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25 SEAL helmet cams show Osama running for his life

ON TARGET: New details of the raid on Osama bin Laden’s Pakistan compound (above) reveal that one SEAL shot the terror lord in the chest and another shot him in the head. (UPI)

The raid that killed Osama bin Laden was recorded on the helmet cams of all the 25 Navy SEALs that took part in the daring mission, it was reported yesterday.

Officials are continuing to review the harrowing footage from the 40-minute mission and have released new details of the raid, CBS News said.

The commandos first spotted bin Laden — wearing a white undershirt and tan robe — when the terror fiend stepped onto the third floor landing in the main house, the network said. They fired but missed bin Laden, who then dashed into his bedroom.

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The first SEAL who followed him into the room gathered bin Laden’s daughters and pulled them to safety, CBS said.

The second SEAL in the room was met by bin Laden’s wife who either rushed the SEAL or was pushed toward him by her gutless husband.

He pushed her aside and then shot bin Laden in the chest, CBS said. A third SEAL then shot bin Laden in the head.

Meanwhile, more information gleaned from the treasure trove of documents and computer drives that the SEALs stuffed in garbage bags was released yesterday.

In one of bin Laden’s diaries, he wrote that his minions shouldn’t bother to attack the vice president because he’s “not important.”

The note instructed al Qaeda operatives to consider the president the most important target, the Web site ProPublica said.

But next in priority would be “military chiefs like the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff [or] the defense secretary,” the site quoted a counterterrorism official as saying.

The official then said the note described the vice president as “not [an] important target because that position has less weight.”

The entry wasn’t part of any concrete plot and it didn’t mention which vice president he was referring to, ProPublica said.

It was also reported that bin Laden set up a time-consuming method to send e-mails to his followers.

He’d type the message on a computer at his Abbottabad, Pakistan, compound — which didn’t have any Internet or phone connection — and save the missive on a flash drive.

He’d then turn the drive over to one of his couriers who then sent it from a distant Internet cafe.