Jocko Podcast - 357: "Remember The Ramrods", With Medal of Honor Recipient, David Bellavia
Episode Date: October 26, 2022David G. Bellavia is a former United States Army soldier who was awarded the Medal of Honor for his actions during the Second Battle of Fallujah. Bellavia has also received the Bronze Star Medal..., two Army Commendation Medals, two Army Achievement Medals, and the New York State Conspicuous Service Cross. In 2005, Bellavia was inducted into the New York Veterans' Hall of Fame.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/jocko-podcast/exclusive-content
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This is Jocko podcast number 357 with Echo Charles and me, Jocco Willink.
Good evening, Echo.
Good evening.
Sims kept moving, and I stopped him by shouting to his back.
Sir, anything you asked me to do, I am here.
You know that.
Sims stopped slowly pivoting on the P-Stone.
He walked back to me.
I know that, Stash Sergeant Bell.
I've never once questioned that in you.
I took a moment.
It was a cool night.
The silence of this area of open nothingness
was now invaded by giant generators humming,
blasting lights brighter than a Texas high school football stadium.
An area that was essentially a path that required night vision two weeks ago
was now amassed with army heavy equipment,
trucks, cranes, and conax trailers of worker bee contractors and soldiers,
endlessly moving equipment 24 hours a day
for the big inter-theater move to Fallujah.
What do you got, Sergeant?
I am more worried about losing people now
than losing people in 10 years,
and I don't mean to disrespect
where you were coming from.
I just can't think that way.
We are going to lose people.
We will lose some of these men.
The reality of what he just said
seemed to impact him in real time
as if he was unaware of what was coming out of his own mouth.
He paused.
Sergeant, I don't know if I'm prepared for that either.
We both looked at each other.
All I wanted was the Fallujah fight.
I dreamed for this test.
I was so excited about the prospects of actually impacting this war.
Now, with Captain Sims, the reality of it seemed to hit me at once.
He looked at me.
Bags under his eyes.
Stress.
Worry.
His wet eyes seemed red from long hours and late nights.
No way around this.
I need you.
This is going to be really rough, he said.
We need you, sir.
You got us here and you will get us home.
Let's get as many back home as we can.
Yes, sir.
We walked in two opposite directions that night.
Captain Sims toward the glowing lights,
me into the pitch blackness of the barracks.
When I think of Captain Sean Sims,
I see him in his DCUs, bright in that night's glow of the light,
with only a helmet on his head and a sidearm on his leg,
walking into the light.
Right there is a excerpt from a book called Remember the Ramrods,
an Army Brotherhood in War and Peace by David Belavilla.
And that's a conversation that took place just prior to the second Battle of Fulubu.
Operation Phantom Fury the bloodiest battle of the Iraq war and the heaviest concentration of urban combat since the Vietnam War
Captain Sims was the commander of Alpha Company second battalion second infantry regiment known as the ramrods
who were organized in the third brigade combat team first infantry division
David Belavilla was a squad leader in third platoon of Alpha.
And so that was a conversation between an officer, the officer, the company commander,
and one of his non-commissioned officers as they prepared for the worst combat that they could imagine.
In a short time after that conversation,
they crossed the breach into Fallujah, where they met the enemy.
And prove their medal as soldiers as warriors and as American fighting men.
It was great sacrifice during that battle, including over 500 wounded Americans, 95 killed.
And for his actions during one house fight in that battle, David Belavia was awarded the Medal of Honor.
And he has written about his experiences in two books, the first book called House to House.
And a new book that just came out that I mentioned, which is called Remember the Ramrods.
And it's an honor to have David Belavia here with us tonight to share his experiences and his lessons learned.
David, thanks for coming out, man.
Thanks for having. We appreciate it.
That reading that section of the book, I remember when we were getting relieved in Ramadi.
My task unit is getting relieved in Ramadi, and the new task unit came to take our place, and we're giving them an in-brief.
And the guys that were relieving us, well, they were coming from San Diego, California, SEAL Team 5.
And I remember giving them a brief, and I was telling them, you are going to take casualties.
And you could see, even though these guys had been to Mark Lee's funeral, they'd been to Mikey Montsorres funeral a couple weeks prior.
But, you know, they got on the ground and there's me.
And I'm telling them, hey, you guys are going to take casualties.
It's a rough thing to face.
And that conversation that you had with Captain Sims, you know, and look, how old were you at that time?
I was 28 years old and you have that attitude like hey this is what this is what I was born to do this is what I've been waiting for
I want to go fight infusion these guys from team five God bless them what they want to do they wanted to get into it of course
and that reality check of hey this is where it's going and this is war and casualties are going to come it's a it's a heavy it's a heavy thing to walk into
I mean, hearing you read that, it's so, it's strange to me because I think of, you know,
the guys that get hurt are the ones that really know, you can get shot at repeatedly, a snap, a hiss.
I mean, you know, when you're first in-country, you always laugh at the new guy,
doesn't know the difference between incoming, outgoing, like, hey, what are you doing?
you're running for the bunker, right?
It's like when a baby's born, the pacifier falls and you sterilize it, steam it, auto-clave it, you know.
Then after like the second-third kid, you're like, you know, come on, put some more dirt on it.
It's good for his immune system.
The reality is that once you have been shot and you know and you see your friends that have experienced it,
there's it's not real until that happens and we remember the ramrods is a book about how we all are
trying to i used to think that i missed war and that for my entire remaining adult years after i left
the military i missed i missed adrenaline i missed the ultimate i mean you go into a job interview
and it's like, are you good enough?
What's on your resume?
You know, what degree do you have your credit score?
In civilian life, we like before we trust.
You go on a date.
Are you worthy of my time?
Do I trust you?
In the military, I trusted before.
I still don't like half of these guys, you know, but I trust them.
You know, like it's a totally different.
And so we look at those days and we think,
that was the best time of my life.
And there's also, we know that's weird for civilians to hear, right?
We know that that's odd.
And I thought those were the best days of my life.
And I realized it wasn't the war.
It was the relationships.
It was the people.
It was the sense of validation and purpose.
Every day I woke up, I knew what I had to do.
I knew I was needed.
And being needed in a fight is the great,
leading men is an incredible honor, but having a purpose in a fight is the greatest
experience ever. When you're being shot at and it's almost like the enemy is only shooting
at the guys they want to take out of the battlefield, you don't ever want to be in a fight
and not getting shot at. That means they're willing to keep you out there for a little while.
You're not exactly a threat to anyone. It's a great feeling to know that
this my generation every reason people are divided today our generation at war had all the problems
people have today we had gay people we had people different ethnicity different religions and yet
we cancel each other's vote out every year so we got in the same debates and then when the bell rang
we went out there did our job and and learned to live with each other
and respect each other and love each other.
And that to me is something that we,
everyone talking, well, it's missing.
It's our responsibility to remind our citizens why we,
there's not a dental plan in the world
is going to make you do what you did.
I mean, honestly, seriously,
is it college debt,
college debt's that bad that you're going to go
and do a vacation in Ramadi?
I mean, it's ridiculous.
It's absurd to say.
So do you grieve?
You know, you have been able to do something with your career that to me is, I'm tired of people saying, look what he did.
I want people to say, look what I can do.
If it's not inspiring to see people like you, then it's a waste.
Because if it's just about one individual, and that's why this award is so, this award is ridiculous.
Because what do you do?
We're team.
It's all about us.
However, there's one guy, you know what I mean?
The only award for the entire living for the entire war, it's not an honor.
It's disrespectful.
I can name you seven names from Fallujah alone that should have the Medal of Honor.
So now you put one award on someone.
What is, are we going to go and just eat shrimp for the rest of our life?
Is now the time to go and, you know,
go off into A&E and start a TLC show, my Medal of Honor life, you know, what am I supposed
to do with this?
No, how about we remember who we are every single day?
I'm still a soldier.
I'm still an infantryman.
I will always be a non-commission officer.
And I'm an example of my leadership.
And the greatest compliment a leader can have is when his subordinates eclips them.
and that's tough for a guy in his 20s running around with people don't understand this about the military
but we get a lot of guys that were Division I studs that brought a gun to football practice.
We get a lot of guys that screwed up and these are guys that could be playing on Sunday,
any sport they want.
There are times that you want a professional goaltend a little bit and be like, well, that's a hard charger.
he's smart and he's physically fit
I'm going to destroy his career
he's going to take my job
I don't want to give him a good report
a good counseling statement
I want to give him an award
and then you start to realize
that the reason why our military is elite
is because every generation
is better than the previous
and you have to embrace that greatness
that's what a leader is
a leader is saying this is what I did
look at what my 12 guys did
they're better men
they're better fathers, they're better citizens,
and they're better soldiers than I was.
That's what you want to be able to say.
And until you say that, you're playing paintball with a college fund.
It's not real.
This is what it's all about, is making it better for the next group.
Well, I think there's a lot in these books that definitely are going to help a lot of people
be able to move through these things.
let's get into where you came from a little bit.
Just a little bit of background on you.
So you're born, born in, what, 1975?
Yeah.
And up in Western New York.
How do you say your town name, Lindenville?
Lindenville, yes.
Population 838.
Is that right?
That's, yes.
It was like a 2010 census.
We're not going to get an arena football franchise anytime soon,
but it's a real small town, Apple town right off
farming community off of Lake Ontario.
And it's about an hour from Buffalo.
And your dad? What'd your dad do?
Dentist.
Father was a dentist, and he chose rural instead of suburban.
He could have done anything, practiced anywhere.
That's where he wanted to raise his family.
And what about your mom?
She was working at the practice.
She was stay at home, helped him out, was a partner all throughout.
Great family, great, great.
I'm the youngest of four.
And everyone has a master's, double masters, PhD.
I mean, these are, my dad was all about education, be a professional.
How'd that work out for you?
I'll tell you what.
It was weird that he, as a dentist, his whole thing was, you know, he had great empathy,
wanted to always take people out of pain.
And I would hang out.
My granddad was a, is still alive, he's 102.
And he was a Normandy vet.
He did Sicily, North Africa, and Normandy.
Let's get him on the podcast, by the way.
I'll tell you what, that'll be a 12-hour.
He won't shut up.
Just give him Olive Garden, and he'll just keep talking.
But my grandfather would, my mom, it's my mom's dad,
and she had like 13 brothers and sisters.
And I would get these stories at an age that you probably shouldn't be telling.
I remember there was a time I went Target.
shooting with my dad. I had a 22 rifle. And I was, he was like, David, your grouping is good,
but let's try to get it center. And I'm like, because it was low right. And he's like, why are you
shooting, you know, let's get it in the middle? And I'm like, but that's where the femoral artery is.
It's by the hip bone. And granddad says, he was like, listen, no more stories about where the
bleeders are. You know, that's not what we want. But he would tell me these stories of combat that were almost
They were filtered.
They were Victorian in the sense that there was no better nobility.
But there was always this contrast of don't ever think the enemy is just, Nazis are horrible, imperial Japanese were the worst people in the world.
But they're human beings and there's something that happens to you when you go to war that you'll never ever look at life the same.
But it wasn't as if it was a warning of don't do this.
It was you can't ever appreciate anything unless you're in that environment with other people doing something together against evil.
So, you know, when I went to K-Fovo and K4 Bravo, no offense to the Clinton administration, I didn't really find evil.
You know, we didn't interrupt, you know, ethnic cleansing.
We found the ethnic cleansing.
We weren't a kinetic force standing up against Milosevic or the, you know, the Greek Orthodox
against the ethnic Albanians.
It was just kind of like we're here.
We're just hanging out.
Iraq was, you know, again, it was, I saw evil.
I saw it.
I saw people that wanted to hurt myself, my friends.
It's a, you know, you can be victimized by that trauma or you can be.
empowered by it. And you could say, listen, there can't be a bad day ever after that, right?
I mean, there can't be. There's nothing you can't do. So your grandfather made that impression on you
at a pretty young age? The stories were ridiculous. He's like, I'm sleeping, you know,
cold day and Bastogne. And it was a dead pig, a frozen pig. And he would tell these stories
of how he would go into these French areas that were friendly to the Nazis.
And he's like, my guys haven't eaten in weeks.
Do you guys have any eggs?
And they're like, no eggs, no nothing.
He's like, you're a liar.
And I'm like, this is a French civilian.
You know what I?
Like, they've been through hell.
He's like, you're lying.
You have eggs.
You've been giving eggs to the Nazis, haven't you?
And he's like, we found barrels of champagne.
We found ham, salted ham.
We feasted on that.
And I was like, what's the message here?
The message isn't.
my grandfather was pillaging of civilians.
The message is salted ham and whatever luxury you could find was the best meal of his life
because he didn't know if his day was going to end tomorrow.
And I'm 12 and I'm thinking, you know, that, could you imagine not knowing what tomorrow is going to be like
and just having this opportunity for fellowship, camaraderie, and a warm meal.
And you will literally do anything just for that moment.
And he's, at the time he was in his 80s, now he's 102, he still thinks about that meal.
It doesn't matter five star, four star.
He thinks about that meal in a barn, you know, next to a blown up 88.
Like, that's incredible to me.
So you got this on one side.
Meanwhile, your dad is all about education.
want you to, how are you doing in school?
You know, I was a, my parents raised me right.
I had a great school, great teachers.
Everything was good.
This wasn't, I went to college, and I was checking the box.
And I remember my senior year, I was in a library, and I was a goofball, and I was just
trying to be funny and be popular.
And the little TV on the little, you know, roller cart TV, they plugged it in.
It was October 93, and I'm watching Bill Cleveland.
get dragged through the streets of Somalia.
And I felt like a complete fraud.
I've never felt like this.
It was the closest I've come to an Outer about experience
where I thought, we can't be funny.
We can't laugh.
This is an American who dedicated his life to protecting us
and he's being dragged by a truck
and ripped apart by kids and Mogadishu and Blackhawk.
down. And I remember saying a prayer that I didn't know what life I would live. I had no idea.
It was going to be a dentist. I had 12 kids, one kid never married. I'm going to avenge Bill Cleveland.
That's all I wanted to do was just give me if it was a two-week missionary trip. I'd find a way
to get into the marketplace and Mogadishu. But I was going to stack up and just take a Polaroid
and send it to the Cleveland family to say, we got them. And the one thing,
that I never understood about soldiering was how important avenging loss is and how what that
means for your morale, what that means for a family. And again, that's another disconnect with
civilians, but knowing that the person that destroyed your life and took something away from you,
that we got them, when a war became nothing but IEDs, nothing but you never saw the enemy,
you're listening to music and you disappear in the mist
in a war where you had the chance to see the enemy
fix them and they're now afraid of you
that's why we fought
and Fallujah Ramadi
Muttedaya Bacuba
those areas
Mosul they gave us the opportunity to actually fight back
when so many of the losses in Iraq at that point
were you know ghosts basically
I want to get to the point where you get done with high school, but there was a part of this book that I promised myself had to be read so that everyone could hear it.
Here we go.
When I was 17 in the summer of my junior year, my dad started a group for teens whose mission was to wait until marriage to have sex.
The 4th of July was the biggest event in our small town.
Our population of 750 would balloon to 3,000 one afternoon.
The fireworks, the parades, the chicken barbecue, the macromay plant hangers made this the go-to location in Orleans County.
Inevitably, there was going to be a float for his new organization.
My father came to me and explained how difficult it was to get older kids to join his group.
And this is a group.
Like I said, this is a group for people that are going to stay virgins until they're married.
I was stunned.
How richly bizarre it was that teenagers didn't want to ride downtown declaring to all their peers,
they were virgins and not open for business.
With a sober face and piercing eyes, he asked me,
David, I would like you to be the king of our virgin float,
not having read the bylaws of the group to see if this sort of nepotism was allowed.
It was quickly revealed that this wasn't acceptable.
policy. There was no disqualification in being related to an officer of the group and naming me
the king of all virgins without a proper vote or at least having a board meeting.
I was a good kid, shy, not exactly a ladies man, and in fact, a real bona fide virgin at 17.
I just really didn't want to be on a float, being pulled by a John Deere tractor in my hometown,
declaring to my entire community that my prom night didn't end like I had told all my friends.
I was introduced to my queen.
She was 12 years old.
Every other kid on the float ranged from the ages of nine to a very mature 13,
but I love my father.
I could not let him down.
People like you and if people like you and if they see you are waiting,
maybe they will wait too, he said to me.
Dad, you are far overestimating my ability to influence my peer group.
No one cares.
This is humiliating.
I rode on the float.
on a throne of chastity while girls who hadn't even reached puberty tossed tootsie rolls to my laughing peers
I wore that crown I wore that sash that read I don't until I do
That was the most emasculating 25 minute tractor ride of my life when the parade ended my dad came up to me and said
Something I never forgotten David that was a very difficult thing I asked you to do remember this if you live your life doing things that are difficult but that are right
You'll find the strength to do
tougher things when they count the most.
My hero asked me to do it, and I wouldn't have changed the thing, because it made my father
proud.
I know you're a courageous guy.
That was rough.
I can tell you, when I was 17 years old, that wouldn't be happening for me.
I would have ran away, I think.
You know, to me, it was always obligation was, you know, your father was your father.
And I love my dad.
And there were times that, you know, when you become a father, you know, when you become a father, you
you think, oh, I don't know if I would have done that.
I don't know if that lesson works out well today.
But it, you know, the toughest thing I've ever had to do in my life was love my army
when my army treated me like garbage.
And there's nothing more difficult than that is to love your branch, love your chain
and command when there's no reason to do it.
And that relationship with my officers was very much like,
my relationship with my father.
These are the rules.
You grow where you're planted.
No one picked their unit.
Very few people get a chance to pick their people.
And when they do, it's different.
But here I am, and these are my people,
and they're going to tell me what's going,
and I'm going to knock it out.
I'm going to find something because I would fear,
the enemy can kill you.
The enemy can hurt you.
The enemy can take your eyesight and your body parts.
but the shame of letting down someone that was an officer in charge of me or a senior NCO
was far greater than what the enemy could.
I was more afraid of what they could do to me than what the enemy could do.
And it sounds stupid to say out loud in your 40s, but I felt the same way about my dad.
I mean, this man was, he was 5'3, never told me to lie, and yet I'd look at his driver's license
from New York State.
I'm like, it says 5'9.
You're not five, nine.
What's going on here?
But that was my dad, and I loved him, and that was a ridiculous request.
A ridiculous request, but making him proud was everything to me.
Do you play sports in high school?
Yeah.
What did you play?
So we're a real small school.
We didn't have football.
So we were soccer, which is very difficult to get motivated for it.
But we did the basketball, soccer, baseball.
Those are my three.
And then you said you end up going to college.
Yeah.
And what do you plan in when you go to college?
What year is it?
What years did you graduate?
1994.
94.
Went to college.
Started off in New Hampshire.
And again, I went pre-med.
Biochemistry was the major, but it was the pre-med.
And then I had no, you know, really sheltered in a really small area.
And so I wanted to meet, you know, girls.
I wanted to be popular.
And so I figured all the guys I made.
meant in the theater program just weren't that interested in women.
It was really strange to me.
And so I figured I'll see if maybe I could be like a theater minor and just kind of hang
out in this crowd.
And I had no real ability to do anything.
And it was shocking that they didn't care.
Like nobody wanted to see me dance or sing or even attempt to act.
They were just like, you want to be in this group.
go ahead. I'm like, this is like a degree.
Don't you need to have some semblance?
It was just like walking around.
Everyone, like, everyone just like, no, put a turtleneck on.
You're a part of the club.
And you're going to spend money to get a degree in something.
And we don't even care if you're even good at it.
And it really, because even the science guys cared.
I mean, you had at least pass and do well.
No one gave a damn about, you know,
the fact that I couldn't do anything.
So were you in plays or something?
I mean, you have to be in everything, but it doesn't mean you're good at it.
You know what I mean?
Like, you have to be involved, but it's, and then like what you're graded on your effort.
Like you're graded on how much you smiled.
I like how this is confusing to you to this day.
Yeah, I was just like, this is like, I don't get it.
And so you wonder why there's so many delusional people going to L.A. and New York.
And it's because, you know, for four years, they're like, you are really trying hard.
I'm like, well, listen, can I work? Can I get a job?
We have a law, a federal law on a credit card that says if you pay the minimum,
and 20 years is what you're going to pay.
But you can walk into a college today and get a degree in Shakespeare on stage,
and no one has an obligation to be like, that's not a real job.
So, by the way, you're never going to make money.
What are you going to make at the end of 30?
Nothing.
How do you do a profit and loss?
There were a lot of guys in theater departments and film that just, you know, what is Andy Warhol, 15 hours of a guy sleeping, it's art.
Well, all right, you know, maybe you could be like Andy Warhol, you know.
So, yeah, it didn't work.
So how long did you stay in college for?
I stayed in for the remainder.
It was my senior year of college second semester, and I had a professor tell me, and so I was getting more and more rebellious in the idea of I felt like my friends were in the army.
My friends were doing cool things.
And I just was like, I'm doing this for my father.
I'm doing this for my mom.
I'm doing this for everyone.
And then these professors were just, I'm like, what have you done in theater?
What have you done?
Have you ever been in a movie?
or written a movie or anything?
And the guy's like, you leave this school,
you'll come back with your tail between your legs.
And I was like, and do what?
Teach?
Like, do I have an offer?
Like, what am I going to do if I leave here?
What have you, like, how are you teaching?
Listen, I go to the range.
Someone, it's a guy who really know how to shoot a machine gun,
teaching me how to shoot a machine gun.
It's not some guy who's like,
I have this crazy dream about an 84 millimeter rocket.
Let me give you a lesson on it.
They actually are subject matter experts.
I didn't understand why these people were professors and why they were doing.
And so I just, my last year, I just said, I don't want to do this anymore.
I want to leave.
I want to go and, you know, maybe I'll write a screenplay or maybe I'll write a book
or maybe I'll do something to show that I don't need this degree.
My brothers all had it.
My brothers all did it.
It was like a check the box.
I'm serious.
I went into debt.
so serious I'm about being an adult.
Like, if you don't take me seriously, I got a piece of paper that says I'm serious.
You know, this is real.
I put money into it.
I wasted time.
I'm a real, an adult.
I was like, no, I don't want to do that.
I want to do something that you don't think it's intellectual, but I think it's intellectual.
And I can't think of anything.
Every time I watch, I'm a big Buffalo Bills fan.
Every time I watch football in the trenches, I'd go to war with that guy.
A war is always a metaphor.
There just wasn't a war.
So I came home from college one summer and we had a home invasion.
These two drug addicts broke into my parents' house.
And I was like, this is my time.
This is my fun.
This is what I've lived my whole life for.
I grabbed Remington shotgun and I loaded it up.
And I was, I'm going to shoot these guys.
They're shirtless.
Shirtless guys just running around the house,
cutting wires off of TV,
throwing them into their car,
moving in and out.
I had a Rottweiler at the time.
I put the Rottweiler in the garage
because I was afraid the Rottweiler would bite him.
And I didn't want, like,
there to be a liability issue.
Like, maybe they were my parents' friends.
Maybe it was a misunderstanding.
But I was shook.
I was scared.
And I grabbed this shotgun.
I loaded it up.
I felt it.
just like I had done previously
and I brought it up the stairs
and I saw these guys. My mom had had
neck surgery. My dad was taking care of her.
They were on the other side of the house
and I just thought
you're going to murder these guys. You're going to
kill these guys and everyone's going to have to move
out of the house. Everyone's going to look at you differently
and what I was really doing was just buying time
right buy in time for them to do something and run away or and they didn't and they looked at me with like
zero fear and that hurt but that was that's you know 3 a.m. inventory no one saw that but then my dad came
out after these guys roll off they get arrested they go to jail the whole trial but right after
they drove off that day my dad looked at me and he looked at me in a way that was just
That was emasculating.
Having your dad look at you and say, you're 22, 23, and you're not ready for the world.
That was it.
That was it.
I'm like, I'm going to summer camp of bad haircuts.
I'm going to go, I'm going to get my Ph.D.
at the University of Fort Penny to Georgia in human studies.
And I'm never going to be, if there's a noise, anywhere I'm at, any where I'm at, any situation I'm,
in, I'm going to handle it. Any situation I'm in. And you know, you could be bigger than me,
stronger than me, you could have more skills in me, I'm going to tear your eyes out or shoot you
repeatedly. There's going to be a series of escalation, but the reality is I'm going to handle it.
I'm going to handle it. I had no ability to control my destiny. I had no ability to handle anything.
and the Army gave me the opportunity to at least say,
we're going to teach you enough to get your ass kicked in a fight,
but we're going to teach you enough that you can control your destiny.
And I needed that desperately.
But there was no war going.
I was 99, you know, end of the late 90s.
And it was just learn how to march and do PT.
And that's what I thought I needed.
So infantry.
They told me 11 x-ray met extra special.
And so when I get to Fort Bend, I'm like, I'm an X-ray.
They're like, I'm a Bravo.
And I'm like, what's that?
They're like, that's real infantry.
I'm like, no, it's not.
They lied to you.
But when I got to Fort Bend and Georgia, the first night, there were kids like crying and nervous.
I slept the best sleep I've ever had in my life in that because I knew this is who I was.
This is where I'd be safe.
There was no stress.
You know, these kids were like 1918.
I was like, this is nothing.
What are you worried about?
Like, this is why we're here.
We're here on this earth.
We were born to do this.
Now, we don't get a war.
That's the part that's going to suck.
Is we're just going to end up with a bumper sticker on our car.
We're just going to say we're a vet and get a free meal at Applebee's.
But listen, we offered.
There was nothing for us to do.
So you were that fired up like day,
one of boot camp.
I had no idea was I wore khakis and a button down shirt because I wanted to impress.
I wanted to impress my drill scientist.
I was a professional.
And they told me that I was going to be there for like 15 weeks.
And so I didn't, I knew I had to shave my head, but I thought I was going to grow back.
So I brought a hairdryer.
Right?
Where they shook my bag.
They're like, what piece of shit brought a hairdraft?
I was like, this is my first challenge.
Like, do I own it?
And I'm like, yeah, that's my hair dryer.
They told me there was a couple months here.
I wasn't aware that there was a payday haircut.
You didn't tell me that, you know.
But honestly, I had no idea really what I was getting into.
But the more I learned, I just, I looked at these drill sergeants,
and I was like, these are amazing.
The NCO became, I'm so glad I didn't go officer, honestly.
Because I saw these NCOs and I was just like, this is everything I've always wanted to be.
If I could have a son and I could see a person shoulders back, looking you in the eye,
and not waiting to speak, but listening, hearing what's going.
And if you don't know the answer, you say, I don't know.
Like, wait a minute.
What is this magic?
If you don't know something, you actually admit that?
And then you make a mistake, you say, oh, I did that.
but you know what it's not going to happen again this was like learning a new language a new way to
this was this was true north nothing else is north but that this is right this is wrong and and own it
accountable responsible and and ready for more to show that you're ready for more you take whatever
i'm guarding this little drinking fountain but you know what no one is stealing that drinking fountain
I'm 10 for 10.
No fire on my fire guard.
This is,
it was the greatest thing in the world for me.
So you go to boot camp,
really no factor for you.
You're kind of loving it.
Loving it.
AIT?
Is that where you go next?
It's all one station.
One big thing.
Yeah.
So infantry is all,
whatever you want.
And they said I was going to be mechanized,
which,
you know, Fort Drum,
Fort Hood.
It didn't matter.
I just wanted to do,
you know,
what's a bunker?
I mean, it just blew me away.
And then I thought to myself, wait a minute, if a bunker is this little thing, guys hang out in it and they shoot you, what's a window?
No, I don't, we have a different battle drill for that.
But I'm like, but it's really a bunker, isn't it?
And they're like, wow, this is a thinker.
We got ourselves a thinker.
So now these guys are saying, let's explain something to you.
A battle drill is like an audible.
You see the linebacker come up.
You see that you're not in man coverage.
Now you're like, I think we're just.
going to react to the contact. But in that reacting to the contact, a million things can happen.
And you've got to decide. So I didn't even fundamentally understand, I want to get close
enough to kill you. That's the game, right? So in order for me to get close enough to kill,
you have to stop shooting in me so I can move. I'm like, wait a minute, this is making sense
now. All these movies are making sense. So I got to keep your head down. So,
plunging fire is different than just shooting over your head, right? I don't want to hit you necessarily
do what would be great to take everyone out and but it's not the way it works. They're moving too.
They're getting away too. But if I can give you something to think about, I can get closer to you
and the closer I get, the more accurate I can get and what's cover, what's concealment.
Hey, the only thing, I would give one more class if you're going down range fighting in Europe or Asia or the
Middle East, what cars have engines in the trunk and what cars have engines in the front?
Because the first day you hide behind what you think is an engine block and those rails
come flying through it like a knife through butter, you're like, oh, those damn Germans,
they put it in the back.
That's the one thing I would change.
But cover and concealment, I understand this, right?
So now I get education.
We have to be educated.
You have to learn.
And having what these young kids have today,
what I didn't have,
all my drill sergeants were making up stories about Panama.
Everyone was at the soccer stadium.
You know, Bosnia, let me tell you how bad.
No, there was not Haiti.
You know, I almost jumped, almost jumped into Haiti,
almost did this, almost did that Gulf War.
These men and women today, they got stories.
These drill sergeants, these leaders are like,
Let me tell you why you want your chin strap on.
Let me tell you why that sappy plate's important.
Why we get low.
Why it's important to bring the elbows in.
What controlled fire actually is?
What do you want?
Hey, there's no drywall in the Middle East.
It's all concrete.
So when you start shooting inside of a close quarter,
that is coming back to you.
It's a tick-tac towing around, right?
A grenade is great, right?
grenade, throw the grenade and everything's over. Unless you don't have ventilation, now you just
threw a smoke grenade in a room, and the only people that know you're in there is the bad guy,
because you don't know where they are, you've never been in the house before, and now they all
know where the door is and where you are. So that frag, let's hope it was a smart frag.
And got, you know, all of these lessons learned that we never had, and we learned in the actual
battle and the ability to take information at the highest level, lowest level, and share
that information.
I've never been in an organization on the civilian side that shares lessons learned like
our military does.
And it's a combat multiplier without a doubt.
Yeah, no doubt about that.
So you're learning from the, I almost jumped into Panama dudes, which God bless them.
No, they were ready.
They wanted to jump.
They were ready.
And so what's your first duty station then?
Where do you end up?
Where do you get assigned when you get done with boot camp, AIT?
You're now, what are you, an E2 at this point, an E3, an E1?
So basically, but the only advice I got from the drills, the recruiter was you're, you can be a spec, you can be a specialist, E4.
Oh, okay.
Don't do it.
Oh.
You got to earn that.
Now, I didn't realize what I had to do is basically just not get a D.
Y for 12 months and it happens automatically.
But that first promotion felt like, you know, I was Thor.
I mean, like getting promoted and seeing the increase in your, you know, in your pay.
And like this was like a big deal.
So E2 to E3 to private, I have a rocker on my little private wings.
Hell yeah.
This was, I'm telling you, it was important.
It was special for me.
So I got, I got a duty assignment.
to Fort Hood, Texas.
And in the process of doing that, my son is born, and he's born with a kidney issue.
And so the Army basically is like, hey, there's no infantry duty station that has these
pediatric nephrologists that you need.
You've got one at home.
We're going to put you on a compassionate reassignment.
I didn't even know what that was.
And they were like, so go be a recruiter.
you got a good GT score
we're going to keep you for two years on a
compassionate reassignment until your son is old enough
to go where you need to be
and we'll keep you in Buffalo
I was like
you know they made up jobs for me at a recruiting station
and I just was miserable
I mean seriously
that's what they did that's what you did
that's why I did for the first 18 months
of my army career I was in a recruiting station
I would have volunteered to be a POW
with that point it was absolutely
There's no more difficult job than being an Army.
Any recruiter, everyone's disqualified.
The game should be if you finally find someone answering the phone, you know, at the mall,
I mean, you're just disqualified, disqualified, disqualified.
I mean, it's ridiculous.
Everyone's disqualified.
I remember one time I found a guy.
He committed to the Army.
I brought his packet in.
I had opened the door on like a, you know, one of those hoverboards just floating through
the office.
I'd go to my station commander and he's like, hey, this guy was born on Christmas Day.
And I'm like, yeah, people get born on Christmas Day.
His name's Christopher Kringle.
And I'm like, that's a weird coincidence.
He's like, you're an idiot.
You're an idiot.
You just talked to Santa Claus.
And again, no idea that there were people out there that would waste your time.
and that, you know, just you're, it was a corporal recruiting program where they, and then they give you an NCO rank.
And so at the time that September 11th hit, the Army, obviously, the military across the board, let's move people, you know, get on with your career.
So were you in that in there when September 11th hit?
Yeah.
So from 99 until, you know, September 11th, I was in a recruiting and they said, look, here, three choices.
reclassified to another job,
go back to AIT and get another job
that's near a place that the
Army will take care of the kid.
Get out of the Army
or go on what's an all-others tour,
which is 36 months away from
dependents.
And I'm like, well, which one gets me to the war?
And to be honest with you,
I love my country, I love my Army and infantry,
but recruiting also will make you want to go to war too.
I don't do anything to get the hell out of that oven.
They're like Germany.
and I'm like Germany, what is it, the Big Red One?
And I'm like, I've seen the movie.
Like, I love the Big Red I want to be in the Big Red One.
Afghanistan?
Are they going to Afghanistan?
They're like, oh, no, no, no.
Big Red One hasn't done anything since 1996.
You are only in charge of the very dangerous battleground of Kosovo.
And I was like, Kosovo is a war, right?
And they're like, technically, it's a war.
I mean, you're not going to get combat pay, but you get like combat almost pay.
You know what I mean?
It could be.
So that was our big fight.
We were peacekeepers.
Forward deployed, Germany, peacekeepers.
And the big red one really hadn't been the big red one for a long time since the Gulf.
And even in the Gulf War, we were kind of like the fake barn door that Saddam chased, you know, in the Gulf War.
So it wasn't the Vietnam big Red Juan or the World War II big Red Juan or obviously the first World War.
It was the peacetime peacekeeper stuff.
And so I said sign me up.
I want to do it.
I want to do anything that isn't recruiting.
And that's what you did.
So you go over there and how did you enjoy your time in Kosovo?
Well, it was a six-month tour that became a nine-month tour.
And no offense to the Minnesota National Guard.
But I don't think you got a relief by the Minnesota National Guard.
Did you?
You always know if, listen, National Guard units are incredible and they're awesome.
But when, you know, a group that had never ever, we got relieved by a National Guard unit
that was calling like their Sergeant Major Phil.
And like, I was like, what?
It was a totally different world.
I never experienced it before.
So we were, we just felt like we were in the backwater.
Everyone was getting Afghanistan.
stand. But my
units in the second infantry
2-2 infantry,
the ramrods, and first ID,
an alpha company, Captain Walter,
Captain Sims together,
Colonel Newell, Sarmajor Faulkberg,
Sergeant Major Bonn. These guys
all decided to take that nine months
of Coastville, three months extended,
and make it the practice for
Iraq. And I got
to tell you what, that saved so many lives.
Because not only were we together
for two years, right,
with 15-hour patrols of watching dogs mate, you know, in Kosovo, nothing happening,
begging for someone.
I mean, nothing was going on.
But after that 15 hours, you're in the snow and you're training for the desert.
You're not going to wear that baklava.
You're not going to wear those boots.
Get in your desert uniform.
Get out there in the snow.
And let's train for Iraq in Kosovo.
We got all the rounds we wanted.
Whatever we wanted.
Claymore, never seen a Claymore since Basic.
You know, whatever we wanted we had access to,
and we blew up pallets and grenades, palaces of C4.
We were ready for combat because of Kosovo.
Had Kosovo not happened, we wouldn't have got that training.
So we graduated to a level that on day one we could fight.
And that's why we were successful.
And then you guys end up getting word that you're going to go to Iraq, finally.
In Kosovo, we're told.
in the shoot.
So it got real serious.
We literally went our nine months.
I think we refitted for 60 days,
but that's like leave and requalifying,
and then right back to the fight.
So by the fall, we were in Germany,
and then we were three months, maybe,
I think is what we had.
We went right to Kuwait and got ready for Iraq.
I'm going to take it to the book here.
When the army deployed,
the ramrods to Iraq in February 2004.
We had a basic idea of where we'd be going
inside the country. We ended up at
Fob Normandy, which,
by the way, I got corrected by one of my
Vietnam veteran friends that they say,
he's like, it's Fobb. So,
I don't know, I've said Fob the whole
time, so there's been a transition,
tilt, and the Sogg guys
from Vietnam. We
say Fobb now. So, Fob
Normandy in Diyala province,
a section of Iraq between Baghdad
and the Iranian border, our area of
Operations included Muk, what is it, Mukdadea?
Mookadija.
Mooktadia, a mid-sized city of about 150,000 fits, one of your guys, was wounded in an urban
firefight in April 2004, only a couple months after we arrived in theater.
To the north of the city lay open, rugged terrain.
When Americans think of Iraq war, the images conjured up are the street scenes in Baghdad
or the flat expanse of open desert in the western part of the country.
But our A.O.
Looked more like Vietnam in 1968.
Thick palm groves grew in low spaces between gentle sloping hills.
There were canals and rivers that the local farmers had harnessed to turn the land so bountiful that they had become known as the breadbasket of Iraq.
Among the heavy vegetation and irrigated fields, small communities straddled the roads leading out.
They were ramshackle, impoverished places, but seated among them were wealthy Sunnis.
connected to Saddam Hussein's once ascendant Ba' party.
Below these elites, the vast majority of the population were Shia Muslims with strong ties to neighboring Iran.
After the American invasion, in 2003, a colonel of resistance formed to the American occupation in one of these rural towns called Sin Sil.
In the early stages of the insurgency, there were actually only a few locals involved who forged ties within Iran to secure important weapons, explosives, and ammunition.
The Palm Groves around Sinsel and its sister village became ideal places to cash those supplies.
When the ramrods first arrived at Normandy, the 4th Infantry Division had been battling this growing threat.
They had identified six men as the leaders in the insurgency known as the Sin Sil 6.
The 4th ID's intelligence guys had put their faces up on a wall map and then connected them to various known hideouts and accomplices with different colored yarn.
The first time I saw their bad guy map, it reminded me of a hundred.
Hollywood stalkers lair.
With Sinsil being the nexus of the insurgency's leadership, it became one of the most important
sectors in R-A-O.
Captain Sims frequently took us out there to meet the locals, drink tea with their leaders,
and discuss the needs of their communities.
Classic counterinsurgency, win their hearts and minds, stuff that came straight from the
Vietnam playbook.
Within 30 days of our arrival, the Sinsill 6 had grown to the Sinsil 10.
We tracked down and killed two of the original members.
When the Intel learned there were three brothers moving between Syria and Sinsel to arrange another flow of weapons to that area, they ended up on a yarn crossed wall map too.
One of our special operations teams located, trapped, and killed one of the brothers.
The other two escaped.
Each time we thought we dealt with the Sinsel a crippling blow, they emerged stronger with even more support from the local population.
It was like fighting a contagious virus.
For every patient we treated, three more infections would crop up.
The Sinsil 10 grew to Sinsil 20 and then 30.
After that, we just lost track as a wave of recruits, organizers, and well-trained Iranian operatives flooded into the breadbasket.
That spring, the insurgency erupted all over the country.
Between the first Shia uprising that displaced the Sunni ruling class rebellion, nearly every coalition unit was inundated with insurgents, planning IDs in their operational area, executing ambushes and launching attacks at key targets.
As the weeks were on, our trips to Sinsel turned into a kinetic version of Groundhog Day.
We'd go out so Captain Sims could continue to try to develop relationships with the local Iraqi power base.
While he was talking to them drinking tea, the insurgents would be alerted to our presence and establish ambushes for us.
So that just kind of paints a picture of what you guys rolled into.
Yeah, the fourth infantry division, you know, at the, you know, so we started to see.
the extensions. You had a stop loss that was going on when Iraq kicked off, and a lot of people
thought they were out of the military and they were kept in. But then you had the first real
extensions. I think it was Karbala was the first armored division that did, they were supposed to do
nine months. Everyone was going to do nine months. And then it became a year. And then a year became
15. And there were units that were doing 18. And so we didn't really have, with the kinetic
tempo that was going on, Afghanistan, Iraq, how are we going to replace these units? Are they doing
sustainment, you know,
stabilization operations,
or are these still kinetic,
you know, I didn't, we were told,
don't, you're not getting a CIB,
you're not going to get a common infantry badge,
and you're not going to get a combat patch.
They told you that when you got to Iraq for 2004?
The mission accomplished,
the war was over,
you had to be engaged by the enemy
that kept changing what engagement was.
So check this out.
So you got there in February.
I was there as well.
I was wrapping up my first deployment.
So I got there in 2003.
I was in Baghdad.
And in April of 2004, so just after you arrived, we went, my task unit, my, it was actually
just a platoon.
It was my platoon.
We went and we captured one of Sauter's top lieutenants down in Najaf.
Yeah.
We were there.
Okay.
So when we did that, it ignited everything.
In April of 2004.
In April of 2004.
So the big fight was supposed.
supposed to be in April of 04. Fob Duke, which is the big fob that we created in April of
2004. Where was it? Right outside of Najaf. Okay. That is named after my brigade,
where the Duke Brigade, Third Brigade, First ID. That was, I've never, so you talk about the terrain,
you know, a lot of vegetation, humidity, Najaf was straight up. The oil bubbling. I mean, it is just
nothing but sand. And
the biggest cemetery
in the world is in
Najaf. And after August
of 04, they added
a couple kilometers, if I'm not mistaken.
That was a horrible.
Mugtano Soder was this toothless
self-defined cleric. He didn't
have the street credit to be a real cleric.
But his dad
ran that Mahadi
militia, Sotter
City in Baghdad. These
Mahadi Militia guys, it was weird to see
the gestation of the insurgency. The Mahani militia knew enough to get killed. They really were
not, they were wearing uniforms that were like gold and black. They didn't really have a whole
lot of tactics. When the Iranians started to bring the Kud's forces in Iranian Revolutionary Guard,
got a whole different, their indirect fire, much more accurate. The RPG 7 as opposed to the
the way they were trying to go after vehicles and tracks and the EFPs and the IEDs.
But the other thing was when we started to make Iraq the insurgent All-Star team.
And bringing in these boys from Chechnya.
I mean, when you would go through Fallujah and pick up passports and be like France, Italy, Chechnya, you know, Bosnia.
There was a guy in Dearborn, Michigan.
Can you imagine that?
You were so hell-bent that you decided to go to Iraq?
I mean, what?
But everyone from all over the world.
Najafo was the first time our unit was able to show what, I shouldn't say our unit.
Armored First Cav, Fourth ID before us, third ID before us.
But the first infantry division in that OIF 1 to 2 showed that tanks and Bradley-fighting vehicles,
belonged in an urban fight.
No one was using the Abrams in the city.
No one thought what's a Bradley fighting vehicle.
The thing about a good, and again,
all infantrymen think the mechanized are lazy and fat
and they just want to eat and watch TV.
And we hate the tankers in garrison.
We're beating up the tankers more than we're training.
You know, infantry hates tankers.
After Iraq, infantrymen and tankers are,
the best of friends. Because if you can support that, again, so many units, they take their
platform, their support by Firebase, it's a five-ton truck with a 50-cal, it drops you off
and it goes home. You carry that support by Firebase with you. You work in concert with the
Bradley's. I'm providing security for you. You're blowing pieces in the, you know, fun-sized pieces
for the enemy,
that 25-millimeter
high-explosive auto cannon
is one of the greatest gifts
the Pentagon gods have ever given us.
And when you want to,
I don't need a clear house.
If I can have a gunner put
two H.E rounds in a room,
it's over.
We're feeling pretty good about it.
We like,
draft kings has us,
you know, as the favorite.
What made me think of that
is I could see your leadership
telling you,
in what would it be in February or maybe even January of 2004 like hey you're not going to get
combat action right you know you're going to go it's going to be but I guarantee by April when that
when they when this when the Mottie militia militia went berserk right you're you're going to
get that combat action whether you like it or not it's common right because they went I mean it was
like a 180 degree turn we were I mean the I was up at Baghdad we went down and the joff to
grabbed this guy, Yakubi, who was one of his lieutenants, and we brought him back.
And by the time we got back, you know, for us, it was another mission.
Now, we had been targeting Sotter for a long time, but they wouldn't let us do it.
And they finally said, you know what, let's see what'll happen.
Let's see what'll happen if we grab one of his guys.
So they sent us to go do that.
And it was total mayhem.
I actually felt bad.
I felt horrible because the conventional forces got caught off guard.
They weren't ready for it.
And like in Sotter City went totally insane.
a lot of casualties there.
And I remember the Baghdad where I was, we'd get an occasional mortar in there.
All of a sudden, the front gates getting attacked.
I mean, it was on.
It was a radical change that happened after that mission.
And it really fueled the insurgency.
There's a couple of videos.
We were getting ready to go to Najaf.
We saw, I think the Poles, the Polar Army was at like a Camp Kilo, which was right outside of the city.
So the Easter uprising in April of 2004 was the insurgents attempt to cut Baghdad off.
And you had Highway 5, which went from the east in Diyala, all the way across Baghdad.
And you had Fallujah, which was always considered to be like the wild west of Iraq, even when Saddam was in power.
And they built their homes.
You know, like the Shia population, vast majority of Iraqis were Shia.
Saddam had the Baathist party, which was Sunni.
but was weird about Iraq's culture as opposed to any other Middle Eastern countries
that Saddam was able to make pan-Arabism in the war against Iran.
He convinced half of the country to die for Iraq, the flag.
And so when he puts inshallah on the flag,
this is like everyone was pro-Arab in that war with Iran,
which was very bloody and costly to the people over there.
And so by the time you're building realistic,
estate, if you're in a Shia area, you are very insecure and you're building your homes very
thick walls. You've got gun slits on all, I mean, you're ready for any minute. That government's
going to roll up and take your house. So you're, it's like siege warfare in a neighborhood.
Everyone is ready for what's going on. I mean, the glass that was embedded in the concrete
when you crawled over the walls. I mean, it was a very insecure culture. But Najaf,
was that Easter uprising, if you go to Arlington Cemetery in Section 60, April 8th and 9th,
you will see casualties from Ramadi, Fallujah, Dalla Province, Bakuba, Sadr City, Mosul.
That's really when everything started was in that, and that one week in April from the Marines
dealing with a vigilant resolve and what they tried to do in Ramadi and Fallujah.
they had to be basically, I mean, they were successful.
They took the, but you had Al Jazeera and Al-Arabia TV and the idea of civilians.
Everything became a PR war and it started with, unfortunately, with Abu.
And that horrific story where you had a National Guard unit abusing prisoners.
And it just put fuel on the fire.
What a, what a freaking horrible.
I.O. loss for America with these knuckleheads.
Right.
Now, you, you, you remember the contractors, the Blackwater contractors.
March.
That happens.
Where are you when that happens?
So first of true division's first brigade was brought in April of 2004 for the Fallujah
fight with the Marines.
And again, Ambar was, you know, 82nd Airborne, hands off, Anbar Province in April of
vote for. And the Marines take over Ambar. There's really no, the army that is allowed, they're there
blocking positions, support. It's not an army mission anymore when Ambar is run by the Marine
Corps. We've got the rest of the country, and there's a whole lot to do, by the way. But all the
attention is on the, I used to love that. In 2006, when I went to Ramadi, when you were out there,
it was, you couldn't say Ambar Pramish, you had to say restive Anbar
province. The rest of Anbar province.
Everything's like, Anbar province like they're eight-foot
Goliath, they're different people, they're so tough.
But Ambar really is the first domino to fall
with the pacification of, you know, when the insurgency
starts to really fall back, it's the sons of Ambar.
That area, though, in 2004, the first ID's first brigade
comes in to help in Vigil Resolve, which is
April, and then they basically lose that Fallujah Brigade, they pull out of the city.
And that was a policy, too, like just catapult the dead cow over the wall, let him get sick
and die.
We'll wait until April.
Yeah.
But because we had an joff and we were able to pick up and move, that guy Fitz, Colin Fitz,
was my peer.
He was the first squad leader.
He got shot in April 8th of 04 in Mook to die.
That kid got shot by three different weapons systems.
And what I used to love is when a new guy would show up, I'd be like, the AK-74 is a different ballistic.
Let me show you on his elbow.
And he got hit by the 762 by 39, the PKM, which is the bigger 762 by, what, 5-1?
54.
54?
And the 74 is, what, a 5-4-5?
I think so, yeah.
Yeah.
So that was the baby.
Yeah.
But all three.
So we were getting popped with, and we took out, I think over a two-day period, we took out 160.
And they saw that that Bradley fighting vehicle was not to play with.
It was not to play with.
And co-ax 25, go to Najaf, show that we can work well with Marines.
That puts a pin on a board where someone says, hey, I want to take Fallujah.
How are we going to do it?
Give me those Army 27 from Armored First Cab and 22 and 163 from First ID.
And so we were just there to help out the Marines in a block, one wing,
and ended up being something a little bit bigger than that.
But that's how we got our street cred.
You got an interesting exchange in here in the book that I was very, very stoked to see.
You say this.
The map board hung on otherwise jailhouse bare walls right beside my car.
the homemade crucifix that held my helmet and body armor.
No photos of home near my space.
Just the board with three maps of our area of operations.
One depicting the road net.
One depicting the political demographics and one topographic.
Surrounding them were the latest satellite and overhead images
that Lieutenant Colonel Newell's Intel shop had pushed down to us.
Hackworth says we need to outmooge the moog.
What hell does that mean?
Work harder.
Stay out longer.
Be ferocious.
Never let them outwork us.
Dig in sometimes.
Take the high ground when possible.
Grab rooftops without turning the lights on in a house.
Never do the same thing twice.
I wish I'd never given you that damn book.
Lieutenant Colonel David Hackworth had been a staff guy in Vietnam
writing counterinsurgency manuals in the Pentagon.
When he was ordered to put his theories into practice,
he was sent to Southeast Asian given command of the worst battalion in theater.
He transformed it into a Viet Cong threshing machine known as the hard.
core recondos they damaged the enemy every time they left the wire fits had given me
hackworth's memoir steal my soldiers hearts before we left Vilsack which is where you
were in Germany I read it and absorbed its lessons then one day at Normandy I sent
him a random fanboy email through his publisher and agent so you sent an email to
Hackworth's you know publisher he responded he was in Mexico dying of bladder cancer
Without violating operational security, I sketched out our situation and asked what he would do.
He offered excellent advice like a tactical dear Abby.
We corresponded often.
And this is what he wrote, you never let them outwork you and you will never be ambushed again.
Your men will bitch.
They will hate you.
But in 20 years, when you are all older, they will realize how much they appreciated the attention you paid to the details of war.
Work harder.
Do your best to leave enemy where you killed him.
If your command makes you police up the dead, make him bleed enough for his buddies to know what happened there.
Send the message.
Mess with us and get wrecked.
They shall fear our ferocity.
I don't know if you know, but this book right here about face, I ended up right in the forward for the new release of that book.
Oh, it's classic.
Yeah.
I'm a huge.
So the fact that he responded.
Yeah, that's like epic.
I wish that would have been smart enough to email him.
I wasn't.
And his ability to, because his whole thing in Vietnam, and again, Vietnam, we didn't invent counterinsurgency.
Obviously, that's what we're doing in Vietnam.
Outmuge the Muge is what he would say, because he was always talking about out Kong, the out enemy and out, you know, out G the G.
Yeah, exactly.
And I was out guerrilla the gorilla.
And so, you know, they're disciplined.
We're more disciplined.
But if you, you know, again, we were doing this thing where I would dismount.
out of a Bradley and I would see an ID and I'm like well we dismounted because they saw the tracks there
so we're not just like they do with the Blackhawks fake land fake land we're going to do that with the brads
you know dismount left ramp goes down no one gets out we drive around for another couple
kilometers dismount more no one gets out sometimes we stay in the Bradley sometimes we leave on the
first the third the fourth whatever never ever egress the you know leave the battlefield the
same spot that you dismounted, and you would walk up on these guys, and the feeling you get
after, you know, you're cold, I mean, people tell you, it's 50 degrees. Well, it was 120 during the
day. I mean, that's a huge drop in temperature, and you're cold and you're miserable. And even
though the smokers couldn't smoke, we wouldn't let the dippers dip. You know, everyone's going to suck
together. But when you get, you know, when you get the enemy and you knock them cold and they don't
even see you coming. There is Christmas Day is a beautiful day that we all love and get excited
about. But when you can shoot a terrorist that doesn't know you're there, it is the greatest
feeling in the universe to pop a guy who's like loading a fuse on an RPG. That is the greatest
experience in the world. You're going to try to hurt us, kill us, and you don't even know we're
there. That was, I took, I took the counter ID counter ambush missions.
they were the most important part of my life.
And I was just absolutely almost to a point where, you know,
it was a little bit of obsessive, compulsive about, hey, the tankers got hit over here.
They were using propane and bouncing a propane tank up to hit these guys at chest defalade.
There would be mobility kills, but they would wait.
You would see a van with a bunch of camera equipment.
we're doing a wedding, I want to see the video.
I don't think you're doing a wedding.
A casket.
You want to talk about the big,
I remember the day that I pulled my testicles out metaphorically.
It was the most brazen thing I've ever done in my life.
They didn't ever want us to interact.
You know, you're having a funeral, a wedding.
Women are respected, respect the culture.
It was the time I asked someone to open up a casket.
and that took as
because I'm telling you that could have been the end right there
but it just it didn't seem right
it didn't seem right what was in it
a body unfortunately I guessed wrong on that one
but I was I was thinking this is where I carry munitions
yeah I would do a fake funeral I do it
because they show up at the grave in the Jafi
you saw this in the cemetery all the time
you know are you burying a body
body, you know, but you had to think like that. And you're going to be wrong. And you're going to,
you're going to make a mistake. But your guys are not thinking like that. And we had to think
outside of the box to be able to fight the enemy the way we had to. But I guess wrong on that one.
But there wasn't a wedding. I got the wedding one, right? They were filming us at checkpoints.
I got that right. You mentioned fits. You talk about fits here. I remember watching.
Fits get hit over and over again, limping, dragging himself to cover, still shooting as he moved.
When he went down, I thought he was dying.
It was like a tectonic shift seeing him like that.
My world rocked.
When Fitts was gone, back at a hospital somewhere safe, I'd never felt more alone.
No one gave us status reports on our wounded.
Healthy looking guys who got evacuated died.
Men like Tyler Pruitt, a tanker medic whose foot was mangled by a rocket that struck
his Humvee's door.
We raced to the scene, cleared the LZ for a dust off.
They loaded him onto the medevac.
There was no sense of sudden urgency.
He was a medic and treated his own wound.
The morphine-induced smile and a go-kill that piece of shit, thumbs up.
He was fine.
Pruitt's war was over.
My squad found the plastic chair the insurgent used to ambush them.
My squad went through hell to track this guy.
Murder, hornets, giant orange wasps native to that region,
stung Joey Swanton more than eight times in the face as he was
clearing out of cash this guy had had on standby.
We stayed well past nighttime in a dense palm grove, soaked to the bone,
heads pounding from dehydration just to maintain the promise of shooting this guy for Pruitt.
The vegetation was too thick.
The trail dried up.
Two days later, I was drinking a cup of coffee in the Chow Hall when his platoon sergeant told me that he died of a blood clot.
This made no sense.
I would never have given up for the night if I knew I was tracking Pruitt's killer.
I would have lived out there for weeks.
I was shocked and felt selfish for quitting.
When Fitz returned to us, it was a Lazarus moment for me.
A Lazarus moment for me.
I just assumed he would be the same as he was before he got hit.
But that pipeline, those hospitals, the physical debilitation, it always changes a person.
I couldn't understand what he was going through.
I could see his physical pain.
Also, he knew the sound of bullet made when it smacked into bone.
Every round that cracked nearby reminded him of that possibility.
He knew the agony of lead mushrooming into your muscle fiber.
He blinked with every shot expecting impact.
Fitz was right.
He'd seen that side of war that I had missed.
The combat support hospitals, the emergency surgeries as men bled out on the operating room tables.
He'd woken up surrounded by burned, limbless men and women clinging to life as the nurses
and doctors struggled to patch them together.
His war was different.
That was the root of his caution when he came back to us.
It wasn't that he feared that for himself.
He feared it for us.
Fitz feared it for me.
So there's a next level badass, right?
He gets freaking shot with three different types of ammunition,
gets Kazevac out of the country.
And he's still wounded.
I mean, he's still messed up.
and when they say, you know,
hey, where do you want to go back to in America?
What do you want to do for the rest of your recovery?
He says, no, send me back to Iraq and be with my boys.
Yeah, and honestly, you know, at this point in my life,
I'm, you know, 28.
These kids are 18, 19.
There's a huge cycle of life that you go through at that age
and, you know, with a family and responsibilities and young kids.
Fitz was in the Army much longer than I had been done more.
His tactical proficiency, you know, watching him, it was always this, when you have two dismounted squads,
it's always a race to the objective who gets there first.
You know, you don't want to be the support element.
It's the worst.
You know, your local support.
And in training, he, you know, he was the guy, the big personality, the senior squad leader.
and every
you know
rotation we did
his unit was the
always the assault unit
and I second there
and then I'd be in the back of it
I'd move my position
in the Bradley in the convoy
I want to be in the back
they're going to hit the back
they hit the front
I never we never got any action
and so when I learned from him
though was his ability
to
the elevation
on an urban battlefield
you know, we talk about little roundtop in Gettysburg, that you're not going to get that
in the desert scape. You're not going to get that in the Middle East. So we're going to use our
buildings, but we're also going to be careful not to just go through the front door every time, right?
If we can go roof to roof, we'll try that. But we can also find ways that if I've got an outer cordon,
inter cordon, and I'm around a building, if I can have someone from the outside just clear two corners,
I can tell that guy coming through the door, worry about corner three and four.
One and two is good.
No one's going to be your right.
No one's going to be your left.
Focus on what's important.
Also, I was obsessed with booby traps, platter charges, doors that would blow up, grenades on a handle.
And he's like, listen, we had no time for that.
It's either going to happen or it's not going to happen.
I'm like, Fitz.
We just heard about a special forest unit, just had a building contained ID.
They lost everyone.
He's like, you tell these 18-year-old kids that there are wires out there that they're going to trip over.
They're going to think about those wires.
Their sawgunners aren't going to be looking forward.
We're not going to – I would go to the classes that Delta Force and Special Forces would train.
They take like two NCOs per company.
And guys like you that are just, you know, hockey helmets.
And they're talking about – and they'd be like, let's talk about this rationally.
And you always had like one intellect and one just like giant, you know –
He has like eight heads on his bicep, and he's just there.
And the intellect guy would be like, think about this.
What's the easiest way to move through a building?
And they put the flyers up, right?
They would send someone forward.
That's what elite people do.
Small unit, elite folks that have the training will do that.
We're not elite, right?
We're not going.
You go into a house and find a cookbook.
And leave one guy has a bullet in his head.
There's a family of seven.
they don't even know Dad's Dead and the cookbook is missing.
That's what you do.
We don't do that.
We're high intensity.
Know your role, know your lane, know your skill level, and master it.
Just master what you do.
We have to strong wall.
We have to have one firewall, keep all of our fire contained.
And you know what?
If it takes a break, a 20, you know, I remember the first time I got in a house fight.
Way before, and thank God our crescendo to violence.
was graduated, because if we would have gone to Fallujah, it would have been over.
We had engaged at close quarters.
We had taken targets out in buildings.
And every single time it would be a new twist.
And we learned from those twists.
And it allowed us to mature.
So by the end of the rotation, when Fallujah happened, we were ready.
But I remember my team leader took a shot, sawgunner took a shot,
and I was saying, I was still giving the hand at our signal.
Right? Like, clear, clear, clear. Like, bro, you just dropped a guy, you know. They know you're here. You know, after you shot the guy in the living room, I think the guy upstairs is aware, maybe the Americans are here. You know, there's no point in whispering. There's no point in, you know, the old days, you know, a rolling tea in a hallway or you'd see a couch or a refrigerator, and it'd be like, okay, I'm going to open one, two. Like, why open an refrigerator door like that?
You know what I mean?
Like this is what they trained.
This is what they taught.
It's all horseshit.
Put around through it.
Put around through the couch.
Put around through the curtain.
Don't even bother with the crazy.
The other thing was I found, in a minefield.
They were Italian toe poppers.
I never even seen a landmine in my life.
In fact, I thought they were RPG fans.
I really thought someone had buried, like a bunch of cigarettes in an ashtray.
They just put RPG.
G-Fins and there's wires connected them and I'm like oh my god oh my god what do I do what I do
you know and so I'm going through like at the range everyone turn off their electronics
probe their way back and I look and everyone's gone everyone got out of the danger I was still there
and I'm trying to get underneath one of the minds and put some C4 down there and I look over and there's
Fitz Fitz Fitz wasn't even near me he got to me here's a guy here's a guy
that wants to be in a minefield with me, only to tell me as two NCOs, that electronic stuff is
bullshit.
He said, listen, man, I love you.
I love what you're doing.
You're by the book.
But listen, we're not getting an EIB here.
This is no expert.
No one's watching us.
Who gives a shit?
You know what you do with a minefield?
Avoid it.
Get the hell out of it and avoid it.
And then he sat down.
He's like, obstacles.
Why do you put an obstacle out?
there. I'm like, well, you're watching it. He's like, yes, you're going to, I'm going to put an obstacle
down because I'm going to overwatch the obstacle. So what does that tell us? Tell someone's here.
Someone wants us to go through that. Now, now let's start to box around these open objectives.
Let's think and use what we're learning. That's what he did. He gave me like that right seat ride
every day. And when he left, I'm just like, now I'm the guy. And I don't know what the hell.
I mean, you know, I didn't, I was learning a lot too.
How long was he gone for?
So he had hurt in April, came back in August.
So that's a, you know, a pretty long, I mean, that was a big chunk.
But when he came back, I thought we were going to be the, you know, flying eagles again.
I thought we were going to be like a, the Road Warrior tag team.
And it was noticeably different.
it wasn't that he was afraid he was in the fight all the time
but it was like let's be smarter about this
you know there's no need to
you know I love taking the Bradley and bashing it through a building
it's one of my favorite things to do I mean we're gonna
and he's like what happens if we lose that Bradley
and I'm like we fix it he's like okay
in three weeks when you get the parts I just lost to Bradley
now guess what that's one less six guys
and I don't have that firepower,
we treat that thing with respect.
You're not bashing it through anything.
I was all right, all heartbroken over here.
Yeah, I was like, well, what am I supposed to do?
So we started to realize that the guys laying IEDs
didn't know the people paying them.
And the guys wiring it didn't know the people laying it down.
So why don't we start digging holes?
Why don't we start putting IEDs down?
Why don't we intercept this machine?
the only difference was I wanted to kill the bad guy.
And Captain Sims wanted Intel for Colonel Newell and the S2 shops.
And that's the part that broke my brain because I thought we were going to win the war by killing.
And that's not necessarily the way you win an insurgency.
Yeah.
So that's a point in a book that you talk about is your differences with Captain Sims and how you guys are reconciling those differences.
you know, he was of the mind, hey, we need to form relationships with a local populace.
We need to learn from them.
We need to support them.
We need to keep them safe.
You were like, hey, we need to kill all these bad guys.
And you guys got some tension over that.
Yeah.
I mean, if you could randomly go through a marketplace and, you know, every one of these dead
guys is on our Bolo list.
Well, isn't that something?
It could be that we, I mean, the way was telling you, like, well, 2% of the population
those are the assholes.
The rest of them are good people.
It's a city of 500,000 people.
It's a lot of assholes.
That's a lot of assholes.
That's a lot of assholes.
That's a crazy disproportionate of assholes living in a zip code.
So he was right.
And I think history proved that.
I think that the counterinsurgency model, the surge, the fob is one thing, but the
Cobb was a very successful way to say, look, we're not just going to engage in a fight
and leave, we're going to live here, we're going to stay here, we're going to own the violence
and only use the violence when it's necessary. I didn't grasp that. I was still thinking Old
Testament. And so the Iraq war in our year in Iraq, counter uncertainty was a huge part of
what we were doing. It was very early in the beginning of implementing that, but Fallujah was
not a counterinsurgency war. Ramadi was not that type of fight. Now, you had some incidents
that really kind of brought this to a head.
A couple incidents that really brought this to ahead
with Captain Sims.
One was this giant guy that comes walking down the street.
You guys are in a position
and this guy comes walking some Iraqi.
He comes walking down the street.
He's got a freaking sword.
And talk us through what happened there.
Look, I would always be shocked
that I would see a 12-year-old Iraqi
and he looked like a six-year-old back in the United States.
They wasn't a well-fed population.
And you don't see giant, this guy was like 6, 8, 3.30.
I mean, he was a big, the corn-fed, big dude.
And he was just acting crazy.
Now, we knew people were doing drugs.
We'd gone, you know, you can deal with all of that.
You've got the drunks, whether they're alcohol policies or liberal or conservative.
People are still drinking.
100%.
People are still doing drugs.
but this guy was at a and we were getting so many there was this weird schizophrenia going on in the military at that time
at least in in the army where we wanted to kill the enemy to get on a report but you also wanted to win hearts and minds and have a quiet area
so if you're going to have a loud fight that showed up on some general's radar you wanted it to be a fight where
Americans were killing bad guys and not getting killed you never wanted the report of you know you lost 10
guys and you killed maybe 20. You wanted to be overwhelming so that if you got on a general's desk,
it was because you guys were badass and killing. And the other side was you wanted nothing on the
report because that meant you were doing your job and there was nothing happening. So we found that
the first infantry division was, you know, doing a pretty good job of eliminate. OIF2 was when we
really started to see the enemy being attritted through special forces and other units of Marines
and Anbar and everyone else. And there was this weird, add-a-boy, you're making us proud. You know,
colonels are going to get stars based on that. But then you had the guys on the ground and in the
S-shops and in the Intel and they were like, and the SF guys who were like, you know, we're just
going to stir the hornet's nest. I mean, our green berets were like, I'm going to go piss off about
500 people and then we're gonna call you boys in to just you know that's what they did they
would go into an area we took a bad guy out we surgically removed someone but they have like 40 friends
hey you guys go handle that and this was the relationship this giant it was a day when we had
a big wig fly in and was looking at the area and they're like no contact just this is going to
be one night where you're just gonna new testament you know turn it all right you know
Orders are go out there and just do.
No, no gunfire.
Don't, don't get in a gunfight.
Don't get in a gunfight.
Can you do me a favor, Bell?
Don't, don't gunfight tonight.
That's what you get told.
And I, and it was legit, and it was all the way down, and I had no intention to get in a gunfight, but the guy's six foot eight.
I'm not, you know, gracey trained, you know what I'm saying?
I don't have the cauliflower ears, and I don't have, but I learned enough to know, you know, if I hit a guy and I pop them good or I use my helmet.
you know, a buttstock, something, I could subdue someone, and I got enough guys to zip tie him.
This guy was like, he was huge.
I mean, he was huge.
And it got to the point where I had no choice.
I slung a Mossberg, and I had an M4.
And when he was, he had my Mossberg, and it was slung on my IBA.
So when, you know, he had positive control over my shotgun.
And we had to put him down and it was just, he was really angry.
And the guy had a mental issue.
So he's a community local guy that everyone loves and adores.
He's a big gentle giant.
But, you know, whether he was drunk or high or both or who knows,
but it destroyed the community.
It destroyed our relationships with the community.
And it's the weird juxtaposition of combat where
a soldier could be honorable and protect his people
and a bad guy could be beloved and a really good guy too.
But when those paths cross,
it's why war's hell.
Yeah, one of the terms I learned from my army counterparts
and in Ramadi was good shot, bad result.
Exactly.
Meaning like, hey, this guy, whatever was wrong,
he was drunk or whatever, acting crazy,
and you wish it could go a different way,
but here's this guy, you try and subdue him,
he fights, now he's fighting you,
now you're fighting a guy that's six foot eight, whatever, 300 pounds.
Now all of a sudden he has your shotgun,
and there's just like, this is just what's going to happen.
You have to kill this guy.
If I walked away from it, now he's,
I mean, how many times I've had,
we had kids that would give, you know, numbers and four vehicles,
five pack,
coming this way. And, you know, we had leaders that were like under no circumstances will you
engage children at all. Hey, I don't want that on my conscience. No one does. But they're also
giving away our position. So if I'm not going to engage him, you know, lethal, we're going to
take this kid down and get him out of, if you let a guy in the battlefield, you know, point out
where everyone is and you're giving away everything.
So he has to be confronted, whether or not what the means you confront him are the way.
But when you're throwing a sword around and you're cutting soldiers and swinging it,
you know, again, I got myself in that situation.
I shouldn't have.
I did.
I found myself in that spot.
I had to get myself out of it.
We did.
But I learned a lot of lessons.
And the lessons are that, you know, when the,
the orders are no shooting you avoid it you're not in the open you go in you take a house down
you get on a rooftop you're not standing in the street you're not pulling security the way we did
had fits been there i don't think that would happen but he wasn't and you know it happened and
again there's look i'm reading little excerpts of this book this book is a is an incredible book
just there's so much in here there's there's entire storylines in this book that we're
not even touching on in what we're going to talk about today. So if you're listening, just get the book.
It'll really help you. This part is one of the stories, one of the storylines about this sort of
differences in thought between you and Captain Sims. And just given some more about Captain Sims here,
just to give some background on him. You say this, Sims walked like a man who had a boulder on his
but was too proud and stubborn to admit the weight was crushing him upright shoulders square
he made his way to us in some ways I suppose taking Alpha Company into Fallujah was his destiny
all along he was the son of an army officer who survived two tours in Vietnam his uncle also
fought in Vietnam completed two tours and was disabled by wounds received there his grandfather
was a 36 year two-war veteran of our beloved service Sean had been born in Taiwan went to
to high school in Korea and came home for college to the country his family had given their
lives to defend. Sims had been a high achiever never type A but rather a devoted studious and
introspective officer with plenty of grit he checked all the boxes Pathfinder an airborne school
Ranger school armor officer school at infantry officers basic he had been the platoon's top graduate
along with the weight of leading a company into the worst urban hellscape
U.S. forces had experienced since Way City, Vietnam in 1968.
Captain Sean Sims carried the legacy of his family's heritage on his shoulders as well.
It's a lot.
A lot for this guy to be, you know, doing.
Yeah, you know, I love West Point and Annapolis, great institutions,
but so many of these ROTC guys, you know,
they've officers are officers and and the good ones you know you learn a lot from bad leaders without a
doubt you know you learn what's what you don't want to be but the good ones sometimes that seed
gets planted and it grows and bears fruit 20 years later and i guess having someone that's so
intellectual and forward thinking that he's like there's a way that we can fight wars and not
lose our soul i would have more than
my soul. I mean, honestly, if you would have told me this is going to be the future, but you can
control the present and save lives and bring everyone home and be successful, what would you be
willing to give? I would have given you everything, everything. I don't care about being 40.
I don't think I'm going to make it to 29. No one's thinking about, you know, no one's buying a 30-year
mortgage when they're deploying to Ramadi. You're not, you're not looking.
at the future. You're looking at now.
And to have these people that were like, listen,
there's a way to do this.
There's a way to do it.
When a new soldier came in,
I wanted them to see the enemy,
especially if we killed the enemy.
That's something that if you're not accustomed
to moving a body off the battlefield,
why is that important? There's a reverence.
We're not out there, cowboys.
we're not disrespecting the enemy.
We respect the enemy.
There's a holy relationship
between combatants on the battlefield.
And you have to respect the enemy,
but you also have to acknowledge
that there is something special
about what is going to be needed
for you to be able to go home,
walk off, more importantly,
win the objectives that we're there to win, right?
So I can't have a guy
brand new in a country
who sees a body
and completely, you know, comes unglued.
This is a part of the business.
So here's the deal.
I don't need you to be on point for the first two weeks,
but I need you to follow up,
and I need you know what it's like to have a rifle crack next to your ear.
I need to know what it's like to be near a firefight,
even if you don't do anything because you're brand new.
But when the aftermath,
and we go through that limit of advance and we cross that battlefield,
I want you to pick them up.
I want you to put them in the bag.
I want you to own this because this is all of our actions.
And this is something you're going to have to get accustomed to.
And the reverence you show, the reverence you show,
because nothing would infuriate me as much as I would want to poke.
I'd end your life if you disrespected one of our fallen.
I mean, that's unforgivable.
But I also was highly defensive.
over the way the enemy was treated as well.
We're not savages.
We're not Russians.
We're not Chinese.
We're not Mujahideen.
We're American soldiers will conduct ourselves that way.
We're professionals.
And you will show respect to the enemy.
We're going to kill them.
And if they're dumb enough to raise kids,
my boy's going to kill your boy too.
That's just who we are.
But there's a way that you respect the enemy on the battlefield.
And understanding that, you know, this idea,
they're meat.
Just leave them out there to rot, leave them out there to be, you know, whatever.
There's a time when that's unacceptable.
Civilians have to know we're the good guys.
We're always going to be the good guys in any circumstance.
So now we're advancing through this deployment, and now you guys find out you're going to Fallujah.
How's that take place as far as are you starting to prepare in any particular way?
And what's the time frame between you guys getting tasked with going to Fallujah?
and actually getting there and like what time frame did you get tasked?
We were supposed to go to Mosul.
That was the first rumor mill.
And Charlie Company ends up going instead of us.
But we know that we're going to be used again.
I understand, you know, April 2004 Najaf, that was supposed to be the fight.
The fight didn't happen until August.
So the Army Command is realizing that this is the year we've got to start doing something.
or we're just going to be kicking the can down the road.
And Fallujah was really depending on the presidential election between Bush and Kerry.
The fight was supposed to happen in October.
You know, it's politics.
We're not going to fight a major battle before an election.
It'll look bad.
Wait until after the presidential election.
So that was November 8th that year.
And so we knew that we had our orders.
You know what's happening in the Army by how good your food automatically becomes?
And you know how, you know, something shitty's coming because, like, hey, let's redo their chow hall.
Let's give these boys some toilets, you know.
They deserve cable.
And so all of a sudden we start getting brown and root people and electricity.
We had power.
We didn't have water.
And all of a sudden, all these things start happening.
And we're like, uh-oh.
And then, like, we had problems with vehicles for a very long time.
And all of a sudden, like a GS-15 master carpenter is like, I can fix your roots.
rooms and you know you want a new gun tube for that abrooms i've got four in the truck you know
they were fixing everything every and then every i was like hey can i uh we were at one point on a
bullet count right at one point we had to be like how you got to every day come up with a certain
amount of bullets so that we're not you know we know who's shooting what when it was all part
of the reporting and then there was a time where they were just like hey what do you want
Do you want Claymore's?
I'm like, do I want Claymore?
Are you kidding me?
Pallets to C-4.
I have no, you know what I did?
So we had engineers, the new task force in the Army.
Platoon engineers, platoon attackers, platoon infantry,
let's go fight, you know, the global Giot.
We, these engineers are brilliant,
they're the intellects of the combat arms guys, right?
They have the prescription glasses that are fashionable.
You know what I mean?
They're super smart, and our 82nd engineers are great.
but they're showing me like a Gatorade bottle.
And they're like, all right, so we're going to put the C4 in the bottom,
and put some cardboard, and what do you got?
Links, shell casings.
Whatever you have, that's the metal.
We're going to put timing.
Now, listen, debt cord, timing fuse.
They're different, right?
I'm like, okay.
So I'm just there, like, you know, writing all this down.
I have no idea what the hell I'm doing.
I'm like, well, these guys said I could use shell casings at links.
why don't just throw bullets in these things?
I mean, that would be a combat multiplier, right?
It explodes and a bullet comes out.
Wow, that is a horrible idea.
That is a horrible idea.
So now you've got live around.
It's like, you know, it's a throw it on a bonfire too
while we're out of.
Mindlessness.
But at the same time, I remember these Claymores,
I had these, and I'm like, okay,
the court is way too short for a Claymore.
And so I'm like, I wanted to start 100 mile an hour taping
Claymore's to IEDs we found, right?
Because I figured that'll be, you know, get in a ditch, clickety-clack, and blow up the IED sound.
I mean, EOD was like the Easter Bunny.
I mean, we heard it existed.
No one's actually seen the Easter Bunny.
It was like a Sasquah.
When I saw Hurt Locker, I'm like, shut up.
Where were those dudes?
I have never seen an EOD, a robot, a guy in a suit.
They're amazing.
God bless them, but they were always EOD is here.
You waited for two days for EOD to show up.
And I'm like, I don't got time for this.
Let me just show me enough.
I'll blow it up myself.
So I got my C4.
I got my blasting cap.
And they're like, you got to crimp the blasting cap.
And I'm like, crimp.
When you say crimp, you mean what now?
He said, oh, you crimped too hard.
I'm like, I crimped too hard.
He's like, just crimping it enough.
I'm learning.
Like, how many?
know, ticks do I need?
You know, how many should I?
And so I'm getting myself in some really, really stupid dangers.
I'm getting nervous over on this.
It's so dumb.
It's so dumb.
And you teach you, it's like, you know, give a monkey a hand grenade.
You know what I mean?
And so we got to the point where I had these claymores and I thought, you know, I've got all
these alleyways.
I'm going to spray paint the backs orange so I could see them.
I'm going to take 100 mile an hour cord, and I'm going to time to the top of buildings.
So if a guy is coming through an alleyway, I'm not going to wait.
I don't want to pull security in every alley on a building.
It's like the Alamo.
We've got to defend ourselves.
I'm just going to clack a Claymore when a guy's running underneath it, right?
Not realizing that the little prongs and the Claymore are actually supposed to be in the ground for stability.
Right?
So it's like, Claymore.
And then when you dangle it on cord, it's like, it's like, it's nighttime.
Which way is it facing?
So the first time, man, it happened.
And that's like, you know, going to the zoo and you got that two hour window where the line is awake.
You know what I mean?
You're like super excited.
You're like gathering the kids and like, hey, hey, someone's good.
When you hear that, like, the windbreaker pants and you're just, you're like, spidey sense,
everything's like, oh, this is real, this is happening.
Here they come.
The bad guy's coming, and he's coming through the aisle, the alleyway.
And I'm like, okay, okay, okay.
Now it's like, do I hit it immediately?
Do I wait?
What's, you know, now you're nervous and you're, but you're the NCO, so you're trying
to be like, guys, let's not get nervous, but you're the one that's not enough, you know,
You're like, I'm my command, but I just, everyone okay, everyone drinking?
Everyone's good.
How's home?
Did you talk to mom?
You know, it's wasted in time?
I finally get the point.
I'm like, all right, I'm ready, go.
And this thing just, I mean, there's 700 of those 32 calibers in that thing.
700.
And that thing just went flying in the air.
I mean, flying in the air.
Like, it could have taken a satellite out.
It was the dumbest thing in the world.
And it was like throwing a bomb in the air, just like launch, like spindicane 40 millimeters right over your head.
And they were like, what did you think was going to happen?
And it was like I thought it would just like, you know, like a top attack artillery round.
But I'll tell you what, not only was that alarming for us.
That guy must to shit his pan.
That dude, I'm sure that guy's in dental school, changed his life around.
He got out of there, went back to the Philippines, and there's a productive member.
But no, you want to think outside the box.
Sometimes you get a little too much knowledge and it could burn you.
All right.
Let's get into Flusia a little bit.
Now, so for this, I'm going to the book, house to house.
And I'll tell you what, the arc of the writing and the thought process between these two books is amazing to see.
So you had written this one.
It came out in 2006.
Is that right?
Right.
So you'd written it maybe 2005, 2005, 2006, something like that.
So you're fresh off the battlefield and you're writing this book and it is an unbelievable account.
It's really, it's just an unbelievable account of you and your guys.
And then, you know, just to finish what I'm talking about, the way that arc goes into,
remember the ramrods, your new book, you can see how much you've thought about it,
how much, just the perspective of getting older and time and the way everything's impacted
and when you look back what it looks like now.
But to be able to sit for me and read these two books and just see that arc is incredible.
So for anybody that's listening, both books, they're both incredible books, get them.
This is going to the book.
It's house to house, an epic memoir.
of war and you say this I meet with Sims Ewan and fits for a final briefing we roll out in the
will roll out in the morning and our mission is now defined Sims details the assault plan and
explains our jobs with step-by-step precision each platoon will play a different part
in the initial attack Fulugia is a city designed for siege warfare and you talked about
that earlier architecture aside the insurgents have had months to prepare for this
battle they've dug fighting positions mine the streets booby trap the houses built by
and cleared fields of fire every road into the city is strong pointed mind and blocked
with captured Texas barriers Fallujah is shaping up to be the verdun of the war on terror
We face a battle of attrition fought within a maze of interlocking fortresses
Attrition is such a sterile word we'll be trading our lives for theirs
Sims makes it clear that our initial objectives will be heavily defended the insurgents have depended the insurgents have deposed
foreign fighters on the city's approaches. They form the outer crust of their defense in depth,
so we'll face them first. Intelligence reports tell us that we'll face Syrians, Iranians,
Saudis, Filipinos, even Italians and Cheshans. They're well-trained, ideologically motivated,
and armed with ample ammunition and equipment. They've trained for years to kill us infidels.
Some have cut their teeth in Chechnya, Afghanistan, and Somalia. They are veterans. They are veterans.
just like us a regular Islamist all-star team we can expect possibly 30% attrition at an urban
breach like this sims tells us I've been writing down everything sims has said now I pause
and stare at the initial casualty estimate 30% just to get into the city there's no way we
can keep everyone alive once inside the city obviously we will we will not use the main
roads they are all heavily IEDDed our
lead tracks must create their own pass with help from the engineers look over the maps
we'll have to improvise most of these routes I'm not going to rattle off what the
acceptable attrition is according to command gentlemen we'll seize highway 10 and
pushed into the industrial district expect some of the heaviest fighting in
this area foreign jihadists will use hit-and-run tactics but there are enough
fighters in the city for them to have a mobile reserve we could face counter
attacks during the first day. The enemy has the forces to mass against us. There will be no
calling in Medevac choppers once you're in the city. It'll be too hot for Blackhawks. We'll have to
ground evak our casualties to this cloverleaf east of the cities. East of the city. End quote.
The bad news continues as Captain Sims closes his laptop and turns to us. We expect the insurgents
have stockpiled drugs. We'll be facing fighters hopped.
up on dope again.
I look over at Fitz
and I know what he's thinking.
If this is true, these guys are going
to be hard to kill.
So that is a freaking
that is a
that is a bout as a heart of a brief
to sit there and listen to.
Bunkers, IEDs,
booby traps, interlocking fields
of fire, strong pointed
buildings. I mean, this is just
for anybody that hasn't been
in the military that doesn't understand
the litany of enemy power that I just went through,
you can't make it any worse.
It's not going to get any harder than what I just read.
And the thing goes, that day was the first day
that we realized we were actually going in.
I mean, we thought that the Marines were going to do,
we had Iraqi intervention forces and Marines,
and we were just on the flanks.
You know, because it was the fane,
the fake invasion.
Seals had gone in on the day that we were taking down Fallujah and took the hospital out.
And once the hospital was isolated, there was one road that connects, intersects Fallujah Highway 10, right?
And so you've got a northern side, which is these homes are all like honeycombs on top of each other.
South of Highway 10 is all industrial.
So there's two completely different ways to do mount.
And industrial as dangerous as a living room because it's wide open, anything can happen.
But it was so crazy that he was giving us an attrition number.
And then he was like, I'm not even going to tell you what command is expecting.
So we're starting to think this is a Normandy Beach landing.
This is the Higgins boats doors.
You know, the ramp is very similar to a Bradley.
The Higgins boat's coming down and you're just going to get whatever.
If you can get to a foothold, hold it and let the Marines come through and then it's on them.
Right.
That's pretty much the way we're looking at this.
I thought to myself, do I share that with my guys?
Do I take that back to the platoon?
There was a time early in the deployment.
My platoon sergeant is a guy from Missouri who is, I mean, if you went to central casting
to find a platoon sergeant, I write in the book, House to House that he learned to kill
anything that can shit outdoors at like four.
You know what I mean?
It's like, if you took a dump outside, this guy could kill it.
Your fair game.
Yeah.
And he would send these deer videos.
His mom would send him deer hunting videos and a deployment.
And I started watching them.
And there was a moment when a deer hunter will be like, hey, and the deer will be like,
and they'll take the shot.
I was doing that to insurgents where you couldn't get the shot you wanted and just be like,
hey.
And the guy would be like, what?
And you'd pop them.
And I'm like, this works.
This is incredible, you know.
So he was always cool.
Always like, you know, I was a meatball.
I thought my first name was Jesus and my last name was Christ
because that's what he said before my name.
There was no rank.
It was just Jesus Christ, Belvoir.
There was no doubt who was running this show.
It was him.
And I remember there was a day that he looked,
called me over to his Bradley and he was smoking a cigarette.
And he said, hey, look at me.
And his face was white.
And he was like, I just got, I've confirmed it three times, no time for bullshit.
We've got 200 to 300 white hots coming through this Palm Grove, and they're expecting to be here in about 20 mics.
And I was like, impossible.
He's like, it's orbital platform.
This is not a ground surveillance radar.
This is orbital platform.
They're tracking them right now.
We've got 300 guys.
QRF 20 minutes.
mass movers, 25.
That's how much time you've got.
Sustain this area for 25 minutes.
And I'm like, this has got to be like a candid camera, you know, what am I going to do?
How am I going to react?
And I remember thinking, the guys always knew when the spare barrels came out, shit was
going to be a bad day.
When you had time to set up a T&E and have a spare barrel, it was going to be a bad one.
But I thought, I'm not going to tell them.
I'm not going to tell them.
I'm going to prepare, like the Battle of Intium is going to break out, but we're just going to have our mags ready.
We're going to have, I'm going to set this position up and, you know, we're knocking down.
There was a guy stacked flour up.
There was like four rows of flower bags.
And I'm like, well, there's, there's position one, right?
And, you know, elevation, low, high, ditches, whatever I could find, a culvert here, a thing.
And we waited.
and we waited and finally the thing was like,
hey, I got the wrong 12 digit.
This is a guy relayed from a sheriff network
and like, so someone else is getting,
someone's getting messed up right now, but it's not you.
And I thought to myself, that's an incredible lesson
because you either train your guys and you're ready or you're not.
How important is drama?
And as a drama major, I can tell you
that I'm not very good at it, but I can tell you that if you're doing it for the effect,
because some leaders need that this is going to be the worst day of a gentleman,
prepare to defend yourselves, right?
That's the line.
You want to have a John Wayne moment.
Is that weakness?
Is that strength?
If you're really doing your job, let 300 guys come.
Ali, chow, you give me 150 meters to stay.
standoff distance and 30 seconds warning, my guys can eat a burrito and we're going to hold
this ground.
That's what I want out of my force.
That's what I want out of my guys.
So I thought to myself, do I take that information back and do I tell them, look around the
room?
Because you know that talk, you probably sat through a briefing.
Look around the room to your left and right.
Not all of you will make it out of this meeting.
You know what I mean?
You're like, everything's dramatic.
everything's life and death.
And over time, it erodes trust.
It erodes fidelity.
It erodes swagger.
So the one thing I wanted to be careful is with families.
You know, the family renting this group, it depends on what unit you're in.
Families are all about, you know, gossip and you got groups of wives that are going to the range.
Like, you know, they know who's deploying, who's dead.
It could be really, if you don't have a command unit at home,
willing to take these casualties and handling themselves as pros,
you can have some real problems in a unit with just gossip and whatever.
I hated the people that were calling home.
I hated the distractions of bills and kids,
and I tried as much as I could to get them away.
I know there's Burger King at the other fob.
Don't eat it.
Don't eat it.
I know there's a Pizza Hut at Warhorse,
and I know they have really good food and blue cheese, don't eat it.
I want you to be as miserable as possible, not because I hate you, not because I'm insecure
and I want to show you my alpha.
I want us all that when we eat blue cheese, damn it.
When we have a whopper, it's going to be because there's no more fighting.
You earned the whopper.
I know your wife and your girlfriend want updates and the kids are riding bikes and
shirk-treating.
I don't give a damn about any of that crap.
going on. And if you are thinking about your girlfriend or your wife or what's going on, is Jody
coming over, what's happening, you are not in this game, and you're no good to me. You're no good
to me. Your focus is on that moge that's cleaning his body of hair, putting in a bag and
saying his prayer because he knows he's going to die. He knows he's going to die. When I came home
from Iraq on leave, I met a Vietnam guy who was a tunnel rat. That's a shit job. That's like the
worst job of the world, right? And I was complaining to him about how I was mad that the UPS man
was whistling and happy. And we're going through all this mess. Like I could see these kids,
grocery stores, guys and their girlfriends at the mall getting a latte, and I'm like,
these freaking turd.
Like you have no respect.
Do you have a limp?
Are you stuttering?
Why are you getting a haircut?
Are you too good for your country?
Who the hell did the...
And I had an inferiority complex
and this Vietnam vet looks at me
and he says, you're going back in a week.
And you know what your problem is?
And I'm like, what?
He's like, you think you're coming back.
And I was like, I didn't know what to do.
I didn't have spit my mouth.
I didn't know if I should crawl into the fetal position.
What do you mean?
I know I'm coming back.
He's like, no, no, no, no.
In your head, you're not coming back.
If you fight like you're coming back,
you're going to not make the choices you need to make.
You're going to always think about someone else.
He's like, right now, close your eyes.
Casually notification team is talking to your little boy.
Your mom and dad just changed your star from blue to gold.
Do you see it?
all right, it's over.
It's happening.
That's your reality.
Now fight.
Now fight.
Now, get out there and realize it's going to happen.
You don't know when it's going to happen.
It's going to happen 62 or a heart attack on a jungle gym with the grandkids.
It's going to happen tomorrow with a bullet through your face.
You don't control it.
Give into it.
You're not coming back.
Fight like you're not coming back.
And you will never lose an inch of ground.
and you'll never lose a soldier
because you were afraid to not give them the fight you want.
It changed my life.
I'm like, is that what you,
is that why you guys are all insane with your long hair and your weed,
your woodstock?
He's like, that's how we fought, that's how we survived,
and that's the only way you can make it through.
And when I thought about that and I started to live that,
I was like, all of these things are distractions.
I want you to have a wonderful marriage.
I want you to have a wonderful family,
but you're not going to have any of those things.
If you're thinking about Halloween and about that bike ride, we got to go take care of people that are going.
And so we would watch Nicholas Berg, the beheading video.
Every second of that guy getting his head cut off by Zarqawi in Fallujah, let's watch beheading videos.
Let's watch the people in the towers that jumped out the windows.
The heat was too much.
They jumped.
That's what we're avenging.
that's who we're fighting.
Every one of these guys cut off Nick Berg's head.
Every one of these guys is raping and destroying,
and they killed our citizens on September 11th.
That's the mindset.
I don't want to hear about your family.
I don't want to hear about your wife.
I don't want to hear about shit.
Pay your bills.
If you don't have a relationship that you can trust someone to pay the cable bill,
I'm going to make this really easy for you.
Reenlist, okay?
Reenlist, because you're going to need the income, right?
we are here to do a job
this is our focus
anything else is sedition
you are committing a crime
to me you're committing a crime
to the country because you are here for a purpose
and I don't give a shit about what your ambition
or hope is right now it's us
I don't my dad didn't know my dad
you had a debt I don't give a damn
we got all these different walks of life
and socioeconomic issues
focus and that did it
that did it
And that's the best possible thing you can do for your troops.
I think so.
I hope so.
Hope so.
Fast forward a little bit.
Ramrod's taken knee.
He calls us into gravely, in his gravelly southern drawl.
There are times I think he's speaking of foreign language.
His southern action is so indiscernible.
It's like a cross between John Wayne and Ross Perrault.
Our task force is known as the ramrods.
Those of us in Alpha Company are the Terminators.
Alpha Company forms a horseshoe around Sergeant Major Falkenberg.
We get down on one knee and wait.
At first, he says nothing.
He spits a wad, a red man chewing tobacco into the dirt as he eyeballs us with a squint.
He takes time to look each of us in the eyes.
I stare back at him.
To me, he has always seemed as big as a grizzly bear and twice as scary.
But now as I study him, I realize he's wiry and short.
It's the weight of his character that makes him seem so long.
Men, I could not be more proud of you if you were my own kids.
We wait for him to continue.
He hesitates.
He's struggling with his emotions and we see his eyes missed up.
That sight sends a surge of emotion through me, part love, part despair, part blind loyalty.
I couldn't be more proud looking at how far you all have come and what you are about to do.
He pauses again and lowers his head.
His iron self-discipline fighting a losing battle with his heart.
That's all, go get him.
The mechanics and support guys start to cheer.
Somebody shouts, give him hell.
Others shout as well.
For a moment, I can't move.
Sergeant Major Falkenberg is our father figure.
He's the man I've most wanted to impress.
I've wanted and needed to believe he was proud of me and what I'd done with my squad.
I never felt I did anything to be worthy of my own father's pride.
My father was the first person in the history of the state of New York to go from junior college to dental school,
starting with absolutely nothing and accomplishing so much on his own.
I sought his affirmation, but always seemingly in vain.
I always felt I never quite measured up to his eyes.
To me, it was my fault for squandering so many chances.
Here, now, I want more than anything to stand with Sergeant Major Falkenberg as we head into the fight.
and measure up at last.
This time I am determined not to fail.
His few words have had a more profound effect on me
than any of the pep talks of the past week.
A great speech is only partly about what is said.
Often what matters more is who says it and how it is delivered.
Our Sergeant Major's vulnerability and love for us spoke volumes.
As everyone else gets up to head for their Bradley's,
I stay a heartbeat longer.
Falkenberg turns his steel blue eyes to me
No words are spoken
But in his eyes I can see something
A feeling coming my way
Respect
I gotta get you to read these books on audio man
It just it sounds so much cooler
Hearing you say it
Falkenberg is a guy
Who is
First of all he was 45
When he died
He was the first American to be killed
In the Battle of Fallujah
and you want to talk about like you're watching a movie
and the hero of the movie is the first guy to drop
and there's no explanation.
It's the most morale-killing thing in the universe, right?
I remember hearing that he was 45 and I was thinking,
I'm 40, you know, at the time I was the same age,
he seemed like a dinosaur.
Like that's the oldest person in the world, you know?
And his body on the stretcher
he wasn't even big enough to cover the entire polis litter
and the guy just was a giant in every
you know always had the worst rifle
eight you know an A4
with nothing on it he's like let the fancy guys have the fancy shit
I don't need it you don't need nothing iron sights
I just absolutely
adored him and and I always, he hate, I don't think he liked me. And that's the other,
no, I really, I could tell you with, with authority that he did not like me, but I had loved
him. And I, and I, and had he liked me, I don't think I would have, he was such, a, a guy who's
been in the military for 25, 30 years, they've been to every armpit, every butthole of the world.
They've seen it all.
There's nothing you're going to tell them that they don't know.
On the day we show up to Fobb, Normandy,
fourth infantry divisions on one side,
first ID's on the other.
Our two battalions, 2-8-22 infantry,
which, by the way, is the order of March at Normandy Beach.
And ironically, it took the first infantry division,
don't take the battle.
That's neither here or their bag in Normandy.
But their first in Normandy,
first, you know, that's their unit.
This fourth ID SAR Major steps up,
and he is the most eldest.
eloquent guy in the world. He's like, gentlemen, on the other side of that wire, there is an
enemy. That enemy will take your life. We are here. Learn from us. You know what I mean?
Like it was, they were dirty. Their uniforms were rat, you know, ripped and we were just, I actually
made noise. I starched by DCUs. I made like a, like a totally combat ridiculous. You don't
ever need that, right? And Falkenberg gets up after.
this eloquent speech about, you know, the world is a dangerous place. We are the beacon of
light and freedom. And Falkenberg just turns to us, doesn't talk to them and says,
don't trust a single one of those sons of bitches. He's like, they're going to steal your night
vision and go deer hunting with him. He's like, they'll put your night vision, they'll put it in
your gas tank, they're going to lie, they're going to steal squad leaders, I want to green to green
every five hours.
I don't want a single fourth ID guy
in your living quarters.
I've seen this shit.
They're your friends
and then they steal all your gear
and they go home to clean
and they go deer hunting with your night vision.
And the guy was everyone was like
what the hell's wrong with this guy, right?
But that's who he was.
He didn't give a shit.
If he was an elementary school principal
he'd be the worst ever.
He was an infantryman
and all he cared about was these
are my kids, these are my boys, and the idea that he would be the first to go down. And how that,
you want to talk about, you know, losing officers, losing senior NCOs, and these young
kids saying, okay, I'm not a platoon sergeant anymore. Now I'm a first sergeant running a battalion,
a ROTC lieutenant running a company. I mean, their trigger pulls away. But that, that to me, was the sign of,
You know, this is real.
Like, we'd lost 40 plus guys to that point in the deployment.
Every one of them stings.
Every one of them hurts.
But he's much more than a leader.
They become your mascot.
They become your empathy.
They're more than leaders.
They're the identity of who you are.
They're your validators every single day.
It's not a good day unless he says it's a good day.
You're not ready until he tells you you're ready.
and when that's gone, it is a father figure.
It was devastating.
It was devastating.
And now you're not even in the fight yet.
It would be like you're going to the Normandy beach
and the guy gets hit in the Higgins boat
and now the ramps are dropping and everyone's like,
what just, and you're like, forget it.
Forget it.
Everything's okay.
Everything's cool.
Keep going.
And you get the report that there's an angel.
That was the radio chatter, an angel.
We got a ramrod seven, angel seven.
You're like, you know, this, well, you know what, let's go.
Our mission is to get the guy that killed Falkenberg.
That's what we're doing right now.
Are you serious?
Yes, I got the mission.
The guys in this block killed Sarm Major.
Let's go get them.
It doesn't matter where we're in Bosnia.
We're getting the guys that got Sarm Major.
Falka Burke. Do not be the one to come home to a ceremony and see his widow and his
daughters and say that you didn't have something to do with getting the person that got him.
That's the only thing we can control right now.
This is the last one we're going to take, right?
But it was, you don't know when to, you can only compartmentalize so much.
And so these two books are dealing with 20 years after that.
And did we maintain our promises to our friends?
did we sit down with the kids we all talk about it
when you're old enough i'm going to sit down with you i'm going to tell you who your dad was
how many of us have actually done that how many of us have actually stood with a widow
i would hear a story of a woman that lost her husband in the war and she got married again
and i thought to myself that's way too soon that's disrespectful like how do you do that
your husband you loved him he loved you he talked about
you all the time and you're just going to marry another guy and someone told me he was like belavia
that was 12 years ago man 12 years ago let this woman move on with her life you're holding on
that you have no idea what she's been through you have no idea who this guy is you you can't
think like that this is these families have gone through so much and we promised that we would be there
Have we been there?
What kind of lives have we lived?
We said we were going to live for them and be twice as good because they're not here.
We have to do more with our lives.
How many have done that?
Instead, we're talking about suicide and addiction and how people have quit.
There's no way you're thinking about your buddy that died in the war if you're thinking about, you know, killing yourself, getting high or giving up.
You are betraying all of that.
We've been far too soft with this generation of saying, oh, it's acceptable.
That's a choice.
You make it a choice.
It's a valid choice.
It's bullshit.
It's not a valid choice.
You made a promise.
And if you would have killed yourself as we're stacking on a house, how would that have been received?
But no, you decide you're going to do it at home when it's over.
No, no.
We have a purpose.
and we have to honor our word.
And this book is about how I didn't.
I didn't.
And it took a stupid, this award that got all my guys together again,
and we realized we don't need any of the stories.
We don't need the glory.
We don't need the attention.
We need each other.
That's why we did it.
We need each other.
We need to be present in each other's lives and validate
and acknowledge that there's purpose.
and that we all have a journey.
And some of us are struggling, some are doing great,
but we got to honor those promises we made each other
when we thought the world was going to end in 24 hours.
At this point, I'm going to fast forward a little bit.
It's basically go time.
And I kind of have to read this part
because we get a new character,
gets introduced into this scenario here.
You say this throughout Alpha Company,
digital cameras appear and soon the men are posing for one another nearby our
embedded reporters take all take all this in they cluster together like new kids
in second grade watching the scene as awkward outsiders these photos are crucially
important a form of insurance against our own mortality a few months back we lost a
man and realized to our unending dismay that no one had a single photo of him to
display at his memorial service it was disgraceful surely this is in the back of
everyone's mind now this time
We will have a record of every soul who goes through the breach
Michael Ware breaks ranks from the cluster of journalists with Yuri in tow they come over to third platoon and offer to take our picture
The platoon lines up and they go to work the other embeds see this and promptly streamed to their assigned units taking cameras and snapping pictures of them as they click away they are no longer awkward
outsiders now they found a way to help us they circulate among the soldiers and start to fit in
They've shown us they're human and the company appreciates that after Michael and Yuri
Finally finish up I light a smoke and stretch out on the ground next to the track. It's almost zero nine hundred
The morning is crisp cold and punctuated by distant artillery barrages
Every few minutes in Apache thunders overhead fast-moving fighter jets criss-crossed above them in the sky
This is where I belong
It's the first time in my life that I've found my place
It's a reassuring thought that eases some of the butterflies fluttering around
around in my gut I wonder if it was like this for the soldiers of the Union Army during the
Civil War tending on the old campground and all quiet on the Potomac have been replaced by our
percussion heavy metal modern riffs of mud vein and dope but we're still basically the same
the details vary from war to war but no matter the epoch the camaraderie remains it is
a closeness that no civilian will ever really understand a Bradley swings
out of the column and starts towards us.
Lieutenant Colonel Newell riding shotgun in the turret yells at the troops as he passes.
He looks like Patton must have looked as he raced alongside one of his flying columns in a Jeep
dressed like he was ready for a parade.
Patton sometimes stood on the passenger seat to shout at his GIs.
Newell can't do that in a modern day Bradley fighting vehicle, but the similarities are
striking nonetheless.
Our task force is 100 vehicles long, strong.
Newell's track runs the length.
of our column like a steel sheepdog shepherding us forward as he passes by i hear him bellow let's go go go
so you got michael ware who's uh Australian journalist uh Yuri's the other guy that I mentioned
and where's he from is a Russian guy yeah and he these guys are in beds and how much did you know
about Michael where at this that when you first met him so Michael Ware was in my opinion Michael
was a public enemy number one because he was the face of Western journalism to the terrorists.
So all these beheading videos, they were trying to basically circulate through him.
He was embedding with both sides.
And so I didn't know what a journalist did, and I didn't really give it to him.
But when he showed up, I mean, really, I mean, what am I?
He showed up.
And he was Time Magazine, you know, CNN, all these things were going to work through him.
And he had the respect of being the guy that has gone to every horrible place in the world.
And so I didn't see him.
I saw him as a partisan.
I saw him.
He has an agenda.
What I learned in flutia.
And one of the reasons why I became a better reporter when I got out was because I had such, I mean, I grew so close to respecting this guy.
Because at a certain point, our radios are only as good as what they're, you know, I can't get on the horn at my rank and level and talk to a general.
the Marine Corps that's on a flank five kilometers away.
He would pick up his sat phone
and he'd call the embedded journalist with the Marines.
And he'd be like, listen, we need artillery.
And we need it now.
And I'd be like, damn.
Like, welcome, welcome to Team America, Michael Ware.
He was doing things and then he sat us down
and gave us his own briefing.
And that changed the way we fought.
Listen, you know, you get command and they tell you dispositions and, you know, I always, it's gross to say, but when you saw an enemy defecate, you could learn a whole lot about what you're fighting.
You know, diarrhea is a good, good sign.
These guys are nervous.
They're not healthy.
They're not, they're not, they're not, you could see the mucus.
I want that.
I don't, I mean, I want it from my, I want to see that, right?
Give me more diarrhea.
I want to see the enemy suffering and scared and not healthy, right?
Michael Ware gave us a briefing on what type of enemy we were fighting.
And the way that these guys, you know, they're rocket teams.
He's like, you're going to look for little designations.
One building is going to have nothing but rockets in it.
The next building, nothing but medical supplies.
The next building, just bullets.
If you start fragging out like you're doing, you're going to get the wrong building
and that whole thing is going to go up.
He's like, look, they've read your books.
They know how you'd like to enter buildings.
We would go into a building on the top floor,
all the stairs were removed.
All of them.
You would jump from a roof to another roof,
and they took out not only the roof,
but the second story as well.
You're falling all the way down to the first floor,
and they've got these rods and glass and constantina wire.
he's like you you there's got to be a way that you you acknowledge that if you're coming from the road
and you're going through a front door they know you're going to take that door right that's the
door they want you to take you would find serpentine like almost like a maze of just really
crudely put together cinder blocks maybe eight feet tall and they would just work you into a turn in a
turn and then you look up and that's the overhead where that pkm
is mounted and they're just going to fire at you while you're like a rat and a maze he's like
this they've had way too much time to prepare he's like tunnel networks
they know they have to protect their wires and and if they leave their wires in the open
there's too much artillery and bombs out there they're going to cut those wires all of those wires
are going to be dug all of them so when you see a hole and a wire coming out it's leading to a
house i've seen it i know what these guys are doing i'm like this is
This is Intel.
This is really good stuff.
And this is a guy who did not care about being famous.
He didn't care about being on camera.
He was just about wherever you're going, I'm going.
And I want to get the story so I can tell the truth.
And that's why he was hanging out with the enemy.
You want to know the truth.
Who are these people?
Where are they coming from?
I love that guy.
I don't think if he didn't film that house fight, there's no way that this award would have happened.
I don't think it was 15 years.
The video and his documentary and it's circulating gave our unit credibility, gave that award credibility.
I mean, we hear a lot of stories, you know, unless you see it or hear it, you know.
Yeah, totally.
I mean, the Chapman story is so unbelievable.
that had I not seen a drone footage myself,
that is one of the most incredible things
any American has ever done in the history of warfare.
Roberts Ridge and what they knew,
the birds getting shot down,
the seals working with Air Force,
and again, sometimes, you know,
those things help just kind of paint the picture a little bit better.
But Michael Ware had no.
business going into any house fight he had no business doing any of that and he did it and uh i just i
he's like family to me now i love him i i i just i i don't know i've never had a relationship with a
person outside of uniform that i could actually say i tell him now you're you're you were born in the
wrong job you you you you should have had a a rifle not a a cannon there was a a part in felusia where i i thought of
about giving him a rifle.
And the only reason why I didn't
was I couldn't imagine
what that report would look like.
If my guy got shot
because he, you know,
nutted up,
I don't know,
I don't think I would have survived that.
And that documentary is called
only the dead, right?
Yeah, yeah.
I remember when it came out,
somebody forwarded it to me like,
hey, this dude's freaking with the moosh.
Hey, this dude's doing,
this dude's with moose in Ramadi.
I'm like,
what, so I, like, what are you talking about and went and watched it.
It's, it's crazy to watch.
It's crazy.
It's crazy to watch.
It's crazy to watch.
He's, yeah, at some points, he's embedded with Americans, and at some points, he's embedded
with moosh.
And it's crazy to watch and see.
And then, you know, there's a story behind it, but yeah, it's a crazy documentary.
He's a, he's a lunatic.
Yeah.
I mean, I know, I love him.
I have another, I, I, there's valor that we show, people fight cancer, show valor.
People stand up to bullies, show valor, soldiers, cops, firemen.
And I never thought journalists could do that.
Every time I hear a journalist being so brave, you know, you had the, you know,
you read a teleprompter, you know what I'm saying?
You went to makeup and got your hair done.
Excuse me if I don't celebrate the holiday.
You know what I might just go to work today instead of having Wolf Blitzer Day.
But the truth is, there are guys out there and girls that,
a woman from CNN in the Afghanistan.
What's her name?
The lady that was bedded,
she's a real deal.
Yeah,
I know I've had a woman on this podcast,
Holly McKay,
and she's gone over and done all kinds of stuff.
It's crazy.
I'm like,
hey, she's like on social media like messaging.
I'm sending, you know,
like messages,
get out of there.
What do you know,
like Afghanistan was falling?
I was trying to pass messages.
Like,
you need to get out of there now.
But, you know,
She's committed to doing her job.
Yeah, and it's weird.
Man, the video of this, I don't know what to tell people.
Read the book for, this is my advice.
Don't watch the video yet.
Read the book house to house.
Spend a few hours.
It probably take you seven or eight hours to read this book.
Read this book.
And you'll kind of be like, well, that seemed crazy.
But, you know, could it have really happened like that?
You'll kind of have questions in your mind.
Oh, yeah.
And then you go watch the video and you're like, holy shit.
So that's my advice.
Read the book and then go watch the video.
Because there's a video that's just, you know, you watch the documentary for sure.
But it's crazy that he was there to capture this on video.
It's crazy.
There's a point in the video, he doesn't mention this, but there's a point where I took a shot at him.
And he's got the camera.
And I, you know, people think that, you know, you, you, in a close,
close quarter fight, you lose your hearing. You can't hear anything anymore. You're exchanging gunfire
for, you're totally deaf. And this dude is like, hey, you know, in the middle of a dark
house, he's a gay, with an Australian accent. And he's like, hey, it's the journalist. And I'm like,
dude, I'm going to, who the F is? I'm going to blow your head off, you know, why are you speaking
English? And I took a shot and he, like, the round like hits the side and he's just like,
And he's right back.
And for years, I thought he just put the camera down.
I thought he just put the camera down in the house and left.
And I was doing a radio show, and I said that.
And the first time he contacted me since the military, he's like, you son of a bitch,
I was in the house with you the whole time.
I have the entire video.
And I watched this documentary.
And the first reaction you have is, I was way cooler than that.
You know what I mean?
Like in your own head.
You hear yourself screaming, and it's like, I can't believe how scared I sounded.
And then you realize, I was scared.
You know what I mean?
Like, you, seriously, like, you hear a story, the Army loves to, you know, they will, they
want their guys, this is the version, this is what happened, very clinical, very sterile.
It all happened within two seconds.
That video is 29 minutes long in totality.
I would have told you that that entire fight was two minutes long.
That's way too much of just, and maybe we block, you know, when you go through something,
you forget about it or you don't think about it or you can't remember it or you don't want to remember it.
But all I can remember is these, it was so dark that you just think it's the same guy, you know?
And you just, you're not, you're bleeding, you're not bleeding.
The 556 almost cauterizes.
You don't get the, you can't drive.
If you're not hitting pelvis or someone in the face, they're moving, you know.
And so you're not getting stomping power.
And the other thing that was so strange is that like you don't know where your guys are.
And so you're constantly, you know, thinking that you're going to get to a spot and these guys are going to frag out.
or just start juicing, because you trained them to do it.
You trained them to air on the side of area fire at all times.
They're going to go through a spendex in here with 240s and M249 saws and 40 millimeters.
And I don't want to be on the receiving end of that.
So how do I just get out?
And then it gets personal.
And the moment it becomes personal is the moment where you go through so many.
In a close quarter battle, it's, well, you know, it's strength, it's will, it's, you know, spirit, it's what you're fighting for, your country, your friends, your family.
It all, it's the most schizophrenic experience that anything can turn that battle.
And I've never been in an octagon.
I've never been, you know, but if there's something you can do that can intimidate me in that 30-second window, or however long it is in a,
in a MMA match.
I at least dominated you enough
where I could do something
and I got you thinking.
Psychologically, I've got you thinking.
And sometimes it's just registering
that the guy that you're fighting against
is scared of you.
Right?
And there was a moment,
so the house fight is really three different fights, right?
You got the, we walk in and we get ambushed.
And then the tough,
the thing that caused me the most
thinking was just to stand in a doorway with a saw.
That was the nuttyest.
That, because you don't know, it's unknown.
Are there two or there one?
Is there, what is it?
It's all unknown.
You've never seen the house before.
And I remember, I hooked my finger to the second knuckle.
I mean, we're butterflies, you know, this is the training that in the military.
It's just, teet, teet.
I'm the second, and I hooked it because I'm like, if I go down,
This thing is going to keep firing, right?
And then I have a runaway.
And the only time I've had a runaway is on the range,
and you point the machine gun downrange and break a link.
And I'm about to do that.
And I think, wait a minute, this is actually, this is actually...
We'll take it.
But that thing fires a lot of rounds,
and now I'm in this unenviable position
of hoping the people that designed the saw,
FN
What's the
FN?
The FN people have fixed that magazine issue
where you could put a M4 magazine in
and they have it.
So I'm trying to feed a magazine
to get a magazine, get a little 30 rounds to whatever.
And I realized that not only are these guys talking to,
so that they had a room that had a stairwell going up
and a Jersey barrier coming out.
And I thought there were two machine guns
the Army has their own version, I guess it was a PKM and an AK.
Excuse me for, you know, thinking that PQM,
those two feet away sounded like two.
Yeah, it was a pompom gun in my mind.
But as they're juicing that door,
the platoon gets on one side.
I'm the other guy on the other side.
But I'm in that, I'm on the stairwell now,
and I'm looking over, and I got nothing left.
And I just remember them talking to each other
and I did not even wound him.
And for 200 rounds at like three feet,
that just took everything I had.
My mojo was done.
So I start beating tail.
And as I'm running out,
I just feel the heat and the tracers behind me.
And I'm like, I'm running out.
I felt like I was in that house with those two guys again.
Like I'm running.
I've never broken contact in my life.
And I'm breaking contact.
And someone just grabs my H harness as I leave the courtyard.
It just pulls me like a rag doll.
And I was just like, that's it.
And then we're taking fire from the roof.
So let me just get through this.
Just to clarify for everybody.
So you guys enter this house.
Yeah, yeah.
And there's, I mean, just think about what you just said.
There's a Jersey barrier.
Meaning that the Mouge had brought freaking concrete barriers.
Like a Jersey barrier.
Like a Jersey barrier.
Like you see on the highway.
Yeah.
And they had it up the stairs.
No, it was underneath a stairwell.
So underneath the stairwell, they have a jersey barrier to like, they built a bunker
inside this house.
This is what you guys are up against.
They've got, so your team's in there, and now they're engaging, and your team is
pretty much stuck.
Right.
They're pinned down.
They can't get out of this house.
Right.
And you're standing there, and you realize that somebody's got to put down some cover
fire so everyone can get the hell out of it.
there. Right. So you've got our machine gunners are outside and they're firing at guys in a kitchen
and these are two young kid, Joe Swanson, James and McDaniel. They have 240 Bravo's, which is the M60
version today and they're firing their machine guns into the house. The bad guys are shooting
from this entryway into a living room and the walls are falling apart. And so you've got,
and again, it's like throwing a log on a fire. You've got the rounds.
just going everywhere.
You can't get up.
You're literally hugging ground
and you can't get up.
And so I just kind of rolled
to the left side of the room
and the entire platoon
was on the right.
And I remember trying to squeeze my rifle
and it just,
there was something in the trigger well
and around it hit the magazine well
and popped the magazine open
with the spring and the bolt was,
I thought it was a double feed,
but the rifle was in op.
There's no way I could do it.
So I just said, throw me a machine gun, give me a saw.
And someone slit a saw over.
And that's one of those things where you ask for like, you know,
I'll help you lift the couch.
And then the couch is 500,000.
You're like, yeah, I need help with it.
The saw came over and it was ready to go.
And I just, I needed time.
I needed time.
Like, my legs were like, you know, lactic acid and just concrete.
They wouldn't move.
And it's just like, you're just like, this is it.
Like, this is it.
It's going to.
And so my whole thought process was get low, suck up as many rounds as you can
and the sappy plate and the helmet.
And if they're going to hit you, they'll hit your leg or they'll hit your, you know,
your arms.
But just bring those arms.
duck walk in as low as you can and just try to get well-aimed fire to keep their heads down
and just kill these guys walk right into the bunker they'll never expect that just walk right in
and it just ran away as soon as i pulled the trigger it was just for clarity what does that
mean when you had a run away so open bolt weapons closed bolt you know the like a machine gun
we train people for three second bursts right so you just as like
long as you pull that trigger down, an automatic weapon is going to fire rounds as long as that
trigger is depressed.
A semi, you got to squeeze every time.
When I pulled it down, I shoot up so many rounds that the automatic machine gun just was
seared and that was just firing the rounds regardless of where my finger was.
So you pull the trigger and it keeps shooting.
And it's just going to keep shooting.
It won't stop.
So in a training situation, when you were talking about branking or it could be a combat
situation but once it's running away meaning you'd let you off the trigger and it's just
bullets are still flying one of the things that you can do is you take the you grab the
belt of the machine gun the all the bullets and you break it off and then it will only shoot
shoot however many are left and then it stops and you know he had to make the decision well
should I break this off oh no wait a second this is a good thing it's working yeah it's
it's basically the same thing happened to Alec Baldwin no okay no but
But it's a really weird feeling, but you think in a, you know, in a combat situation, use it, right?
I just point it.
But the problem is that it's a 200 round.
It's a drum, a hard plastic drum.
And there's 200 rounds, and you don't realize how fast those rounds are gone.
Because once the rounds are gone, I don't have any more linked ammo.
I'm not a sawgunner.
I'm hoping that these guys are just going to get out.
These guys have the Australian Peel.
Anytime a special operative trades a grunt,
you get things you don't know.
So I learned Australian Peel,
but I'm never going to learn.
I'm never going to use it because I'm an elite American infantry event.
I don't break contact, right?
As the first time we did it,
and it's basically like, look, I'm going to go forward,
you're going to get out.
So I got the gun, I'm going to move in,
you're just going to, and I just need to know last
man. The last guy just has to get a last man. So I know everyone's out and then I'm going to go with
them. I'm going to fire everything I have and run away. And we're breaking contact. And I don't
hear last man. The gun's going crazy. And I'm walking on the stairs above the little bunker.
And I'm just kind of trying to bend, you know, like it's a leaf blower. Like just trying to like
get it in there. And if nothing's happened, it was a disaster. It was pretty bad.
But that's on tape.
You know what I mean?
It's freaking crazy.
Could you have not put that part in?
Like it would be great if only the cool parts were in there.
But unfortunately, it's everything.
You say, I mean, as you're writing about this, it's crazy to read about it.
The trigger still depressed.
My mind races.
I've suppressed the enemy.
Now I should kill them.
My heart urges me forward against the stairwell.
Get out of there.
Clear the room and juice these guys.
I try to step forward, but my feet won't let me.
My legs feel like they're chained to the floor.
I can't advance the 10 feet needed to end the fight.
Don't be a bitch.
Move forward.
I strain against my own body.
I cannot move.
The saw's bolt clacks back and forth as it chews through my ammo supply.
Okay, I probably have about 110 rounds left.
What if I make a push to get on the stairs?
No, my body still refuses.
My heart rages.
I zee the saw along the barriers.
More foam explodes out to the cascade on the floor.
It looks like snowfall in hell in the fire lit gloom.
Okay, I've got probably less than 100 rounds left.
It's time to move.
Get forward.
Finish this.
Finish this now.
I push.
I swear.
My legs won't budge.
The enemy remains unhurt, hiding behind the ripped up barriers.
I can't do it.
My heart seeds with contempt.
Then my saw runs away from me.
Sometimes with that weapon, once you go cyclic, you can't stop it.
I ease off the trigger, but it remains locked back.
The bolt charge.
charges on its own the gun spews at least 50 more rounds then clunks on an empty chamber
I'm out of ammunition I'm still in the stairwell room any second the fuckers under the stairs will pop their heads back up
See that I'm an open target and finish me my leg suddenly free up I've got to get out run
I spin right and bolt through the doorway thinking McDaniel and his 240 will be that in the four year
To cover my escape I don't see Misa anywhere
But both of the living room in the forier in the forier are
completely empty. I charge through both and out the front door as I fly into the
courtyard and automatic weapon clatters. Give me another automatic weapon. I scream.
Still standing in the courtyard. Yo, pull back. Fitz yells. I need 203s. Give me some 203 fire.
Bullets crack over my left shoulder and hit the outer wall in front of me. I keep running.
My legs pumping furiously. And then I'm through the gate and with my men. Misa appears
at the gate and throws me to the side outside the street. I got you, man. You. You're
You're good.
We're safe.
So you get out of the house.
Yeah.
I mean, honestly, that was pretty, I think it was the angle of the house didn't, you know,
the guys on the stairwell could only hit you when you're in the house.
And the guys from the window had to have either moved away from that vantage point.
Because if they were hitting, you know, McDaniel Swanson were right outside with a couple other guys.
And they were exchanging machine gun fire.
at point blank range,
if those guys were there
with the ammo that they had,
I mean, it would have been too easy.
There were pillars in front as well,
but for some reason,
I wasn't a fish in a barrel for him,
but I could feel it.
And what was so crazy
is that, you know,
I'm just thinking to myself,
my, you know, like when you're at that two mile
point in a run,
and you hit the wall
and your legs,
just everything is, you run so hard that you can't feel anything.
The adrenaline is just going nuts.
But you're like, I eventually have to stop.
And when you have to stop in that moment, it's a, it's a, you can't just stop out of dime.
You got to at least walk it out after you hit the wall.
I mean, I went from zero to 60 and I was, I felt my butt cheeks.
I thought I got hit in the, and the, in the ass.
And I, I think it was my heels.
Like, I mean, kicking my own ass, like, I had muscle spasms.
You know what I mean?
Like a Charlie horse just from nothing to full sprint in a fight or flight.
And I had soreness like on the back of my hamstring and my quads and my glute.
And I was just like, am I hit?
What happened?
And the realization that I did nothing to the end.
me. At least if I got two, if I got one, let's get the bomb. And the problem with Fallujah is that the
bombs became like a butcher shop. You know, you've got a big set play. You got like three fixed
wing. And I'm like, I need a bomb. Okay, here's what's going to happen for your bomb. Mr. I need a
bomb. All artillery stops. All the aviation assets are gone. You're getting your bomb. It better
be important and your number is 15 because 14 other guys need a bomb Mr. DMV, you know,
I need my license done now. And you are on a list. And if you don't have a radio, you don't have
rank, you're not getting a bomb. So we asked for the bomb. I wanted the bomb, didn't get the bomb,
but now I'm on the street with the platoon and everyone is ducking for cover. And it was just such
a horrific feeling of, I can't, I mean, I would have told you that that moment of my life
was the moment I was born to have. And it never in my mind ended with me running, screaming
with nothing, with no dent in Goliath's armor. It's just, it was crazy. Like, I can't believe
nothing happened. Now that being said, a normal human being would be like, well, thank
God, I got out of there and everyone in my
platoon is okay, cool.
Okay, let me tell you what happened.
All right, normal human being.
What would happen if you were in front of your men
that you care for, love and everything else,
and then you start giving orders and they're like,
no, sir, I'm listening to him, right?
That's what they did.
Oh, okay.
And that just pissed me off.
I lost it.
I went from, I can't believe this is happening, to F this.
Yeah.
You guys want to listen to Fits?
You guys want to listen to Lawson?
We couldn't get accountability.
Is someone in the house?
Is anyone dead?
Do you have all your equipment?
I couldn't get anything.
Everyone was scattered from still getting shot at.
So Fitz and Lawson did what we are trained to do, which is break contact to another building, set up fire superiority, get elevation.
eyes on, suppress, and then consolidate, come up with the new plan.
That's a normal plan.
That's a normal plan.
That's a normal plan.
I had Michael Ware, and he claims that I'm pacing the streets like a lunatic.
I don't remember that, but I do remember looking at Michael Ware.
And I just looked at him, and he looked at me.
He looked exhausted, sweaty, and he was just like, I felt like he was telling me you could do this.
Absolutely.
There's two guys in the house.
You're good for two.
You're out there, you know, thinking to yourself and you write in a book, like what the hell kind of example that I just set for my guys?
Exactly.
Then you start with, give me my fucking rifle.
Who has my fucking rifle, which is classic, right?
You'd, you know, throwing your rifle to somebody else.
You took the saw.
And you're like getting more pissed off by the minute.
But in my head, I was telling my guys what to do, and they were not listening.
I was internalizing that as Bel-Via shook, Big Sarge is not the same guy.
He's scared.
He just ran like a little bitch.
I'm going to look at loss and it fits.
These guys are cool, calm, collected, like they are all the time.
Right?
And I was just like, you, all right, all right.
Like, is that what you think?
I wasn't, there's no rational.
You're not, you're emotional and, and adrenaline's going crazy.
And the only guy that I can get any, you know, my, my Dr. Phil is an Australian from Time
magazine.
And he's like, I'm not going any.
And the bullets are, listen, I don't know what was happening to me.
I can't see me.
I can see him.
And there were bullets all around him.
just ping, boom, ping, and he was just like standing there.
So I'm like, this guy either has a death wish, or he really believes that I can do this.
And if he believes I can do it, that's all I need.
And so I was like, let's come up with a plan.
And my plan was a bomb.
I need a bomb right now.
You get some Bradley's up there.
Yeah.
Cantrell's Bradley lumberes up the street.
The platoon scatters as the Bradley.
arrive some some get behind it for cover the turret traverses his gun barks the shell
explode the shells explode high into the side into the kitchen and living room
untershire is that right what you say yeah untershire walks his fire back and forth
sysong between the two rooms he pauses his Cantrell sweeps the track free of the
shell casings which tumble hot into the smoking street Cantrell backs the
Brad up to up the street to where he can lay down a curtain of fire on the rooftops most
the shells go high, but the incoming shots cease for the moment anyways.
What else you got?
You think we got him?
Cantrell asks.
Michael, where?
Here's the question.
Over the din of the Brad's engine shots, he shouts, there's no way he's got him.
Sergeant Bell, there's no way.
Where had been in the courtyard when the shit hit the fan?
He had to dodge the machine gun fire from the kitchen.
In my heart, I know he's right.
But at the same time, there's no point in wasting any more ammunition.
The Brad just can't get a kill shot into the house.
At best, the barrage drove the insurgents away from the front windows overlooking the courtyard.
I think we're good, I tell the Brad crew.
We're back to square one.
I start to pace again.
Walking back and forth, my inner monologue spills out of my mouth.
I'm talking to myself in front of where in front of the men.
I'm livid.
The whole situation is taking my dignity.
I need to find the strength to get it back.
Honor.
What an overused word.
It's an abstraction.
Who can define it?
All year in Iraq, I've stood with my men.
If they had to fill sandbags until three in the morning, I'd be out there in the dirt and mud with them.
I would never give an order, then go relax as they worked.
My example is all I have as a non-commissioned officer.
I take pride in that.
That is my honor.
I've always told my men not to be afraid in combat.
When the bullets start flying, they need to man up and dish it back tenfold.
How many times have I drilled this into them?
Perhaps telling them to be unafraid is unrealistic.
We're all human.
Fear walks with us in every battle.
Yet we cannot allow fear to dictate us who we are and how we act
We cannot let it control us we must master it
That is another essential element of honor as I storm around in the street struggling with myself
Where regards me curiously the last thing I want right now is a journalist watching me grapple with my own demons
I turn away and pace back up the street slipping on a couple of 25 millimeter shell casings in the process
Another spray of sparks flares around me do I
have the balls do I have the nuts to do what my fucking heart wants me to do if I don't go in
They'll have won how many times if we heard that American soldiers rely on firepower and technology because they lack courage
How many times has our enemy said that man for man? They can beat us
That's nothing new the Germans and the Japanese said the same thing during World War II
Inside that house I surrendered my honor and my manhood
Now I have to take both back or live with the fact that they are right about me that
That is unacceptable.
I rant and swear with abandon.
Down the street, I see Sergeant Knapp taking care of my men like they are his little brothers.
I want to cry.
I'm so proud.
I love these kids in a way I will never be able to express.
I see their faces one by one.
John Ruiz, Lucas Abernathy, Peter Sokolos,
Alex Stuckert, Victor Santos, Brett Pulley,
Tristan Maxfield.
They deserve more from me.
I stopped pacing and letting me.
out a deep rattling sigh only where remains by me on the street everyone else has moved away
perhaps my display is convinced them i've gone mad but where is still here the journalist our platoon's
unofficial intel officer we stare intently at each other fuck it i say fuck it agrees where that settles
it i'm going back in it seemed very rational at the time again i
really thought there were two bad guys in that house. I know I'm good for two. I figured even though
they're talking, I had to have hit them with something. Rickishay, a piece of concrete. Maybe they
went through their ammo. But the clock is ticking. And my biggest fear, the reason why the, so the
Bradley, the streets are very narrow and there's high walls. The Bradley can only traverse at a certain
elevation so it was only getting the upper stories and the gate was only so wide right the my fear was
just give them something to think about so they don't run out because the last thing i wanted to do this
was we're looking for 10 of 12 bad guys which everyone's looking for 10 of 12 bad guys and and it was
in a structure of homes that was blocked off by four tanks so we had thermals they couldn't leave this
block they're in here somewhere and this is a couple more houses to go
this is all of them.
We think, we hope, it's all of them.
I don't want them getting back in the houses that we already cleared,
and now we're playing whack-a-mole again,
and we're going to get someone killed or hurt.
But again, talking, someone, I thought someone said we're going to die.
And so in the video, I'm yelling, we're not going to die.
And all the guys today will tell me, no one said that, that was in my head.
that I'm just, I'm, but they thought, they were like, dude, you were having a full-blown conversation, and there was no one you were talking to.
You're answering questions.
You're taking food orders.
Like, you've lost your freaking mind.
And, and I think Weir sensed that.
I think, I think Michael Ware sensed that I was coming unglued.
And so he decides to egg you on.
So he's basically like, this guy, I think we've got, we've got some hope here.
He's like, what are you thinking?
Without saying it, he's like, what are you thinking?
I'm thinking I want to do this.
And I was ready.
Someone gave me an M16A4 with a 203.
I had one grenade.
I had 140 millimeter.
And I made the mistake of giving magazines away because I saw,
the enemy was wearing our uniform because that Fallujah Brigade had all of our uniforms.
But I saw a guy running around with a Marines rifle.
And this guy had the bandoliers, the IBA, and I just thought someone died, and they got all of his ammo.
And there's no way I'm going to go in here and get waxed and then give, because I was, you know, we were carrying, I don't know how many magazines.
Their combat load is not.
So, you know, I don't want the guy to have everything.
So I carried five magazines.
One of them was empty, which was my mistake.
So I had four full magazines, and I probably should have taken much more than this.
You know, no, that was a huge mistake.
But I was thinking I don't want these guys to have too much.
But then, so, so the plan is, I need as many sawgunners as I can.
Now, doctrine is one thing.
You've got your, you know, in a stack, our military infantry, 7-8, you know, non-special
forces doctrine, is you got a point man, rifle, and then you go with your grenadier,
and then you got your automatic weapon, and then you got a leader.
team leader, squad leader, whatever it is.
What we learned very quickly in Fallujah is,
I need machine guns.
Hell, yeah.
Automatic fire.
I don't give a damn what it is.
Shotguns and machine guns.
So we, incredible for our battalion and our brigade and our division,
to just find brand new saws.
Most of these saws were older than our sawgunners.
One of the time we deployed,
we got everything was new.
And they got the combat saw,
the smaller rifle, the collapsible buttstock.
This was good stuff.
So we all carried saws, as many saws I can get.
So we had, I said I wanted four guys around the building, and I was going to run in there like a lunatic and try to push him out of the house.
And then our sawgunners would shoot him up.
That was, that was the, that was what we drew on the dirt, right?
Lawson is a buddy of mine.
Lawson died in 2013.
Great kid, great guy.
He was our weapons squad leader.
He had an M-14 only for Fallujah.
No night optics on it.
So when the M-14 goes away, the only thing is guys are Beretta.
And I don't know if you know this, but next to, like, gold,
a 9-millimeter magazine was the hardest thing to find.
You would do anything to find an extra 9-millimeter magazine.
They were just, you could not.
Every pog, you know, sitting around weather traffic,
they all had the 9-millimeter magazines.
We couldn't find them.
So we only had two magazines.
of 9 mil and he had his 9mm and that was it and night vision with no optics obviously it's a handgun
so we set up our guys as soon as i walk into the house the third time right so we're in the house
leave the house the bradley fights that's like the second fight and then i get in the house the
second time the real fighting everything is different that bradley fighting vehicle rearranged
everything in that place and the first thing i notice is
that whatever plumbing system they had is all over the ground and it smells like a menstruating
anchovy, right? It is horrific. It is horrific. I mean, just the foulest, nastiest, dirtiest water in the
world. It's slick. And I, there's fires everywhere. So the areas that aren't wet have fires
going on.
And I'm seeing these, I thought they were, at the time, the only light I had was night vision
and the blinking of the shots that were fired, the tracers.
And now I'm seeing that what I thought were bricks are just blocks of that plastic
PE4, the shitty C4.
And there's one like mushed on the ground.
And I'm like, this entire freaking floor is wired.
and I think I gave the instruction
because they're not very well.
They don't know,
they know as much about explosives as I do.
And there's like these really long,
you know, popsicle stick size blasting caps.
And they're like out.
There's some of them are hanging like speakers,
like just really poorly done.
Not, and the Brad just rattled everything.
So you got water.
And then there's broken mirrors everywhere.
and you could look up in the corner
and you could see a broken mirror
through the fire and the night vision
and you could see the corner
so they saw us coming
when we walked in
but that worked two ways
because I can see them
at the 7-11 that they built
with their little mirrors everywhere
and then I could hear
one of the guys
like doing his prayer
like he was saying the same thing over and over again
and that's when
he started to
he was screwing a fuse on a rocket.
And his buddy under the stairwell was holding the rocket
and he was basically fixing the rocket to fire the RPG.
He's got an open door behind him.
And I was like, okay, game's over.
Lawson's inside.
The guys are outside.
He fires that RPG at the, you know,
I'm not McGiver.
You shoot a rocket at a bunch of flasher
It's going to blow up, right?
I don't know what the hell's going on.
I mean, it wasn't raised in Mogadishu, you know.
So I don't know how explosives and all that work.
He's got that rocket.
He's going to shoot it.
We're all done.
So the plan was now, and everywhere I'm walking with the water,
it's sending a wake of little ripples everywhere.
So they know that someone's in here.
So I don't have any choices.
I just decide it's, we're doing it.
So Lawson doesn't even know.
like what's the plan what's
you know what do we're with we're just doing it he's just in there with his nine
mill with his nine mill he has following your death right and Michael
where with a camera and Michael where with a camera trying to get light what's your
night what are you seeing through your night vision that because
you got you got fires in there that screws it up you get no ambient light or is that
ambient light working for you like what are you seeing through your night vision so I wasn't
an airborne guy but I was told that the airborne infantry changed the way the
night vision works so when you make a sudden
jerk of your head, the night vision shuts off. And whether it was just running or just the motion
of whatever I was doing, my PS-14s were cutting off and turning back on. And it was the worst time
because the only reason why I got that rifle, it's got a P.EQ2 alpha, which is an infrared flashlight
and an infrared laser. Now, you're Antiochly with that thing. I don't have to aim it. I mean,
I'm popping dudes from the hip.
with a peak to alpha.
I've got a line right to you.
I could, you know.
So, but without the PF 14, it's crap.
And these things are just on and off?
They're just going, and it never happened before.
I had great night.
I was like proud of the way I took care of my knife.
The guys would break their knife vision.
Be like, you, irresponsible, horrible human being.
You know what a Marine would do to have that?
You get a seven bravo for the rest of your life.
You don't deserve the PS 14.
That was such a cool thing to have the PS-14s and the squad.
And we took great care of them, and I never had an issue.
And all of a sudden, like, you need it.
You need to make that flight, and it's delayed, and you're screwed.
And my night vision start coming on and off.
And so I just said, all right, I turned it off.
I turned it right back on.
And I'm like, I just need just to get through that door.
Again, I'm thinking there's two guys in this house.
The only two people I've seen are under that stairwell.
and that's it
and nobody's communicating
we don't know what the
other platoon is doing they're on the other side
of the street they don't know where I am
the Bradley the
a lot of confusion
but I walked through that door and I saw
his eyes and I was like
oh yeah like you had no
idea of all the things
you thought back door
see I thought they were thinking back door too
right I put the guys they were super
loud they're getting around the house
now we're going to come through the back door
and then we came to the front door
again and I see
this guy's teeth and their beautiful teeth
like veneer teeth like my dad's
a dentist I know good teeth
and this guy smiles and I just
I just start shooting
and then my night vision
dies again but I got
quality aimed
shots with the Pek2 Alpha
and I figured I got them both
and one guy
ran and the other one guy
trapped between the Jersey barrier and the stairwell he couldn't move out of that area so he
was pretty much done and but the other guy ran to the kitchen in front and it was like okay
one guy that's it one guy left and he's wounded you know I hit him a couple times and then
as I'm doing that I'm walking backwards away from the stairwell and I'm like this is a room
and I'm just standing in the doorway of a room.
And then as soon as I'm thinking I haven't cleared this room yet,
the guy from the kitchen starts shooting back.
And then Lawson, with his nine mill,
it's just, you know, gangster from the side just popping this guy.
And this guy starts shooting at Lawson from the kitchen.
And as he's doing that,
Lawson just kind of pops back into the water.
And whether he had hit through the wall or,
I don't know. I don't know. It's dark. I don't know what's happening. He's not saying anything
which is smart. He's a tough guy. He's been hurt before and he's never cried or screamed
or anything. So he just kind of went back and he just, his whole arm just drops and he's got
his hand on his shoulder and he's reaching for his neck and he's like, is this blood or water?
And I'm like, oh, no. Like that's not the choice. I can't see. And he's like, it feels slick.
I'm like, but the water's slick, you know, the water.
He's doing this, like, with his hand.
He's numb.
He can't move his fingers.
So he's like, he just points to his weapon, and with one finger says, I have one mag left.
He just won.
And I'm like, okay.
And so I switch out mags, and I back into this room.
And it's a master bedroom.
And I have, there's like a bed, a wardrobe.
and I got to clear it, right?
And as I'm doing that, these guys come running through the door.
And so now we're exchanging fire,
but I'm noticing that there are tracers going horizontally in the room.
And I'm thinking, it is my zero off.
Like, am I just, you know, like, because I'm shooting from the hip
and the PS-14s are coming on and off.
And I'm like, am I shooting to the side?
you know, is this Pek-a-2?
Did it get damaged?
Did it get jostled?
What's happening?
What are these rounds are going horizontal.
And my platoon sergeant is screaming in my radio.
And with that noise from my ear, everyone, and I hear a cavalcade of foot steps, upstairs, next room over.
And I'm like, this radio is going to be the death of me.
So I just take, I told them, I said, two Fers down,
one RPG
I'm really stressed out right now
I'm really stressed out right now
and I just threw the radio in the water
and that's when I realized
that I could start to cheat a little bit
and use the gap
of my night vision's solid for a little bit
and I used to have that peeky too and I could use the gap
between the frame of the door and the concrete
metal frame and there's like a hole
and that that dude was just like
like trying to creep up on the door
and I'm like I got you
you know and so I just put the rounds through that gap
and I couldn't have done it without a laser obviously
and he buckled
and but the weirdest thing was
guys would fall
and I'd look over and there weren't there
and so I'm like
is this Hollywood's obviously full of crap
but I mean is this the same guy
or is this a different guy?
or is this a different guy?
Is he running up and down the stairs?
What's going on?
And just as that happens,
another guy comes tearing down the stairs
and I could hear his pants
and as he hits the water,
again, that ripple gave him away in the water.
And he just started firing
and I popped him
and then the guy came out of the kitchen,
the original guy that was wounded,
came out of the kitchen.
And then all of a sudden, I'm just kind of relaxed and everything's cool.
And I hear some guy screaming from the stairwell.
And it's like British, a British accent.
And he's just like talking.
And I don't know if it's Lawson.
I don't know if it's Michael Ware.
Michael is Australian.
Is he talking to me?
But this guy's like talking about like,
your mommy won't find your dog tags.
and I'm like, is me,
are you trying to intimidate me?
So I'm speaking broken Arabic,
first infantry division, manual,
stop or I'll shoot,
do not resist First American infantry,
all that crap.
And then I hear like dog or something
kelp, whatever.
And as I'm going through all that,
another target appears in the door
and I'm shooting that target
and I see a long stream
of rifle fire
that is from my left
out of a wardrobe
straight into the wall
and I'm like
I didn't just shoot
that was not me
you know what I mean
and I'm like oh my God
there's a dude in this room
and as soon as I even process that
the doors just come flying open
and he runs out
and he's got a snub-nose AK under his armpit.
So he's running this way and the rifles pointed behind him
and he's just squeezing it, like behind him.
Oh, okay.
Right?
So he's planning to try and get out of the road.
I think he's just trying to get it.
But it's dark and he can't see anything.
And the wardrobe falls on its doors,
which again, there's a lot of miracles.
But that is probably the most miraculous thing
is that an entire wardrobe, like a foot locker,
you know, like a wall locker.
that it landed on its doors.
Because if that thing would have fallen flat,
he shot right into that wall locker,
into that wardrobe.
And had that thing been flat,
that would have gone right into me
and the side of the wall as well.
And it just absorbed through the wall.
I took,
I thought I got, I hit the elbow.
And it just instantly, it's wet,
but I'm wet too.
so it's like what's going on.
But I remember grabbing my arm
and I'm doing this inventory of like,
you did it.
You got shot.
And it's not that bad.
Right?
It's not that bad.
It hurts.
You can't see it.
But you are now a bullet shot.
You've been a victim of a bullet wound.
And all these guys that acted tough,
you now know what they went through.
You're just as tough as they are.
You're not going to scream menick.
You're not going to leave.
you're gonna breathe you got shot in the arm and you're good to go you got lucky
stay in the fight everything's good and then I'm like this really hurts like it's
really hurt and I'm like oh okay but I'm like I'm psyching myself up right dude is at
the corner he's leaning against the metal the doors weren't like real doors they're
like metallic tin doors and he's leaning against it and I hit him now again I
I thought I hit him six or seven times.
The video, it's like three shots.
But again, what I'm thinking, what actually happened?
I thought I hit him repeatedly, but I got him in the lower back.
And it was the first time I heard someone, like, actually scream, like really loud.
And he moves his way out the door.
But I hear him up the stairs.
And this is the time where I get to do my little field, you know, medic.
I'm going to treat my own arm wound, put a tourniquet on.
You know, I have no idea.
Like, it's below.
It's right here in the little joint area of my elbow.
And I'm like, oh, my God, I feel the bullet.
Like, the bullet is actually in my arm.
And this is crazy because there's no Kevlar.
And it would make no sense that a bullet would lodge
and just kind of stay there.
So I'm like, oh, I feel dizzy.
But is it the smell?
Is it my nerves?
I can't pass out now.
And I just kind of flick it out.
And I feel it.
And it's like a piece of wood.
It's a splinter.
And I'm like, dude, you went from almost being shot by a bullet to a splinter,
and you were going to take yourself out of this fight.
You know what I mean?
Like call a medevac for a splinter.
I went from thinking, I'm just like every other tough guy.
I saw it get shot to being like, you don't even, can't take a splinter.
Like, you were going to punch out for a splinter, man.
You know what I mean?
So, like, my head is going from, like, super confident to.
But when he left and he turned and I saw his face,
I'm like, he's scared.
And I like the fact that I hit him repeatedly.
He's wounded and he's scared and he wants to run away from me.
So I figured, okay, Lawson, go get, I'm yelling to Lawson.
I need saws and shotguns and fits and first squad.
Get everyone, get the whole platoon in here.
And he's like, I'm not leaving.
and I'm like, no, you got to leave because we need to get everyone in here, right?
So I don't want to be on that floor because I'm thinking Bradley Fire or the guy's just coming and start spraying.
I've nowhere to get cover.
And the best place I want to be is at least on the second floor to tell them, hey, you know, smoke grenade, flare.
I'm here, right?
But I know that guy's there.
And I look up the stairs and I can see his wet feet, but then there's blood, like a lot of blood on the
stairs. And I make my way up in between my wet shoes, my wet boots, and the blood, I take a step
on that puddle of blood and both feet just go completely out. Like, I lost my footing completely.
And when I lost my footing at that moment, a round just went off from the second level of the
stairs. And it was right. And our bullets, when they hit, like brick,
or concrete ricochet, that 7-6-2 just, it just fugged.
It just went right through it.
But I could see it.
And I was like, that's where my head was, right?
And so I went from, I got this guy to, I just slipped.
And if I didn't stand up, I would have been done.
And then when I got to the second level, my PS-14s went,
when I went to flick them on, they went to IR.
You know, that light that...
Yep, like a light, yeah, that shines.
And I saw his face, and he was just all kinds of stressed.
I imagine he was very stressed.
And I was like, this guy's mine.
And one more, that's it.
So I'm doing my head.
I'm like, one, two, three?
Or is that one, two, three, four?
Like, I'm just trying to do an inventory of how many...
Are there still people alive downstairs?
Did I just leave Lawson and where with alive guys?
Or is this just two guys?
and I'm just losing it.
Do you know if Lawson went to get the rest of the squad yet?
I can't hear anything.
My hearing's gone.
And not only that, I can't.
The building is so big and thick that with the water,
if it was empty and dry,
maybe you could hear echoes of whatever.
But the only thing you could really hear
was what was coming at you.
When something went from, hits the water,
the water was the giveaway.
that there was someone coming because you could hear the splash and you could see the signature of it.
But upstairs was dry.
It was super dry up there.
And now I'm back to, I got my rifle and I charged a magazine and I think this was the last, what felt, it felt like 20.
Maybe just one of those I recharged and didn't have full 30.
but I took out my grenade and this is where I was going to practice my cooking off.
I was so proud of how I cooked grenades off.
I was cooking grenades off at the 12th grade level.
I was really good at it at that point and that sizzle, you know.
So many guys would tape their spoons and then they just throw the grenade with the tape off,
but the spoon would stick to the casing, right?
You pull your pin and you threw it and it never went off because the spoon stuck
to the, it's been taped for so long.
So I was like, it's not happening to me.
And I brought it to my ear.
You got to be careful, because, you know,
defense contracts, there's five seconds, two seconds,
but I couldn't hear the sizzle.
My ears were so shot that I was like,
one, two, and I just was like, oh, no.
You know, like, that's how this story ends.
You've been blowing my own head off with a grenades in my ear.
Like he's taking a call.
Like Mossad blew me up for taking a call.
And as I turned to look at him, the room was an L shape, right?
So I had like a perpendicular.
I threw the grenade.
I hit him with a grenade, but it went into a big pile of these foam mattresses.
And I heard it, go boom, and I heard him, you know, hurt.
And it got bit by something.
Shrapnel hit him somewhere.
But when I came into the room, I instantly tripped over my shin scraped off the top of just a mess of propane tanks.
I mean, the entire room was full of propane tanks.
I fired one round and I just smelled this like really oily, thick smoke that was like plastic foam burning and natural gas.
and I just like I can't I can't shoot again because I'm going to blow the tanks up or do whatever
so I just kind of used my rifle to find him in the room of smoke and wave the smoke around
and just try to find where he is and whack him as hard as I could and that's where we just started
wailing on each other in the dark and the smoke just kind of where is he where is he at and I didn't
want to bend the barrel. The M4 is a rifle that, you know, I butt stroked people with that plastic
butt and it doesn't really do what you want it to do. But the problem with the M4 is that if you
wax someone hard enough, you're going to bend your barrel, right? So, I mean, that, you're taking
your rifle out of the fight. And I got Santos's rifle, but it's heavier. You know, the A4 had that
stock that was, you know, and so that, that's much better to go into the fight with than an M4 would be.
So I tried to take advantage of that
And I really
It was the first time I realized how
How exhausted I was
I was really spent you know
And I was starting to feel like my stomach
Was tightening and
Breathing became harder
And I was hoping that I could
Just get close to him and shoot him
Right like be able to get a close shot into him
but I also realized that when a person is fighting for their life,
they're not going to give you any of those openings.
And I could tell he was older.
The foam would burn and then die,
and then a flame would pop,
and then it would die, and then a flame would pop again.
And he had a gray beard,
and he was wearing a bandalier, like, you know, around his waist,
and so yeah it was like every time I thought I had an advantage he had a big gouge out of his arm his forearm had a giant bite from shrapnel and so when he would do something to me I would just kind of put my hands in that that wound and that and he just complete you know that he that was so much pain that he would
you could tell him his guard was down but this is why we need to teach self-defense and and jihitsu or
something because in the gear it's hard enough to move you know god forbid if i had elbow pads on
i wouldn't have made it but the vest is so heavy and the way we load the vest is he makes it
even more unbalanced i didn't have any moves i didn't have a choke i didn't have anything to do
and my hands were wet, usually hair.
So I stuck my finger in his eye.
And I figured that that was going to do it.
And I was so freaked out by the way an eyeball, you know, ruptures that it just unnerved me.
The whole thing was just so, it seemed like I was cheating.
You know what I mean?
like I was doing something that was not what we're supposed to do.
I never had an experience with anything like that before.
I've never done anything like that in my life.
Training.
No one's ever given us a PowerPoint or class on that.
And I had my helmet, you know.
And so I figured my helmet is probably, but my PS-14s were on the helmet.
And the tie down at that point, when I took my helmet off,
the, no one ties, elites don't tie things down,
but we tie everything down because we're so irresponsible.
You never know when you lose something.
And I had a, I tied it down, but when I took my helmet off,
my 14s fell and now you've got like this, you know, pendulum.
And so it's not, you're not able to get what you want.
Now, the part of the story that gets misinterpreted a lot,
is I took a sappy plate.
And everyone said I took my sappy plate out.
I opened my vest.
And on an IBA at that time, it was Velcro.
One side had a plate, the other side didn't.
And so as I was trying to hit him,
I wasn't getting enough force with my helmet.
I took his head and I just kind of used the open vest to subdue him.
If you ask me, that's when the fight really stopped.
that I would think that I, that at that point it was, I don't think he was, we weren't
equals at that point, whatever.
You got the upper hand?
Yeah.
The wounds that he was sustaining to his head between the helmet and the sappy plate were
enough to either disorient him or make him just not a, a problem.
At least in my own head, I thought everything was great.
And he goes to the ground.
and when he goes to the ground,
I put my hand over his mouth,
and I'm literally, all my force has got one hand.
The one arm is wounded,
and when I put my leg on it,
he's like his hips are coming up.
He's hurting him.
But then he's yelling,
and then I hear a guy above us yell back.
And that's when I completely went from,
I'm in control, and I'm going to be okay.
to complete, you know, a panic of I don't have the strength.
I don't have the strength to do this, right?
And he's wounded.
I mean, shoot me four times.
You know, I don't know if I could do what he's doing.
But if there's another guy that I have not yet met and he's 100% healthy,
I'm in deep trouble.
I'm in trouble.
And so I've lost complete positive control of my rifle at this point.
And I'm trying to find it with one foot.
and just kind of probe my foot out to find my strap.
I could drag it to me or do whatever.
And he bites my hand really aggressively.
Right.
And it's like now I'm firing on, you know,
I thought I had him in a good grip where I could at least,
and I thought the fight was out of him.
And he just starts biting me.
And then as I move up my body,
the hand that I was not holding, I just heard a loud crack of what turned out to be a Soviet 45.
I don't even know where he had it, where it came from, but it just fired directly in the wrong,
he didn't, thank God, he didn't know where my head was, but it was close enough to my head that it went from not being able to hear cloudy to like ringing, not being able to hear.
you know which is it's like a tinnitus versus I just can't hear you know and that was that was
really like it affected my equilibrium and affected my thought process things became dire I went from
super confident to like this isn't going to work out and you and when I stood up looking for my
rifle I felt that I had my Gerber in my cargo pocket not on my belt which would have been almost
impossible with the adrenaline, the sweat, and the water to pull that out. It was so tight to
my belt that it would have been, you know, but it was in my cargo pocket. And a lot of people
think that's a multi-tool. They say he killed, you know, the multi-tool came out. It was a Rex
Applegate, you know, a very quick release. And I just figured I would just pop them. I was
just going to let him know, you know, no, I was speaking broken Arabic.
It turns out he didn't even speak Arabic, but I was just trying to tell him to shut up.
And so I could hear what was being said, or how many, you know, was it, is it our guys?
Maybe it's my guys coming up and I just can't hear.
And so I just, I was just letting him know I have a knife.
And then it was, he bit me again.
And when he bit me, you know, in my, he bit, you know, my lower body.
And that was unbelievable pain.
It was unbelievable pain.
And it was just a complete adrenaline spike.
And it became, I'm going to, I'm just going to jab them.
You know, I'm going to cut them.
And when I put it in, it hits collarbone.
And it cut my side of my pinky down.
my hand just kind of went off the blade and kind of went to the knife.
And nothing happened.
It was too hard and it was not in the right region.
And then when I put my hand over his neck,
I kind of felt where I could guide it.
And as soon as I put it in, it was a cold night.
It was a rainy night.
I felt steam, like warm, hot steam.
And there was a noise that I couldn't hear the noise, but I could feel the noise.
It's a, it's like you, there was a, uh, the spurt was this is, and everything just auto rebooted.
He was just like, it was over.
It was like there was no, you know, there was no, uh, response to it, you know, and, uh,
response to it, you know, and the only thing, I took enough science to know that I could speed it up.
And so I just kind of was doing like a little bit of like a CPR almost.
Just to get, just to end it, you know, just to get all of it out.
And so I just started putting, you know, like doing CPR to end it.
And that was it.
And after all that, I, I, it was ridiculous.
And it wasn't, I wanted a cigarette, you know.
And I went outside and again, my helmet's gone.
My vest is open.
My rifle is somewhere on the ground.
I have a magazine, maybe, I don't know, eight rounds,
left, 10 rounds, much less than 30.
And I know there's a guy above me, but it's a porch.
And there's a roof on top of it.
And so I just kind of cupped my hands, but I wanted the cigarette to be like my light, right?
Because I have no night vision, and I figure if I get that cherry going, I could at least signal someone if they're coming in because I haven't, you know, I figured I could at least see something.
something, get some nicotine.
I mean, I wanted nicotine, but I also wanted to see, like, what was going on,
signal, do whatever.
And as I'm dragging that outside, open air, I just hear, like, a job, like, someone, like,
took, like, a scuttle of feet, and, like, the, the most grotesque Joe Thysman snap.
I've ever witnessed, I played sports.
I've seen guys, you know, break legs and.
compound fractures
Achilles injuries
that was a bad one
and whatever he landed on
completely immobilized him
when he landed on the ground
and
he was in severe
distressed
and emotional
about how much he was hurting
and the magazine
swiveled out of his
you know
no buttstock on the AK
it was a
short AK with no buttstock and the magazine was out and when I threw it back in and recharged
it just was way it burst it was on automatic and it just burst and very little accuracy. I don't
think I hit him with the AK and then when I ran into the building he fell like back into a water
tank in the corner and he couldn't move his like he was one leg was the only thing that was
causing you know his ability to move but the rifle i ran into the rifle and uh my rifle and so i i picked
it up and i just shot um until it went empty and i don't i hit him i could see that you know
i hit him and i hit his wounded leg and i hit him in the back uh near the kidney
And all I know is, I didn't know if there was a landing.
There was a canopy underneath that part of the building,
but I just heard the saws open up on him.
So when I looked over finally,
I could see that he was head first in the Palm area
and the two machine gunners had done their thing.
And then the guys come flying in,
and Lawson ends up getting shot.
by a shotgun.
Lawson,
total accident,
but Lawson basically
was on the second story.
And he was like,
Terminators,
our guys were called Terminators,
Terminators coming in,
and he just kind of turned the corner
and someone hit him in the sappy plate,
but that could have been horrific.
And so the next,
they're like,
bomb is coming in.
Bomb's coming in.
And I just,
my voice was hoarse.
I was like,
totally like, you know, shook and we ran out of the house and fast mover dropped a bomb
and it went right through the house.
You could hear it like, ting-pong, like you could hear it.
Like, it didn't go off.
And then they brought, so that was a 250.
They brought in a 500.
That thing bounced.
And I don't know if it was our laser, if it was the few, I don't know what happened.
Two bombs were duds.
the final one was a 2,000-pound bomb,
and we were all, like, outside of the house,
that blast was worse than anything that happened inside the house.
I mean, it just voided all of our, I mean, just, like, we just vompt,
like uncontrollable vomiting.
So you were just outside the house when the 2000-b-bomb-red.
So the Bradley's all pulled up on the line,
and the guys got inside the Bradley's and zipped up,
and Fitz had grabbed me
as I was making sure all the guys were in the brass
he just grabbed me and threw me in a hole
and honestly we got the best end of it
because the guys that were in the brads got just completely concussed
from that boxed-in area and all of that munition
I mean danger close I'd say it was
I don't know 200 meters
from where the bomb went off
and all the periscopes on the side of the brads
were all shattered.
And the guys were all like woozy and vomit.
It was really bad.
I mean, they got shook really, really good.
We were outside, and I think we got the better end of it.
I think because we were low and in a hole,
we didn't get nearly as messed up as all of it.
But we go back in, pull the bodies out,
you know, start doing our inventory.
And the next day, IWan dies, our executive officer.
And then J.C. Madison died.
And then Sims died.
And it just kind of was like crazy day, but there's like 12 other crazy days to go.
And we just kind of did our thing.
And then 15 years later, I get a call that the DOD is doing an investigation.
And people I haven't talked to in 15 years are calling me, telling me that they're looking into every aspect of my military career.
and I'm thinking, like a lot of guys have happened,
someone gets a little jealous, someone gets upset,
and they said something happened the way I had a reporter investigating
and the military calling, I lawyered up, I got a lawyer,
and I was like, you know, I'm not going to jail, like what's it going on?
And then Trump called.
Hold on, before we get to that.
Before we get to that, so this,
This whole story that you just told about being in this house,
this is November 10th, 2004.
This is your 29th birthday.
29th birthday, yeah.
This is two days into the battle.
Yes.
Because there's a couple days, and there's a little bit of a low as it kicks off, you know.
Right.
It's hard for you guys to get through the breach.
You guys get in there, and it takes a couple days.
I mean, there's action out of the gate, but this is definitely a highlight for what you guys were doing.
Yeah.
Um, like you said, Lieutenant Ewan, November 12th, he's standing in a Brad.
He's actually waving goodbye to, to where who's going to like, fill his report or whatever he's going to do.
And he gets hit with, uh, he gets hit with an RPG.
Um, RPG that doesn't detonate.
So it's like, awful.
Um, you, you got in, in the book, remember.
member of the ramrods you've got this this quote do they take you know his brother had died and
you explain this in the book and again there's so many there's so many things in this book but you
know his brother had died in 1989 and so ed iwan they his parents want him buried you know
in the cemetery in their small town in uh nebraska i believe and there's a inscription on his
grave about about lieutenant ed ewan it says ed lived every moment he
He stood in the rain, heard the thunder, danced to the lightning, and believed in rainbows.
That's the 12th.
The next day, the individual that we've talked a bunch about, Captain Sims, who's your company commander, a guy in the, it's, you know, I don't think I covered this, but as you guys are going in, you know, this guy realizes what kind of a fight you're about to go into.
And it's not going to be a hearts and mind fight.
And you guys all really come together as,
and he knows he's going to be relying on his door kickers.
And so the next day after Lieutenant Ewan dies,
Captain Sims, he's kind of catching up with you guys on the battlefield.
You guys are tired.
And he's going to go basically do a strong point in a building,
kind of set up a little command.
host or something and you know you're like hey boss let me let me go clear that thing for you let me get
my squad in there let me clear that thing and he's like no you guys get some rest stand down he says air
out your feet get some chow will take care of it and um it was a building that had been cleared but
you know it then had been left and cleared and left and when these guys go in it um they get into
gun fight captain sims is killed and like you said you know the
this is and this is something sometimes people forget is that when someone gets killed in combat
combat continues and you still have a mission you still have enemy and you still keep going and that's
what that's what happens you guys keep going for a total of 10 days it's November 17th you guys
finally come out of the field and you got some great you got some great you got some great
perspective in there, you know, as you're coming out of the field and what that's like.
You guys are now seen way more than anybody else has seen.
And certain the ramps in the rear, you know, they're trying to tell you to get your
uniform squared away in this stuff.
And always that contrast between the guys that are on the front lines, the guys that aren't,
the Time Magazine article comes out.
So Michael Ware, like you said, works for time.
So you guys are out of the field on November 17th.
November 22nd, this article comes out that he's written.
It's called Into the Hot Zone.
And it's telling your story.
It's telling your company's story.
And of course, I mean, you know, the Fallujah event was in every,
it was the entire news for, you know, three week period.
And so now everybody is reading this article about you, about your guys.
And all that being said, deployment's not over yet.
You guys still have another three months of deployment left.
What are you guys doing when you get out of Fallujah?
What's that recovery like?
And now what's your mission towards the end of deployment?
So, you know, we don't really know about the magazine, the article.
but everyone in our sector knows about Fallujah
and they know that when we were gone
we were replaced by units that
didn't have the same logo on their arms, the insignia
and what that meant, the red one
that we were in Fallujah
and that bought us a tremendous amount of street credit
with the bad guys.
You know, it's, we were super cocky,
we were super confident.
And we weren't, you know, the mistakes that we made, the zigan and zagin in the old days was long gone.
The chances we were taking.
You know, they always talk about how when, you know, the John Basselon story of, you know, you get a guy that does crazy things like Guadalcanal, and then he wants to go back to Iwo.
And the unit that he led, I mean, they got a, John Basselone is a legend and an icon.
He's selling war bonds.
He's dating Hollywood starlets.
I mean, this was a national hero, and everyone hung on everything he said.
He had so much street credit.
He didn't last, what, 15 minutes on Ewo?
And so there are things that the reason why they take you out when things like
Fallujah, Ramadi, big set plays where units do crazy things, is because you don't have
a sense of your mortality.
And you do take chances that you think.
well, has it happened yet, you know, I'll roll it until, you know, we fold. And our unit was doing that.
I mean, we were just like, in the old days, if you took fire, the enemy stopped, you know,
you'd give chase, you'd do your job, but at the end of the day, we fired, they stopped,
they ran away, who cares? After Fallujah, we were going to kill you. Like, we were going to take you out,
and it didn't matter how long it went down.
It didn't matter, you know, we had guys going through tunnels and, you know,
it's very difficult to clear an attic.
You know, that's one of the most dangerous things you can do
because you're literally just popping up in the middle of a floor
and anything can hit you.
And those are always, you know, guys were just doing things
they'd never done before because they survived what was, you know,
an epic urban fight.
And I noticed it.
And I noticed that Election Day was the big thing.
The Battle of Fallujah was because January 2005 was going to be the first free election
and all of the craziness that was going to happen on Election Day.
And so our mission came to just, we had a pretty good handle on Diyala Province before Fallujah.
When we left, there was that period where they regressed a little bit just because the unit, you know,
you're brand new.
You don't know the area very well.
Great soldiers, they just didn't know our area.
And so they were only there for a month and a half.
And we started to see that they were taking liberties.
We took those liberties back.
We counterpunched.
We did great things.
But it also became a way, like it was real now.
Like the guys were gone.
They weren't ETSing.
They weren't going to a different duty station.
They were no longer there in the memorial services and the, you know.
And you just take more loss towards the end of a deployment.
And you think, why are we taking loss?
at the end. We're so close to just going home. Like, is this, what's the point? What are we doing?
And so that became more of a struggle of keeping our poise and our focus, but also the discipline
was the hardest. For leaders at the end, that's when all the crazy happens. Like in the last
30 days of a deployment is when nothing can be rationalized. No loss, no injury, no death. Nothing makes any sense.
because you're that close to the finish line.
And it takes a lot to just kind of,
maybe I'm going a little bit too crazy.
You know, what you don't want is you don't want,
you know, that guy who's getting out of the Army,
he's got a month left in a combat zone,
and this is Jerry Rice's last football game.
And he wants one more touchdown before he hangs it up.
I don't want a guy who wants one more fight, you know,
before he hangs it up.
You know, so you want to be reasonable,
but at the same time, professional and disciplined.
But that was tough because, you know,
and then these units are coming in to replace you,
and they've done nothing but red.
You become, our unit became like Army rock stars.
You know, they were in magazines and their Army Times.
And so guys are taking photos with these new guys
and sign in furniture.
And this is the coffee maker from the gunner of the, you know,
But it was a weird feeling to hear your unit and these names of guys that you work with every day,
and they're in Rolling Stone magazine.
They're on CNN.
They're talking about Falkenberg.
Hey, turn on.
Could you tape me Fox News?
They're doing a special on Sarve Major Falkenberg.
Like, what?
Like, is your Sergeant Major?
It was a very surreal experience to go from the backwater and a unit.
that really peaked in Vietnam to the first infantry division back
where it's cool again.
And all these guys who just did their jobs
are now, you know, doing interviews.
You know, you've got reporters that are sneaking out of the fob
to interview the boys from Fallujah a month later.
And it's just like it was very surreal, you know,
because it's just a lot of attention
and it's not necessarily people process it differently, you know.
And you guys end up going home in February 2005?
Yeah.
And at what point are you deciding that you're going to get out of the Army?
You know, my whole thing was, so I didn't know anything about, you know,
the Time Magazine, everything you hear about, you know, you're in a vacuum.
But there was a big award ceremony going out for the division and a welcome home.
And again, we're a German unit.
And it was a lot of silver stars and bronze stars
and a lot of these guys that did incredible things.
You know, it was hard to get a private, a specialist,
an E5, the award that they deserve.
A lot of guys that really never squeezed around
were getting awards that probably, you know,
our service awards, not valor awards.
You have that in every unit.
But it was apparent that they were going to take this,
Fallujah fight and essentially make this award a distinguished service cross.
And that's the way it was built.
We did the unit, the brigade commander, Paul Ray Smith had just received the Medal of Honor,
the first recipient since Vietnam posthumously for what happened in 2003 at the airport in Baghdad.
And so this was going to be the second, a distinguished service.
Cross, which would have been the first Distinguished Service Cross since Vietnam.
So we got the Medal of Honor and the Distinguished Service Cross.
And this is what you're hearing about your award?
Yeah, so I'm getting the DSC.
That's the way the ceremony is going to be all the guys get their silver stars or bronze stars,
and we're going to hold the DSC, Secretary of the Army is coming to Germany, hold division.
It's a DSC award.
I did a commercial for Armed Forces Network talking about getting the DSC and the DSC is in the back.
I mean, it was happening.
And as that's all going down,
they're basically saying no one knows anything more than the DSE.
And it's not an award that you, you know,
you don't know how to write it and the witnesses.
And so the division did the DSC with battalion and witnesses and whatnot.
And Secretary of the Army shows up, day of the award,
we do their rehearsals.
We're getting ready for the live,
the band, the division commander,
and the secretary of the army is like,
Bellevies not getting the DSE.
And so I'm like,
all right, you know, like,
what, that kind of sucks.
I mean, we did the commercials.
I'm in my uniform here, like, what's going on?
And they're like, they're upgrading it.
And I didn't even, you know,
I was like they're upgrading the DSC.
I mean, it doesn't make any sense.
Like, what is going on?
And it went from being upgraded to just, you know, Army Times, USA Today, all these media people telling the world that I'm going to, I'm nominated for the Medal of Honor, which is not something the Army puts out. No one puts that out. You can't say you're nominated for anything. It's not, you know, you're either approved or you either get it or you don't. There's no like, you didn't get the Medal of Honor, give them the DSC. It's the Medal of Honor, nothing.
Right. You can take a Silver Star and upgrade it. You can take a DSC and upgrade it, but you don't get like a fallback award. You know, it doesn't work in reverse. So I go home. I leave. There was a lot that happened on that deployment and our unit was disbanded. So half of the guys went to another unit and deployed in eight months. The rest of the guys went to stop loss guys went home. Everyone went home.
And I just was like, I'm going to be a civilian.
And I wanted to do some embedding.
I wanted to do, you know, some other stuff, work some vets groups and whatnot.
And then I get a package in the mail and it's the Silver Star.
And it isn't my citation and it's not my name.
And I'm like, this has to be a mistake, right?
It's not in my GD214.
It's not your citation.
It's not your name.
No, it's just like I jumped on a tank and I suppressed the enemy.
It's basically the Silver Star was for stepping in the,
the doorway with a saw.
Got it.
And then there's something
with a Bradley
that I didn't do.
And then my name is spelled wrong.
But it's not on my DD-214,
and the orders aren't signed.
So I'm like,
you know, what's going on?
And now everyone's like,
you're going to get the Medal of Honor.
And the media is like,
this is happening.
The Silver Star, it's an interim award.
You're going to hold on to that,
and then you're going to get the Medal of Honor.
Well, that goes on forever.
and then nothing happened.
So what are you doing?
So now it's you're out of the Army.
I'm out of the Army.
I decide I want to go back in the Army,
but I don't want to, I have a family
and I want to be a dad, I want to get a normal job,
and then I hear.
So you're conflicted.
Conflicted.
I go and become an embedded reporter.
I start a veterans group.
We start running Democrat, Republican,
veterans for Congress.
We have a great class.
Lee Zeldin, who's running for governor in New York, was one of our first guys.
Alan West was one of our first guys.
We've had some good ones.
We've had some bad ones.
But we ran, you know, quality guys and girls.
And in the process of doing that, I meet all of these, like, there's a class that is started
where there's like a professional veteran class that comes out of Afghanistan and Iraq.
And I'm super cognizant that I don't want to be that guy.
I don't want to be the DD-214 guy in my car.
I don't want to be the guy that's low crawling to the cop here
You know it's like hey at what time well zero-niner we're gonna like stop another brief
Right like you work at an office depot like you did not add an actual depot and so
I don't want to be that guy and I want to be like a normal guy
But every time something happens with the war
My local newspaper my local whatever is like this guy's getting the Medal of Honor and then
people want to write books
and the books they're writing
are not the stories that happened
they're like, you know,
then, you know,
killed eight people single-handedly.
But that's one story.
You know how many people he killed over here?
And it's like, wait a second.
First of all, how much money you get?
What's going on here? Like you're making
money off of our friends, our stuff.
Why are you sharing
these stories? They're not true.
and then I got to hang out with guys like Marcus LaTrell,
and I saw the veteran side of celebrity in a way that made me super grateful for my life.
Because Marcus was a 50-50.
50% of the country thought Marcus Atrelle is truly one of the greatest treasures we have in our planet.
He's a humble, decent, wonderful man that went through some crazy things.
And then 50% were like, I hate him because he's successful and known.
Why is he famous?
Why do I care about Marcus LaTrell?
And I'm watching him go through this.
And I'm seeing that for every guy that wants to shake his hand, for every girl that
wants his phone number, there are 50 people that want to put him in jail.
And there's 30 people that want to call him a fraud and go after his story and go after
as friends, and he's doing this journey, and it's like he's a pioneer.
Like he's discovering the Oregon Trail, and he's doing it all by himself.
Uncharted waters.
Uncharted waters with grace and dignity, and he can't win.
Everyone's out to snipe him.
And I remember he told me one day, we were in Texas doing something, and he said,
you are so lucky.
It's not the Medal of Honor, because it's cool.
crazy as this is, the Medal of Honor would be worse. And I'm like, you know what? Maybe you're
right. I'm blessed. Sal Gianta, first living recipient. I see this guy, it's a Super Bowl. He's on the
letterman show. And I look at his face. And I'm like, this guy has got the weight of the world.
And he is just, just getting buzz sawed. I mean, there's, you're the great, you can't take anything away from
Sal Jinta, what he stands for, what he did, who he is, how he leads his, but there's still
people that want to just rip him to shreds and go after his unit and his decisions and does he,
well, I heard he was, come on, man, give the guy, and he's the only one. And there's no net,
there's no support, there's no one he could talk to, Vietnam guy, nothing, just Jinta on his
own, doing his own thing. And I said, thank God, this one, the first, I was like, I'm, and
And then it became, well, maybe the story isn't true.
I mean, you didn't get the award that they said you're going to get.
So they did the investigation and obviously you didn't do shit.
This is bullshit, right?
So now I'm like, wait a second.
I go from being like the Susan Lucci of Combat Veterans.
I'm nominated for a daytime Emmy for 18 years.
Did I get it?
It's an honor to be nominated.
Now, when did you do your embedded reporting?
So this is six.
So 2006, you're freaking in Ramadi when I'm there.
Yeah, no.
So that's- Which is crazy.
And Major Megan McClung was the P-A-O who lost her life for the Marines.
And I thought I got approved because I'm like the only guy that wants to be there.
And at the end of that tour, at the end of that little time, she said, will you sign my Time magazine?
And I was like, no way.
Like she's like yeah come on what do you think we're stupid like yeah you show up here no one wants to be here
We just wanted to make sure you weren't coming here to be a hero
And you weren't coming here to do something stupid and when it was appeared you know it was apparent that you had your heart in the right place
We thought you could you could use your platform to tell them what we're doing because we're doing great things in Romani
No one's talking about it at all
What was it like when you were on the ground there in Romani? Yeah
That was the worst place I've ever been in my life I would take
Ramadi, I would get an apartment of Fallujah
before, in
2006, Ramadi was insane.
And I'm not telling you anything
you don't know, but I'm, you know,
as you're sometimes you don't,
sometimes you can go through something that's really bad
compared to another bad thing, but unless you have
the perspective to know, like,
okay, I saw
the Army, the Marine Corps,
and the SEALs, right?
There was no
differentiate. The only time
you can tell elite people
just by the way they move, you know,
the fluid nature of how special
operations do their thing. The Rangers
incredible.
Marsa, the Marine Special Operations
Marsok,
you know, all these guys, recon.
These are some studs, right?
I never was
in an area where I could not
tell
because of just the over
the, just
the disproportionate amount of brazen enemy attacks,
you could not differentiate what unit they were attacking
until 40 minutes into the fight
and the objectives were being pushed.
And you could actually see it was that crazy.
It could have been 100 first,
it could have been third Marines,
it could have been Navy SEALs.
There are 60 guys running around
doing whatever the hell they want to do.
And it is just snipers in high,
that was where we found the guy on a table with a hole cut in the table and there was human waste, human urine, hooked up with IV bags, and someone just went in there and threw water on the blanket.
I mean, the dedication to just lay in a hide with an IV for your food, Romani was nuts.
And, you know, the cement truck bombs, the video of it, no one was covering it.
We had a time was just balcony journalism.
You heard a story.
A stringer gave you a video of an IED.
You put it on the news.
Nothing on the ground.
Nothing tactical.
Are we winning?
Romani was a fight that actually was like an anaconda, just squeezing the life out of these insurgents.
And the more you killed, you saw a close.
clear reduction of violence. I mean, a clear reduction of violence. Like, you might have five guys,
you couldn't recruit when you just had that kinetic fight. The snipers were crazy. The mortars were
crazy. It wasn't, and the civilian population was still there. But you saw the beginning of the
sons of Iraq. You saw the beginning of the Ambar Awakening in 2006. But most importantly,
you saw the population see enemy combatants that were Mujahideen as the actual occupiers.
That was the first time was Romadi 06 when Americans are like, they're the bigger tribe.
They're not going anywhere.
They're good people.
They're honest.
They just want to be left alone.
Play the game, work the job, do whatever, take their money.
But these guys from Syria, I don't want them.
I don't want these guys coming in from wherever.
They're the occupiers.
Get a ran out.
Get these people out.
And we'll be fine.
But Ramadi, it was not a good place.
And it was also weird to see people lose their life and watch someone mourn someone that I didn't know.
Like, I'd never been around someone who was hurt or killed that I didn't have a connection to.
and to watch that extremely personal, you feel like a stranger, you feel like you're intruding.
That's not why we're there.
That's a very personal thing.
And that was really crazy too.
And when I was in a Ramadi, I had a kidney stone.
And I remember being medevacked by one of the seals out there.
and the last thing he told me
I mean I was trying
I didn't want to drink their water
because it was weird
because they don't want you there
like no one cares about you
you can be missing for days
and they're like when I don't know
I can move on
and so they were like
I'm going to buy you a drink
and I was like
yeah that'd be I guess he meant
he was going to give me pain meds
but what I came to
I was on the shoulder of a grown man
I was thinking, please don't know who I am.
You know what I mean?
Like, I don't want to be the guy from Time Magazine that's being carried off, like, you know, a sandbag.
But they did surgery on me there and removed the stones and gave me a catheter and I had stents put in.
It was nuts.
And then they sent me back out into Ramadi.
And I remember this guy, this guy came up to me.
He's like, hey, I got your Flomax.
Do you need Flomax?
You guys are issuing Flomax prescriptions.
We have evolved since 2004.
But I got to see the hospitals and the surgical units
and how hard those men and women work in,
the ground units,
but the people of Ramadi gave me hope
that this is actually going in the right direction.
I couldn't say that about Dialla.
Dialla was worse,
and I went back to Diall in 2008,
same area that I fought in.
I went back to Fallujah in,
didn't really seem all that great.
I mean, it wasn't better.
And then in 2008, it went back to Fallujah,
and they had a fight at a city council meeting
over solar lights for their traffic signals.
And I was thinking, damn, they're more green than we are.
Yeah, that's for sure.
But, yeah, the moral of story is,
when I got out the award,
I didn't know what was happening with it,
and it, everyone kind of turned, the media at least, people were like, this isn't real.
This, you're bullshitting.
This story is not true.
You know, Gerber would have given you a knife by now.
You know, like, there's something would have happened.
Like, this doesn't make any sense.
And yet, everyone said there was a tape.
There was a tape out there.
And I didn't have a relationship with Michael Ware.
But they're like, there's a tape out there.
And now I'm thinking, oh, shit, one of them's on the tape.
Show me what's in the box.
What's on the tape?
Like, is it good?
Is it bad?
Like, I don't want to, you know, do whatever.
And then he sold his documentary.
And when he sold his documentary,
everyone started talking about it again.
And the book started reading the book.
And they wanted to make it a movie.
They wanted to do all these different things.
And I thought,
I'm getting into the territory that I was really happy.
I never was in.
And then you got Dakota and everything he went through.
And Kyle.
and all these guys, Will Swenson.
And, you know, it just seemed like half of the population was like,
out of boy, here's a free ticket to Disneyland.
And the rest of them were like,
I'm going to hunt you down and make sure you can never work a job again.
And it's such a schizophrenic world, man.
And so 2018, I'm minding my own business and I get these calls.
Before we get there, though, so what do you?
I mean, there's a huge amount of time that's passing by.
So it's now 2005, 2006.
You're doing some reporting, 2008.
Pete, you're doing reporting.
Yeah, so I worked in Washington.
I started a veterans group called Vets for Freedom.
Pete Hagseth, Fox News.
We had, Marcus was a part of that.
There was all these guys that we tried to just get the politics out of war fighting.
You know, send us to fight, and if you don't like it, don't vote to send us.
But you can't defund a war while we're in the process of fighting it.
And then I just, I wanted to go back home.
I wanted to be a dad.
I wanted to coach soccer.
and I wanted to just see my kids
and this is what we fought for.
So I just became a normal, you know, a guy.
I worked at a milk plant.
I was doing, you know, advocacy work for like the power grid.
You know, like nothing crazy.
Like, you can't be against protecting the power grid.
You know what I mean?
And working at a milk plant and everything was cool.
And then an opportunity came up to do some radio.
And I'm in Buffalo.
And I love my hometown.
I love the bills.
love everything about Buffalo.
And I was like, hey, you know what?
When I'm on the radio, no one's talking about the Army.
I'm weather traffic guy.
So in a way...
So wait, you were a weather traffic guy?
No, no, I'm just saying I'm talking about just cat declawing and plastic bags.
Like nothing remotely, you know, did you write a book?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But let's talk about this cats and these declaws.
Why are we declawing cats?
It's like cutting their fingers off.
Are you happy with yourself?
And in a way, I could control my narrative.
You didn't know what I looked like.
You just heard it every day.
And yet I controlled what you knew about me.
And if you wanted to ask me a question about something I don't want to talk about,
I just switched to start hung up on you, you know?
I didn't have to be on Facebook.
I didn't have to go nuts.
I didn't, you know, you want to talk about the war.
And, you know, there's moments where you have a book out, you go out, Fox,
You talk about the end of the war, the way Obama ended the war, Bush, what do you think about this?
What do you think about Trump?
What do you think about the caliphate?
Those are things you feel like doing them or you don't, but I'm not a professional veteran.
And that chunk of my life was amazing, you know.
And then I started going through all the things all my friends were going through.
You know, Chuck Yeager dies at what, 99?
What do they talk about?
The Soundberry is 24, dude.
We're talking, Chuck Yeager's entire life.
and we're talking about when he was 24?
It's a sound barrier.
Who gives a shit?
He had kids.
He had a job.
He had businesses.
Nobody wants to talk about Chuck Yeager.
They want to talk about when you're 24.
And you start to realize that if you live your life in that moment, that's all you're going to be.
And everyone's going through what I'm going through.
Went through a divorce.
Divorce sucks.
War sucks.
You move on.
You meet new people.
You have new relationships.
But I never, I figured.
that the guys were the war.
My old unit, my old life
was the thing that I'm burying
in a time capsule.
And so those guys, the more
I heard about them, the more
there were problems, I'm not your
squad leader anymore.
I can't help you anymore.
It's time to move on.
And then all of a sudden, I get these phone calls
from guys I haven't talked to in forever,
guys at the Pentagon,
people I met, you know, in Washington,
or overseas and they're like,
do you hear what's happening?
Which is like the worst way
to start a conversation.
Did you hear what they're doing to you?
They knew a lot of information.
They had a lot of stuff.
And your initial thought was they're investigating you for some.
They were investigating.
They're asking questions.
I don't even know who you are.
You're calling me on the phone.
Did you think the Medal of Honor just was never going to happen?
At some point did you figure, all right.
What year did you approximately say,
hey, you know what?
It's been four years.
This shit ain't happened.
I got my silver star with my name missed out.
There was a guy.
All the living recipients were Afghanistan.
And the Obama administration was very clear that Iraq was the bad war.
Afghanistan was a good war.
We don't talk about Iraq.
The caliphates moving throughout the country.
No one wants to revisit Iraq.
We're making Iraq movies that we avoided because it was too close to reality.
Now, you know, Superman's making the movies.
you know, Ramadi, like all these things were happening that the culture was just like no more Iraq.
And it was okay.
And this was like 2010 or something?
I'd say, yeah, yeah, okay.
It didn't happen.
It was like, okay, fine.
And by the way, I saw what happened to Marcus.
I saw what was happening to all these other guys.
I mean, they savage Dakota Meyer.
There's absolutely nothing.
No one can rationalize why that guy goes from American hero on a pedestal.
You know, you take Will Swenson and Dakota Meyer, each branch of service, you get more
for the exact same thing.
You don't think that's weird for those two guys?
You don't think you're creating, why are you doing that?
You can't say that Will Swenson did something incredible that day.
Dakota Meyer did something incredible that day.
No, that's not what you do.
You make it about branch rivalry.
You take two guys.
You're digging into people's lives.
This is trauma.
This is their identity, right?
And then Dakota decides to be a man and get married.
And because he marries someone, we've got to put it on TMZ.
He's now a celebrity that gets followed by Gossip magazine.
Come on, dude.
These kids are young.
They've got their whole lives in front of them.
You're lucky they didn't end up, you know, like Elvis in some Vegas hotel just, you know,
eating peanut butter sandwiches.
I mean, you can't do that to young people
and not give them the opportunity
to become normal again.
These guys can't work normal jobs.
They can't be normal.
You don't want them to be normal.
You want to exploit them to sell war bonds.
But then when they make money
or they become successful,
you attack them for being horrors.
I mean, it's unsustainable,
and it's horrible to see.
It's like watching a slow-moving freight train,
a baby playing with a stick of dynamite.
And you're watching this.
And all I could think of is my heart breaks for these guys.
I know them all to be honorable, wonderful men,
but I'm so glad I'm not there.
I'm so glad that for whatever reason my path was different,
and I could just control it.
You know, I love that.
And then it became apparent that not only was this going to be serious,
but reporters, the same reporters going after Navy SEALs for, you know, doing silly things.
The same guys loving the Leavenworth dudes that were getting thrown in jail.
These reporters were like, hey, tell me about this incident.
Tell me about this.
Tell me about that.
And I'm like, you know what?
You can all eat a bag of hot.
I am, I'm lawyering up, dude.
You're not touching me.
Not touching me, right?
And these guys are like, dude, one or two things.
happening. Either you're going to go to jail for 40 years or you're going to be the ambassador
to France. Like we've never seen this before. Like there, no one wants to acknowledge anything.
So I'm doing the radio show one day. My contest line blows up. Like, we give tickets to
Manhattan Steamroller. And it's someone from Army personnel that's like you must pick up the phone
or will come to your house. And I'm like, Army personnel. Like, that's not. Like, there's no
criminal
CIA.
There's no
CBS show
is going to
spawn off
G1
you know
RV personnel
yeah
admin
71 Lima
on this
episode of 71 Lima
paychecks
and stopped
right
we're going to figure out
the housing
you know
food crisis
no it's
ridiculous
and then
they're like
a senior member
of the DOD
wants to talk to you
and I'm like
maybe
the DSC, right?
Well, that's awesome.
Senior member, got to be chief of staff, you know, whoever.
And then one day, they're like, are you by your phone?
Are you by your phone?
I'm like, yeah.
And they're like, the senior member of the DOD is calling.
And are you suspect at this point that you think of the DSC?
You think the DSC came through?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Because senior member, they would just say you're getting the, but just tell you,
I'm a grown man.
I mean, what are we doing here?
It's not like.
Let me go to the book.
Phone rings.
I took a breath, then answer the phone.
Hello, David, an upbeat woman's voice, said to me,
my name is Madeline, and I have President Trump on the line wishing to speak to you.
Is now a good time?
What the hell?
I almost said that out loud.
Fortunately, I caught myself.
Yeah, now's a good time.
My phone blinked.
Suddenly heard President Donald Trump's voice come through my phone speaker.
David, how are you?
Do you know why I'm calling?
I'm a little nervous, I admitted.
You should be nervous.
I should be nervous.
Okay, do you know what you've been recommended for?
In that instant, I knew what was coming was far more life-changing than throwaway allegations.
The war was over.
I had moved on.
14 years ago, I was told I was nominated for the Medal of Honor, sir, a lifetime ago.
Back then, the thought of being awarded America's highest valor medal was seemingly a dream come true, a validation of my skills and professionalism as a soldier.
It would erase the insecurities I had wrestled with constantly and be a tangible symbol of my service to my father.
After all these years, I could go home to him with something he could take pride in about his youngest son.
None of that happened.
Well, David, you got it, Trump said.
Just like that.
I mean, it's one or two things.
It's Alec Baldwin from Saturday Night Live or it's Donald Trump.
I mean, the President of the States.
And honestly, it was so surreal.
The moment I heard, the moment, you know, you get a call from a flashy number and it's a switchboard of the White House, then it can't be the DSE, you know.
But the amount of cloak and dagger that's behind this thing is just so crazy.
And then it's not just you get in the Medal of Honor.
Now it's you're the only guy from Iraq.
So now this gives every weenie from the mainstream media an opportunity to be like, let's re-adjudicate why we went to war.
in Iraq.
Am I just a recipient of the Medal of Honor?
Am I a mascot?
Am I the guy that you just want to, you know, why is happening?
Why is there only one?
Why are there so many Afghanistan, only one over here?
And, you know, I, I mean, when you look at the timeline, you know, some of these guys
have had the Medal of Honor for 10 years, 15 years, you know, whatever.
I think the old, the gentle was like 2012, maybe 11, 10, sometime around there.
I mean, I was long out of the honor.
army when that happened. So I'm the old, the second oldest of the GWAT recipients, but I'm one of the
newest recipients, right? And so it's like, I kind of navigated all of that and kind of put that
away, you know, maybe you do want to give it to a 23 year old. Go out there and enjoy it and have fun and,
you know, get a, you know, buy a car dealership, you know, valor cars. Go do what you want to.
do with it but at this point it's like you know you're you're 35 and someone delivers a
Shetland pony to your door you're like no Santa I was 11 when I wanted that you know like
that's it's not it's not what I at this phase of life and then it starts happening and then
every you realize oh you know here's the key to the city and you know here's an allegation here's
the, you know, why, why did you say this on the radio? Did you, did you actually imply that
this person should be beaten to death? I mean, I'm like, I've been doing the same thing for seven,
you know, come on. The attention is, and then everywhere you go, you're in the past tense.
They talk about 2004. They don't want to hear about 2022. They don't want to hear about the future.
It's, you know, you're frozen in time.
You're at your own funeral, everywhere you go.
And all I thought about was,
I went through this with 40 of the most beautiful people
I've ever known in my life.
Maybe I'll just go through it with them again.
What if we make this award?
Instead of being the guy that stands up there awkwardly
in a uniform you've probably never worn as a soldier,
and you eat a bunch of shrimp,
and you meet like Jimmy Kimmel,
right? Why don't you
just say, look,
I'm going to be
the guy that just
constantly redirects it to the kids that got
nothing, right?
The ones that did everything
I asked him to do and
never received any
you know, maybe we
just bring the band back together.
You know, let's make the Medal
of Honor about the unit.
Why do you not go? Why don't you get to invite
people to it? You, you, you
get all these people that come to the White House, but you can't invite the guys that actually
were there that day? Why don't you want to do that? You know, why isn't this a unit award?
Why don't you bring, it's all of our, we all did it, right? There was a camera there. There was
one guy and, you know, it became a story that people talked about, but did I do it? Could I have
done it again? I'll tell you, would I do it again knowing what this was? No.
I would have called a bomb in and waited for it patiently.
There's no way you want this.
If you are a person that is going to live your entire life, you know, based on the past,
I don't know if any other award where you have to wear it everywhere.
If you interviewed Will Smith and he brought the Oscar, you'd think he was a total douchebag.
You might think he's a douchebag anyway.
And you might be right.
But my point is you don't bring that everywhere you go.
this is an award you're supposed to wear everywhere.
You're supposed to, it's your identity.
This is like, oh, no, there's only so many living,
and there's only so many in our history.
And let's, just everywhere you go, it's this award first.
And I'm thinking to myself, man, that, that, it's the wrong,
there's so many, let's talk about the Iraq war.
Let's actually have a discussion about what was sacrifice
and what was accomplished.
Because I'll tell you what, all you people that want to ignore Iraq,
for 10 years.
Baghdad's more likely to host
a summer Olympic Games than Kabul is.
I mean, can you actually look
at the two wars and say that is Iraq
better today than the
good war, the war of choice in Afghanistan?
And that's through no fault of American valor
American blood. But you could get a
president elected tomorrow that
decides Ukraine's worth American
treasure in blood. You can get a president
tomorrow that wants to hit Nova Scotia for some reason.
I don't know. Look,
We don't make those calls, but we fought a fight of our generation, and we did it with valor.
We just went beyond the highest expectations of what our military branches ask of us, and I'm proud to be a part of the generation.
I might not have voted to go to war with Iraq, but I'm proud of my war, and my war was Iraq, and I'm proud of the men I'm winner I served with.
And make the award about that.
Yeah, and just to clarify, you were the first living Medal of Honor recipient from Iraq.
Paul Ray Smith was the first recipient.
But in that story is, you know, as close to Audie Murphy as you're going to get.
You detail this, you know, as it goes from there.
So first of all, it's incredible.
you know, as you make this decision to bring everyone in
and you start reaching out to your old friends
and you're reaching out to the Gold Star families,
the widows, the moms,
I mean, it's incredibly emotional to read through it
and how that goes down
and what you're feeling and what you're thinking
and then, you know, you get to the point
where you're actually, you're taking through the ceremony
and I, you know, I attended Mikey Montser's,
Medal of Honor ceremony at the White House and you know was obviously honored to be able to be there for that but
You just being able to read your experience and what that was like and and
Reflect on what I saw. I mean you just did a great job of capturing the
the ceremony and what happens
Yeah, it's it's it's a very powerful a very powerful thing and this idea
that you talked about, you know, why not make it everybody else's award.
And it's not just something that you're saying right now.
It's what you actually did.
You reached out to everybody.
You got the band back together.
Those are the words that you use in the book.
They allowed us to take those guys on stage.
Oh, no.
That was awesome.
That was epic.
That really was cool.
And listen, I got to tell you, I don't know how I would have reacted.
You know, they handled it with grace and love.
And the ramrods of my unit were, they're, I don't think, you know, in my 20s, I couldn't tell another man.
You know, we, in the military, we're super weird about, you know, we laugh at things that are, you look at today and you're like, you would never say these words or you'd never laugh at these jokes.
But expressing love in my 20s was, could not be done.
You couldn't go up to a guy in your 30s or your 20s in uniform and be like, I'm, I'm.
I love you.
You know, don't ask, don't tell.
Just love me.
Write me a note or something.
And when you hit a certain age, you realize, I love you and I want to tell you that.
I care about you.
I really am proud to be in your life.
It's a gift that you and I are connected.
And no matter what happens in this world, no matter what disappointment you have, I know who you are.
I know what you're capable of.
I know what you've done from me
and, you know,
these, the questions
that I was always afraid of,
you know, if I would have gotten this thing when I was 29,
I probably would have been an idiot.
I probably would have,
you know, I don't know if I was emotionally mature enough
to be able to realize that
you're a product of the people you're with.
You know, we smoke cigarettes at 14
and we blame, you know, peer pressure.
But peer pressure,
also makes you kick a door down. Peer pressure makes you clear a road to IEDs. It makes you jump
out of a helicopter with a rope. It depends who your peers are. If you've got quality people,
you're going to be all right. Following the herd is okay if the people are worth it. If you
got dirtbags and scumbags, you're going to be an idiot. So these kids are men. They're all
great people. I'm blessed to have them in my life. I'm glad we're back. But, you know, it doesn't
give you a pass and there's always going to be you know there's it's it's it's crazy how
we think that something that we get is you know somehow going to make you coast through like
i think there's a mindset that you don't need to do anything anymore get a DUI tomorrow and find
out the first thing they say won't be you know a random guy in buffalo with a radio show
It's going to be, you know, the metal viner guy gets a DUI, as it should be.
Don't get a DUI.
Don't be an idiot.
You know, it's not hard to do.
I hope.
Yeah, pretty awesome.
On that day, when you talked about them coming on stage, you say the president asked my family to join us on stage.
This is right after you receive the Medal of Honor.
This has become a traditional gesture to acknowledge the family.
My mother walked up to meet the president along with my brothers.
Dan and ran and my three beloved children.
Their mother stepped up to sharing the stage with them was unforgettable.
My family together in front of countless people across the world.
The effects of November 10th have rippled through their lives ever since,
even if the kids had not known it.
They earned this, a gesture that was once an homage to them by our president and
atonement for all the hardships we'd experienced as a family since my return.
As I stood there, though, my heart and head told me this needed to be first.
and foremost the ramrods spotlight.
Their moment.
I needed to give this honor
their on stage with the president to the men,
to Mara Lee and Colin Sims,
where it rightfully belonged.
I moved to President Trump and asked him,
sir, can I bring my ramrods up here?
I pointed to the audience.
Trump was surprised.
This wasn't just a break in protocol.
This was taking a wrecking ball to it.
But this president was never one
to adhere rigidly to,
to pass traditions.
He asked, how many are we talking?
All of them, sir.
He looked over at them and said,
let's do it.
Bring them up.
Come on up here, guys.
President Trump rolled his hands over to welcome them.
Get up here.
The ramrods flowed onto the tiny stage.
This felt right.
This wasn't my award.
This was our award.
Our moment, not mine.
We fought the Battle of Fallujah as one family.
We would share this stage as one family.
It reminded me I was never alone.
I always had them.
These men never betrayed me, never let me down.
They did everything I asked of them and more.
They are the reason I am alive and did have my reunion with Evan after all.
Of course, they were also the reason I was wearing this award.
There we were shoulder to shoulder one more time.
Captain Sims led the way for this moment.
He showed us that true leadership didn't end with our time in combat.
It took me 14 years to figure that out.
wanted us to fight scrupiously not because he saw it as a path to victory but because he knew
it was the only way we would survive the aftermath of war I had never known an officer who looked
that far ahead he wasn't trying to just be our commander in Iraq he felt that responsibility would
be his forever as this event unfolded I understood the vision of our forever commander
the Medal of Honor had brought us back together it was our unifying
force.
Yeah.
And what's pretty awesome is you can go watch this on YouTube.
I hate to say it, but you can go watch this on YouTube and it's freaking outstanding to
see.
It was awesome.
It was awesome to go through.
And so then, you know, the Army wants you back and help out, recruit, do all those
things.
And, you know, one of the things that really opened my eyes, the Army is, I love my army.
And I, I, that's the soft spot.
It's always been, don't let, you know, your army is depending on you and you want to do
its best.
But the army also has changed a little bit.
And it's another generation's army.
It's not really my army anymore.
And I think that's not necessarily a bad thing, but it's not a good thing, you know, all right?
And, and there were times during this process where I had, I had people in my life.
I wanted to be able to experience this award with the folks that I had a new,
I had a new brotherhood of people that I cared for.
And because of the situation, you know, with divorce and the Army and the White House getting
involved and all the PR people and the communications people,
they were making calls and dictating decisions that weren't really,
putting me first, right? And it's tough. It's tough because you have to think, well, this is about
the institution, this is about this, this is about, but we're supposed to be an organization that is
lethal, that's ready for the next fight. And we are far too in the weeds as an institution right now.
I don't know the Navy or the Air Force or the Marine Corps, but I could tell you that, you know,
there is this generation.
We were supposed to, you know,
they talk about that famous class in West Point during the Civil War
that had all this experience in the Mexican and the Indian campaigns
and how great they were in battle in the Civil War
because of all the experience they had,
that was supposed to be us after 20 years of war.
We were supposed to have the best generals and the best colonels
because every one of these young lieutenants cut their teeth in combat.
We didn't have it after the Gulf War.
They all went away.
And you had peace time.
And peace is great.
We love peace.
We fight for peace.
But my God, we are hemorrhaging far too many like colonels and majors that are just saying,
it's not worth it.
And the guys that sticking around for four stars, I worry that in 10 years they're the ones
that need it.
They ain't got nothing else to do.
There was a time when our four star generals were the best of, they were CEOs.
I just saw one retired the other day.
This guy could work anywhere in the country.
He's that good.
Paul Funk is one of the greatest generals
the Army's ever seen.
What's going to happen in 10 years?
Are we going to have the best of the best?
Or are we going to have people that just hung out long enough?
Survivor Island.
They kept a hell down to the torch.
And they're there.
It's sad.
But I want my commands armages to all have been private.
in Ramadi and Fallujah.
I want my generals to have been lieutenants in Kabul and in Afghanistan.
We don't.
We're losing it.
Well, that would certainly be an ideal thing.
And speaking of ideal things, you ended up giving a speech.
And this speech the next day, this is at the Hall of Heroes at the Pentagon,
and you end up giving this speech, it's an amazing speech.
It's an amazing speech.
And it's got a bunch of views.
Once again, you can go watch this.
But in the speech, a lot of is you're just paying a tribute to the men you fought alongside.
And you pay homage to all the services.
But there's one part of the speech that I think it captures what you just said of what the ideal, what the American military is supposed to be.
and I just want to read this real quick.
You say this,
and go watch this whole speech on YouTube.
You say this,
the entire military is one cohesive,
dedicated force,
and the threats to our nations,
they don't sleep.
They're watching our every move.
Iran, Russia, China,
North Korea, ISIS, al-Qaeda.
They may be watching this right now.
Our military should not be mistaken
for a cable news
Gab Fest show.
We don't care what you look like.
We don't care who you voted for.
Who you worship, what you worship, who you love.
It doesn't matter if your dad left you millions when he died or if you knew who your father was.
We have been honed into a machine of lethal moving parts that you would be wise to avoid if you know what's good for you.
We will not be intimidated.
We will not back down.
We've seen war.
We don't want war.
But if you want war with the United States of America, there's one thing I can promise you.
So help me, God.
Someone else will raise your sons and daughters.
We fight so our children never have to.
We fight for one day when our children and our enemy's children can discuss their differences without fear or loathing.
We fight so that anyone out of our children.
there thinking about raising arms against our citizens or allies realizes the futility
of attrition against a disciplined professional and lethal force built to withstand
anything you can dream of throwing at us Americans want this kind of country
Americans want this kind of world and we stand ready to defend it to protect us
so help us God may God bless this beautiful
Army. May God bless our Marine Corps, our Navy, our Air Force, and our Coast Guard. May God bless our allies.
And we already know that God blessed America because he gave us the greatest fighting force this world has ever seen.
2-2 infantry and the first infantry division. Thank you, Ramrods. Duty first. Duke's.
again to me
that's the military
that I tried to join
that's the military
I tried to represent
when I was in
and many of those
I served alongside
that's exactly the way they felt
and you captured it
incredibly
I appreciate that
little editorializing
at the end of the greatest
fighting force
the world's ever seen
you know that might be hyperbole
but my point in that
is that you know
know, I think we're all raised differently in the military. Our leaders gave us tough love.
But now that we're out, we're still ambassadors. And it's very, very important that people start
to see veterans, you know, we're not some infomercial for Sally Struthers. For 99 cents a
month, private snuffy can get a cup of coffee. You know what I mean? Like we got, you know,
like wounded dogs in cages, building houses.
I love those institutions, but we're going to run out of houses to build.
We're going to run out of wounded men and women who gave us everything for our country.
God bless their sacrifice, God bless their service.
But I don't want a cottage industry of you watch a recruiting commercial.
It's followed by a guy lost his limb trying to open his kitchen cabinet.
I mean, that's a really schizophrenic message to send to America's young people.
How do you honor service and sacrifice without bookending it next to a commercial saying,
join us, and we too will give you a kitchen countertop that allows you to cook in front of your family
in case the worst thing happens.
Hey, listen, everyone knows what's going on with service.
And the men and women who have sacrificed, who have been out there, they empower us.
They're walking vessels of valor, our generational valor.
No one should sheep in that. No one should denigrate that. Buy them two houses and an additional car.
In fact, take it from Iraq. Let the Iraqi people pay reparations for our dead and are injured.
I'm all about it. I have no problems with that at all. But at the same time, we still have to have a warrior class in America.
and this is just the victimization of veterans is something that just absolutely I find repugnant.
And it's not helping us.
It's not making us more deadlier or more lethal on the battlefield.
It's not intimidating our adversaries.
And it's not bringing peace to our allies.
It just shows that, well, eventually America will get it.
Eventually we'll understand that the greatest generation was the greatest generation of American because they knew they were at war.
and they had to do everything to win their war.
You want to say no to war forever?
I'll be with you.
I don't want to see war again.
But if this is going to happen,
it's got to be overwhelming, devastating,
and a reminder to your future generation,
go to dental school and learn a trade.
Don't fight against Americans
because it is going to end in tears every single time.
And I just don't think we're that military anymore.
And I don't think our elected officials,
want us to be that military anymore.
You know, hearing the stories of people joining our military to get hormone therapy,
it's like, what are you doing?
You're combat ineffective.
You can't deploy.
Why would I want you in my team?
What do you do?
I want a college degree.
You want a college degree?
Fantastic.
You want to be a citizen?
Fantastic.
You want to better yourself?
better your community, better your country.
I'm all about giving you the tools to make your society better for serving.
You're not bettering yourself because you're selfish and you see yourself in a different light
and this is what's best for me.
It's not best for your community.
It's not best for your country.
It's best for you.
And that's the opposite.
It's literally 180 degrees from what we're supposed to be.
And I just don't know why more people aren't standing up, especially
our generation saying just because I'm who we are does not offend you I mean representing our true
self of what the military is and what veterans do is is not something it invokes pride right it gives
us swagger it gives us security it gives us pride it gives us patriotism if it's offensive to
you that's the problem that's your problem it's not it's not the institution's problem
I'm so sick and tired of having to apologize for what?
What do you want me to do?
You know, the first question that we got asked
when we did the whole little media thing
after the Medal of Honor is,
what do you say to the families
who lost loved ones in Iraq or Afghanistan?
And I'm thinking to myself,
the fact that you have to ask that
just shows me, I mean, what are you goose stepping with, you know,
what side?
You tell a family member that they're,
loved one died so that we could live. That's what happened. Their sacrifice could have been any one of us.
They put themselves in a position so that we could have a tomorrow and a future. And if that is
difficult for you to understand, then I'm glad you never served. Honestly, the part of me wants to think
that maybe we think we're better than civilians and other parts want to say, well, some people can't
do this. Some people don't want to do this. I get all of it. But there are certainly people.
that are offended by people who make the choice to serve their country or serve in, you know,
any sector of first responders or any of these other folks, they're just offended by everything.
And I honestly, I don't even give a damn about it.
I mean, you're just a vacuous non-entity at the end of the day.
If you're not going to put the fire out, if you're not going to help tell everyone there's a fire,
and all you want to do is comment on why the fire got put out?
then you're just a jackoff.
Like, there's no, there's no, there's nothing in the chain that says, I need more of that.
So stop acting like you're on an equal platform with a disabled veteran.
You know, let's give a service dog to everyone.
If you need a dog, get a dog.
I'm not offended that you have a dog.
I don't think you need a pot-belly pig.
I think you're being obnoxious with a peacock.
I think when you brought a bowl with fairy shrimp in it, you're just being an ass.
I mean, we can differentiate between the people that need to be put on a pedestal and the people that just want to be acknowledged for being different.
They wanted to serve.
They love our country.
They love our family.
We're all different walks of life.
But that doesn't mean that we're not proactive to people that are obviously trying to get in the way of this family tradition.
Today, if you're joining the Marine Corps of the Army, it's because your dad did it.
because your uncle did it.
Why isn't this a decision
everyone is making?
You have an obligation to go to college.
Everyone has an obligation.
Well, you're not going to college.
What's wrong with you?
What do you mean?
You're not going to college.
Obviously, you're not serious about succeeding in life.
It's ridiculous.
And then you think to yourself,
why isn't every single 18-year-old saying,
I'm going to do my two years and find myself,
I'm going to learn about people and be uncomfortable and be different and sacrifice and see the world and see different people and be surrounded by diversity and difference.
I don't have to force the diversity.
It's already there.
There's diversity everywhere, right?
And it's in the military.
It's in every walk of life.
There's diversity.
Embrace it.
It's beautiful.
But it's different.
And you have to be exposed to that different.
grow. I don't understand why every able-bodied person is insane. I want some of that. I want to be better.
I want to take care of myself. I want individual ruggedness. I want to be tough. I want to survive.
Right? And you've got a generation of website developers that, you know, I mean, seriously, if a zombie
apocalypse happens, I look at, there was a time when, you know, a person said, I want a partner who's going to be there for,
me when it all goes down. And now that decision isn't, I want someone who what. Look, I understand that,
you know, things have changed. We can't change. We have to be the same yesterday, today,
forever. And the military cannot adapt to this schizophrenic nature of, hey, today we believe
the following individuals, you know, are a protected.
class. Today we believe the following individuals can reproduce. Today we believe the following,
I mean, you want to kick out 15,000 people for vaccinations. What did you do with anthrax?
Did you dishonorably discharge them? What did you tell them? You said, you don't want the anthrax?
Well, you know you're not going to defend your country with all the people you trained with for a year.
Why don't you take the anthrax? That was the choice. Am I going to not deploy with these men
that I consider family to me?
Because what?
I don't know what anthrax is.
If anthrax was naturally occurring outside of training grounds in San Diego,
would people not, you know,
this vaccination thing to me is an object lesson
and how we have completely decided that we want our universe,
instead of our universities becoming more like our military,
we're deciding to make the military plug and play to everything that's happened in society.
And unfortunately, the enemy gets a vote.
And the enemy doesn't give a damn about inclusiveness or feeling good.
The enemy wants to kill you.
They want to kill you as quickly as they possibly can.
And I don't want a military that feels good at the end of the day about who they are.
I want the military to feel good about who they are because they dominated the battle space.
and Americans don't know what a mortar incoming or outgoing sounds like, right?
That's a problem.
Yeah, I mean, the military has one purpose.
And that's to be able to fight and destroy the enemy.
That's what it is.
And if you're doing things to the military that don't enhance that capability, it's a problem.
And you know, you said that the enemy doesn't care what we're doing, what we're doing.
Actually, they do care what we're doing and they're trying to encourage it as much as possible.
They want us to be as weak as they can possibly make us.
They can get drugs over the border.
They can put programs on your phone that fill your brain with a bunch of stuff that makes you think things that are not healthy.
Like, that stuff's actually happening.
That's actually happening.
So hopefully, well, I'll tell you one thing.
These books that you've written in my Estableness,
Any 15 to 23 year old male that reads these books will be encouraged to move in the right direction
because they lay out what it means and and like I said, they're an incredible, this incredible arc between the two books and
They're incredibly powerful and and this is these are stories that need to be told
These are stories that need to be told so people understand what it takes and what it means and
and what a brotherhood is inside of a military organization and what
sacrifice really is and we can never forget these things and you would think you
would think the way the civilian populace sometimes behaves you'd think that
these wars didn't happen they happened a couple years ago you know they happened a couple
years ago and you know what they're gonna happen
again. They're going to happen again. And there's there's there's always going to be war.
There's always going to be conflict. What conversation do you have if that if that does go down? In five
years, you're talking to an 18 year old and they're like, did you foresee this coming? How what?
You go to universities. I know some people don't touch the the, you know, Vassar giving the talks on the circuit.
But one of the things that young people in college will always ask, you know, a veteran is what can we do to prepare for the future?
And sometimes the answer of you need to be prepared to kill 20 communist Chinese is, you know, 20 million people want you dead.
There's a way that we can say to the Chinese government, the people of China are not the enemy.
The people of Russia are not the enemy.
The people of Iraq or Afghanistan are not the enemy.
But no Venezuelan leader or Mullah and Iran or forever leader of China is going to dictate how the world behaves.
So I don't think I would have told you at the end that I hung up my uniform that the world was better and safer.
And I'm disgusted that, you know, as we grow into our twilight,
our kids are going to have to learn
to shoot, move, and communicate.
And that's heartbreaking.
And I don't know what,
how do you have that conversation?
There's only one thing that's more heartbreaking than that,
and that is if they don't learn to shoot, move, and communicate.
Because if they don't learn to shoot, move, and communicate,
it will be overrun.
I mean, at some point,
you have to be able to back up the way you want to live.
You don't just get to walk around the world
doing whatever you want without being able to do.
defend that way of life. And if we don't maintain that ability to defend the way of life that we
often take for granted here, it'll go away. It'll go away. All right. Books coming out,
November 8th, everyone by it immediately. Remember the ramrods. Where can people find you right now?
What are you doing right now? So we are odyssey.com, the David Belavilla show, five days a week,
four hours a day. Tons of
content that is not really meant to upset anyone.
Pretty PG-13 stuff.
But I got to tell you, I find that what I'm trying to do with my radio show is to have discourse.
You know, I don't see the world the way a left-wing progressive sees the world.
I respect them.
I want them.
I need them in my culture and my society.
I don't want to cancel them.
I want to learn.
but I need you to understand that if we disagree, we need to discuss how to disagree.
And there's a way that you can have a discussion with someone that you disagree with
and leave it with respect.
And we have no ability to have discourse in the country today.
And so what I try to do in my little piece of the world is just facilitate quality,
critical thinking, and discourse.
This isn't how you, I disagree with X, Y, and Z, inflation, energy,
oil, this is what I feel about abortion, marriage, wonderful.
I don't care what you think.
It really, it's boring to me.
What you think.
How do you think?
Why do you think that?
That's far more interesting.
Because it always is going to come to a selfish exercise.
I feel this way because I robbed a bank and I would like to be reformed.
No bail.
It's always like, there's always a story that makes you have, why are you against, you know,
pan-Asian trade?
Well, I'll tell you, I have a tire company.
And my intellectual property was, there's always a reason for it.
So what you think, no one cares about, why you think it, and how you think, to me, is the secret sauce.
And so what I try to do in a talk show is get 80-year-old people and 20-year-old people from all different walks of life to tell me, you know, you're transgender.
Tell me what do you, what motivates you to call into a talk?
show, what do you want people to understand? Because I don't get it. And I don't mean disrespect.
I don't understand it. Help me understand it. No, I'm not here to help you understand it.
I'm here to tell you you're wrong. Okay, well, I do have a problem with that. Because if I'm asking you to
help me understand something and you refuse to, that's where everyone shuts down and we label each other
and where you're this or you're that. I'm just saying I want to know what, where are you coming from
and why is it important that I give a shit
about where you're coming from?
Because I bet you you don't.
You don't care.
I could bore you for four hours
with the Buffalo Bill secondary
and why the Tampa 2.
You're going to be like, no one cares, dude.
No one gives a damp.
I do.
Why do you care so much about it?
Why are you so into a football team?
Is there anything else going on in your town?
Maybe there isn't.
You've got chicken wings.
They're cool, you know?
Be Fun Wick is fun.
Logan Barry.
why do you feel this way?
Why is it important that I understand where you're coming from?
And if I can't get your respect enough to see me as a person,
then I, you're not even, all you're doing is annoying people.
No, really.
And we have to stop annoying each other and just say, look, where are you coming from?
Why?
Because I'm a veteran does not make me better than a person that isn't a veteran.
And for a long time I thought that way.
In my heart of hearts, I'm better than you, right?
That's not true.
I've learned in my elder years that that's ridiculous.
Your patriotism has nothing to do with what you did in the military or out of the military, right?
I just would like you to love the home team.
I think that's, you know, just love our team and be supportive of it.
And at the end of the day, if you can respect people and disagree with them, man, I think we could solve all of our problems, right?
it's fun.
It's a little frustrating, but it's fun.
How long is the show?
It's four hours a day, five days a week.
And it's, I get a lot of Canadians.
You know, the Canadians, because we're close to Buffalo is close to Toronto.
The Canadians know more about the Constitution than we do.
And the Canadians have nothing but like state-run information.
They don't have choices.
So they'll be like, listen, let me tell you about the Second Amendment, why it's important.
You know, the article's a confederation.
It doesn't allow us for a standing army.
I'm like, where are you from?
Brampton.
Like, you're not even, you're not supposed to know any of that.
You know, your prime minister needs a haircut.
Like, it always, it's always an education and it's super fun.
And I think it's a great service to just say, hey, we have to be better.
We can be better.
Optimism is great.
It doesn't make you naive.
Be hopeful.
look forward to the future, but it's all about the way we conduct ourselves and our discourse
and how absolutely toxic it can be by just saying, nope, you're one of them.
I don't want to hear it. And nothing gets done after that.
To find you, Davidbelavia.com.
Davidbelia.com and go to odyssey.com and what is it, odyssey.com?
Odyssey. It's A-U-D-A-C-Y. It used to be Entercom.
They changed the name to Odyssey.
What about your social media?
Do you actually have it?
I don't really do.
I mean, I just, for the book, we started a DG Belavia at DG Belavia Twitter and Facebook
one.
But what happens is you get all these like Nigerians and people that create, you know,
I'm on like dating sites.
Like I need money to get out of Iraq.
You know, could you help me?
So I just need a thousand bucks.
I'm trapped in, you know, in Nepal.
It's like, no, that's not me.
That's not.
But there's a lot of those out there.
So you're not, so are you on Instagram too or no?
I'm on everything.
But DG.G. Belavia.
David Belavia Instagram.
David Belavia on Facebook, all that stuff.
But D.G. Belavia because there's so many accounts on Twitter.
But that's Twitter.
But for the most part, I don't really do that.
The social media thing is just main.
Are you nuts over that?
I'm not nuts on it, but I'm on it.
I'm on it.
How long?
I see with the time.
Right, right.
With the, you know, working out and stuff.
Yeah.
Do you get a good response for that or do people get it?
I don't know.
I mean, some people chime in.
Yeah, people chime in.
Do you read any comments?
You know, I'll look through the comments sometimes, but, you know, I don't get, I don't get all hyped up about what anybody says.
I mean, if somebody says something cool, I'm stoked.
But if there's someone that wants to.
to say something negative, it literally doesn't bother me at all.
I just kind of like, oh, cool, you know, it's a bot.
You know what a bot is, right?
So it's just a bot.
But there's people that get really spun up about that stuff.
I just look at them and say, that's a bot.
Where are you getting spun up about a computer program in Russia or something that's
putting that information into you.
But, no, I've found social media to be mostly good.
I've connected with some incredible people.
I mean, I've had people come on the podcast that were, you know, Vietnam, World War II, that I connected with them through social media.
So that's been awesome. I get great feedback from people.
What we, some of the stuff I make, I'll get feedback.
Hey, you should make this.
You should make that.
I'm like, oh, that sounds like a good idea.
I didn't really think of that.
I think if you go into social media with like a positive mindset, as cheesy as that sound of like, okay, there's going to be some good stuff in here.
You're going to find it.
If you go in there worried about a bunch of negativity, which there's definitely going to be, it'll drive you crazy.
So I don't get wrapped around any of it.
What did it take for you to get to that enlightenment?
Was it a man, I was on Joe Rogan's podcast and Joe Rogan's like, hey, dude, you know, like at some point he goes, hey, this is the first time I was on.
This was 2015.
And he's like, dude, you know, when this comes out, don't read the comments.
It's like a warning, right?
And I think, you know, in the military, you get thick skin, right?
And so I would say I definitely had thick skin.
So they came out and I sat, I remember I sat in my daughter's room, my oldest daughter,
and we were reading the comments and I was laughing hysterically because some of them
are pretty freaking funny about, you know, I'm a Neanderthal and obviously I could barely
string a sentence together and all these things.
And I was just laughing and it seemed funny.
And so I think from day one, A, from Rogan's comment, like, hey, don't read the comments.
I didn't take that literally.
What I took it was is,
hey, look, there's going to be people that are assholes.
And when you read shit from people that are assholes,
just say, yeah, Roger that.
And some of them, like I said, some of them are pretty funny.
So it didn't take me long at all.
Didn't take me long.
But, you know, it's a thick skin.
You're in the military.
Any weakness that you show is immediately being pounced upon by your platoon mates
and you're going to get torn apart.
It's literally the worst defense in the world is to say,
Ouch.
That really hurt.
Please don't ever mention my goiter.
It's going to come up 85 times.
I've got something in the world that really bothers me.
And I've never told anybody what it is ever.
And I never will.
I'll probably leave it in my last will and testament and say, hey, y'all in my
platoon that did this at some time or if you wanted to really piss me off, if you would
have done this, it really would have bothered me.
But I'd never let you bastards know.
So I don't tell anybody.
You know, so I started telling young people.
that you should be the same way about your dreams.
I think everyone should have a fake dream that they give.
So how do you utilize this?
Don't ever share what you really want to do in life.
It's no one's,
you have to protect that.
It's what you want.
What do you want to be in 10 years?
Why the hell am I telling you?
There's one school of thought of that is like when I say,
hey man,
I'm going to lose 30 pounds and I posted on the internet.
Hey, everybody,
I'm going to lose 30 pounds.
And then you're like,
oh, I better lose it or else I'm going to look like a shipperer.
or hey, I'm going to run a marathon,
and I'm going to run it on this date.
And so there's, I forget, there's a name for that.
Do you know what the name for that is?
Something along the lines of public accountability.
Public accountability.
So that's the thing where you say,
hey, my dream is to, you know,
create my own, or write a book, right?
And so you tell everybody and now you kind of get pressured.
So what's your reasoning behind not telling people?
I think you should protect,
you have people in your life,
trust is everything.
right so you have people in your life that you trust these are your life partners and everything else
that's what that relationship is all about right together we're going to raise a family
we're thinking about buying a sheep farm outside of san diego that raise them together in harmony
all right that with the moment you go out and start telling people this is my ambition
why would i want to expose what i want or what i'm not manifesting i don't you're
don't need accountability from people. If I'm losing 30 pounds, again, this is, I think we,
we as a generation, we're the same roughly. I think the social media of we are the ones that
screwed up social media. It's not the young kids. It's the, it's the gen Xers that, you know,
in the old days, I would drive by your house and be like, you're a loser, right out the window.
And now I stop at the driveway and I'm like, let's wait for a comment.
it's not enough to scream you're a loser now I got to wait in my car to be like who's going to come
out and debate me on whether or not I think you're a loser and we put things on in social media
that are just like we're thirsty for some sort of response that I'm proud that you're losing 30
pounds good for you you need to you know what that's healthy who gives a damn either you're doing it
because you want to do it or you're doing it because you want people to think you're doing it
At the end of the day, if you have a dream to be a 50-year-old law school graduate,
shut up.
They should find out about your R&B album the day you drop it.
Not I'm in the studio.
Do you know what I mean?
Because all you're going to do is you're going to hear for three months.
What the hell are you thinking?
Chaka's got a cookbook.
That's awesome.
Let's see it the day it comes out.
Why am I telling everyone busy in the kitchen today?
Work it on the new recipe.
So there's where I think.
Now I see
I'm capturing or I see a similar vein with people
where they get satisfaction
just by saying, you know,
hey, I'm always want to write a cookbook.
I'm going to come out with a cookbook.
And they get a boost from that.
They get a, what is it, an endorphine?
A dopamine hit.
They get a dopamine hit by telling you,
hey, man, I'm writing a cookbook right now.
And that's enough to make me feel good
that I don't actually do anything.
Right, right.
As opposed to me not getting that instead of going and freaking hammering on my computer with my steak recipes.
Would you rather have 27-inch biceps or would you rather have vegetable oil in your arms?
No, honestly, you could look way, you would look.
And if you were that Iranian Hulk, that guy who, those are the guy, you invite him to move and he can't lift the couch, he can't do anything.
He has.
So that's the equivalent for you of telling you what my name?
my dreams are.
Don't, I don't, I'm just
injecting, what is it?
What is it? What are they injecting their
biceps?
What, what was the lesson?
Did you have this in the seals?
If you had a new girlfriend or a wife,
would you ever show anyone a picture
of someone that you were romantically connected?
How long was I romantically connected to said woman?
The only time they should ever see your partner is in person.
Because that is the dumbest thing you did.
That is a little way.
Why would you do that?
I want to show you who I'm dating.
And then you wait for like, what is the responsible
to be like, oh my, is she okay?
Where is she from?
Chernobyl.
You don't do that.
That's weird too.
Don't be asking you.
You see a picture of my girl.
Not even if that's your friend and you're like, oh, I heard you're dating somebody new.
Like, yeah, what, tell me.
I don't know.
I feel like that's normal.
I had a, I knew a guy who had a picture of his family and all, you know, his daughter and his wife.
They're in bikinis.
And I just say, listen, man.
No, you got to take this picture down because it's not only inappropriate.
There's no way this is safe.
This is not safe for anyone.
They make a comment.
They're weird.
They don't make a comment.
They're probably normal, right?
But why would you even do that?
Don't ever in the military, rule number one is you never show a picture of anyone you are involved with because there's no point to it.
It's weird.
Now that you're putting it to you that.
It's a horrible thing to do.
That was one thing when I was.
reading your book and you or no when you were talking today and it's also in your book like one time
my wife asked me I was on a point I was in Ramadi and my wife says oh the kids want to see a picture
of where you sleep you know and I had like we know we had some old Saddam building and we had you know
built our little plywood freaking beds in there and stuff like this and so I'm like cool and I would
email my wife like once a week you know a little update you know hey chow's great uh miss you
blah blah blah how the kids and so I went to take a picture of where
I slept at night and I realized there's like no picture.
So I went into like my, went to my freaking locker.
Pulled out pictures of my wife and kids.
Pinned them up, took a picture, took them all down, put them back in the folder, put it in the drawer and shut it.
Because that's smart.
Just like you were talking about.
Like the last thing I needed to be thinking about over there was my wife's.
Absolutely.
And that seems like a maybe that seems like it's not healthy, but I think it's completely healthy.
You got guys depending on your decision making.
Without a doubt.
It doesn't mean that you don't love it.
It's like whenever I see a Facebook profile, it's like Joe and Kim Jones, and I'm like, oh, no.
You know what I mean?
Like, you know what I mean?
Like you're there, you don't want to be a two-headed monster.
You got to have autonomy.
But you also have to have trust.
Yeah.
I had the luxury of my wife being very, I've described emotionally dependent.
So she didn't need me to be like telling her, you know, hey, I hope everything's great.
And she was like, hey, I got this.
I got the home.
I got the freaking water heater when it breaks.
I got the whatever, the toilet when it gets stopped up.
You handle your, you know, what your business overseas,
and I'll take care of this stuff.
And that was pretty, very lucky.
Yeah.
I'm lucky to be in that scenario.
But to me, and it's the ultimate in just, you know, making those choices and putting
those barriers up.
Because there's, in today's, you know, private sector and jobs today, is absolutely no.
I mean, you know, you bring your lunch to work.
You don't make lunch at work.
You don't get to the kitchen and start constructing a meal.
Like, what the hell's wrong with you?
You know, it's like I have one, the pet peeve that drives me nuts is the wet hair.
What's the wet hair?
Anyone that shows up with wet hair.
Like, is it raining out?
No, you have no time management.
Just be late.
Be late and presentable.
coming from a guy that bought a blow jar.
You know what?
I learned lessons in life,
but there's no reason why someone should be running into work,
brushing their teeth,
you know,
doing,
just,
I'm going to be late.
And then I'm going to show up
and I'm presentable,
I'm ready to go.
This isn't a meeting with,
you know,
tribal elders.
The first 45 minutes
we're just going to waste time
talking about the weather.
Show up,
be ready,
everything's cool.
You always got that guy
that's going from like cubicle
to cubicle,
asking,
hey,
how you doing?
what's going on.
We have no line of like,
what's personal?
What are you doing this weekend?
None of your damn business, Bob.
Get my expense sheets.
You know what I mean?
Like, we're buddies.
You want to be friends.
I don't want to be friends.
I want to just get the job done.
You know what I mean?
With dry hair while we're at it.
Echo Charles,
you got any questions?
I do not.
Sometimes Echo throws that curve ball in the end, man.
So you got to watch.
Dopamine.
Dopamine.
Serapamine.
It's a thing's real.
It's real. David, any closing thoughts?
No, I want to say honestly, what you do is it's important to our generation and a lot of people look up to you and it's rare that you meet someone that's worthy of that.
There's a lot of people that have the pedestals, the products, this is what I want the world to see.
This is the person I want to be and the perception.
And you're legitimate.
You're who you are.
you who you there's no difference with a microphone is this on by the way
no when the microphone when the mic or when the mic's job with the bikes odd it's the same
and and that's it's refreshing I really was afraid that I was going to meet you and I was
going to be like oh man I wonder what that guy would be like who's that guy what's that guy
like if you've never done that where you met someone and you really really thought they
were just totally squared away.
This is someone I could look up to as a mentor.
And then you're just like,
I have done it, but I'm just wondering
what asshole Jocko would be like.
Who's that guy?
Oh, you could totally.
Am I like, uh,
I don't know, what would I be doing?
Head cold.
What would I be doing?
COVID Jocko.
Is that your ulterior?
Well, I had COVID a couple times.
It was no factor.
No factor.
I remember when that, when you cut a video
that you had COVID,
there was like,
there was controversy.
It's like, oh, what?
What did he do?
Yeah.
Oh,
I'll tell you what I did.
You told people,
people were like,
oh, he must be.
No, I was doing events.
I, like,
during COVID,
there was times where I went to,
like,
the first live event that I did
with COVID,
when COVID was a thing.
And I went to this thing.
It was in Arizona.
And I forget what month it was,
but I went,
and I was thinking,
like, oh,
how freaked out is everybody going to be?
And I wasn't freaked out of COVID,
because I was,
like, young and healthy.
And anyways,
I went to this event and and then they said hey so can people shake your hand when you're done I'm like yeah cool and so I stepped down off a stage and they all line up a 500 people out of a thousand or whatever
and the funny thing was was there was there was a few people there's probably 10 people that had masks on as they approached me right so they come they come up to take the picture they shake my hand they take their mask off to take the picture when they get close to me I'm like I just you know so yeah I got COVID
But maybe that's the evil jaco.
Well, you would figure if you're going to be a person,
it's usually when you're sick or you're not in sound mind.
But those were the viral jaco videos are not what you expect them to be.
They're not like, it's not controversy.
It's just something that happened to you that people make viral
because I can't believe it's happening.
Like, as if you had COVID, it was a declaration like you wanted to talk about your vaccine status.
There was a time when that question was asked.
Some people didn't want to talk about it.
Some people did.
Some people said it's none of your business.
But the assumption that you had COVID, it meant something about vaccine status.
We now know it's ridiculous.
It's ridiculous.
The Yankees, Aaron Judge, he got COVID.
Everyone's like, I can't believe you didn't get vaccinated.
I still do that, by the way.
When I hear that someone gets COVID, I'm like, why wouldn't you want to get vaccinated?
It's so weird.
Like, you should know better.
You're the vice president of the United States.
You should get vaxed.
It's safe and effective.
Like, do it.
Everyone's doing it.
I'm telling you, it kills me.
I love that.
I remember that moment specifically when everyone was asking, like, what was he doing?
Yeah.
Well, as you know from doing radio four hours a day, you can't pretend to be someone for four hours a day.
And just like on this podcast, you can't come on here.
I can't come on here and talk for hours.
hours and hours and like be in some character mode where I'm pretending to be someone that I'm not.
I think it would be hard for me.
But there's a lot of MMA guys, a lot of guys that just are not.
I mean, look, I love the sport and I think those guys are, Tim Kennedy is one of the coolest guys.
Totally.
I mean, I love that dude.
He's funny.
He's just a maniac.
But there are a lot of people that just aren't tough people.
The facade is they're tough, but they're not tough, you know what I mean?
And I just think that that's, it's cool that there's no, you know, you don't have to put that out there.
It's genuine and it's real and you don't have to, you don't have, this is not a podcast, it's an interview show.
The podcast format is like, this is how Jock sees the world.
You know what I mean?
Let me tell you what I like.
I like fudge.
I like fudge.
I like cookies.
And I like pumpkin pie.
And then you do a podcast about just you.
You're sharing this platform with a lot of people, given opportunities, putting the light
that's on you on other people, helping people, sharing ideas, being consistent.
It's important.
It's appreciated.
I don't know if you get it enough.
But I really do appreciate this.
And I appreciate you.
You're letting me be a part of it and everything you continue to do because it means a lot.
Seeing people that you emulate, turn out to be honorable and decent is awesome.
So thank you.
You, I don't know about it.
Nobody does.
That's okay.
That's how he likes it.
That dopamine thing scared me.
You had that way too quick.
It's real.
He's called dopamine.
Yes, sir.
Yes, sir.
Right.
Well, man, it's, you know, I've said this a couple times on this podcast.
I mean, if you could sit down and talk with John Bazelone for three, four, five hours.
It's like what I wouldn't give to be able to do that.
He's from Buffalo.
Yeah.
I love that too.
So to be able to sit here and talk to you for, you know, however many hours we've been going,
it's just an honor.
And I know that so many people are going to learn so much from this.
So thanks for coming on.
Thanks for the lessons learned.
Thanks for your service, obviously.
Thanks for your leadership.
And thanks for the example that you set for everyone in the Army and everyone in the military.
and really for the citizens of our country of how to be honorable.
That means a lot, and I really appreciate that.
My last question for you, and I'm going to let you go.
If you could do it over again, what elite branch do you think?
How would you rank them?
All the branches in each one of the elite branches, they all have great guys.
Who's the one group, though, that you worked with it, said, and you thought these guys are like, that were equals?
Well, I worked with Special Forces guys that are better than me.
I worked with Marines that were better than me.
I work with whom I miss them.
I work with Army Rangers that were better.
I worked with guys from the 101st that were better than me, guys from the 137 that were better than me.
There's studs in all these groups.
I've also worked with every one of those groups that with guys that were not.
as good with guys that you didn't want to go on a mission with you.
So to me, there's great, incredible guys in all units.
And then there's also in all units, there's people that are crap.
But just as institutionally, Delta, you've got the, you know, Mars, you got the Air Force Special
Lives, right?
Individuals, there's going to be good and bad.
But the one group that you looked at and said, wow, if I wasn't a seal, I'd want to be that.
That's if I wasn't a seal.
If you weren't a seal, it can't be a seal.
I mean, there's a little.
You didn't get the vaccination.
They kicked you up.
Yeah.
Actually, they let them all stay in.
Thank God.
If I wouldn't, if I wouldn't have joined the Navy, I most likely would have joined the Marine Corps.
Just because like every, well, like most of the young men I grew up with, when you looked at the Marine Corps, you thought,
hey, it's the Marines.
Yeah.
Because they do such a good job with their culture and with their image.
And the Marine Corps is an outstanding group.
And so I probably would have ended up in the Marine Corps.
And if I wouldn't end up in the Marine Corps, I would have been in the Army because the same thing.
Let's see, I'm dodging.
I'm now I'm feeling like I'm dodging your question.
I don't think so.
Who I would actually.
What if your daughter said she wanted to go?
What would you suggest?
If my daughter said she wanted to go into special operations?
No, no, she wanted to just join the military.
What branch would you think?
think what you want your daughter in?
The Air Force.
No, without making that a punchline, why is that?
Well, my, I'm just, my oldest daughter came to mind.
She's very analytical.
She's really smart.
I think that she could bring a lot to the table in that kind of environment,
probably being an intel officer.
She's really good at assimilating information,
and she'd probably be really good at that job.
So, there you go.
Yeah.
And I would be horrible at that job.
Analytical?
Not just being an Intel officer in the Air Force.
I don't think it would be a good fit for me.
Have you ever been, could you be a pilot?
Are you too big to be a pilot?
Because they're kind of like jockeys a little bit.
Yeah, they're a little bit like jockeys.
One of my really good friends is a top gun pilot, Marine Corps.
And I had no desire whatsoever to be a pilot.
None, zero.
I had no desire and you know even like riding into Bradley I never liked riding into
Bradley I always felt like I wasn't in control like it was this machine and I
couldn't really now look I wasn't driving the Bradley I was always sitting in the back
like you were freaking sweat my nuts off and wonder where the hell I was right right
no situation so so I'd rather be in a Higgins bow yeah that you could see where
you are yeah that was so so but being a pilot for me I never had any desire I'd
watch a movie and I didn't care I wanted to see what the grunts were doing
yeah I always wanted to
I wanted to be on the ground.
And more specifically, I wanted to be some kind of a commando of some kind.
I wanted to like put Cammy Payne on and sneak over beaches and kill people.
That's what I wanted to do.
That's the only, that's the first job I remember wanting.
Like when I've realized I'm gonna grow up and I had to do something,
I wanted to do that, something where I put a cammy cork on my face,
you know, because we used to burn the cork and then put the black on our faces when we were little kids.
I wanted to do that over the water into the case.
into enemy territory and kill bad guys.
That's the only thing I remember wanting to do.
So that's why if I wouldn't join the SEAL teams,
it would have been the Marine Corps,
because the Marine Corps was in the water,
and I knew that much even as a young kid.
But Pilot was never into it,
never even thought about it for a minute.
I always wondered that because what I think about, like,
the, even when I watch Avatar,
I'm rooting for the Marines in that.
I know they're the bad guys, but I don't like, the blue people are the ones that, like, I like the, I always watch the movies for the guys that I can identify.
Not that, you know, they're evil, they're hurting the, you know, the wonderful blue people, but I'm just saying, I get it.
I understand that.
In the Navy, the guy, every time we watch a Navy SEAL movie, there's a guy comes out of the water and, like, gets ready to hold the body.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Is that a real thing?
No, no.
That's the, the movie, that movie is called Act of Valor.
and yeah that's not real
no one does that no that's not real
they that's like a
that movie's like a
hour and 30 minute music video
of maybe seals that's what they're real bullets
yeah they uh you know it's a big recruiting thing
it was a big recruiting thing and they got some guys to play the roles
in the movie they they hired these guys
they hired this production company to make a recruiting video
and the guys said hey we can make a
recruiting video, a 30 second or a one minute recruiting video, or we can make a 90 minute feature film.
What do you want?
And then the Naval Special Warfare at the time said, well, we need people.
Let's do it.
And so it was a big recruiting tool.
And the Navy benefits from that because no one, basically no one makes it through seal training.
It's a very small number of people that make it through seal training.
So the Navy gets all these dudes.
and that's one thing that's horrible about trying to go in the seal teams is that if you don't make it through the seal team,
if you don't make it through basic seal training, you're in the Navy.
And if you're the type of personality that wants to be a machine gunner, you're going to end up on a ship in an engine room turning wrenches or changing oil or whatever.
And look, that's a legit job for some people.
Some people love turning wrenches.
Some people love being at sea on a ship.
Some people love that kind of job.
That's what they should do.
And they join the Navy to go do that, which is perfect.
But if you join because you want to be a seal and you don't make it,
you're going to end up in that job that you really don't want at all.
See, what's nice about Marsoc or special forces in the Army,
if you don't make it through special forces selection, cool.
You're an infantry.
You're still in an awesome spot.
You can go back later.
You'll learn more.
Same thing with the Marine Corps.
The SEAL teams is rough in that aspect, man.
You don't make it through SEAL training.
You're done.
You're doing a job that you most likely don't want to do.
That's fascinating.
That's a good point.
So be careful of that, man.
Be careful of that of young people out there.
That's why go in the army.
Go in the army.
Become an infantryman.
You pick your own MOS.
Yeah, there you go.
And you can be extra special.
I love an X-ray.
Awesome, man.
Thank you so much.
Thank you.
Appreciate it.
With that, David Belavia has left the building.
Crazy town.
Crazy town.
Yeah.
It's honestly if you're listening to this right now get these books and read them
They're really powerful and there's so much there's like I said during the podcast
There's entire storylines that are in these books that I don't didn't even come close to mentioning today
Yeah we even get we even get close to that part of the story which is a this story runs the whole
thread this other stories in there the whole time there's so much going on he does such a great job
capturing it the house-to-house book you can tell when you read it that he's a couple years off
the battlefield but his mind is not off the battlefield yet his mind is in the game when you're
reading that thing yeah it is very intense it is very raw and and then you get to read remember the
ramrods just what almost two decades later well i guess 15 years later 15 years a long time
Yeah.
In a man's life, 15 years a long time.
And you learn a lot and you see a lot and you go through a lot more and you get perspective on stuff.
So it's a really incredible read both these books.
So check these books out.
They're awesome.
There was a couple of things that he mentioned.
And I was like, ah, I really put into perspective in a crazy where he, where he,
described a sniper that they found and he was attached to like IV just to stay there the whole time.
And what did he mean?
He said there was a hole in a table.
Yep.
So he just laying on the way.
Laying on the table.
So he didn't have to go to the bathroom or nothing just right there through the hole in the table.
Just staying there for just days and days and days to be a sniper.
Yeah.
That is committed.
That is committed.
There's some committed insurgents that are ready to die for their cause.
Did you notice he said something super small?
It's kind of a side note, but like he goes when he was
anticipating maybe the Medal of Honor scenario and someone's like oh there's also a tape out there
And then he was like oh there's a tape
Let's show me the tape and then he said what's in the box
Yeah, so show me what's in the box and then he kept kind of talking about
Do you know what that's from what's in the box? I do know what it's from it's from the movie seven
Right
which is interesting because again, because he's now older,
first of all, he knows he's forgotten things.
Second of all, you learn eventually that your perception
of what's going on in combat isn't the same
as what's really going on in combat.
So he now at this age, he knows that like,
oh, there's a video, I wonder what I'm, you know.
He knows what he thinks he did.
He knows what he thinks he said.
He also at that age knows that what he thinks he said and what he thinks he did may or may not be on there
May or may not be perceived the same way by everybody else
So that's why he's like what's in the box
That was to me. That was a pretty much perfect movie analogy
I was very impressed. Yeah, what's in the box? He wants to know, but he don't want to know
It seems to him. It was that kind of deal. I liked it
Yeah, so much respect for that as well. Yeah, and if you get that you can watch that
on parts of it on YouTube I didn't know that there's he mentioned a 29 minute
version so that would be the entire the entire event probably from the time they get
to the house they go in the house they get everyone out of the house they wait for
the Bradley's Bradley like that whole thing is probably 29 minutes there's one clip
that I've watched it was maybe like five minutes long and it's basically from the
time they're getting to the house the last time when he's gonna go in and
kill everybody that's on video on YouTube that you can go and
And look, it's not like a movie because most of it's just black like flashes
Noises explosions you don't really know what's happening
You now once you've read the book and now you hear the podcast you're gonna be like okay that must be what's oh okay that's and
But then you see you know at the end of it there they are dragging these bodies out of this house that this guy went in there and killed
And yeah it's it's definitely
wild and that movie by by where the the movie the only the dead it's definitely a fascinating
movie to watch and and you get you have to understand his perspective a little bit it takes
a little getting used to because for me you're watching it like oh wait this guy's
with muja hadine forces that are attacking Americans like I hate this guy what are you
doing you're embedded with like I hate you like why don't you stop them and so
So, but then you realize, hey, he's trying to figure out what's going on.
And so you end up understanding what he's doing, even though at the time.
And there's some, I actually, I need to watch it again because there's some, that dichotomy is brought out in a way that makes it easier to understand.
Because let's face it, if you're freaking sitting there while Mujahideen forces are getting ready to kill Americans and you're not doing something to stop him, I got a problem with you.
You know?
And I think some of it is like he's with them and he's like, holy shit, they're doing an attack.
and he kind of just, he knows if he says anything,
they'll just kill him.
And, yeah, it's a really, but then,
and then at a certain point in the movie,
he basically stops embedding with the Muge
because he realizes that they're evil
and he starts embedding with the Americans.
But he has got a lot, he passes a lot of intel
to the Americans, and especially to like David Belavilla
in his platoon.
He's given them exact intel about who the fight.
And it's really clear in the book how helpful he was from that perspective
But who knows maybe at some point we can have Michael where he's he's got all kinds of crazy stories from his all the
insane things he's done and it's weird you know like I guess the the
The the highest degree of
Explaining all that would be a documentary right? But at the same time a documentary is only going to be an hour long
and you know you got limitations
and what you can put in there
and how long you want to
whereas if he's come and explain some of that stuff
on the podcast and maybe a little bit of a longer
format you could get down
to some good information that may not
be conveyed
properly in the
in the
hour and a half long documentary
yeah
hey how hard like
wait have you ever done jujcic with full
gear on like the full
gig
how is it all
lot different like it feels like especially just even how he sort of mentioned is seems like dang
that might be a lot harder actually no it's it's not it's not a lot harder yeah it's not a lot
different it's a little harder it's a little different it's not a lot of either I feel like
then again then this is more of a question like the bottom game would feels like it'd be a lot more
different than the top game wouldn't be that much no they're both about the same different
Oh, for all?
Yep, yep.
That was a excuse that got used by people when it came to training martial arts and
Jiu-Jitsu in the SEAL teams.
It was like, well, you know, Jiu-Jitsu, you just wear a ghee, you don't wear all this gear,
or J-J-J-Zoo, you just wear a rash guard, so it's unrealistic,
and you're not going to be able to fight when you have gear on, which is, they would say
the same thing about, I would make comparison to parachuting.
Because when you parachute with military equipment, it's this big paroching.
Shoot and you've got you could potentially have a weapon with you and potentially have a rucksack with you and you could have
potentially have your web gear with you and you have all these things on so it's a lot different than me running down to
San Ysidro or wherever and doing a civilian jump where I'm just like literally wearing a pair of short sneakers and I jump out a little back little little
a little little a parachute on my back and jump out throw out you know it's just real easy and slick and cool yeah
But here's the thing.
If you're really good at those slick, cool civilian jumps and you put a military rig on, you're going to be really good.
Same thing with shooting.
Sometimes guys would be like, well, you don't want to learn the bad habits of target shooting or of three-gun shooting, which is a certain competition type of shooting.
You don't want to get the bad habits from that.
But if you take a guy that is a three-gun shooter competitive and now he's in combat, he's just going to be infinitely better.
Now, look, are there certain little things you?
you got to watch out for?
Yes, there are certain little things that you got to watch out for.
You know, I don't know if you've ever heard the story, but there's a shootout in Florida.
I think it was in Florida.
And the cop, the cop got killed.
And when they did like the investigation, he had the shells from his revolver in his pocket,
which meant that as he was reloading, instead of just dumping the shells from his revolver,
he was catching him, putting him back in his pocket, which is a habit that he got from being on the
police range and you don't want to have to bend down and pick up your brass so you just put him
into your hand you put him in your pocket so he had lost whatever three quarters of a second or a
second and a half on every reload because he had this habit so you do have to pay attention to what
bad habits you may or may not get from doing these civilian activities that are complementary to your
military career so for instance there are positions
in Jiu-Jitsu where it may not be the best thing to do because oh you got a side arm
Right, or like let's say your police officer there's certain positions you want to use because it doesn't expose your weapon
It doesn't expose your weapon to being grabbed
Yeah, so you want to do certain things that are a little bit different now would I rather be a cop that's a purple belt in Jiu Jitsu?
That might have one bad habit or some cop that has no
experiencing jiu-jitsu and she's going to get the shipbeat out of you yeah you're going to get
the ship beat out of you that's what's going to happen yeah so so so jiu-jitsu with gear on is
slightly different slightly harder but very very similar and it's and it's similar enough that
it's going to make all the difference in the world yeah in one of these scenarios and yes and keep in
mind, even if it was like a lot bulkier and a lot harder, it's still better than no
Jiu-Jitsu, which I've always thought or whatever.
But I was wondering at the time, you know, obviously, you know, he tells the story all good.
So I'm like thinking about it, like how that looked and how that felt or whatever.
And like I kind of imagine like trying to choke someone.
And you know, like you ever, like maybe if you have the Gion and they're fighting your choke or
whatever.
And maybe they're not even fighting that good, but it's easier to fight a choke with the Gion
versus with no Ghi.
Right, because you can just grab any part of that thing or whatever.
So with the bulky gear on, chest plate, helmet, like all this stuff, it's like kind of hard.
I would think it'd be harder.
So I'm like, shoot, I wonder how freaking hard.
Even if the dude is untrained, I wonder how much harder that would be.
It'd be the same as training versus untrained like a jihitsu fighter.
Someone that doesn't know jiu jitsu is lost.
Yeah, and I feel like sometimes, well, a lot of times anyway, people don't do jiu jiu jitsu.
Maybe they'll do another martial art or maybe they'll advocate for another martial arts.
martial heart, they'll do the straw man thing where they'll be like, yeah, you're going to pull guard in the street or whatever.
Like, I think it's pretty common knowledge that someone who knows Jiu-Jitsu and they get in a fight with a guy in the street or in a kill house or whatever, they're not going to pull guard on the guy.
They're going to, it's like, hey, let me, basically what they do is they look for the most inappropriate move of Jiu-Jitsu and they say, what, you're going to do that move on the most inappropriate time, whatever.
When the reality is, no, Jiu-Jitsu is like a bunch of moves, actually infinite moves.
And you know a certain amount of those infinite moves and you're going to do literally every single time that you possibly can the most appropriate move for the appropriate time.
And pulling guard is one of the many moves that's more, yes, geared towards a training scenario like with another jujitsu guy or with, you know, a tournament scenario, whatever.
Yeah.
But that's not like a, yeah, that's not a self-defense or a real fighting move.
No, unless, you know, like for Bella Villa, this dude comes out.
out of the closet if he would have just like like hit him and knocked him to the ground and all of
a sudden David Belavilla is on the bottom oh yeah and that's not pulling guard that's very very that's very
different but you are on the bottom and you are going to need to get out from the bottom or at least
control the guy from killing you better know guard so you better know guard at that point
so and you know that's exactly what what he said too you know and look you got you got you got all your
friends you got a machine gun all your friends got machine guns you got a pistol all your friends
got pistols you got a knife all your friends got knives
you'd think there's a pretty slim chance
you're going to have to actually
kill someone with your hands
or with your helmet or with your knife.
It's a pretty small chance,
but there you go.
There you go.
So keep training, everybody.
Keep training.
Awesome, honor to have him on.
With that, speaking of training,
when you train, you're going to need to fuel your system.
It's true.
It's true.
Jock of you.
So, again, I know this comment,
knowledge or whatever, but this is one of those deals where, you know, you can get plenty
supplements from plenty places, you know, but you want to get the for real clean one,
the one with only upside no downside.
Yeah.
That's what I had to add.
It's true.
So the drinks, the energy drinks which have no sugar in them, the energy drinks which have no
chemical preservatives in them, this is what everyone else is feeding you.
The stuff that has sugar in it, the stuff that has chemical preservatives,
in it, the stuff that has chemical flavoring in it.
We don't have any of that.
This stuff is literally good for you.
You can get it.
Get milk.
Get the ready to drink milk.
By the way, we had a little jaco fuel board meeting today.
We started discussing how much milk ready to drink we should make.
And I'm listening and there's comments being made.
You know, it's going to be this investment.
It's going to do this thing.
We got to do it this far in advance important information.
What, how much should we, boom, we're going back.
and forth and finally I said hey make as much milk as you can make as much as you can
where like we have it at the gym here victory it's selling out in like a day it's gone so
everybody loves the ready to drink milk so we are going to make as much as we possibly can
to get it to everyone because it's the best it's just the best it's just so good so good for you
so convenient now look do you get the powder milk
Yes.
I have the powder bonk.
That's my dessert.
But sometimes you need that midday hitter.
And sometimes what you think, man,
it's going to take me four minutes to make a moat.
No, no, not gonna.
It's true.
It's gonna open up an RTD ready to drink.
Did you, are you familiar with the term RTD?
Yes, sir.
Is that a normal term to be familiar with?
Is everyone familiar with that term?
Ready to drink?
You know what I'm going to be?
I think it's an industry term.
Yeah, you know, actually.
RTD.
Like a normal person doesn't say that.
RTD.
RT.
Ready to
I might be thinking
MRE
Oh yeah that's meal ready
Ready to eat
Yeah
Oh this is different
But it is a drink
And it's ready
Well it's kind of the same
Yeah very similar
So hey check it out
For Jock Fuel stuff blog
You can go to joccofuel.com
You can get the drinks at Wawa
You can get all the stuff
At vitamin shop
It's all at the military commissaries
It's at the Hanford
Supermarkets
Up there in the Northeast
Dash stores in Maryland
I'm in Portland, Wake Fern and ShopRite.
Circle K in Florida.
We're at H.E.B.
You know that, Texas.
If you're in Texas, go to H.E.B.
I know you're going to H.E.B.
Go to Jockle Fuel.
Get what you need.
That's why we got it in there for you.
Apparently kicking ass down in HEB.
So thank you.
Go get some.
And Murphy's down in the southeast.
That's where you can get Jock Fuel.
And if you don't have those retails,
stores in your area, jockofuel.com.
Go get some.
What else?
Well, at origin, I can't forget about that.
American made stuff.
Started with jiu-jitsu geese.
Yes, we did.
But now, now there's a lot of other stuff.
Jeans, boots.
New washes of the jeans, by the way, I got all three.
Oh, wait a second.
Over here.
No big team.
I didn't get them yet.
I'm sorry.
Some people got it.
Some people don't know.
It's okay.
Talk to Amanda Roberts about that.
Amanda Roberts.
I know you're listening right now.
You know what I need.
I don't want the light.
I don't know.
No, send me all three.
I was going to say, send me all three.
Because I was going to say I don't need the super light ones.
But Pete was reminding me.
Pete said he was driving his motorcycle.
And it was hot.
It was a sunny day.
And the really light jeans, they don't absorb the heat.
Did the job.
So yes, Amanda Roberts.
Please send all three washes of jeans to my house as soon as you can.
I did agree.
with you there though I you don't strike me as the light wash jeans wearing tight I would that's
what I hesitated on it but then I remember what P robbers sold me functional P robbers sold me functional
like when I'm out in the desert heat I don't want to wear a black pair of jeans I want to wear a nice
pair of light pump with light ones you make a good point all of them fit the same just functional
functionally sound 100% by the way yeah so yeah jeans boots some belts the belt even it's a
It feels like a subtle thing.
Very impressive.
Very impressive.
If you're going to make it, make it real good.
That's the kind of the overall concept, right?
Yes, sir.
All made in America, by the way.
Yeah.
Well, that's not even a by the way.
That's a, hey, listen up.
Made in America.
If you care about human beings,
don't buy stuff that's from other countries.
Because they're not taking care of their human beings.
They're enslaving human beings to make you your product.
They don't care about the environment.
They don't care what they do with the dye.
when it's done dying whatever they're making they just put it in the ocean put it in the
rivers kill all the animals they put it did the crap in the atmosphere so if you care about
people if you care about planet earth and if you care about America then go to origin
USA and get some origin USA.com that's what we got also jocco store it's called jocco
store so we can represent the path discipline equals freedom good
We've seen that video before.
We know that concept.
Good.
You want to represent this where you can get it.
Also, we've got the short locker, which is a new shirt every month.
Subscription scenario.
New shirt.
Some cool designs on that one.
Good feedback on that one.
But yeah, you can get that at jocco store.com as well.
Subscribe to the podcast.
Don't forget about Jocko Underground.
Don't forget about the YouTube channels, right?
The Jock podcast YouTube channel.
I do a lot of assistant directing, and let's face it,
When I do that, it's kind of a big deal.
You do good work.
Also, Origin USA has a YouTube channel.
If you want to see what's happening at Origin USA, check that one out.
We're showing kind of what's going on behind the scenes there.
Psychological warfare.
I've been saying I was going to make another one of those for like five years.
Slowly we're kind of being created with some of that stuff and leaking it out a little bit.
It's good.
It's good.
All right.
So psychological warfare,
if you want to get a little MP3 activity for yourself
when you have a moment of weakness,
flip side canvas,
Dakota Meyer.
Kind of interesting today.
Speaking of Dakota Meyer,
I asked David Belavilla,
hey,
what flavor drink do you want?
I said,
we got this,
we got that black cherry vanilla.
I was like, cool,
ran down,
got to go,
by the way,
that's Dakota Meyer's drink.
That's his signature flavor.
He's like, hell yeah.
So,
I should have got a picture of that.
Yeah.
God, I'm an idiot.
Well, you know what?
You can pull some off the camera, off the video.
Yeah.
When he's taking a drink, right?
Of course, yes, sir.
You can do that, right?
Yep.
And we can send it to Dakota.
It'd be like, hey, Dakota.
Birds of a feather.
Yeah.
Bunch of books.
Hey, these two books, remember the ramrods,
an army brotherhood in war and peace,
and then house to house, both of them by David Belavia.
Just outstanding books.
If you have any interest in,
History in combat in war in human nature in the limits of
Mankind on an individual level of bravery get these books
They'll both be available on our website but sometimes people go hey would you what what what books should I read? They're all on the website
They're on the website go to jocco podcast.com go to books on the podcast. There's a tab. Is that the right word? Yes sir. There's a tab
And you can get those good get only cry for the living by Holly McKay
Final spin I'm bummed David Belovia talked to me for 10 minutes about how much he
Freaking loved final spin it was great blah blah blah and we and we didn't we weren't recording
We weren't recording echo Charles next time which is great. It's my job. That's my battery
you had one job two jobs. What was the other one and a half
Yeah, so check out Final Span.
Check out all these leadership books.
I've written.
The kids' books have written.
Miking the Dragons, Way the Warrior Kid, 1, 2, 3, 4.
About Face.
We talked about that today.
I wrote the forward to the new version of that.
So get in there.
Extreme ownership, dichotomy of leadership.
Eshle on Front have a leadership consultancy,
a leadership consultancy where we work with companies all over the world,
teaching them leadership principles that we learn
the battlefield. If you're interested in that for your organization, go to eschalonfront.com.
And if you're just an individual that wants to come to an event, wants to learn these principles
face-to-face, you can also go there, check out our events. We also have online training.
Online training for leadership and life. Look, leadership is a mindset that's going to help you
in every aspect of your life. It's not necessarily, oh, I'm in charge of 42 people and these
are the leadership principles I need to know. No, it's like, oh, I'm in charge of me. I'm in
charge of my two kids. I'm in charge of the three peers that I have at work. I'm in charge of
my group of seven friends. Whatever it is. If you're interacting with other people, you are leading
people. So learn how to make your life better. And by the way, it all starts with you. Learn to lead
yourself. Learn a decision making process for the things that you do. You need all that through courses
and through live interactive training on Extreme Ownership.com.
Go check that out.
And if you want to help service members active and retired,
you want to help their families.
You want to help Gold Star families?
Check out Mark Lee's mom, Mama Lee.
She's got an incredible charity organization.
If you want to donate or you want to get involved,
go to America's Mighty Warriors.org.
And also don't forget about Micah Fink,
who is taking vets up into the wilderness
so that they can search and find
themselves, heroes and horses.org.
And if you want to connect with David Belavia,
go to David Belavia.com.
He's on Instagram, sometimes.
Reluctantly.
He's also got that radio show.
Facebook is David Belavia Radio.
So check that out.
As for us, we're on Twitter.
We're on the gram on Facebook.
Echoes at Echo Charles.
I am at Jocker Willink.
Of course.
And then we kind of got in this discussion.
I don't buy into it all.
It's not all good.
Social media can, it's just like fire, right?
It's fire.
Fire can be good.
It can cook your food, keep you warm.
Social media can connect you with people,
give you some good information.
Fire can also burn your house down and kill your whole family.
Guess what?
Social media can cause a lot of significant mental problems as well.
So be careful.
That's what I'm saying.
Once again, thanks to David Belaville.
for coming on here, for sharing your story.
And we will not forget what you did.
We won't forget your proud two-two ramrods.
Duty first.
And thanks to everyone else in the Army, the Navy, the Air Force, the Marines, the Coast Guard for your service and sacrifice.
Thank you all for being the best military in the world.
And don't lose sight of that.
Thanks as well to our police and law enforcement, firefighters, paramedics, EMTs, dispatchers, correctional officers, border patrol, secret service, all first responders.
Thank you for protecting us here at home.
And to everyone else out there, there's been much sacrifice for our freedoms.
Let's make sure that we live to honor them.
Let's live like Lieutenant Ed, Ewan.
from his epitaph.
Ed, who lived every moment, stood in the rain,
heard the thunder, danced to the lightning,
and believed in rainbows.
Go live every moment.
And until next time, this Zekko and Jocko.
Out.
