LONDON - Following the criticism by the Archbishop of Canterbury on Osama bin Ladens killing, three other bishops of England have added their voices to the debate over the legitimacy of United States operation that resulted in the fatal shooting of the unarmed al-Qaeda leader. Their comments come after Dr Rowan Williams, the Head of Church of England, was criticised by senior politicians and the Armed Forces after he questioned the US military action. The newly appointed Bishop of Bradford, the Rt Rev Nick Baines, warned that jubilation on the streets in response to bin Ladens killing would not be very helpful. Obama might think 'justice has been done; but, despite overtones of 'atonement, we might reflect that vengeance isnt necessarily the same as justice, he said. Bishop of Bradford said: To say that this is about justice begs a lot of questions. Making people feel better is not the same as justice. Osama bin Laden is no hero of mine and no hero of most people in the Western world. But he is a hero to many others and his death will, I suspect, lead to more trouble rather than less. The lesson for the West must surely be to adopt policies around the world which are 'right and promote justice and not simply use wealth and military power to promote our own political or economic expediency. Dr Tom Wright, the former bishop of Durham, who is now a professor at St Andrews University, went further. He suggested that the United States had engaged in vigilante actions by invading a sovereign country, and was operating outside the law to dispense redemptive violence. The US somehow has to learn that it is not the worlds policeman, and that other peoples sovereign territories are not simply an extension of Washingtons remit, he wrote in the Church Times. The Bishop of Buckingham, the Rt Rev Alan Wilson, said bin Laden should have been tried. In a Facebook posting, he said: Osama bin Ladens death is a military success, but he was a human being better put on trial as a criminal than killed in a way that some will call martyrdom. On Saturday, the Archbishop of Canterbury said he felt very uncomfortable that the United States had killed an unarmed man. He suggested that such action meant that justice could not be seen to be done. One senior British government source described the Archbishops remarks as very unwise.