Jocko Podcast - 434: War Crimes, Murder, and Leadership.
Episode Date: April 16, 2024How Coalition Forces and Task Unit Bruiser fought for and maintained the moral high ground in The Battle of Ramadi. With Dave Berke, USMC.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/jocko-podca...st/exclusive-content
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This is Jocko podcast number 434 with Echo Charles and me Jocko Willink.
Good evening echo.
Good evening.
Also, joining us tonight is Dave.
Good evening.
Dave.
Good evening.
So there are two brutal conflicts going on in the world right now.
Well, there's more than that, but there's two that are very prominent.
One in Ukraine, between Ukraine and Russia and then obviously in Gaza and in and around Israel as well.
And the term war crimes comes up quite a bit.
And we all now look at social media and the news and there's a lot of speculation about war crimes that are going on or allegedly going on or possibly going on or they could be occurring on the ground in both these wars.
And I'm not on the ground in either of those wars obviously right now.
I haven't been on the ground in either of those places.
But I have been on the ground in another war and I heard speculations about war crimes in that war and this is in Iraq
Dave obviously that's one of the reasons I wanted to bring you in today because you are also on the ground in Iraq and
So looking at it now when I hear all these when I hear the term war crime get thrown around and used
It seems like a good thing to try and understand what that looks like on the ground and I can understand
You know where some of these
Some of these
Speculations come about some of these rumors come about
And it's really clear when you look at social media and there's there's pictures images that get put up that are 22 years old or 14 years old or seven years old from different locations
These things are happening
But they're really not happening at all and then in other cases there's clear
it's clear that horrible things are happening.
So again, I don't want to speculate
about what's happening on the ground right now
in either one of these wars.
If I was going to come on here and talk about them,
you know what I'd do is actually I would go there.
I would go there.
But I haven't done that.
But like I said, and Dave, same boat,
we've been on the ground in war
and I wanted to talk through,
some of those some of those things um one thing that happens and you know on me so if you as a leader
fail to do a good job of communicating what the situation is on the ground you leave a vacuum
you leave a vacuum of people that don't understand what's going on in the ground and when people
don't understand what's happening because i as a leader do a bad job of explaining to them and
painting a clear picture, just like any other situation, rumors will start to fill the blanks
in their own heads with ideas and with assumptions.
Now, fortunately, what actually happened in the Battle of Armadi is very well documented.
It is extremely well documented.
And it was documented real time and it's been documented since then.
There's situation reports.
there are operations summaries, there's commanders briefs, there's investigations.
So inside the military, you got all those things.
I mean, how many sit reps did you write while you were over there, Dave?
Literally one every day.
Yeah.
And that's just the daily sit rep, not including all the sit reps that wrote for all the actions.
So for an individual action, you're writing a sit rep.
Everyone.
The opsums.
Same thing.
Every day.
So we had to write every time.
we did an operation we do an operational summary yes the sit reps the commanders briefs all these things
are saved you know they're all they're all they all they all still exist um the commander's briefs
investigations that happened they all get saved but then it's not just the military that's doing this
because guess what else going on you've got news reports you've got journalists you've got embedded
journalists you've got articles then you've got also what's interesting and i kind of mentioned this
You've got academic journals now that have gone back and interviewed people and written books about exactly what happened.
So there's all, luckily, there's all kinds of documentation about what it was actually like on the ground there.
Now, of course, Dave, you have all this information in your head.
You know what it's like.
I have all this information.
I know what it's like.
I made the mistake of thinking it was obvious what was going on on the ground in Ramadi.
I made the mistake sometimes of assuming that other people understood the situation.
And look, did you do one deployment on the ground in Iraq?
One.
And it was just to Ramadi.
Just to Romadi.
When you were in Ramadi, did you ever go to anywhere else?
Did you go to Balad?
Did you go to Baghdad?
Did you go to any other cities, any other towns?
Yeah, I did Baghdad once or twice.
Went to Al-Assad.
And that's about it.
Okay.
So Al-Sah, how much time did you spend in Al-Assad?
I took probably three or four trips out there.
Okay.
Not a ton of time, but I went out there a handful times.
Spend the night there?
Yeah, absolutely.
So you were in Iraq, you're in Al-Assad, you were in Ramadi.
What was the difference between Al-Assad and Ramadi?
Dude.
Night and day.
It's night and day.
It's hard to describe how different.
It might have been like two different planets.
They're very different.
Totally incomparable.
Totally incomparable.
And that was the way a lot of Iraq was.
So much of Iraq, now look,
You could go to Sotter City, terrible.
There was certain little neighborhoods
in certain cities that could be bad.
But even, you know, for my first appointment, 2003, 2004,
it was very interesting because we went all over the place.
Man, I'd roll up on some fobs somewhere in the middle of nowhere.
And you could tell they were taking it.
And it was pretty hot.
And then you'd go to another fob two days later
and just like the guys, there's nothing going on.
Yeah.
So what happens is,
is people take their experience of Iraq.
So even someone that was in Iraq and they go,
oh, I know what Iraq was like
because they were in wherever.
But everyone's experience is very different.
And depending on where you are,
things are a lot different on the ground.
So I never really thought through that
as clearly as I should have so that people would understand
what the actual situation was on the ground.
It was not the same as everywhere else.
News article, May 22nd, NBC News, 2006.
One recent coalition tally of significant acts, that's roadside bombs, attacks, exchanges of fire,
indicated that out of 43 reported in Iraq on a single day, 27 occurred in Ramadi,
according to a Marine officer who declined to be named because he's not authorized to speak to the media.
And that, he said, was a quiet day.
So you have all of Iraq.
There's 43 reported incidents.
And in that particular day, 27 of those incidents were in this tiny city of Vermont, which is four miles across.
In one continuing on here, in one neighborhood, Master Sergeant Tom Coffey 38 of Underhill, Vermont, gestured to a paved road, his forces would not drive on.
They hit us so many times with IEDs, roadside bombs.
We ceded it to them.
said so think about that there's a road the enemy has hit us with so many bombs on
that we're not driving down it anymore look I was in Baghdad for six months we drove
down route Irish to you ever drive down right ours route Irish route Irish in Baghdad it got
hit there was never a chance that coalition forces were gonna say yeah we're not gonna
drive down it anymore continuing on same article after one neighborhood sweep developed
into an hour long gun battle Iraqi major Jabar Marouf al-Tamini
returned to base and drew his finger across a satellite of the,
a satellite map of the area he just fled under fire.
It's fallen under the command of insurgents, he said,
shaking his head, they control it now.
Again, there was no other part of Iraq that I'm aware of
where Iraqi forces said, yeah, that's under the control of the insurgents.
There's no other area that I can think of that I've heard of.
where U.S. forces said, yeah, we're not going to go there anymore because the enemy controls it.
Summer of 2006 in Ramadi, there was 30 to 50 enemy attacks a day.
And by the way, what counts as an attack?
Because is someone shooting a rifle, someone shooting a machine gun at a Humvee hit in the window?
That's an attack.
Guess what else is an attack?
A complex or coordinated attack where there's multiple elements maneuvering.
It is that the enemy was good.
But in, like I said, in 2006, this was very different from other places in Iraq.
I'd been to a bunch of other places in Iraq in my first deployment.
I've been to Baghdad, been to Fallujah, been in Ajaf, been to all over.
Enemy contact in those other places.
Now look, I'm not talking about the assault on Fallujah.
I'm not talking about Sauter City at certain times.
I'm not talking about Tamim when they went or Al-Qaeda or what was it, Al-Qaeda.
Al-Qaeda.
I'm not talking about al Qaim in the marine I'm not talking about those those moments
But on a general normal day
There's no there's in those other places enemy contact it
You kind of had an anticipation that it could happen but it was unlikely
It was unlikely and in Ramadi it was imminent. It was actually imminent
I would have bet every time
We left the wire every time coalition forces let the wire the odds were they were getting enemy contact
Period of story and it's hard to understand that like I said especially if you've deployed to Iraq in a different time
Leif deployed back to Ramadi in 2000 I think it was 2009
Not a shot fired during his six-month deployment
So the reason I'm bringing this up is because if someone had been to Iraq and they went to a different place
place at a different time or even went to Ramadi at the same time it's it's not going to be the same
thing and again this is something that I failed to recognize um how different it was you know
even going back to Vietnam you know when we came back from that deployment I talked to
Vietnam guys and it was the same thing there was some v some guys went to Vietnam some
seals went to Vietnam and they were in significant contact
regularly.
That was a smaller number of seals.
Most of the seals that went to Vietnam,
they did operations.
They got three, four gun fights.
I mean, I talked to one of my friends
who was a machine gunner in Vietnam,
seal machine gunner Vietnam,
and he was like, yeah, we got in four firefighters.
I fired like 50 to 100 rounds in each firefight,
and then we were out.
Good.
Like, awesome.
It was very different.
It was a very different situation.
When you were rolling in, as going into Ramadi, like, where were other facts going to?
Yeah.
So for Anglico, remember, I was an Anglico fact.
So we had, I'm pretty close, I think either 23 or 26 teams all over Iraq.
And all the cities you just mentioned.
And we would roll up a summary every day of what everybody was doing everywhere.
And the way you described is exactly what I experienced, which was.
And I'm generalizing a little bit because there's a lot of people.
There's always an opportunity.
There's always risk everywhere you went.
There wasn't like, oh, there's nothing going on ever,
but there was always risk everywhere.
Just about everything that was happening was in Ramadi.
And it was an interesting thing for me
because you talked about some of the,
almost like a leadership failure
of what that perspective was in my mind.
I failed to grasp that too
because not only was Ramadi my first,
it was my first deployment on the ground.
And I'd never been to any of those other places
in like non-combat scenarios at all.
So I didn't have,
have any other perspective. So I'm in Ramadi for however long I'm there. I'm like,
this is just how it is. And I had this first trip. We called it biop. We go to Baghdad
International Airport, which we would do like a log run of supplies or something. And what I can't,
what I realized very early on was, was you guys do that on Helos or were you guys,
guys are you guys driving out there? Driving out there. Oh, check. And what that was was,
was I figured out very early. I'm like, oh, this is a break. And again, this is not like
judgment of, oh, if you're in Baghdad, there's nothing going on. It just happened to be,
they were getting after it. But the environment was such. There was,
much more control. The coalition forces controlled much more. And the environment was just very
different. So if we had guys that needed a break, I could put them on a log run to buy up,
which meant like you're going to go out there for spend the night. You're going to get two days.
And I say off in quotes, but it's a little bit of a break from the imminence of that.
And I came to discover very early on my experience in Romani wasn't normal. It was Romani in 2006
is where I ended up. And it wasn't like that everywhere else. And so the calculation I had to
make of oh I need I need to pay attention to how my guys are going to do throughout this deployment
because this isn't normal yeah again anywhere you were in Iraq at that time look is there a
possibility of insurgents absolutely guys did incredible things guys were taking risks all the
time Ramadi that was that was intensified and amplified there were insurgents everywhere
that and they were interwoven into the population and they used all kinds of weapons to attack
and kill American and Iraqi soldiers.
And they used the most sadistic methods of rape, torture, murder to control the population.
So there was a situation where a local was skinned alive by the insurgents.
There was a situation where the heads were cut off and left in the yard of people in the local population.
The insurgents were, they were sadistic.
and evil and they were there and they were there were targets everywhere and we really hadn't been in
an environment like this before the so the previous so when we got there the previous task unit
great dudes um and they had been busting their ass working hard getting things set up they were
setting conditions they were building relationships with the conventional forces they had some
Iraqi forces that they were partnered with.
They made all the introductions for us.
They started training them.
They were a little bit limited by what their Iraqi forces were capable of,
which, you know, it's just the reality of the situation on the ground.
But they gave their Iraqis, their Jundis, I might use the term Jundi.
Jundi is just a term for Iraqi soldier, but we kind of used it as a catch-all for an Iraqi military person, Jundi.
soldier so they had done that and they conducted some good operations but they were also controlled
by the amount of the areas they could get into so as you you heard in one of those quotes i read
earlier there's roads that were just no one's going down those roads and to say oh we'll just jump in
our Humvees and drive down there and do direct action mission was stupid well it's just dumb and so
they weren't going to do that we weren't going to do that there's massive IDs there's our ambushes
but we show up there and we start doing a turnover with the guys we're taking over for great dudes gave us great turnover
and and that was the environment that we stepped into because there's all these that usually the
estimates are like four to five thousand enemy fighters there that's that's usually the estimate now
the population's 400,000 but standing against these insurgents are these soldiers and marines
that are putting their life on the line
on a daily basis
to protect the local populace
while trying to hunt and kill the enemy
and just look
the 2-28 which was the group that was on the ground
when we got there the Iron Soldiers
outstanding
and then the 1-1 AD came in and took over
they were outstanding
and the
daily life of those guys
was heroic
you know why I just
I just asked you if you took it.
Do you get helicopters to bag guys?
You're like, no, we drove.
That first seven minutes driving out of Ramadi sucked.
Totally, man.
Sucked.
Michigan.
Yep.
Yeah.
You're going down route Michigan to get out of there.
Now look, you could have snuck up.
What's the road to the North Africa?
Mobile.
Yeah, you could have gone to Route Mobile and pushed out.
I hope you did that.
You're looking at me like maybe you did sometimes.
I have done one of each at least.
When you just, I know, I'm cutting you off.
The Michigan out of it.
of Vermont to buy up that was if you got through to the street sign that said like next exit you know you're leaving the town you're heading towards
fluid you're good to go yeah good to go yeah but the guys from the 228 the guys from the 1 1 AD these are soldiers and Marines that are there
every single thing that they did every single time they rolled out it was them standing in the face of death
and this is something that impact us so as soon as we get as soon as task unit bruiser shows up there
immediately we're going to memorial services for soldiers and Marines and standing there in the
it wasn't the chow hall it was next it was a chapel so it was a tent it was a big tent
it was a big general purpose tent next to the chow hall and we show up and you know I hear that
they lost a soldier lost a Marine and so I'm like hey we'll go you know this is these are our guys
so we show up and immediately know the seriousness.
Now, I will tell you, I knew there was casualties happening.
I did not know that the casualties were happening as often as they were.
I did not.
I thought to myself, hey, if a soldier or Marine gets killed, we will 100% go to the memorial service.
That was not true.
We went to them when we could.
But almost every day someone got wounded and people were getting killed.
a couple times a week.
And it was an honor for us to be able to support them.
Now, there's a little technical aspect when I use the word support.
So in the military, there's two different.
You can either be the supporting unit or the supported unit.
And what supported means is everyone is supporting what I'm doing.
I'm the supported unit.
So I'm the one that's the main effort.
and if you're a supporting unit,
then you're the one that's helping the main effort.
You're sort of like, oh, I know what it's the co-star.
So there's the star and the co-star.
The star is the supported unit
and everyone else is the supporting actors.
Right?
Well, quite frankly, oftentimes
special operations is the star of the movie.
Like, hey, we're going to be the ones
that actually hit the target.
So these other conventional forces are going to support what we're doing where the you're going to be supporting role. We're going to be the main role
That makes sense in oftentimes what we had here was different
We were the supporting force oftentimes meaning that the conventional army or the conventional Marine Corps
Was the main effort they were the star of the show and we were the supporting actors
The reason that's important to bring this up is some people
didn't like that.
Some people in the special operations in community,
in the special operations community did not like that.
And there's a good reason why they didn't like that.
There's actually a good reason why they didn't like that.
There's a good reason why I was,
cautious.
And if you read the book by Ben Milligan called By Water Beneath the Walls,
you'll understand why.
Because sometimes special operations,
when they're the co-star,
when they're the supporting actor,
they can get abused.
And if you don't know what I'm talking about, read the book by water beneath the walls.
There was times where the Rangers, for instance, would get used to assault targets that they shouldn't be assaulting.
They didn't have the strength.
They didn't have the numbers.
They were so highly trained.
So there were times like that in the history of special operations where falling into that supporting role has caused problems.
Now, like I said,
was cautious but it was not like that we we may have been on paper the supporting
unit just like you are that you are the supporting unit on paper Dave so many
so many similarities yeah we are the supporting unit but I can promise you that we
got as much support as we gave and that was required that that was really
necessary now listen if we wouldn't have done that we just wouldn't have I mean
same thing with you if you would have said listen I'm only gonna go out if I'm
the star of this movie,
you wouldn't have gone out, really.
I know we wouldn't have.
If the only way to go out,
we could have done an alternate set of missions.
This is true.
But we wouldn't have been as involved as we were.
And you would not have contributed the impact you would have made
would have been significantly less.
I was forced to face with the exact same
when I got there,
maybe a little different because I had an image in my mind,
which really wasn't based on anything,
because I had no previous ground combat experience.
So I had a sense of what Anglico did.
So I show up there thinking how it's going to be.
As soon as I get there, I realize, if we're going to contribute,
we are going to have to find a way to support the Army.
And we are on the Army side of things.
So you're talking about the Marines of the Army.
We were covering both, but we were primarily on the South with the Army units.
I was going to have to.
Did you have another Anglico team that was up with 3-8?
No, because 3-8 is a Marine Battalion.
They have their own organic fact, which I know this guy's,
3-7 and 3-8, I know those guys extremely well.
We had another Anglico team out of Craig andro with you guys, which you know, another Anglico team.
But because the Marines up on the north side of the city had their own organic fact and air shop, they didn't need me.
I worked with them a little bit.
I actually did some missions with them, but mostly didn't have to.
The Army didn't have any, so I worked with them.
To your point, though, as soon as I got there, I realized, well, first of all, there weren't enough of me to go around.
They needed way more support than I could provide them.
But the only way for me to really contribute is it was exactly what I just said.
I had to support them.
Not do what I thought I wanted to do for me.
It's what I needed to do for them.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I got asked by one of my senior officers that actually came to Ramadi.
They're like, do you need anything?
I was like three more task units or two more task units or something like that because
there was so much work to be done.
And one of the reasons there was a lot of work to be done was this was going to be a very
tough fight.
And one of the reasons it was going to be not just a tough fight, but it was a different
fight than what had happened in Fallujah in 2004. So in Fallujah, it was a massive kinetic
operation where coalition forces pushed through. They gave warning to the civilians to leave,
like it was a siege and assault of Fallujah. Just, that's what it was. And outstanding job
by the soldiers and Marines that executed that. But it was very kinetic. Like I said, there was warnings.
infrastructure was devastated inside of Fallujah when that happened.
And so when Maliki gets elected, he wants peace.
And he knew that a Shia-led invasion, let's call it, because that's what it is.
So most of the army, so Iraq is made up primarily of Shias.
And the ruling class had been Sunnis.
That's Saddam was a Sunni.
So the army once the army was formed up now in 2006 the army consisted of a lot of Shia
There were some Sunni battines but it was a majority was Shia
So what Maliki knew is if he took his Shia army for the most part and did a massive kinetic operation through Ramadi that would look like
Shia versus Sunni and that would you know could obviously
splinter into a massive civil war.
So what he wanted to do was a less kinetic option.
He also wanted to preserve the infrastructure.
Yeah.
So that's what was going on.
This, that's what was going on.
And so a few weeks into our deployment,
it was time for the 2-28 iron soldiers out of Pennsylvania.
And they're actually out of all over the country
because they were National Guard here to get guys from Utah,
guys from Vermont, guys from all over the place.
Pennsylvania, yes.
and there was also active duty
The 3-8 Marines was working for them at the time too
But it was time for them to go home
Most of them to go home
And General Gronsky's been on this podcast
Talked through what that looked like
Talked through what his deployment was like
The now the group that came in to take their place
Is 1-1 AD
They're led by Colonel, now general
Sean McFarlum
He comes in to replace them
He brought more combat power to
So he has tanked
He has Bradley's he has more people like it's a significant upgrading combat power and that gives him the capability of going into these enemy control territories and setting up combat outposts
So when you got there about a month ahead of me
Yep so what did that transition look strategically from what the 228 was doing to now you get one one AD rolls in? I
What did you say?
Yeah, a lot of how you describe it.
So I get there.
I have, I think, a month ahead of you is about what it ended up being.
I'm there a month ahead of you.
I think I'll leave a month before you, give or take a couple of days.
A lot of work when we first got in with the 228.
A lot of that for me was figuring out what was going on.
And I'm not a strategist, but really what we were, there was a lot of,
maybe the best where I could think of is like a containment.
Like we knew where we could go and where we couldn't go.
And of course, we are there as a supporting unit.
I am there to bring capability that they don't have.
They didn't have helicopters.
They didn't have jets.
They didn't have ISR.
They didn't have a bunch of things that I had.
We also, quite frankly, Clay, had an extra chuck and extra rifles and an extra turret gunner.
We brought things that just helped that did nothing but help them.
But in the end, the operations were somewhat limited to making sure that the enemy didn't expand their reach and didn't go beyond what we knew they currently had.
We had crystal clear maps of what we owned and what they owned.
And a lot of it was operating inside those confines and knowing what that was.
Clearly the contrast when we swap out, we watch the swap out from 228 to 1-1, that operation,
that the entire strategic mindset changed.
And that month, maybe a little bit of different.
I may have saw some things from experience-wise, but you and I saw the transition very similarly
from what was going on from a very similar perspective, despite I had a little extra time
on the ground.
Yeah, I do remember when I got there, because I got there.
or maybe like, I don't know, a week or something
before like tasking at bruiser,
like all the boys showed up.
And the rumor was,
we're doing Fallujah.
We're going to Fallujah the place.
Did you get that?
Exactly same thing.
So I was, when my guys were coming,
I was thinking to myself, oh, it's on.
Like this is going to be,
we're going to do another Fallujah.
And Seals operated in Fallujah.
And that was a good situation for them, you know,
to get in there.
Yeah.
And obviously it had worked because you looked at Fallujah and Fallujah was
Pretty pacified. I mean at least from that perspective
Now are there some negatives? Of course you know you've got displaced citizens. That's a huge thing
You take 400,000 people and think about that you're in Iraq the infrastructure is already not great now you're gonna send 400,000 civilians out into the hinterland to try and figure things out that doesn't work
But that's what I was hearing when I showed up there. Oh, we're gonna do another Fallujah. That's what we're gonna do and it didn't take maybe a couple weeks before oh we're not doing a Fallujah
And part of that was the 11 AD coming in.
Oh, maybe you remember this.
I just remembered it.
There was a moment where what we're going to do is
when the 228 and the 11AD are on the ground together
will have twice the combat power.
That's when we're going to do the Fallujah thing.
Did you hear that rumor?
We've talked about this.
We've never proved it.
But you and I were in the same meetings.
Partially because of our role in our organizations,
we had similar roles in terms of,
of our responsibility downstream and rolls to the brigade.
And so all these, you're repeating all the exact same conversations I observed to include,
well, if we do this, what's the risk, what's the drawback, the infrastructure piece was always the
largest one was like, rumbling the city might have long-term impacts that we don't want.
So all these conversations, but we have this window where we had all these,
brigades.
Yeah, all this firepower available.
So I think we were literally sitting in the same rooms, having these same conversations as
they're talking through these things.
Yep.
The clincher was, though, Maliki, smart, right?
Maliki had been elected and he was smart enough to know,
dude, I don't want a civil war in this country.
And if I invade Ramadi with a bunch of Shia army people
and they go into a Sunni city,
we could have a freaking civil war on our hands,
and he didn't want that.
So the new strategy was to go into these enemy-controlled territories,
enemy-controlled neighborhoods
and set up combat outposts.
All of this was to be done by with and through Iraqi forces,
meaning everything needed to be led by Iraqis.
They wanted everything to have, and this is the term that was used, an Iraqi face.
Here's the problem with the term Iraqi face.
Iraqi face is just the face, right?
And ultimately, you needed to have more than just the face.
You needed to actually have some capability.
And I wrote about this in the dichotomy of leadership.
We were told when we got there and the guys that turned over with us like, hey, they're going to try and make you use Iraqi soldiers to do all your missions. You're going to have to take them with you. And it was kind of like, and they were doing some of it. It was definitely challenging for them. It was challenging for us. And again, wrote about this in dichotomy. They were telling us we needed to have. I forget what the exact ratio was. It might have been six to one. It might have been seven to one. But for every one American, you had to have six Iraqis soldiers with you.
This was problematic.
I pushed back against it.
Even though I pushed back against it, I didn't push back and say, no, we don't want to take any Iraqi soldiers.
All I said was, hey, look, the minimum number of seals I want to have is like four, five, six, something like that, depending on where they're going.
But we still, 99% of the operations that we did were side by side with Iraqi soldiers.
We didn't have to take them on reconnaissance missions.
That's one that we were allowed to do unilaterally.
And so we did a couple of those.
We did one that was waterborne,
and we were really nervous about taking the Iraqi soldiers with us in the boats
because they didn't know how to swim.
And so we went, took the time to get them.
We had to order life jackets.
We got them life jackets eventually.
And I remember I sent that one up the chain of command saying,
hey, listen, we want to do this, we want to do these operations from the boats.
I don't feel comfortable with the Iraqis going with us.
Can we do it unilaterally?
And the word came back down.
Nope.
Take Iraqis.
And so what we did was we gave them like swim training.
And it was more like float testing than it was swim training.
But what we did is we got them to make sure that they would float if they fell in the water.
And then we went and brought them with as a partner force.
And they like did basically security from the boats as we did the going ashore part.
But that's the type of scrutiny.
you know that was happening with trying to get these missions done and and that's the way it works
and the reason it was was because if no one is telling you you have to take Iraqi soldiers with you
you're going to say yeah okay then we then we want it's it's just additional risk that you don't
want to have to take and here's another important piece to understand that again through through my fault
Not everyone understood this.
Our mission from the Siege of SOTIF, which is the combined joint special operations task force.
So this is all special operations in the country, both Iraqi and American and whoever else.
Our mission from them was to train and fight company and platoon-sized elements of Iraqi soldiers.
So why is that important?
Well, we weren't being told to train and fight special operations units of Iraqi soldiers.
We were being told to train and fight, and by fight, I don't know if you know this echo or I just want to make this clear.
Train and fight means we're going to train them and we're going to fight with them.
Like we're going to take them out and fight them.
Like sail a boat.
Like we're going to sail the boat.
That's what you're going to fight the platoon.
You're going to take them out so they can fight.
The people that we were training were.
that we were directed to train were regular conventional Iraqi soldiers, the Jundies.
We ended up scraping together and actually the guys that predated us, they scraped together and
put together a unit, a special, they called it a special mission unit. That was pretty close to like,
okay, this is more of a special operations type direct action. And again, the guys that preceded
us there from the SEAL teams, they built that unit and did a good job and so we took them over.
but we also took over a bunch of working side by side with regular Iraqi jundies.
And each time we try and carve out like a scout element, we called them scouts.
They had their own little scout element.
We'd kind of work with them.
But they were mostly just general purpose Iraqi soldiers, which meant they were conscripts,
which meant they were untrained, they were uneducated, they were unmotivated.
Sometimes they were unloyal.
And we didn't have any blue-on-green.
We didn't have any of those types of attacks while we were there.
But we were definitely suspect.
They had a, they, the, they had a poster of Mukta al-Sadr in their barracks.
You know, like the crazy Mukta al-Sauder looking poster and he has got lightning all around him.
Like the Jundis had that, that guy was a, that guy was a bad guy.
I had targeted him my previous appointment.
And here he was, a poster of him hanging in the barracks.
So there was, it was tough.
But that's, that's what we were dealing with.
It also mean that they were poorly equipped.
They didn't have night vision for sure.
They certainly didn't have night vision.
They didn't actually have flashlights.
So they might have like a flashlight for every three or four guys.
But they certainly didn't have weapons mounted lights.
They didn't have any helmet mounted lights.
They just would have like a flashlight.
And you know, we did.
You know, everyone, every seal probably has three or four flashlights.
And so guys were giving them flashlights so that they could see.
But this is one of the reasons.
why we conducted a lot of operations in the daytime.
Because when the mission of the partner force that you've been tasked to train and fight
doesn't have night vision and operates in the day, what are you going to do?
Are you going to say, hey, we trained you, but now you go out by yourselves?
You can do that.
What kind of bond do you form with the forces that you're working with?
Not a very good one.
Does it give the enemy a tactical advantage?
Yeah, here's the thing.
The enemy did not really go out at night in Ramadi very much.
I'd say we probably killed less than 1% of the enemy that we killed were at night.
They came out in the daytime.
That's when they came out.
That's their best form of camouflage.
Their best form of camouflage was, wasn't the darkness.
It was the civilian populace.
So, you know, the idea that we own the night, which we certainly do,
But the enemy knew that we owned the night.
And that's why they were very inactive at night.
They wouldn't do anything at night.
Yeah, very similar things.
And obviously, coming from aviation, you know, the massive advantage we typically had back then
was we had the capability of conducting daytime tactics at night because of our night capability.
Night vision goggles, all the systems that we had.
We loved operating at night because it gives us a huge advantage.
One of the other things that was a huge priority for us as we focused almost exclusive.
We did a lot of stuff at night.
I shouldn't say we did plenty of things at night.
But typically the night missions that we did were all intelligence-driven raids
where we knew where we were going and why,
and we wanted to catch them by surprise because we expected them to be doing nothing,
which is what they were typically doing.
So I don't mean to say we didn't operate at night,
but the night missions had a different focus behind them.
Our daytime missions, one of the things we also got some strategic insight.
You've talked about this a lot.
And it's just something that I had to reflect back on
because I didn't quite keep up as much until after I was gone.
thinking about it was our presence there, our existence there was really designed to help the local
populace that we decided not to fallujah. We were not going to try to level their city
is we wanted them to see us as a better alternative than the insurgents who were really bad,
evil people. And one of the ways we had to do that is we had to be present. We literally called them
presence patrols. They were there to show them, hey, we are going to stay here and we're going to
align with you. And I want you to see us doing that, which meant we were going to operate during
the day. Would I rather operate at night for a tactical advantage? Yes. I have all this great
gear and all this great training and a lifetime of experience doing that, knowing the enemy
couldn't. That did not help us with one of the main strategic objectives we had, which was
you are going to see me there, which means we had to operate during the day and we had to make
a big adjustment to do that because just at face value, we had a bigger advantage at night,
but that wasn't going to accomplish what we're trying to accomplish. And yeah, that's exactly
with, for instance, with that special mission unit, like we're doing direct.
direct action rates, which we did, I don't know how many direct act.
We did a lot of direct action rates.
Of course, we did those at night because we had that small group of Iraqi soldiers that we gave
them all flashlights.
So we could help get to the target.
You know, we'd have our guys on night vision.
We could kind of protect the patrol going on there.
Once we hit the target, well, now they're inside.
We can turn on lights.
They can use the flashlights.
Everything's cool.
Yeah, we absolutely did that.
We did a lot of that.
But when you've got a conventional Iraqi force that needs to, you know,
do a patrol or a clearance inside the city,
they are absolutely gonna do that during the day.
I mean, it would be mayhem if they did that at night.
You couldn't.
Yeah, you couldn't do it.
So that's what we started doing with these Iraqi forces
and lead. Again, as much as we could get them
to take the lead, we started to clear the city.
Now, the other thing is, am I gonna have to push
the guys like, hey, you guys gotta go out?
Dude, I don't have to push.
I don't have to push Laif, Laif Bab,
or Seth Stone or BTF Tony.
Like, hey, you better go out there and do this.
Or JP or Mikey Monsor.
Like, no, these guys are people.
I mean, yeah, Mikey Monsor is the guy that had got Kazevac
because he had a freaking ear infection,
comes back and is like, can you get me back to my guys?
I want to go.
I want to go.
Like, that's just not happening.
We had 30 plus freaking badass frogmen that want to go out.
So do I have to push them?
No, actually what I have to do is hold it back.
Actually, we'd have to say like, hey,
BTF Tony, I know that you want to go and do this, that.
The other thing in broad daylight, you're not doing that, bro.
It's not happening.
He wanted to get, he had all kinds of ideas of things that PTF Tony wanted to do.
So that's what we did.
And like I said, do we do direct action rates?
Of course.
Do we do those at night?
Yes, of course.
Do we do recons at night?
Yes, of course we did.
Did we oftentimes for our Overwatch positions insert at night?
Yes, we did.
So we did those kind of things, but this is what was different was we had to go into a
coin, a counterinsurgency mode.
We had to change the mode from just doing direct action to doing these
counterinsurgency type operations, which is a whole spectrum of operations.
Why are we doing that?
Because we were freaking losing at the time.
We were losing, not just in our body, the whole country, we were losing.
Enemy attacks were up 300%.
It was going in the wrong direction.
I know that while my first deployment to Iraq, we were targeting insurgents.
We were targeting really like cell leaders.
We weren't calling them insurgents yet.
That's what they became once they got organized, once they got led.
But we were playing whackamol.
Go out grab a bad guy.
Someone to replace him.
Go out.
Grab a different bad guy.
Someone to replace him.
Here's a declassified study about the war that was released in 2007 about the insurgency in 2006.
says, this is from the Gamma Corporation.
Ramadi, the capital of Al-Lombar, was the only city in Iraq where gunfights were still
routine in 2006.
In late 2004, AQI leaders fleeing the assault from Fallujah had poured into Ramadi, eventually
laying siege to the government center in the heart of the city.
A woefully undersized force of two American battalions undertook a house-by-house operation
to hold a city of 400,000.
five visits to since 2004 I had watched the American casualties climb beyond those suffered
in the Fallujah battle 140,000 troops in country and they produced 3,000 patrols a day,
including close insecurity.
That's not a sufficient number.
Force protection had become its own mission.
Even our advisors have to take four Humvees to make one patrol.
The senior levels insist on it.
We're to risk averse.
We're not taking back the streets.
The commanders understand the principles of counterinsurgency.
The first is to make contact with the people.
And you don't establish that by staying inside the wire or driving in convoys.
Convoys.
The first technique we'd push as instructors, if given more freedom to suggest improvements, that's simple.
We'd argue for more foot patrols with the jundies.
But this school is not in the business of operations.
We're here to change attitudes.
So this was the whole
One of the strategic changes that we saw
Is we got to get outside the wire
We coalition forces got to get outside the wire
Gotta start doing like you said presence patrols
But it's not just presence patrols it goes beyond that
Because what we're gonna do is we're gonna set up
Combat operations inside your city so yes we're gonna do
Presence patrol and what are we doing all those presence patrols by the way?
We're going in a meeting with the families we're saying oh your kid's sick
Oh we got a corman here let's give them some medicine
That's what we're doing.
Oh, you've got a problem with your generator.
Oh, guess what?
We got a CB that we can bring out here and help work on your generator for you.
You're figuring out what this, you're doing census as well.
Who's out there?
What's that human terrain look like?
Yes, and doing big clearance operations.
Where you're literally going, again, we being Iraqi soldiers in the lead.
You know, on one of these clearance operations, we'd probably have 150 Iraqi soldiers
seven seals,
100 army guys,
the army guys are setting up cordons,
the seals are setting up
overwatch positions,
and the Iraqis are moving building to building.
Yeah.
Just like as a broad kind of overview
of what those clearance operations look like.
There was nothing like,
there's no comparison to this.
You couldn't look at Fallujah
from the year prior where that,
I know it worked for a particular outcome,
but it would not,
It was not a frame of not a model model to use.
In fact, they looked at the Flouza model and said, we can't do that for that exact reason.
It was nothing like 03, the march up.
It was nothing like Desert Storm.
Like, there was, what we were doing in that time, there was no other, oh, just, we're just going to do that.
Everything was different.
Everything was new for everybody.
It was completely complex.
And it was unlike, certainly historically, but also unlike what I was thinking and what people were thinking,
because the frame of reference that you have is, whatever your previous frame of reference is, is if you're on the march up,
in 03, that's what you remember.
And then you get there like, oh, God, this is totally different.
If you were in Flusia, guys that I came from Fulia or had been in Fulia, this is totally different.
There was no comparison to the complexity and the range of things we were doing and the type of missions we were doing to anything that anybody had done.
And I mean anybody, even the most experienced people that have been around for 15 years, there was no frame of reference that, oh, we did this, you know, back in Desert Storm or we did this back in OIF.
We were doing things that nobody had done in a generation.
And again, when you say we, you're talking about this broad coalition of U.S. Army soldiers and Marines, special operations.
That would be us, the seals that were there.
It was all new.
And again, this is all historically documented.
This isn't like Dave's sitting here saying, oh, he's saying what they did to do.
We did something.
No.
It's like, it's documented.
Yes.
Hey, did it happen in Tala Far?
Yes, it did.
So headed dim and dump.
Yes.
Actually, let me throw a correction at you.
Up in Talafar.
which HR McMaster went up and did Seas Clear Holden Build up in Tallahfar.
The Marines in Al-Qaim, which I mentioned briefly,
they did what they did that was outstanding was they made friends with the local populace
who were pointing out where the bad guys were.
So actually now that I think about it, people had done this before.
We were capturing those lessons.
We heard about the Marines and Al-Qaim going door-to-door.
It was a great story.
It's like Marines are in Al-Qaim going door-to-door trying to clear the city
and someone would be like, hey, why are you coming to my house?
house the bad guys are four buildings down oh okay well do you want to help us and
they would want to help and then McMaster did this up in Talafar and guess who
took McMaster's place McFarland so general McFarland Colonel McFarland at the time
rolls in and said oh what you do here oh I see what you did okay it worked oh
yes it worked okay let's go let's go do it in Ramadi Colonel Gronski didn't have
the combat power to get it done he needed more people well
McFarland shows up and he's got tanks, which is going to be a huge asset, and he's got more combat power.
So that's why this idea of going in and building these combat outposts, so it wouldn't just be a presence patrol.
It would be a permanent presence.
That was another word that got thrown around a lot in those brigade meetings.
Establish permanent presence.
Yeah, the cops.
That's what the combat outposts were.
And as we started to come up with a plan, the actual mission planning,
for building the combat outposts,
I realized one of the best things that we could do
in Tasking of Bruiser was support these operations.
Be the supporting actor.
Provide Overwatch.
And look, we did some overwatches out of the gate,
out of the gate, Tasking a Bruiser,
and hey, I'm gonna correct you again, Dave.
You said no one's ever done anything like this before.
My first deployment, there was a unit
that was getting hammered with mortars
on the fringes of Baghdad, real hostile.
area at the time and we went out there and set up sniper positions we went out
there and set up these sniper positions we did it one time we were ineffective we
were ineffective we got mortared you know we took some really close mortars but we
didn't do anything we didn't we didn't engage anybody but it gave me a little
glimpse of oh wait a second if we would have been out there for a few days what if we
would have put a couple other overwatch positions in other spots you know there's
There's other things I figured out that we could do and as I saw this unfold as soon as we got there's like oh we can put snipers out
Yeah and that's what we started doing immediately and luckily
Task unit Bruiser had 13 snipers in it
Which is a lot. It's a lot for four snipers in a in a task unit would be would be sort of probably what the requirement is
six is probably normal like oh we got six or seven snipers we had 13 snipers it's it just
Just luck, luck of the draw, look, oh, you have a chief, you know, BTF Tony, guess what?
He'd been to sniper school.
Not every chief goes to sniper, so that's, there's an additional one.
We had guys that were new guys that had snuck in and gone to sniper school.
And so we just ended up in a platoon with a lot of snipers in it.
And so we had a huge tactical advantage.
And so very quickly, like I said, I got our snipers into the field.
And guess what?
When our snipers are going in the field, they're not going into the field solo.
They're going in with Iraqi soldiers.
They're going in with our interpreters on every sniper overwatch so that Iraqi soldiers
are with us.
They're helping maintain security.
They're up on the rooftops.
They have machine guns in case we get attacked.
They're helping us deal or manage the deal with or manage the families that are in these
buildings.
And so we put these sniper teams out there and like I said, very quickly, these snipers are
snipers.
These seal snipers started killing bad guys.
Within days, we had these combined Iraqi SEAL sniper elements that are out there killing.
We probably killed, I don't know, six, seven, eight bad guys within days.
And this was very shocking.
This is very shocking to the rest of the SEAL community, really, and special operations
community at large.
It was shocking to me as well.
It was shocking to the guys.
Well, look, we all knew Ramadi was bad, but we didn't understand how effective we could be.
You know what else was surprised?
The enemy.
The enemy was shocked because they hadn't had someone sneak into their backyard and kill them when they didn't expect it.
In these areas where people couldn't drive, well, guess what we could do?
We could walk.
We could sneak in there.
We could sneak in there at night.
We could set up a position.
When they start in the daytime, start doing what they normally do, we could take them out.
When they start digging holes in the road to put IEDs in, guess who's going to kill them?
We are.
But there was a lot of them and it surprised.
Like I said, it surprised the enemy.
It surprised me.
It surprised everybody.
My boss was surprised.
I was surprised.
My boss's boss was surprised.
No one was used to this level of enemy engagement.
That's why I said Romani was different.
Here's a quote.
Another one.
After the Fallujah offensive, the Americans tried to quell the insurgency in Ramadi
with a combination of political maneuvers and,
cooperation of tribal leaders to root out foreign Islamist fighters.
But that plan has spectacularly fallen apart.
The men who dared to ally themselves with the Americans quickly learned that the U.S.
military couldn't protect them.
Insurgents killed 70 of Ramadi's police recruits in January.
Yeah, that's glass factory.
And at least half a dozen high-profile tribal leaders had been assassinated since then.
This was a freaking terror campaign.
Quote this whole thing's a quote I'm injecting some little quotes like this thing is a freaking terror campaign
That was my interjection back to the book Ramadi has become a town where anti-American guerrillas
operate openly and city bureaucrats are afraid to acknowledge their job titles for fear of being killed the government center in downtown Ramadi comes under gunfire or mortar attacks daily
That's from Megan K. Stack and Lewis Roug from an article called Fear of Big
battle panics Iraqi city 11 June 2006 so yeah go listen to the podcast about the glass factory
if you want to know what happened there and this is all fresh when we showed up that happened
in January those tribal leaders the sheikhs got assassinated so the idea that Ramadi
was somehow in good condition when task unit bruiser arrived and let me give you another
quote here uh in late 2005 the Sunni tribes around Ramadi
attempted to expel al-Qaeda in Iraq.
After growing weary
of the terrorist groups, heavy-handed,
indiscriminate murder and intimidation campaign,
a group calling itself the Anbar's People's Council
formed from a coalition of local Sunni sheiks
and Sunni nationalist groups.
The council intended to conduct organized resistance
against both coalition forces and al-Qaeda elements,
but undermanned and hand-strung by tribal vendettas,
it lacks strength and cohesion.
A series of charge.
tribal leader assassinations ultimately brought down the group which ceased to exist by February of 2006.
This collapse set the conditions that the brigade found when it arrived in late May.
The assassinations created a vacuum, a leadership vacuum in Ramadi, and by cutting tribal ties to outside tribal centers isolated the city.
For their part, the tribes had adopted a passive posture, not wishing to antagonize the powerful al-Qaeda presence in and around Ramadi.
In short, as the ready first prepared to move from Talafar, their new AO was essentially
in enemy hands.
So that's what was going on.
The idea that Ramadi had been pacified was not true.
Ramadi was a complete war zone when we showed up.
Here's from the same article.
In the summer of 2006, Ramadi by any measure was among the most dangerous cities in Iraq.
The area of operations averaged over three.
times more attacks per capita than any other area in the country.
With the exception of the embattled government center and nearby buildings held by a company of Marines,
Al-Qaeda-related insurgents had almost complete freedom of movement throughout the city.
They dominated nearly all of the city's key structures, including the city hospital, the largest in Anbar province.
Their freedom of movement allowed them to emplace subsurface IED belts, which rendered much of the city a no-go terrain for U.S. and
Iraqi army forces.
That's the summer of 2006.
I'm just going to use that as a better way to explain what I was saying.
All corrections aside, my whole point was like, this was different than anything.
When I say we, that was my team and the teams were supporting, this was a, there was nothing like this.
This was just different.
Yep.
This environment was different.
And listen, if you were in Habania or you were in Baghdad or you were in Yusufia and
Someone was shooting at you?
We get it, man.
Of course.
Of course.
The chances of them shooting you were three times greater if you were in Ramadi.
So that's just the way it was.
And that's why it was different.
And that's why I didn't do a good job of making sure people understood what we were getting into.
Because it was so different.
Now, as we got there and like I said, we started killing bad guys almost immediately,
we immediately became the most scrutinized unit in the country.
And I don't mean that in a bad way, actually.
I actually mean it in a positive way.
My chain of command wanted to make sure that we were doing the right thing
and make sure that we had the support that we needed.
So they increased their micromanagement.
And I was fine with it.
How did they do that?
Well, here's a couple examples.
Number one, they changed the level of authority required for,
operations to be conducted.
So let me give you an example.
There was some basic operations that I was able to approve myself.
If we were going to do a presence patrol.
When I got there, I could say, yep, Leif, you want to take your guys out and do a presence patrol?
Go ahead.
I approve it.
Within a week, they said, hey, Jocko, we want, we have approval for that now.
I said, okay, cool, fine.
I wasn't upset by this at all.
I had a great relationship with my commanding officer.
we could I think the only the only thing that I was actually allowed to conduct by the end of the deployment
but no not by the end but just within a couple weeks was like hey if you need to do a logistics
convoy you can approve it jocco everything else was overseen by my chain of command which I was
perfectly fine was why did he do that it's because the operations were very risky and he knew it
my boss knew it my commanding officer knew that he's the overall responsible
If I'm going out there and killing a bunch of people, and he wants to know what's going on.
Of course.
He's the one that's going to have to answer for it.
Yeah.
Hey, Jocko, I'm going to put more control on you.
Great.
Thank you.
No problem.
And that's exactly what happened.
And listen, he knew that operations were risky.
Like I said.
And I can tell you right now, this might seem strange.
And I don't know what it's like for you in the pilot world.
If you want to promote and you want to make rank,
the surest way to do that is to avoid risk.
Just don't take risk.
Just don't take it.
Even for me.
Like I had to up to this point in my career,
it had been an awesome career.
I mean, I had an incredibly blessed career in the SEAL teams.
And if I wanted to continue on my trajectory,
the easiest thing to do is not do anything.
The easiest thing to do is, yep,
we're going to train some Iraqi soldiers.
That's our mission.
We'll train our Iraqi soldiers.
We'll stay.
That is tempting.
I'm sure it was tempting for my boss too.
But here's the thing.
Our fellow Americans were in a fight and needed our support.
The U.S. Army soldiers, the U.S. Marines were in an incredibly tough fight.
and we had some capabilities that we could bring to the table to help them.
And I knew it.
And there's not one part of me that looks at a situation where there's Americans that are fighting and I say, oh yeah, that's not me.
I'm not doing that.
These guys are getting wounded and killed on a daily basis and we've got an opportunity to help protect them.
That's what we're doing.
And guess what?
My boss agreed.
And guess what?
His boss agreed.
These were risky operations.
I had a conversation with my boss, my commanding officer.
He comes out.
We'd already done some operation.
We already killed some bad guys.
We'd already gotten some firefights.
And he's like, isn't this risky?
And I was like, sir, yes, it is.
Isn't it risky to be out there with these Iraqi soldiers in the daytime doing clearances?
Yes, it is, sir.
It's very risky.
There's enemy all over.
He says, what are you going to do to mitigate the risk?
I told him, we are going to kill the enemy before they kill.
else that's what we're going to do for mitigation that's where that's one of the primary
drivers of setting up these overwatch positions because I had an element on the ground with 40
Iraqi soldiers and I had six or seven seals with that element helping them do the clearance
how can I protect them oh I can tell you I can protect them I can put my snipers in
overwatch positions where they can protect them and see the enemy maneuvering on them and that's
exactly what we did and and again my commanding officer was
I had a great relationship with him.
And he, it's his job to make sure we're doing the right thing.
You know, before we even left on deployment, I was in his office.
We had changed, we were supposed to go to Baghdad.
We had changed.
Now we know we're going to Ramadi.
And he, I was in his office and he asked me something along the lines of, or he told me
something along the lines of, hey, before every mission, you need to ask yourself, is this mission,
worth the lives of one of your guys.
And I actually looked at him, I said,
hey, sir, I can answer you that question right now.
There's no mission that there could be
that's worth the life of one of my guys.
There's no mission.
I don't care if it's Osama bin Laden.
I don't care.
That might be an extreme statement.
But there's no mission that's worth the life of one of my guys.
These are my bros.
Were you kidding me?
And I said, sir, that being said, there will be risk on every mission that we do.
And we're going to mitigate it as much as we can.
But it is not possible to mitigate all risk.
It's not possible.
Or unless we just stay home.
So we will mitigate risk to the utmost, to the utmost.
And that's what we did.
And then, again, great relationship with my commanding officer.
He approved all the missions.
He had to approve all the missions that we did, except for maybe, like I said, logistics convoys.
If we were running a logistics convoy to bring Seth Stone and the guys out at Craigador some equipment or gear that they needed, we could do that.
I could approve it.
Everything else that we did had to be approved up the chain of command.
And by the way, there was also a level of operations that had to get approved by his chain of command.
And they were all being very micromanaging of us, which was fine, which was fine.
So the idea that I was out there just running unchecked is like completely insane.
It's completely I had, first of all, I had my chain, my chain of command.
So my seal team commander and then the siege of soda commander above him.
They're reading all these opsons.
They know exactly what's going on.
On top of that, we have the conventional Army chain of command and the Marine Corps chain of command,
which, by the way, the Army reported into the Marine Corps at that time.
On top of that, we had to get approval from the battle space owner.
So if you're going to go work in Tamim, which is one section of Vermont, if you're going to go work in there,
you need to get approved by the battle space owner.
You've got to present that mission to them.
You've got to coordinate with them.
Then you've got to go talk to the company commander and say, hey, captain, here's what I'm
I'm looking at doing.
Then you got to talk to the platoon commander who's actually going to be running the QRF for you or whatever.
Oh, and by the way, on top of all that approval, you've got to get approval from the Iraqi chain of command.
So every move that we made, every operation that we conducted, every time we left the wire, it had to be approved and coordinated through all these different elements.
And then, of course, on the ground, like I said, you've got to coordinate with everyone on the ground for sure.
You gotta talk to the battalion company,
platoon squad.
If you fail to coordinate with the battle space owners,
it's freaking suicide.
It's suicide.
They owned the ground.
And by they, I mean like a company commander
owns a chunk of real estate out there.
You gotta go talk to him.
They have the intel, by the way, too.
Like they're the ones that know,
hey, there's an IED in that street three days in a row.
Don't go down it.
Thank you.
They told us the safest route.
Matt Laif wrote about this.
Laif wrote about asking a conventional battle space owner,
hey, spec ops wants to do an operation down here.
What do you think?
He's like, do not drive down that road.
You'll lose a vehicle.
Okay, cool.
We didn't go.
By the way, the conventional battle space owners,
they're the ones that conducted our QRF.
They're the ones that conducted our fire sport.
They're the ones that we relied upon to conduct our casualty evacuation.
So if we got a guy wounded, it was the Army or the Marine Corps
that was going to come and rescue us.
If we needed fire support, it was the Army or the Marine Corps that was going to come and rescue us.
That's what was happening.
They're the ones that were going to send troops.
They're the ones that are going to send armor.
They're the ones that are going to send Kazavak vehicles to us.
We didn't have the assets to do that.
We did zero times.
Zero times.
Well, I guess let me not say zero times.
Anytime we did an operation in the urban area of Ramadi,
zero times was task unit bruiser assets, the QRF or the Kazavak, zero times.
If we did an operation in the hinterland in a rural area, like up at MC1 or one MC, what is it,
MC1, MC1, MC1, Mike Charlie won.
Yeah.
If we did an operation up there, it's a rural area, we might stage our vehicles and leave
an element with vehicles that could actually do the Kazovac, but even there most of the
time, I don't want to say zero, because I think a couple times we did actors or own potential
or Act as our own Kazavak but 99% of the time it was the conventional that were doing that for us and so
They had to approve what the hell we were gonna do they had to agree to support it
I had to put in my concept of operations what my Kazavak platform was who it was what frequencies we were gonna be on
And if we couldn't get the approval and support from the conventional forces we could not conduct the mission period in store it
We we couldn't conduct operations
without them. That's why this was such a team effort. And we called in these assets,
QRF, fire support, and Kazavak, you combine all those three together. We called those in,
I can't count how many times. And God bless the U.S. Army and God bless the U.S. Marine Corps
for coming to help us and coming to save us and coming to evacuate our wounded guys. And you might
think yourself, why did they agree to do that? I can tell you why they agreed to do it.
because they knew that we took significant risk to go into their areas, go into their battle spaces, and kill the insurgents that were trying to kill them.
And they were thankful and grateful.
Just like we were thankful and grateful for them when they came and pulled our ass out of terrible situations.
This was a team effort.
The Army called us Army SEALs.
The Marine Corps gave us Marines.
I had Marines that worked in my tactical operation center for the,
entire deployment to coordinate communication.
There's two outstanding Marines that were there, 24 hours a day.
We used the Marine Corps CERC boats on many occasions, at great risk to those Marines
and their boats because we had a great relationship.
The Marines didn't have to do that.
They did it because we were all part of the same team.
That's what's going on.
Here's an overview of how things unfolded.
This is once again from Colonel Sean McFarland, the brigade commander.
He says it was clear that to win over the sheiks and their people
our BCT that's brigade combat team would have to move into the city and its contested areas
Thus we decided to employ a tactic we had borrowed from third armored cavalry regiment and used
Successfian Talafar the combat outpost or cop this is what I was just talking about
That's what McMaster did general McMaster no disrespect sir
General McMaster Colonel McMaster at the time that's what he did up in town
Talafar with the proud soldiers of the third armored calf.
Legendary guys, legendary deployment, did an outstanding job.
Continuing on, back to the book,
our cops normally consisted of a tank or infantry company team
based in a defensible local structure in a disputed area.
Eventually, the cops included an Iraqi army company wherever possible
as they became emboldened by our presence.
Later, we began to establish Iraqi police substations
at or near the cops as well.
At this early stage, the outpost provided lily pads for mechanized, quick reaction forces, safe houses for special operations units, that's us, and security for civil military operations centers.
In rural centers, the cops sometimes doubled as firebases with mortars and counterfire radars.
That's out like at MC1.
Because we now maintained a constant presence in disputed neighborhoods, the insurgents could no longer accurately trace and predict.
our actions frequently and random patrols out of combat outposts presented prevented al-Qaeda
from effectively moving and operating within the local populace at the same time the cops
enhanced our ability to conduct civil military operations CMO intelligence reconnaissance
and surveillance and information operations now I'm going to continue on here's something
that no one wants to hear these outposts also acted as fly bait especially
in the period immediately after a new cop was established.
Experience in Talafar taught us that insurgents would attack a newly established outpost
using all systems at their disposal, including suicide car bombs.
These attacks usually did not end well for the insurgents who often suffered heavy casualties.
During the establishment of the first outpost in July 2006, the enemy mounted multiple
platoon assaults.
The frenzy of attacks on the new outposts culminated in a citywide battle on July 24, 2006,
in which al-Qaeda in Iraq forces were severely beaten and sustained heavy casualties.
By October, the attacks were far less with elements consisting of a handful of men conducting hit-run type operations.
These noticeable decreases in their strength indicated our plan to decimate their ranks was clearly working.
Constant coalition presence, insurgent attrition, and loss of the insurgent mobility
We freed the people from constant intimidation and sapped any support for al-Qaeda in Iraq.
So what that meant was, what I just read, the flybait, this is what people don't want to hear.
You, when the conventional forces were building this massive construction project to establish a combat outpost, we knew that the enemy was going to attack.
That's what we knew was going to happen.
And so what we did in task unit bruiser is we pushed out from those combat outpost as they were being built and set up sniper overwatch positions with Iraqi soldiers along with us, with interpreters along with us, would seal elements and would set up these sniper overwatch positions.
And when the enemy maneuvered into attack, we would interdict and kill them.
and they did it often.
That's what was happening.
Continuing on, the cops also allowed us to control the infrastructure in Ramadi
and use it to support the populace again.
During a heavily publicized operation in July 2006,
we established a combat outpost manned with newly recruited Iraqi army troops and U.S. forces.
We set it up just outside the Ramadi General Hospital walls
while the Iraqi army secured the hospital.
Within days, the hospital was providing medical care for the city.
The effect devastated and embarrassed al-Qaeda in Iraq insurgents.
Wounded fighters brought to the hospital were detained while the general populace received quality medical attention for the first time in a year.
And yes, Seals supported that operation.
As a matter of fact, Seals went in first to that operation.
Seals went into first, Seals were the first people on the ground in almost all of the first.
of these combat outposts.
Why is that?
Because the Army wanted us there.
Because the Marine Corps wanted us there.
Because they knew, and we knew, they were going to get attacked.
They knew and we knew that as soon as we cleared these roads, as
EOD and the engineers cleared these roads from roadside bombs, insurgents would come out
and put, they have a name for it.
It's called reseeding IEDs.
So an insurgents.
would go and put a hole in the ground and put a bomb in there.
The engineers would clear that bomb.
It would leave a hole.
The insurgents would come back out and reseed, meaning put a new bomb inside the hole.
That's one of their tactics, techniques, and procedures.
So that was very easy for my snipers to get up on a long access road where a mine
clearance vehicle goes by, digs out a mine, disposes of it.
There's a hole there.
The vehicle drives away.
Two hours later, insurgent comes out to reseed.
This is one of their tactics, continuing on from the same article.
The brigade staff believed that by offering convincing incentives,
we could create a tribal alliance that could produce lasting security in Ramadi.
To persuade the tribes to cooperate, we first needed to understand the human terrain in RAL.
And that task fell to an outstanding and talented junior officer, Captain Travis Patrick.
an Arabic speaking former special forces soldier and an infantry officer assigned as the Ready Brigade's S-9 engagements officer
Patrick Quinn coordinated brigade level local meetings and discussions.
He quickly gained the sheikh's confidence through his language and interpersonal skills
and developed strong personal bonds with their families.
He strengthened these bonds during meetings between the brigade commander or deputy commanding
officer and the shakes battalion and company commanders also worked on improving relations with the
townspeople on a daily basis thus the shakes growing trust of the brigade officers let led them to
support our efforts to reinvigorate police recruiting so there was interaction on a daily
basis almost with the tribal leaders there
And much of that was because of a heroic human being named Captain Travis Patrickren,
who was at all the meetings Dave was just talking about, who is an Arabic speaker, who was,
he was a special forces guy, freaking just an outstanding human.
Big ass smile on his face, by the way.
Nice, super nice guy.
Understood the culture.
Now does this mean that every single Marine and every single soldier saw this incredible level
of coordination and cooperation?
Of course not.
Can there be someone that might have a different perspective or harbored some kind of animosity
or didn't understand how the team worked together?
Of course, look, there's 5,600 people there.
There's people in silos.
There's people that see one event and judge, you know, what if some Marine didn't get word
on seals using their O.
Or getting fuel from their fuel farm?
What if an army officer didn't know.
we had coordinated with headquarters on a resupply of some ammo.
What might what might one of those individuals get angry and hold a grudge sure
That's possible could there be someone that didn't get the coordination that was missed the meeting
And seals roll in there and they didn't know about could that yes absolutely is that possible in fact it's not just possible
It's guaranteed you got such a complex environment not everyone's gonna see it the same way but the those people are in a small
very extremely small minority
The vast majority of people on the ground understood with great pride,
the communication, the coordination, the camaraderie that was everywhere on the battlefield.
Everywhere.
Now, again, if you're on the outside and you don't know this, I can see how, you know,
someone could get the impression that Jocco's just out there just doing everything on his own.
You could end up with that.
It's just so clearly ludicrous to think that.
Everything was checked.
Everything was scrutinized.
Everything was approved through multiple lines of chains of command.
And that's the way it was.
And so I got into this whole diatribe because I was talking about the scrutiny that we fell under.
Here's another scrutiny that we fell under.
So yeah, we had scrutiny from getting our missions approved.
Another piece of scrutiny that we fell under almost immediately was,
Because we had to begin filling out two sworn shooter statements for every person that we killed.
This was not a normal procedure.
And as, you know, within a, within probably a week, this, hey, from now on, we want two sworn shooter statements for everyone that you kill.
I was like, okay, Roger that.
What was what did Leif and Seth and the boys say?
What are you kidding me?
We got to fill out more paperwork.
Of course they're mad.
But I knew and I understood why.
I had a conversation with my JAG officer about it.
He's like, listen, these multiple forms of.
documentation of what happens this is going to mean when people make claims in the future
if they do we will be able to explain exactly what was going on and that made sense to me
war is complex and people remember things differently and it's best to document what happens
and that's exactly what we did that's exactly what we did for every single enemy fighter that we
killed we have an explanation of what happened why they were engaged any pertinent information
around the incident and how the rules of engagement were implied.
And those documents were then reviewed
and they were corroborated with other reports.
And what do I mean by corroborated with other,
what other reports?
In order to do that, I have to explain the human terrain.
And you heard Colonel McFarland mentioned the word human terrain.
Human terrain in Ramadi.
First of all, the enemy, the insurgents.
There's really three components of insurgents there.
you had al-Qaeda
straight up al-Qaeda in Iraq
a QI-Z is what we called it
al-Qaeda in Iraq you had Sunni extremists
these Sunni extremists were not
al-Qaeda they were
fighting for themselves
for their own control
and then you had criminal elements and there's crossover
in all three of these because sometimes they all had a common enemy
sometimes they didn't sometimes their enemy
was each other in fact often it was
so but you had this
this element
of enemy these insurgents okay so then you so you have that then you have
American forces well anything I what I miss on on on we could talk the whole day I
guess about Al-Qaeda Sunni extremists and criminal elements there and these are
the three main there's little fractions with within those because because the
Sunni extremists sometimes different tribes had different elements of extremism in
their own tribe so they would sometimes
fight each other 100% so it wasn't just a war it was like a three four way war kind of
so check this out the Sunni extremists the Sunni sheikhs at one point fought al-Qaeda
Al-Qaeda assassinated the shakes this I think it was six or eight I think I
just read it was six six Sunni Shates got murdered by al-Qaeda that actually put the
the Sunnis in check they were like all right dude this is
We're not, we're just going to have to go along with them.
That's freaking terror.
Terror is supposed to have a purpose in a situation like this where we're trying to control
the populace.
The Al-Qaeda was trying to control the populace.
What they did was torture, rape, murder.
One of the key people, or one of the key murders that they can do is murder the leaders
of the tribes.
And that's exactly what they did.
They did that bomb at the glass factory.
Who was at the glass factory?
Police recruits.
Who were the police recruits?
They were local Sunnis.
And then you just had straight criminal elements.
And there's a lot of talk about a guy named Sheikh Satar,
who we formed a relationship with.
It was actually the conventional forces,
we included formed a relationship with this guy named Sheikh Satar.
And Sheikh Satar had been targeted in the previous six months as a bad guy.
and as a matter of fact
the brigade commander
Colonel McFarland went to the Marine Corps
and said hey we're going to form a relationship
with this guy and they're like no that guy is a target
he's like he was a target six months ago
now he was on our side
so that's what was going on
so that's what you had from the enemy
but on the friendly side
so we had American forces obviously there
we have almost 6,000 soldiers and Marines
by the way not all these soldiers and Marines
are in combat roles
Look, you got logistics and support, but you also have military transition teams.
What are those military transition teams are doing?
They're embedded with the Iraqi military.
They're friends with the Iraqi military.
They're working with the Iraqi military.
They live with the Iraqi military.
We have police transition teams.
What are they doing?
Oh, they live with the Iraqi police.
They work with the Iraqi police.
They have a relationship with the Iraqi police.
You also have civil affairs groups that are going out there and building infrastructure,
working with the shakes, trying to get projects done for them, paving roads, digging wells,
all those things.
Medcap, doing medical civil affairs.
Oh, there's a breakout of some kind of disease or there's a situation going on where kids need
better water.
Okay, let's get that medical of civil affairs element going.
So you have the U.S. military, but the U.S. military is all people with rifles.
There's people that are there specifically their job is to rebuild the infrastructure from day one.
Then you have the Iraqi army.
I don't know the exact number,
maybe 3,000 Iraqi soldiers out there.
They were out on operations with American forces, with all of us.
Like I said, 99% of the operations that we did,
other than recons and logistics runs.
There were Iraqi soldiers with task unit bruiser.
I don't want to deviate too much from the timeline here and all that.
But like when you say criminal elements,
generally speaking,
what their goal is?
Make money.
Oh, that's it, straight up.
So they're essentially fighting a different war than it.
I mean, everyone's kind of fighting their own different.
And by the way, if the opportunity comes to make money by putting a road in the bomb,
putting a bomb in the road for Al-Qaeda, they'll make money that way.
If money comes from helping an American find out where a bad guy is, they'll make money that way.
They're just criminal elements.
So you have like human intel sources.
Do you know what that is?
Yeah.
Yeah, it's basically like someone that's going to tell you what's going on.
Some of those people, like six months ago, they were planting bombs in the roads.
Now Al Qaeda is running out of money to pay me.
Oh, but you'll pay me to tell where Al Qaeda is.
I'm in.
Let's go.
It's crazy, man.
Makes sense.
The Iraqi army is there with us.
They're out on all these operations.
And they're obviously going to bond and they're going to take care and protect the friendly Iraqi civilians.
Also, we have interpreters.
the interpreters come from a bunch of different backgrounds to speak Arabic,
but they're going to look out and see what's happening.
Then on top of all this,
you actually have the interim government of Ramadi.
There's a government in this city.
They have a mayor.
They have staff.
They're trying to run a city.
They're trying to build infrastructure.
They're trying to provide services.
They're trying to build up their political capital.
Right?
And how do you build up political capital?
By protecting and supporting the civilian populace.
So when someone runs a tank through a freaking wall, what happens?
They go to the government officials and say, hey, the freaking Americans drove a tank through my wall.
What does the mayor say?
Oh, let me get the Americans out here to give you some money.
Or let me get their engineers out here to rebuild your wall.
There's a direct conduit for the civilians to run their grievances and complaints up the chain of command.
is going to go right to the coalition forces.
And so you have that official government of Vermont.
Then you also have this entire shake, all the tribal shakes.
And they've got all their elements,
and they're trying to keep their political power.
And that means the coalition forces
are conducting what we call tribal engagement,
TE, engaging with the local tribes.
These are the people of the power.
It's a tribal culture.
These are the people of the power.
And there's multiple tribes,
powerful tribes in the region.
And the tribal leaders, they're going to have power.
And the Americans, what we had to do, the Marines, the Army, the SEALs, we had to build relationships with those tribal leaders.
And we had to help the tribal leaders protect their neighborhoods.
We had to help them fix damage buildings, help them with their power issues.
Like, that's what's happening.
And guess what else?
Civilian casualties.
If there is a civilian casualty in Ramadi, it's immediately known to everyone in Ramadi up down and across the chain of command.
That's what's happening.
That's what's happening.
That's why it's so important to mitigate collateral damage.
That's why it's so important to protect the civilians.
But when I say collateral damage just now, I just meant like the walls, the buildings, the infrastructure.
But you've got to protect obviously the people, the human beings.
I think Laif's platoon, like, cut down date palms
because they wanted to improve their field of vision.
Like, we had to go pay for these freaking date palms.
That's the level of, like, grievances that would get filed.
So the idea that SEALs or any American or any Iraqi force
was out there indiscriminately killing civilians is,
it's, like, implausible.
It could not happen.
It could not happen.
Every single civilian death.
which did occur, by the way.
Were there civilians' death?
Yes, there were.
And every one of them was reported, was investigated,
and it was resolved with the local populace.
It had to be.
You could not just go out and think that you could go and kill civilians.
Let me give you an example.
Let me give an example of what happens.
This is from Al Jazeera.
25 June 2006.
Specialist Nathan Lynn was charged with,
voluntary manslaughter for allegedly shooting an unarmed man on February 15th.
Lynn and a second soldier, Sergeant Milton Ortiz Jr., were charged with obstructing justice
for allegedly conspiring with another soldier who reportedly put an AK-47 near the body
in an attempt to make it look as though the dead man was a fighter.
Ortiz was also charged with assault and communicating a threat in a separate incident
on March 8th.
He allegedly put an unloaded weapon to the head of an Iraqi man and threatened to send him to prison.
The soldier who allegedly placed the weapon near the body was redeployed and left the army before criminal proceedings began.
Both soldiers from the 1st Battalion 109th Infantry of the Pennsylvania National Guard are being held in Baghdad while awaiting hearings.
So you want to know what happens when you kill a civilian?
Everybody knows about it.
And again, who reported these things?
The locals report them.
The Iraqis soldiers report them.
The Americans report them.
The Shakes report them.
The Terps report them.
Everyone is watching.
You can't get away with things.
And if you try and get away with things, you're going to hurt the freaking war effort.
This is how, through all these different sources, this is how they found out and investigated and followed up on every engagement in Ramadi.
It was reported through a citizen network to the government officials and back to the military.
And like I said, I don't care if it was a broken door, a smashed window, a breached wall, we're going to hear about it.
And any careless or overly aggressive unit that it behaved in this manner would have been shut down immediately.
would have been shut down immediately.
Any unit that didn't coordinate with battle space owners,
they would have been there for one day, one day.
We wrote about one of those elements in the book Extreme Ownership.
Special Operations Element came in.
They thought they were going to do their own thing.
They were gone in two weeks.
I think they did two or three missions.
They were gone.
They weren't coordinating.
And certainly any individual who's intentionally or repeatedly
behaving in a way that's against the rules of engagement or against the law or against the
strategy that we were conducting they would have been arrested in prison court-martial
sent to jail period of story so so if you hear when you hear about war crimes if you
hear about someone wantonly killing civilians it's just a lie from someone that has no
idea of what it was like on the ground it was not possible it
So despite the level of violence in Ramadi,
engagements were highly visible, highly tracked.
And in Task Unit Bruiser, we did get investigated.
And when we did, I was thankful.
This is actually a great lesson I learned very early,
which was from the Army.
If something questionable happens, immediately get investigation.
You should invite investigation.
Did you have this attitude?
Dude, I am literally sitting here and it's like you're describing my experience there.
All these things you're saying are the same exact things.
I have so many stories in my head.
I was thinking of a story 10 minutes ago as you're walking through this.
I was on a patrol.
Listen, we worked together a bunch.
Most of my operations were not with you because we were doing so many operations with so many other units.
I was on a patrol where, and I was supporting an army squad or a platoon or something, we shot a cow.
We shot a cow.
A local civilian cow got shot.
Twice.
And they did an investigation.
I was interviewed because I observed it.
And in the end, like we conducted an investigation and then went back to that family.
I could show it on a map and paid them, bought the cow, apologized, and fixed that problem
over a cow.
The level of scrutiny was so insanely high.
And I don't want to make it sound like it was debilitating where you were fearful of doing
something wrong.
You just understood that every single thing you did was being watched and observed, scrutinized, and assessed and reported from all sorts of people.
So even if I was like, hey, don't tell anybody we shot the cow, which is ridiculous anyway, 20 other people who I'm not coordinating on that are going to report it to include the owner of the cow.
The owner of the cow.
Who's going to go meet with his shake on Thursday night?
And he's going to be like, hey, you're freaking Americans shot my cow.
That's right.
And so the best thing we learned we could do is if anything went wrong and things went wrong.
We made mistakes.
Cows got shot is we didn't wait for someone to tell up the chain across.
We came home and immediately reported those things.
And if it wasn't you, somebody else is going to do it.
It was just the life that we were living there.
So as I'm listening here quietly, I am living in my head what went on.
It's exactly the same thing across all places that we operated there with every single unit.
You couldn't, you just, you simply.
could not do anything out of the of what was appropriate and by the way if you did you're
actually putting your own life at risk too it would have been dumb even if you could but you
couldn't it's just how it was and that's what the thing about investigate and that's what I
learned you know investigate the word investigation has a negative connotation right
like oh you're getting investigated and so what happened was I was working with an army
unit I was probably two weeks there and he we were
planning or something. He's like, oh, I got to go talk to whatever, legal's here to the jazz or the, and CID.
CID is here from Baghdad. I'm like, oh, what for? He's like, oh, we're getting investigated.
I was like, oh, he goes, oh, no, it's good. He goes, that's my attitude. Come investigate us.
You want to know what we're doing here? Come investigate it. And I was like, that is beautiful.
And that's the attitude I had. So you should want to get investigated. You should want to have
everyone interviewed. You should want to have the truth be there. The classic example that looked like
the blue on blue we had a blue on blue obviously what about extreme ownership I came back I was like
hey we just had a blue on blue let's investigate and find out what the hell went wrong
every KIA gets investigated if you enter a mosque they're going to investigate that if an
unarmed personnel on our person gets engaged or gets killed that it's going to be investigated
and here's the good thing once everyone on the team knows that like everyone knows
Everyone knows, oh, any action that you take is going to be investigated.
So that's what we did.
And listen, we're there for six months.
We engaged hundreds of enemy.
Did we have a small number of engagements where military aged males were maneuvering or behaving in a manner that was congruent with enemy tactics?
And they got shot?
Yes.
that absolutely happened.
Guys digging holes.
Guys maneuvering in a tactical manner toward friendly forces.
Guys driving past clearly marked checkpoints.
There were some cases where this type of behavior was identified by snipers
and the snipers deemed that military-aged males were displaying hostile intent,
meaning this sniper's looking at someone maneuvering, running, digging a hole,
driving and decided hey this person needs to be killed they're a threat they're
they have hostile intent sometimes there's a warning shot if possible sometimes
there wasn't and then once neutralized those individuals that were shot were
inspected and if it became clear once a target was neutralized that they ultimately
were not a threat then we initiated the investigation yep here's what
happened bring someone in from the outside
to investigate, whether it's the Army, whether it's the Navy,
whether it's the Marine Corps, bring their legal teams in,
to interview everybody and to review the pertinent information
and debrief with all the different elements that are out there
and then make some kind of a legal recommendation.
That happened.
And in each of these small number of individual cases,
the shots that our snipers took were ruled clearly
within the rules of engagement.
And look, does that have,
help the conscience of a freaking sniper,
maybe a little, but not really.
We still got to go out, find the family, pay the family.
But this is a tiny number of situations
where this took place.
And like I said, all investigated and reviewed and cleared.
What you have to do is you have to investigate.
You have to get the truth out there.
There's another term that I learned from the army,
which is good, shot, bad.
result and it's a it's a terrible thing means a sniper or a rifleman saw something they
identified what they thought was hostile intent they took a shot and it ends up having a
bad result and that did happen and it did happen with my guys on a couple of occasions
now look I can tell you no women or children were ever engaged by anyone in
tasking a bruiser ever and the reason is because they weren't a threat they seldom
would even come out if there was shooting going on they wouldn't come out when they did come out
it's like they were doing things that were not even remotely hostile there were times that the
enemy used women and children as human shields but even in those circumstances no one ever shot a
woman or kid there's a one instance where a enemy fighter was transporting weapons and ammo and was
hiding behind a child and that military age male was shot and killed by a sniper from
tasking a bruiser documented now you might think well how is this happening were there
were we're task unit bruiser the only snipers in romadi that were having success absolutely
not there were many successful snipers and sharpshooters in the battle romadi here's here's
an example you probably never heard of this uh this is from an article called marine
sniper makes his mark with swift death this is from AP press writer Antonio
castaneda battle of Vermont July 30th 2006 when he was when he was five
when he first fired an M16 his father holding him to brace against the recoil at
17 he enlisted in the Marine Corps spurred by the memory of September 11th
now 21-year-old Galen Wilson
has 20 confirmed kills in four months in Iraq and another 40 shots that probably killed insurgents.
One afternoon, the Lance Corporal down to man hauling a grenade launcher five and a half football fields away.
Wilson is the designated marksman in a company of Marines based in downtown Ramadi watching over what Marines call the worst,
what Marines call the most dangerous neighborhood in the most dangerous city in the world.
Here, Sunni Arab insurgents are intent on toppling the local government protected by the Marines.
Wilson, 5'5-foot-6 with a soft face is married and has two children and speaks in a deep, steady monotone.
After two tours in Iraq, his commanders in the 3rd Battalion 8th Regiment called him a particularly mature Marine, always collected and given to an occasional Rye grin.
His composure is regularly tested.
Swaths of Central and Southern Ramadi, 70 miles west of Baghdad, are dominated by insurgents who regularly attack the provincial government headquarters that Marines protect.
During a large scale attack on Easter Sunday, Wilson says he spotted six gunmen on a rooftop about 400 yards away.
In about eight seconds, he squeezed off five rounds, hitting five gunmen in the head.
The sixth man dived off a three-story building just as Wilson got him in his sights and counts as a probable death.
Wilson says his skill helps save American troops and Iraqi civilians.
It doesn't bother me.
Obviously, me being a devout Catholic, it's a conflict of interest.
Then again, God supported David when he killed Goliath, Wilson said.
I believe God supports what we do, and I've never killed anyone who wasn't carrying a weapon.
He was raised in a desolate part of the Rocky Mountains outside Colorado Springs,
surrounded by national parks on three sides, he says.
He regularly hunted before moving to Fort Lauderdale, Florida as a teenager.
His brother also serves in the military.
Technically, Wilson is not a sniper.
He's an infantryman who also patrols through the span of destroyed buildings that make up downtown Ramadi.
But as his units designated marksman, he has a sniper rifle.
In the heat of the day or after midnight, he spends hours on rooftop posts peering out onto rows of abandoned houses from behind piles of sandbags and bulletproof glass cracked by gunfire.
Insurgents have killed good Marines I've served with.
That's how I sleep at night.
Though I've killed over 20 people, how many lives would those 20 people have taken?
So that's an example of one Marine.
Outstanding Marine, by the way.
In an infantry, supporting his infantry unit.
And look at what he's doing.
So, by the way, the 3-8 Marines and the snipers from 3-8 Marines gave us so much information.
We modeled their operations in many ways, the way they were doing things.
Tony, BTF, Tony, Chris, went and talked to them to figure out, hey, what's the best way to get this done?
But so there you have a Marine sharpshooter.
Imagine what happens to the number of enemy killed when tasking a bruiser goes into areas.
It goes into areas that have bait out, which is a combat outpost that's being built and sets up between one and 13 snipers in mutually supporting overwatch positions with interlocking fields of fire.
You're going to kill a lot of bad guys.
and we did kill a lot of bad guys.
We killed hundreds of enemy fighters.
So did the Army.
So did the Marine Corps.
But we clearly had to stick to the rules of engagement.
The rules of engagement were so perfectly clear.
I'm going to read them to you.
Here's the rules of engagement.
This is what Dave, your Marines had to follow.
The soldiers had to follow.
The Marines, everyone there.
Rules of engagement.
Nothing on this.
prevents you from using necessary and proportional force to defend yourself.
One, you may engage the following individuals based on their conduct.
Persons who are committing hostile acts against coalition forces, persons who are exhibiting
hostile intent towards coalition forces.
So if someone looks like their intent, that's a target.
These persons may be engaged subject to the following instructions.
Positive identification is required prior to engagement.
PID is a reasonable certainty that the proposed,
Target is a legitimate military target.
If no PID, conduct your next higher commander for decision.
B, use graduated force.
When time and circumstance permit, use the following degrees of graduated force from
responding to a hostile act or intent.
One, shout verbal warnings to halt.
Two, show your weapon, demonstrate intent to use it.
Three, block access or detain.
Four, fire warning shot.
Five, shoot to eliminate threat.
C, do not target or strike anyone who has surrendered.
or who is out of combat due to sickness or wounds D do not target or strike hospitals mosques
churches shrines schools museums national monuments and other any other historical and cultural sites
civilian populated areas or buildings unless the enemy is using them for military purposes
or if it is necessary for your self-defense. E do not strike do not target or strike Iraqi
infrastructure lines of communication or economic objects unless necessary for self-defense or if
ordered by your commander if you must fire on these objects fire to disable and disrupt
rather than destroy F always minimize incidental injury loss of life and collateral damage
three the use of force including deadly forces authorized to protect the following yourself
your unit and other friendly forces detainees civilians from crimes that are likely to cause
death or serious body bodily harm such as murder or rape personnel or property designated by
the on-scene commander when such actions are necessary to restore
order and security.
Four, in general, warning shots are authorized only when the use of deadly force
would be authorized in that particular situation.
Five, treat all civilians on their property with respect and dignity.
Do not seize civilian property, including vehicles, unless the property presents a security
threat when possible give a receipt to the property's owner.
You may detain civilians based upon reasonable belief that the person, one, must be detained
for purposes of self-defense.
Two, is interfering with coalition forces mission accomplishment.
3 is on a list of persons wanted for questioning arrest or detention.
4 is or was engaged in criminal activity or 5 must be detained for imperative reasons of security.
Anyone you detain must be protected.
Force up to including deadly forces authorized to protect detainees in your custody.
You must fill out a detainee apprehension card for every person you detain.
MNC, TAC 1, General Order No. 1 is in effect looting and the taking of war trophies are prohibited.
All personnel must report any suspected violations of the law of war.
committed by any US friendly or enemy force notify your chain of command judge
adequate CID IG or chaplain so the those are the rules of engagement they
didn't change we didn't have you didn't have Dave didn't have one set of rules and
I'd had another set of rules that didn't happen all the rules of engagement are the
same and they were fault and and here's another thing that was an undercurrent at
the time the Haditha Dam investigation had started so
There was a bunch of civilians killed at the Haditha Dam.
The story had not broken yet, but the Marine investigation started February 14, 2006.
So right before we arrived in Ramadi, the Marines knew that there was an investigation taking place, charging Marines with killing Iraqi civilians.
And it definitely sent a shockwave through the Marine Corps, and that shock wave leaked over to, you know, everybody else.
myself included.
So the 3-8 Marines
were highly focused, very professional
with this atmosphere, but so was everybody else.
It was like the first time
everyone's thinking themselves, oh, wait a second.
Oh,
we got to make sure that these things are done correctly.
And by the way, just FYI,
these charges were dropped eventually
in the Haditha Dam.
The Abu Ghraib Prisoner Abkhuse thing.
Freaking terrible.
Terrible.
strategic impact on the war.
Nobody benefited more than Al-Qaeda
from what happened at Abu Ghraib with the prisoner abuse.
And look, I had just come from being the Admiral's aide.
And so I got to see all the,
I got to see the way this stuff hit.
Seal Team 5 on their deployment,
they had some drama with photos.
They had taken photos of prisoners and whatnot,
and these got posted in a public forum.
It was a disaster.
That's why I was like, no more photos.
You're not allowed to have photos anymore.
When I got home, Seale Team 7, 2004, I get home from deployment and, you know, we put our gear away.
And then they're like, okay, go spend the weekend or whatever, go spend two days with your family.
I come back every single one of our computers.
And we have a lot of computers because our whole system is running off computers.
All of our computers, both classified and unclassified computers, were all confiscated by NCIS.
All of them.
Every email, every image that was on there, every briefing that was.
was on there, it was all on there. So even though I had had a great deployment and led scores of
operations and got, you know, great marks on my evaluation, my fritrap, received combat awards
for that deployment, it didn't matter. Even though I was selected to go serve for the Admiral,
it didn't matter. Guess what? Despite an eminently successful career in deployment, it didn't matter.
It's like you're getting investigated. And this was stemmed from at Tiltim 7 in my sister
a platoon, there was a report of prisoner abuse from someone that had been fired in the platoon.
Someone stole something.
They got fired.
They got sent home.
And then they reacted to that and made a bunch of claims.
And these types of things happen where someone gets disgruntled.
They get, yeah, they're mad about something that happened.
And then they go out and make some wild claims.
And that's triggered an investigation here.
And this is the thing that I learned.
You got to be ready for that.
You got to be ready.
Who knows what might motivate someone to fabricate claims against you or your troops?
You got to be ready for that.
You've got to be ready for that.
You've got to even be ready for your own freaking guys telling stupid stories.
Right?
This happens too.
Guys exaggerate.
Guys are emotional.
Guys let their ego get out of control.
I always like to talk about getting mortared.
Because if I'm sitting here and I'm telling you guys a story,
And I'm like, okay, let's say I got, I'd say the closest mortar ever hit to me.
I got one get really close in Ramadi, but I was on the other side of a wall.
So it wasn't that bad.
I got, there was, we were in Baghdad, in the outskirts of Baghdad, and we were set up.
And I, a mortar probably hit, probably hit 50 feet away from me, right?
And it was a little mortar too, a little 60 millimeter mortar, I guess.
62 or whatever does the Russians use.
If I'm telling you guys that story, what am I going to say?
You know, I'm probably not going to say a number, but I'm like, this thing hit right
next to me.
Right next to me.
Echo, if I say something's right next to me, how far away is that?
Right next to you.
It's three feet, one foot.
Yeah, two feet, yeah.
So that's what happens.
Guys tell, echo, have you ever gone home to your wife and be like, you know, come, we, we
change your jitsu?
You ever get home and tell your wife, like, Chaco beat the shit out of me?
Yes, sir.
Now, your wife understands Jiu-Jitsu.
She knows what that means.
She's not picturing me pummeling your head in, right?
She knows what that means.
They caught Leif on a video I saw it the other day.
Leif's saying, Jocko choked us all the time.
You know what I mean?
What's he talking about?
Oh, it's like Jocco's a bully.
No, Jocco trains Jiu-Jitsu.
Laf's laughing as he says it, but if you hear that secondhand,
Jocco choked us all the time, what do you got?
Here's one.
Dude, I was surfing.
I caught every wave.
Dude, I caught every wave.
What does that mean?
Dude, I want you to know that I caught a lot of wave.
But what if you're not a surfer?
What does that mean?
If you're not a surfer, that means,
oh, Jocco said, claimed he caught every wave.
Now you meet someone else that's, that's, is a surfer,
and you say, well, Jocco is out there.
He says he catches every wave.
And the surfer's like, dude, that doesn't sound, that's not, that's impossible.
No, he said it.
He said he caught every wave.
Oh, yeah.
So can you get someone from tasking a bruiser that's like,
dude, we killed everybody.
Yeah, 100%.
100%.
Oh yeah, we shot this dude.
Yeah, you're going to get people that do that.
You got to protect yourself from that.
You're going to develop that stuff.
Yeah, I hear stories about me.
Like, my friends would tell stories about me
that are totally exaggerated.
I'm like, dude, come on, man.
Like, really?
Chaco do it every wanted.
It's like, bro, there's an entire,
I know it might have seen that way and you probably felt like that
But do you want to review all the three concept of operations that got set up the chain of man?
So you got to be prepared for that you got to you got to be prepared for other people to come at you
You got to be prepared for your own people to tell stories
That aren't true that get caught by someone that doesn't understand and next thing you know you've got
stories that are out of control and what what that means is you got to take the high road
you've got to you've got to take the high ground you got to take the high road at all
times you know it goes back to that story of Delta Charlie one of my platoon
commanders when we were doing a hydrographic reconnaissance and had that opportunity
to not do it and him looking at me and looking at the platoon and said we we don't
have to do this but would that be the right thing to do and it's like you
Yep, that's not the right thing to do.
And I learned from that.
That was when I was 22 years old.
It's like, yeah, you better do the right thing.
And so, yeah, got it.
Well, came home from Seal Team 7 deployment.
They take every computer that we have.
They scrub it all.
And guess what?
We're cleared.
Cleared from any wrongdoing.
Had another investigation after that, multiple interviews.
And again, it's just people are talking.
They're hearing things.
Once you sit down and do the investigation,
thankfully it's like oh good got it you're clear so investigations should be
conducted and they are conducted and and but I saw what this negative behavior could
do to the community and do strategically in the war effort so you got to do the
right things for the right reasons and if you don't follow the rules you're going to
be held accountable and you know Leif and I did a whole podcast on Rules of
Engagement podcast 385 and go look
listen to it if you want more detail but but going back to what we were talking about
earlier Dave it did the violence escalate when we were there did the violence
escalate oh it absolutely escalated and I mean I kind of covered that from these
other sources like the 228 iron soldiers from Pennsylvania had to rotate back to
America 1 1 1 AD came took over they brought in a new strategy new strategy was sees
clear hold and build go into
these enemy controlled neighborhoods very aggressive strategy building these combat
outposts it was taking the fight to the enemy that's what it was doing and we did
it in the entire city an intensive and aggressive strategy and you know what did
it increase the casualties yes it did and the brigade commander sitting in those
meetings that you and I were at Dave he would tell us yeah I had to explain this up the
chain of command because the chain of command's going oh my gosh you're taking more casualties
down there he's like yes sir this is what we're doing this is why here
Here's the efforts that we're making.
This is why the casualties are happening.
This is why casualties are increasing.
When you take the fight to the enemy, there's going to be more casualties.
When you go into the lion's den, you're going to find lions in there.
And there's going to be casualties.
And it was heartbreaking.
It was horrible.
But the American Marines and soldiers did their duty day in, day out, and got the job done.
And it was an honor to fight alongside them.
And it was it was also incredible to see the progress.
It was incredibly to see the progress.
And that's one thing that I'll always remember that.
I'll always remember seeing the progress.
And look, obviously I didn't go out in the field on every operation, you know,
because I'm the overall commander of the Seals and Ramadi.
And we had, we divided up in a five different,
how many elements did you have?
We created three elements out of my single element.
Yeah.
So we created five, from Tasking and Bruges, we created five elements.
And they were partnered with, we did it originally to partner with the five different Iraqi conventional forces and the one special mission unit.
We did it to partner with them and built those elements.
You know, so everyone, everyone of those elements had an officer in it and had an NTO.
And, of course, I trusted them and trained them and knew they understood the mission and the commander's intent, the end state, the rules of engagement, all that stuff.
And so sometimes there'd be two, three, four of these elements at the same time going out on operations.
And usually those were, usually those were smaller operations.
And most of the time, if I'm sending a platoon chief, a chief and a lieutenant junior grade out in the field to conduct an operation with 17 Iraqis, I'm not going on that operation.
You know, like, plus there's three of them going on the same time.
So there's a lot of work that the guys did on their own, obviously
But there's also plenty of situations that I had to go in the field
And usually like if we're conducting a larger operation like a big court in search in the city
I'm going we're doing a direct action I mean I don't know how many days times you and I Dave were sitting in the field together
But like doing uh that that big area south of you know I'm going on that we're going into build a cop oh I'm definitely going on that we got all these different we're going on a conference
We're going on a complex direct action mission multiple.
Yeah, I'm going on that.
We're supporting construction.
Yeah, I'm doing that.
But in those situations, you can provide better command and control from the field.
You have to see what's going on.
And sometimes, of course, I just go because you have to understand what the guys are doing.
You have to go out and see what's happening with your own eyes.
And also the guys have to know that I'm not asking them to do anything that I wouldn't do
myself of course so you got to roll out but going out over and over and over again on
that deployment I got to see I might have gotten to see you know when someone's losing
weight echo Charles sure if you see them every day you don't notice as much yeah
so like Leif or Tony or Seth or JP who's going out on every op they look they
don't see that drastic difference but if I'm going out once a week it's like oh
it's a little bit oh so one of the first missions I went on
We were in enemy contact took 32 minutes. I was like damn, okay.
Wait, it took 32 minutes to get contacted.
Yep.
Yep.
It's like, and the reason I know this is because the company commander was like, start your stopwatch.
He's like, we got a half an hour.
And I was like, okay, 32 minutes.
It's go time.
That was in the beginning of deployment.
In the middle deployment, there was another operation.
And again, these stand out to me because of this time thing.
One of the, one of Lief's assistant platoon commanders is going out.
And I was like, you're going to get contacted.
And this was leaving from cop falcon.
I'm like, you're going to get contacted.
And he's like, you think?
I was like, you're going to get contacted.
And he walked out the wire.
I set my stopwatch.
12 minutes later, he's in a gunfight.
So enemy contact coming even faster.
But then I compare that from a progression to one of the last combat outpost that we put in.
And I actually did like the clearance.
I was the guy that seized with a few army guys seized this thing in central Romadi.
The platoon pushed right past it to set up an overwatch position.
And we didn't get seals didn't engage anybody.
So it went from this immediate contact thing or within half an hour, 15 minutes you're going to get contacted to this last combat outpost that we put in, no contact.
And that's what I knew that a change was taking place.
That's what I knew that we were winning.
Did you notice that kind of reduction?
You also, you left a month earlier than me, right?
The timing of my departure was pretty interesting.
I mean, pick, go back.
I left mid to late September.
Think about what was going on with you guys in mid to late September.
I mean, it was still just, it was right at that apex.
And I left.
And even like the basic sit reps for the next month were already different.
And that last cop, I think, went in like right, I mean, like right after I left.
I completely noticed it too when I got, I mean, it was busy when I got there.
Things were going on with the 228.
And oftentimes, like early I would judge how busy it was based on what my teams were doing.
I had two became three teams.
There was a lot of times where something would happen and it would frustrate me because I wasn't at where the engagement was.
Because what fresh with me about it wasn't that I wasn't part of the engagement is that I couldn't help.
It got to a point that by the middle of the summer, and that's a comparison of the 35 and the 12 minutes was my teams were engaged all the time.
And it was, it wasn't that we were just in the right place at the right time.
It's just that the engagement, it got so much more just like that.
So again, all the things you're talking about,
I'm listening in parallel to my experience is exactly the same.
Yeah.
Putting in that last combat outpost, I was really surprised
because we had the enemy surrounded.
I fought to myself that enemy is going to fight hard.
Caged animal.
We were a cornered animal.
And it was really surprising.
I have a picture of myself and Colonel McFarland.
It's one of the I think I'm like actually the only picture I have
But and I forget who took it
But we were in that combat outpost
Like me and there's no security set yet like
Just the just the actual security of the element that took it
Right so it's probably like 20 guys there or something
And we're standing up there but it was weird to be
I look at that picture and I know why we took a picture
Because there was like no shooting going on it
You know because he'd come to cop out he'd come to all these different
where I was out there.
And it's like, oh, why do we?
Oh, okay.
That's right, because nothing was happening.
And again, that's when I kind of recognized that a change was taking place.
And again, this change wasn't because the positive change was not just because of
tasking the bruiser.
Obviously, we had a tiny role.
The negative change of, you know, the escalating violence, that was the strategy.
And that's what was planned.
We knew that that was going to happen.
But the change wasn't from us.
It was from the entire team.
And it was a bond, a bond that we had with that entire team.
And we still have it.
We still have it.
I mean, I've gone and talked to, I've gone and talked to units that were commanded by guys that we were on the ground with.
You know, I've talked to the Air Force Academy, talk to West Point, Naval Academy.
that's to me when these guys invite me to talk it's like yeah what do you need the they gave they
gave some of the guys in tasking and bruiser got valorous awards from the army that's not normal look
has it happened of course it happens joint awards is a little different like you get joint awards
good it's a joint group but to the amount of administration administrative effort you've got to take
to get a Navy guy
an award
of a valorous award
that's that that show
that to me was such a huge gesture
of the bond that we had
that these guys were actually taking their time
to put in
and I'll tell you like Stoner
dude he had an R-com with a V
Army Commodation Medal
with a V for Valor
that was his
you know he also had two silver stars by the way
he didn't
care about those he liked that R-com with a V that was the bond and the brigade
commander Colonel Sean McFarland now general Sean McFarland but when we were leaving
because when we left they still had a lot of fighting to go and when we left you
know shook my hand he said you and your guys kept hundreds of my men alive
hundreds of them and that always stuck with me because look we look
back at the war now what you know was it right or wrong what was our reasons WMD all these things
we could tear ourselves up thinking about that but what I know that we did was we helped keep
hundreds of American and Iraqi soldiers alive and on top of that we liberated that city from
those those suffering civilians that are living in Ramadi in a torturous
environment under the reign of brutal extremist insurgents and we were able to liberate them
and protect our fellow servicemen and women and and it's not just my opinion that like things got a lot
better again this is so well documented here's a here's an example of that here's an article on point
by Andrew Lubin, October 2007.
Quote, while Al-Qaeda has been driven from the city,
it has not been driven from Anbar province nor from Iraq.
But Ramadi, which the Marines thought in August 2006
was fully under control of the insurgents,
is the example of Iraqi-American cooperation.
There is an economic boom taking place.
There are rebuilding projects.
The porcelain factory is reopening next month.
Shops are reopening.
and better quality food and goods are for sale in the markets and salaries have risen 20% in the last six months
For as mayor Lateef obeyed said to me in April when I attended his third economic
Development Conference Ramadi is open for business come visit us
So when I hear people talk about oh we made it worse? No
Ramadi was open for business
It was awesome we there was a green beret
in charge of teaching counterinsurgency to junior seals.
And the example that he used was a Battle of Vermont.
That's the model for that type of warfare.
That was very meaningful, right?
You got a Green Beret that's teaching seals,
and he's teaching not about what Green Berets did,
but he's teaching about what the seals did,
because it's an outstanding example.
Here's another article explaining the success
by Ulrich Thickner.
The article is called Hope and Despair and Divided Iraq from August 2007.
This is news the world doesn't hear.
Ramadi, long a hotbed of unrest,
a city that once formed the southwestern tip of the notorious Sunni triangle,
is now telling a different story,
a story of Americans who came here as liberators,
became hated occupiers,
and are now the protectors of the Iraqi Reconstruction.
again, just an incredible victory, incredible victory for coalition forces.
And Colonel Sean McFarland and his major Neil Smith said this about the reason for success.
Here's why the success happened.
Clearly a combination of factors, some of which we may not fully yet understand, contributed to this pivotal success.
As mentioned before, the enemy overplayed its hand and the
people were tired of al-Qaeda. A series of assassinations had elevated younger, more aggressive
tribal leaders to positions of influence. A growing concern that the U.S. would leave Iraq and
leave the Sunni's defenseless against al-Qaeda and Iranian-supported militias made these younger
leaders open to our overtures. Our willingness to adapt our plans based on the advice of the
Sheiks are staunch and timely support for them in times of danger and need and our ability to deliver on our promises
Convince them that they could do business with us our forward presence kept them reassured
We operated aggressively across all lines of operation
Kinetic and non-kinetic to bring every weapon and asset at our disposal to bear against the enemy
We conducted detailed intelligence fusion and targeting meetings
and operated seamlessly with special operations forces, aviation, close air support, and riverine units.
We have now seen this model followed by other brigade combat teams in other parts of Iraq, and it has proved effective.
Indeed, the level of sophistication has only improved since the Ready First departed in February 2007.
Although perhaps groundbreaking at the time, most of our tactics, techniques, and procedures are now familiar to any unit.
operating in Iraq today.
Yeah.
This was
it was a pivotal
moment.
As a matter of if I had another article
I was going to quote, I didn't bring it,
but there's another article that called
Ramadi the Gettysburg
of the war.
The turning point.
This was the turning point.
In that same article by Colonel McFarlane,
they share some of the important
lessons from the battlefield.
And they say this, the most enduring lessons of Ramadi are ones that are most easily lost
in technical and tactical discussions, the least tangible ones.
The most important lessons we learned were, accept risk in order to achieve results.
Once you gain the initiative, never give the enemy respite or refuge.
never stop looking for another way to attack the enemy.
And finally, the tribes represent the people of Iraq,
and the populace represents the key terrain of the conflict.
The force that supports the population by taking the moral high ground
has as sure of an advantage in counterinsurgency
as a maneuver commander who occupies dominant terrain
in a conventional battlefield.
So, and I think it's important to mention,
never stop looking for another way to attack the enemy.
He's not just talking about combat.
He's talking about attacking, in air quotes,
attacking the shakes by building relationships with them,
attacking the economic situation by putting money into the economy.
Like, it's attacking on all fronts, on all lines of operations,
and finding another way.
I guarantee some of those projects that cost $230,000
that propped up a shake had much more negative impact on al-Qaeda than some of the operations
we were doing clearances.
But both of those were important.
But the most important thing that he talks about is the moral high ground.
Having the moral high ground was critical.
And we knew that.
We all knew that.
And we kept it.
And anyone that was on the ground there knows this.
For people that weren't there, they might not understand.
And that's my fault.
It's my fault.
I obviously have done a bad job of explaining all this, obviously.
If when I hear things, I think it's crazy talk.
But it's my fault.
People that were on the ground understood what was happening.
And that's my job.
And I can say, thankfully, I did have the opportunity to explain the battle of Vermont to
the families of the fallen.
And they know, they know and understand the efforts
and the risks that their sons and we as seals
and all coalition forces in the Battle of Vermont took
in order to protect the local populace.
And I hope that the families of the fallen Marines
and soldiers know the same thing that these brave warriors
were part of an incredible band of brothers
who fought and sacrificed valiantly to do their duty,
who took massive risk
and sacrificed immensely to accomplish the mission
and ultimately liberate the city of Vermont.
And you know, I was getting a little choked up
earlier talking about Travis Patrick Quinn.
He ended up being killed by an IED.
after we left in December, traveling with Megan McClung, Marine.
Another, just an outstanding woman, just outstanding, squared away.
Again, Dave, you and I sat in all those meetings with those individuals.
They're just outstanding.
And there was such a huge price paid.
And listen, a lot of that price was making adjustments to make sure we could take care of the civilian populace.
doing a massive kinetic
how many bombs did you guys drop
I mean
between me and the other
Ramadi Anglico team the two in Anglico
in Ramadi of the 24 units out there
dozens like 23
yeah like 42
probably between bombs
hellfires guns
all the different
drops probably
25
that's
That's just amongst the two Ramadi
Amigos.
That's six months of heavy fighting
and you guys only did
25 drops.
Do you drop any 2,000 pounders?
Yeah, I think I have
I think I've got one Gb, you know,
heavy J-DAM.
And I can wait if you want to complete your thought.
But there's some context here
that I can't help but mention
because it's not
just your failure because when you hear about an accusation or a story or a
perspective that's so outlandish not just because it didn't happen but because
it couldn't happen it's not just levied against you it's anybody that got there
and my team did we had the same exact experience as we got there with a certain
set of expectations of how things were going to be and very quickly they
changed out of necessity
And what my team ended up doing is even that number seems like a small number that is a huge number of drops.
More than anybody had done before we got there.
Way more.
There are teams before us that never dropped a bomb.
Partially because, and this leads into what I've been feeling listening to you during this podcast is,
do you know how much attention it draws when you drop a bomb from a plane from a $45 million fighter overhead ACE?
city and you drop a bomb. You want to talk about the scrutiny that you get when you decide
I need to employ this piece of ordinance off its aircraft, whether it's a hellfire missile
into the building adjacent to Mark Lee or a gun in a type one cast scenario that hasn't been
conducted in years. And we were scrutinized every one of those drops between the two Anglico
teams in a level that had never been, it never happened to that much scrutiny because we didn't,
done that much. And the firefighters, when a forward air controller is shooting his personal rifle,
you're going to get scrutiny. And of course, obviously, the most scrutiny comes is,
I lost the first Anglico Marine in Iraq, my radio operator. I lost that first Marine.
Nobody else, me. And you were talking about investigation and the connotation that most people
have is this negative connotation. Actually, what it is, when done correctly, which it almost
always is, is they're there to help. It's not that much different from like an inspection.
They're making sure that you're smart and safe and protected so your Marines are. And so all that
scrutiny was welcomed. And I think reflecting on this, the biggest mistake that I made, and I can
feel this now looking back because, and I don't want to put myself on the same scale of what you did.
I worked with you guys a lot. I did a lot of my own without you with other teams. So not just
with task unit bruiser. But I feel all those same things that you're talking about.
the same experiences I had is I took for granted the understanding that everybody would have
about what we were doing because I spent all my time with people doing it.
Meaning, I didn't think about what people on the outside were thinking about what we
were doing.
I just didn't spend any time, and I needed to.
I needed to think about their perspective, their misunderstanding, their ego, their point
of view, their experience, which is totally incongruent from my experience, because if you
did anything like we did, it is nothing like anybody else had done. It was different. And if you
don't understand that context, you could very easily draw conclusions and make accusations and say
things that aren't true. And that's because I never explained it. It's because I took that for granted.
When I arrived there and we started doing what we're doing up to the point that Chris was killed
and beyond, what I took for granted was people understanding what we're doing, how we're doing it,
and probably most importantly, why?
And so the idea that this is just a perspective levied on your unit
or particular unit,
it's all of us that were there that had the obligation
to make it understood what we were doing,
the idea that you could do something,
misaligned with the rules of engagement,
and get away with it.
The only thing more outlandish than that accusation
or that thought is the realizing,
You would never do that anyway because it would undermine what you were trying to get accomplished, the belief in what we're doing.
And it's hard right now, a little bit of a hard pill for me to swallow was the failure for me to not take into account.
Everybody else on the outside of that world and the assumptions they are making, that was my job.
It wasn't just to call in airstrikes or train my guys or shoot or that was my job.
And no Anglico unit had endured the ups and downs that my.
Salt did because we had a ton of drops, a ton of engagements, and I lost a Marine.
So whose other job should it have been to explain what was going on and why?
Did I talk to Kathy Leon?
Yes, all the time.
She knows everything, everything.
But I didn't share or explain or even consider how important it would be to have people
outside of that understand in the community and beyond.
And so the failure you're talking about or the fault that you have,
it's really hard for me to listen to you and agree with that without at least making it clear that I was in a very, very similar position,
very parallel, very adjacent, and during the exact same things,
recognizing the same obligation that I had in my same mistake.
Yeah, you know, you lost Chris.
And so Mark was the first seal, killed my rack.
You know, what happens to the community when you lose a seal?
the first seal in Iraq.
I mean, yeah, everyone mourns,
but there's guys, wait, what are you doing?
Yep, wait, why are you doing that?
And I heard a little bit of that,
but I also heard a lot of support.
Like, massive support.
What do you need?
How can we help?
You're doing great.
You know, again, my chain of command,
which is the Army chain of command,
the special operations that's what what I'm getting is you know hey good job so I I
again failed to see oh and you know I'd hear I'd hear someone say what do you guys
even doing I'd be like hey man you know like I look I got an email from one of my
buddies was like dude what are you guys doing going out in the day and it's one of my
friends you know it's a little bit longer that was basically was hey what do
you guys doing going out in the day you know and I wrote back like hey man this fight
is taking place during the day we're working with the Iraqi
They don't have night vision.
They don't have a, he's kind of like, okay, he's like, got it.
Yeah.
What I didn't think was, what about the person that doesn't know me?
What about the person that can't ask that question?
Yeah.
What about the person that has a, you know, has a negative attitude and then sits in the
platoon space saying, I can't believe these guys are going out during the day?
Yep.
These guys are taking too many risks.
That's not a special operation.
I should have done a better job of explaining the situation on the ground.
Because, you know, and we took a lot of casualties as well, wounded guys.
So we have wounded guys.
We have the first seal killed in Iraq.
Mark Lee.
We have the second seal killed in Iraq, Mikey Mansour.
Ryan Job, severely wounded.
Ends up dying from those wounds.
and unfortunately I should have noticed oh when someone has a question if one of my friends is asking this question
that means people that aren't my friend are thinking this and I should have done a better job
of explaining what was happening and it goes beyond the op sums because my friends when I got back
I didn't really think about this when I was overseas when I got back my friend said
they would read the op sums allowed in quarters in the morning so like at trade at
at the team areas they would stand up and say you know last night task unit bruiser
conducted an overwatch and killed 14 enemy fighters and guess what my friends were they were
pumped and they were stoked and when we had guys get wounded when we had guys get
killed they were heartbroken but my friends who know me knew that I was doing
the right things for the right reasons but what I miscalculated was there's
gonna be people that don't like you there's gonna be people that hold a grudge
there's gonna be people that look at your success and basically accuse you of
cheating or whatever the case may be and that's what I failed to realize and it and it's a blind
spot so hopefully this type and I'll you know we can bring on I can bring on Laif JPM everyone's got
their perspective but hopefully this paints a clearer picture of what we did and how we did it
and how we were able to maintain the moral high ground in Ramadi and like I said,
the risks that were taken and the sacrifices that were made to maintain that high ground.
That's originally why I asked you how many bombs do we drop?
Because you know how many bombs you could have dropped on Ramadi?
All of them.
Yeah.
All of them.
Yep.
You dropped 30 maybe 40, whatever the number is.
Every one of those buildings at one point or another could have had a bomb
dropped on it because it was housing insurgents.
But we didn't do that.
Men and women, by the way.
And I call that out specifically because I'll never forget seeing a casualty evacuation
rolling out to go support Iraqi soldiers that were wounded and there's a girl up, a woman
in the turret.
So men and women took incredible risk.
Instead of dropping a bomb on that building to go out and
and clear that building and keep the local populace safe and there's a huge amount of risk to do that
but that's what you have to do and I hope that in these ongoing wars the same approach is taken
and that is what we have to do in every aspect of life you really have to do this in every aspect
of your life you've got to do the right thing you've got to take the moral high ground
You can't surrender it.
You got to do the right things for the right reasons.
If you make a mistake, you own it.
If people try and tear you down, try and understand what their perspective is and try and lift them up by showing them yours.
And for business, for life, for combat, in tactics and in morals, take the high ground or the high ground will take you.
That's what I got.
So like I said, I think we'll probably get questions about this.
We got Laif, we got JP, people, you know, people that were there with us in other units.
There's so many awesome people.
So we can continue to get this, the real picture of what was going on so that these people are remembered in the right way.
Hector Charles yes
Well let's go we got how do you dispose of a mind?
A bunch of different ways yeah okay but I thought what are the ways you can
You can blow it in place so you can put another bomb on top of it
That's actually that's what you're probably gonna do that's the main one yeah getting in there with like a pair of pliers and clipping the detonator
You can be done and guys do it
but the preferred method is to blow that thing in place.
Is there like any scenario where you'd somehow transport it somewhere else and blow it?
Yeah, yeah, you could.
Funny story, we put in Cop Falcon and the mine sweeper was coming down the road.
And it was like digging and Laif and someone else was like looking over the side of the building watching this thing dig up a freaking bomb.
Yeah.
And at some point he's like, dude, this might not be a good idea.
And the same thing happened to me in my first appointment.
Oh, to look over the building at it.
Looking over the building and I think it's about to blow up.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, it's going to blow up.
It's not a good move.
It's not a good move.
I had that, I had the same thing happening on my first deployment.
I'm like, my EOD, we were hitting a target.
We found an IED.
And in this particular case, my, I, just to case and point, my EOD guy, like, disarmed the bomb.
Yeah.
but I was standing there as he's manipulating it like combine like right by him like watching him and he looks over his shoulder and goes you don't have to stand here that's what I was and there's two things going on number one he was looking out for my safety but number two like that's probably not the most comforting feeling having someone standing looking over your shoulder and you're going to get him and you killed if you screw this up so there those are the yeah you're either going to disarm that thing or you're going to blow it in place and the guys will do both depending on
what it calls for.
Damn.
It's crazy.
And they're pretty like common ways of making a mind.
I mean,
because you said sometimes you say IDs.
Sometimes you say mines.
And obviously there are two different things because ID is improvised or whatever.
Yeah,
that's a key component is improvised.
But you can take an artillery shell.
Do you know what that is?
It looks like a big giant bullet.
Yeah, yeah.
And it's filled with explosives.
Yeah.
So sometimes they just take old artillery shells and they bury,
they,
bomb. Oh, they like rig the what do you call the trigger? They would they make a trigger
generally speaking because the trigger that it comes with is not going to work for
what they need it for right so though they'll basically the way explosives work
there's the explosive itself the thing that's gonna make the explosion and cause
the problem is generally pretty stable yeah but then you have to have to have
something that's not stable that's less stable that's generally speaking a blasting
cap. This is something that
that is going to explode very violently, very quickly.
So blasting cap and detonator or what?
Yeah, the same thing.
Okay.
And there's different types of detonators.
There's different types of blasting caps.
But,
but generally, like, the material, like, in a,
in a Claymore landmine,
have you ever heard of a Claymore?
Yeah, yeah.
Front toward enemy.
The stuff inside of that, like,
you can play with it, like Play-Doh.
Yeah, was that C-4?
Yeah.
You can set it on fire and it'll burn.
Like, there's, that's what you can do.
Oh, yeah.
But if you set it on fire and hit it with a hammer like you have a problem, but but there's the blasting cap that you put in there
It explodes very fast very violent. It's a lot a lot more volatile. So when our breaches are carrying their breach
They don't have the blasting cap in the explosive charge itself
Yeah, yes, let's see for so if it blows up it'll hurt
It might even take a couple fingers off or like you know, but if you have the it connected now you're gonna like lose an arm and possibly your life
life.
So that's kind of the deal.
Yeah.
Crazy.
Any other questions?
That's an example.
I don't know how this kind of stuff works all the time, you know?
I mean, all I see is what's on like McIver or whatever.
You know when you undoes the bomb or whatever.
That's all I know.
That's my education.
So thank you for that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You can kind of tell, you know, you'll see.
But what you got to watch out for is there might be wires going into the bomb.
And then you clip the wires.
And then you lift up the bomb, but there was a pressure plate.
So now it still blows up.
Oh, like what?
They can have multiple different ways of the charge blowing up.
Oh, yeah, huh?
I was going to say maybe like a distraction.
You know, like, you know, they'll be like, hey, it's this, but it's really this.
Totally.
That's crazy.
Just like McGiver, bro.
Yeah, yeah.
That's how.
I'd go into that part, but I know.
I know we're off that.
Cool.
Right on.
Thank you.
Yes, we're doing the right thing.
We need fuel.
By the way.
I don't know if you need that or not.
Just coming off the UFC fights, by the way.
Do you have a good time?
Good fights.
Good card.
Yeah.
We're not mad at that.
Some good people hanging around, which was cool.
It was kind of epic, honestly.
Yeah, I would say that, say that as well.
I didn't talk to Tim Kennedy about how he feels about being at the UFC.
You know, like, I actually did.
What do you say?
Basically, in a nutshell, I said, do you miss fighting?
And he said, no.
And I was like, oh, interesting.
Like what do you mean, whatever?
He was like, he's like, hey, let me explain this to you.
He's like, I like violence.
But, like, and we're eating dinner or whatever.
And he was like, see, if a fight broke out over there and they needed me, I would love nothing more than to jump in that fight.
But if you said, hey, go fight that guy over there, I'd be like, no.
He said, go F yourself.
So he doesn't like, like, hey, you fight for this or you fight for that, you know, kind of thing.
But if the fight is going down, he's down kind of a thing.
So that's why he didn't really, you know, he said that he wasn't that much into it being there.
But he was very much into hanging out with everybody.
That's what he said straight out.
What about Andy?
Andy Stone?
Yeah.
I didn't talk to him about that specifically, but, you know, we caught up, which was very cool.
You know, he had the operation for his scenario.
He went through that.
That was kind of scary because he said it was random.
It wasn't like something, you know, he ate the wrong thing.
Freaking ran into this.
He said, hey, it was just sort of bad luck kind of scenario.
But he's back in the game for sure.
Him and Leo was there as well.
I felt bad because, yeah.
I saw you know I did text Andy I was like I didn't even say hi to Leah just like
mayhem going on it was mayhem going on another thing I felt bad about so we had a
contest in a jaco fuel yeah yeah and I barely like I didn't get the word out good enough
and the contest was sick fuck yeah it was sick like it was the best contest ever and what you
won was and this dude Corey freaking great he so the contest was if you if you won the contest was if you
won the contest it was a is it called a sweepstakes it was technically not a sweepstakes that's
technically different what was it called all right just a tricking i don't know contest okay
well you got like a vote for every time you bought something from jaco fuel and then there was like
a drawing and you could also there's another way to enter because you have to give another way to enter
because there's all these legal rules and whatnot you got to follow the rules so we did it anyways
the winner was this dude uh cori and
What he won was, and he got to bring his buddy out, Fabry.
Fabry.
They came out from North Carolina.
And so what they did was they got there.
They showed up.
They got there Friday.
They arrived, happenstance, by the way, at the same, like maybe five minutes after I arrived.
Oh, check.
Like, I was going to leave, and they were the Joccofuel guys, you know, Liam and
them.
They're already there with a sign.
And I was like, oh, they got the sign for me.
And they're like, no, man.
Not for you.
It's for the winners.
I was like, all right, well, hang around.
See what up.
Dude, epic.
So those guys got that dinner that night.
We had dinner the next night.
We all hung out for good food at the steak restaurant in Vegas.
Then we went to the fights.
Had like the UFC suite hanging out.
Andy Stumpf, Tim Kennedy, like Chris Pratt.
Like it was really awesome.
It's legitimate.
And then watched Bo Nicol fight and then went to Bo Nichols after party,
which you didn't go to, by the way.
Yeah.
When we give you the lowdown on Bo Nichols after party?
Yeah, yeah, please.
They had like 10 bags of In-N-Out Burger.
And a bunch of Jocko go.
Yeah, okay.
A little solid.
And some Hulk.
And so we went there and those guys came.
Yeah, just really cool.
But here's the thing that I felt bad about was I didn't really like, we didn't promote it enough.
Yeah.
To like, as how cool it was.
Yes.
And it was UFC 300.
Yeah.
And that's a big deal, bro.
Yeah.
UFC 300, UFC 200, UFC 100, those are big.
It's a big deal.
Yeah.
The monumental moment in time.
Even the way I felt about it when you're like, oh, yeah, we got this contest or whatever.
And I'm like, all right, cool.
Like, yeah, I guess you get tickets and UFC.
And it sounds fun or whatever, but I never, didn't really think about it.
But when it went down, I hung out with them like kind of a lot.
Like, you know, sometimes we'd be a part or whatever.
But, you know, just some of it kind of by happenstance as well.
And when I looked around and I was like, bro, this is kind of, for me, this is fun.
And I'm just me.
You know, I didn't win nothing.
I was just there.
But for me, this is like a kick-ass time.
I was like, if I won this and got a brother, this would be a really good fun, good fun time.
But then I compare that being actually in the experience, like the freaking like level 10 fun going on versus what I thought it was when, you know, before everything happened.
I was like, yeah, there's a total mismatch with like how kind of we promoted it, if you will, versus how it really went.
Because it was freaking.
It was epic.
I was so.
I was I had like really good seats.
Yeah, I saw that.
I saw that.
I may or may not have had the second best seats in the entire arena.
So I'm literally sitting three feet behind Dana White.
Yeah.
And here's what's awesome.
Dana White is so fired up that like when something would happen, he would turn around and like give comments.
Just like me and the two guys, three guys I'm sitting with.
Yeah, yeah.
You know, I'm just, he, he was so amped.
I'll give you an example.
So, Gachi broke his nose with like a second left.
Yeah, yeah.
And like as like in the first round.
In the first round.
And as that like happens like, for example, Dana turns around.
He's like, I just heard Gaichi.
He said they broke my nose.
He broke his nose right there.
He just had surgery on that thing.
Dude, this is crazy.
And then like turns back around.
Right, right.
So when you wonder about the success of the UFC, man, you got to have someone that is that
passionate and into it that he sits there and is totally engaged.
in every fight and turn around and saying that that kick was ridiculous like
did you see how hard they were like that's what he's saying and again it's just I
mean I'm sitting there like saying it you know just in it and he's that freaking
pumped yeah so yeah it was legit it's pretty cool to see in the way you didn't make the
way-ins though right because you had a thing I did not I didn't even the way-ins
were freaking legit like yeah in that like you know how okay and so last UFC I
went was Dominic Cruz your I favorite back in the day for the
championship yes he barely remember yeah um and I remember thinking all like they
were really when I was at the event they do a really good job on the height during
the event on TV because when you're at the event you know it's kind of like oh wait
there's no music I mean there's music but it's different it's like okay cool it's
way better live because you're seeing the actual fight but the hype all the
hype you know contested yeah it's different on TV it's way more um as far as like
the production hype is what I'm saying not the fight hype production hype
So I'm thinking, oh, yeah, that's cool.
That's interesting, you know, from a production standpoint.
But, bro, now?
Now, brad, every little moment is like you're just on this roller coaster.
I'm freaking UFC.
Wayans.
Freelims, freaking main card.
The whole deal.
The whole deal was really good.
Yeah.
And those wins were legit, too, just to experience the whole deal.
Fortunately, I've been to a lot of them.
I've been a lot of UFCs.
But most of the time, I was, quite frankly, I was working.
Yeah.
Yeah, it's different.
I was working at 95% of the UFC.
I've probably been to 40 or something.
I don't know.
I don't know.
Maybe not 40,
but I've been to a lot of UFCs.
I was working at most of them.
Meaning I had a fighter on the card.
I'm warming up.
I'm getting punched backstage.
You know,
like I'm sweating.
It's not,
it's a different kind of fun.
The attention is like not even on the show.
Really?
Oh yeah.
For me.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It actually wasn't fun.
By the way,
also,
this is back in the day.
Like we're all like the fighter,
You get two rooms.
The fighters in one room, the other nine of us are in the other room piled up on the floor,
sleeping on towels.
You know, he's cutting weight, so we're cutting weight.
Right, right.
You know, you can't eat in front of them or whatever.
Yeah, yes.
And then on top of that, then we're all poor, you know.
So it's not like, oh, let's go to the steakhouse.
No, hey, let's go to the buffet and sit here for two hours and just fill up so we don't have to eat again.
Yeah.
Dave, Super Bowl.
You went to the Super Bowl this year.
I did.
How was the hype?
It was hype in that scenario.
It was pretty crazy.
That must have been crazy.
It was also in Vegas.
It was insane.
Yeah, it was insanity.
My son was overwhelmed.
Did you have good seats?
We had good seats.
Where were your seats?
45-yard line.
Perfect seats.
They're in the upper level, but like first row.
So like for him to be able to see everything, you know, with nobody blocking his, you know, his young, a little, like, it was pretty.
And isn't he a fan?
He's all in on the chiefs in Patrick Mahombs.
So it was like, all right, this, I'm going to take him.
This may never happen again.
He's going to go.
He was at a good age where it's going to be like a life memory locked in forever.
10 years old.
Patrick Mahomes.
And then, of course, they like win in overtime.
It was, it was insane.
And it's Vegas.
It was crazy.
Dude, he's never going to forget that.
That's freaking epic.
Do you watch football and TV with him?
When he wants to.
How does the hype transfer?
Dude.
It's not even close.
It's not, I can't even, yeah, there's no, it's not worth explaining.
And in fact, like, he's like, likes watching football, kind of.
But, you know, take or leave it.
He likes to play.
But to see it live is, is so different.
He was pumped.
It was a life event, man, for sure, without a doubt.
Oh, yeah.
Super Bowl, too.
Super Bowl, Vegas.
That's kind of a UFC 300 in Vegas.
Yeah.
This is a freaking hype.
Out of control.
Yeah.
Hype city.
Big 10.
Taco Fuel.
Good presence.
I've seen some jocco fuel scenarios crack you know who else was fired
Zuckerberg sitting next to Dana the whole right on and like they're they're talking shop
the whole time too and Zuckerberg's talking shop you know he's turning around like ah you know yeah
well you know he's in the game yeah he's in the game he's training as jujitsu yeah was good
the jitsu can bring everybody together the fighting it can bring people together so yes
and obviously Chris Pratt was there he was getting after it
Yep.
Jaco fuel.
Yep.
We bonded over his Hawaii story.
Oh, that's right.
At bubblegum shrimp, by the way, which I'm very, very familiar.
He was on Maui, though.
Okay.
Which, you know, we love Maui.
Hey, man.
Maui.
All day.
All good.
Yeah.
For sure.
100% Maui.
100%.
But yeah, all good.
Yeah, it was good to see him.
All right.
Jaco Fuel.
Jocco Fuel.
If you want some JoccoFuel.com, you can get hydrate.
You can get greens.
You can get whatever you need, man.
And let's face it, the mulk.
Yeah.
It's just a key component of life.
That's what it's, that's what it's, that's what it is.
Yeah.
A key component of life.
Where can you get 30 grams of clean, outstanding protein in like moments?
Yeah.
Like zero to I'm good.
Yeah.
That tastes like that too, by the way.
Yeah.
I know something, you know, on the surface, it seems secondary, but, bro, in real life, it's a huge deal.
No, it's a huge deal.
So check it out.
Jocofield.com.
You can get it online at joccofield.com.
You can also get it, vitamin shop, Wawa.
The mulk, people have been asking about this.
So the protein drink, ready to drink, is in Wawa right now.
If you recall a little while ago, they pulled our energy drinks out of there.
We got, our slots got bought by some of the big corporations.
But there was a high demand signal for protein drink.
And so it's in there, it's crushing.
So if you're around a Wawa, go get yourself.
And if it's in the morning time, get yourself a sweet cream coffee milk 95 milligrams of caffeine
Are you drinking that Dave? No, you're not in your head my wife
Your wife is in the game it's like out of control now. Yeah, it's like she is like the least critical person in the world
If we run out of sweet cream milk which we have now one time she's coming at it she's like coming at me hard like
It's not like you know like oh did you mow the lawn like where's my mole? So it's kind of cool that she's so super stoked about that
Yeah, yeah the thing that's cool about that is it
Literally two birds with one stone.
It's like here's two birds, here's one stone.
They're both getting killed.
You're going to get 30 grams of awesome protein
and you're going to get your 95 milligrams of caffeine.
This thing is epic and people are down for it.
So check that out.
You can get that at Wawa.
You can get the stuff at Vitamin Shop.
You can get at G&C, military commissaries,
Afees, Haniford, Dashdores in Maryland,
Wake Fern, ShopRite, H.E.B.
Meyer, Harris Teeter, Lifetime Fitness,
Shields, small gyms everywhere.
Jiu-Jitsu.
If you got a Jiu-Sit Gym,
if you got a CrossFit Gym,
if you got a powerlifting gym
if you had a gym
what kind of gym would you have
Echo Charles
probably like victory
M&Me and fitness
to be honest with you
okay it's perfect
yeah it's kind of got everything
we got crossfit
we got bodybuilding
I would have the bigger
weightlifting gym though
like general weightlifting
bodybuilding fitness
type I would have a bigger one
you'd have a couple
you want to see some cable
crossovers in this piece
a little something
a little try more tricep point
like if they're
enough to get too
you know deep into it
But I would expand it into, you know, the old Muay Thai room?
Yeah.
Because the Muay Thai kickboxing scenario is already huge over there.
So I'd expand into that room for some more weights.
You don't want it with a glass.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Okay.
That's me though.
But either way, you know, borderline.
Well, if you have a gym or if you go to a gym where you want them to have Jocker Fuel,
have your gym owner or you, you know, JF Sales at joccofuel.com.
Also, origin USA.
We're making stuff in America.
We're making training gear
We're making jiu-jitsu gear
Gis
We're making jeans
We're making t-shirts
Joggers making boots
Dude
So the team
Took a
Hide
From an elk
That Joe Rogan shot
I saw that
And made boots
From the hide
And the way they did it
There's an entry
in an exit wound,
they made it so
the entry and the exit wound,
they used that part of the leather.
So you can see,
and then they put red leather behind it
on one boot.
So the entry wound,
it's going in on one side.
There's like a slit,
and you can see red leather,
and then on the other side
where the exit wound is,
there's a slit and red leather
behind that.
Yeah.
So it's like the boots have
the wound in it.
It's the best thing I ever seen in my life.
It might be the most squared away
pair of boots
been made ever you know well if you were Joe Rogan what would you do with those boots you know do you wear
them or do you put them on the wall I don't know bro it might be a special occasion kind of a scenario
it's a special occasion kind of scenario I got some boards surfboards hell yeah look we don't like
wall hangers we're anti wall hangers we want to surf those boards but I do have some boards that are
like hey there's got to be some condition some epic condition other than that yeah they're looking
beautiful yeah I got some of stoner's old boards yeah stoner didn't leave me his
boards so I could freaking hang him on a wall yeah got a ride yeah so I feel that way
about those boots yeah certain moment in time gotta break out those elk boots I
didn't feel me apparently they're super super soft yeah so you're excellent like
you're describing the whole thing like sounds pretty sick to see them looks slightly
more sick in real life it's it was very impressive did you actually hold them you've seen
them well yeah I mean Pete opened them and we looked at them but yeah I didn't like
try them on enough no but you was the leather super soft actually to be honest I didn't feel the
leather okay didn't touch them not really in the game look cool hey we can't get you those boots
the Joe Rogan boots hey we do got plenty boots hey check it out origin USA dot com this is
this is all made 100% in America 100% in America that's what we're doing hunt gear by
by myself cam hands yeah
You know, he's so fired up.
And if you're, if your test human is Cam Haynes, bro, you're good.
You know what I mean?
Cam's a freaking maniac.
The dude is just hunt, hunt, hunt.
That's what he's thinking about.
You know what he's thinking about right now?
Probably hunting.
Oh, he just thought about his bow for a second.
Now he's back to thinking about killing an elk.
So check it out.
he's in it
Joe Rogan's in it
actually Chris Pratt's in it too
We're all in the game
That's what we're doing
OriginUSA.com
Check it out
It's true
Get yourself some American-made stuff
That's what I want to say
The reason
The reason that Cam is on board
The reason that Joe is on board
The reason that Chris is on board
Is because it's American made
These are patriotic people
That understand how impactful this is
to the country
These are all people from working class backgrounds, by the way.
Like, these are people that understand what it means to make stuff in America.
And that's why they're on board.
That's why they're partners.
So originusa.com.
America.
Check it out.
Also, Jocka's store called Jocco Store.
Discipline equals freedom.
This is where you can get your stuff to represent that idea.
Which is true, by the way.
Also, there's a thing called the shirt locker.
Subscription scenario, new design.
month people seem to like down check it out but yeah it's all on jocco store.com if you like
something get something there okay also if you need steak which you definitely do and look
this is kind of a bummer five years ago eight years ago but I was fired up to go out for steak
yeah because I was going to get a really good steak that I like that it was better than anything
I could have at home that situation is flip now yes different because we got Colorado craft
beef and we got primal beef
You will get a steak that tastes better than any steak that you can get in a restaurant.
I don't know that's a bold statement, but I'm going to tell you right now, if you have Colorado craft beef or you have primal beef, you will have steak that tastes better than whatever steak you're getting in whatever restaurant you're going to.
You go to one of them super fancy steakhouses.
Sure.
We got you.
Yeah.
So check out Colorado craftbeef.com.
Check out primalbeef.com and get some American
can made beef.
Look,
those beef sticks.
Yeah.
They're the new Snickers bar.
They're the new Snickers bar.
Are you down in those things?
Dude,
I'm getting screwed on those things.
I got the nine-pack shift
and I'll open up the pantry.
And I'll like,
I'll have to go hunt the kids,
like the rappers will be in their bedrooms.
My kids are just straight up stealing,
hoarding.
So the beef sticks are so good.
At least the meat,
like it's in my freezer.
You can't really,
you can't steal the steak.
Yeah, yeah.
Dude, those things are like immediately,
if they catch wind
that they've shown up on the auto ship,
they're gone.
Yeah.
They're gone.
Which deep down, like,
secret that's actually one.
That's what I want them eating,
but there's a part of them to like,
can I get one maybe?
Can you at least talk about some for the old man here?
They're awesome.
Check those out.
Also subscribe to the podcast.
Also, jocco underground.com.
Also, YouTube.
We got a YouTube channel.
Jocko podcast, right?
Official.
Jocko podcast official.
Then there's also the,
Jock Fuel.
Also,
Origin USA.
Yeah,
Origin USA, for sure.
But Jocka podcast,
we're coming out
with a Clips channel too.
Sometimes people
just like the clips,
you know.
Look at you on that one.
Just saying, you know,
it's affected.
Oh, it's effective.
Hey, bro,
how long have we had this podcast for?
Anyway,
like I was trying to say,
sometimes we just want the clips.
You know,
we're on the go,
all this other stuff.
You know,
we might not be sitting through,
you know,
three hours necessarily on that day.
That's not what we're doing.
So, you know,
the clips that might be beneficial.
We'll say that.
Thank you, though, for inquiring.
Right on, right on.
Also, psychological warfare.
Also, flipside canvas, Dakota Meyer.
He's made awesome stuff to hang on your wall.
I've written a bunch of books.
Leadership strategy and tactics, field manual.
Final span.
The code, the evaluation, the protocols,
wrote that with Dave Burke right there.
Discipline equals freedom, field manual.
Way of the Warrior kid, one, two, three, four, five.
Check those out.
Please get those for the kids that you know.
just give them to him.
Just give them to him.
Give the nine-year-old across the street
one of these books right now or all of them.
And that way, in seven years,
they're not freaking cranking the music up
and throwing toilet paper into your trees
because they're out there living a life of discipline structure.
He's over there.
Who he's going to be doing?
Coming over like, hey, can I mow your lawn?
I'll do it this time for free.
And we can talk about some kind of a contractual agreement
right?
when he's nine or 12.
Just do it.
Get the kids on the right path.
Mikey and the Dragon is about faced by Hackworth,
extreme ownership, dichotomy leadership.
Ashland Front, we have a leadership consultancy.
We solve problems through leadership.
And if you want to check it out,
go to Ashlandfront.com.
We have an event called the muster.
The next one is in Nashville.
I think we just rearranged the dang seats
so we can get a few more people in there.
It's 02 to 04 May.
So that's coming up real quick.
Check it out.
Next one after that is in Dallas, 16 to 18 October.
We just got back from Gettysburg Battlefield.
Amazing.
We have another event called the council.
All these things are focused on making you a better leader,
which is going to give you a better life.
Also the Women's Assembly, September 11th through the 13th in San Antonio, Texas,
for the female leaders out there.
Check that out.
And if you want to get good.
at this stuff you need to practice it you need to continually study it and that's
where we have the Extreme Ownership Academy this is gonna help you with business
it's gonna help you with life it's gonna help you dealing with your kids it's gonna
help you dealing with your wife or your husband so check that out Extreme
Ownership.com also if you want to help service members active and retired you
want to help their families Gold Star families check out Mark Lee's mom mama
Lee she got a charity organization if you want to donate your
you want to get involved, go to America's Mighty Warriors.org.
Also, Micah Fink, he's got Heroes and Horses.org for all those individuals that need some help.
Readjusting, getting back in the game, he takes vets up into the mountains of Montana so they can find themselves.
And Jimmy May, he's got an organization called Beyond the Brotherhood.org, helping bring guys into the civilian sector.
And if you want to connect with us, Dave is at David R. Burke.
I'm at jaco.com and I'm on social at joccoe Willing.
Echoes at Echo Charles.
Just watch out for the algorithm.
And don't get caught up in the in the in the in the mayhem that's going on there.
Comments, the response.
Got to be careful.
You got to be careful that one.
Getting emotional about things you shouldn't get emotional about.
It's a bot.
Mm-hmm.
also thank you to all of our men and women out there on the front lines put into very dynamic
situations where decisions have to be made in seconds where lives are at stake and they do the right
things for the right reasons thank you for what you do and also to our police law enforcement
firefighters paramedics EMTs dispatchers correctional officers border patrol secret service
as well as all other first responders.
Thank you all for doing the right things
for the right reasons here at home
and keeping us safe.
And to everyone else out there,
there's decisions to make.
There's the high road and the mud,
the right thing to do,
and there's everything else.
And it's not always easy.
But if you do the right things for the right reasons,
and you do not surrender the high ground,
In the end, you will win.
This is Dave, and ECHO, and Jocko.
Out.
