"Once those teams went into the compound I can tell you that there was a time period of almost 20 or 25 minutes where we really didn't know just exactly what was going on. And there were some very tense moments as we were waiting for information.
"We had some observation of the approach there, but we did not have direct flow of information as to the actual conduct of the operation itself as they were going through the compound."
Panetta's "lost 25 minutes" needs to be seen in the context of a man with civilian roots, notwithstanding two mid-60s years as a Lt. in military intel: Former Congressman, Clinton White House budget chief and Chief of Staff, credentials with civil rights and environment movements -- a fellow with real distance from the true spook/military mojo.
Taken together, here's what we have: President Obama did not know exactly what was going on. He did not decide that bin Laden should be shot. And he did not decide to dump his body in the ocean. The CIA and its Special Ops allies made all the decisions.
Then Brennan, the CIA's man, put out the version that CIA wanted. (Keep in mind that, as noted earlier, CIA was really running the operation -- with Special Ops under its direction).
What we're looking at, folks, is the reality of democracy in America: A permanent entrenched covert establishment that marches to its own drummer or to drummers unknown. It's exactly the kind of thing that never gets reported. Too scary. Too real. Better to dismiss this line of inquiry as too "conspiracy theory."
If that sounds like hyperbole, let me add this rather significant consideration. It is the background of Nicholas Schmidle, the freelancer who wrote the New Yorker piece. It may give us insight into how he landed this extraordinary exclusive on this extraordinarily sensitive matter -- information again, significantly, not shared by The New Yorker with its readers:
Schmidle's father is Marine Lt. General Robert E. "Rooster" Schmidle Jr. General Schmidle served as Commanding Officer of Special Purpose Marine Air-Ground Task Force (Experimental) -- that's essentially Special Operations akin to Navy SEALs. In recent years, he was "assistant deputy commandant for Programs and Resources (Programs)" -- where, among other things, he oversaw "irregular warfare." (See various, including contract specs here on "Special Operations," and picture caption here) In 2010, he moved into another piece of this, when Obama appointed him deputy commander, U.S. Cyber Command. Cumulatively, this makes the author's father a very important man in precisely the sort of circles who care how the raid is publicly portrayed -- and who would be quite intimate with some of the folks hunkering down with Obama in the Situation Room on the big day.
You can see a photo of Gen. Schmidle on a 2010 panel about "Warring Futures." Event co-sponsors include Slate magazine and the New America Foundation, both of which, according to Nicholas Schmidle's website, have also provided Schmidle's son with an ongoing perch (with Slate giving him a platform for numerous articles from war zones and the foundation employing him as a Fellow.) These parallel relationships grow more disturbing with contemplation.
***
So let's get back to the question, Who is driving this Ship of State?
First, consider this passage:
"Obama returned to the White House at two o'clock, after playing nine holes of golf at Andrews Air Force Base. The Black Hawks departed from Jalalabad thirty minutes later. Just before four o'clock, Panetta announced to the group in the Situation Room that the helicopters were approaching Abbottabad."
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