New 9/11 exhibit stages hunt for Osama bin Laden

The exhibit presents the hunt for bin Laden with graphics, videos and the voices of the protagonists.

9/11 Families
The museum's collection includes more than 60,000 items that tell intimate stories linked to the attacks and its aftermath [Brendan Mcdermid/Reuters]

Declassified United States government documents and artefacts are part of a new exhibit on the decade-long search for Osama bin Laden at the site of the 9/11 attacks in New York.

“Revealed: The Hunt for Bin Laden” opens on November 15 at the National September 11 Memorial & Museum, a multimedia account of the mission that ended with bin Laden’s killing in Pakistan in 2011.

The exhibit presents the hunt for bin Laden as a sort of who-done-it come alive with graphics, videos and the voices of the protagonists, from intelligence agents, former President Barack Obama and members of the US Navy SEALs team that raided bin Laden’s home and shot him dead.

“We began to think of it as a crime story, albeit a horrific one at a huge scale,” the design firm, New York-based C&G Partners, said in a statement.

“The exhibit is built of tall angled ‘shards’ of raw plywood, no two alike, which can be positioned to evoke a mountain canyon, military field office or residential compound.”

The museum is located on the 16-acre site where more than 2,700 people died.

The museum’s collection includes more than 60,000 items that tell intimate stories linked to the attacks and its aftermath.

Photos show the scenes of the search, from caves to a wild mountain range in Afghanistan where bin Laden was believed to have been hiding. He was under protection from the Taliban that issued al-Qaeda members passports allowing them to move around freely. One of these passports will be displayed.

In other images, US military personnel huddle in strategy sessions and outside on terrain being searched. Visitors will see trunks containing items gathered during various US raids of al-Qaeda locations that might have yielded evidence of his whereabouts.

Successes and failures

The presentation does not whitewash failures, titling one section “Gains and Setbacks”.

The exhibit details the failure to catch bin Laden before he fled Afghanistan. One artefact on display from his al-Qaeda training camp there is a blue wall fragment seen in propaganda videos featuring bin Laden.

After he disappeared, law enforcement experts and members of military and civilian anti-terrorism units describe how they hounded down al-Qaeda followers working to hide him.

Finally, members of Navy SEAL Team 6 explain, in their own words, how they acted on a tip that led them to descend on his compound in Abbottabad, Pakistan, as Obama and his cabinet watched from the White House.

Source: AP