SEAL who shot Osama bin Laden Abandoned By The US Govt.
- Navy SEAL who shot Osama bin Laden has no military pension or health care, report says
- Journalist Phil Bronstein profiles man he calls the Shooter in the March issue of Esquire
- Bronstein: "He has nightmares about how he's going to support his family"
Nearly two years later,
the SEAL Team Six member is a secret celebrity with nothing to show for
the deed; no job, no pension, no recognition outside a small circle of
colleagues.
Journalist Phil Bronstein
profiled the man in the March issue of Esquire, calling him only the
Shooter -- a husband, father and SEAL Team Six member who says he
happened to pull the trigger on the notorious terrorist. It's a detailed
account of how the raid unfolded, and what comes after for those
involved. The headline splashed across the cover reads, "The man who killed Osama bin Laden ... is screwed."
In a statement the Navy
responded: "We have no information to corroborate these new assertions.
We take seriously the safety and security of our people, as well as our
responsibility to assist sailors making a transition to civilian life.
Without more information about this particular case, it would be
difficult to determine the degree to which our transition programs
succeeded."
"They spent, in the case
of the shooter, 16 years doing exactly what they're trained to do, which
is going out on these missions, deployment after deployment, killing
people on a regular basis, " said Bronstein, executive chairman of the Center for Investigative Reporting. "They finally get to the point where they don't want to do that anymore."
Bronstein reported that
the man left SEAL Team Six in September. His family's health care
coverage ceased. Because he retired before the 20-year mark, he gets no
pension.
The Shooter is judicious
about the details of his story and hasn't been involved in dramatic
books, movies or video games that will make millions for some. It's out
of loyalty to his work and concern about his family's safety, Bronstein
said. The shooter worries what could happen if his name went public,
like Matt Bissonnette, the SEAL whose identity was revealed after he
published the book "No Easy Day" using a pseudonym. CNN can't verify the account in Esquire, or the one in Bissonnette's book.
Bronstein reported that the Shooter was offered some witness protection, but no such program exists yet.
Home life is a struggle,
too. The Shooter and his wife are separated, Bronstein wrote, although
they live in the same house -- "on very friendly, even loving terms" --
to save money. He has done consulting work, Bronstein told CNN's Wolf
Blitzer, but it's not clear how long it will last.
"They suddenly find
themselves trying to translate into a civilian world that they're not
used, and they haven't been used to for decades," Bronstein said. "I
think he has nightmares about how he's going to support his family, and
how he's going to feed his family."
Source;CNN
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