Another fact is that the duel between Bin Laden and Washington was connected not only to his person as Osama bin Laden, but also to his office as the continued leader of the terror cell behind 9/11. If Bin Laden would have stepped down, for instance, over the last years, then the United States military would (and should) have focused on his capture, while at the same time hunting for the new leader of al-Qaida. After all, Bin Laden didn’t kill American citizens, al-Qaida did. They’re the real enemy.
The final fact is this: Osama bin Laden didn’t step down. He persisted in his leadership of al-Qaida until just last week. He remained not only the man behind 9/11, but the man behind the organization behind 9/11. He did not surrender. And he remained with his trigger-finger on the loaded gun of terrorism.
Now for the murky details. Was Bin Laden killed as an unarmed man? Was there really a “firefight” that produced a “fog of war”? Or is this fog purely rhetorical? Fortunately, we don’t have to deal with these tricky (and probably unanswerable) questions to reach the conclusion about his death being justified. They’re not essential; and here’s why.
Given the facts mentioned above, we can say this: if Bin Laden was shot without a weapon, he was killed not merely as an unarmed man, but as an unarmed man behind al-Qaida (and behind 9/11). In other words, since he persisted in his leadership of al-Qaida — and since he routinely exercised the power of terror to kill thousands of Middle Easterners and Americans, alike — simply calling him “unarmed” doesn’t suffice. In the world of extremism, a domineering mentality is as powerful as a rifle or an IED. If Bin Laden didn’t have a gun, he certainly maintained his deadly powers of persuasion.
For the SEALs to kill Osama bin Laden, then — whether or not he posed an immediate threat to their safety — seems much like an act of self-defense. They defused once and for all a powerful al-Qaida weapon that had brought death to thousands, and would do so again if left unchecked. They shot and killed a man who, although perhaps unarmed in the strict sense, was erratically lethal. And this constitutes not an act of murder, but an act of justice.