As soon as legendary journalist Sy Hersh's controversial story on the Osama bin Laden raid was published Sunday night, critics pounced and skeptics ripped his account because of its reliance on anonymous sourcing and its lack of documentary evidence.

Now a respected New York Times foreign correspondent, who was based in Afghanistan and Pakistan, writes about a key detail "in Seymour Hersh's Bin Laden story that rings true."

Carlotta Gall writes that she also learned from sources that Pakistan's intelligence service, ISI, had kept bin Laden prisoner since 2006 and that the CIA learned about his location from a Pakistani informer who sold the information for $25 million — not, as the White House claimed, by tracking bin Laden's couriers.

"On this count, my own reporting tracks with Hersh's," Gall writes.

Gall heard the same story about the informer "circulating in the rumor mill" in the days after the raid, but it was too difficult to corroborate without any documentary evidence.

Two years later, as Gall was researching her book, "The Wrong Enemy: America in Afghanistan," she writes that she "learned from a high-level member of the Pakistani intelligence service that the ISI had been hiding bin Laden and ran a desk specifically to handle him as an intelligence asset."

View photos bin laden More

Bin Laden, the global leader of Al Qaeda, resided in a walled compound about one mile away from Pakistan's version of West Point, the elite US military academy, before being killed by US Navy SEALs on May 2, 2011.

After her book came out in 2014, Gall says, she learned that "it was indeed a Pakistani Army brigadier — all the senior officers of the ISI are in the military — who told the C.I.A. where bin Laden was hiding, and that bin Laden was living there with the knowledge and protection of the ISI."

Since Hersh's story was published, NBC News and AFP reported similar accounts of a Pakistani intelligence official helping the US locate bin Laden.

And Gall says it's a significant development in our knowledge of the events surrounding bin Laden's later life and death.

"This development is hugely important — it is the strongest indication to date that the Pakistani military knew of bin Laden's whereabouts and that it was complicit in hiding a man charged with international terrorism and on the United Nations sanctions list," Gall concludes.

View photos Seymour Hersh in an interview with the Associated Press in 1997. More

Gall also notes that she is skeptical of other details in Hersh's story — specifically that two of Pakistan's top generals, Ashfaq Parvez Kayani and Ahmed Shuja Pasha, knew in advance about the US raid on the Abbottabad compound where bin Laden was living. And she writes that Hersh's claim that nothing of value was recovered from the compound "rings less true to me."

Hersh vigorously defended his story in an interview with Business Insider earlier this week, saying the criticism was a symptom of "attack the messenger."

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