The book delivers much more (or much else) than the title would suggest. There is a great deal of background on the history of the SEAL program, and of political events that fomented the Islamic jihad movement, starting naturally with the Balfour declaration and the establishment of Israel. The author doesn’t say so specifically, but one gets the impression that he would admit at least a modicum of recognition of justification for Arab political discontent with a world order that includes Israel.
There are two startling ideas that Pfarrer puts forth that I want to highlight here, as they challenged my general outlook.
1. It was operationally a SEAL mission. The SEALs justifiably see the CIA as a bad joke when it comes to operations. The invasion of Grenada actually was a thing that involved heroic action by SEAL operatives, heroism made necessary by CIA incompetence with such basic intelligence as maps. From the King David hotel bombing, to the USS Cole attacks, the CIA has utterly failed to integrate and act on known intelligence. The USS Cole attack was preceded, months earlier, by a bumbling identical attempt that saw the explosives-laden attack craft sink in the harbor. Al Quaeda operatives were actually able to salvage the explosives to use for the later successful attempt. What. As for 9/11, I guess by now it is generally known how badly internecine politics impaired our intelligence apparatus from recognizing the threat, but Pfarrer painfully recounts the highly specific, and ignored, intelligence reports that warned of civilian planes being used as weapons.
2. Iraqi WMD were real. Front-line US troops encountered nerve gas munitions on numerous occasions. These encounters are documented in Assange’s “Wikileak” materials. Just because the inept searches for WMD did not find them, does not mean they do not exist. As proven by the front-line experience, these weapons did exist, most likely still do exist, and most probably are in the hands of terrorists today. They constitute an unacknowledged sword of Damocles hanging over all our heads.
The actual operation against OBL occurs mainly as an afterthought. So it’s not the book I expected, but an engrossing, important, and terrifying one nonetheless.
Just one thing – once, he committed the egregious error of using “flaunt” when “flout” was intended, and that is just unacceptable.