WASHINGTON (AP) — A new book says President Barack Obama hoped to put Osama bin Laden
on trial, showing the U.S. commitment to due process under law, if the
al-Qaida leader had surrendered during a U.S. raid in Pakistan last
year.
In "The Finish," journalist Mark Bowden quotes the president
as saying he thought he would be in a strong political position to
argue in favor of giving bin Laden the full rights of a criminal defendant if bin Laden went on trial for masterminding the Sept. 11 attacks.
But Bowden says Obama expected bin Laden to go down fighting. A team of Navy SEALs raided bin Laden's compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan in May 2011 and killed the terrorist leader.
The
Associated Press purchased a copy of "The Finish," which is due to come
out Oct. 16, a few weeks before the presidential election. The
revelation that Obama hoped to capture bin Laden may provide political fodder for Republicans who have criticized the Obama administration for trying to bring terrorists from Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and overseas to trials in U.S. courts.
"Frankly, my belief was if we had captured
him, that I would be in a pretty strong position, politically, here, to
argue that displaying due process and rule of law would be our best
weapon against al-Qaida, in preventing him from appearing as a martyr," Obama is quoted saying in an interview with Bowden.
Obama
believed that affording terrorists "the full rights of criminal
defendants would showcase America's commitment to justice for even the
worst of the worst," Bowden writes.
Obama had expressed similar views as a presidential candidate.
New York congressman Peter King said he would have been "totally opposed" to a trial.
"To
give him a forum and all the constitutional protections that a U.S.
citizen would receive when he was clearly a war criminal is part of the
defensive and apologetic attitude" of the Obama administration, the Republican said Wednesday.
U.S. officials have said the Navy team was ordered to capture bin Laden if he surrendered or kill him if he threatened them. Bowden asserts that the SEALs could have taken bin Laden alive but had no intention of doing so.
In
a separate account of the raid that was published last month, one
member of the Navy team, Matt Bissonnette, wrote that the SEALS climbed a
stairway inside the compound and opened fire when bin Laden poked his head around a doorway. Bissonnette wrote that bin Laden's hands were concealed and the SEALS presumed he was armed, so they shot him.
Bowden's
extensive access to top figures, including the president and
high-ranking officials in the Pentagon and CIA, may revive criticism
from Republicans that the White House allegedly leaks about the raid to
burnish its foreign policy record during an election year.
Bowden, known for the book
"Black Hawk Down" about a 1993 U.S. military operation in Somalia,
details how the White House planned the mission and explains that the
specific American team was chosen because it had "already successfully
conducted about a dozen secret missions inside Pakistan."
The
recounting of the raid matches most previous versions. But Bowden also
offers new insights in what sounds like the first-person perspective of
the officer who commanded it on the ground, Adm. Bill McRaven. Scott
Manning, a spokesman for the publisher, says "McRaven is not identified
as a source in the book."
McRaven was
able to monitor all Pakistani communications during the raid from his
command post at a base in Afghanistan, according to Bowden. The account
shows that Pakistani authorities were unaware of the raid as it
happened, giving the Americans breathing room to fly in a backup
helicopter to replace the one that had crashed while depositing the
first batch of SEALs in the compound.
After McRaven told then-CIA director Leon Panetta he had a "Geronimo" call — the radio code that meant the SEALs had found bin Laden — the admiral realized he had not asked whether bin Laden was dead or had been captured.
McRaven checked again with the SEALs on the ground before relaying that bin Laden
had likely been killed. But McRaven cautioned Panetta to "manage his
expectations" until they had more definitive proof, by comparing his
photographs with the dead man.
Later, McRaven told the president that he felt sure that they killed bin Laden but said the military needed to complete DNA analysis to be certain, Bowden writes.
The book's publication may complicate the Pentagon's attempts to punish Bissonnette for his book.
Writing under the pseudonym Mark Owen, Bissonnette published "No Easy
Day" without submitting it for a security review by the Pentagon. Bowden
was under no such requirement to have the book vetted because he was not a government or military employee.
"The Finish" is published by Grove/Atlantic Inc.'s Atlantic Monthly Press imprint.
___
Associated Press writer Adam Goldman contributed to this report.
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press.