9 years after the operation by a team of American Special Forces that led to the killing of al-Qaeda founder Osama bin Laden, "Fox News" released a documentary film that included a testimony from American soldier Rob O'Neill, who, with his gunfire, executed the first wanted murder on the American terrorist list. at that time.
Oni, in a film called "The Man Who Killed Bin Laden," revealed exciting details of the process that former US President Barack Obama and his administration have pursued, moment by moment. O'Neill said that he had received several weeks of training to carry out the mission, and his team's flight took about 82 minutes to reach near bin Laden's house, where he was only interested in thinking about the completion of the mission, and the liquidation of the man responsible for the September 11 attacks that killed nearly From 3 thousand people.
O'Neill said he could not believe what was going on to the point that when he opened the doors of the plane it was confirmed that this was not a training site in the mountains of the United States. It is not a desert. It is lights .. it is a city. ”
Parts of the documentary revealed“ how the operation team infiltrated the compound that bin Laden inhabited, where the house was stormed and finally went to the bedroom of the al-Qaeda founder on the upper floor. ”
According to the American soldier’s account, there was a curtain. He was removed, so that the soldiers behind him could find a number of women, who are bin Laden's daughters and one of his wives, and his colleagues had imagined that they might have explosive belts, but one of the team members removed them "risking his life", as he could have received a bullet from bin Laden who was definitely They were found somewhere, and
when O'Neill finally found bin Laden, he showed that he was not armed, and Unni said L: “His arm was on the shoulder of one of his wives (..) I put my hand on him, and pushed him to the hallway, yes I stared at the face that I saw thousands of times over.”
When the broadcaster asked the American soldier in the documentary, “Did I tell him anything (before he was shot) O'Neill replied briefly, "No ... we met for a second ... that was all."

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