Bin Laden book No Easy Day 'contradicts official account'

Maybe someone should have looked at the guy "leaking" the information to a no name journalist, both with lots to gain preying on conspiracy therorists. He seems overly paranoid and one of those so smart he's crazy guys.

Steve Pieczenik - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

I took a class from a retired intelligence guy who claims 9/11 could have been prevented but intel agencies wanted to hoard information rather than share it. They all had pieces of the puzzle but no one agency had enough to put it together in it's entirety.

Every time a SEAL dies he was supposedly a Team 6 guy who was on the OBL raid.

Even us regular infantry guys know better than to put out some of the publications these SEALS are.

It's a huge story and an opportunity to make money off of it. Every account of the details are all different so how can we know the author was actually on the raid? He says he was but if all these guys were on the raid that died and wrote books that brings the total to somewhere in the neighborhood of 30 something operators. Supposedly they used two modified UH-60 Blackhawk helicopters which is standard for SOCOM operations like this. Those seat 12 tops, not including crew, that's 24 operators. Flight crew should have been 160th SOAR or Naval Special Warfare internal but as far as being SEALs themselves doesn't seam right to me.

I am curious as to how many of these authors are full of it and trying to make a profit. There's a website about stolen valor where there are countless tales of people using false military credentials for everything from a military discount on food to building political careers. Has anyone checked to see if any of these guys were even team guys?

Since Chris Kyle's book it's become a mad house of operator/writers.
 
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