Shawn Ryan Show - #268 Mike Waltz - Special Forces Green Beret Turned UN Ambassador Warns About China

Episode Date: January 5, 2026

Mike Waltz is an American politician, diplomat, author, businessman, and retired U.S. Army Colonel, a combat-decorated Green Beret with 27 years of military service and the first retired Special Force...s officer elected to the U.S. House of Representatives. Born in Florida, to a family steeped in military tradition as the son and grandson of Navy Chiefs, Waltz graduated from Stanton College Preparatory School in Jacksonville, Florida, before attending Virginia Military Institute (VMI), earning a Bachelor of Arts degree with honors in 1996. Commissioned as an Army lieutenant upon graduation, he excelled by graduating from elite Ranger School and selection for the Green Berets, deploying worldwide on multiple combat tours to Afghanistan (starting in 2000), the Middle East, and Africa, while serving in the Pentagon under Secretaries Rumsfeld and Gates and as a counterterrorism advisor to Vice President Dick Cheney. Waltz served three terms as Republican Congressman from Florida’s 6th District (2019–2025), resigning to become National Security Advisor in President Trump’s second administration (January–May 2025) before his September 2025 Senate confirmation as the 32nd U.S. Representative to the United Nations, where he currently serves. A successful business owner, he co-founded Metis Solutions, a strategy and intelligence firm that grew to hundreds of employees worldwide and was acquired for $92 million; he authored the bestseller Warrior Diplomat recounting his military and policy experiences, along with Hard Truths on Green Beret leadership, with proceeds benefiting veterans’ charities, and he continues media commentary on defense and foreign policy. Shawn Ryan Show Sponsors: Download the DraftKings Sportsbook app and use code SRS to turn $5 into $300 in bonus bets if your bet wins—see full terms and responsible gaming resources at https://dkng.co/audio. Go to https://drinkag1.com/SRS to get their best offer—plus, for a limited time, receive a FREE AG1 duffel bag and FREE AG1 Welcome Kit with your first subscription order (while supplies last). Sign up and get 10% off at https://betterhelp.com/srs. #ad Get 27% off sitewide at https://helixsleep.com/SRS, exclusive for listeners of the Shawn Ryan Show—enter our show name after checkout! Mike Waltz Links: X - https://x.com/michaelgwaltz IG - https://www.instagram.com/michaelgwaltz Warrior Diplomat - https://www.amazon.com/dp/1612346316 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Ambassador Mike Walsh. Thank you, brother. Welcome to the show. Honored to be with you, man, and I'm so proud of you and what you've done with this platform, what you're doing with it. Really honored to be here. That means a hull of a lot coming from you. Thank you. Thanks.
Starting point is 00:00:21 Thank you. And it's an honor to have you here. Yeah, it's been a heck of a year. I'll bet it has. I bet it has. But, man, like, congratulations to you, too. I mean, you know, very interesting breakfast, but growing up, you know, Jacksonville, Jacksonville, Florida. I mean, sounds like he came from damn near nothing. Yep.
Starting point is 00:00:48 And Green Beret, congressman, entrepreneur, ambassador of the UN, national security advisor. I mean, holy shit, dude. It's impressive. It's quite the arc. You know, it's been a blessing. It sounds cliche, but I mean it only in this country, the most amazing country the world has ever seen. I think I was telling you at breakfast that there was this moment.
Starting point is 00:01:15 I grew up in the west side of Jacksonville, which is the kind of the, definitely the poor side of town, one of the poorer side of town, big Navy town, grandfather was in the Navy, father was in the Navy. I obviously defected and went Army. But there was this moment a couple of years in Congress during the presidential campaign. And I'm standing up on this big stage, thousands of people, the mayor of Jacksonville had just walked off. And President Trump's rolling in with Air Force One, like literally boss move rolling in in the backdrop. And we're on this Navy base, Cecil Field in Jacksonville. And I'm looking out. at the PX where my grandmother and I used to go to buy her cigarettes because they were, you know,
Starting point is 00:02:03 they were subsidized back then. And like, I mean, you know, look out and see my mother who literally my dad, when I was an infant, just went out to see and we never saw him again. I mean, he just left her and left us. Oh, shit. Yeah. So I never really knew him. I saw him once before he before he passed when I was, when I was an adult and I was at VMI, Virginia Military Institute. I was like, who the hell is this guy? It's my dad and wrote him and went and saw him. You went to see him? He was, yeah, I went to see him, you know.
Starting point is 00:02:38 What was that like? Mixed, right? You know, as a teenage boy, you build up a lot of anger, I think, and resentment when you see your mother struggling, like she was. But, man, I didn't expect you to go there right out the gate, Sean. But at the same time, you don't know who your dad is. And I'd always had this kind of military bug. And I knew this family history of Navy, you know, of Navy chiefs and seeing all the photos and stuff and went and saw him.
Starting point is 00:03:13 And, you know, he kind of had some reasons and excuses. But I was just there to get to know him. And thank God I did it because he died a few years later. Holy shit. How old were you? Oh, 20. 21, 22. So you did not meet your dad until you were 22 years old.
Starting point is 00:03:29 I was 19. I mean, I had met him, but I didn't really remember him. I had not met him, you know, or I could really remember him and have a relationship, have a conversation with them until then. But the point is my mother was my rock, is my rock. Worked three jobs, night security guard, dental hygienist, pick and save clerk. But then put herself through college on nights and weekends, we actually ended up graduating the same year.
Starting point is 00:04:00 Took her 15 years so that I could get through and four, right? Are you serious? And then as you well know, and the military becomes such a pathway, you know, not only for you personally, but kind of has been for the United States really since World War II, out of poverty and into the middle class. And now my daughter is my, I've got a 21-year-old and a three-year-old. That's a whole other conversation, but my daughter's going to, is about to graduate school on the GI Bill, right?
Starting point is 00:04:36 No kids. And so to go from, because you can pass it on now to your kids, great thing that Congress did a few decades ago, but to have that full arc and to have been standing with the President of the United States in the Oval Office to have been representing every congressman represents about 800,000 people to have now been a part of the Republic that you and I and so many others were willing and did die for has been an honor and an amazing ride. Man, I'll bet. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:05:11 Man, I did not the childhood stuff, man. Wow. We're going to dive into that, I hope. We'll go anywhere you want. Perfect. Yeah. I'm not going to do a deep water swim with you out in the Pacific, but anywhere but that. Cool. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:05:30 But, well, Mike, everybody starts off with an introduction. So let me, uh, okay. Let me do yours. Ambassador Mike Walsh, an American politician, diplomat, author, businessman, and retired combat veteran, U.S. Army Special Forces Colonel. First, Green Beret elected to Congress and still served in the reserves while you were in office. While in Congress, you represented Florida and served on the Armed Services Intel and Foreign Affairs Committees and the China Task Force. Co-founded a bipartisan Veterans Caucus called the Four Country Caucus of Veteran Members of Congress to work issues together and increase the number of vets running for office.
Starting point is 00:06:12 Fucking amazing, by the way. You come from a family steeped a military tradition as the son and grandson of Navy Chiefs. Author of three books, including War Diplomat, which recounts your military and policy experiences. Also a successful business owner founding Meta Solutions, a strategy and an intelligence firm. Husband to Amy, an Army veteran, father to son. Army. Sorry. Husband to Julia.
Starting point is 00:06:43 oh yeah excuse me good julia's my wife husband to an army veteran right father of son army and most importantly you're a christian yeah man welcome to the show i got to throw in my daughter anderson in there too yeah perfect thanks man my pleasure my pleasure like i said man well very accomplished career that's that's um very impressive but uh i'd like to i'd like to you know one thing that i wasn't expecting to go and if you don't want to that's okay but you know the the the the childhood stuff that comes out on this show is is it just always surprises me how many people go through some type of you know abuse or parentless childhood it's it's it's it's it makes it real to me how many people there are in in the world and in the country you know that that they go through that and um
Starting point is 00:07:43 And I think a lot of America's youth find answers to things that they're going through from people that have been on the show because we go in so deep on that. And so on, you know, and just, I mean, what, so many people I've had on the show have grown up without fathers. And you hear about this, you know, all these kids that do this. and what so what was it that can you just describe going to your dad well look it i don't want to make too much of it because my mother did such an amazing job of filling the void i mean she was provider mother father rock inspiration kick you in the ass when you needed it um forced me I wanted to go hang out with my friends, but I had tested for this gifted program, and she forced me to go to this charter school because she could see that I was just going to screw around and not apply myself. I didn't want to do it. She made me do it, and it was a fantastic education graduated with 36 college credits right out the gate. But I also remember her sitting me down and saying, look, I've got to work, I've got to provide, I can't be here to make you do your homework.
Starting point is 00:09:14 I can't be here. You've got to have a sense of self-motivation. If you want to do these sports and other stuff, you've got to get yourself there. You have to get ready. And it just, I think, imbued in me this level of independence and self-motivation. I hear you on the lack of fatherhood, but at the same time, you can't let yourself become a victim. Well, that's what I'm getting at like is.
Starting point is 00:09:43 Of your circumstances. And I just, just quick as aside, because she's an amazing woman, my, you know, my wife is one of five raised by a single mom who literally was an immigrant from Jordan, Christians that fled persecution and came here. Their dad died in an accident when they were young. She being the oldest, became the quasi-parent. and they now are doctors, lawyers, she's an army veteran and a diplomat herself, right? I mean, they pulled themselves up from a one-stop-light little town because of the strength of their mother. Yeah. So if anything, I just, I also, I think two things.
Starting point is 00:10:26 One, there's been a revival of men, and I would put myself as one of those that are determined to be good parents, to be. as Christianity calls us to do to be the moral leaders of your family. And you're seeing that revival, post-Charlie Kirk and his assassination and others. You're seeing that, I think, revival of people focused on family and being good fathers and leaders, but also just the strength of the women in this country. And you see in this administration strong women from the chief of staff, the Attorney General and on down, I forget which journalists made some comment that the president doesn't like strong women, like, surrounded by him.
Starting point is 00:11:16 And so, I don't know, you know, bootstrap yourself, suck it up, dust yourself off, and move forward. And the greatest country in the world, you have opportunity here. Yeah, yeah. Did you have any brothers and sisters? I have a half-sister, but it was really mainly just me and my mom. No, is she older or younger? My sister's older. Okay. Yeah, yeah, okay.
Starting point is 00:11:40 Yeah, she's older. No shit. So just you and your mom growing up. Yeah, pretty much. What did she, what would you know? But I also sought out to, and my mother pushed this. I remember her walking up to a group of men at my church saying, I heard you guys are doing a men's Bible study and said, yeah, we are. Our name's Brenda.
Starting point is 00:12:02 And they said, good. I've got a teenage boy, and he's coming to it this Sunday. And so she sought out for me positive male role models. My priest went to VMI. That's how I got really focused on Virginia Military Institute. And then through him, my two favorite generals, George C. Marshall, who's, by the way, the only general to also win the Nobel Peace Prize for the Marshall Plan, who led the entire effort in world war two and and of course patten uh went went to vm i and through them through him got
Starting point is 00:12:37 steeped in history and then my friend's fathers i had there you you can surround yourself by positive role models and the old saying you are you become who you surround yourself by it yeah but again that was back to my mom man great insight for your mom wow that's that's awesome man i I fucking love stories like this. You know, I mean, it's sad, but it shows, I mean, you just see so many people who victimize themselves, and I can't talk about childhood because I had a great childhood, you know, and so to me, for me to get up on a fucking soap box and, you know what I mean, it would be asinine.
Starting point is 00:13:15 But for somebody like you or a lot of the other people on the show, I mean, it shows like you can still fucking make something. You don't have to victimize yourself. But I don't even feel like it was a bad, you know, I mean, we didn't. have much. The only place my mother could afford was literally in the flight line of Naval Air Station Jacksonville. So P3s, those four-engine submarine hunters were buzzing our house every 20 minutes and rattling the whole thing. But I think part of it is serving now abroad across Africa and the Middle East where you really see true poverty.
Starting point is 00:13:50 Yeah. I don't even want to come out of the show that I had a, you know, a tough childhood compared to others. Yeah, I'm not. But I could have easily, and we've all seen people that just fall into victimhood and they never leave where they are and they never push themselves.
Starting point is 00:14:05 And, you know, thanks to great parenting and a kick in the ass when a young man needed it. Yeah, yeah. I think we've done okay. Right on, man. Well, I forgot to give you your gift, too. There you go. They're doing to lead gummy bears
Starting point is 00:14:20 legal in all 50 states made here in the USA. probably the only reason you came i don't blame you this was it i've got one for a couple for you actually i don't mean to turn this into a to a whole thing but first and foremost i've got to add to your collection over there bottle of horse soldier bourbon uh this is distilled by the green berets who went into afghanistan dropped off in the middle of the night linked up with warlords and rode into liberating that country and kicking the shit out of al-Qaeda on horseback and those that team those guys have now become entrepreneurs much like yourself
Starting point is 00:15:07 and me and so many others i'm so proud of them they're building a massive distillery 9-11 themed veteran themed in in kentucky but they they batched this bottle for the 250th anniversary of the Army. No kidding. That was their original batch. Man. I'd love to you to have that, add that. Oh, shit.
Starting point is 00:15:37 The same team that made the president's iconic red hats. And this just captures, people ask you, what the heck are you doing at the UN, which is a whole other conversation, how we need to clean house and doge that place, but also save some of the goodness. make the UN great again. So when all the world leaders come together in one place in the world, once a year, or the president was just there speaking to prime ministers, presidents, they call it Unga, the UN General Assembly, but we've now relabeled it, Munga, make the UN great again, my mission. And then finally, of course, copy of hard truths, my latest book.
Starting point is 00:16:21 So you mentioned warrior diplomat that was really about my time in the Bush White House as a civilian policy person. But then, as you know, both the SEALs and the Green Berets have reserve units. So I was a reservist, Mitch had to have a day job. My day job was in the Pentagon and then the Bush White House. I had to be the only idiot in Washington that was writing the strategy. But then I would get mobilized and have to go do it. that was my first book warrior diplomat i've done a children's book uh and then we're happy to give you this copy of thank you hard truths which talks about the lessons i learned in combat and
Starting point is 00:17:01 how i've applied them now to to congress and is there combat going on over there in congress you know man thank you there are many days i thought the tribes of afghanistan were easier hurting hurting those cats than uh than the tribes of dc man I don't know which were more dangerous, right? For sure. What a disaster over there. Well, Mike, let's get into your story. All right.
Starting point is 00:17:30 So grew up in Jacksonville, single mother. What got your interest in the military? It was always a history guy. I remember mom would, she was a runner, and I would literally ride behind her in my bike. she tells a story better than I do talking about Pearl Harbor, Midway, Battle of Coral Sea. Your mom was talking to you about this stuff? No, I was like, I had read, I was literally read every World War II history book, military history book in our elementary school library. In fact, they brought in more from the local high school that I was just devouring these things.
Starting point is 00:18:14 And, and, and, and, but I would ride behind her and recite, you know, how Yamamoto got shot down and his strategy for having shallow torpedoes to, to, to come after our fleet. And then also, obviously, in Europe and Africa, Pat and Eisenhower, Marshall, all the greats. Wow. Right. So, so, so that was there. I always knew I wanted to serve my, my, really my high school or childhood priest was a VMI grad. And, and, and, um, I went up and then tortured myself through, I, you know, told you about the great education I had through high school. And rather than go and party at Florida State, like a lot of my friends did, I went and got my head shaved every Monday and the snot kicked out of me for four years, right? Right on. But proud to say, I graduated, distinguished military graduate, commissioned in the Army, got a full ride. to go there. So at least I didn't pay to suffer. But it is actually an amazing education. You want to talk about another place that's completely steeped in both discipline and history. My barrack's room
Starting point is 00:19:31 was Stonewall Jackson's classroom. Wow. And I mean, there's all kinds of stories about have ghosts and what people saw and didn't see. We had to literally prop up our beds, like these plywood, we called them racks with a little thin mattress on them every day. We'd prop them up. You're in the gray uniform, information every morning. But it taught me a couple of things. One, the rules that are the most important.
Starting point is 00:20:06 you have to appreciate, and that was our honor code. I will not lie, cheat, or steal, nor tolerate those who do in that period. And we had a ceremony there that if someone was convicted by their peers of violating the honor code, they called it a drum roll. You gathered everyone up at night. At two, three in the morning, you'd hear this drum roll starting to come out, and everyone would line up against the rails and they would announce the cadet's name
Starting point is 00:20:39 that had been found to be dishonorable and they were banished, right? So there's that. But then there's all the rules that are bendable. And I think that served me really well in the unconventional warfare space of knowing when you can push the rules and then which ones are sacrosanct.
Starting point is 00:21:00 And again, another male role model, the Sergeant Major, Sergeant Major Bill Goodson, Green Beret, E9, became, and the guy was probably 45, 48 years old, still outrunning all of us. Great looking, charming, funny, knowledgeable of the world, spoke multiple languages. Is that what captivated you? Yeah, yeah, it is. I started out, so in Army Special Forces, you have to do something
Starting point is 00:21:33 in big army first, you can't even try out until you're a captain or a staff sergeant, right? Unlike the seals where you can just go right in. They want you to go season in kind of big army. So I started out in armor and tanks, loved it, but it was the 90s army. And I remember we had to get a colonel or one-star general's permission to basically start and move your tank because we were so short on money, on fuel, and everything. parts, the whole deal. I used to take my platoon out on golf carts that I would just go rent to my own
Starting point is 00:22:07 to practice our formations. And so that was pretty frustrating to say the least. But I loved the Special Forces mission where one day, you know, you're out with your medics building a clinic. Actually, this actually happened to me downrange. just to take a step back on the story real quick. But we were embedded with Australian Special Air Service,
Starting point is 00:22:43 Australian commandos and also some seals. They were doing the traditional kill capture. They had sniper teams out that they were watching this really bad guy, this really bad Taliban commander who had beheaded a couple of police. officers tortured a kid on on radio and live you guys are listening to this just bad guy to force his tribe to listen to it because they weren't working with them anyway they have their snipers out they've been out there for days we all know what happened for example operation what red wing and lone survivor really worried about getting compromised
Starting point is 00:23:24 my medics come up to me and say why don't we just host a medical clinic right down from where we know this guy is we did we got a bunch of local doctors and as and sure enough people are lined up down the road because they haven't seen a doctor in forever uh and we got a bunch of local doctors and as they come in we're fingerprinting them getting the biometrics and whatever and then they get treated sure enough this guy steps in before we can take his picture he turned around and bolts one of my guys goes to go after him said no no no wait We didn't go after him. We call the local police chief.
Starting point is 00:24:02 He goes and gets them, wraps them up. It's our guy. And now the police chief is a hero. We've treated all kinds of villagers. One of the village chiefs so appreciated us treating their kid. They gave us information on three of his other lieutenants that we went and rolled up. And the cool thing is I was able to go back to the Australian commander and say, we got him.
Starting point is 00:24:30 bring your guys in. So what I loved about the Special Forces mission was one day you can be doing that. You have to learn local languages, specialize in a certain part of the world. And, you know, as we saw in one of my tours, there were three of us embedded in a UAE Arab task force partnered with 180 Afghans. Wow. So closest I'll get to Lawrence of Arabia in my entire. in my entire life. And by the way, if I never eat goat again, I'm good because we were just out there living
Starting point is 00:25:07 off the land. It was me, a medic, and a, and a commo sergeant, three Americans, 90 Arabs, 180 Afghans out in the mountains. And say that again? Three Americans, 90 Arab soldiers from the United Arab Emirates Special Operations Task Force that was deployed in Afghanistan. were in beds with them, partnered with 180 unit of 180 Afghans. We were out there, man.
Starting point is 00:25:37 It's completely out there. What are the UAE guys like? I've never even, I've never seen them. I've never worked with them. At the operational level, no, the operational level, they were great. Sometimes at the command and control level, we had to, you know, we had to work with them. That's what we were there to do with the close air support, with the, with the drones, with the, Fire support, coordinating with other units, the whole deal.
Starting point is 00:26:05 One point I got caught. We had a miscommunication. I mean, I had an interpreter that was doing four-way translation in combat. He was doing Pashtun, Dari, the two languages spoke by the Afghan unit, Arabic and English. Holy shit. That guy was worth his weight in gold. By the way, he was left behind by the Biden administration, but we're still working on getting out um so that you know that complexity of mission i found fascinating and so as a as a captain i went
Starting point is 00:26:41 and tried out and uh i'm one of those that took me twice right and i say that because i talked when i talked to student groups or young soldiers like it's okay to fail you know it's set up oftentimes for you to learn to fail so but i got through it uh got through ranger your school and and um then somebody turned me on to the fact that you could do this in the reserves and i and i fell into this kind of policy world in this like i said this back and forth of there i am writing it there i am deployed and then the really fun part or sad part and i write about this in my first book is coming back and saying hey mr president i was there in the room when you said, do this, we're now out there on the ground, not doing what you said. And coming back and
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Starting point is 00:29:28 For additional terms and responsible gaming resources, see dkng.com slash audio, limited time offer. How did you, I know we're on a time constraint, so we're going to skip some stuff, but I think that is one of the things in your story that I found most interesting is that at some point in time after special forces, you were writing policy and then living out that policy in a wartime environment as a Green Beret. I mean, how did you go from special forces to writing policy back to special forces? Well, I just, my first office in the Pentagon that I worked in as a civilian, was actually set around dealing with the narcotics problem in Afghanistan.
Starting point is 00:30:24 The office was originally stood up to go after the narcotics problem in Colombia, relevant, again today, what we're seeing in Venezuela, under what was called Planned Columbia in the 90s and early 2000s. I think one of the real success stories, Green Beret success stories, American success stories. If you remember where the Medellin and other cartels were basically about to take the place over. blew up an airliner attacking parliamentarians, just a few green berets in their train, advise, and assist the Colombian military, and they defeat the FARC insurgency over time. We were looking to do the same thing with how opium was funding international terrorism in the Taliban. So they were attracted by my background. We did that. I helped craft that policy and then that started the back and forth, right?
Starting point is 00:31:20 Oh, shit. So they sought you out? No, no. I applied. It was through, it was through a mentor of mine. Were you still in the military? I just, yeah, I was in, at this point in the reserves, at this point in both the Seals and Green Berets that actually is in National Guard, have National Guard units and went in with
Starting point is 00:31:40 that, went in with that background, started kind of really working on. not just the counter-narcotics piece, but then the broader Afghan policy went back out and did the tour where I was embedded with the Emirates and with the Jordanians were there to a smaller extent and with the Afghans, just a few of us.
Starting point is 00:32:03 I had others embedded with NATO special operations. So I saw at that time that the Europeans were in way over their heads in terms what they were willing to do politically. The soldiers out on the ground were great, but I tell a story in my first book where this Danish unit had to call back to their parliament to send us a QRF because it violated their ROE. Or the Germans were in the north, wouldn't send us a medevac, wouldn't send
Starting point is 00:32:36 us close air support because we couldn't identify the enemy the way they're what they called national caveats. demanded it and you know i think it's one of the reasons that we struggled so badly in that in that conflict yeah yeah damn how do what are what are some of the things that i mean i just it just is so wild to me you're writing policy and then and then you're living it i mean literally how fast but then bringing that knowledge uh you know bringing that knowledge back to policymakers. And then, you know, that's one of the reasons I stayed in the reserves while I was in Congress, too, was to have that ground truth to bring in when I was on the Armed Services Committee,
Starting point is 00:33:23 the Intel Committee, and others. And it's part of what I write about, you know, in the book is you have to stay, I call it bottoms up leadership, where you are talking to the soldiers or as a CEO. I would always end my staff meetings with my team on what decisions are you waiting on from me, what resources do you need from me? How can I empower you? And that's that kind of green beret mentality.
Starting point is 00:33:52 You empower the teams, you empower those out there. But I've tried to do it as a CEO, as a member of Congress, and now as ambassador to the UN. But, you know, one of the, you know, a couple of things that I have really focused on that I write about and that I'm trying to instill now and to live that I think we really need more of. One of the stories I write about, if you don't mind, is discipline and how that applies not only as a leader, but as a Christian leader. and I know you have people who've been through Ranger School here. You know, the difference there is they starve you and they sleep deprive you. And one of our patrols, you know, they give you like normally when you're going out like five MREs for seven days, right?
Starting point is 00:34:51 And you're supposed to have the discipline to kind of ration. Nobody does. I mean, they've eaten like all five MREs by like day two because you're starving and you're moving 23 hours. a day, you're getting like an hour sleep a night out on these patrols. And so by the time you come to day six or seven, it's time for the resupply mission. And man, that is the most important mission. I'll never forget this second lieutenant got tapped. Hey, you're in charge.
Starting point is 00:35:17 Get us to the resupply site. And we're moving all night long. We're trying to get to this thing. I mean, you're hallucinating. I had lost 31 pounds by this point as you're over mountains and across. streams, and as we were getting near the site, we could hear the helicopter, the resupply helicopter that was going to drop a bundle with our next batch of our MREs circling, with our only circling for a certain window.
Starting point is 00:35:42 And this poor kid got us so lost. I mean, I'd never forget, see it, Avido, he's in there looking at the map, and he's stopping. We can hear the helicopter, and everybody's bitching and grumbling. And then the worst sound you'll ever think of, that helicopter flies off. I thought the whole platoon was going to beat his ass. because we were, and I forget the Ranger instructors. Like, oh, man, I think there was a big, big batch of snickers on that one. That sucks, guys.
Starting point is 00:36:10 I hope you, you know, hope you're not too hungry. Well, I had had the discipline to, remember the MREs? They had those, like, little Halloween packs of skittles. Yeah. I had saved my skittles from every one of those. Everybody else had inhaled everything. And as we're like trudging through, uh, through the mountains again, I decided every 500 meters I was going to treat myself to a single skittal. And this thing was like a burst of energy and
Starting point is 00:36:41 happiness. And, um, I mean, just, it just kept me going every 500 because I had, I was on the verge of either just falling flat on my face or quitting. I was, it was so demoralized and hear that damn helicopter fly off. And I don't forget, we're laying down in a, in a fighting position, I pop one in, I look over, and the two guys next to me are, I mean, they're just staring a hole through me. And they're like, give me one. And they're like, come on, man. You didn't share.
Starting point is 00:37:15 You know, we're having like this argument. I thought they were going to come, you know, like come after those skittles. They wanted them so bad. Anyway, long story short, I ended up, I never forget it was a purple one. I throw it and I hit him in the face. And I'm thinking, I had the discipline to, you know, to ration my food. These guys didn't. They didn't help me out.
Starting point is 00:37:36 Whatever. Fast forward. Finish the phase. You go in for your final evaluations. Big burly master sergeant. I don't forget standing there in front of him. He's got big, big dip in, and he's flipping through my stuff. And I could see, I mean, you know, you get evaluated by them, but also by your peers.
Starting point is 00:37:53 Yeah. Which is incredibly important. Had all, all goes. he said, Ranger Waltz, you did great. He got all these good, good marks, except you got two bad peers must not pass from two of your fellow squad mates. And I could see the red slips sitting on this desk. And I'm like, those, if I don't get my tab over those assholes and skittles, I mean, it's just like rolling through my mind as I'm sitting there.
Starting point is 00:38:24 and he said it's the point of the story he said I see you put down your site profile that you're a Christian yes sergeant I am he said I see you kind of describe your leadership style as servant leadership yes sergeant I am
Starting point is 00:38:39 he said well I have one question for you and this for all the marbles he said in that situation what would Jesus have done I was like he would have given him he would have shared a Skittles, Sergeant. Yeah, you're right. He would have shared it. You're damn right. I'm right. Like, dip spit. You don't ever tell an NCO he's right. I'm always right. I'm a Ranger instructor. Like, Spits flying. And I'm like, oh, man, I'm screwed. Now I pissed him off. And I'm standing there with dip spit all over my face going, I blew it. And he sits back down. And he says, I'm going, but don't you have your tab. I said, but don't you ever forget.
Starting point is 00:39:24 It was the easy part. Living it is the hard part. And as an officer, officers always eat last. And if you have the discipline to do the right thing, you pay that forward when your men don't. Right. And so I've tried to apply that my whole life. Fast forward. There I am in Congress running my first, my first, I'm. not in Congress yet, running for the first time to be in Congress. I get the call that you dread when you're doing this, that my opponent just had millions of dollars dumped in their account by Pelosi, Super PACs, Bloomberg. The whole thing, by the way, Bloomberg dumped money into 24 races. This is in 2018, Trump's first midterm. Pelosi comes back in.
Starting point is 00:40:19 He dumped money into 24 races and won 21 of them. right. And you get that call. I couldn't compete with that. But what I could do is outwork them. So my team of volunteers and I ended up knocking 210,000 doors. And I'll never forget. And so what I started doing was popping a skittle every like successful door knock. And I'll never forget. I've taken up too much time. but by last door, a woman opens up, and I saw as I was walking up, there was a little shrine in her yard, and I asked her who it was. And I introduced myself, and she said, oh, I know who you are, Colonel. I've seen all the negative ads on you on TV. And I said, well, that's not who I am, and this is who I am. And she said, you're pretty conservative for me, but you know what? If you've had the guts to do what you've done,
Starting point is 00:41:19 you'll have the guts to do the right thing in Congress. And it turns out, her son was an E4 that was killed Second Ranger Battalion in Panama. And she had a little shrine to him. And as I was thanking her and hugging her, and she said, don't ever forget him and be worthy of him. When you're walking up those steps in Congress, be worthy. And so I think about that. I think about, you know, one of my green berets I didn't bring back Matt Pacino and his sacrifice and all of them. What happened to him?
Starting point is 00:41:51 Um, Matt was a was an absolute stud, uh, former, um, police officer, uh, up in Massachusetts, uh, before he became a green beret. And, um, the, the, the shorter version was he always volunteered to go on point. And so again, you want to keep a story alive. What's up? You want to keep a story alive. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Um, he, um, he, he, was probably if I had to rank all of my all of my guys you know at that point I was commanding a special forces company about 90 of them I'd have ranked him top five I mean he was just incredible smart sharp good looking built like a you know built like a linebacker but and this was kind of a bigger story of the war the the enemy had gone to IEDs we had all of these jammers and antennas and whatever. And the good news is they had worked. So what did the Taliban do?
Starting point is 00:42:54 They went back old school. They went back to trip wires. And the difference in Iraq where they tended to come in from the side in Afghanistan because it was dirt roads, they tended to come up through the bottom. And it, the conventional units and what have you, didn't know how to deal with it. And a lot of them shut down, not this team. And these are, you know, I'm sure you've seen them. They just got after it.
Starting point is 00:43:16 And they were going out. one night after a commander, and Matt started volunteering to go out on either motorcycle or four-wheel or ahead of our armored convoy so that he would be close enough to the ground to see if there was any dirt disturbances or trip wires or what have you. I don't forget stopping them before they went out on the mission. I was a commander approving the missions and saying, guys, you guys are pushing it. And I said, Matt, you're volunteering to go out every time. And he said, you know what, Mike, if I miss something or we miss something, I wanted to get just me, not my four or five brothers in the car behind me, right?
Starting point is 00:44:02 Like, who thinks that way? I mean, these are the best America has to give. And, you know, they were going out one night, successful hit, came back all. alternate route. We think somehow it got compromised because they set up the trip wire at night, which was highly, highly unusual. And he was on an ATV when it came up and downed him. But his family is amazing. They have set up, of course, a foundation. They work a lot with Gary Sinise. It's the Matthew Petino Foundation. I've donated the proceeds from my books to him and his family to pay it forward. So those are the ones, you know, it's one of the reasons that I'm so passionate about now veterans serving again. It doesn't have to be in Congress. It can be city council, state rep, up in Congress. And, you know, you mentioned in the bio, I co-founded a bipartisan Veterans Caucus because, you know, if we were all willing to die together a few years ago, we can figure out things like health care policy or taxes or whatever.
Starting point is 00:45:18 together as veterans in office. When I ran in 2018, we were at a record low. 15% of Congress were vets. That was down from 75% in the 1970s. And we've now in the 70s. In the 70s, in the 70s, three quarters. Now, a lot of people would say, okay, of course, that's because of the draft. But, you know, after 20 years of warfare in the Middle East, we've had a lot of veterans go through. There's just, they're just not taking that next step to run for office. I mean, I think that's great that you did that, Mike. I'm just curious, why do you think it's important for veterans to continue service in Congress and the Senate and local politics? Why do you feel that that's important? You're not done serving just because you went overseas and
Starting point is 00:46:08 came back. That doesn't mean you get to sit in the VFW Hall and drink beer and tell war stories. with such a few, a small percentage of Americans now post-draft serving, the country needs you. Leadership, teamwork, followership, discipline, mission focus. If you look at, no offense to lawyers out there, but if you look at the type of profession that's gotten into politics now, lawyers have largely, replaced business owners and veterans. And we're looking to write that shift. Why do you think that is? Well, I think on the veteran side, you used to, back in the day, you'd go serve a couple
Starting point is 00:46:57 years and you'd come back to your hometown, pick up your life, get well known in the community and perhaps run for office. Now you're running around the world for 20, 25 years. And then you come back home and decide you want to do this as I did. And people try to call you a carpetbagger. I've been around defending you, thank you very much. So I think it's the nature of service that shifted somewhat over time. I also think it's the amount of money involved.
Starting point is 00:47:29 And there's a number of organizations out there that are focused on getting veterans back in. And again, we've seen that update coming back. But at the end of the day, it's the ability to overcome differences, focus on a mission. for the betterment of your country and get things done. I mean, I just, I can't remember, I think, I can't remember if I just had this conversation with Jocko or Mappas and that or that. This is not a beer, by the way, this is it.
Starting point is 00:47:56 Just for everybody out there. No beer. But, you know, we, we were kind of discussing that, I think it was with Jock. And we were talking about, you know, how in soft units and military units, I mean, we, we have to work together because our fucking life depends on it, you know, and then we look at
Starting point is 00:48:18 what goes on in Congress, what goes on. You have to work together. Your country depends on it. Exactly. And, you know, from the outside looking in, it doesn't seem like much is getting done. Yeah. Part of that is the media, but the media loves to focus on the dysfunction. Like, we've had a defense bill get passed, a lot of veterans on that committee consecutively
Starting point is 00:48:41 for, it's the only piece of legislation for 61 years running that has passed and there's a lot of good stuff in it. But like case and point, several years ago, impeachments going on. Everybody is hating President Trump. Everyone's calling everyone a racist or this or that. I sent a note out to all the veterans in the house and said, meet me 6.30 a.m. tomorrow morning. You know what over 40 did. How many veterans are that? At the Vietnam Memorial Wall, and we linked up with the Park Service, who himself, the head park ranger there, the Vietnam Memorial Wall, is a disabled veteran who lost his leg, and we washed the Vietnam Memorial Wall together, right?
Starting point is 00:49:29 And we had, you know, a camera crew out there, Brett Bear from Fox and others have come. America needs to see that. They need to see we can get over it and come together to solve their problems. Quit bitching, bickering, fighting. Now, we need to fight for what we believe in, but at some point, you move the, you know, you move the country forward. And, you know, other things we've done, I mean, to share with you a fun one. And it was actually the horse soldier bourbon guys that put this together. I brought 10 veteran members of Congress together.
Starting point is 00:50:00 We went over to Normandy for the both the 75th and the 80th anniversary of D-Day, and we jumped out of the original C-47, Sean. that led the 101st Airborne in the invasion in 1944. And we did it, by the way, with a 97-year-old paratrooper. I remember. It was Tannum, buddy of mine. I'd never forget landing. His name was Tom Rice, and I walk up to him. Tom, you okay?
Starting point is 00:50:27 He's like, hell, yeah, that was a hell of a lot more fun than last time. Nobody's shooting at me. Right? Yeah, right. But the point is, you know, if I could get every high school class over to Normandy where you see more American flags flying on French homes. You see all these French kids running around
Starting point is 00:50:48 with American flag t-shirts and big banners that say thank you for our freedom. Welcome to our liberators. Thank you, America. You would think D-Day had happened like last year, not 80 years ago. By the way, last time I took 10 members with me, I'll never forget Speaker Johnson stops me on the way out.
Starting point is 00:51:13 He said, Mike, I heard you're doing this. Like, yeah, it's going to be amazing. And this is good for people to see. He said, you know, we only have a two-seat majority. And you're going to be out there jumping out of original plays. Like, yeah, it's right. The parachutes are new. The parachutes are new, Mr. Speaker.
Starting point is 00:51:28 We'll double check them. Everything else is vintage. He was a little worried. I remember seeing you doing that. That was really cool to see. But the country needs to see that, right? And I think the next generation. needs to see that and always appreciate and be worthy of those who made this American country
Starting point is 00:51:47 what it is. Yeah. Be an American worth dying for. I want to go back to veterans and serving in the political sphere. You know, do you, his, have, in your mind, have veterans lost interest in serving in politics or have the American? people do they just not give a shit anymore and they're not getting elected um i think it's more i think it's more the former uh and nothing's 100% one way or another i think it's i think it's more
Starting point is 00:52:24 the former um there's organizations now that help them set up up you know how do you set up a political campaign there's a lot of consultants out there that are sheisters and rip off artists they knows someone with your profile or raise a lot of money. They're happy to spend it, even if it's a hopeless strategy or race. So I became very passionate about helping them navigate. I mean, you look at Shihi, who just came in, you know, you, I mean, just great veterans. Mark Wayne Mullen, Tom Cotton, you know, I just got on the list, Jake L.C.L. Jared Hudson, running for Senate in Alabama, right? You know, but get in it. You know, You know, yelling at the TV and throwing shit at it and saying, this is what I fought for, not good enough.
Starting point is 00:53:12 Get in there, roll up your sleeves, be part of this amazing republic that we were willing to die for. Do you think veterans are leading the way in Congress? And I think, and I think American people have been incredibly responsive to those who step up. Not always, look, I'm not going to say that always makes the best politician, and I certainly don't agree with a, there's not that many progressives. that are actually veterans, which are odd, doesn't mean we always agree. We disagree on all kinds of things. But we do agree almost always that America has been a force for good historically. And certainly it's not systemically racist, misogynist, and, you know, a terrible country. So in that sense, we have that commonality. And that leads to mission accomplishment and getting
Starting point is 00:54:00 things done. What do you think the pulse of veterans within the sphere is? Are they hopeful? Are they? I think they're hopeful now, not to sound overly partisan, but they're hopeful under President Trump's leadership. The recruiting numbers show it. Pete Hegseth is restoring that warrior mentality. Dan Driscoll at Army, right, is taking the military mindset with technology and the technology and the next the next level we have great leadership in navy and air force so it's about leadership i was the chairman of readiness uh the readiness subcommittee and we were focused on everything but putting two bullets or bombs on foreheads when you have to uh and that pointing into the spear everything else should be to support that not these social experiments that are going on i i pushed uh the biden
Starting point is 00:54:57 administration fought back left right and center on gender neutral standards. The rucksacks, the rucksack. The artillery shells are artillery shell, right? Doesn't matter. Black, white, or brown, man, woman. It's about standards, not all of, not all of that other stuff. And so now to see that being enacted, you've seen the recruiting numbers follow, and I think the mentality and the retention numbers have followed, all of which were at a record low just a year ago, just a year ago, right? And, you know, they amazing thing about President Trump is he puts the right people
Starting point is 00:55:34 and the right seats in the bus, gives them a vision and says, go. And expects results. Right on. And that's what I think our military members want, right? It's what I loved about being a green beret is, you were given a broad mission set and you were dropped off in the middle
Starting point is 00:55:54 of nowhere and told be a warrior diplomat, figure it out when that guerrilla chief over. over, when that government official over in line with what America needs. And, you know, nobody's going to micromanage you on how to get it done. Yeah. I want to, I just have to ask you this, totally off, totally off subject right now. But I met you through Scott Mann at Tyler Andrew Vargas's thing at the, in D.C. that I spoke at.
Starting point is 00:56:24 That's when we first met, I met you through Scott. Then Scott told me about this operation you were on. where it sounds like you were a singleton and on escape and evasion and Scott was on the top kind of walking you through where to go. You got to tell me this. He never told it to me. Yeah. I want to hear.
Starting point is 00:56:44 So young, young Captain Mike Waltz. I mean, this sounds fucking badass. A major Scott man who I think is one of our legendary Green Berets in his own right is a thought leader speaker. founded task force pineapple by the way that got so many of our Afghan allies out and the Biden withdrawn debacle. But this was actually in the tour where I was embedded with the Arab task force with the UAE task force. So it was just three of us. The first call I get from them. By the way, we're out in Helmand Province, middle of nowhere. This is back in 0506 or less
Starting point is 00:57:27 less than 50 Americans in the entire province. Ten years later, there were over 20,000 Marines. Back then, there was just none of us. One of the hottest zones. One of the hottest, I mean, it was a everyday firefight. This is the amazing thing about, you know, our mission set. I had worked with the UAE command and my command and reached back to D.C. because I was this reservist back or forth and convinced them to build an airfield
Starting point is 00:58:00 out in this hottest Taliban zone where we were going to get an Arab partner now with all of their assets. Oh, by the way, in this hot Taliban zone, not that far from Iran either. It's a strategic asset. We were taking the survey, Emirati Air Force survey team up there and got into a running gun battle. My only medic got shot with a femoral bleed, so I'll never forget. He was left-handed. Brown goes through his arm, bounces off his chest plate and shoots down, and you know with a femoral artery.
Starting point is 00:58:37 You got minutes. I'm down there working on him, you know, calling in the medevac, literally put my knee on his, on the artery while we're, while we're running and gunning. And I think it's got to be the only deployment of the, uh, of the Taliban Navy, because the road where they were ambushing us, cliff on one side, so they had us pinned and we're trying to drive out of it, they had barges with mortar and RPG teams. Are you serious? That were paralleling us that we couldn't, uh, that we couldn't get out of.
Starting point is 00:59:13 So we eventually fought our way out of that. I broke some rules, and when we called in the MEDAVAC and told them that the LZ was clear, it wasn't. The bird got a little shot up, but we got our guys and a couple of UAE guys out as well that got shot up, got them out of there. So the first call I get that night is from Scott Mann on, and you know the satellite radios, everybody can hear it. I mean, when you call up that tick, that troops in contact, everybody hears it, you're directing fire, directing the fight. When you get the notice to, hey, step off of the satellite radio that everybody can hear and have a one-on-one on the sap phone, like something's up. First call, he calls in and says, hey, we think someone's inside your perimeter. What do you mean?
Starting point is 01:00:06 Well, we just got an intercept that the Taliban think they can capture you and, you know, the two other Americans are with you if they overrun. but they were just offered a bounty from a guy that was in Pakistan to get you alive. And we think they're working with somebody on the inside. Mike, if you have to go full E&E, you do what you got to do. Holy shit. And this is, it was so remote back then. There wasn't much, many assets. I mean, we were probably a solid hour, hour and a half flight from Kandahar.
Starting point is 01:00:40 And oh, by the way, when they had tried to send in some QRF, it got shot up. So this is an 05? This was 06. What is this like? Oh, six. Wow. This was an 06.
Starting point is 01:00:51 I mean, longer story, what had happened was the British were supposed to come down as the transfer to NATO. They were delayed. So it was just us and our little, you know, UA.E task force out there trying to establish this air base, trying to pacify the region, doing the best we could. The next call I get was even better from the major man who's up at the headquarters. Hey, Mike, you need to get out of there. Your mission is canceled. I was pissed. I've been working on this for months to get this air base, strategic airbase set up.
Starting point is 01:01:31 You're done. I was ready to fight my way forward. He said, no, you're not. It gave me a direct order. He said, they believe they have you surrounded. they're going to overrun you. When I give you, when I give you the next call, you need to get under anything you can.
Starting point is 01:01:47 It's going to look like Apocalypse fucking now. And he had B-1s, Preds, F-18s from Carrier Strike Groups, just stacked up and just laid waste, including I saw the footage later where everybody was celebrating. I don't know. I hope this thing gets.
Starting point is 01:02:10 in trouble, Scott. They hit a, they hit everybody celebrating in a mosque and they just blew this knot out of it. I mean, body parts flying everywhere. So we ended up, you know, we ended up fighting our way over the next. Where did you? So you, you hunkered down? We hunkered down as, as Scott was commanding, controlling every Air Force asset they had in theater just as we were trying to get out of where they had us surrounded and, and fight our way out. ended up staying on the phone with me for probably the next 40 hours on just constant as they were guiding us through these various ambushes that we had until we could get back to our base, which by the way was for everybody who served out there was Fab Robinson, who's named
Starting point is 01:03:00 after Chris Robinson, one of the Green Berets we lost that tour. Holy shit, dude. So that was Scott. and he's a he's a great friend uh he's written several books on the greenberry mentality and um 40 40 hours of kinetic e and e yeah off and on yeah as you know what it i mean it's not no rounds aren't flying no i mean rounds aren't flying every minute but it was you know you don't know that and so i'll never forget i don't know why um it seemed like every ac 130 which is my favorite platform in the Force, by the way, the big cargo gun ships, right, that have that one 20-millimeter cannon and the mini-guns. It seemed like every targeting officer was a female. And I've never asked the chief of staff of the Air Force why this was. But I'll never forget my guys. I mean, she was like
Starting point is 01:03:56 an angel and then the angel had death in every minute. Target eliminated. ambush 50 meters to your left boom damn they're gone and then my guys are are running bets on whether she was blonde whether she was brunette and of course they're all tripping over themselves when we get back to the base back to finally get back to candelhar and then bog her air base to go thank her in person and yeah I mean it was it was it was a hell of a fight The OA fighters were fantastic. The soldiers were fantastic, but man. What was going through your head when they said it was an insider, somebody inside the perimeter?
Starting point is 01:04:40 Did you have it? I mean, did they ever figure that out? You know, I don't, they didn't that tour, but a year later, I saw some, some traffic that they, the Emirates themselves rolled a guy up and he just kind of disappeared. And then fast forward that, fast forward a few years later, I'm actually in Abu Dhabi, the capital of the UAE. And we have, you know, it's a bunch of people, but we have a kind of a meeting and greeting with the crown prince, Muhammad bin Zayed. And the ambassador at the time is introducing everyone. And then as he comes and introduces me, he says, and your highness, this is the American soldier that. was embedded with our forces and does it walks them through you know what had happened a couple
Starting point is 01:05:33 years prior and he stopped and locked eyes and said um you know basically we've carried each other from the field of battle and we will defeat the extremists together it's look it's an amazing country and not to not to sell you a but i mean i've been to paul mccartney concerts and uh and they were a key key member now of the abraham accords and you can go there and go to a church you can go to a synagogue And you can go, of course, to a mosque, very tolerant, very open. Take it back to Afghanistan with those guys. We would go into these villages that hadn't seen a Western or probably since the Russians, right? Up in the mountains.
Starting point is 01:06:18 Sean, I can't tell you how powerful it was to be standing there with an Afghan officer, an Arab officer, and then me, but I'm bearded up and just kind of trying to blend in. Because you've got a whole sea of Afghans sitting there with black eyeline or an, you know, AKs sitting on their laps. They're all Talibs. But for the Arabs to say, this isn't the way forward. This isn't true Islam. Look at Jakarta. Look at Dubai, right?
Starting point is 01:06:49 Look at Istanbul. You can have a better life for your children and not follow these, you know, basically these al-Qaeda losers. That was incredibly powerful. What was even more powerful is they would then turn to me and say, look at what the United States did for Germany. Look at what the United States did for Japan. Look at what America does, even though they were once enemies. That's what they're trying to do here for you. Stop attacking them.
Starting point is 01:07:17 And oh, by the way, don't let al-Qaeda and ISIS, you know, attack America. You could have a better life. That coming from them was worth its weight in gold. It turned whole areas. I'll take that over a division any day. That strategic messaging was critical. That's, wow. That's great to hear.
Starting point is 01:07:35 Yeah. Mike, let's take a break. All right. And when we come back, we'll get into all things UN. I know you're a big fan, so cool. We're dogeon. We're cleaning house. All right.
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Starting point is 01:11:19 BetterHelp is a strong place to start. You can't step into a lighter version of yourself without leaving behind what's been weighing you down. Therapy can help you clear space. Sign up and get 10% off at BetterHelp.com slash SRS. That's BetterHELP.com slash SRS. All right, Mike, we're back from the break. We're getting ready to get into some U.N. stuff, but I know we've got a couple of things left to wrap up here. So one of them being a story, I believe, from your service. Yeah. It, you know, so much of today's discourse, right, is punch back harder if you're punched, you know, get ahead of it, be aggressive, hit hard, which, look, I'm all for it. But you have to
Starting point is 01:12:12 also know when to show restraint. And one of the chapters that I talk about in hard truths, and I know a lot of other veterans that have faced this scenario, but we were told to hold the line in a valley. We were holding a flank. And as you know, in Afghanistan, as soon as you're static for a while, eventually you're going to come under fire. And I had a coalition element, because again,
Starting point is 01:12:42 you know, as green berets were always embedded. Sure enough, we hadn't been there. 30 minutes, mortar rounds, start coming in, hit. Next one comes in, it's closer. Next one comes in, it's closer. Pretty quickly, one of my snipers spots of probably 10, 12-year-old boy up on a hill. Every time this kid brings a phone up to his ear, unarmed, but every time he brings a phone up to his ear, brings Binos up,
Starting point is 01:13:12 another round comes in closer. And after about the third time, that happened, sniper asked me permission to take him out. He was sitting on a Barrett. And you know what a 50-cow round is going to do to a 10-year-old boy. And I, you know, thought about it for half a second. He's screaming four-letter words at me, giving him permission to take the shot.
Starting point is 01:13:35 You start thinking about your own kids. I was thinking about my daughter. Another round comes in, actually wounded. did one of our Afghan to start screaming. And, you know, I ended up telling the sniper, take a warning shot. Took a warning shot, splashed rocks, you know, right at his feet. Kid dives behind a boulder, comes back up, takes another shot, and the kid ends up running over the, running over the hill.
Starting point is 01:14:03 And we didn't kill him. And if you think about it for a moment, like kind of take a step back. And I wrote about times when we've shown restraint as a country and whether that was a right thing. Grant showing restraint with the surrender of Lee, I think, prevented a insurgency in the South for many years following, help the country heal. Truman in Korea didn't hit China. MacArthur fired over it, but showed restraint Bush 41, stop. in Kuwait didn't keep going all the way to Baghdad in the Persian Gulf War. But one of my favorite stories that I think is really untold in history was during the Cuban Missile Crisis,
Starting point is 01:14:53 a Soviet submarine executive officer of the number two. So Soviet submarine is coming in under the U.S. Navy's blockade of Cuba. They get picked up. Navy destroyer starts dropping and depth charges on him, and the Soviet submarine captain believes that World War III is broken out over the Cuban Missile Crisis and orders his executive officer to turn the keys, the dual keys, to launch a nuclear-tipped torpedo into our fleet, which had he done that, no doubt would have kicked off World War III. Vasily Arkapov was the Soviet Russian XO refused the order. didn't do it. And you imagine me, a Soviet Navy. Debt charges are dropping. He refused to launch a nuke at our fleet. They eventually ended up surfacing and found out no World War III had not
Starting point is 01:15:49 kicked off. And I mean, that restraint saved all of us, right? Yeah. So, I mean, back to the story, we ended up following the kid into his village, lined up all the elders, you know, him the riot act and one of the elders stepped forward and said luck the taliban were here this morning told us every family to give their oldest son to go attack the americans um al qaeda had been in and out al qaeda had been in and out of that village telling him the same thing one family refused and they hung a seven-year-old boy his body was laying right there um so i don't know man you know like was that the right call i'm sure a lot of people will watching this saying you should have taken the kid out, I don't, you know, um, I was in a similar
Starting point is 01:16:41 situation. I say that in the sense of we've got people making these life or death decisions every day. They stick with you one way or another. If I had been sitting, if I, if one of my guys have been killed by one of those mortar rounds, could I explain that to the family? Right. Yeah. But you're saying, sorry. I mean, I just, I don't know. You know, I think that showing some mercy, having a heart is definitely a good thing. I mean, I was in a similar situation in Baghdad where the MSR was getting, you know, IED every fucking day. Americans are dying every day.
Starting point is 01:17:26 They sent us out. We go sit up outside of a, it's happening right outside of a school yard. And so we're all in a rural environment. And so we're all gillied up. And convoy goes by, first, within the first, you know, 24 hours and these, but right before the convoy comes in, school gets out, these kids come, and they set up, I mean, it was 10 yards from me, right fucking there. They did not even, I mean, right, I could have reached out and grabbed them.
Starting point is 01:18:01 And there's three of them. One pulls out a cell phone. And I'm like, fuck, please don't do this shit. And this is all rules of engagement, right? Like, you make a bad call. Yep. You can be prosecuted. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:18:15 And, um, conboy goes by. We called it in, said, hey, we got a group of, you know, kids sitting here. And, uh, they said, don't engage. Conboy goes by. They fucking hit the IED. They missed. We asked if they, we could restrain them. Nope.
Starting point is 01:18:34 let him go and then you know i mean you're just thinking back it's like i didn't want to kill that fucking kid yeah you know i did not want to kill that kid but then on the same on this you know on the same accord what happens tomorrow whose convoy comes by here tomorrow with this kid sitting in this exact spot knowing i could reach out and touch him at least restrain them kill him anything to save an American's life and fucking nothing and I, you know, I just, I don't know what the right call is in those scenarios. Well. But in yours, I didn't have that kind of closure.
Starting point is 01:19:15 I'll say, um, as now as leaders, uh, you have to give our junior officers and leaders and NCOs the latitude to make those calls, the right training, right, the understanding of what you can and can't do. But, you know, I mean, President Trump, God bless him, pardoned a number of guys who were just prosecuted to the Hill. It was put in jail for 19 years. Oh, four of them are right up there. They're their pardons, the Blackwater guys. Yeah, right. You know, and we saw what happened to three for 35 years, one for life. We saw what, you know, what the media tried to do to Eddie Gallagher. Yeah, there's Eddie Gallagher's murder charges right there. Right. And, and it's
Starting point is 01:20:04 It's one of the many things I love about our president, but he instinctively knows you let your warriors be warriors. They're inherently good. If one goes way off the reservation, fine. But, you know, in these kind of life or death, seconds go by a call. In this case, I show. Law enforcement. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:20:24 Oh, even more so for law enforcement. I have so much. I tell this to all my sheriffs, my district, my state, all of them. You know, we go down range and we're in it. But then when we come home, we can psychologically turn off. Police officer can never, never psychologically switch off. They're never off duty. And they're one cell phone, you know, away from a riot for making a bad call.
Starting point is 01:20:49 At least we make one. It's out in the mountains, right? I don't know. In this case, you know, I talked about those times in history. We showed restraint or strategic level. I made that call then. You know, I remember my, again, back to one of my campaigns early on, this guy accused me a stolen valor on the, you know, on the bronze stars and stuff. And I swore the next time I was going to see him, I was going to punch the guy in the mouth.
Starting point is 01:21:19 And I wanted to go back out and when the media and online, he was putting all this stuff on online, thank God for my amazing wife, Julia and my team said, rise above it, right? and show, show some restraint, show, you know, some dignity and don't crawl in the mud with them. So I just, I think it's important for people to think about sometimes the discretion is a better part of our and take a step back, rise above all the noise. I think that is a major thing people that could learn right about now, right? You know, I wanted to ask you, but I lost my train of thought earlier, when you were coming out, when you were creating policy and then going back into the field and fighting and living that policy and seeing, you know, the repercussions of it and then going back and giving the feedback on the, I mean, I'm curious, how seriously did they take you? Did you feel like they gave a shit when you were giving them the information? I'll tell you, even though I disagree with a number of policy decisions they made in the Bush administration, Iraq being one of them. And I hope that's not too hurtful to people out there, but I think it was a strategic mistake.
Starting point is 01:22:40 The intelligence got it wrong. But they valued that ground truth. They knew they were being fed. I mean, the most politicized thing in Washington is what's coming into the what's coming into the, what's coming into the, White House and they knew they were in a bubble. And so for me to come back from the field was very valuable to them. They appreciated it. And I appreciated that they appreciated it. I also broke a lot of China. But I had to have the guts to speak truth to power. And I'll never forget one general piping in saying, Mr. President, Mr. Vice President, the Afghan army will be operating on its own,
Starting point is 01:23:18 independent of us, kicking ass and taking names within 18 months. We're going to get it done. Here's how we're going to get it done. Oh, by the way. This was 2007, by the way. Right? And oh, by the way, guess what his tour was, was 18 months. Shocker.
Starting point is 01:23:37 Right? Like, it was all going to be, you know, unicorns and rainbows. And the Afghan army was going to be, you know, fighting like the British Army by the time, his watch. And I forget, he turned off. And they looked at me, I said, Mr. Vice President, they can't even count. Like, look how long, not that it's a perfect analogy, but, you know, we've been partnered with the South Korean Army for 70 years. By the way, the South Koreans had a higher illiteracy rate after years of occupation and devastation, no army, no police force, no government, you know, by Japan. up until World War II, we've been one for 70 years.
Starting point is 01:24:20 I'm not saying we should do that and should have done that in Afghanistan or elsewhere, but we have to appreciate what we're dealing with. Number one, number two, decades to defeat communism, world war to defeat fascism, Islamic extremism, we can't take our eye off the ball. It will follow us home. And, you know, we've just got to find a better way to deal with it. We can't do nation building, but a counterterrorism approach partnered with by with and through small teams, I want to fought over there and not here. So, yeah, I mean, it's that speaking truth to power, you had to do it.
Starting point is 01:25:03 And whether it's as a captain coming back from a tour, a major coming back for a tour, or now in Congress, or as ambassador of the United Nations. Did you feel like the generals were fighting against you for their own self-interest? I mean, obviously, that one, his self-interest was, oh, no, we have to fucking continue because I need this extra star after. Man, this is a longer conversation, but I think an important one. I think we have, you know, the incentives have changed so much since the all-volunteer from the draft army. Don't get me wrong, all-volunteer service, the best the world has ever seen. but it is different. A tour on an otherwise very promising 20, 30 year career,
Starting point is 01:25:51 which you've sacrificed a lot. A tour is a blip on that otherwise career. Back at the draft army, it was get over there, fight until you win, and don't come home, take every risk necessary that you need to. Now, you know, don't have a base, get hit too hard, don't take any casualties, don't take too many risks.
Starting point is 01:26:14 God forbid, you don't lose a sensitive item. And so you never see anybody relieved for the enemy actually making gains. It's really fucking odd, Mike. I mean, the biggest fucking risk you can take is to actually go to fucking war, correct? I'm with you. That's the biggest fucking risk. So we take the biggest fucking risk. And then we, and then we, and then we, and then we, and that's when we do the risk mitigation shit.
Starting point is 01:26:44 and the risk analysts. What the fuck is that? The default action becomes inaction because nobody gets fired for kind of getting through your tour. And we had an accumulation of 20 years of that. I mean, I'll never forget. We switched to the MRAP, right, which was in order to deal with the IEDs, It had a V-shaped hole, armored hole.
Starting point is 01:27:16 It was great in the sense of how it protected people, but the vehicles were too heavy. They made you use predictable roads. They were often broken. And we had this accumulation of rules. I'll never forget dealing with this platoon. It was a conventional platoon. We had to get our guys in there and clean out al-Qaeda and the Taliban out of this area
Starting point is 01:27:39 that was right next to the hill that this platoon was on. I go up and talk to the platoon leader. We had a tough conversation, but he made me realize that it was this accumulation of rules that tied his hands. He couldn't leave the base unless he was in a minimum, first of all, unless he was in an MRAP, even though he had all these armored Humvees that he could have taken various routes or gone at night or what have you. So he had to be in the MRAPs. He had to be in four. He only had five and two or three were always broken. So vehicles were out.
Starting point is 01:28:10 He had to have a certain number of soldiers to go out on patrols. but he had to have a certain number of soldiers to defend the base. It didn't add up to the right total. So he basically sat, right? Yeah. I mean, it's like, fuck, I'm like, what am I going to do? You know, what are you going to do? Or I, you know, this was back to my point on VMI where you learn which rules to bend to get the mission done, but that doesn't cross the line.
Starting point is 01:28:41 I mean, at one point, we had this village chief who really wanted to be on our side. Every time al-Qaeda, ISIS, the Taliban would come in, this one commander in particular, he would call us. But the third or fourth time we didn't show up and take care of business, he and his entire tribe gave up. And what turned out, and the generals would tell you to answer your question, they never declined admission. I laid out the 12 different headquarters that we had to ask permission of, 12, to get approval to go out. And if you went out on helicopters, regular, you know, Chinooks or Blackhawks, you had to have an Apache escorting ahead of it because you didn't want the birds to get shot up. So then you had the Apache. Well, then if you had the Apache, those were getting shot up.
Starting point is 01:29:33 So you had to have a predator ahead of that. then you had to be within an hour of a medevac, then you had to have a certain size QRF, and all of these risk of mitigation measures added up means, you know, we were tying our own hands. And I think that that added up in many ways to strategic defeat. I do want to say, Sean, though, because there's a lot of, I think, our generation out there hurting on what was it all for. we didn't have another 9-11 for 20 years, and they had every intention of hitting us again. I've seen the intelligence of plot after plot after plot that was thwarted.
Starting point is 01:30:16 The more they were running around, worried about where they were going to sleep at night, the less they were plotting and planning to hit us. We kept an entire generation safe. We've got to find a better way to do it now. But I don't want people to think their sacrifice when it was in vain. It was not. It absolutely was not. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:30:43 I wonder that a lot too. I know everybody does. We all do. And again, for those out there that are really wondering saying this and that was all screwed up, get in position to make a difference. Right. One of the first couple of things I did when I got into Congress was address things that I saw that were effed up when I was down range. One of them, I think I told you, one of my guys I lost, the Pentagon went and pay to bury him in two different places. So I get a call from my Sergeant Majors that the Greenberry I lost was Brian Woods.
Starting point is 01:31:20 And the family wanted him celebrated in one place, but his wife wanted them buried in another. and they tried to hand him a bill. He said, absolutely not. We ended up passing the hat around our unit to pay for it, you know, $8,900 billion budget. But anyway, we got that into a bill. We got it passed. We got a guy by the name of Richard Staiskel, who was misdiagnosed. The military doctors missed him with lung cancer until it was stage four.
Starting point is 01:31:54 And on his deathbed, rather than enjoy his life. life or joyous family or, you know, as he was heading into stage four anyway, he's up on the hill making it, making it happen. And we ended up getting the law changed to where you can sue for malpractice if it's here stateside, not a medic downrange. But if you're misdiagnosed here, we got service dogs introduced into the VA, right? Believe it or not, the VA were saying, we're not paying for service dogs. They don't do anything. Here's your bag of pills. Right. You know, here's your therapist appointment. I can't tell you how many veterans I know that got off their meds, got out of their house, or out socializing again because of a well-trained good
Starting point is 01:32:37 service dog. We fought through the bureaucracy and got the legislation. You got all this stuff pushed through? We got the stuff pushed through. Not just me. I mean, this is a team effort. It's a team effort. Right. But my point is the service wasn't in vain. We kept the country safe as best we could. And for all the stuff that pisses you off, get in there, knock the doors, I'll put you in touch with people to help, and get in there and keep serving, man. Yep. Right?
Starting point is 01:33:06 Next generation deserves us pushing all the way through to the end. Yeah. I agree with you. There's a lot of... It's frustrating. There's a lot of... I mean, I got a lot of buddies in there, too. I mean, you were in there, but I got a lot of buddies that are in Congress.
Starting point is 01:33:23 I got buddies that are in the Senate. And, you know, and, man, they're just so fucking distraught. They really are. Some of them are thinking about not running again because they haven't been able to make it the difference. But then you come in here and you talk about these things that you're able to get pushed through. That's we never heard about things. The media doesn't cover half of it. I cover the drama.
Starting point is 01:33:44 And look, I get the frustration. But this is the greatest country the world's ever seen. And we've got to, you know, as Reagan said, we're one generation from losing it all. Yeah. So, and with fewer and fewer of our population serving, those attributes, we've got to get, we have to get in there and fight the fight. And then, look, I mean, this administration in just a year, you're turning the military around, recruiting numbers have turned around.
Starting point is 01:34:17 We're getting focused on the right things in terms of technology. the legislation is moving to rebuild it's going to take a lot to rebuild our shipyards and our shipbuilding at the same time you have new technologies like seronic and androro and others that will leapfrog us that will leapfrog us forward look at the middle east i mean i just got back from israel jordan looking at the whole gaza situation we got the entire UN Security Council unanimously to support the president's 20-point peace plan. Just a few months ago, you had hostages and tunnels, and a lot of people had lost a lot of money betting that you'd see all of them come out alive, and now every, all of the remains, except one left. I met with the family of Ron Gavili, one left, that have come out, ceasefire in place, Hezbollah on its back foot, the Assad regime gone. decisive action from the president, Iran no longer chasing a nuke, the Houthis no longer using
Starting point is 01:35:29 our ships as target practice. That's what leadership comes. That's what leadership brings you from a commander-in-chief who gets it. What is the plan with Gaza now? So what the UN Security Council resolution and the president's peace plan established is a board of peace led by him that will have led by who led by the president so president so president trump so american leadership will continue what just underneath that there's three things a funding mechanism not the u.n it's independent but it be run by the world bank that countries like the gulf arabs can contribute to uh for for reconstruction one two uh a technocratic Palestinian committee that everybody's going to agree to who's sitting on it, not Hamas, to restore government
Starting point is 01:36:24 services, water, sewage, you know, basic services, and number three, an international stabilization force. Countries like Indonesia, Azerbaijan, and others. What the president did that was so brilliant, he actually did it at the UN, was pulled together not just the Gulf Arabs, but countries like Turkey, Pakistan, Indonesia, Muslim majority countries and said, we're going to tell Hamas this is the way it's going to be and that united pressure got us to the peace plan, got the hostages out. And I think we'll get us to the next phase. And the president's been clear. Like, look, a lot of valid questions. I asked
Starting point is 01:37:05 it. Others are asking it. Samas really going to disarm. He's been clear. They're going to disarm one way or another, either the easy way or the hard way. And I think only he could pull together. the Arabs, Palestinians, the Israelis, the Europeans, it really, I think history is going to look back on that Charmolsheet peace agreement and say it was one of the turning points in history towards Middle East peace. You think this is going to bring Middle East peace? You know, I think if anybody can do it, it's him. And that's not, you know, that's not just. coming from me. That's coming from Prime Minister of Israel. It's coming from the Palestinians, the leaders of the Gulf War, or the Gulf, excuse me, Arab countries, the Europeans and others. I do. And the team that he puts around him, Steve Whitkoff, Jared Kushner, Marco Rubio,
Starting point is 01:38:04 the vice president, Susie Wiles, they're very business-oriented. Why does that matter? They're not beholden by this is the way it's always been and has to be. They're focused on results. D.C. is horrible for a priority means more people, more money, more inputs. They're focused on the outputs, even if they're unconventional. They're not held back by the way things have done in the past. And, you know, the business people he's put around them, and I've worked with all of them and still am, are incredibly focused on commercial diplomacy. Business binds people together. And that was the brilliance of the Abraham Accords, was, you know, the more.
Starting point is 01:38:46 we're talking about rail and ports and data centers and, you know, just a better life for everyone by working together, the less we're talking about 2,000-year-old animosity. Is it going to be bumpy? Is it going to be difficult? Absolutely. But again, just look in the last decade, no one would have believed you would have had Arab countries and the Israelis coming together like they have under the Abraham Accords. and the next step is going to be expansion of it.
Starting point is 01:39:16 And being at the U.N., you know, we have a key piece of that. What else did you learn on that trip, Israel and Jordan trip? Yeah. I think there's, it's a real fragile moment, but it's a moment of opportunity. You have a real opportunity in Lebanon. We have a... What's the opportunity? Well, you have a former general, the head of their armed forces, President Aoun.
Starting point is 01:39:43 So you have a non-Hesbalah line. Actually, he's committed to fighting Hezbollah, now elected as president. You've got Hezbollah, if you remember the Pager, the Beeper and Pager operation, plus taking out their leader, Nassarola. They've been decimated. They're trying to rebuild, but they're on their back foot right now. Iran is on its back foot that have supported all of these guys. And the Assad regime, which was also a puppet of Iran, is gone. So you have this window, I think, to get everyone moving in a common direction.
Starting point is 01:40:21 It's going to be a lot of work, but it is a real opportunity. Had the opportunity to sit with the King of Jordan, King Abdullah. I think I told you my wife's family is Jordanian Christians, came over as immigrants through Ellis Island in the 1950s and built an amazing life here. He's a real leader in the region, has a real clear-eyed view, not always seeing eye to eye with their neighbors, the Israelis, but if you look over the arc of time, have been a great ally. And I do believe under this president and this team's leadership, is it going to be, I don't know, you know, are they going to be Switzerland? No. But we can get to a level of stability. And the key, as the president said recently in an interview, was knocking the Iranian regime back so that they're not meddling nefariously and against us, against Israel, and against stability in the region and all the Arab allies. I think that was a critical, critical step. yeah what i mean what about the what about the humanitarian crisis that's going on over there i mean did you go into gaza i went right into the edge of it and there you know it depends on the the
Starting point is 01:41:45 the security situation it looks like a i mean it's it's devastated i mean it's it's not even it's absolutely uh devastated in many ways so in my role you know a lot of the key uh agents that are providing humanitarian aid are aligned with the UN. Some of them, one of them called UNRWA, the UN Relief Works Agency, has been completely infiltrated by Hamas over the years, has radicalized the Palestinian youth through radical educational material and curriculum,
Starting point is 01:42:19 and has to be completely dismantled and reformed. So that was a piece. There's a humanitarian corridor coming through Jordan, By the end of my trip, we were able to get that border crossing reopened. Look, we've gone from almost nothing going in to by the time I left nearly 1,000 trucks a day. We're going in, screened and acceptable by the Israelis so that it's not smuggling in, all the things that Hamas used to build all of these tunnels. I mean, we can't forget who started all of this. and the miles and miles and miles of concrete and generators and fuel that they could have used to improve Gaza, they used to build the most nefarious incredible tunnel network, I think the world has seen ever, and that the Israelis are still working to destroy.
Starting point is 01:43:15 So it's a challenge, and I think we all have to appreciate that President Trump has taken this on. It would have just said, you know, you guys work it out. But ultimately, what it will lead to is an expansion of the Abraham Accords. Do you think it would have been a bad thing? And that will lead to broader stability and so that finally we can, you know. What do you think would have happened if we wouldn't have interjected ourselves into that? I think I know the hostages would either still be there. or no longer be alive. Remember, we had a number of Americans pulled out. Israel will be bogged down
Starting point is 01:44:02 in the most vicious urban warfare. There will be no expansion of the Abraham Accords. And Iran would have the opportunity to reassert itself in the most nefarious of ways. So it's only with America, American leadership and really only with this president. So look, look where we were under Biden. I mean, the whole world was on fire and continuing to spread and to get worse. Look what happened under the Obama administration when he just completely walked away with no plan. You had attacks all over Europe and attacks here in the United States with ISIS expanding and growing, a caliphate the size of Indiana with an economy the size of Austria. So I just don't think we can afford to ignore.
Starting point is 01:44:53 the problem and wish it away. It's just how do we get it to a place that, you know, we can focus on, as the president's also doing on our own hemisphere, we have all of the energy, food supply, critical minerals that we need in the Western Hemisphere. We just have to pay attention to it. And he is from the Arctic to our own border to South America and Central America. We have to continue to focus on the Pacific on what I think is the greatest threat this country has ever faced, which is the Chinese Communist Party. Only the president can uniquely work with them and get this to a place that's workable.
Starting point is 01:45:37 But if the Middle East is constantly on fire, I don't think it could be ignored. The president is putting this on a trajectory with this peace plan. that we can have an expansion of the Abraham Accords and get this to a much more stable place. You guys know the performance in work and in life starts with sleep. For a long time, I focused on everything except the most important part of recovery, my bed. My old badgers was terrible. I was waking up sore, overheating, and not getting real restorative sleep. So I made the switch to Helix sleep, and the difference has been immediate.
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Starting point is 01:47:54 For Patreon exclusives, you're going to get epic range days with me and damn near every guest that's come in the studio. You're also going to get behind the scenes content and guest updates. You're going to get first dibs on new merch drops and limited edition items that will never be sold again. Plus, exclusive offers from our partners you won't find anywhere else. So subscribe to the Vigilance Elite Newsletter right now. I'm just going to ask a couple questions. Yeah, it's okay. And, you know, I mean, when we talk about, and I don't know the money. I don't, I just, I know we sent another, what, 60, was it 60 billion to Israel a couple week ago maybe or so?
Starting point is 01:48:39 No. Okay, whatever. Throw all the fucking numbers out. We spend a shit ton of money in Ukraine. We've sent a shit ton of money on Israel. their own Gaza conflict. No longer spending money on Ukraine. You know what I mean, though.
Starting point is 01:48:51 Like, if you take all the aid that we have sent all over the fucking globe, and I'm not talking about this administration, the last one, the one before, I'm just talking in general, right? We have, we have Chicago fucking disaster, San Francisco, disaster, New York, disaster, Detroit, disaster, St. Louis, disaster. North Carolina, East Tennessee from the hurricane, fucking disaster. I mean, lots and lots and lots of American cities are damn near fucking destroyed. And we are sending $60 billion here, $100 billion there, a billion here. I mean, all over the place.
Starting point is 01:49:38 And we've been doing this strategy for fucking ever. Why aren't we taking, and maybe I don't know why we have. aren't. But why aren't we taking the 60 billion here and the 100 billion there? And why are we not taking all that aid and going, you know what, fuck you, I'm going to take the 60 billion and I'm going to dump it into Chicago. That doesn't mean free phones and free food and free everything for Chicago, but that means I'm going to, I'm going to get the fucking, I'm going to build up the police, I'm going to build up the sheriff's apartments, I'm going to build all this shit up.
Starting point is 01:50:13 Oh, look. You know, I mean, I'm going to fix the education system and we're going to go city by city by city. We're going to go and we're going to invest $60 billion in our southern border because if we're going to sit here and say, we need, we need X country to go and kill all the Islamic terrorists for us, okay, great, we've been doing that method for a while. We were over there for fucking 20 years ourselves doing this shit, you know, but. What we haven't done is dump all of that into our border.
Starting point is 01:50:46 We haven't dumped that into our border patrol. We haven't dumped that into our police departments. We haven't dumped that into our, just our infrastructure. Sure. Our infrastructure. We have not dumped that into our infrastructure. Under this president, we are. First he started, first thing you have to have, which you know, I mean, security is the oxygen.
Starting point is 01:51:07 Commerce, everything else needs to breathe. started with D.C. our own nation's capital. And the National Guard there, you've seen from carjackings to robberies to murders drop dramatically just by the presence of security. You've got Janine Piro and actually prosecuting people that commit crimes and keep him in jail. You saw what he's done in L.A. You saw what he's trying to do in other cities to establish a modicum of security first. A hundred, and 50 billion dollars. That's almost the entire budget of the entire United States Army in the big beautiful bill to go to our border, to go to CBP, to ICE and others. And you've seen encounters in our borders, which we were told it was impossible, go from over 12 million people coming in, unvetted, to now virtually zero.
Starting point is 01:52:06 You have down in Venezuela, you have the Iranians, the Russians, the Chinese, massive amounts of trafficking, an individual that is the head of an international cartel that's now under a hell of a lot of pressure from this administration. So I do, so I would argue that exactly what you just laid out, which is an America first policy, this administration has done and I'm proud to have been a part of it. And then separately, what is that abroad? It's American leadership, but it's also burdened. sharing. No, I mean, I was there at NATO ministerial after NATO ministerial. I told you about the
Starting point is 01:52:47 fact that their soldiers were there with their lives on the line in Afghanistan, but their governments were tying their hand. And at these NATO ministerials where I think seven countries at the start of the first Trump term were meeting their bare minimum 2%. Now second term, he's got them all signing up to five percent of their GDP to contribute to their own. militaries. Oh, by the way, we're not providing any more money to Ukraine. The Europeans are buying the hardware from us, creating jobs from us, also reinvigorating our industrial base, and they're paying for the defense of themselves. And then, you know, where does the UN fit on that? Look, first of all, we're doging it. We're cleaning it up. I already have a commitment from the
Starting point is 01:53:39 U.N. Secretary General to cut 2,600 U.N. bureaucrats. These are international bureaucrats. We pay for a fourth of everything. They do 2,600 gone, 25% of global peacekeepers gone. Overall, 18% budget cut. First, real cut they've seen in their history. I've only been there a few months. We're working on it. This is all because they see what's coming with President Trump. But here's the other side of them. that. On the, you know, why don't we just, why does President Trump say, look, it has potential, help it find its potential rather than just get completely out? There needs to be one place in the world. If he's the peace president, we take a diplomacy first approach, which we should,
Starting point is 01:54:26 backed by the big stick of a rebuilt military, there's got to be one place in the world where everybody comes together to talk. I want that to be here in the United States. And if we didn't invent it, somebody would reinvent it, and I don't want it in Beijing or EU or somewhere else. Every year, every world leader comes to New York to try to hash things out. That's one. And then number two, burden sharing is a key part of America First principles. So, for example, talk about cartels. Haiti has been completely overrun by gangs right off of Florida shores.
Starting point is 01:55:02 They are moving people, guns, drugs, fentanyl, you name it. working with the cartels in Venezuela and Colombia, over into Europe, the United States, what have you, much less if we have a migration crisis because the country is collapsing onto our shores. Under the last administration, they spent over a billion dollars trying to take care of it ourselves. Now we've shifted that to the UN. You're going to have other countries coming in and we pay a quarter of that.
Starting point is 01:55:29 I don't think we can just completely ignore it and wait until it's a total crisis. But we're now sharing the burden. Others are taking that on. Same thing in Gaza, like I described. I don't want U.S. boots there. We talk about the problem with having the Israelis go back to war like it was, at least. So there's a burden-sharing aspect to that that I think is important. And then finally, this is the piece that I'm only fully coming to appreciate.
Starting point is 01:55:57 There's all of these international bodies that kind of govern global commerce. everything from international shipping to the seabed, the, you know, the ocean bottoms, which, by the way, President signed an executive order to begin mining critical minerals out of that. How is that all regulated to space, to telecommunications, to international civil aviation? If we just walk away 193 other countries, Europeans, Chinese, Russians are all calling the shots. I want us calling shots. We have to get in there and block and tackle. We talked at breakfast a recent win. The International Maritime Organization was on the verge of putting in place a carbon tax on global shipping.
Starting point is 01:56:48 Yeah. What the fuck is that? What? Who the fuck would we even pay that tax to? Well, it would be levied on shipping companies that basically had fossil-fueled ships. as a way to reduce the carbon footprint and to force them in, kind of like what they've tried to do with EVs, with cars. Here's the problem.
Starting point is 01:57:11 It would have passed on an estimated billion dollars a month onto consumers, would have created a slush fund for the UN, would have pushed ships towards biofuels that the EU subsidizing, and that only Chinese shipyards could transform, right? And so we got, I mean, Secretary Rubio was engaged, our Secretary of Energy, Wright, Duffy, the president got involved. They called us diplomatic gangsters, but we got in there and fought the good fight and defeated it. Mike, before we... So I guess my point is, is the president has charged us with cleaning it up, but also with the burden sharing and the diplomacy aspects of working in line with our,
Starting point is 01:58:01 with our interests before we go into everything we're going to we're going to talk about at the u.n i just one more thing on the venezuela stuff it's been mexico mexico mexico cartel cart like all this cartel shit coming out of mexico china sent it in the precursors to fentanyl mexico to the mexican cartels i'm not saying we shouldn't be in venezuela but why are we not in Mexico because it's been Mexico, Mexico, Mexico, Mexico, Mexico. Now we're fucking around to Venezuela. Mexico's on our border. We've been talking about. Well, we're pressure in the hell. I mean, the Mexican government sent back several dozen major leaders of cartels that they had refused for years and definitely under the last administration, they extradited all of them
Starting point is 01:58:50 into our court system. That was a huge win from just a few months ago. The Mexican government put 10,000 of their own guardsmen onto their side of our northern border and they're sending security forces to their southern border, which President Trump had them, you know, worked with them to do his first term, Biden let it go. Now that's back again. I think the bigger piece, and when I was in Congress, I pushed for us to be able to go on offense against these cartels. You know, I tell people this all the time, back in the 90s, the FBI was running around the world trying to arrest Osama bin Laden and remember that? I mean, in Sudan and other places and Al-Qaeda lieutenants and oftentimes didn't because it wouldn't stand up in court. They viewed it as a law enforcement problem. After 9-11, we saw it squarely for what it is, a national security problem. We have to move in the same direction with these cartels. They are killing Americans.
Starting point is 01:59:55 They are attacking our inner cities. They are poisoning more people than we lost in a year more people than we lost in 10 years of Vietnam. This is a national security threat. And we have to treat it as such. And these cartels aren't like, you know, I don't know, your mafia groups back in the 60s of organized crime. They are armed to the teeth. They're armies. They are many armies, and they control whole swaths of Mexico, and they have a state
Starting point is 02:00:24 backer in Venezuela. So that's the kind of the mental shift. I just, you know, the media doesn't want to talk about that this administration has brought Christy Noem, Homeland Security, Stephen Miller in the White House, the president, of course, vice president. And that's squarely in America first. But I just pushed back. It's Mexico, too.
Starting point is 02:00:45 I think Venezuela is getting all the media, but it's Mexico too. Okay. Okay. All right, moving into the UN. So it's just been a question on my mind. And from the D.C. swamp to the international swamp up in New York. So the UN, I mean, what is the UN's purpose? What is its purpose supposed to be? And where are they getting off the rails? It was established post-World War II by basically the victors, led by the United States, for the victors of World War II. two, to prevent another World War, certainly to prevent World War III with nukes. And I think in that sense, looking through the Cold War, it was largely successful. Unfortunately, since then, much like many of our own federal agencies, it's now trying to do everything for everybody, 80 years of bureaucratic bloat, focused on all this nonsense.
Starting point is 02:01:45 I mean, Sean, there's seven agencies, seven. Major agencies with massive budgets focused on climate. So sit aside the whole debate on climate. You don't need seven. You arguably don't, you know, get it down to one. And then, oh, by the way, there, let's talk about energy, independence, all of the above solutions and the right things. But so just cutting this massive bureaucracy down is first and foremost. And I just laid out to you step one.
Starting point is 02:02:15 How is the UN broken down? Who controls it? So it has, think of it as kind of, you know, like a legislature in the sense it has a general assembly. 193 countries participate. Think of that. It's a rough analogy, but kind of like the house, the bigger body, smaller body, the UN Security Council. That has the five permanent members, UK, U.S., China, Russia, France. Right?
Starting point is 02:02:45 We all have a veto. And then you get elected members. that rotate on and off 10 other elected members. What the UN Security Council passes is binding international law. And then it has a Secretary General that's kind of the administrative head that's over the peacekeeping forces and the huge humanitarian agencies. But it's also got a lot of these independent agencies that you've heard of, like World Food Program, UNICEF that focuses on children.
Starting point is 02:03:11 And then the IEA focused on the International Atomic Energy Agency and others. Right? World Trade Organization. Keep going down the list. Again, there is a body that governs from space to telecommunications to, I mean, there's an international civil aviation organization under the UN. Well, I want pilots as I fly around the world, international travel, to all speak English. The air traffic controllers to be trained up to a certain standard, the mechanics to be trained up to a certain standard. So I just work. with Secretary Rollins, the Secretary of Agriculture, because as our farmers export food, the Europeans and others through these international agencies are trying to put all of these crazy regulations on it. So just as we're deregulating in D.C., I've got a mandate and mission from the president to deregulate, get out of the way for American businesses and industries in these international organizations. I mean, the Chinese and others are in there, over-regulate AI. We're making sure they stay out of the way so our entrepreneurs can win
Starting point is 02:04:23 that race, right? But my argument is we have to be in there and block and tackle, like I told you on that international shipping vote. If we walk away, they're going to do it without us. So there's 193 countries in the airline. There's more. So the UN is this international, kind of like the Vatican is in Rome. It's this international entity in New York. That's where we established it post-World War II. And all of these countries have embassies to the UN in New York. There's actually more in New York than there are in Washington, D.C., because there's countries we don't have relationships with, like Iran, North Korea, Venezuela, Cuba, and others that by treaty can be in the UN, but not in Washington. The other interesting thing about it is New York, because of that
Starting point is 02:05:11 dynamic is one of the most active spy versus spy cities like Vienna, where a lot of these other organizations are in the world. Because you've got all these other players there. Yeah. How was it funded? So everybody contributes, but we contribute the most. It's us number one, China number two, now with the world's second largest economy and then and then on down the list we're at we contribute 25 percent correct but we are we have withheld that funding until we see the reforms that that we want to see so that conversation and negotiations ongoing interesting and so how is the we need to see salary reform bureaucrat reform we see all kinds of things before they get another do we have more poll than everybody else since we put in 25% yeah we not always we should one of
Starting point is 02:06:15 the flaws is that everybody gets an equal vote in the general assembly where we have more poll than anybody else is in the security council where we have a veto something's going against our interests then we'll veto it but you know again things like getting the UN to get Haiti under control. We just got that through. Why did we go to them for Gaza? Well, a lot of these countries that are willing to contribute forces so that we don't, or others don't have to, they need the stamp of international law for their own domestic reasons to be able to do that. So in order to get that the presence plan now endorsed by the international community unanimously, was it was a big deal. And there's other, you know, there's other crises around the world that we'd rather them
Starting point is 02:07:11 deal with than us. How are you, I mean, how is it introducing reform into the UN? I would imagine that. I mean, it's, oh, here comes the new ambassador. How's that? Look, well, first of all, a number of administrations haven't even really tried. we're determined to do it. And the president's going to use an eye on his behalf, whatever leverage we have to. I, you know, as a former member of Congress, standing before, you know, a town hall of firemen, nurses, doctors, lawyers, everyday Americans need to be able to look them straight in the eye and say, we're going to get this organization to work for us. And look, I know rightly, a lot of skepticism, look where the president took NATO since the beginning of his first term back to real, you know, they're at least on a pathway to burden sharing a real partnership. I think what he's done with NATO and what we've done with NATO, we can do with the U.N. in the second term.
Starting point is 02:08:20 What would happen if we don't see the reform? If we don't see the reform, we don't pay. Do you, will we leave the U.N.? That's up to the president. That's ultimately up to the president. The president just gave in his speech at the UN General Assembly. He said, look, we need to get back to basics. We need to get back focused on stopping wars, maintaining the peace, preventing wars, and stop all of this gender, climate, all of this other nonsense.
Starting point is 02:08:52 Same conversation we're having in Washington, D.C., but we're having it with the world, especially if we're going to be the biggest bill payer. So back to basics, fight for American industry in these international bodies. And then, you know, it can provide a platform for issues that we really care about. I did not have on my dance card man that I was going to have Nikki Minaj at the UN talking about the persecution of Christians, mostly in Nigeria, but all over the world. It's just, I don't know, quarter billion followers. I mean, that's incredibly powerful. So as much as it needs to be cleaned up, it does have that 80 years of kind of a brand, it's a platform for people to do that. We want to focus on human trafficking.
Starting point is 02:09:43 We want to focus on a number of things, anti-Semitism and others that are righteous, worthy causes that the administration cares about and that this can be a platform to touch the global community. but man i told you tribes of afghanistan are easier some days i mean it's it's tough yeah it's tough that it is i'll bet it is i mean do you have any what i don't have a whole lot of insight into you know how this all works within the u.n so i mean i'm the way you're kind of describing it almost sounds like congress for the world yeah you know and So what I want to ask is, you know, when you were in Congress, I'm sure you had allies, you know, people that you were working with to get stuff pushed through. Do you have anybody within the UN? Do you have other ambassadors from other countries that you consider to be friendly, that you have a common agenda, a common goal? Yeah, look. I mean, this, Sean, this is where kind of so many of the lessons being a Green Beret comes in, right?
Starting point is 02:10:52 You know, I mean, we're dropped off in the middle of nowhere, in the middle of a tribe or allied military, half of them soon kill us than they would, the bad guys. And it's through relationships. It's through influence. It's by with and through. It's building coalitions. It's negotiation, right? It's all of those bringing all of those skill sets. Oftentimes in special forces, we can't make that partner.
Starting point is 02:11:22 military or that tribe or whomever, guerrilla force do exactly what we want to do. But we're the United States of America. We come with that moral authority. We come with that leadership. We come with the, you know, in the case of the horse soldiers, the backing in the United States Air Force and the leverage that comes through with that. So it's bringing all of those tools. I mean, I'm another, right? Yeah. I'm, I'm sure. You know, who do I work with Argentina. I work with Italy. Of course, with with the United Kingdom. You know, we have a lot of like-minded leaders, a lot of, you know, with the Gulf states now, that Gaza resolution, we had all of the same countries that were with the Abraham Accords, plus the ones the President Trump had developed these relationships with, come with us publicly that led to the Palestinians that kept the Israelis comfortable, and then we had to tell the Europeans, you can't be more Catholic than the Pope here. You can't care about the Palestinian issue more. than the Palestinians and Arabs and Egyptians, everybody that's right there dealing with it.
Starting point is 02:12:27 And we got everybody on board. But it was a lot of sleepless nights, a lot of work. I mean, when you're talking about, you know, fighting that carbon tax, wokeism, all this kind of stuff. And what goes through my mind is, I just don't see any other countries. fighting against that well we end up winning the vote right on that carbon tax but we had to lead uh we had to give a little bit of you're going to work with us or else uh we had to you know we had to lean in and use the leverage that the united states has uh and that president trump
Starting point is 02:13:15 uniquely does and there's no other you know the the head of nato and our first meeting in the Oval Office said, only you could get the Russians and Ukrainians could get Zelensky and Putin on the phone from where they're annihilating to each other to now at least we're talking. We're not there yet. And I don't want to get ahead of the president in these negotiations or his team. But that's only the United States. And I'm convinced only this president could have gotten us this floor. You know, earlier you had mentioned that you think that the one, the threat that you're most concerned about is the CCP. Why is that? Not the amazing, wonderful Chinese people, Chinese culture. But we have never faced an adversary, not the Soviet Union, not Germany, Japan, never faced an adversary with rival economic might that openly talks about surpassing us technologically.
Starting point is 02:14:22 That is building ships at a rate of three to five to one. You could fit every shipyard in the United States inside China's one largest shipyard. You know, we have one to two percent of shipbuilding. Yeah, for China is a 50 percent. And the rest is South Korea and Japan, right? That is increasingly dominating, not dominating, but challenging us in space. intends to put a station on the moon the ultimate high ground by the end of this decade thank god for jared isaac men and the renewed push uh i had the northern i touched cape canaveral
Starting point is 02:15:05 in my old congressional district and you know in 2018 the chinese launched more into space than us and the rest of the world combined by last year spacex was launching more than the rest of the world can buy. That's American ingenuity, right, at its best. So no other adversary has ever had the ability to challenge us in all of those domains. Add cyber to that. And has such an aggressive influence operation here at home. In academia, through Confucius Institutes, many of these.
Starting point is 02:15:50 Chinese students are wonderful young people, but if their family's threatened at home, they don't have a lot of choice. And it's a challenge unlike any we've ever faced. Now, ultimately, I'm convinced we will prevail. It's a real competition. How close is it? ultimate we will prevail we always have what's the biggest thing in the way i'll tell you well right now and a number of us and the president is laser focused on this supply chain supply chain if there was any lesson from covid was that seemingly inexpensive things that cost pennies like mask gowns and gloves can become a national security risk i'll never forget in 2019, the Pentagon, I was on the relevant committee in the Armed Services Committee, comes to us kind of in a panic about ammunition, the cost of ammunition and they need
Starting point is 02:17:01 more money and we're all shooters. We know how expensive a bullet is these days and need more money, need more this. We dug into it and it turns out the biggest missing piece was an element called antimony. There was formerly five mines in Idaho and Utah. They'd all been shut down by over-regulation, environmental regulation, investors, and the owners had walked away, three countries in the world that mine and refine antimony,
Starting point is 02:17:29 Tajikistan, Russia, China. Go back to the Pentagon. Like, this is a crisis. What are you going to do about it? This was actually, I think by this time, I was 2021, 2022. And they said, oh, no, well, we're demarshing. meaning standing a strongly worded letter on, you know,
Starting point is 02:17:48 why these countries have withheld shipments from us. You kidding me? So like-minded group, mainly veterans, we forced the Pentagon to create a stockpile at least. So we have some emergency supply until what we see now with Secretary Bergram and Wright and the president and others are revitalizing our mining and refining industry. And if it can't happen here fast enough, at least it's happened with allied countries, seabed and other places, right? So supply chains across the board, we have to be self-sufficient. I mean, the arsenal of democracy has to be there and present.
Starting point is 02:18:30 It's what President Trump so uniquely realizes the big stick is in our military. The big stick is the strength of our economy and our supply chains and our resilience. And, you know, it's taken all kinds of measures to revital. that. And I have to, you know, my small piece of this is blocking and tackling in these international organizations. What do you think your biggest challenge is going to be as ambassador to the UN as far as the reform goes? Well, it's a challenge, but it's an opportunity is we'll have a new secretary general. So kind of, you know, the administrative head of it all elected this year. again China Russia Europeans we all have a veto so it has to be somebody that we come to a consensus on
Starting point is 02:19:15 but this needs to be has to be somebody that is reform minded we have to save this institution from itself it's just sinking under its own bureaucratic weight and it should be the secretary general it should be the UN that's solving things like Cambodia Thailand and India Pakistan and Azerbaijan, Armenia. They should be in there. Yeah, fine. President Trump has stepped in as the peace president. I think he'll get the Nobel Peace Prize for it. I'm now getting the UN in a supporting role, but with the next Secretary General, they should be in a leading role. Again, back to basics, not solving all this, trying to solve all this other woke nonsense. Yeah. Yeah. Well, Mike, is there anything we didn't cover that you want to cover?
Starting point is 02:20:04 Well, I would be remiss if I didn't just very publicly thank my amazing wife. She is herself a combat veteran, both Afghanistan and Iraq, a family of immigrants. She was also established the State Department's hostage negotiation office, one of the first hostage envoys and was President Trump's Homeland Advisor. in his first term. So, man, you know, as husbands, like, we try, but we never win an argument. Like, I really never, ever win an argument. And, oh, by the way, she's dropped it gorgeous.
Starting point is 02:20:46 So, you know, I say that because my wife's amazing and my family's amazing, but I say that as a Christian. But I also say that as a veteran in the sense that, like, it's the families that bear the burden of service. you know, we're out there being commandos or diplomats or whatever, you know, serving this amazing countries in ways that are incredible. The family is like, we don't come home, we come home missing limbs, or we come home not right up here anymore, right? So I just have for both the Gold Star community and all the families out there,
Starting point is 02:21:31 whether you're in the intelligence community, diplomatic service, military, whatever, just a deep, deep appreciation. And one last thing, we don't want to go too long. I think my most amazing moment with President Trump, and I talked about this in my speech at the Republican National Convention, was with the 13 Gold Star families of Abbey Gate. These families were, it's bad enough, the loss, and how the loss happened. but they literally couldn't get an audience with the previous commander-in-chief with Biden. They were so distraught. And they'd come to us in Congress.
Starting point is 02:22:10 And this is what I love about him. I said, let me give him a call. Call him. He said, you know, Michael, get him up here. Tonight? Tonight. And so we get him up to Bedminster. The scheduler calls me and, you know, a little bit.
Starting point is 02:22:29 distraught and says, all right, we can, we had a lot going on. We can carve out an hour. He ended up spending the entire night with him. He shook every one of his hand, heard this stories, talked about their loved ones, then invites him up to dinner. Sean, by the end of the night, he had one of the couples who was having a really hard time with it all, up dancing. The moms were laughing. Oh, that's awesome. A couple of the moms came up to me and Julia. My wife. wife afterwards and said, this is the best thing that has happened to me since I lost my son. So I just say that in a sense, that's a side no one ever sees that I, you know, deeply appreciate.
Starting point is 02:23:09 And I think your viewers would appreciate it to you. Yeah. Thank you, Mike. Yeah, man. Best love to you. I'll take prayer. No matter where you're watching Sean Ryan Show from, if you get anything out of this, please like, comment, subscribe, and most importantly, share this everywhere you possibly can. And if you're feeling extra generous, please leave us review on Apple and Spotify podcasts.

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