The Team House - 1000+ Missions with the 75th Ranger Regiment | Nicholas Moore (throwback episode)

Episode Date: November 19, 2025

original air date - 9/30/22This episode dives deep into the combat career of Ranger Nicholas Moore, tracing his journey from early deployments in Afghanistan and Iraq to some of the most significant o...perations of the post-9/11 era. He recounts the inside story of Operation Red Wings, the hunt for Marcus Luttrell, the Extortion 17 shootdown, and the brutal 2011 gunfight where he was wounded. Moore offers a raw, detailed look at leadership, loss, and what sustained the Rangers through two decades of continuous war.Grab Nick's book here:https://www.amazon.com/Run-Sound-Guns-American-Afghanistan/dp/1472827090Help Support the show here:https://www.patreon.com/TheTeamHouse00:00 – Start & Origin story 07:05 – In Ranger School on 9/1111:05 – First Afghanistan Deployment & Early Missions18:05 – Iraq Invasion & the Jessica Lynch Rescue41:05 – Operation Red Wings: Turbine 33 Shot Down52:10 – All-Night Climb Toward the Crash Site57:44 – Rangers Find Marcus Luttrell in the Village1:01:14 – Recovering the Fallen SEALs on the Mountainside1:22:23 – Extortion 17: Planning, Shootdown, and Ranger Response1:39:07 – Securing the Crash Site & Recovering All 38 Fallen1:55:10 – The 2011 Gunfight Where Nicholas Moore Was Wounded2:12:40 – Finishing His Career & Leaving the RegimentBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-team-house--5960890/support.

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 The Team House with your host, Jack Murphy and David Park. Hey, guys, welcome to episode 165 of The Team House. We're here tonight with Nicholas Moore. He is the author of Run to the Sound of Guns. He served in 2nd Ranger Battalion from the ranks of Private to platoon sergeant, over 1,000 missions and 13 combat deployments where he was wounded. He was involved in some very significant operations from Jessica Lynch to extortion. version 17 to Operation Red Wings, the Recovery, to numerous other things that we'll get into tonight.
Starting point is 00:00:42 So, Nicholas, thank you for joining us. Oh, thanks for having me. Absolutely, dude. Really appreciate you taking some of your Friday to speak with us. No worries. So let's start off, man. We'll start at the beginning, the beginning of the story. If you could tell us a little bit about sort of where you grew up and why you ended up in the military and why in Ranger Battalion.
Starting point is 00:01:06 So I grew up in Newton, Kansas, and just trying to figure out what to do. And I thought, you know, college sucks. But if I joined the Army and I want to go to school and, you know, I serve, then I can don't have to take a student loan and I can go and it's all good. And, you know, some of us do it and end up going to school and some of us don't. And we just end up staying in the military. But the whole thing was, you know, I had a recruiter. that just based on the lifestyle that we had, you know, playing sports and being active and outdoor activities, hunting fish and all that stuff, he goes, man, you'll, you guys love the army, but you'll never be happy if you don't pursue the Ranger Regiment.
Starting point is 00:01:53 And so, you know, that was kind of, well, what's that? And, you know, so you do a little bit of research. And you're like, okay, well, that's definitely what I want to do. And so, you know, you go do it. and, you know, there's the old mantra that goes with it, you know, as you continue to be in the Ranger Regiment, what have you done for the Ranger Regiment today? So, you know, there's always that little aspect, you know, as your career progresses through, you know, it's always trying to better, you know, the organization as a whole. Yeah. Did you do, was any of your family in the military? Was it
Starting point is 00:02:26 something that you had been exposed to earlier than that? Or like, or is it just kind of, it seemed pragmatic at the time. No. My grandfather's both, both my grandfather served in World War II. And then, you know, we've had, you know, family members in the military, but mostly it's always been in the Navy. And I had an aunt who served in the Air Force back in the late 70s, I think. And, you know, but nobody really in the Army except for my grandfather's brothers.
Starting point is 00:02:57 You know, they were in the Army in World War II. But, you know, it's, we're basically. basically a Navy family and then me and my brother decided we were both going to join the army and be Rangers and, you know, so it was fun, you know, that part of it. My grandpa didn't talk to me for like three weeks because he was mad. Really? We didn't join the Navy. Okay. So you and your brother, did you like have the same like entry date into the army? I mean, was it that close? Yeah, we're identical twins. So we graduated school and went through basic training. Airborne School, Rip, and then got stationed together.
Starting point is 00:03:36 So we did it all together all the way until, I think, 04, 05. And then he went down to, his wife got restationed to Martin Army at Fort Benning. And so he went down to be a RIP instructor. And that's kind of where our careers split apart. I stayed at second, and then he moved down to third for a while. And then, you know, went to did some time. in the big army and finished his career as an ROTC instructor at the university of Kansas. So what at that time, just to hit it up a little bit, going through basic training, airborne
Starting point is 00:04:14 school, what was the RIP experience like? But that was 1999 pre-9-11 before the war kicked off. What was it like going through RIP during that time frame? You know, it's, I don't know if it's better or worse because now I think about it and just like, God, would I want to sit and do that for eight weeks? The whole raft thing. Yeah, the whole rasp thing. It's like, wow.
Starting point is 00:04:41 No, but I had a lot of fun. There was really a lot of my Ranger experiences that I didn't like. You know, some of them good, some of them bad, but they're all memories. And, you know, just kind of fun. You know, it's always that mental challenge through some of the things, you know, is can I make it to the end? And, you know, when you do, you're, you're, a better human for it and you're a better ranger all the way around and you have you know a starting
Starting point is 00:05:06 point to learn what suck is yeah so you get out of rip and you go to the best company in the best battalion uh yeah right bco 275 yeah right yeah bko 275 yeah right yeah bco 27 went to first platoon my brother went to third and um so that was always fun i mean it was always fun i mean it was always, you know, all the way up until we both got our tabs, you know, it was just, you know, who's got the better twin? And they were always, you know, putting us, putting us against each other. And so it was, you know, nothing changed from school or, you know, sports. And so it's just, you know, so 275, something, something different between 275 and in 375 and I believe 175 is you guys all have platoon names. And 375, not every platoon, but yeah. In 375, I think my platoon was only
Starting point is 00:06:01 one that had a name. But I'd like to hear what your platoon name was and how it got that name. Well, one Bravo, it was eventually, it became the C-Bass. Okay. And it was just, you know, it was at the same, right, we, they tagged it right at, you know, the Afghanistan was just cranking off and Austin Powers had just come out. And it was, you know, our P.L was calling us a bunch of mutant sea bass. And so it just kind of stuck. And so that was that. And, you know, I was in one Bravo till I, until I, in the middle of 03, and then I went over to three Charlie and stayed there till 08. So you, you actually were in Ranger's school during 9-11, right?
Starting point is 00:06:54 Yeah. So how did that be done for you? Yeah. You know, it's kind of one of those things, you know, sometimes you, you're like, like, no, this can't really be happening. And we just thought it was some kind of weird, you know, false motivational thing that our eyes were doing. We weren't, you know, nobody was really sure if it was something that everybody was,
Starting point is 00:07:17 you know, accustomed to in every class that, you know, oh, you got to hurry up because, you know, the country's going to war and all this stuff. But what kind of struck at home was, you know, when they came out and they asked people if they had family that worked at the World Trade Centers. and you kind of get the weird look like, why are you asking that? And then, you know, 45 minutes or so later, you know, hey, does anybody have parents that work at Pentagon? And, you know, everybody's like, well, why would I raise my hand?
Starting point is 00:07:43 I don't want to get singled out for something. And, you know, then they're kind of like, hey, no, this is, you know, serious. And they realized that we weren't believing them. And so they kind of called a couple of guys to go forward and just kind of see the newsfeed on a TV and for about five minutes. And then kind of came back and said, hey, they're not. they're not lying. It's,
Starting point is 00:08:01 this is real. And so we had one guy who raised his hand and say, yeah, my dad works at the Pentagon and, you know, they said, well, you need to call him.
Starting point is 00:08:11 And so that really messed with him. It was a kid out of 375. And luckily his dad was out of the office. I think he was at Fort Lee, Virginia that day. But he, you know, when he came back to work on the 12th,
Starting point is 00:08:24 he didn't have an office. Holy shit. Yeah. And then how much, So how far into Ranger School were you and how much longer did you have to go? And how did that affect Ranger School? Well, you know, we're basically day two. Okay.
Starting point is 00:08:43 Oh, wow. Oh, wow. So, you know, we've just done the PT test in that morning. We just finished the five-mile run. And so it was interesting because you always hear the stories of guys, you know, you've got to get, you know, 70% of your patrols you got to pass. Well, I mean, at that point, they were, you know, the RIs knew the writing on the wall.
Starting point is 00:09:06 And so the whole point was to get the guys back to the units as fast as possible. So you pass one patrol and you never got another one. Yeah. So, you know, and then it became guys that failed patrols, you know, was putting the right guys in positions to help them get the next patrol to pass so that they could go on to the next phase so that guys aren't stuck, you know, playing the,
Starting point is 00:09:32 how many months can I be in Ranger school game? Right. And graduate and then get back to your units because we got to go do business. Right. Yeah. Did you have any of those guys in when you were, when you were doing a Jack where they just assigned like four,
Starting point is 00:09:48 four bat guys to him and just say, he's going to pass this patrol. So you basically don't let him make any decisions. I probably was that guy going through his, like as an E2 had been in battalion for like two months. I think I was that guy. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:10:06 No, but where they basically give you the reins and say, get this guy through this patrol. Right. You know, it's not the pick on people, but it's usually the young lieutenants that they're just still trying to get their feet underneath them as,
Starting point is 00:10:20 you know, what it's like to be a leader. And, and, you know, we've got, you know, guys from the Ranger Reds have been there 12,
Starting point is 00:10:26 18 months. You know, some guys that got hurt. you know, maybe 24 months of experience. And they kind of understand the game. So, you know, let's just turn them loose. Yeah. So you were, you were in Ranger School when the first actions, when Afghanistan kicked off, right?
Starting point is 00:10:44 Like, yeah, we were, yeah, we were just finishing up mountains when, when everything kicked off. And we were getting graded patrols and who was going to go to Florida. And it just happened to be the night that 375 jumped on Rhino. and the RIs wheeled the TV cart out and said, hey, check this out. And all the guys from 375 are crying and the guys from first and second are laughing. And the guys from third are like, why are you laughing? And it's not funny. We're not a part of this.
Starting point is 00:11:11 And it's like, well, guess what? Our battalions haven't gone yet. Yeah. Yeah. Were you worried that it was going to be like another. I'm going to miss the war. Yeah, it was going to be like Desert Storm. It was going to be over before you were out of Ranger School.
Starting point is 00:11:26 Yeah. there was a lot of us that were, you know, it was going to be the traditional like Renata, Panama, desert storm where it's going to be over as fast as it started. And, you know, you're going to miss it all. But, you know, when you start thinking about the amount of time that it was going to take to put everything over there, you know, and get it in place, it was just a matter of, you know,
Starting point is 00:11:50 when's it going to be our turn? And is there going to be anything left? Because a regiment's going to rotate everybody through at least once. Right. Right. So you graduate Ranger School. And how, how was your reception when you got back the second bat? What was going on at the time? Everybody just gotten back from Yakima. So it was kind of a, I got back like 24 hours before the battalion rolled back in from doing, you know, all the big fun stuff over in Yakima. And, you know, it was just kind of figuring out, you know, how the rotation was going to work. because, you know, 175 was just gearing up to go. And so we were trying to figure out what our training schedule was going to be and what was going to look like.
Starting point is 00:12:31 And then when was our window going to come to go and was there still going to be anything to do when we got there? Yeah. And then 20 years later, it's still going on. Yeah. Yeah. So when did you get the word that you guys were heading over and like, what was it like jocking up for that deployment, getting ready to go out the door?
Starting point is 00:12:51 We kind of got the word that we were still going to get to go. It's probably late November, December, you know, 175 is going to go, and then it's going to be our turn to go. And, you know, it might be the only deployment that we get in Afghanistan. But, you know, it's right as it stands right now. You know, we still had to go do rotor wing, bilats and all the training that, you know, was normally, you know, gearing up for all that stuff.
Starting point is 00:13:21 um so you know we did and then uh beko beko led the the push for second battalion because at that time it was um uh basically you know there was only the need for like basically one company um we were still sitting you know split between kandhawn bogram and that was about it and then um you know everybody realized that this was going to be the long fight and so then we started uh kind of pushing out and doing the expansion for the American footprint and setting up bases and all that stuff. And that's kind of what we ended up doing our first deployment. And then after we've been there for oh, I don't know, maybe a month or so, they rolled in with the rest of the battalion. So Aco and Siko came in and kind of helped expand the footprint and all the fun.
Starting point is 00:14:11 So what was it? You know, like post-haku Gar, post-hoku-gar and, you know, at Operation Anaconda, there really was nothing going on in Afghanistan. You know, it was basically, when you look at what was going on, you know, you hear about 175 in the Robert's Ridge and then 375 is jumping on rhino and doing all that stuff. You know, we're going over there thinking, you know, it's going to be game on. It's spring, summer, and everybody's going to be fighting. And that was, you know, complete opposite. You know, let's say we're just as much as we were trying to feel out, you know,
Starting point is 00:14:44 what was going on with Taliban. You know, they're kind of sitting back on the border and just watching, you know, how we're doing business. Yeah. So that first deployment was like pretty relatively quiet at the time. Yeah. I mean, we did one, there was one operation where, you know, they got it, the platoon got in a gunfight house on a 50 cal. So I didn't get to be, you know, on the ground for that one. But it was one engagement, last five seconds. And that was it. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:15:15 And the deployment was just setting up bases and driving around Afghanistan and Humvees. Oh, yeah. You mentioned, I forgot, you mentioned, you mentioned, you mentioned. mentioned in your book that you actually had a guide, a tourist guide in a ranger who had been a Russian in Afghanistan. Yeah, there was a kid in, well, not a kid, but, you know, there was a guy in Thurpleton that was, I believe he was Ukrainian, but, you know, it was part of the Soviet bloc at the time. And he was, you know, like 1819 and got conscripted into the Red Army. And, you know, he spent a year in Afghanistan in like 88, 89, right, when they were
Starting point is 00:15:52 shutting it down. But it was really cool because, you know, at the time, you know, he could tell you what everything was on, on Bogger and, you know, all the remnants of what was left. So that was, I mean, for a history lesson, that was kind of cool. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, it's pretty surreal. So, so that was sort of your, your first trip. It was just, you know, setting the footprint. There wasn't a lot of activity. What happened then after that, you went back and reset. and what was your kind of time between the deployments looking like at this point? You know, so we went back to reset and that was kind of when everybody was thinking that, you know, this is basically a wrap-up and, you know, we're not going to be involved in this anymore,
Starting point is 00:16:34 but, you know, all the battalion's got at least one deployment and, you know, 375 came back over and ripped us. And, you know, so when it came time, you know, throughout the year that it was, we were going to at least go one more time. it was, you know, Iraq was ramping up. And so it was like, okay, well, who's going to go to Afghanistan? And so Charlie Company got picked to go to Afghanistan. And the whole preface for them to go was to shut down the special ops, you know, footprint over there. And then kind of if things did crank off in Iraq, then they were going to join us over in Iraq.
Starting point is 00:17:10 And, you know, they ended up staying for six months. You know, they did their three-month deployment plus the Iraq and, you know, and stuff. So they got stuck in Afghanistan for six months. So let's just say Manning retention, the Charlie Company was terrible after everybody got home. Yeah. Yeah. So then you guys were working up towards the invasion of Iraq, right? Which was that was March of 2003?
Starting point is 00:17:36 So were you guys part of that initial invasion or did you get through shortly after it? We, the battalion was infilling, you know, shortly before everything cranked off. We didn't actually put wheels down, you know, over there until the night that it officially cranked off because we got a had a bird. We are bird broke in Germany. You know, it's always kind of one of those fun things that are, you know, riding in on the C-17. You got your gas mask strapped to your hip and you're wearing your mop suit. Right.
Starting point is 00:18:13 Right. So can you tell us a little bit about what a mop suit is for the people who might not be familiar with it? It's a chemical suit that you have to wear. And, you know, it's a charcoal-lined suit. And it's for gas and biological weapons and stuff that's going to help keep it off your skin.
Starting point is 00:18:32 And they're terrible to wear. Yeah. They're like hot in the, they're hot in the daylight and cold at night. Yeah. Yeah, they trap air. They're basically like sweats, like the plastic suits that you used to wear for wrestling or whatever. Like, they're not comfortable at all. No.
Starting point is 00:18:49 Yeah. So when you guys, because your bird got hung up in Germany, when you landed for the invasion, did you guys go to Saudi or did you go someplace else for since you were? No, we landed in Saudi. Okay. Yeah. So, you know, everywhere where the special office footprint was during Desert Storm was the same place that we went to and, you know, basically, basically unloaded. and then just got everything set.
Starting point is 00:19:20 And I think within a couple of days, we were running cross-border routes out in the west. Yeah. And so then what was that like for you, like moving from Saudi into Iraq? And what kind of vehicles were you guys in? And what were the last operation? We were running the soft-skinned, you know,
Starting point is 00:19:39 Humvee gun trucks. We'd skin the roofs off and taking the windows out, which was stupid. Because we caught one of the sandstorms right after it happened. and I know Thurpleton got caught out in it in the trucks and no windshields, and they're trying to hold MRE boxes up over their face to keep rocks from blowing in. And, you know, nobody can see anything. So they're stuck sitting out there in it until the sun comes up.
Starting point is 00:20:00 And then they can at least try and attempt to get back. And so it was interesting. You know, we had 550 cord from all the tents to the latrines and to the chow hall so the guys could follow the string and, you know, walk around in the brownout. Yeah. Yeah, those sandstorms were something else out there. And then, so how long was your trip to Iraq and, like, did anything particularly notable happen during your tour there? Not in the first part of it, you know, until everything came down for us to do the Jessica Lynch rescue.
Starting point is 00:20:41 And we had just rolled in off a 24-hour op to go tie in with 375 and help. them come back from H1, where they jumped in and then bring their vehicle convoys back. So we drove out, tied in with them, and then brought this like five-mile-long convoy back across the border. And then we were rolling in dog tired. And the commander comes out of his tent. And he's like, hey, back your stuff. We're leaving in three hours. And we're going to go do this.
Starting point is 00:21:06 And I was like, how, that's funny. But seriously, folks. Yeah. I'm this stupid E4. What do I know that the commander's not just, you know, not being a jerk and trying to get guys to have some kind of false motivation because you always, you know, get in, dog tired and throw down on the cot and start cleaning your rifle. And squalier comes back in.
Starting point is 00:21:31 He's like, no, pack your stuff because we're out of here. Yeah. And were you guys aware of Jessica Lynch of that whole situation at the time? Or was the mission? No, I mean, no, we hadn't really gotten any. I mean, we kind of got like a little brief of it. but the kind of the um the shit you know kind of the the the the all of the whole thing was like how in the heck does a maintenance company get ahead of the front line yeah you know it's like
Starting point is 00:21:58 the the unfathomable you know how does this happen it's you know we start kind of spitball in this whole thing and you start you know talking some of the maintenance units that are out there and they just you know at the time they weren't equipped with night vision at the time they're still driving, you know, blackout lights and the way that, you know, everybody has since World War II. It's just slow moving and trying to navigate. You know, only the combat arms units have night vision because that's the priority. Right.
Starting point is 00:22:27 So, you know, it was just kind of like, how does this even happen? Yeah. And so what was, what was the mission as it was brief to you guys? What was your role and what was the overall effort? We were going to set in as far as Bravo Company's part of it. We were going to infill on Marine Corps 46s on the west side of Nazaria, kind of in this flat, looked like a kind of a trash pit area on the west side of town, and then we were just going to run in a few blocks off the desert
Starting point is 00:22:59 and establish blocking positions around the hospital while 175, a company from 175 was going to skirt all the way around on the east and then come in from the north and then bringing the, you know, the big guns on the trucks and, um, just basically,
Starting point is 00:23:17 you know, lock it all down until we had gotten her out and gotten confirmation and recovery of, uh, everybody else that was off those trucks. And, uh, I was,
Starting point is 00:23:30 we were only on the ground for like three and a half hours and it was all done. Yeah. I mean, by the time the seals came in on the hospital and did the whole, uh, you know, recovery of her. We had just basically put the blocking positions on the ground. We hadn't even gotten them established yet as far as how fast that that whole thing happened.
Starting point is 00:23:48 It was a matter of just moments. Yeah. And because, you know, but it was fun. You know, it was fun to be a part of it. And, you know, like we were saying earlier, this is, you know, there's all these things. It's just another day at the office until you get later in life. And then you start talking to people about it. And then it's like, wow.
Starting point is 00:24:07 You know, it's kind of a historic, you know, event that we got to be a part of, you know, the first successful P.O.W rescue in over 40 years. Yeah. Yeah. And then what happened in terms of recovering the bodies? Were you guys part of that? No, that was 1-175 with, you know, their guys on the trucks, so that they recovered them, and then they ground ex-filled them out on their, on the Humvees. and so we just maintain blocking positions and stuff until
Starting point is 00:24:41 you know that they were done and they had ex-filled the trucks and then we pushed out for ex-fill on the 46es and you know got back on the on the air base there and Nazaria and you know high fives and handshakes and it was all good
Starting point is 00:24:55 and you know go find your friends in 175 and see how the everything went on their aspect of it when they rolled back in yeah and how I mean I can't imagine that that that that was well of course it wasn't pleasant but it was it was it pretty harrowing for them because those those bodies were in shallow graves right yeah yeah and it was uh you know they
Starting point is 00:25:20 they said it wasn't it wasn't pretty yeah yeah and i could only imagine you know yeah you know later seeing some of the things that i've seen you know later on it's just you know i it's not fun yeah Um, so was there anything else that happened, uh, during that trip to Iraq that was notable? We did, um, you know, Operation Reindeer, which was a, you know, the true, you know, the true Ranger mission smash everything, kill everyone, you know, destroy it all. And then, you know, come out high fiving and, and handshaking at the end. we had our first wounded in action on that on that deployment of team leader from second squad
Starting point is 00:26:08 got hit with an RPG and lost his lower left leg so you know um you other than that it was it was a it was a great traditional you know typical uh ranger training off you know do you Do you remember, like, I'm sorry, but do you remember many of the details of Operation Raneer in terms of like who you were after and sort of what, how it's going to go down? Yeah, so what it came down to was that there was a, a Cigant collection that had, you know, large size force was kind of out training in the, in the desert kind of northwest, Afghanistan, or, Iraq and it was just basically you know it was like 80 to 120 is what Intel was
Starting point is 00:27:08 putting on that it was and you know you could tell they were holding formations and they were doing training and things like that and so it was you know who could hit this first and you know this is at the big command level and this is you know what's been filtered down through the company commander at the time
Starting point is 00:27:26 was that it was in the 100 first sale or area of operation. And they were going to take like a week to plan it out. And that didn't make, you know, the powers that be happy. And so it kind of came into the special ops side. And, you know, we just said, well, we can hit it tomorrow. And so we, you know, just worked through our normal off cycle and planned it out,
Starting point is 00:27:51 rehearsed it. And, you know, it basically, other than Matt getting hurt, you know, it worked. it you know the same way it does in training um but even to that part you know we train you know casually play and all that stuff so it it just sucked that you know it would actually happen sure so i mean that was a pretty sizable force on that target yeah yeah it was um uh the i don't the exact count i don't remember exactly the number but you know it was over 80 So first and second came in on helos and third had launched basically about 10 hours before the half, the, the helo package launched. And they drove up on trucks.
Starting point is 00:28:41 They were going to do the backside blocking and set up the FARP for the little birds and all the stuff. And so then they, you know, after we exfilled the half, then they stayed and kind of did the BDA, the battle damage assessment afterwards and gave a rough count. you know, handed the objective over to the 101st when they, they came in to take control of it. So it was kind of interesting when they came back, you know, kind of get the picture of,
Starting point is 00:29:09 you know, what it looked like in the daylight. Yeah. So, so after that, then it was back home. You become a team leader? Or were you over?
Starting point is 00:29:27 Yeah, moved over to Charlie Company and took took a fire team over in Charlie Company. And then we did the winter surge in 03 to Afghanistan. We walked around in the mountains for six weeks. We always call it Mount Fays Research for those of us that were there. And can you tell us about that? Was it similar to your first appointment to Afghanistan or was it completely different?
Starting point is 00:29:55 I was different because we were up in the Konaar and in the Pesh River Valley. This is that big surge. This is the big surge Wesley Morgan writes about, isn't it? Yeah, I believe so. Yeah. Yeah, so we were kind of expanding the footprint and just kind of getting into the mountains to kind of chase down some of the rat lines that people were, you know, Taliban fighters were using to come in and just kind of deny the access through the mountains in the winter and show that everybody that, hey, we're not afraid to come up here and we're not afraid to hang out for. weeks on end and and and do our thing which was it was fun i mean you know like i wrote in my books you know some of the people you know it in villages at like 10 000 feet you know they're still
Starting point is 00:30:40 thinking that the russians are in there yeah and so you know just to to see the disconnect in that country at you know at that you know at that primitive point was like uh no they haven't been here for like 10 winters now at least What was it like operating at that altitude and such like? I mean, that's some of the most difficult terrain in the world. It was definitely taxing, if you will. Some of the guys, you know, they never been at altitude like that. Some of the guys, you know, out of Florida and Georgia and, you know, never, you know,
Starting point is 00:31:18 being on Mount Yona and Ranger School is probably some of the highest elevations they've ever been on. And so you're getting guys up there, you know, 10,000 feet or above. And guys are coming with altitude sickness. and they're just not being able to adjust as easily as some. And, you know, manning is still low in Charlie Company at the time because it's just coming off the Iraq thing. Guys are like, I'm out of here. We got hosed over.
Starting point is 00:31:44 And so we're in there with five-man squads. So we're still carrying all the gear for nine. And so the only nice thing is we went in with no body armor. We were just carrying chest racks and rucksacks, but the rucksacks were still weighing in. know, about 80 to 90 pounds, depending on, you know, what is in there. Yeah. Yeah, that land will break you, too.
Starting point is 00:32:08 That's not easy terrain to move over. No. You know, we did, we did hire on some pack mules, which is kind of interesting for a while. And that was, a lot of it was just to go to the resupply points and be able to bring back the supplies that we needed instead of, doing the ranger school rup dump and then walking down and loading up and then carrying it all back up and it's like well let's just hire some people with mules and we'll pack mule this stuff up there and you know all we have to do is just walk so did you guys just hire like the mules or did you actually have people because you have to know what you're doing with a mule right yeah no we
Starting point is 00:32:51 we hired the locals okay time and it's like hey you know here's however much in you know Pakistani rupees that makes them happy and it feels like they're justified to waste a day, you know, renting their mules to us and walking them up the mountain. Yeah. And then bringing the cases of MREs and whatnot. One of the story, oh, I was going to say one of the stories you told during that time, because you guys were on the HVT, the high value target and the time sensitive target. And can you tell us about when you went out with the SEAL team?
Starting point is 00:33:26 Oh, so we had just coming out of the. out of the Pesh, we've been in there for three weeks, and it was supposed to have, like, a 72-hour rest and refit back at blogger. So we all get back, you know, off the birds and, you know, it's kind of standing around in line for showers, and this HVT comes down. And they said, hey, the team's going to, seal team's going to go out and hit this, and we've got to go out and do blocking positions. So get it all back on and load up.
Starting point is 00:33:49 And so, you know, I didn't get a shower. And so we roll in there and we hit this, this draw off the, off the KONAR and you know seals are hit the wrong side of the valley
Starting point is 00:34:04 because Intel's just not very good in Afghanistan at this point it's just you know it's humid so it's there's a huge margin of error in it and they didn't want to walk
Starting point is 00:34:13 across the valley and go up so they just call the helo to come pick them up from one side and carry him to the other because they didn't want to walk it in a nutshell I guess that's the nice way
Starting point is 00:34:28 to put it short yeah Yeah. So was there anything else on that? And for those of you who don't know, I'm not really drinking. I'm on meds. I had surgery. So if I'm a little like faded. But was there anything else on that particular trip that because you mentioned that that was up to that point like sort of one of the best sort of all around sort of, I guess, military experiences you had just in terms that. of the type of job you guys were doing? Yeah, you know, it was kind of the, for those of us later on, that, you know, that were still in the regiment or the battalion, you know, that kind of became the baseline for the word suck.
Starting point is 00:35:20 It was like everything else, if it, you know, meet that threshold of just pain and misery, it wasn't that bad. Right. Because that was, it was just brutal. I mean, You know, got knee knees and ankles and, you know, guys are quitting. And it's like, oh, well, awesome.
Starting point is 00:35:39 You can quit all you want. You ain't coming off the mountain. They're not sending a helicopter for you. Right. Yeah. Where are you going to go? Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:35:47 So, you're private. They're not going to send a helicopter. Come get you. It's great. Awesome. We'll deal with, you know, you quitting later. And those are also the type of operations that you hold over the new guys head when they weren't on it.
Starting point is 00:35:58 You're like, oh, you know, they start complaining. Like, ah, you weren't there. Yeah, but then you made yourself feel like a dinosaur later on. Right. Right. So then, so you guys are on this hopping schedule because that was in late 2003 and then the spring, you're right back in Iraq again. Yeah. We did the winter, the end of 2003.
Starting point is 00:36:23 We were back in Afghanistan and then we were kind of doing the spring surge as we referred to it in 2004. And it was just a short little 45 days. to kind of reinforce the special ops footprint so we could move some units around, you know, shift guys and not have a loss in combat abilities. Yeah. So that was definitely interesting because that was like the introduction, if you will, to IEDs.
Starting point is 00:36:53 You know, at that point, you know, was starting to get armored vehicles and it's like, why are we driving around with this? You know, what's the big deal? you know, they're like pop can size explosives. And, you know, like within a year, you know, we're, they're planting, you know, 2,000 pounds of HME under the roadbeds and blowing tanks apart. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:37:15 Well, and not just that, but you talk about your story with the tanks, the Abrams tanks, right? Yeah. Yeah. We had that trip. We were going from BIA, from the airport into town, into the green zone, to link up to do an op. And, you know, we're running blacked out. And, you know, we got the city light shining in our face.
Starting point is 00:37:38 So you can't really see anything other than about 20 yards in front of you. But, you know, the highway is a long straight run. And so, you know, put it down and just go. And there was a tank that had been sitting in the median. And they traversed the cannon to look at something with thermal off the cannon. And they brought the barrel across at a zero plane. And it was right at the same time. We came in with the truck.
Starting point is 00:38:00 almost killed the gunner out of my truck. He was in a medically induced coma for about 45 days, and his face was broken in about 13 places. Turned the Mark 19 on the front of on the lead truck into a basically, the receiver was a banana in the barrel broke in three places. The strike plate we never found. And, you know, it basically almost totaled the truck. It took us two days to get the turret.
Starting point is 00:38:30 you know, reconfigured with stripped parts off other vehicles and put it back together. Jesus, that's insane. Yeah, it's,
Starting point is 00:38:39 it's, and it's weird sometimes, too, in combat how it's those, you know, in a war zone, how, how it's some of the most
Starting point is 00:38:48 random events that, that, right. You know, you know, blue on blue isn't always just friendly fire. Sometimes it's just these incredibly random events like that.
Starting point is 00:39:00 you know and it was just one of those things they didn't see us because they were busy looking at something and we couldn't see them with the lights and just the you know the the we're all running you know the monocular pvs 14s and you know it's like well hey we're good we're on this we own this section of highway between town and the airport and there's nothing going on out here ever and so you know we don't really need to you know watch out for for other forces but you know there's a tank sitting in the median and Right, right. Happened to be the, you know, I just had chosen to drive in the left lane as the lead truck, you know, and we hit it. Didn't damage the tank. I mean, we scratched the paint a little bit, but no damage to the barrel. Yeah. And so that was a fairly uneventful trip for you guys, right? Yeah, that one, that one was, yeah.
Starting point is 00:39:59 as far as any operations that saw, you know, any contact in it, you know, there wasn't really a lot going on at that point. And then your next trip was Mosul? Yes. Well, no, Afghanistan. Oh, Afghanistan? We went to Afghanistan. That's 2005. That was Marcus Littrell.
Starting point is 00:40:22 Okay. Okay. Sorry about that. So can you? No, that's right. Yeah. So can you tell us about that then? Marcus LaTrell, you know, Afghanistan targeting was, you know, still in its infancy,
Starting point is 00:40:37 is still a lot of human base at that point in time in Afghanistan. So there really wasn't a great targeting platform to go on. You know, we look for, you know, legacy targets and plan out some of that stuff. And as far as what the Rangers were doing, a lot of it, We were just on TSTs, time sensitive target, manning for one platoon, and then the other was on CISAR, combat search and rescue. It was a basic standard range or taskings at that point in time. And we had just rotated off of the Csar tasking onto the time sensitive target tasking.
Starting point is 00:41:17 So we had just finished all the standups for running through timelines and checks on all that stuff and got the word that, you know, Marcus LaTrell's team was going to go out and do this Operation Red Wings. And, you know, as Rangers always do, you know, we get enough information to have a conversation about it at Chow Hall table. And so started talking with some of the recie guys. And, you know, they're, you know, they're briefing us because they've been following this a lot closer than like a rifle platoon has that wasn't kind of in our wheelhouse as far as talking. targets we were looking at, but stuff that Recky had been looking at in areas to do, to do some of their stuff. And they were like, yeah, we wouldn't do it this way, not four guys. No, we'd take a whole Recky section, you know, 12 guys and then, but we wouldn't do it without a rifle
Starting point is 00:42:06 platoon and support, you know, even if it was a, you know, 5K standoff between the two because they can fight to us and we can fight to them and it's a bigger footprint on the ground. Yeah, do we run the risk of spoiling the target? Yes, but, you know, on the other side of it, you know, we, as Rangers, you know, we're always going to bring everything in the kitchen sink to bear on an objective to turn the, you know, the odds in our favor. And, you know, did they do anything wrong the way they did it? No. They made judgment calls along the way and, you know, we can armchair quarterback this.
Starting point is 00:42:46 Right. You know, years later and say, well, I wouldn't have done that and I wouldn't have done this. but, you know, they did what they do. Right. So, you know, that led us into, you know, them losing comms and them getting in the fight. And, you know, as the movie portrays it out. And, you know, and then we got to go in and do the combat search and rescue on the Turbine 3-3 crash site and then figure out what the question mark is. What was going on on your business?
Starting point is 00:43:23 base with your platoon. I mean, are you getting word that this team is compromised? There are guys who are MIA. We might have to go look for them. Then you find out a bird went down. I mean, can you take us through a little bit of that? So that morning, so June 28, that morning, you know, we got up and we just did what Rangers do. You know, we got up the PT, went and ate breakfast, going on with our training cycle. We were going to go out to East River Range, which is just outside of Bogram, the little town of Bogram. So we left the base, got outside there. We're going to go do some shooting drills and just, you know, have a good session on the range. We get out there and start throwing the target stands off the trucks, and that's about the time
Starting point is 00:44:04 that, you know, we find out that the bird's been shot down, and, you know, it was, hey, don't worry about what you've thrown off the trucks, get back on the trucks. We've got to get back. And there was a lot of guys were like, what are we doing? and, you know, we didn't have any of the answers at the leadership level of what was going on. We just knew that, you know, we had to be back for something that was going to get briefed, you know, to us. And as the situation was developing, and so then as we were rolling back in, you know, we'd find out that the aircrafts have been shot down, that teams in the fight. And, you know, we're just on standby at that point.
Starting point is 00:44:45 So I wouldn't really kind of understand the whole situation for, you know, probably another six years as I progress through through leadership. But, you know, as I tell people, it's, you know, as a young guy, you know, it's not that we're not going to get in there and we're not going to be a part of this and we're not going to, but we're going to turn the tables. So that way when we do recommit forces into this area, we've got so many assets to bear on the objective that nobody would be in their right mind to want to play. So, you know, it was probably, you know, about 10 hours or so after the initial shootdown that, you know, that night as we're getting ready to launch. And then you finally got the green light that we're going to go.
Starting point is 00:45:31 And we load up everybody that's going to fit on the aircraft at altitude and launch. And then we hit mountain weather on that night and have to divert infill and go sit at Jolabad for a day. and then wait to get infield the next night. What was your understanding at that time of the situation on the ground? So the understanding was that the 47 had been shot down. There was no movement on that. You know, ISR feeds were terrible at the time. I, you know, don't even understand how people could understand, you know,
Starting point is 00:46:11 what they're seeing on that screen. It was such a bad quality feed. even then, you know. And so we knew that the aircraft been shot down. We were going in to do combat search and rescue on the crash. You know, Murphy's team was still a question mark as to what's going on because there had been no radio comms with them since Murphy's sat phone call. So the priority tasking was to recover the crash because we knew where it was.
Starting point is 00:46:41 and then after that it would just be to figure it out, if you will. So we interviewed Tony Brooks on the show before. Was he in your platoon? Tony was in one Charlie. So he was the other half of the element that went up. So it was a third platoon led the way because we weren't on the C-Sar. So we didn't have all the recovery and crash axes and all the stuff. stuff to do that. So we kind of plowed the way, if you will, and we were there to kind of take
Starting point is 00:47:17 the brunt of any contact that was going to be made because we were just there to add security to what they were going to come in and do as far as recovery. That was, you know, one Charlie's tasking at the time. So that was that was where Tony was. And, um, okay, cool. Yeah, no, it's cool to get like some different perspectives on it. So, so then what was your platoon? I mean, just explained what your platoon's role was, but then walk us through infill and getting on the ground. So infill, we infilled somewhere about, probably about 8,000 feet, and it was what we could get to with the package size that we had on the aircraft. And so we knew there wasn't a way to land anywhere up there. So we knew it was going to be a rope and it was going to be at least at minimum
Starting point is 00:48:04 a 40 footer. And it ended up 40. And then as a rope drifts, you know, it kind of goes 40. to 60 to you know as as it works out and then when one Charlie came in I know their rope started at 60 and it ended somewhere around 80 Tony said they just roped down into fog with like no idea of where the bottom was
Starting point is 00:48:27 yeah yeah it was well I mean the fog came in after we were already on the ground I know what he's talking about because you know it is just the way the weather was working and, you know, it was just, it was, you know, one of those points where I never really, you know, after a private, I never roped with, with leather gloves, you know, fast rope, you know, the working work gloves anymore. I always did it in a Monex shooting gloves. The hamburger helpers. Yeah, I never tried, like trying to take those gloves off and always felt like my hands got so much hotter. And, you know, I had a teen sergeant and said, hey, just, just rope in your shooting gloves because you don't have to grip the rope is tight.
Starting point is 00:49:09 you dissipates the heat just as well and he said just try it on the fast rope tower so I did and that's a 40 foot rope and you know it wasn't terrible and then I was watching guys carrying 240s and stuff roping in and they've got the big thick gloves on and they're squeezing extra tight just to have a feeling on
Starting point is 00:49:25 the rope right and so then they're burning in and you know and their hands are getting so hot that you know they're blistering at you know still 10 or 15 feet above ground and they're just letting go they're like I'll just deal with it when to hit the ground and you know when one Charlie came in, you know, they had the same problem and guys were falling off.
Starting point is 00:49:44 And then they were just ending up in a big pile. And I know their RTO had his arm broken because he got stepped on. Yeah. And so, you know, he got guys that need to get medevac, but you ain't getting medevac. Yeah. Yeah. So what was it like for your platoon roping in and getting on the ground? It wasn't, we didn't have any contact or anything.
Starting point is 00:50:08 And it was, it was quiet. you know, and then when you, when the brownout cleared and all the, you know, the wash of everything and, you know, you kind of look up the mountain, you know, you can see the crash because it's still on fire, still burning. And it's just kind of one of those ominous moments, if you will, just kind of, you know, the gravity of what you're doing has finally set in because you're seeing it with your own eyes and not on a TV screen. And then, you know, it just becomes the all night walk uphill. through the nettles and, you know, the Scotchburn, or not the Scotchburn, but, you know, the pines and all the ground cover that's up there in the mountains. And it's just, were you guys, was there any intelligence that there were enemies on the objective or around the objective? We had, you know, any eyes around the area, but it wasn't anything like on, on the objective. There wasn't any movement on there, you know, throughout the day or anything.
Starting point is 00:51:18 And there wasn't, there wasn't any, you know, people coming and going from it. I think, you know, looking back at it now, as they realized what they had done and what was about to happen. And so they just kind of got a little bit of standoff. And they really were, it was to observe, you know, how we were going to take care of it. Yeah. And so, you know, as the, the, that day, turned into, you know, a week to two weeks, you know, at night, you know, you see little fires on the mountain and, you know, get eyes on it as best you can. And then AC130s dropping, you know,
Starting point is 00:51:56 105s on it. Yeah. So what was that first movement, that first night? What was the movement like for you guys? How long did it take? It took all night. We didn't get to the top until about an hour before, you know, sunrise and then we're sitting there on it and then kind of listening to one Charlie, you know, suck their way up the mountain. And then one Bravo was still about halfway up the mountain because they had driven in from Jolalabad the night or the morning that happened. They drove up the 90K in their trucks. And then they started walking from the base of the mountain up. And they didn't make it until the next day. And, you know, know, only about half the guys that started to climb up the mountain made it up.
Starting point is 00:52:46 The rest of them had to go back down and get picked up by the trucks and, you know, because they just either heat exhaustion or, you know, twisted ankles and whatnot. Yeah. Yeah. And so what did that, what was the next like week to, what, what did that set in motion for you guys in particular? So what is set in motion for us was, you know, priority tasking was to accountability and recovery of all, you know, members of that aircraft crew and then the QRF team that was on there. So that totaled 16. And so we got those numbers, you know, kind of early afternoon. And there was a small clearing on top of the mountain. You could put a small helicopter like little bird on it.
Starting point is 00:53:33 But it was, you know, CDS drops for demolitions. and, you know, basically had to create an HLZ to be able to get everybody off that mountain that, you know, the remains for those guys. And so it was kind of a good distraction, if you will, to do timber charges and clear that space to be able to make enough room to bring, you know, helicopter in. and so we just finished our regimental breaches course. And so all that old stuff, you know, that timber stuff was still fresh in everybody's mind. So it was a, you know, we're all sitting there trying to do the math and the first start and so like, use the P method. Yeah. So we're sending tree stumps and everything up, you know, like Roman candles.
Starting point is 00:54:27 It was, you know, just pack as much explosives in these little burrow holes underneath and launch it. And so that was fun. We cleared that. We got the tasking for, you know, what would turn out to be go down the mountain and find Marcus. And so that started the fun of the mountain weather moved in that night and dumped on us. And we're trying to walk downhill and, you know, the trail's a little streambed at the time. And so guys are slipping and falling and guys are trying to not fall off the ridge. And then we end up just for safety reasons, you know, we end up spending the last few hours.
Starting point is 00:55:05 kind of huddled under pine trees waiting for the sun to come up so that we don't lose anybody. How many guys did you have left in your platoon at this point? We had split before, so we had two squads in the PLs package. So, you know, the platoon leader, RTO, FO were with us. And then the platoon sergeant had his, you know, one squad, two machine guns, you know, on still on the top. on the top of the mountain and close to the crash side. We knew we were, yeah, they were still up there with one Charlie and reinforcing them.
Starting point is 00:55:46 And we're just kind of the maneuver element, if you will, going down and trying to confirm or deny what this push to talk signal was that we were getting being triangulated down into this. I always forget the name of the village. I can't ever remember it. So you guys had to kind of like hide out, not hide out, but, you know, take cover under the pine trees until dawn and then continue to move down to where this, you know, extensively there was a SIGA hit that you had to go investigate. Right. And so that was basically confirm or deny, you know, was it enemy recovered American equipment or was it actually, in fact, you know, Murphy's team or, you know, what the question mark was still for that. And that was kind of where we were at for the tasking. You know, the crash had been accounted for us.
Starting point is 00:56:42 And now we're just trying to figure out, you know, the fate of, you know, this four-man seal team. And so, you know, finally pushed down in there. Was it a consistent signal that you guys were going off of? Or was it just like a single, a couple hits and they're like, okay, around this general area? No, it wasn't like a consistent, but, you know, like somebody just key in the push to talk, you know, intermittently enough to get an, you know, an orbital transmission to triangulate, you know, where it was. And so it's kind of confirm or deny
Starting point is 00:57:18 what that was. So, you know, there was an SF team that was walking up that we tied in with. Okay. And then pushed back down into this, this little village. And then, you know, as we're doing the ranger smash through all the doors and clearing the village, you know, here comes Marcus, you know, up from where they had him hidden and kind of stashed. And so, you know, confirm that and then start, you know, doing the. So they actually brought Marcus out to meet you guys. Right. And they knew why we were there.
Starting point is 00:57:50 And they knew what we were looking for. And so it was to, you know, hand him over and then do the, you know, kind of the whole SF thing where they do the, you know, let's drink some tea and talk and, you know. What was that moment like? What was that moment like when you first got face to face with Marcus and confirmed this guy's alive? And what was your perception of all that? I don't know. The big question, you know, the first thing that we asked was once, you know, he went through the whole challenge and kind of confirmed that it is him, you know, through the whole, you know, P-O-W-M-I-A cards.
Starting point is 00:58:25 Yeah. You know, we all fill out and going through that. It was, you know, dude, where's everybody else? you know and then you know he's like they're dead well okay great not great but you know it's like okay but where they're on the mountain that's it you know it's kind of that you can't give me anything more the city is just started kind of a frustration thing and I get it you know he'd been you know that wasn't it probably wouldn't have been fun to come down that mountain the way he says he came down that mountain.
Starting point is 00:59:03 But, you know, I would like to hope to think that, you know, if my friends were dead on that mountain, I could at least remember some kind of terrain feature that I could at least tell somebody that they're, you know, they're up here in this area. And so what was the next step after that initial, you had that initial questioning of Marcus? What happened next? So what happened next was, you know,
Starting point is 00:59:30 we just kind of secured the little village that we were at. and, you know, confirmed that it was him, passed up, you know, over SAP that, you know, we had him and we were in control of him, and then we just had to sit and wait for nightfall to come so that we could bring in the middle backbird and get him out. And then it just started, you know, days and days and days of sweeping and searching this mountainside for the rest of the team. For the rest of the team. I mean, did you guys eventually find the remains of those three other guys?
Starting point is 01:00:09 Yeah, we exiled Marcus in the next day. You know, we were sweeping the lower portion of this spur. And the other half of our platoon was coming from the top of the ridge down. We were just kind of meeting in the middle. And so after we had met in the middle and, you know, kind of traded information, they got a break. you know they started to climb back up for the night and we turned around and it started coming back down to finish our suite they stumbled on on two of the remains just by happenstance somebody lost their footing and slipped into a little wash and ended up you know face first with with two of them oh man that's rough and so well the rough part was is they still had to go like 800 meters vertically with you know two sets of remains and all we have is the old school uh poncho method to to carry them up right uh because you couldn't do it with a litter so it was wrapping them up into poncho and and kind of getting them up
Starting point is 01:01:12 as best as possible and you know then they had to carry it traverse them across the ridge back over to the the hlz and um you know and that it that was the hard part is after that now we're just looking for one person right And, you know, we ended up searching for, oh, man, probably another 10 days before we got ripped out when 375 came in. Yeah. And at that point, you know, we're 14 days, or 12 days into this whole thing. And it's guys are just gassed. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:01:49 And I remember Tony saying that, I mean, the weather, you guys weren't getting enough water, that it was just, it was just nonstop for you guys. Yeah, it was, you know, from sun up to sundown, you know, and then you got to, you know, we're pulling security and small elements. And so you're not getting much sleep and guys are getting sick with, you know, dehydration stuff or guys are getting, you know, you know what happens. And you get a bad MRI and then you got a little bit of food poisoning or whatever. And work doesn't stop. You just got to keep going. Yeah. You know you've got a little bit of food poisoning from an MRI that may have spills.
Starting point is 01:02:29 soiled and you ate it anyway. Yeah. So. Yeah. So you guys get ripped out before you find the, uh, the final body. Yeah. And then, but we got ripped out. And then, uh, so I want to say it was probably eight hours later, you know, that 375 had,
Starting point is 01:02:54 had found the, uh, the last one. And so. You know, we were happy that we were upset that, you know, we didn't end up finding him, you know, because somebody else had to come in. But, you know, we were glad it was over with. Right. Right. Well, you said the, you mentioned earlier on that, you know, there were things that you piece together years after the event. Because at the time, you know, you're a sergeant, you're, you know, reacting on the ground as things unfold in front of you, doing the best you can.
Starting point is 01:03:28 And I just wanted to ask you real quick, you know, what's your perception of what happened out there today versus what it was when you were actually there as a younger man? I mean, is there anything you've learned, anything that kind of like opened up your scope or offered a wider context that was surprising to you or that kind of that you look at this event much differently today than you did at the time? I think it just what, you know, it comes in mind is, you know, the amount of effort that goes into this type of situation is one of those things that we never train for when, you know, nobody ever goes into a training scenario that, oh, we're going to have aircraft shot down, we're going to do this and we're going to do that and then all this kind of stuff. And so it's like the worst of everything, you know, as far as the circumstances. and it's trying to understand all the pieces, you know, the wizard behind the curtain, if you will,
Starting point is 01:04:24 of what's going on. And, you know, it's all the questions that we asked after we got back. You know, why did it take so long for us to launch, you know,
Starting point is 01:04:34 what were the circumstances. And, you know, it's, when this type of situation happens, it is, everything stops in, in theater,
Starting point is 01:04:44 you know, and then it's, it's all assets, shift, focus, and it's trying to, put everything in place so that way, you know, like I said, you know, when we do commit the force, it is, you know, with all the odds, it can be stacked in our favor as best as possible. And so, you know, not to jump forward too far, but, you know, it's kind of one of those things that always stuck in my head.
Starting point is 01:05:11 And then when the extortion one seven shootdown happened, you know, we're on the ground. And so then it's, I can explain. you know, because I'm the old fart at this time, you know, it's kind of explaining to the boys on the fly is like, hey, look, you know, this is what's happening behind the scene. You know, we're here in the middle of it right now, but this is what's going on on the backside. And so it's not that, you know, we're not going to get things that we need, but there are steps and things that have to happen. And so it was one of those, that was the big learning lesson for me was, you know, what are, what are all these steps on the backside of this, of this, type of scenario. It's, as we talked about on last Friday's episode, I mean, it's, it's amazing the effort that the U.S. military will go through to recover our soldiers, even if it's only to recover their remains, that will go through incredible lengths to, to, to repatriate every American troop is just incredible.
Starting point is 01:06:14 Right. Right. You know, that was, you know, the, warfighter series on History Channel, we did a segment with this Marcus LaTrell, Red Wings Recovery, and, you know, something that he said, you know, when they get in trouble, you know, it's not expected, but, you know, when they say that the Rangers are coming in, you know, they're coming in with everything, you know, because, you know, we're bringing everybody that we can and we're bringing all the toys and all the stuff and, you know, we're bringing a big footprint. and yeah um it i mean and you know even though it was it was challenging for all the rangers involved i mean we i mean i'm grateful and i think you know obviously the families are grateful
Starting point is 01:07:10 like everybody's grateful that that those seals did come home you know that they were found um because that would also be a horrible you know thing for a family to go are they just out there You know, are they still alive being held somewhere? To this day, I mean, DPAA, I mean, we deal with it with our Vietnam veterans. You know, there's like 150 special forces soldiers alone, I believe, we're missing somewhere in layouts in Cambodia. And I mean, that's just terrible. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:07:42 Yeah. So after did it, aside from that, you guys ripped out. So you left Afghanistan at that point, correct? Yeah, that was our last off. You know, we were out of there with just a couple of days. Long enough to, you know, download the ammunition, pack everything up, throw it in a pallet, and get on aircraft. We were, we were out. And then you turned around, and then you were in Mosul in 2006.
Starting point is 01:08:08 And I thought you're, yeah, I thought that your, yeah, I thought that your, your chapter name, fast and less furious was funny. Can you tell us why you, why you called your chapter that? It was just a I'm not really sure anymore It was just kind of a play on On words with You know Things are speeding up in in Afghanistan
Starting point is 01:08:34 Or in Iraq But you know not necessarily are we Having more fun if you will There's not You know we're smashing targets and taking guys in But we're not really getting in the fight Right There's no gun fights really
Starting point is 01:08:46 Right going on And part of that The way What I got from this chapter and the way you explain it, the reason you weren't getting in as many gunfights is because you guys had really nailed down how to do these hits and that 98% of these hits were done silently where the bad guys never even knew you were there until. Exactly.
Starting point is 01:09:11 You know, it was one of these, you know, so we've just come out of Afghanistan. We've been dealing with this and, you know, the other battines are, you know, kind of setting this new trend, if you will, this new TTP for. this, what we're calling silent entry. And, you know, it's not the traditional ranger below the front door open, go in, smash everything. It's, you know, how can we come in as sneaky and quiet as absolutely possible? And, you know, basically we're waking people up out of a dead sleep to take these targets. And so, you know, at first you're like, oh, this is such a big letdown.
Starting point is 01:09:44 But then as you start going on and it really becomes this thing that we're all kind of driving for is, you know, mission success is now not how much can we smash, but how successfully can we get in repeatedly, silently without firing any of these shots? Because now we're getting all of this intel from all these people through interrogations and all this stuff. And so when you shift your mindset kind of away from the traditional, you know, what we like to call the Ranger smash,
Starting point is 01:10:15 and now we're kind of playing on the same TTPs and kind of lines that, you know, team six guys are playing on and Delta forces playing in and they've been having success for years and you know all kinds of settings around the world that they're employed in you know we can as a Ranger Reservant we can employ these types of you know operational guidelines that we're going to go do this and we're going to do it as quietly and mission success is now based on the amount of people that we can not kill on target but we can drag off target right you know and then it really becomes the driving force.
Starting point is 01:10:52 You know, mission success is now can we do it and how many times can we do it? And then, you know, it's kind of the, not necessarily mission failure, but, you know, if shots are have to be, you know, fired in. Right. You know, what did we do wrong that got us into that gunfight? Because it's really impressive, you know, as a leader, when you can bring like 13 plus guys into a target building and roll up 14 or 15. dudes without anybody knowing that you're even in the room.
Starting point is 01:11:25 Right. And so, you know, that was, you know, and then when we started going into two other techniques later on, you know, was like, but we're so good at this. Why are we switching to doing this other thing? And, you know, I never really liked what we call prefer, you know, later on. It would be the call out. And I understand the, you know, as a leader, the thought behind it. is that it's less risk of force because we're now telling the enemy.
Starting point is 01:11:56 And, you know, for those of people who don't understand, it's kind of like what, you know, a SWAT team will do. Or, you know, the FBI does, you know, when they surround a house or a compound or whatever. And then they're getting on loudspeakers and they're telling people to come out and surrender and all that. But, you know, it's never the fun way to do. It's kind of, you know, if you will, it's boring. Right. Right. walk us through like one of those ops that really like stands out in your mind where you,
Starting point is 01:12:26 you know, you just kind of like pride open the front door and Rangers and Night Vision just kind of slipped through. Well, there was, uh, Mosul, we, we had one op and I mean, we had been in probably four or five houses down the block trying to get the, the right house. And when we finally did get the right house, you know, we popped the front door open all nice and quiet. And I mean, there was no, there was no reverberation off the metal door or anything. We had, you know, pressure and counterpressure. work in and you know we ended up you know sliding in all nice and and quiet and you know i had a whole
Starting point is 01:13:00 squad of guys you know pulling security on dudes and then it was you know we had the first floor you know secure as as far as you guys are we got guns on the right amount of people and and you know we've got a whole other squad is sneaking in to take care of you know what needs to be going on upstairs and everybody's all super quiet and you know we're basically we take the whole house down all in one shot and we end up with like 16 detainees and you know the whole target's done in 45 minutes we got everybody's tagged and bag we've done all the site exploitation and and you know and then we're we're on to the next objective yeah that's amazing when you know when when you can look back at that and be like wow it was a part of that and you know that that worked out great and and you know
Starting point is 01:13:51 when you can explain, you know, that that is, you know, mission success because, you know, Intel drives the targeting and when you don't kill the intelligence, then you get more targets and you get to go have more fun. Right. You know, when you could explain that to the younger guys who are, you know, 19, 20 and just kind of chomping at the bit and it's like, no, hey, relax, relax. We're being smooth. We're being quiet.
Starting point is 01:14:21 you know, we started, you know, climbing walls and, and, you know, then it became the whole, you know, can we do a top down, you know, can we come in from one building or can we ladder up the side of the building? And, you know, not only can we come in from the ground floor, but can we send an assault force in from the top floor and still do it all silent, you know, it just becomes a whole other side of, you know, this developing persona that we're creating. in the Ranger Regiment. It's not just are we the ability to go smash things, but we can be as precision as anybody else, but do it with twice as many people. Right. I want to take just one second here to give a little advertisement actually for our own podcast. We have a Patreon site, and there's a link down the description if you guys check it out. And if you join, you will get ad-free episodes. You get all these episodes without any of the ads in them. And there's also a couple bonus episodes and bonus segments that you guys can check out. So the links down in the description.
Starting point is 01:15:32 That's all I wanted to throw out there tonight. You get deep thoughts by Jack and Dave sitting in our smoking pajamas and, you know, talking about the way of the world. Plus a lot of great bonus content. Yes. But so then after Missoule, you guys did Ramadi, which is a lot more of the same. But now you guys are operating on boats. Yeah, we're on the on the SWIC boats on the sock ars.
Starting point is 01:15:58 No shit. Yep. So that, you know, it was a it was different. It was totally fun. I mean, you know, because at the time, you got to remember,
Starting point is 01:16:06 Ramadi and Flusia, they're still on the, you know, it's still a wild west out there. You know, Marines are still having it out all day long, every day. And we're trying to,
Starting point is 01:16:15 you know, kind of squeeze in the seams and do what we're doing. And, you know, we had a company commander at the time. He was notorious first. you know, any holiday, it was the day that, you know, he had been blown up. And so he didn't really like to drive anymore. And so he's like, the only holiday I've never been blown up on is Halloween. And so
Starting point is 01:16:33 we took the ground assault force out in strikers and hit a target, driving back. And his truck gets popped. And, you know, it was what we call a catastrophic vehicle kill. So it's a striker, but it had a whole penetration. And it was enough to penetrate the bottom of the floor. And then what came through stuck in the back of the seat on the driver. Nobody was hurt. And it was a testament to the striker as a vehicle platform that we were using it, blew all the circuit breakers in the vehicle. And all the driver had to do was just reach around,
Starting point is 01:17:07 push the breakers in and start back up. And it drove all the way back to the gate. And then it gave up the ghost. You know, all the steering linkage in the front broke apart. And it was plugging the ECP there at the gate onto Ramadi. And so that was kind of fun because we had to move the T barriers out of the way to open it up so we could get the wreckery in there to hook onto it because there wasn't a way to pull it through the chicanes with all those barricades in place. So we had to, you know, it was probably a three-hour process to get that truck through the gate. You know, we got all the Marine convoys and Army convoys and Ramadi.
Starting point is 01:17:45 They're all backed up sitting outside waiting for us to move our piece of junk. And so after that, you know, the team six guys were like, hey, we've got, you know, the boats are down, you know, at the little offsite, you know, on the river. And, you know, we can start employing those. And so we started doing, you know, boats in, helicopters out or helicopters in and boats out. That's pretty cool. Kind of and riding the rivers. And it was definitely really cool because we could get way closer to target on the boats. than you could with, you know, helicopters without the noise signature.
Starting point is 01:18:23 And it just, you know, opened up a whole other avenue of a technique that we had really, you know, been utilizing. And it was, yeah, I just, only thing, the only thing I wish that it was, it had to been in the summertime instead of in the winter. Yeah, I bet. I've never been to Ramadi before. So I'm actually looking up on the map. So the Euphrates kind of runs. right through the center of the city and there's a few like outlets, one of which it looks like it runs right into like the city center.
Starting point is 01:18:56 Right. That's pretty cool, man. So you were, you said you were able to get closer to target using the boats. Yeah, we could get within, you know, a K of the target building or, you know, depending, sometimes it was within, you know, four or five hundred meters of the target. And so, you know, you have the last, you know, the LCC is, you know, basically at the boat drop-off point on the beach and then, you know, moved to target and take the target down. And, you know, then move to Exville. And, you know, just short helicopter ride back onto the base. And so it was, you know, it was definitely fun because we were the one of the first to actually
Starting point is 01:19:36 implement it. And so, you know, we kind of got to be on the front side of that as far as what the Rangers were doing with, you know, boat ops. Yeah. Now, did you guys, did you guys have those? I mean, I know that boat offs was always supposed to be a ranger thing, but it really, we only, at least like in the 90s, we only used it for training. Like, did you guys have those in theater? Did you acquire them? Did somebody else have them and you borrowed them? How did that all start? well it was the there were the swick boats so the teams brought them and the so the swick teams are the guys they were manning all the boats and so they're the sock cars that the you know the 900 horsepower twin jet drive uh you know 40 foot uh salt boats uh and so you know there's a whole crew this navy guys that drive the boats gun the boats all we did was just get a ride and um that's pretty cool man i never even knew the rangers did that That's interesting. Yeah, it was definitely fun.
Starting point is 01:20:43 You know, and the boats of, you know, everybody's like, well, I wouldn't want to do that. Well, it's a fully armored boat. You know, it's 900 horsepower. It'll do 50 miles an hour on the water. It's safer than driving down a road that's packed full of IE. Yeah, must are like deploying. Yeah, mines or something. Mine.
Starting point is 01:21:00 Yeah, exactly. Well, there had been, there was a time, you know, early on where the enemy had been trying to out how to IED the river and they couldn't figure out how to do it and there wasn't any success whether they tried hanging them from the bridges but you know you can see that and then they tried to plant them in the river banks but it wasn't anything that was going to cause any kind of lethality to the boat so they just basically gave it up as like well if they're going to use them then there's something that we can do about it until they come on target so i i know that so we have like more mazul and afghanistan and i don't want to leave too much out but i'll
Starting point is 01:21:40 also really want to get to, I want to talk about 2011. Okay. I want to make sure we talk about that. Am I missing anything? I'll speak. Yeah. So can we talk about your injury, about how all that came about? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:22:01 So do you want to skip the extortion? Oh, no, no. Let's talk about the extortion. Yeah, let's talk about extortion. 17 first. Yeah, sorry about that. No, that's okay. So this was kind of the 2011 deployment.
Starting point is 01:22:17 It was the last of the surge, the special ops surge into, you know, Petraeus's surge into Afghanistan and kind of increasing that force. So BECO was the last company and Second Ranger battalion to surge, whether stay late or go early. and so we just finished the KPEX at Fort Bragg, which is the big, you know, the special ops dog and pony show for congressmen and, you know, the president and all that stuff, which was fine because it gave us, you know, an extra week of training with, you know,
Starting point is 01:22:53 160th and some, you know, platoon time, if you will, to run around and work fine-tuned some TTPs and some SOPs and bring some of the new guys a little bit tighter online with how we're going to accomplish these tasks when we getting overseas. So we got tasks to go to Fav Shank and be tasked with Team 6 under their command. And so we went over and did that. And we had a pretty good working relationship with the Gold Squadron for that. early part of that deployment and then the, you know, night of August 6 rolls around.
Starting point is 01:23:42 And so objective lefty grove comes up on the table. It's a, you know, it's a target that had been tracked and chased and kind of lost, but never could get a lot of fidelity to it because he's a pretty dynamic target, meaning he's constantly on the move and, you know, hard to nail down to one location. but he had rolled into the tangy valley on this, you know, this day. And Siggint had kind of pinned him into a certain location inside the valley and a little cluster of buildings. And it was enough that probably about 70% fidelity on the objective targeting that it was still solid. And we had just come off a few days of weather.
Starting point is 01:24:24 And we're looking at maybe some more days of weather on the back end of this. So we had this little like two-day window of good weather to do an op. And I just kind of, you know, looked at the MIPL. And, you know, we went to chow and we were sitting there having the conversation. I'm like, look, I'm willing to take a swing at 70%, you know, for this target. You know, we're going to be stuck sitting for weather for a few days. And I don't, you know, we've already been stuck sitting. And Rangers doesn't do well sitting, sitting around with.
Starting point is 01:24:59 with weather if we don't have anything to do. So, you know, I was like, I'm willing to take a swing at 70. You know, we're going into the Tangy Valley. So it's basically guaranteed gunfight. And, you know, what do you think? And he's like, yeah, I'm willing to take a swing on 70%. So we went back and pitched it. We'll take a swing at it.
Starting point is 01:25:18 And if nothing else, you know, we'll let him know that we're chasing him and kind of break his pattern of life. And usually when we can do that and break the pattern of life on people, that's when they start making mistakes. and it becomes easier to, you know, launch a follow-on operation because he's not sure what he needs to do. And so, you know, we drew up the plan and got approval and then briefed the plan, pitch the plan to the boys. And, you know, it was one of the only times I've ever told the boys, actually it was the only time I ever told them. I was like, you know, this is the tangy valley, and it's not an if we're going to get into a gunfight.
Starting point is 01:26:00 It is a 100% we are walking into a gunfight on this night. And there's a reason why we only go into this valley on the no illumination cycle. And that's because they're going to shoot at anything. Helicopters, aircraft, people. So, you know, switch it on, put it on straight. And, you know, we're going to get it on tonight. And so we had an uneventful, you know, infill. when no rounds taken because we had flown in extortion 16 and 17 had been our infill aircraft
Starting point is 01:26:31 and so then they flew back, cycled through and Gold Squadron was on QRF for us or any follow one objective that came up from what we were doing and so infield got the guys got the boys on the ground, you know, started moving to the objective, got word that, you know, there was eight to ten enemy fighters moving off the objective. And so we hold the formation, got clearance for fires with the Apache gun ships and lit into them with the Apache gun ships, two gun runs per aircraft and then push the target uneventful after that and then cleared through the contact and had stirred up a bunch of, you know, stuff in the valley. And so, you know, I was, it's just, you know, guys in there rebel rousing, um, trying to get guys to come out and,
Starting point is 01:27:34 you know, gather a force to come and fight. And so we're clearing through our target. And, uh, you know, it's looking good for what's being seen on ISR because they're seeing a bigger picture than what I've seen within, you know, a thousand meters circle of my objective. And so the call came from the, from the jock to, uh, my platoon leader and myself was like, hey, are you guys going to go, you know, you're going to go push farther into the valley and, and, you know, taking on this contact. And at the time, you know, we're working a pretty good objective. And we actually kind of thought we had what we were looking for on the objective as far as who we went into the valley to get.
Starting point is 01:28:15 And we said, no, no, we think we're working it. And we have what we want. They said, you know, do you care if, you know, Gold Squadron comes in and, you know, it starts their own movement to contact on the rest of this objective. And, you know, about 5K to the west of you. And I said, well, that's plenty of de-confliction of space for small arms fire. So if they want to come in, you know, and that's what they want to do, the good on them, you know, it had been a pretty, a pre-executive.
Starting point is 01:28:42 briefed discussion between my platoon leader, myself, Jonas and Lou, the master chief and the commander for the gold squadron that, hey, look, if it does ever happen, it's a single objective, but we end up bringing in the other element, you know, we'll link up and then we'll just kind of work at Exville, you know, as it plays out. And if we have cycle aircraft and we'll cycle aircraft, and, you know, we'll just get it done. And it's like, okay, great. Awesome. So we knew how that was going to go. We kind of had a pre-plan position where we were going to link up, you know, if that had happened. And, you know, we got the word that they were loading on the extortion. And we weren't sure which way they were going to come into the valley. And we kind of said, hey, we recommend, you know, if you overfly our objective, then we can at least, you know, provide ground cover for anything. and you know but that way you know we only get a small amount of say and it doesn't really carry
Starting point is 01:29:49 that much weight as far as what the airplaneers are doing you know because these are conventional aircraft so the pilots are only flying what's been approved through their S3 air shop and and so you know what we were saying to our jock is not necessarily making it over to theirs and so we were like well okay so you get the call that there are wheels up and they're 10 minutes out and so we wanted to clear one more building so we've kind of pushed to try and clear this building real quick and get the call that you know they're six minutes out and then three minutes out and so we held our assault and what we're doing and we're just kind of sitting there waiting and I'm waiting I'm waiting to see the birds flush after infill and so that we're not you know if we end up shooting
Starting point is 01:30:33 on target that we're not going to ricocheting something into aircraft because they're within and, you know, small arms distance. And then that never happened. And I would kind of wondering what's going on. And we get over the fires net from the FOs that there's a fallen angel. And I had known what the, you know, the pro word, if you will, is. And it's just kind of dumpstruck by it.
Starting point is 01:31:00 And I said, say that again. And he's like, we're a fallen angel. And I was like, okay. Now, so that my brain and my, you know, it's all connecting. You know, speak it in English. And he goes, extortion has been shot down. And I was like, okay, great.
Starting point is 01:31:16 So then it was, you know, how fast can we back out of this target building? How fast can I get the guys on the load and get them to start moving? Even though we don't know exactly where it is yet, it's, I just know the general direction that we need to go, which was to the west. And so we got the boys back out of the objective, off the objective. and we're moving in about three minutes, you know, as far as getting guys pushed out. And then it's trying to all the weapons and everything that we had accumulated on our objective is trying to take all that stuff with us and, you know, get everybody and everything on the move and not leave, you know, all this stuff to potentially be shot in the back with it. So send it forward and find a place to blow it in place. and, you know, then the question comes to, like, what do we do with all these detainees?
Starting point is 01:32:10 And so it just becomes, well, leave them. And, you know, people are like, well, are you going to untie them? I was like, nope, somebody will come over and cut them loose later. I'm not cutting anybody loose. They can figure it out. Right. And so we got off the objective and started moving. I just, you know, I'll never forget, you know, when the lead element and the snipers
Starting point is 01:32:33 and the dog handler finally got within eyesight of, you know, around the terrain feature. And it was just this, you know, I won't use the profanity, but it was one of those, oh my God, moments. You know, the whole night skies just lit up with just fire and, you know, the burning wreck of it. And, you know, we're still trying to figure out, you know, the fastest way. And, you know, should we, you know, so the tangy road that, runs through this valley is heavily IED. I mean, it's IED like every three to 400 meters.
Starting point is 01:33:08 There's something planted in that road and it's to stop, you know, the trucks. And so there was this, you know, do we want to go over land? And I told the P.Ls like, hey, look, sir, my recommendation, we got to assume the risk to force and we're just going to have to stay on the road because we got to get there. And he said, I agree. So we just, you know, I told the dog in the handler up front, it's like if it looks suspicious or he wants to, you know, to, you know, say that there's something in the road and just market and market good and just tell everybody to stay out of the way because we got
Starting point is 01:33:43 to go. And so it took us about an hour to go the 5K to get up there. And then, you know, it's kind of trying to put this whole thing together on the fly. And, you know, everybody's radios are going nuts as far as, you know, the PLEs, you know, like basically glued to the stat radio and it's like, hey, sir, we've got to, I need some information here, you know, we've got to, you got to tell me how many people are on this aircraft, you know, so we're working through that and it's, you know, I finally get the numbers and I'm thinking, you know, it's half the force and I'm like, okay, so, and they, you know, but he gave me the number of 38 and I was like, so how many are on the other aircraft?
Starting point is 01:34:29 you know, I'm not joking about it. I'm like, I'm in disbelief. It's like, how many people are on the other aircraft? Then it goes, empty ship. And I was like, oh. And I was like, for those people that donors, you know, that aren't listening that aren't, you know, in the military mindset of this is that, you know,
Starting point is 01:34:50 it's a technique and it's not a bad technique. You know, it's a risk of force, risk, the aircraft decision that leaders make. Do we put everybody on one aircraft? and only risk one aircraft to enemy fire and get the force all in it once, or do we only put half the element on one aircraft and the other half on the other? And the problem with that split force on multiple aircraft is that that lead aircraft makes contact, that second aircraft is not getting on the ground.
Starting point is 01:35:20 Right. And so then you only have half your force on the ground. So given the situation that they were going in to pick a fight with, you know, of anywhere 12 plus fighters on that side, it made more sense to just risk one aircraft and put everybody on the ground all at once. And it's not a bad decision. It's just, you know, people ask me, well, why didn't you do that then?
Starting point is 01:35:42 Well, I brought 55 guys to the fight that night, and we don't fit on one aircraft. Yeah. So, you know, we finally get up there on the crash and we start, you know, call for supplies that we're going to need. And, you know, the backside support, you know, from, you know, guys in the rigger shop to doing CDS drops because we're out of,
Starting point is 01:36:08 we're out of water by this point, you know, there are supplies that we just don't have. And the whole way up there, I'm in my mind, I'm flashing back to all the stuff that we brought in the night. We did the, you know, the turbine 3-3 and the Marks the trail, you know, that six years ago, all that's flooding back in. to my mind and I'm trying to think of all the stuff that we had and all the stuff that one Charlie had and I'm trying to you know request this stuff because at this point in the game as far as you know the GWAT this is combat search and rescue is not something that we have
Starting point is 01:36:43 time to train on anymore and it was something that you know back in the day when we assumed ranger ready for us one it was one of those one day two day taskings that you know we all trained you know right crash axes and smashing through and this is what we do now we get fam egress once a year when we do rotary wing violets on you know if the aircraft has a hard landing not destroyed but it has a hard landing you know this is how we destroy the radios is how you destroy you know the airframe if need be you know and so on and so on but at this point it's like okay well i need i need body bags i need water i need biohazard you know and if you can find them i need class D fire extinguishers.
Starting point is 01:37:28 And so I'm trying to get all this information requested to the jock so that they can build this weird CDS palette to hopefully help us, you know, get everybody recovered. Because by the time we got on the crash site, you know, it was still a fireball. It was still on fire for hours after. And, you know, it was one of those learning points. I guess, if you will, for the job that, hey, look, you know, this is the second time in less than 10 years that we've had this happen. And we don't have any class D fire extinguishers to put out a metal fire. Right. And helicopters have a lot of magnesium in them.
Starting point is 01:38:10 Right. And so, you know, we did correct that, you know, later on that all this stuff did make it into country. And thankfully, that never had to use it again, but it was one of those where we probably should have some. this stuff at least on standby. And given that you are already in a non-permissive environment, I imagine that you probably had a decent air package to start with. But what happened at that point? I mean, did they start pushing all the assets you guys needed?
Starting point is 01:38:44 Yeah. So the air package, you know, we had a patchy's on station and then we had an AC130 and then we had fast movers in the stack at altitude. And so what happens is when this kind of situation happens is everything in the country shuts down. It doesn't matter where in the country it is. All operations are cease and assist. If you're not on target, you'd be calling for X-Pill or you're walking home. Because, you know, every ISR platform manned and unmanned, you know, fast movers,
Starting point is 01:39:13 rotary wing assets, they're all coming to wherever that crashes at. And it was nuts, the amount of support that we had. you know and so the big armies combat search and rescue element the pathfinders in the book they're not you know pathfinder pathfinders that was just their call sign was pathfinder um you know those guys almost didn't make it in um because they were shutting everything down and so it was either going to already be there which was us or it was going to have to come in on a truck um So they made it in just moments, moments before everything got shut down as far as rotary wing assets. And the strange part is that, you know, transport aircraft have flying pairs or triplets. And so extortion 1-6, the other aircraft in the flight, I had to get special permission to fly back from the objective area as a single ship.
Starting point is 01:40:15 Now, I messed and misunderstood because I thought when you were saying everything in the country got shut down, I thought you meant because it was all pushed to you guys. But why would they shut down the pathfinder or the combat search and rescue effort coming down? The rotary wing aircraft are getting shut down. It's not the fixed wing aircraft or the ISR platforms or any of that stuff. the Apaches are getting grounded. All Rotary Winger assets are getting shut down at this point. And it's a timing issue of can we get these in? And basically what it is is it's allocation of assets.
Starting point is 01:41:02 And we just had a helicopter shot down. So we're not going to commit any more helicopters into this area. And so what their whole thing was is that they had to get on the ground after we had containment of the area to provide a ground force security element on their HLZ for them to be able to come in. And so we had that just, you know, right before the sun came up. So it almost, I mean, it almost sounds like they get super risk adverse. Like we have one helicopter down. It is very risk. Yes. We have a helicopter down. And so we're not going to risk another helicopter to get you guys the assets you need. Because we don't.
Starting point is 01:41:45 want to lose another helicopter. Right. And that, so then a lot of it becomes like things that we were requesting that normally would come in like on the back of a 47 and just get kicked out in a kit bag. Yeah. It has to get put on a fixed wing aircraft. So it C-130 and then it has to get CDS drop, combat delivery system. It has to get dumped to us that way so they could fly in, you know, A-10s as air support and all that other kind of stuff.
Starting point is 01:42:11 And it just becomes a risk aversion to more groundfire. for Red Rewing assets. So how did this unfold as the sun came up and you're continuing with this recovery mission now? That's what this has turned into. Right. So as all this is going on and we're trying to figure out, is there going to be anybody else that's coming in. And so we're securing the crash site in a kind of a flickball shaped. perimeter as loose as we can.
Starting point is 01:42:46 And to start working the recovery efforts of it, you know, it's still dark and night vision's not working because it's so bright with all the fire. It just becomes this, basically sent two fire teams out, one on the north side of the creek that, the tangy river, and one on the south side. We just started doing concentric arcs, you know, basically fire teams online just kind of combing around this. And what we're looking for is anybody that has been possibly ejected from the crash,
Starting point is 01:43:20 whether they had survived or, you know, hurt or whatnot. And so that was the first thing is, you know, how much of this can we clear within reason, you know, get out, you know, 100, 200 meters and make sure that, you know, when we start pulling remains, we're not missing somebody because they got pitched out of the back. So that's how we found like the first six to eight guys were kind of in this arc pattern that had been kind of thrown out within, you know, 50 meters.
Starting point is 01:43:54 And then, you know, we got started getting the accountability. And so then we started finding chunks of the aircraft, the rotor assemblies, the front and rear rotor assemblies, you know, are in these positions. And we're kind of assuming that that's the farthest that any of this recollections. is going to get, you know, people aren't going to get that far, but, you know, the rotor blades are still spinning and and torqued out and they're going to, you know, wobble off and, you know, end up in an orchard here or get slammed into a tree, you know, cluster of trees over here. And so then it becomes, you know, how can we work this problem while it's still on fire? And so then it becomes, you know, how long can we sustain, you know, the exposure to the heat and things cooking off and
Starting point is 01:44:42 exploding and, you know, the risk of force for us to make this as fast as possible. And, you know, it's just kind of one of those surreal moments, if you will, because you start, you know, as the sun's coming up, you're starting to see the look on everybody's face of just, you know, horror and disbelief that, you know, I can't believe this has happened. And, you know, you try not to expose everybody to that. So you're really relying heavy on the guys that have a little bit more season under their belts and the squads that are a little bit more mature. And, you know, so I was really relying real heavy on second squad at the time to, you know,
Starting point is 01:45:31 to work this. And then as they started to get gassed and just worn out, you know, rotating. one other squad in to take over until we kind of got this all, you know, accounted for. And I mean,
Starting point is 01:45:52 I don't want to get like too graphic, but I mean, they're actually having to recover the remains of these seals and attachments who burned up in the crash. And we're picking them up out of the firing, you know, wreck
Starting point is 01:46:07 and stuff. So, it's a pretty difficult job yeah yeah i mean you know if you were for the guys that were there you know we had talked about it later it's like you know hollywood couldn't have written anything more graphic right for people that you know want to imagine what this is like i mean you couldn't have written a script like this any right any more graphic than what it actually turned out to be as far as the way and movies are made now.
Starting point is 01:46:39 It's crazy. Right. And, you know, and I give the credit to the boys because they, you know, they handled a lot. Yeah. That night. And, you know, for some of them, you know, it's their first deployment. And, you know, they're seeing the worst that can happen. And so, you know, it's trying to make sure that everything was okay.
Starting point is 01:47:06 Right. Right. And so, you know, I think it was probably about four, four and a half, five hours. And we had everybody, you know, pulled out and accounted for. And, you know, it wasn't, there wasn't a lot of some people left. So, because that was one of the questions, you know, later when talking with the jock and things after it was all said and done. You know, there was, you know, questions over, you know, how did you get accountability? because, you know, through the investigation, I mean, there was investigations that went on.
Starting point is 01:47:44 This thing went on for weeks of, you know, there's everybody wants all these answers. And so then, you know, one of the questions comes is like, how did you, you know, come up with that you had accountability of all of these people, you know, and it wasn't preface. The statement wasn't prefaced correctly because they're getting information from like mortuary affairs that says, you know, You can't count it as a human unless you have 51% of the remains. And some of these guys are, you know, not to be graphic. There's, you know, it's sea spines and skulls. Right, yeah. You did the best.
Starting point is 01:48:22 You did the best you possibly could under combat conditions. Right. Right. And so, you know, we go, you know, we go up for the ramp ceremony. And so anybody who's spent any time in the Ranger Regiment, you know, personnel and accountability of people and equipment. That is the senior NCO's bread and butter. That's his baby.
Starting point is 01:48:44 And so I just remember going into the jock and, you know, we're up there for the ramp ceremony. I'm kind of talking with the, you know, the regimental staff and the officers and, you know, bumped into somebody that I, you know, knew and I respected. And he goes, you know, hey, you did really good under the circumstances. And I said, sir, I got a bone to pick. And I don't care if it gets me fired, you know. It was one of those.
Starting point is 01:49:07 since winning the Ranger Regiment is personnel accountability of men, weapons, and equipment, not the NCO's job. And when you grill my platoon leader over something that he's not involved in, I have a big problem with that. And so, you know, I'm being polite about it. You know, but it was one of those things where, you know, it was like, you know, We did the best we could under the circumstances, and, you know, I wouldn't have given you a false report in these circumstances if I wasn't sure that we had everybody. Right. And so your PL was taking heat?
Starting point is 01:49:49 Like they were trying, like your PL was taking heat? Yeah, there was a there was a VTC, so a video teleconference. It's like a few days later. And he was being grilled over, you know, accountability and how did we get these numbers? But they never prefaced where they're getting their questionable. you know, numbers from or how we could say we had accountability.
Starting point is 01:50:13 And so, you know, that came to light and I just, I, you know, I was still short-fused from the whole thing. And I just was like, well,
Starting point is 01:50:21 I don't care. No, I get it. You're the platoon sergeant. And the buck stops with you. And you, you've said that. You know,
Starting point is 01:50:30 I understand. Well, no, I mean, what was fun is that, you know, I excuse myself from the big jock and,
Starting point is 01:50:37 you know, We went over to the ramp to stand by for the ceremony and somebody came over and they actually apologized to my platoon leader for, you know, that grilling, if you will. And I was, I actually thought that, you know, the, the fabled Black Chinook was going to come in and carry him off. And I was going to be without a platoon leader, but it didn't happen. And, you know, I felt, you know, justified after that, that, you know, he got raked over the coals for something that wasn't in his lane.
Starting point is 01:51:04 Right. And, you know, I got him in apology. And so then everything was straight. Not trying to brag on the situation, but, you know, it's not his. Yeah, you guys speak up. And also that they are using an administrative standard for, you know, yes, you know, this is, this is a sailor, but it's not enough of a sailor to be counted. Get the fuck out of here. Yeah, exactly.
Starting point is 01:51:34 Yeah. You know, like I said, you know, we, you can't, nobody can have more than one skull and one C spine. Yeah. Yeah. No, I, I did, did the, did the army or did the military take steps to make sure that that your guys were okay after that? Because that, especially if you think about some 1819-old, you know, in his first deployment. So we, sorry. We had, you know, throughout the rest of the deployment, we had, you know, the psychologist and the chaplains, you know, they were always coming in and checking on the guys. And, you know, as leaders, you know, we were constantly asking if they were, you know, doing okay. And, you know, if everybody was still having issues from the floor. But the, the hardest challenge as a leader was to, you know, look the boys in the face when it was all done and everything got.
Starting point is 01:52:34 cleared to operate again was to, you know, tell them, hey, we're going out. And we're going to load back on these aircraft and we're just going to keep doing business. And, you know, to see the look in some of their faces, it's just, you know, there's timidness in their eyes that you can see. Because they've seen the worst that could happen and, you know, ask them to step back on those airframes and to, you know, assume that risk, you know, that was the hardest. You know, and then it got easier for them, you know, as we kind of settled back in. But, you know, then we started, and we went back into Tangie like six weeks later, and we lost one of our guys. Tyler Holtz was killed.
Starting point is 01:53:20 Had another guy, a specialist who was wounded, all in the same area of, you know, where that crash had happened within about 400 meters, 500 meters of the, crash site itself because what we had done was we had gone back through all the video and the ISR and you know figured out where those rocks were fired from and so that became a target in itself a very deliberate target and you know we brought the rest of bravo company up and did a big company op in there and you know we put 150 rangers on the ground and you know we were just basically what it was to just say hey look you may have shot an aircraft down we're not afraid to come in here And, you know, then, you know, unfortunately, we have a team leader that's killed, another guy that's, you know, severely wounded.
Starting point is 01:54:11 And, you know, so it is kind of this big downer for that. And then, you know, and then I get hurt a few weeks later. And so it's just kind of weird. One brawages continues to just take a meeting either physically or emotion. or mentally and it was a rough trip i always you know guys always asking what was that one like i was like well at that point in time you know one bravo had been in more gunfights that deployment than the rest of the battalion together all the other platoons we had been in more gun fights on that trip and guys were just spent yeah nigglis before we get into the operation that led to your injury i
Starting point is 01:55:00 I wanted to ask you, because it's something we've talked about on the show before, and as a senior NCO, you know, you mentioned the one side of how the guys responded to the extortion 17, the timidity or the timidness. How is an, how is an NCO? Did you have to deal with the other side of that, too, of reining in the guys that wanted to get some that wanted payback and would look. And that was a broad definition of a payback. Sure. I know what you're getting at. And you always say, hey, look,
Starting point is 01:55:38 you know, we're going back in here, but we're still going to be as professional as we possibly can. And there will be no shenanigans. You know, it is to beat that into them. It's like no matter what you feel, no matter what happened with those guys,
Starting point is 01:55:52 we're not going to get shut down operationally because somebody wants to do something stupid as payback. We're going to get it. And we're, We're going to give it to them in the right way, and we're going to do it our way, you know, within the rules of engagement. And, you know, and that's going to be it. There's not going to be any shenanigans.
Starting point is 01:56:14 Were there, during your time in the Rangers, were there, like, leadership challenges? And if, in that, in that sense. And if so, how were they dealt with? Not really. I know what you're getting at. you know, as the Ranger Regiment or even just the battalion as a whole, you know, the kind of when you look back at the way things were, when everything started in 2001, you know, we started kind of as a special operations support, you know, we're there to, you know,
Starting point is 01:56:49 provide security and blocking positions and things for, you know, Delta Force and Team 6 and, you know, to get to the point where we're, we're now we're running and gunning on the same target decks and you know the same targeting lines and you know we've earned our right to to be in this point i most of the guys at this point as far as squad leaders and and you know even some of the senior team leaders but you know we we know what it's like to be the guy on the outside look at in and now we're on the inside right there there was no way that anybody was going to risk you know, ruining that reputation that that we had of for anything.
Starting point is 01:57:37 And so. No, that's, it's, it's really interesting. Because it sounds like it really was a, a matter of responsible leadership in the sense of, you know, setting the tone and making sure that that, making certain that that tone is stuck to. Right. You know, and a lot of that, you know, it comes down to the people that, you know, we pick as NCOs to continue to lead inside the regiment. It's not, you know, it's not just me. You know, it's all the other 11thatoon sergeants that were there at the time.
Starting point is 01:58:18 And, you know, it's all the squad leaders that we say, hey, this guy has what it takes to be that squaliliter. It's that guy that has the personal integrity to, you know, continue to push, push the, you know, what we're doing in the right direction. It's not to compromise our integrity or any of that stuff because, you know, when those kind of things start happening and you start getting questionable circumstances on target, you know, then your freedom of maneuver and freedom of movement and, you know, what you do, it starts getting, you know, put under a microscope. And so nobody wants to be under the microscope. And so, you know, I give it to the guys that that took over after I got hurt and, you know, the guys that are even still doing it today. You know, it's, it is carrying on that legacy of what we started 20 years ago and still continuing to develop, you know, where it's going in the future. And, you know, it's awesome to be, you know, a part of that history, you know, because I look at what the Ranger Regiment, is now, and back to what it was when you were there and when I was a young private,
Starting point is 01:59:36 and it is hands down a completely different organization. You know, we can do all that old stuff, but we are so much better at fitting into the operational roles that we have now. Yeah. Yeah. So we'll just talk about the incident where you were wounded and then we'll take some viewer questions and yeah yeah yeah so can you tell us about yeah the operation which presumably a purple heart is in the works here so uh yeah so it's october six seven um 2011 we're taking a swing
Starting point is 02:00:17 at an iED and weapons facilitator it's a mid-level target you know kind of the middle of the deck it gets you the guys above and the guys below which the guys below are you know the guys below are you know the targets in the pyramid that, you know, the BS battle space owners are dealing with. And so when you slice out the middle, you can work the targeting from both sides. You can get the guys who are providing stuff from across the border. And then it gives you the ability to pass onto the battle space owner who's putting this stuff in the roads that are trying to blow their trucks up. So, you know, that's kind of where we're swinging across the food pyramid, if you will,
Starting point is 02:00:52 is right in the middle. And so we're in Baraki, Baroque or, well, Baroque was the little, the town, but we're in Logar province, kind of on the east side of the
Starting point is 02:01:10 tangy valley. And the target grids dropped in a little cluster of four buildings that all shared walls. So it's like a plus symbol. And you know, you get 25% chance of taking
Starting point is 02:01:28 the swing right the first time. And so we swung wrong. And so we went reset all the pieces to move and strike the next compound. And as we're resetting all the pieces, you know, I made a stupid decision that I preached a thousand times before and shoot houses. Don't ever put your body in front of an open doorway. And I had just instinctually, I just stupidly put my leg across this doorway. And as soon as I did it to hold the door open, I took a three-round burst. I took first round through the right thigh. Then I took one as I was getting spun out of the way. I took one through the right armpit and entered in my armpit and exited out my bicep.
Starting point is 02:02:13 And then I took the last one through my helmet. Through the helmet. Well, I mean, it split the helmet. Like the Kevlar opened up. it hit right temple right here and then it blew my nods off my mouth. Holy shit. It came out right on the top. I'm looking at the picture in your book.
Starting point is 02:02:37 I mean, that's bad. From your leg. Yeah. That's bad. Yeah. So, you know, a dual tube, dual tube night invasion, you know, when I got everything, when I hooked it back on and went to flip it down, everything was offset.
Starting point is 02:02:54 And, uh, so I always. people go, well, what did that feel like? I was like, well, I know what a baseball feels like when somebody hits a home run. Yeah. I mean, and honestly, all those, I mean, all three of those areas, your leg, you know, with the formal and everything down there. And then. Right. And then your armpit, like around going in the armpits is one of the worst things.
Starting point is 02:03:17 Yeah, is one of the worst things. Right. So when I finally, you know, after it was all said and done, I got, you know, I finally made it to Germany. and I was talking, you know, had a chance to kind of talk with one of the surgeons who happened to be one of the old battalion surgeons. And, you know, he came in and he was kind of joking with me. I heard about this cranky old ranger, NCO who's down here just, you know, he's just giving me a hard time. And so I was like, you know, I was asking questions. I said, I know I got shot through here, but, you know, what were the, you know, how lucky am I or how lucky was it?
Starting point is 02:03:54 And he goes, well, you have the, the. You know, the femoral artery and the femoral nerve, they run parallel to each other down the inside of your thigh. And he said that round went right between both of them. God. And I was like, well, okay. All those ops, and this was the one that got you. Yeah, all that. And this was my stupid mistake.
Starting point is 02:04:23 And so, you know, that being said, that night, that gunfight went on for, You know, they brought in the QRF to, too Bravo came in to backup first lieutenant because we had, I was wounded, urgent surgical. Specialist Seros was expectant. And then we had an Afghan partner who was expecting. He had taken a round to the face. And, you know, we had two other guys that were wounded severely, but they didn't see. say anything about it because they were still able to conduct ops. And then we had 12 other guys that had received fragmentation because I got shot and then,
Starting point is 02:05:12 you know, there was an exchange of gunfire and then the enemy threw a hand grenade out into this little alley. And so then it went off and, you know, I got a whole bunch of fragmentation in the back of my, you know, hamstrings from it and then a bunch of other guys caught frag off it. But that, that objective alone that night, we gave out 14 purple hearts. Wow. Wow. So even after you got shot, you kept getting here, like, they just wouldn't leave you alone. You kept on you were just like frying. You're like, I'm out. It's like, I got shot and then you, you know, it's like time out. No. Yeah, right. Right. I'm already out, guys. Everybody goes, everybody goes, you know, did you have this, you know, surreal moment where it's like time slowed down? Yeah. Because what I perceive in my mind as being, you know, just a minute or two is, you know, It turned out, you know, it's probably about six or seven minutes. Yeah. Because, you know, my bell's wrong.
Starting point is 02:06:05 Yeah. The lights got real dim in the tunnel. Yeah. If you will. And in my mind, you know, we do all this casually play during training. But when it actually happens, you got to, it's a conscious thought effort to go, okay, I have to put a tourniquet on. Yeah. You're like, I know where they are, but can I reach it?
Starting point is 02:06:26 Yeah. Can I get to it? because I'm kind of laid over on it. And it's like, well, I can't really move. And I knew my femur hadn't been broken because I stupidly stepped, you know, I put pressure down on my leg when I lost my balance after I got shot in the head. So I was like, okay, good. You know, in my mind, I'm like, my femur's not broken.
Starting point is 02:06:44 And so then I'm like, okay, I've got a tourniquet in my mid pouch. And then I also have one down on my left calf, but I've got all this crap. And I'm kind of in this weird position. Can I even reach it? Yeah. You know, because I've got a team leader and two other guys. who are straddling over top of me trying to get guns through this doorway and they're, you know, in the in the fight and I'm not in the fight anymore.
Starting point is 02:07:06 Right. And I'm trying to like reach between their legs and my legs and grab this tourniquet and put it on. And then, you know, that is sucks. And then you're like, okay, but I still have to crank this thing down and, you know, get it as tight as I can get it. And then there's a lull. And then, you know, I know that Saros is hurt. you know so I know I can get I can probably walk and so you know I get help stood up and then
Starting point is 02:07:35 I try to get myself out of the way you know as best I can and so I start walking back down the alleyway to where we're going to have the CCP and then you know then then my leg starts going numb and it's like hey doc come here you got to help me and you know really what I'm trying do is just get out of the way so that the other medic can get in there and help seros and get him kind of drug out of the way into the CCP. But I don't really start panicking about the whole thing until I got my equipment cut off and my radios came out. And so then I lose all situational awareness to the fight. Right. And then it's like anxiety comes in. It's like I have no idea what's going on anymore and I am not in control of anything as a leader and that that just
Starting point is 02:08:30 sucks. But I knew when we reorganized the priority for Medevac and it became myself and one of the snipers who took frag through the nose, took frag through the bridge of his nose, I knew that when I and him went from being on the second aircraft out to being on the first aircraft out and the Afghan and Saros ended up on the second aircraft. I just knew that, you know, thanks, we're not not going well. And, you know, Doc wasn't going to tell me anything anymore because I'm not in, you know, the first sergeant saw on the objective. So he's kind of taken over those duties. And I just, you know, was bad at that point in my mind. It's just, you know, everything that's gone
Starting point is 02:09:13 sideways can go sideways and inside out. And, and so they met a vacuum and then, when did you, when did you become aware of how the operation went? So I got medevac and got back to Shank. It was probably about 30 minutes after I had gotten shot. By the time we got, you know, from the CC, you know, point of impact to the CCP and then over to the HLZ to Medivac and then loaded it on and then into the cash. and then surgery, and then I didn't find out that Saras was killed so I got the bog room. And then, you know, some of the guys that were in the S4 shop come over to tell me what was going on on the objective.
Starting point is 02:10:03 And that gave the QRF came in and the boys are still out there. And, you know, the whole thing went for like six more hours before, you know, this son, you know, it was done and over with. and they were pulling both the tunes out just as the sun was coming up. Yeah. And so then you begin that long process of rehabilitation. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:10:30 So, you know, it was probably three or four days in Afghanistan and Boggham waiting on the Medevac transport to go to Germany. And it was a week in Germany. And then back to Madigan and, you know, another week to 10 days at Madigan. And by the time I was all said and done, it was a dozen surgeries and then, you know, rehab. So I didn't make it back on active duty status until after New Year's 2012. Did you, were you able to contact your wife from theater or when did she find out about it? I called her right after I got out of the first surgery in Shank. and but they handed me the sat phone and I'm still you know trying to come out of sedation from that
Starting point is 02:11:20 and so you know sat phones don't work well when the antenna is pointed to the ground and so it's kind of frustrated you know my mouth's all cotton-bald from you know the anesthesia and the fentanyl and you know I'm frustrated that I cannot be coherent enough I just remember handing the phone up to the platoon I'm like just please tell her and so he's a gave her the you know the you know the you know the information that was going on and then uh you know the battalion commander called her a little bit later i was in surgery and in my bogg room and so uh she she knew within you know a couple hours yeah yeah you write in the in your book that you know probably the most difficult conversation you had to have was with uh the family of
Starting point is 02:12:12 specialist seros and you know how yeah and you know that that was uh you know it's always tough you know when you have to look you know them in the you know in the face and say hey i'm you know i'm sorry that your son died and he died you know right next to me from you know not not getting shot but you know he died from fragmentation that just happened to catch him under the arm in just the right spot where there was a gap in the armor and you know that I survived and your son's dead. And, you know, that's, that's one of those, those tough situations. And, you know, because they can go one or two ways.
Starting point is 02:12:52 You know, they could be, they can hate you for life or they can embrace you. And, you know, luckily enough, his dad had spent time in the army. So he understood. And so that was okay. And, you know, that was kind of one of the harder things. You know, last year I got a chance to meet a bunch of the gold star. families for the SEAL team that was killed. And, you know, I'm always proud to meet them, but it's kind of one of those double-edged
Starting point is 02:13:20 things is that, you know, they're still holding on to anger or grief and, you know, which way is it going to go, you know, are they going to embrace you, or are they going to hate you? And, you know, that's tough because I never not want to meet them. But, you know, on the same side of it, you know, I'm, you know, their son is not. not here and I am. Right. You know, but regardless of the fact, you know, I, I have a sense of pride and all the boys that were there that night have a sense of pride, you know, that, hey, you know, regardless of whether you like us or hate us, you know, we brought them home. Yeah. You know, we're willing to accept, you know, your anger or frustration at the situation, you know, that's just
Starting point is 02:14:06 the way it is on the survivor's side of it. Right. Right. Yeah, you, I mean, you, can't blame people for their emotions and their circumstances, you know. So how did you end up finishing out your career after getting shot up pretty badly? I spent six months on battalion staff and running the S2 shop. And then we had an incident happen where we had to relieve a platoon sergeant in one of the companies. And so I ended up moving over to snipers for my last year and was running the sniper tune for the last year. And then I was on the sniper range.
Starting point is 02:14:49 We were out eastern Washington shooting on a department energy range over there. And the company commander and the first sergeant come over. And, you know, off-site training is always fun because everybody gets to be out of the office. So, you know, I'm hobbling around and kind of dragging my leg. And the first sergeant's like, hey, you're going to see a specialist when we get back. And so I went and saw the specialists and he kind of just laid it out, you know, bluntly for me. He goes, do you want to walk when you're 40?
Starting point is 02:15:19 And I said, well, yeah. And he goes, well, then you need to stop now. And so, you know, that started the whole, you know, med board process. And so then I was out of the Army about six months later. Wow. Wow. So I know a lot of guys that take some a year or two or three to get. get out, but because I wasn't on any kind of pain medications or any of that stuff,
Starting point is 02:15:48 you know, it didn't have to, you know, worry about substance abuse or any of that. And so my packet kind of went a little bit faster than some of the other guys. Some of the other guys from that had gotten shot that deployment, you know, were still in for another year or so even after I got out because they had to get, you know, through kind of a I don't want to say rehab process, but, you know, they kind of had to get leaned up the meds and, you know, and finish the rehabbing and stuff. Yeah, I also, I noticed it in your book. You also, are you involved with Gallant Few? I know that you have the postscript for them.
Starting point is 02:16:34 They, I'm friends with, you know, some of the guys that did Gallant Few, Tim Mabel. and I'm drawing a blank on some of the others. But it was one of those things. Yeah, Carl Munger. And so it was one of those things that he, Carl asked me if we would put that in there. And I said I will most definitely gladly, you know,
Starting point is 02:16:56 put that in there to kind of help, you know, all the fellows out. Yeah. I mean, since it's in your book, hey, folks, if you have a spare five bucks this month or whatever,
Starting point is 02:17:11 why don't you, head over to Gallant Few. Yeah, I haven't spoken to Carl in a while, and probably I should correct that. But he's a good guy, and Gallant Fue does a lot to help guys out. But it's Gallant Fute. They really do. Yeah, Gallantfue.org. Check them out.
Starting point is 02:17:27 Throw them a buck or two, you know. So I know we've kept you for a while here, Nick, but let's hit up these user questions real quick. Yeah, we've only got a couple. One from Jackson, thank you very much. Did you ever work with any of the tier one units, Delta, Seal Team 6, HART, and if so, which impressed you the most of the bunch and why? You work with all of them, you know, in some aspect or another. I lean towards, you know, I did enjoy working with Delta Force a little bit more. And a lot of it is just because there's kind of this, I don't know.
Starting point is 02:18:09 And all the tier elements have their own personality. And we kind of sometimes fit better with guys in Delta Force because especially early on, you know, a lot of the team leaders and squad leaders and guys, you know, the career progression is, you know, from the Ranger Regiment is to go to that organization. So there is a familiarity with people who understand where you're coming from as a unit or an organization. whereas we didn't really have that for a while with Team 6. And so we always kind of got looked at as like the Kid Brother thing. And then as far as the HRT, I've only worked with a few guys from there.
Starting point is 02:18:48 And that was in the kind of middle part of Iraq. It was only a select few. And that was to kind of we were building the terrorist database with the, you know, the three-letter agencies for, you know, Homeland Security and whatnot. So as far as that goes, but everybody's, they're all a great bunch of guys. I mean, I know, you know, in certain aspects, you know, we all talk trash on each other because we can. And, you know, it's a cultural thing. And if you're not a part of the culture, then sometimes it gets looked at.
Starting point is 02:19:21 It's unprofessional. But, you know, you're reading enough seal books and they take cheap shots on us. And so this, some of this was a, you know, a chance to, you know, level the field, if you will, and take few shots of them. And so, yeah. Crashed some shade down. If you want to call me unprofessional, then, you know, then so be it. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:19:45 Um, thanks for the donation. So, Holmes gave us a sticker. And I'm not in, Holmes later comments that sticker didn't work out right. Dang. So I don't,
Starting point is 02:19:56 the sticker is either somebody raising us up and worshiping us or I'll go with it. Or it's, I don't know, it's like holding up a new baby. I'm not sure. But I'm going to go with the work. I'll go with that. The three of us, the four of us, including D, the four of us are the new pantheon for Oms. Hey, can we take like a five minute break? Yeah, man.
Starting point is 02:20:23 Yeah, go ahead, man. I've got a cramp going on. Yeah, yeah. All right, thanks. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, so guys, next episode is going to be, hold on a second. I'll tease this out here.
Starting point is 02:20:39 Okay, so on the third, actually, we have an extra episode that we crammed in here. James Leporta, who is an investigative journalist with the Associated Press. He is also a former Marine, and he's broken some of the stories about, what's that guy's name, Majuski? Guy running for Congress, who's a stolen, I shouldn't say that's stolen valor dude. I shouldn't say he's a stolen valor guy. He actually did serve, but. But it's still stolen valor if you say that you did top secret deployments and you didn't. My deployments are classified.
Starting point is 02:21:12 Yeah, that's still like, I think that's still still in value. I don't know. We'll let you guys vote whether a stolen valor or not. But if a dude makes stuff, stuff about his military career, that's kind of a not cool. Stolen valor-ish. And then next Friday is Tim Weiner. Tim is a journalist. He wrote, he's written a number of books. He's written some pretty
Starting point is 02:21:34 definitive histories of the Central Intelligence Agency and the FBI and a history of political warfare between America and Russia. So that'll be a pretty interesting conversation, I think. And then on the 10th, another extra episode, Joan Barker, and she was a facilitator. some of the aviation foreign internal defense in Afghanistan. And in both Tim and Joan, they will be in studio interviews. And so will on the 14th, John Fox, who he was a Marine and he worked or he went and he became an international volunteer with the YPG in Syria. And he wrote this book that I'm almost done with it now.
Starting point is 02:22:22 He wrote a book about it's co-authored, him and two other guys who are far, foreign volunteers and fought with the Kurds in Syria against ISIS. So it's a pretty fascinating book. I think it'll be a good interview. Good stuff. Good stuff. And if you haven't joined our patron, join our patron. Like hook us up. Hook yourselves up. There's a ton of bonus content on there. Like I said, you get to see Jack and I in our, I said smoking pajamas earlier. I meant smoking jackets, but we keep it casual. We don't have smoking jackets quite yet. We keep it really casual. And our wifu pillows. We have the humidor and the cigars are on their way.
Starting point is 02:23:04 So we'll see who wants to smoke it up. Yeah. Neglis, thanks so much, man, for spending a Friday night with us. We really appreciate it. Yeah. Quick one from one of our- I appreciate you guys having me. One of our Patreon users asks, since you were in 275,
Starting point is 02:23:26 Did you ever serve with Pat Tillman and his brother? Yeah, I mean, they were an alpha company, and I was in Bravo Company and Charlie County. But yeah, they were, Kevin and Pat were both there at the same time. Do I know them? Not really. I mean, I know him about as well as I, you know Matt Best, which is I know who he is. And I know he was an alpha company, and, you know, that's about where it's at. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 02:23:56 Fair enough. So everybody, some great, great war stories. I mean, on the ground stuff for so many things that have happened during the Gwatt first-hand accounts. Run to the sound of the guns. Check it out. Get it on, you know, we say Amazon. The link is down the description. The link is down below.
Starting point is 02:24:18 But, yeah, we highly recommend it. Check it out. Do you have anything that you want to plug, aside from Gallant, you are you involved in any charities or organizations or businesses that you want to plug? Anything that you want to do? Not currently, you know, no, I'm not involved in anything. I'm just a retired guy who got conned into writing the book, if you will. Well, the people ask me, you know, hey, would you write another one?
Starting point is 02:24:53 And I was like, no, because if I haven't known what it was going to take. to write the first one. I would not have even written that one. Yeah, it's a great book, tons of references. A lot of great pictures, too, which is something, you know, you see a lot of pictures in Vietnam era books, but you don't see a lot of pictures, I think, in like modern GWAT books a lot of times, which is, I think it's really cool. You know, it's something that a lot of really interesting. And that one of your wound, I've never seen a pump like that. That sucks. Yeah. Yeah. It's very interesting. Yeah. Yeah. but it does suck because it's a wound back.
Starting point is 02:25:28 Yeah. So it's sucking out all the fluids and whatever. But I'm bum. Sorry. All right. All right. Thank you, Nick, so much, you know, again, I really appreciate it. Appreciate your family's patience with us while we suck you away on a Friday.
Starting point is 02:25:43 And, you know, if there's anything, you know, we can do, feel free to reach out anytime and hope to talk to you again soon. All right. I appreciate it. Thanks, guys. Have a good night. Take care. Thank you.
Starting point is 02:25:54 If you were going to joined us, we'll see you next Friday. Or we'll see you before that with games.

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