Orlando Sentinel

New September 11 exhibit stages manhunt for Osama bin Laden

- By Verena Dobnik

NEW YORK — Declassifi­ed U.S. government documents and artifacts will be part of a new exhibit about the decadelong search for Osama bin Laden at the site of the New York terrorist attack he mastermind­ed.

“Revealed: The Hunt for Bin Laden” opens Nov. 15 at the National September 11 Memorial & Museum, a multimedia account of the mission that ended with his death in Pakistan in 2011.

With direct access to the operatives who led America’s feverish post-9/11 hunt for the top terrorist, the exhibit presents a whodunit drama with graphics, videos and the voices of the protagonis­ts.

Those include intelligen­ce agents, former President Barack Obama and members of the U.S. Navy SEAL team that raided the compound where bin Laden was shot and killed in his bedroom.

“This is essentiall­y a kind of crime story, however, at a horrific scale of crime and at a global scale of pursuit, with many trials and tribulatio­ns,” the exhibit’s main designer, Jonathan Alger, said Wednesday at a news conference at the museum.

Photos show the scenes of the search, including caves and a wild mountain range in Afghanista­n where bin Laden was believed to be hiding.

He was under protection of the Taliban, which issued al-Qaida members passports allowing them to move around freely.

One of those passports will be displayed, along with enrollment forms used by al-Qaida to recruit new members.

In other images, American anti-terrorism military units are seen on terrain they’re combing for possible clues to bin Laden’s whereabout­s. A trunk on display contains items collected during U.S. raids, including some from bin Laden’s compound.

A declassifi­ed, pre-9/11 U.S. intelligen­ce document reveals: “Bin Laden Determined

to Strike in US.”

An artifact on display from his al-Qaida training camp in Afghanista­n is a blue wall fragment seen in propaganda videos featuring bin Laden.

The presentati­on titles one section ”Gains and Setbacks,” and details the U.S. failure to catch bin Laden before he fled Afghanista­n.

“We were working on it; we just didn’t do enough,” said Mark Kelton, the former CIA chief in Pakistan in charge of the bin Laden compound operation.

Speaking at the news conference, Kelton’s voice broke with emotion as he remembered that after bin Laden was gone, he told American colleagues in Pakistan ”that we had delivered justice to a murderer.”

Members of Navy SEAL Team 6 recorded in their own words how they tracked bin Laden’s courier, eventually descending in a helicopter on the compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan, as Obama and his Cabinet watched from the White House.

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