Here’s a screen grab from one of the propaganda videos they seized.

Now, let’s see what he looked like after a Navy SEAL double-tapped him.
WASHINGTON — A detailed portrait of Usama bin Laden’s daily life emerged Saturday from the single largest intelligence collection ever, including a disclosure of home videos that show him watching news coverage of himself on television.
The videos were shown to the news media Saturday by intelligence officials. The five movies offer the first public glimpse at bin Laden’s life behind the walls of his compound in suburban Pakistan.
The government-selected clips also provide an opportunity for the U.S. to paint bin Laden in an unflattering light to his supporters. The videos include outtakes of his propaganda films and, taken together, portray him as someone obsessed with his own image and how he is portrayed to the world.
One of the movies shows bin Laden, his unkempt beard streaked in gray, sitting on the floor, wrapped in a brown blanket and holding a remote control. He flipped back and forth between what appears to be live news coverage of himself. The old, small television was perched on top of a desk with a large tangle of electrical wires running to a nearby control box.
In another, he has apparently dyed and neatly trimmed his beard for the filming of a propaganda video. The video, which the U.S. released without sound, was titled “”Message to the American People” and was believed to be made sometime last fall, a senior intelligence official said during a briefing for reporters, on condition that his name not be used.
He looks better than he did the last time he released a video in 2007:

Update: Video of Bin Laden watching the Obama regime’s favorite network, Al Jazeera.
Update: More pics.


