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How Obama actually delayed pirate rescue -- SEAL team deployment stalled 36 hours, hampered by limited rules of engagement
Posted: April 18, 2009 -- 11:45 pm Eastern
© 2009 WorldNetDaily
Remember: At the time little Barry Soetoro [aka Barack Obama] first announced his run for the presidency, the sum total of his executive experience consisted of organizing ping pong tournaments in Illinois.
Fast forward to the spring of 2009: Little Barry is now Commander-in-chief and we have a piracy mini-crisis off the coast of Somalia. Three black Muslim pirates are in the cross-hairs of SEAL sniper rifles. Little Barry, who is black and was raised in a Muslim household, is having trouble pulling the trigger. Duhhh?
Long story short: The rescue was a success in spite of, not because of anything Obama and his flunkies did.
The Night Watchman
WASHINGTON – While Barack Obama is basking in praise for his "decisive" handling of the Somali pirate attack on a ship in the India Ocean, reliable military sources close to the scene are painting a much different picture of the incident – accusing the president of employing restrictive rules of engagement that actually hampered the rescue of Capt. Richard Phillips and extended the drama at sea for days.
Multiple opportunities to free the captain of the Maersk Alabama from three young pirates were missed, these sources say – all because a Navy SEAL team was not immediately ordered to the scene and then forced to operate under strict, non-lethal rules of engagement.
They say the response duty office at the Pentagon was initially unwilling to grant an order to use lethal force to rescue Phillips. They also report the White House refused to authorize deployment of a Navy SEAL team to the location for 36 hours, despite the recommendation of the on-scene commander.
The White House also turned down two rescue plans offered up by the Seal commander on the scene and the captain of the USS Bainbridge.
The SEAL team operated under rules of engagement that required them to do nothing unless the hostage's life was in "imminent' danger.
In fact, when the USS Bainbridge dispatched a rigid-hull inflatable boat to bring supplies to the Maersk Alabama, it came under fire that could not be returned even though the SEAL team had the pirates in their sights.
Many hours before the fatal shots were fired, taking out the three young pirates, Phillips jumped into the Indian Ocean with the idea of giving the snipers a clear target. However, the SEAL team was still under orders not to shoot.
Hours later, frustrated by the missed opportunities to resolve the standoff, the commander of the Bainbridge and the captain of the Navy SEAL team determined they had operational authority to evaluate the risk to the hostage, and took out the pirates at the first opportunity – finally freeing Phillips.
The G2 Bulletin report was authored by Joseph Farah, founder and editor of WND, and a veteran newsman with extensive military sources developed over the last 30 years.
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Captain Richard Phillips
Through a sniper scope
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