What's new

What to Wear to Kill Osama bin Laden

Bang Galore

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Feb 21, 2010
Messages
10,685
Reaction score
12
Country
India
Location
India
What to Wear to Kill Osama bin Laden

In “No Easy Day,” author Mark Owen(Matt Bissonnette) details the essential gear for an assault mission.


2012-09-05-noeasyday-thumb-620xauto-44186.jpg

The king of night vision goggles (NVG) Mark Owen wore the night Navy Seals killed Osama bin Laden. They were distinctive because of the sophisticated four tubes. Photograph courtesy of Owen. (Cost-$65,000/- according to Matt Bissonnette/ Mark Owen)

There are many revealing parts in No Easy Day, Mark Owen’s controversial account of the murder of al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden. One in particular stands out: The author, writing under a pseudonym, details the methodical way he dressed himself before departure for the bin Laden compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan. “Sitting on my bed, I started to get dressed,” he writes. “Nothing I did from the moment I started to put on my pants was random. Every step was carefully planned.” He said this was the same process he went through before every mission as a “way to focus.”

Here’s an inventory of those steps, and how he got dressed, for a mission that would be over in 24 hours.



—First he laid out his Crye Precision Desert Digital combat uniform, a long-sleeve, partially camouflaged shirt and cargo pants combo with ten pockets, “each with a specific purpose.”

—In the pockets he put assault gloves, leather mitts for “fast-roping,” an assortment of batteries, energy gel, two PowerBars, an extra tourniquet, rubber gloves, an SSE (forensic) kit, an Olympus point-and-shoot digital camera, and $200 in cash. The money was for a bribe or a ride, if needed. “Evasion takes money, and few things work better than American cash.”

—On the back of his belt, he placed a Daniel Winkler fixed-blade knife.

—In a pouch on his back he had bolt cutters and antennae for the two radios he would wear and use to communicate with other team members.

—Other items included:

A “breaching charge,” used to blow open a door or other locked or closed barrier.
His helmet, which weighed under ten pounds and included $65,000 night-vision goggles with four tubes instead of two, and a Princeton Tec charge light. The helmet “could officially stop a nine-millimeter round, but in the past . . . had stopped AK-47 bullets.”
A small laminated booklet—a “cheat sheet for the mission”—that included a mini grid reference guide (GRG) with an aerial view of the bin Laden compound, a list of radio frequencies, pictures of the targets (bin Laden, his son, his brothers) with stats such as height, weight, and any known aliases. For bin Laden and his son there were several renderings of what they “could look like now.”
Salomon Quest boots. Owen “tied the loops of my laces down in a double knot and tucked them into my boot top.”
A 60-pound armored vest with ceramic plates that covered his vital organs in the front and back.
Mounted on the front of his vest were two radios on either side; between them were three magazines for his HK416 assault rifle and one “baseball-size” fragmentation grenade, as well as several chemical lights, including the infrared version for night vision.
His “bone” phones. They sat on his cheekbones and allowed him to “hear any radio traffic through bone conduction technology.”
His assault rifle. He checked out his EOTech sight with a 3X magnifier. He pulled back the bolt and chambered a round and made sure it was “safe.” He tested his red laser and flipped down the NVGs to test the infrared laser, too.

Then, “all of my checks were done,” he writes. “I’d completed my steps to prepare for the mission. I took one last look in the room to make sure I didn’t forget anything, and headed out the door.”

2012-09-05-noday.jpg

Photograph courtesy of Owen.

mark_owens_guns.jpg


Matt Bissonnette's weapons
A Heckler & Koch MP7 with suppressor(top)
A highly modified M79 40mm grenade launcher, a.k.a. the "pirate" gun (middle)
A Heckler & Koch 416 assault rifle with a ten-inch barrel & suppressor (bottom)


What to Wear to Kill Osama bin Laden | Books | Washingtonian
 
Lol. It took this much equipment to supposedly kill an unarmed guy with a huge **** collection?

The fact that these leaks of info, often time contradictory to one another leads me to believe that this hoax was not well planned by the script writers in DC and partially in Islamabad. May god help the sheeple.
 
Looks like a alien vs predator war. The US must have some secret information that Osama has injected some virus in his blood and became a viscous predator.
 
Be prepared for airsofters to get new gear like this in the coming weeks.
 
**Feeling jealous**:oops:

The weapon camo is completely useless since it was a night mission. What I don't understand is why they chose suppresors over muzzle flash suppresors.
 
The weapon camo is completely useless since it was a night mission. What I don't understand is why they chose suppresors over muzzle flash suppresors.

Maybe the camo is not mission specific and their rifles comes painted that way...
 
Lol. It took this much equipment to supposedly kill an unarmed guy with a huge **** collection?

They went to kill a guy deep inside a hostile country. They sure needed a lot of ammunition and fire power just in case things went pear shape. But the Pakistani forces didn't bother them at all.
 
They went to kill a guy deep inside a hostile country. They sure needed a lot of ammunition and fire power just in case things went pear shape. But the Pakistani forces didn't bother them at all.


Pakistan is an ally, not a hostile country. :D
 
The weapon camo is completely useless since it was a night mission. What I don't understand is why they chose suppresors over muzzle flash suppresors.

Whether day or night, weapon should be camouflaged. Don't want it sticking out too black don't we eh? And a suppressor acts as a flash hider and reduce noise.
 
It's also helpful to have the weapon blend in with the soldier. (same camo...doesn't stick out.)
 
Whether day or night, weapon should be camouflaged. Don't want it sticking out too black don't we eh? And a suppressor acts as a flash hider and reduce noise.



Not entirely. Unless these are some special supressors, there should be no way to hide the flash.

When it comes to Pakistan hearing gunshots is not as suspcious as seeing flash from rounds. Abbatobad being a quiet hilly mountain city, it would be a big mistake to expose a weapons flash. According to eye witnesses it was an especially dark night.
 
Not entirely. Unless these are some special supressors, there should be no way to hide the flash.

When it comes to Pakistan hearing gunshots is not as suspcious as seeing flash from rounds. Abbatobad being a quiet hilly mountain city, it would be a big mistake to expose a weapons flash. According to eye witnesses it was an especially dark night.

Most good supressors do the flash as well....
 
Back
Top Bottom