Jok3r, on 3 May 2011, 2:11, said:
And no, it's not some stupid police force, it's a group of the best fighting men in the world- and their job is to protect themselves first. Under stress, making a consistent shot on, say, someones arm as it seems you're suggesting they should've done is incredibly difficult. A miss, and one of the SEALs could have been killed. When the targets are shooting back, priority one is to stop that to protect your guys. If it comes in the form of A-Box shots, that's how it happens. It would be one thing if this was anything like a hostage situation, with targets in the open where maybe a sniper could take a shot like that. In a raid, it's just not practical (that is to say, it's downright incredibly dangerous) to subdue an armed enemy combatant, especially when there are multiple combatants.
Police forces (as in, regular police, not SWAT or anything) can usually subdue armed targets without deaths, how come highly trained military commandos are unable to do the same? If they were accurate enough to be able to hit his head I'm pretty sure they can be accurate enough to incapacitate rather than kill. If you watch
this video on the BBC it states there was 40 seals involved in the operation. I think that would be more than enough the be able to incapacitate any threat.
Jok3r, on 3 May 2011, 2:11, said:
Anyway- their mission was to remove him from the equation dead or alive. Alive would be preferable, but as I've outlined, taking an armed resistor alive is incredibly dangerous. And the article says he had neither internet or a phone line, but couriers going in and out of the compound frequently (one of whom is how the compound was found). That means he was still involved. And I'll reiterate- it's not a violation of precedent- they tried to bring him in, but he shot back. The fact that he got killed resisting doesn't mean he wouldn't have had trial if he came in peacefully. Would you rather he was alive now and the DEVGRU team that went in were dead, so that maybe he could see trial later?
Well then, if his death was included in the mission parameters then it is technically an assassination, correct? How exactly is it not an assassination if that is an accepted conclusion to the operation?
Ghostrider, on 3 May 2011, 2:18, said:
I'm not so sure, Chyros. We don't know what went down when they found Osama, and the SEALS may have been forced to shoot to kill. I'm also thinking on the personal level, given the chance to shoot Osama-Satan-Bin Laden, I bet most US soldiers would take the shot. In the head.
Even more reason this is an assassination.
Edited by Alias, 02 May 2011 - 16:29.