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



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American Sniper1

W
ORKING WITH THE
 A
RMY
W
ith the initial attacks dying down after a couple of days, we foot-
patrolled back to COP Falcon from Four Story. There we met with
the captain of the force, and told him that we wanted to be based
out of Falcon rather than having to go all the way back to Camp
Ramadi every few days.
He gave us the in-law suite. We were the Army’s in-laws.


We also told him that we would help him clear whatever area he
wanted. His job was to clear the city around COP Falcon, and ours
was to help him.
“What’s the worst spot you got?” we asked.
He pointed it out.
“That’s where we’re going,” we said.
He shook his head and rolled his eyes.
“You guys are crazy,” he said. “You can have that house, you
can outfit it however you want, you can go wherever you want. But
I want you to know—I’m not coming to get you if you go out there.
There are too many IEDs, I’m going to lose a tank. I can’t do it.”
L
ike a lot of the Army, I’m sure the captain initially looked at us
skeptically. They all assumed we thought we were better than they
were, that we had out-sized egos and shot off our mouths without
being able to back it up. Once we proved to them that we didn’t
think we were better than them—more experienced, yes, but not
stuck up, if you know what I mean—then they usually came around.
We formed strong working relationships with the units, and even
friendships that lasted after the war.
The captain’s unit was doing cordon and search operations,
where they would take an entire block and search it. We started
working with them. We’d do daylight presence patrols—the idea
was to make civilians see troops on a regular basis, gaining more
confidence that they were going to be protected, or that at least we


were there to stay. We would put half the platoon on an overwatch
while the rest patrolled.
A lot of these overwatches would be near Four Story. The guys
downstairs would patrol and almost always be contacted. I’d be
upstairs with other snipers and nail whoever was trying to attack
them.
Or we would bump out five hundred yards, six or eight hundred
yards, going deep into Injun territory to look and wait for the bad
guys. We’d set up on overwatch ahead of one of his patrols. As
soon as his people showed up, they’d draw all sorts of insurgents
toward them. We’d take them down. The bad guys would turn and
try and fire on us; we’d pick them off. We were protectors, bait,
and slayers.
After a few days, the captain came up to us and said, “Y’all are
bad-ass. I don’t care where you go, if you need me, I’m comin’ to
get you. I’ll drive the tank to the front door.”
And from that moment on, he had our faith and our back.
I
was on overwatch at Four Story one morning when some of our
guys started doing a patrol nearby. As they moved to cross the
street, I spotted some insurgents coming down J Street, which was
one of the main roads in that area.
I took down a couple. My guys scattered. Not knowing what
was going on, someone asked over the radio why the hell I was
shooting at them.


“I’m shooting over your head,” I told him. “Look down the
street.”
Insurgents started feeding into the area and a huge firefight
erupted. I saw one guy with an RPG; I got him in my crosshairs,
squeezed easy on the trigger.
He fell.
A few minutes later, one of his friends came out to grab the
rocket launcher.
He fell.
This went on for quite a while. Down the block, another
insurgent with an AK tried to get a shot on my boys. I took him
down—then took down the guy who came to get his gun, and the
next one.
Target-rich environment?! Hell, there were piles of insurgents
littering the road. They finally gave up and disappeared. Our guys
continued to patrol. The 
jundi
s saw action that day; two of them
died in a firefight.
It was tough to keep track of how many kills I got that day, but I
believe the total was the highest I’d ever had in a single day.
W
e knew we were in good with the Army captain when he came
over to us one day and said, “Listen, y’all gotta do one thing for me.
Before I get shipped out of here, I want to shoot my main tank gun
one time. All right? So call me.”
It wasn’t too long after that we got in a firefight and we got his


unit on the radio. We called him over, and he got his tank in and he
got his shot.
There were a lot more in the days that followed. By the time he
left Ramadi, he’d shot it thirty-seven times.

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