'Hope in his last moments, bin Laden realised US hadn't forgotten 9/11'

Obama leaves office in January, with Al-Qaeda significantly diminished by drone strikes.

Update: 2016-05-03 02:53 GMT
Obama and US First Lady Michelle Obama were scheduled to visit Agra but the trip was cut short as the US President decided to go to Saudi Arabia to pay condolence to the Royal family following death of King Abdullah.

 Washington: Five years after US special forces killed Osama bin Laden, President Barack Obama says he hopes that in his last moments the terror mastermind realized Americans had not forgotten about 9/11.

In an interview with CNN broadcast on Monday, Obama marked the anniversary of what many see as one of his presidency's greatest achievements: ending the long hunt for the illusive Saudi-born Al-Qaeda boss.

"Hopefully, at that moment, he understood that the American people hadn't forgotten the some 3,000 people who he killed," Obama said.

Read:  5 years on, doctor who helped CIA track bin Laden languishes in Pak jail

Obama leaves office in January, with Al-Qaeda significantly diminished by drone strikes and somewhat eclipsed by its offshoot, the so-called Islamic State group.

US special forces killed al-Qaeda founder bin Laden in Pakistan on May 2, 2011.

The CIA on Sunday had marked the anniversary of the killing of Osama bin Laden by live-tweeting -- with a five-year delay -- the raid by US special forces on the Al-Qaeda founder's compound in Pakistan.

Using the hashtag #UBLRaid, the CIA blasted out updates of the May 2011 strike as if it was unfolding in real time -- in a highly unusual move for the secretive spy agency.

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