Navy SEAL who says he killed bin Laden refutes Hersh account
The former member of the U.S. Navy SEAL Team 6 who says he killed Osama bin Laden has joined the chorus of critics refuting Seymour Hersh’s controversial report challenging the White House account of the 2011 operation.
“When
I was first sent this article, I thought it was a joke,” Rob O’Neill
told Fox News on Monday night. “This thing is so ludicrous it’s almost
an insult to the word ludicrous. For someone who wasn’t there to say
stuff that I saw happen … it’s a comedy.”
O’Neill
took particular issue with Hersh’s allegation that there was no
firefight during the nighttime raid on bin Laden’s compound in
Abbottabad, Pakistan.
“Well
I’m sure that my friends who got shot at and almost took a few bullets
in the face through the doors would disagree,” O’Neill said. “I saw
Osama bin Laden standing on two feet, there were no [Inter-Services
Intelligence] up there. I shot him in the head twice, and then I shot
him again in the face while he was on the ground.”
O’Neill,
the Navy SEAL who last year revealed himself as the source behind
Esquire’s 2013 story detailing the killing of the terror leader, stood
by President Barack Obama’s account of the operation.
“The story that our president put out is the truth,” O’Neill said. “Everything that we said we did, we did.”
![Navy SEAL who says he killed bin Laden refutes Hersh account](https://s.yimg.com/cd/resizer/2.0/FIT_TO_WIDTH-w540/6e1f940fa42b4037d1b814d11827edb7e9237a63.jpg)
President Obama announcing the death of Osama bin Laden.
The White House slammed Hersh’s account on Monday, calling his report “baseless.”
“There
are too many inaccuracies and baseless assertions in this piece to
fact-check each one,” White House National Security spokesman Ned Price
said in a statement. “The notion that the operation that killed [bin
Laden] was anything but a unilateral U.S. mission is patently false.”
On Monday night, NBC News published a report that seemed to support at least one part of Hersh’s story: that a “walk-in” to a CIA office in Pakistan tipped the United States off to bin Laden’s whereabouts.
Former CIA Deputy Director Michael Morell called the revelation “irrelevant.”
“Look, what I don’t know is whether somebody did walk in and say, ‘I know where he is,’” Morell said on “Fox and Friends” on Tuesday.
“But I can guarantee you that any information given to us by a walk-in
with regard to bin Laden — and there were probably a lot of people who
walked in and said, ‘I know where he is’ — that was completely
irrelevant.