Bin Laden's Death and the Implications for Jihadism
U.S. President Barack Obama appeared in a hastily arranged televised
address the night of May 1, 2011, to inform the world that U.S.
counterterrorism forces had located and killed Osama bin Laden. The
operation, which reportedly happened in the early hours of May 2 local
time, targeted a compound in Abbottabad, a city located some 31 miles
north of Islamabad, Pakistan’s capital. The nighttime raid resulted in a
brief firefight that left bin Laden and several others dead. A U.S.
helicopter reportedly was damaged in the raid and later destroyed by
U.S. forces. Obama reported that no U.S. personnel were lost in the
operation. After a brief search of the compound, the U.S. forces left
with bin Laden’s body and presumably anything else that appeared to have
intelligence value. From Obama’s carefully scripted speech, it would
appear that the U.S. conducted the operation unilaterally with no
Pakistani assistance — or even knowledge.
As evidenced by the spontaneous celebrations that erupted in Washington,
New York and across the United States, the killing of bin Laden has
struck a chord with many Americans. This was true not only of those who
lost family members as a result of the attack, but of those who were
vicariously terrorized and still vividly recall the deep sense of fear
they felt the morning of Sept. 11, 2001, as they watched aircraft strike
the World Trade Center Towers and saw those towers collapse on live
television, and then heard reports of the Pentagon being struck by a
third aircraft and of a fourth aircraft prevented from being used in
another attack when it crashed in rural Pennsylvania. As that fear
turned to anger, a deep-seated thirst for vengeance led the United
States to invade Afghanistan in October 2001 and to declare a "global
war on terrorism." Read more »
Dispatch: Strategic Implications of Osama bin Laden's Death
Analyst Reva Bhalla discusses the strategic implications of Osama bin Laden’s death on U.S. foreign policy. Watch the Video »
