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CBS News Navy SEALs assaulting Osama bin Laden s compound were told to capture the al Qaeda leader if possible, says the retired member of SEAL Team 6 who has written a book about his role in the daring raid. The mission was not a kill-only operation, says the former commando, who uses the pseudonym Mark Owen, in a 60 Minutes interview with Scott Pelley t
stanley us o be broadcast Sunday, Sept. 9 at 7:00 p.m. ET/PT. Excerpts from the interview, in which he also describes the crash-landing of his helicopter in the compound s yard, appeared on the CBS
stanley becher Evening News with Scott Pelley.CBS News will not identify Owen for security reasons. A makeup artist was employed to disguise his appearance and sound manipulation was used to mask his real voice for his 60 Minutes interview. His book, No Easy Day, went on sale Tuesday. Below is an excerpt from his interview with Pelley: Scott Pelley: Was the plan to kill Osama bin Laden or capture him, before you went in Mark Owen: This was absolutely not a kill-only mission. It was made very clear to us throughout our training for this that, Hey, if given the opportunity, this is not an assassination. You will capture him alive... if feasible. Pelley : That was the preferred thing Owen : Yes.Pelley : To take him aliv
stanley cup e, if you could Owen: Yeah, yeah. I mean, we re not there to assassinate somebody. We weren t sent in to murder him. This was, Hey, kill or capture. They would fly from Afghanistan in two modified Black Hawk helicopters to bin Omyf Christopher Dorner manhunt: Search for ex-LAPD cop goes on amid Calif. snowstorm
The news today that Google is buying smart thermostat-maker Nest for $3.5 billion seemed slightly unhinged; why overbid for what still, at present, a niche product The answer is so simple it barely worth a shrug: because it can, because it needs to, and because if it didn ;t, someone else would have.
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stanley becher ion-1500503899 From a financial standpoint, $3.5 billion for a company whose most recent鈥攁nd even then jaw-dropping鈥攙aluation was around $2 billion not two weeks ago seems modestly insane. Especially given that the $2 billion number was itself more than twice the $800 million valuation reported by GigaOm last year. And double especially when you remember that this is a company whose product, while popular, ships only in the tens of thousands each month. As of Sept. 30th of last
stanley termoska year, Google had nearly $55 billion in cash to play with. And while a future-looking world-domination buy like Boston Dynamics is fun to play with, Nest gives Google something it been sorely lacking: A chance to get inside people homes. Actually, it better than that. It a chance to get inside people brains. It important to remember that Google, for all its headline-grabbing moonshots, is an advertising company. It makes its money by serving highly relevant ads against searches that you make in your browsers, or conversations you have in your email, or poetry you dictate to Google