Navy Seal who killed bin Laden 15 years ago today recalls the mission and the 9/11 motivation: ‘I just shot that f–ker in the face’ – Image for illustrative purposes only (Image credits: Unsplash)
On the 15th anniversary of the raid that ended Osama bin Laden’s life, retired Navy SEAL Robert O’Neill shared a visceral account of the operation that reshaped his world. The former SEAL Team Six member described the heart-pounding moments inside the terrorist leader’s compound and the deep-seated drive rooted in the horrors of September 11, 2001. His reflections underscore the human cost of that fateful night in Pakistan and the enduring quest for justice.[1][2]
A Mission Born in Secrecy
The operation, known as Neptune Spear, unfolded on May 2, 2011, in Abbottabad, Pakistan. O’Neill and his teammates received word of the top-secret assignment just three weeks earlier, with scant details provided. High-ranking officials, including the vice president, briefed them at Cherry Point Marine Corps Air Station on a target in a remote house, but omitted the location and any promise of air support.[1]
Rehearsals intensified using mockups of the compound and specialized Black Hawk helicopters designed for a stealthy rooftop insertion. The team treated it as a potential one-way trip, preparing for every contingency, including the loss of aircraft. They staged in Jalalabad, Afghanistan, awaiting the go-ahead, aware that failure loomed large.[2]
Chaos in the Compound
The raid commenced at 12:30 a.m. local time and lasted a mere nine minutes. One helicopter crashed upon arrival, forcing the SEALs to adapt swiftly. They breached the perimeter, blasted through a false door, and methodically cleared rooms, encountering bin Laden’s son Khalid, whom they killed during the advance.[1]
O’Neill turned a corner and faced bin Laden, who stood just three feet away, positioned behind his wife Amal. Recognizing the al Qaeda leader instantly, he perceived an imminent threat. Following SEAL protocol, O’Neill fired his H&K 416 rifle twice into bin Laden’s forehead, then once more as he crumpled at the foot of the bed. Immediately after, he radioed fellow SEAL Will Chesney: “I think I just shot that f–ker in the face.”[2]
The team secured vital intelligence—computers, CDs, and floppy disks—while managing civilians, including children, whom they moved to safety. Extraction proved tense as Pakistani forces stirred and F-16s scrambled. After a 90-minute flight, the pilot’s voice cut through: “Welcome to Afghanistan.”
9/11’s Unyielding Grip
The mission carried profound personal weight, forged in the ashes of the 9/11 attacks. O’Neill explained that the SEALs fought not for glory or reward, but for the first Americans compelled to battle al Qaeda hand-to-hand—the passengers of Flight 93. Their defiance aboard the hijacked plane embodied the raw resistance that fueled the team’s resolve.[1]
He evoked a specific victim: “the single mom who dropped her kids off at school on a Tuesday morning, then an hour later jumped out of the World Trade Center, pressing down her skirt as her last act of human decency.” This image crystallized their purpose, transforming national tragedy into targeted retribution. Before departing, O’Neill bid a tearful farewell to his three-year-old daughter and wife, steeling himself for what might be his final mission.[2]
Aftermath and a Singular Regret
In the raid’s aftermath, reality crashed in. A teammate snapped O’Neill back to duty: “You just killed Osama bin Laden, your life is about to f–king change, now get back to work.” High-fives followed the radio call “Geronimo,” confirming the kill. O’Neill later pondered the surreal shift: “I just shot Bin Laden—like what the f–k? Everything I had ever known, everything I planned, just changed drastically.”[1]
- Secured bin Laden’s body for identification, cleaning his face and photographing it.
- Discovered opium hidden under the bed.
- Celebrated quietly amid the adrenaline, focusing on the bigger victory.
Today, O’Neill harbors one regret: bin Laden’s burial at sea. “I would have hung him from a bridge in New York City,” he told the New York Post, believing a public display might have offered fuller closure to victims’ families.[2]
Fifteen years on, O’Neill’s story endures as a testament to the SEALs’ precision and the long shadow of 9/11. The raid delivered justice, yet its echoes remind us of sacrifices made in silence, reshaping lives on both sides of the fight.
