American Sniper: The Autobiography of the Most Lethal Sniper in U. S. Military History



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American Sniper1

T
HE
 S
HERIFF OF
 R
AMADI
T
he Ramadi offensive would eventually be considered an important
milestone and turning point in the war, one of the key events that
helped Iraq emerge from utter chaos. Because of that, there was a
good deal of attention on the fighters who were there. And some of
that attention eventually came to focus on our Team.


As I hope I’ve made clear, I don’t feel SEALs should be singled
out publicly as a force. We don’t need the publicity. We are silent
professionals, every one of us; the quieter we are, the better able
we are to do our job.
Unfortunately, that’s not the world we live in. If it were, I
wouldn’t have felt it necessary to write this book.
Let me say for the record that I believe the credit in Ramadi and
in all of Iraq should go to the Army and Marine warriors who fought
there as well as the SEALs. It should be fairly proportioned out.
Yes, SEALs did a good job, and gave their blood. But as we told
the Army and Marine officers and enlisted men we fought beside,
we’re no better than those men when it comes to courage and
worth.
B
ut being in the modern world, people were interested in knowing
about SEALs. After we got back, command called us together for a
briefing so we could tell a famous author and former SEAL what
had happened in battle. The author was Dick Couch.
The funny thing was, he started out not by listening but by
talking.
Not even talking. Mr. Couch came and lectured us about how
wrong-headed we were.
I have a lot of respect for Mr. Couch’s service during the
Vietnam War, where he served with Navy Underwater Demolition
and SEAL Teams. I honor and respect him greatly for that. But a


few of the things he said that day didn’t sit all that well with me.
He got up in front of the room and started telling us that we were
doing things all wrong. He told us we should be winning their hearts
and minds instead of killing them.
“SEALs should be more SF-like,” he claimed, referring (I guess)
to one of Special Forces’ traditional missions of training indigenous
people.
Last time I checked, they think it’s okay to shoot people who
shoot at you, but maybe that’s beside the point.
I was sitting there getting furious. So was the entire team, though
they all kept their mouths shut. He finally asked for comments.
My hand shot up.
I made a few disparaging remarks about what I thought we
might do to the country, then I got serious.
“They only started coming to the peace table after we killed
enough of the savages out there,” I told him. “That was the key.”
I may have used some other colorful phrases as I discussed what
was really going on out there. We had a bit of a back-and-forth
before my head shed signaled that I ought to leave the room. I was
glad to comply.
Afterward, my CO and command chief were furious with me.
But they couldn’t do too much, because they knew I was right.
Mr. Couch wanted to interview me later on. I was reluctant.
Command wanted me to answer his questions. Even my chief sat
me down and talked to me.


So I did. Yup, nope. That was the interview.
In fairness, from what I’ve heard his book is not quite as
negative as I understood his lecture to be. So maybe a few of my
fellow SEALs did have some influence on him.
Y
ou know how Ramadi was won?
We went in and killed all the bad people we could find.
When we started, the decent (or potentially decent) Iraqis didn’t
fear the United States; they did fear the terrorists. The U.S. told
them, “We’ll make it better for you.”
The terrorists said, “We’ll cut your head off.”
Who would you fear? Who would you listen to?
When we went into Ramadi, we told the terrorists, “We’ll cut
your
head off. We will do whatever we have to and eliminate you.”
Not only did we get the terrorists’ attention—we got 
everyone’s
attention. We showed 
we
were the force to be reckoned with.
That’s where the so-called Great Awakening came. It wasn’t
from kissing up to the Iraqis. It was from kicking butt.
The tribal leaders saw that we were bad-asses, and they’d
better get their act together, work together, and stop
accommodating the insurgents. Force moved that battle. We killed
the bad guys and brought the leaders to the peace table.
That is how the world works.



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