title 536: Ramadi: Sacrifice, Brotherhood, and The Return. w/ William "Spanky" Gibson

description >Join Jocko Underground Full Episodes
A Marine’s journey through Ramadi, the realities of combat, and the strength required to return after devastating injury. A conversation about duty, brotherhood, and enduring hardship.


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pubDate Wed, 15 Apr 2026 07:01:42 GMT

author Jocko DEFCOR Network

duration 13496000

transcript

Speaker 1:
[00:00] This is Jocko Podcast number 536 with Echo Charles and me, Jocko Willink. Good evening, Echo. Good evening. After the Fallujah Offensive, the Americans tried to quell the insurgency in Ramadi with a combination of political maneuvers and the cooperation of tribal leaders to root out foreign Islamist fighters. But that plan has spectacularly fallen apart. The men who dared to ally themselves with the Americans quickly learned that the US military couldn't protect them. Insurgents killed 70 of Ramadi's police police recruits in January and at least half a dozen high-profile tribal leaders have been assassinated since then. Ramadi has become a town where anti-American guerrillas operate openly and city bureaucrats are afraid to acknowledge their job titles for fear of being killed. The government center in downtown Ramadi comes under gunfire or mortar attacks daily. And that right, there's an article titled Fear of Big Battle Panics, Iraqi City. It was dated 11 June 2006 from the Los Angeles Times written by Megan K. Stack and Louise Rouge. And we've heard from quite a few people on this podcast that fought in Ramadi in 2005 and 2006 and 2007. And there's one common theme that comes out of those conversations and that is the relationships that we formed on the battlefield. The incredible mutual support that was shared between the Army, Navy and Marine Corps units. And this happened at every level from the Brigade Commander working for the Marine Corps Division Commander and the good relationships there and that carried down through the entire chain of command and at the tactical level. Almost every operation that took place was a joint combined operation and if you're not familiar with military terminology, what that means is joint means it was multiple services. So Army and or Navy and or Marine Corps all working together and then combined means you have different country involved and in this case the country was the soldiers from Iraq, the Jundis and one of the real obvious examples of this was my task unit, task unit bruiser and the relationship that we had with Marine Corps Anglico. And on the on the west side of Ramadi, Leif's Charlie Platoon worked with Dave Burks, Anglico crew. Dave's been on this podcast a bunch of times, Lightning Six. And on the east side, where Seth Stone was, there was a detachment from Delta Platoon, and they were working out at Camp Corregidor with the first of the 506. And there was another Anglico there, Lightning Four. And we had a great relationship with them. And a superb example of the camaraderie that existed in Ramadi is from one of their Marines, Gunny Gibson, Gunny Gibson, who I knew at the time was known more commonly by his nickname, Spanky. And Gunny Gibson, Spanky, was exactly what you would expect from a United States Marine. He was professional. He was mission focused. At the same time, he was funny, approachable, and likable. And everybody notes that he led from the front. And he helped Seth Stone and Delta Platoon learn the battle space, passed on lessons learned. And Gunny Gibson was eventually wounded in Ramadi, shot in the left knee, was medically evacuated, eventually lost his leg above the knee. But that did not stop Gunny Gibson. He attacked his physical therapy just like he attacked the enemy. He started off with walking and then running with his prosthetic and then swimming and then biking and then skiing and then running races. And eventually in January of 2008, he became the first above the knee amputee in history to deploy back to a combat theater in the GWOT. And it is an absolute honor to have him with us here tonight. Retired Master Sergeant William Spanky Gibson. Good to see you, brother.

Speaker 2:
[04:16] Hey, thank you for having me. I appreciate it. It's quite an honor.

Speaker 1:
[04:19] Yeah, man. That's a long time coming. I know we've touched bases and we've high fived at various times in the past 20 years. But to finally get you out here is just it's awesome. Great to see you. And you're going strong. And we were just saying, you're one of the few people that has actually pulled off being full. You're a retired dude. You don't have any side hustles. You don't have any other things going on. You're a fully retired dude that's spending time with your family and your grandkids. What is it? Seven grandkids, seven grandkids.

Speaker 2:
[04:47] Epic. I love it. It's a totally different life.

Speaker 1:
[04:51] So having you out here, man, it's great. I know you're just flew out here for the day to come and do this. And you know, I've had a bunch of guys from Ramadi on and it's so awesome to hear everyone's different perspective of what they saw. And we've had everybody from guys that were, you know, gunners in humvees, you know, privates, you know, E2s all the way up to brigade commanders from both the two to eight and the one one AD. So Gronsky and McFarland have both come on and then a bunch of battalion commanders, just company commanders. We've tried to get a full spectrum of guys that were over there. And it's really great to hear everybody's different perspective. And it'll be awesome to hear years as well. I'm looking forward to it.

Speaker 2:
[05:28] It's good to be here.

Speaker 1:
[05:29] Let's get in a little bit. Give us a little bit of background of growing up. So you were Oklahoma guy.

Speaker 2:
[05:33] Yep, Northeast Oklahoma. I'm an only child. Yeah, no siblings. Part of my life was spent in the country, running around the woods. Yeah, shooting things with 22 until I was old enough to do my hunter safety course at 12 in Oklahoma and start hunting deer. And my mom hated living so far out in the country. And we moved back into town, which for me and my dad both was terrible. But so then it was just normal. Started wrestling in fifth grade. I was always very, very small. And, you know, when you're in fifth and sixth grade, I played football, played basketball, or I'm sorry, baseball, wrestled, and that was about it. You know, and then as I got into junior high and realized that I'm, you know, weighing a hall of about 68 pounds and I'm getting hit by 130 or 150 pound guy, I'm like, I don't like this. And here's this, one of my friends missed a fly ball and broke his cheekbone and I'm like, well, I don't really like this. I love George Brett. I always try to emulate him. That was big in those years, remember? So I stuck with wrestling. And that was pretty much the gist of it. I've always been, I was never a great athlete. I was okay. I got better with time, but I was always a follower. I was always a small guy. Me and one other guy, Jason Brewer, we were the smallest kids in school in our senior year. And I knew I had this desire, I wanted to go in the Marine Corps because of my grandpa, dad being Navy. So that was-

Speaker 1:
[07:07] What did your dad do in the Navy?

Speaker 2:
[07:08] He was CB, electrician.

Speaker 1:
[07:10] Hell yeah.

Speaker 2:
[07:10] Yeah, I joined 58, got out in 70, came back to Northeast Oklahoma and hence me, 71. So, but the-

Speaker 1:
[07:20] And what did you know about your granddad being in the Marine Corps?

Speaker 2:
[07:22] Oh-

Speaker 1:
[07:23] World War II?

Speaker 2:
[07:25] Looking back, yeah, he was World War II, got out. He was from Salinas, California. So my mom was born out here in Redondo Beach. He got out in 46, create kicks off and 50 goes back in. As a tech sergeant back then, they didn't call him Gunny's. And then he stayed from 50 till 76.

Speaker 1:
[07:44] Damn.

Speaker 2:
[07:45] Now, I knew that part of it, because I was definitely in his life a lot. And even in my early career, but you know what? Not till after he passed away in 2000, when I was on recruiting duty, did I ever think I should ask more questions. Because then I got all the photos. That's all I asked for when he passed away was, I just want everything Marine Corps. And which was weird because he had a picture of a battle ship somewhere in the Pacific because he was in the Pacific. And I had a picture back in 1990 of the Jersey doing a Liberty Float going to Portland, Oregon and I just got out of A or C and I've got this picture. Well, when he died, me being on recruiting, we put all the I Love Me stuff on the wall. I stacked that picture and it almost, if it wouldn't have been for some of the equipment that was on the boat he was on, we didn't have in those hard days. But I regret not asking more. Same with my dad. My dad's been gone almost 10 years. I regret not asking more questions. And I just got my air torch promoted staff sergeant. I've been selected for it right before my grandpa passed away. And then they promoted me over the phone in Yuma at the BEQ with my mom to staff sergeant over the phone so I could wear it for his ceremony. So I regret that he didn't get to see me go farther. I regret not asking those questions. But then again, my grandpa was a typical World War II era Marine. The only thing...

Speaker 1:
[09:12] Turned on with the rest of his life, not worried about what he did.

Speaker 2:
[09:15] Yeah, it was all about just enjoy what you got left and not, you know, neither woe is me or, hey, I'm the hero, so.

Speaker 1:
[09:24] So what was it like going to the Marine Corps? Did you just enlist right out of high school?

Speaker 2:
[09:28] Oh yeah, I turned 18 in boot camp. The I there's a best friend of mine that we wrestled together from seventh grade up until I ended up blowing in ACL in high school, which almost DQ'd me. The my buddy, his dad was still here at MCRD San Diego as a series gunnery sardine, still active duty Marine. My buddy John Catcher who looked just like Chesty Puller back in those days. He was guaranteed and I wanted to emulate my grandpa. You know, no disrespect to my dad. Don't like the whites, I like the blues. And so, yeah, that was going to be the number one thing that I want to do is go. Well, what sucked was we graduated around the 22nd of May in Oklahoma. He immediately the next day came out here to stay with his dad before he would check in. My recruiter, a guy named Johnny Matthews, never forget this guy, great guy. He calls me, you know, landline, my parents' house. I'm just hanging out and he goes, I need you to ship. I end up shipping a week before my buddy John, we were buddy program. We didn't realize, he didn't realize it. I didn't think, tell his mom and get ahold of your dad, blah, blah, blah. We're sitting in church, second week of boot camp. And he's like, dude, what happened? I'm like, sorry, brother, that's where Matthew said you got to go. I went. So I went a week after I graduated high school. My 18th birthday was shot day, walking through all the electric guns. And yeah, that started it. I knew that I wasn't going to go to college. I'd taken VOTEC, my junior and senior, for precision machining. So I like doing anything with my hands. But I was going to go to the Marine Corps. I must guarantee, I almost went in the Army. Yeah, a year before I, two friends of my German class that me and John were in, they were able to go to boot camp before their senior year.

Speaker 1:
[11:25] Yeah, that's a cool program.

Speaker 2:
[11:27] It was. And I almost did. But I was only like 10 months out from that ACL reconstruction. And it was the old school one, patellar transfer, where they had big gnarly scar. And yeah, so I guess that was God's way of telling me you're not going in the Army. And I didn't think I could get in the Marine. I was in house detention May 5th of 1989, in house detention because I got in trouble at home at class. And Johnny Matthews comes in there. Well, let's try. I'm like, they dequeued me. I can't. He goes, let's try and kiss and ship. Put me in a couple of days later, got me out in house detention. And then May 29th, 1989, I was at the hotel waiting to come to here. I got here May 30th. My dad's birthday is May 29th. I went to boot camp on my dad's birthday.

Speaker 1:
[12:18] How did you like boot camp? All good?

Speaker 2:
[12:20] I got the name. What's that?

Speaker 1:
[12:22] All good, what you expected?

Speaker 2:
[12:23] It wouldn't matter. Like I was kind of saying before, you tell me what to do. Cause I wasn't a stud. I was a little guy. And I was overweight definitely my senior year, because all I did was drink and eat what I want. And not because of the ACL, woe is me. I didn't start shaving until I was 21. So my mindset at that year was I can never get in the military. I don't want to go to college. I don't want to stay at home, but I didn't have enough testinal fortitude to say, well, you know, pull up your bootstraps and do something. So the best thing I ever had in me was go to boot camp. So when I got here to answer your question was, I was happy as hell. I got the name Spanky. I got thrashed all time for smiling. I was so happy. And not that I was a tough guy, because that wasn't the case. It's ironic when I look at my boot camp pictures, it's been a while, because I graduated second squad leader from boot camp. Everybody else is tall. And here's this just short kid that don't even shave yet. But I guess I've always been very lucky in the factor that you tell me to do it, I'll do it. And I might push back a little bit as I got older, but I'm going to do what you tell me. I'll be a good Marine, because I want to make the Marine Corps look bad, and keep me on a leash, because if you don't, that spanky side comes out. And it never too much that I should be hung for it, but I had a rambunctious side, but it was not a bad rambunctious side. It was just, you better put me back on a leash, because if I use my imagination, it's going to get a little questionable.

Speaker 1:
[14:02] So what did you end up with for an MOS?

Speaker 2:
[14:04] O3. And I was open contract. And I remember me and John, after I came back from MEPS, and I said, they let me in. Well, because it was only a few weeks to go to boot camp, I was, you know, I was at good of the core. I wanted infantry because come on, I grew up in the country. My dad had me in Sea Cadets when I was in like fifth, sixth, seventh grade. I did National Guard explorers. You know, I grew up watching all the really good Sanze Wajima and all the cool movies. And, but I was such a little kid, I didn't think about, you know, everything that comes along with that. I just said, I just want to be like them. And yeah, you gotta think about it. 1982, First Blood, all these things, all the Vietnam stories that were in movies back when we were in that impressionable age group. And so yeah, I mean, to answer your question, I loved boot camp. I really did. I mean, it sucks. But you just had to, drill instructors like me because they like thrashing me, I think. But it was always that fun thrash because they're like, this kid is just like 17 and happy and always smiling. And, you know, not always, but if they would start roaring at somebody with their big boy voice, I would just be over there thinking it's awesome. You know, Full Metal Jacket, Harley Army stuff. But yeah, so I enjoyed it and I think it came natural as long as I had guidance.

Speaker 1:
[15:31] So then what came next?

Speaker 2:
[15:33] Back then, so I graduated boot camp late August. The Marine Corps was testing out the Marine Combat Training School at the Pendleton. So it didn't matter if you're an 03 or not. Now I found out the end of boot camp I was gonna be an 03XX. They don't give you an individual. But you have to go to four weeks of Marine Combat Training or you go on to your eight or ten weeks of School of Infantry. Well fortunately, a bunch of my buddies from boot camp that I looked up to were all going infantry. Some were mortars, some were machine gunners, some were 11s, a couple of them were 51, 52s. Well, honestly, I didn't care. 03XX, I'm happy. We sat at MC, Marine Combat Training in the old Quonset huts for a month. Well, we get to the end of that and they're like, hey, Spank, we're going to go over and endoc. They were running the weekend before we're checking in. Staff Sardin Gerdes, ended up being my platoon sardin for Desert Storm. They were running endoc. Now, I could always-

Speaker 1:
[16:31] So it was endoc? Is that basically like a tryout for recon?

Speaker 2:
[16:35] It is. You know, it's a ruck run. It's two days of, you know, Saturday till Sunday evening. You got to be back at SLY by 6 p.m. or 1800. It, you know, PFT, swim qual, ruck run, a basic, do you have the basic capability to go to reconnaissance? And I just followed my buddies. They talked me into it and I got lucky. I made it. And because if you told me to do it, I did it. Now, I wasn't a stud, so I'm not going to be the fastest. I'm not going to be the slowest. But I grew up on lakes. You know, I wasn't lucky enough to grow up surfing on a coastline somewhere. But I was always in the water as a kid in the summers.

Speaker 1:
[17:19] Makes a huge difference.

Speaker 2:
[17:20] So water never... Now, we don't have swim teams where I'm from in Oklahoma. So I didn't know side stroke, backstroke, you know, crawl, you know, breaststroke, all the proper strokes that are on the swim call. I didn't know any of that. But they would demonstrate and they would say, do it. You know, like the burning oil. Remember when that was all a big deal? You had to do the length of the Olympic pool. You can only surface two or three times, whatever it was. Well, you give me the task and you tell me the parameters of that task. I'll do my best to emulate it and achieve it. So I was lucky because I shouldn't have been there. I was a kid. So that was a kicker. So I in-doc, go to School of Infantry. Those same buddies, one of them, Don Marasca, he's a full-work colonel. Now, they got in line at School of Infantry West, that's what they call it now. They got in line. So I just followed them, not knowing what line I was supposed to be in. When I get up there, there were machine gunner, O-331 machine gunner, and I'm like, nothing cooler than that. Once again, first blood, I'm gonna shoot up the sheriff's station. Well, get up to it, and they're like, no, you need to go down there, you're gonna be in O-352. I'm like, I don't know what that is. Tactically operated wire guided missiles system. So, tow on a truck. I don't wanna do that. I don't wanna shoot machine guns for my friends. And then they noticed I had 13 driving violations in high school, because I was a pizza delivery guy, my junior and senior year. So, those guys were like, no, you gotta go over here 0351, which was the dragon. Dragon in the small back in those days, now Javelin. Well, now not even MOS, I think. Now, I kinda wanna do this. I wanna go over there. Well, I was a little guy, but I had good test scores. I did pretty good on the ASFAB and all that stuff, the D-Lab and all that in boot camp. So, I've done pretty good on testing. So, here I am, 0351. But then, by the time you get about the six week SOI, then you find out your duty station watcher. I got first, Recom Battalion. Eventually, it disbanded in 92 and then came back because of OIFOF with my five other buddies.

Speaker 1:
[19:39] Damn, dude.

Speaker 2:
[19:41] So, we get there.

Speaker 1:
[19:41] Was that just luck that that happened?

Speaker 2:
[19:43] I'll always say it is because I should have never been there. My first team leader before I came down to Coronado for school, because remember, we used to come to LFTC-PAC back in those days. Now, it's all at Pendleton, the BRC or whatever. I just followed those guys. So, we all go to Coronado together. You know, a couple of us on the same training team with my, I almost called him an RI., not my ranger instructor. Staff Sergeant Steinhauer was my, we had, you know, the Lauder, we had some real animal recon guys that were instructors as staff sergeants. And we get Steinhauer and, you know, never, you know, that time between November and, you know, I had to do a RIP, I had to do a couple beach weeks. So by the time we got here late, you know, late January to start school, you know, I understood what it was like to do a three mile fin and drag your ruck when you get on the boats or doing, you know, all the stuff we had to do back then, you know, especially hydrographic surveys, the fun stuff. Yeah, just hope I can get out the parameter. I'm not getting bashed in the surf so this is January of 90.

Speaker 1:
[20:52] You're going through the icon school.

Speaker 2:
[20:54] Yep. And then we graduate in April. And then after that, I was in Charlie Company with Lou Gregory and I'm in Silver Star and Desert Storm. But when I got back from school, they moved me over to Bravo Company. So I went to Bravo 2-2, second platoon, second team. And, you know, John Benish and who I was talking about before, Corporal Moffat was my ATL. You know, it was, you know, just happy to be there. And then that's when the fun began.

Speaker 1:
[21:21] And so, so you're like right prime time for the first Desert Shield, Desert Storm.

Speaker 2:
[21:27] Yeah, we, so Charlie Company, all my buddies, I've been in Coronado with, they were, they end up going late September because they're going to support Seventh Marines and they're going to be on the ground during, you know, the shield portion and, you know, bombing campaigns and all that. We didn't get there on Fifth Meb, supporting Fifth Marine Regiment because we had 13 ships on that Meb. And we didn't get into country until first part of February. You know, we floated over, I think we got into Longopo, you know, early December right before Christmas. And then we started pumping from, we didn't stop from Longopo until we got in the Gulf.

Speaker 1:
[22:09] And then you, what, did you get into Kuwait? Did you guys, where'd you go into?

Speaker 2:
[22:14] Yeah, we were in a waffle oil field. So everybody talks about Kofchi, you know, Kofchi being the big stuff for the Marines, pretty much on the coastline. We were what, five, six miles inland because there was a, Saddam had blown up a big oil field right there. And the village, you want to call it that, call it a village, small town, was a waffra. And that was a waffra oil fields. So we punched through a waffra. But when they said go, after the bombing campaign, four days, we were past Ali Asimov.

Speaker 1:
[22:44] What were you in? Were you in vehicles? What were you in?

Speaker 2:
[22:46] Yeah, we were just trucks.

Speaker 1:
[22:47] Trucks?

Speaker 2:
[22:48] And the whole two, five, second battalion, fifth Marines were all Amtrak's. They had like 80 Amtrak's. And they kept getting, you know, they had the Mikulet trucks up front. So they were blowing lanes to go through. I mean, it was interesting as a 19 year old kid. I was going to say it was a Ramadi.

Speaker 1:
[23:06] You were, when you were going in there, were you guys thinking, cause I remember seeing the other, the big reports were on CNN and stuff that there's going to be 40,000 American casualties in the first 40. They had all kinds of crazy stuff. Is that what your mindset was going on?

Speaker 2:
[23:17] And it was, and you know, I kind of skipped over it, but we, you know, back then when you had Yemen, you know, a little different than Yemen and Oman. Now you had North Yemen, South Yemen, now North Yemen, Oman. Well, that's where we trained for that big faint. So we were setting down on those beaches, doing the hydro's, so the boat companies could come in and the, you know, all the LCACs and the LCUs and all that could bring all the grunts in. So we trained for four or five days on the beach there, you know, in North Yemen. And not knowing, I was a kid, not knowing that was that faint to storm the beachhead in Kuwait, you know, the traditional Marine Corps mission, which in an ABFM Recom Platoon, our traditional is hydro, patrol in, be a little ahead of the stay guys and ahead of the infantry and just keep moving. Well, when I remember we're in, you know, on the Tripoli, we're on the COM deck and we're going over the maps. And I was in RTO, I was primary, I remember 104K was 65, even though I was a grunt. We didn't have many COM guys.

Speaker 1:
[24:27] KY65 was a big, Oh, it was a beast.

Speaker 2:
[24:29] And my gosh, you jump that stinking thing and it dropped fill. So you had to carry KIK 13, tape reader, everything with it. And we're gonna bring back memories on that one. But the, we're looking at the, you know, with the old school 10 power, you know, like not Joel Ersens, but the map reading, looking at the sad images. And our team leader has got us in there and we're gonna try to plan that route after the hydro and it was just, you know, trench, trench, berm trench, berm trench, you know, on all those public beaches. And we're like, oh, that's gonna suck. You know, we got to snoop and poop, you know, by platoons, you know, three teams of six guys, we're gonna have to do our 800 meter lane and then go in and gather some information. I said, this is gonna be interesting. And then it went away. But, you know, not like we knew, that didn't get passed down to the lowest level. But it was interesting. And then settin outside of a wafer with a bunch of Saudi, you know, there were Saudis in like a, look like an old school little bitty castle right on the border. And we're out there and, you know, first time I ever seen anybody pray, you know, Muslims. You know, it was wild. I mean, it was just super cool to have that experience at that age.

Speaker 1:
[25:41] Oh yeah, for sure. And so how long were you, how long did you stay over there?

Speaker 2:
[25:45] We only stayed in country like a month and then they brought, they used the majority, you know, cause Trippley had gotten hit. They were trying to figure out what to do with our platoon with everybody trying to find divers to work the offshore, you know, the go plats that had been blown up. Well, me and one other guy were the only non-divers in the platoon. And they take us first of all, right into the ASU and then we go into Dubai and they house us in these like little, I've called them Airbnb's now. So everybody else from our platoon could go out and work go plats and figure that out. And then next thing you know, they're like, okay, you know, we're heading to Bangladesh. And then, you know, we're heading that and that was Operation Sea Angel.

Speaker 1:
[26:29] What was that?

Speaker 2:
[26:31] That's when that tsunami came through. Now this is in 91, March of 90 or yeah, early April 91, Operation Sea Angel. Well, we're floating back to head to the Philippines, which we were all excited about that. And we pull up into Bangladesh and that was, you know, the stuff we saw in Desert Storm from the air campaigns. I guess that's morbid to some people, but it wasn't that bad. It wasn't saving private rye and getting off the Mike boat, you know, getting hammered down. It was just people getting blown up because they didn't put up a fight that well. But Bangladesh, when you see a couple hundred thousand people floating in the Bay of Bengal, and we've got boats and ponchos, so we're going to help this. Well, we only spent three or four days for us. And then we started sitting back to the Philippines just before, you know, the volcano went. Because that volcano went up in June of 91. And then we got back to, you know, off the coast Camp Pendleton, oh, I guess it was right, almost July 1st.

Speaker 1:
[27:34] That's I didn't, I only didn't spend long in country and does your storm that's still a hell of a freaking first deployment right there for a 19 year old kid.

Speaker 2:
[27:40] Yes, I mean, but it's exciting.

Speaker 1:
[27:43] Oh, yeah.

Speaker 2:
[27:43] Because who doesn't join not to be tested? I wish we would have been tested, you know, a lot more just to see how you're going to react during that test. Well, and what 19 year old, 18, 19, 20 year old kid that's trained, trained, trained, trained, trained, you want to be evaluated. Now, being an RNS or an Amphib platoon, you know, because first force had just stood up in 87, 88. So all we had at first Recon Battalion was we had, the Charlie Company was deserts, Habitual Relation Seven Marines, Fifth Marines. We could either go support them with Amphib requirements if they're going to do raid or guess you can call it Deep Recon. So most of our time spent was either doing beach weeks or long patrols, 7, 10 day patrols. You know, to cover that 2 to 50 mile barrier, because in the force, DR People Toons would cover everything for the MEPH agenda. So I love patrolling because I love being in the woods. Did not like carrying a radio, but you got to do what you got to do. I mean, I didn't become appointment until we got to Somalia. I carried PRIC 77, KY 57, then the 104th, KY 65, and I carried that dude for about a year and a half.

Speaker 1:
[28:58] That was my, that was, I was a radio mentor in the team. So I was in the same time period. So it was, eventually we got the 117 bravos, but for HF, the HF was the 104 and the 65.

Speaker 2:
[29:11] Oh yeah.

Speaker 1:
[29:11] That's a freaking.

Speaker 2:
[29:12] And then the DC, do you remember the, did you guys get the digital communication terminal?

Speaker 1:
[29:16] Oh yeah. Yeah. That was that thing called DMG.

Speaker 2:
[29:20] We called it the DCT.

Speaker 1:
[29:22] Okay.

Speaker 2:
[29:22] But that was a brick too. It was with that long skinny ass battery. And the fact that we would have to do our combo reps, our set reps, you know, all of our reporting process, you had to do it on there. And so you just had one more, you know, and back then for us, we called it the DMDG.

Speaker 1:
[29:40] And it was basically Echo Charles, it was like a keyboard with a little LCD screen, you're typing stuff into.

Speaker 2:
[29:48] Least you could handle the brightness, because that was the problem. You got to think when you're in a reconnaissance platoon, you know, if you're going to get under the poncho per se, to have a red light on, or to have to turn a light on for whatever reason. Well, now you've got this screen about that big, that's red, bright red. And it would just, if you didn't check the volume control on that thing, it would be loud and bright. But I thought it was cool because I had to go through CW school.

Speaker 1:
[30:20] Oh yeah, I did too.

Speaker 2:
[30:21] Yeah, and did, did, doll my ass. I must have laid in the rack for months. I was okay at it, but it went away quick. But I would lay, I remember for two weeks, I was laying there, did, did, doll, did, did, doll, did, did, doll. So I was like, if that'll get me that knee key out of, if I can get it out of my ruck, we're good.

Speaker 1:
[30:43] All right, so what are you doing to get back?

Speaker 2:
[30:45] What do you mean, get back in the corps?

Speaker 1:
[30:46] No, so you got back to, you got back to from your first deployment.

Speaker 2:
[30:49] Oh yeah.

Speaker 1:
[30:50] And just get in a workup for another cycle.

Speaker 2:
[30:52] You just start going in the training pipelines. And now there's a whole different mindset because the mindset prior to Desert Storm was all at Coronado. It was all IRA, Spetsnaz. Everything that we trained for was if it's going to be in an urban environment, it's going to be IRA techniques. And if it's going to be, you know, contiguous linear, it was going to be basically Russia, Cold War ideology. And now that's all changed.

Speaker 1:
[31:20] Yeah. You know, when I went to a Sears school it was all like Arab Eastern block for us. It was Eastern block. Like they're speaking like Russians, but like, and then there's like Arabic mixed into it. It was really, you know, they're just trying to cover all the bases, I guess. But yeah, that was the mindset back then.

Speaker 2:
[31:34] Yeah.

Speaker 1:
[31:34] It was like we hadn't quite the Cold War was allegedly over, right? But they hadn't transitioned out of it yet. So that was still definitely a big focus.

Speaker 2:
[31:43] Yeah. And you're not going to train minus the cage parts or something like that. You're not doing the Vietnam era, you know, portion of it. So we get back, we have our leave package and then it starts going in. Because, you know, I'd already went to jump school in October of 90. And we just start preparing, you know, alert contingency and got our beepers. If you remember that stuff. And well, a certain portion of Camp Pendleton units have to be on that every month. They rotate it every month. Nothing sexy. You just had a beeper.

Speaker 1:
[32:14] Yeah. Well, I mean, when I got a beeper, I thought it was like very cool.

Speaker 2:
[32:17] Well, it is.

Speaker 1:
[32:18] Yeah.

Speaker 2:
[32:19] And a Radio Shack suitcase phone, you know, that you can't afford to pay. But the, so yeah, then it just kind of was one thing after another. And, you know, I got married in 91. We had our, I was actually on a JTF6 op doing counter narcotics in New Mexico when my daughter was born, my oldest. So it was just, it's such a blur at this point, 35 years later, because it was just nonstop. If you weren't on the beach or out patrolling or going up to Bridgeport or going to a school or whatever, it just, it's crazy.

Speaker 1:
[32:57] That's just life.

Speaker 2:
[32:58] Yeah, it was just so fast. Looking back on it now. And then, you know, we take off for Somalia. We were actually in, a bunch of us were in RNS school there at SOTG. And well, yeah, I'll say that. We're in RNS school, LA Rides, 92. And they pulled us to go up to El Toro, stage up. Well, yeah, we're getting ready to go on 15th Mew. So when the guys, the infantry is going up there, where they're attached reconnaissance asset, what the hell are you going to do with, you know, 18 of us? You know, we can't get two on a row in a six man snatch team with two guys in the center that we were training at El Toro for. And, you know, I was carrying a saw at that point. I had just come off the radio and was getting ready to become an ATL, which changed. And, you know, I had turned it in, get a shotgun, can't have a saw up there. Well, then, my gosh, get to El Toro and then the next day, they're like, well, we don't need U-18 guys. So come back down. And then, yeah, I didn't want to miss that. Yeah, because that was interesting, doing line training and yeah, that's a little contingency you weren't planning on. But, you know, it was definitely interesting. Well, come back. And then we start getting heavy on the Mew. You know, we, I got in trouble. Do you ever remember a guy named Bob Hassell?

Speaker 1:
[34:22] No.

Speaker 2:
[34:23] Yeah, he'd been in Team One. Him and a guy named, I heard he got killed on the Silver Strand 10, 15 years ago. But Bob Hassell and a guy, what was Gaffney's first name?

Speaker 1:
[34:35] I know Gaffney.

Speaker 2:
[34:36] They got in trouble.

Speaker 1:
[34:38] Not a big surprise.

Speaker 2:
[34:39] They summoned to us for, I guess, your, you know, whatever you guys call it. They came to Somali, they were 15th Mew. They came to be corpsmen for us.

Speaker 1:
[34:48] Oh, right on. Oh, cause they got in trouble.

Speaker 2:
[34:50] Yeah.

Speaker 1:
[34:51] Got it, yeah.

Speaker 2:
[34:52] And never asked, never cared. I wish I remember Gaffney's first name. But the, cause he was younger, Bob Hassell's bigger muscular guy. And we're down in outside of Phoenix. You remember a base called Williams Air Force Base? Right next to the FBI training academy. It's where they were doing the aircraft.

Speaker 1:
[35:12] I don't think I ever went there.

Speaker 2:
[35:13] Okay. That's where the FBI cadets were doing their aircraft takedowns.

Speaker 1:
[35:17] Okay.

Speaker 2:
[35:18] So for our RNS mission, for that Mew, they flew us down so we could gather intelligence on them while they were training. Well, me, Michael Maddenley and Bob Hassell decide to, you know, we're in for a few days. We're going to have Sark duty while the other teams are out doing the RNS mission. We were told not to drink. We go to the Air Force E club there on Williams Air Force there. And we went straight retarded. Thankfully, Bob broke contact. He probably, I think he was second class. He should have mentored me in the other E3 Lance Corporal.

Speaker 1:
[35:52] In his mind, he was.

Speaker 2:
[35:53] He probably was. Well, we didn't, when Bob left to go back to the Hooch, me and Squeak, Squeaky was his name, we decided we didn't want this party to stop. We end up linking up with some young ladies and their boyfriends or whatever they were. And we moved on to a house party kind of thing going on on base housing.

Speaker 1:
[36:16] These are just great decision after great decision.

Speaker 2:
[36:18] Oh, terrible. Yeah. Like I said, you give me a good leash, I'm pretty decent, but you let me off leash, I'll do stupid stuff, immature stuff. Well, that-

Speaker 1:
[36:29] You are what, 20?

Speaker 2:
[36:31] Yeah.

Speaker 1:
[36:31] Yeah.

Speaker 2:
[36:32] Just turned 20 that summer. Well, or no, I was 21. I just turned 21. No, I was 20. I was on restriction when I turned 21. Well, when they kicked us out, because we were just going mad hatter on the Jack Daniels and their subway sandwiches for their party, well, they basically kicked me and hit maddeningly out. Well, then now you got two drunk young Marines that still want to keep going. And as we were meandering, trying to figure out where we're at on this base to where our hooches are, we just see some blinking lights behind a building. And it was golf carts. Later on, it ended up being the Med Building. Well, then we get in the golf carts, we start deciding to play, beat them up. We ended up, as we're bumping golf carts, running one in a big cul-de-sac. So he jumped in and next thing you know, we see some small cactuses in front of a building and we decide to slalom those, which means we ran over every one of them. Didn't know they were endangered. Didn't know that was General's building. We get back at the Hooch at 430, Air Force MPs are there, because they know these have to be Marines. Well, my buddy Madden Lee was wearing a miss, he's wearing white Levi's and a misfit shirt. So not like he's not going to stand out like sore thumb. Well, we talk our way out of it when they're searching all our rooms. And we're like, no, we just woke up. We've got a, you know, we got radio watch over at the Sark and you know, which we did at six. Why the drink? And they weren't smart. We show up right as our staff sergeants coming over there to say, you guys should have already been here. And lo and behold, they quasi arrested us. If you want to call it that, not in my record for that. Took us to that same medical building to do blood work. They're going to get us for DUI on golf carts on this base. And then all this damage. And then we kind of get stupid in the med thing. They've got us locked to these four chairs, you know, the chairs that are four of them together. And we started getting stupid. Next time they caught it, he's dragging one, I'm dragging one, I'm putting IV in his arm in one of the bedrooms. That didn't go over very well. Five hours later, we're on a chopper back to Pendleton. Monday morning, we were in battalion level off-sires so that they can't court martial us. It's like a reduce, both of us did. Kicked us off the Mew, rightly so. Deserve that. And then put me in a different platoon. And ended up going to alert and to go to Somalia. So yeah, I'm not proud of that, but I'm gonna say it because I've heard you talk about decision-making processes. And that's what I, I'm giving that as my bad example of if you don't keep me on a leash, it's not too rowdy, not like I'm being evil, but I'll just be stupid.

Speaker 1:
[39:32] Yeah. Yeah.

Speaker 2:
[39:33] And immature. It's sad.

Speaker 1:
[39:34] Golf carts can be real tempting, you know?

Speaker 2:
[39:37] Yeah.

Speaker 1:
[39:37] I know I had guys, we were at a place where they had golf carts and the golf carts, I didn't know about this. And you know, the security contact would be in the morning like, Hey, we think one of your guys like took golf carts and crashed one of them and we found it in the ditch, you know? And I was like, well, we worked late. I don't think it was one of my guys. He goes, well, is this one of your guys had the guy's wallet and ID? Oh yeah. Yep. That's one of my guys. Yep. I guess it was one of my guys. We didn't work that late. We didn't work late enough.

Speaker 2:
[40:09] Start covering.

Speaker 1:
[40:11] So when you went out with a Mew to go, did you guys know you were going straight to Somalia? Was that the deal?

Speaker 2:
[40:16] No, and I ended up not going on that Mew. I was 15. They're the ones that did the initial on the TV swimming.

Speaker 1:
[40:22] Oh, so you were hating life.

Speaker 2:
[40:23] Oh, but I deserved it. I did 45, 45 reduction rank, half month's pay for two months, spent my 21st birthday. My wife is pregnant. She's due in October. And my parents come out. I never called them and said I'm on restriction up at San Mateo. We're Fifth Marines, because that's who technically we're attached to. And then what happens? First Recon Battalion disbands? Well, I stay with Fifth Marines and they made Bravo Company, Recon Company Fifth Marines when they disband. So now I just stay there after I get off restriction EPD and we start going back into another training cycle, but now it's totally different. You know, we don't have the funding pool like we did. We don't have the space. We don't have the all the support. You know, there is no parallel off, no more jump mission anymore. None of that stuff. And we're setting their training and they're like, they come in and they're like, you guys are going, you're flying over. So we flew into Mogadishu December 29th of 92 to support the UN head chairman, support the infantry and basically was going to be to guard UN vehicles that were delivering food and run security. So six man teams easy. We got two Humvees, one Mark 19, one 50 cal or back then a 16 depending. And three guys in one truck, three guys in the other. And we get to Mogadishu, our platoon after about a week, after Bush left Bush 41, he came in on New Year's to say, yeah, thank you guys. I'm going away. Clinton's going to take over. And went out to Bar, you know, Bar-dera first, then Baidua, and then we did a couple of fly-ins in Galahar out on the Kenyan border. So for that three months, we were staying pretty busy patrolling.

Speaker 1:
[42:15] Yeah.

Speaker 2:
[42:15] Because we were doing a true RNS mission.

Speaker 1:
[42:18] Yeah, that's again, like totally legit for a 21 year old Marine that's now out there doing real combat operations.

Speaker 2:
[42:25] Well, and it was more action than Desert Storm. Yeah, okay. I'll always compare everything to Ramadi and I know we're gonna get there. But Desert Storm is a combat action ribbon that don't really know. We hit one anti-personnel mine, blew a tire off our truck. That's not combat. It was so fast and so aggressive and they were so weak. There was, you know, Kofchi, no. Kofchi, they scrapped up. But for our area, Clearing Ali As-Salam and all the bases that we were going through after Awafra, it was nothing. I mean, it really wasn't.

Speaker 1:
[43:00] What were these patrols like in Somalia then?

Speaker 2:
[43:02] You know, like North Texas, scrub brush, Mesquite style trees, baboons. That was cool. Because, you know, we're doing the typical R&S, patrol at night, hide site during the day. And where do you, you know, like Desert Storm we dig in the net, you know, have our painted nets and sand on them, you know, trying to do a hide site. But hide sites in Somalia, you find scrub and hoping that it's not a bamboo or a pig in there. And that was the problem, because if it's going to be big enough to get all six of you in there and you can hide because there is no real, it's, you know, you still have wadis, but there's not a lot of high ground. It's pretty flat terrain. And you find a nasty spot big enough to get the team in. You know, sometimes we do three and three if we had to. And oh yeah, I've crawled in a few of those little, because you know it's an animal's cause of this in the briars to get in there. So you know you're going in, pistol out, this is going to suck, try not to give away. You don't want to shoot. It's not our job to be firing a weapon. Let's gather information. So you don't want to, you know, give away your position because we all know what E&E is like. That sucks when you're way out somewhere. Well, yeah.

Speaker 1:
[44:19] What were you guys reconning for?

Speaker 2:
[44:21] Basically just gathering information because a big problem out in Bardera by Doha, Galahari was not only the trucks getting taken over, you know, come February, you know, those fractions, that's why I was calling me out. Everybody thinks Black Hawk down. They think Mohammed Adid, Farah Adid, you know, everybody knows his name. They don't realize Mogadishu had 13 of those same people. He was just the strongest. And then you have the same thing in all those other small towns like Bardera, Bardera, you know, by Doha, all those. And then those were right on the Juba River that runs down the center. And then so they would come in, they would snatch leaders in a village and then pull them out and kind of, you know, hold them hostage. Well, they were telling us, you know, we're no longer doing the food convoys. Now we're out there gathering information for the infantry to say, okay, we're watching them come down these lanes, these wadis. Typically, they would use wadis. And there's no high ground. And that's what we were doing. You know, anybody that we got to handle on, it's because they were coming in the village in early morning, morning went still purple, snatch up village leaders, and then just try to make the village give them whatever they wanted. And then once we started doing that, that started going away. And then by March, they were like, okay, 10th Mountain's coming in, taking your place for all Marine forces. You know, 15th Mu, my original platoon, they just did the initial, and then once we got there, they went back on their Mu duties and didn't really stay in country. But it was, it was cool. It was traditional or deeper.

Speaker 1:
[45:59] I know that's awesome.

Speaker 2:
[46:00] Yeah, but not super deep, because it's not that big of a country. But it was cool.

Speaker 1:
[46:05] And then did you guys just fly home when the mission was over?

Speaker 2:
[46:09] Yeah, came through Shannon like you always do. And then we come into Shannon, got back, and that was late March of 93. I got out of the Marine Corps in May of 93.

Speaker 1:
[46:19] And what was your plan when you got out of the Marine Corps?

Speaker 2:
[46:20] Going to school. The corpsmen, that's why I'm like no hassle and gaffney and the guys so well. We didn't have a corpsman on our team. Well, I took natural to all the aid classes. And I loved it. Probably hindsight should have been a corpsman later on in life. But I really enjoyed all the classes. And you know, back then, if you remember, it was all MTTs. You know, we always had MTTs. We went like SF Demo MTT. You get the 18 Delta guys come out for three weeks and do a class for a corpsman. And they would always let me. A matter of fact, in Bardera, I was wearing second class pettie. I'm an E3. But so I can go to the major battalion class. My corpsman gave me his chevrons and his caduceus. And I went to the class because I was the team medic, too. Yeah, especially once I quit carrying the radio. And you know what it is, we always rotate point man. ATL, TL, they're not leaving their positions. Typically RTOs aren't either. But when you're really doing long patrols, you're going to rotate that point man out and he's going to be an ammo bearer, not carrying a VHF or HF. But for me, I always had aid and litter. I always had the classes. It came natural. I enjoyed it. So I'm like, I'm going to go to med school.

Speaker 1:
[47:43] And did you feel like you had enough from the Marine Corps basically?

Speaker 2:
[47:48] No, I think it was.

Speaker 1:
[47:50] Or was your record a little bit jammed up and you're like, well, I got this.

Speaker 2:
[47:54] I could reenlist. I was RE1A. They would have let me reenlist even though I had been burnt because 03s in the reconnaissance side was still not a big MOS. A lot of people weren't getting it. But I think part of it was stuff my grandpa had told me in 91 after I got married was weighing on me. Because my daughter's born on the JTF. I see her for one few days at Williams, when my parents and my ex and my brand new daughter come in. And then I go on restriction just all that whole time frame. And then do a couple of classes and bam, you're flying to, you didn't do the Mew, but now you're going to Somali anyway. I just thought I probably didn't have much ahead of me. And I think it's a typical Lance Corporal mentality of FTS, you know, it was cool when we could jump and we could have fun and do a lot of schools. Now we're at the infantry and we can't do nothing. And we're kind of the bastard stepchildren at 5th Marines. And I'm like, yeah, I'll do it. And it didn't take long for me to realize I'd made a bad decision.

Speaker 1:
[49:10] So you went back home?

Speaker 2:
[49:12] Yep, went back to my hometown, bought the house next door to my mom and dad, because I have this young family. I work odd jobs during the summer, worked in a welding shop, dumping slag barrel. I just did whatever temp jobs before I started school in August. And then once I started school in the August of 93, and my buddy John Ketch, or something like that, he's getting out, he's getting ready to go to school. Yeah, I'll get a job at the ER, as an ERT, because I had all the EMT training and certification. So I'm like, well, I'll get some clinical experience, which I had none. So I got a job working nights in the ER, going to school five days a week during the day. And I thought that was kosher. And then what happens in 94? A lot of my friends went back over to Somalia. And they come back and they're coming through and they're telling me how much different it was in our first time. I'm not really liking civilian life. I'm doing decent school. I got three, three GPA in 90 some hours. Five semesters, I knocked out 96 hours. I was doing 20, 22. I was going at it like a marine would go at it. And, but then it was, I quit the hospital because I got rode up at the hospital for slamming a drunk Indian, because I live in the middle of Cherokee Nation. Two Indians come in from the bar. One buddy stabs the other buddy. They get him in on a gurney. Nurse comes in after I do his vitals. He starts groping the nurse. She's screaming. I run in there, slam him off the gurney, and then I get in trouble for him. I'm like, if I hurt him, he's in a hospital. But I'm thinking, save her. I'm not thinking, we get sued. My brain doesn't think that way. I reacted. Which I was common back in those days. You know, they get Rowdy and they bring her buddy in that they just stabbed. But I saw the writing on the wall. Between the buddies, work, not really happy being a civilian. I'm going to go back in. That's what I did.

Speaker 1:
[51:20] Was it hard to get back in?

Speaker 2:
[51:21] It was because of that, because they changed the rules in 95. Now do you know what happened April 19th, 1995?

Speaker 1:
[51:29] No idea.

Speaker 2:
[51:29] Oklahoma City bombing.

Speaker 1:
[51:30] Okay, yeah.

Speaker 2:
[51:31] The day before I was in there getting in. The day before, April 18th is when I went to get back in the Marine Corps. But because of my office hours, I had to get three personal letters so that they would waiver my infractions. Because you got to remember what Clinton did. Not talking bad about him, but we all know that we're in that time. He was really chopping up the military.

Speaker 1:
[51:52] Downsizing everything.

Speaker 2:
[51:55] So to piece that prior service entry, I'm going to get lucky. Well, once again, now an ACL reconstruction is permanently disqualifying. So what do I do? I'm sitting out there. I can't take no for an answer. They gave me my package. You know, and this is the day before Oklahoma City bombing. So I did five months of work, withdrew from school. And I'm going to, and I was working like security at the industrial part we have, just to make money at nights while I'm at school. And I just stormed into that, that MEPS doctor's hatch. I saw a kid come out, you know, and it was kind of like a psych office. You know, you come in one door, you leave the other. And that's the way it was at MEPS then at the mural building. Well, I said, I can't. I was just, I was frothed. And I said, I'm just reflecting over all the bad mistakes I made getting out and just being stupid. And I just stormed back in there. And I said, you've got to let me back in. And after a five minute conversation, another guy standing there in his underwear and me not taking no for an answer, he overturned it.

Speaker 1:
[53:08] Nice.

Speaker 2:
[53:09] And I got back in and then I'm laying on the couch next morning, see the building blown in half. And then I call the recruiter. This recruiter was Jamie Nunes and Claremore. And he said, we don't know what's going on. But the captain, the Marine captain, the Marine sergeant that got killed in that bombing, thank God, every one of the Marines that worked in the staff were at training off site. And the sergeant that got killed, my package was on his desk. And I'm like, oh, you know, I had to get those letters. This took me months. You know, what do I do? Been very selfish. And Jamie Nunez was like, avionics guy. He's like, hey, Spank, we got bigger problems here. And I'm like, well, I went to school. I need to be back in. So come June, I get approved. You know, they approve me, get back on active duty, go down there. They swear me in just like a marine listing and major getting off. Never get this guy's name. I'm like, okay. Yeah, what's going to be my job? I'm assuming at no less than 03. My 03-51 unless you might not put me back as a recombinant in 03-21, but you'll at least make me a grunt. He is a motor T driver. I'm like, I got pretty decent scores. What's going on, sir? I said, well, good to go. And I turned into that same Lance Corporal driving a golf car, and I said, good to go, sir, whatever it takes. He goes, Maureen, what do you mean by that? I said, because it's my naiveness. I said, well, when I get to Del Mar for Motor T, because when I got out, first force, first angle co. and Motor T school is at Del Mar. I said, when I get to Del Mar, I'm just going to walk over to first force and see whatever it takes to get me in. He goes, well, that's all fine and dandy, but the school's in Missouri, at Fort Leonard Wood. And I'm like, well, that failed. And he goes, well, just wait, wait, wait. And he went back for hours and I'm sitting in the conference room and I'm like, this sucks, but it's more important for me to be a Marine. Stop thinking about the job, quit being selfish. Being a Marine is more important. And that's how I became an 0-8-6-1. He goes, you already got your gold wings. Do you know what Anglico is? I said, roughly, I never work with them. But I said, I know who they are. He goes, we're going to make you an 0-8-6-1 forward observer, and you're going to be destined for Anglico. I'm like, okay, sounds good. They got a jump mission. Hey, this, they still patrol, you know, all the things that I enjoy doing, being in the woods. I'm like, I'll take it. And yeah.

Speaker 1:
[56:01] Did you have to go to these schools?

Speaker 2:
[56:02] Yeah, I had to go to Fort Silver, Fort Observer's Course, which I, you know, stupid for me going there, honor graded it. And then I came here for naval gunfire at LFT, LFTC. They didn't give me honor grad there. They gave a reserve, Della Valley. They gave him honor grad because I got the shooter award there. Come on, recon, we still do that kind of stuff. So it was super easy for me. And because I was a PSEP-er, they were like, we don't want you to have both of them. I'm like, I don't give a crap. You can give me anything. You know, I just want to get back in the fleet. But we had a real lucky class naval gunfire with six of us Marines. One was a staff sergeant, two sergeants. Me is technically a Lance Corporal and one PFC. And three SF staff sergeants. That was our whole naval gunfire class, nine guys. And it was good because it was getting me time to get back into shape, too. You know, after Fort Sill, I'm slowly getting back into active duty shape after a couple years of not being on active duty and not doing anything.

Speaker 1:
[57:04] What were you, two years you were out?

Speaker 2:
[57:05] Yeah, it was a little over two years.

Speaker 1:
[57:06] A little over two years.

Speaker 2:
[57:07] Yeah.

Speaker 1:
[57:08] And what's your first duty station where you get done with school?

Speaker 2:
[57:10] Okinawa, Japan. 3rd Battalion 12th Marines, I don't go to Anglico. Me and JT Linhart, the other younger kid, because that kid that honored Craig Della Valle was from New York City, he was a reservist. So me and JT, we go to 3rd Battalion 12th Marines. So we check in there and at that time it was down at Camp Foster. I don't know if you ever been over there.

Speaker 1:
[57:33] In Okinawa?

Speaker 2:
[57:33] Yeah.

Speaker 1:
[57:34] I've been there, but I don't remember. It was like in the early 90s or mid 90s when I was in Okinawa.

Speaker 2:
[57:40] That's when this was, 95, 96. We're down at Camp Foster, the big base. And I get there, I'm there a month and the Mass Sardine are, you know, we had the Shore Fire Control Party. Do you remember those? So basically he said, you're an E3, but I picked up corporal right at that six month mark. And while I was there, when I first got there, and he had me take Shore Fire Control Party to 31st Mew. He said, we're gonna go up to Camp Hanson, do that. So I spent six months at Hanson. By the time I got back, you know, I had a few months. We went and climbed Fuji, we went to, you know, a couple training ops at Camp Fuji, and then it's a one year rotation. And me and JT, we get to our first Anglico. So that's when I got to first.

Speaker 1:
[58:29] And then you check in there, what's your role there when you show up? Just like back in the day?

Speaker 2:
[58:33] Yeah, I'm gonna be on a FIC, Fire Power Control Team.

Speaker 1:
[58:36] And what year is this?

Speaker 2:
[58:37] This is 96, yeah, September 96. But the odd thing was Gunny Nelson, my platoon sergeant. You know, typically Anglico did very similar to Recon. When you got to your calico roper again, you know, that's how I look at it. And then you go through the Anglico Basic Course, ABC, because they don't have a formal MOS school, like Recon does or other schools. Excuse me. So I check in, well, I would, a lot of times I don't wear my wings on my camis, you know, just didn't wear it. So I check in, I'm a corporal, and fresh me. All the NCOs and all the people that have been around, fresh me, you know how that goes. And, you know, start checking in, kind of minding my P's and Q's, getting to know my platoon sergeant, or my salt sergeant, my salt OIC, my thick OIC. And Gunny Nelson, our platoon sergeant, he's looking at my records. I'm like, oh damn, you got Des Storms, Somalia, you already got your gold wings, you know, you've already been to A or C, you've been to all these different smaller schools for when we're younger. He's like, you don't need to go to ABC. He was, we're not going to teach you anything which you don't already know. And I said, well, I appreciate that. So it was kind of like some of the fellow NCOs were, oh, you just think, you're not going to have to earn it. I'm like, send me through it, I'll do it. I don't give a crap. Well, then we immediately, I go on Salt Alpha Thick 1. Well, I mean, within six, nine months, they sent me to Jump Master School as a corporal. You know, they're already just, I mean, we were going straight into Mew Supports. So, 96, 97, we fly over for 31st Mew, we're just going over for six weeks, do one op with the Rocks. You know, we stayed a week on a Rock LST. And then, you know, just basically do the old school assault. When I'm talking the War War II ones, the ones that had the anchors that would pull you off the beach edge. But it doesn't do like the old LSTs, it just opens like this, they ground that dude and then they jack it back off there. So we do an insert with the Rock Recon guys. And I'm going to tell you, those guys, no joke, when they say we're going to move from here to there, because they travel light, we've got long rucks on, we're carrying a little bit of weight and a lot of radios and batteries, you know the deal. And but it was great. I mean, we had a great time, six weeks, come back. And then, you know, you just, some guys rotate, get ready. Well, what happens? 98. I think I just, I was actually, I came back from ranger school. I went to ranger school, May of 98.

Speaker 1:
[61:31] How was ranger school for you?

Speaker 2:
[61:33] Well, it was definitely a good weight control process. Knowledge base, 50. I went at 200 and came out at 150. Yeah, my team didn't even recognize me before I went on leave. They thought I was a new guy. I was emaciated, looked like I did when I was in the hospital after I got wounded. But the, and that was me. Now I won't say it that way because that would just be terrible because she's a good woman. I would do anything to just go away for a while. And found out my oldest son, she was pregnant with my oldest son Colton. And to answer your question, it was knowledge wise because in Coronado, I had to arrange her handbook from a PFC. Even A or C, we use a ranger handbook. So not like the ranger handbook. I was not naive. I wasn't like a young kid from a battalion somewhere. I was a sergeant. I was 27 years old. And yeah, I did well. I mean, sleep, no food, sucks. Got, I don't want to boast. Got an undergraduate position. Got the USA leadership award. But that's just because I was an older Marine. And one, I wasn't going to fail. There's no way we had had a captain in the class before me, before I even left to go out for rap, that dropped during rap, an 08 captain. We were getting lots of billets because this is about time they found out they're disbanding first angle go. So first, I was at first re-commentary when it disbanded. Now I'm in another unit disbanding first angle go. And they're going to disband us summer of 90, or sorry, 99. So summer, you know, I go, you know, two months change for ranger school. Yeah, it was good. Used to be on my left calf. That's why I put it on my arm, my jack and my tab. Used to be on my left leg. But the constant reminder, I shake a soldier's hand. But, you know, I come back, they gave me three weeks to leave because I was bad. Well, in that time, a lot of us team, you know, team chiefs is what they call us in a fig. Team leaders, an officer, lieutenant or captain. Team chief is a corporal sergeant, normally sergeant. So I'm a team chief. Well, all of us team chiefs, because companies is disbanding, we're all gonna do B Billets. So when I'm back and I just started to leave to heal, you know, because my, bottom of my feet look like dive booties that we wear in Okinawa. It was like horse hair. You know, I had to heal a little bit and put some weight back on. Because it does, it tests your body. It's a good school, I'm not knocking that. It's a gut check. It's gonna teach you intestinal fortitude all day long on what you can accomplish. You know, good on anybody who goes to that school. Well, they call me up at the house and I'm like, I come in and see my star major, star major Westrup, and I'm like, I don't want to be, I gotta work at your drill field. I'm not a drill instructor type guy. I don't look the part, I don't sound the part. I want nothing to do. And because I'm way behind my peers that I joined with in 89, and the troubles I had had in my first enlistment, I was like, I want to go recruiting duty. He's like, Spank, why do you want to go recruiting duty? Star major. Ain't no way in hell I'm getting promoted on the drill field. It ain't happening. I'm not the typical.

Speaker 1:
[65:11] So is it like if you're, if you're, you know, you're out there on the drill field, you're going to be against these front running people, but recruiting duty is like a little bit.

Speaker 2:
[65:18] It's all on performance.

Speaker 1:
[65:19] Got it.

Speaker 2:
[65:21] Drill field, now I can't speak for it, I didn't do it. Drill field is all, it's like being in boot camp again.

Speaker 1:
[65:28] Yeah.

Speaker 2:
[65:29] And it's all like a promotion board. It's your, your look. I was never that stereotypical looking Marine. I could always PT, not the typical looking guy. So I'm like right there, I'm going to fail. Now I might outrun them, out whatever them, some of them, most of them I would imagine, back in those days, but ain't no chance. They're going to look at me and I'm just, you know, it doesn't matter what's on your chest. I don't look the part. And I can't live the facade. You know, I've heard you talk about decentralized control and that you know the deal. When you're in small type of units, even as a Marine, you always have bearing in professionalism, but it's, you know, I'm not going to blouse my boots, grow my hair a little bit longer. I'm going to, you know, you're going to push the Marine Corps standards as the way we do it, you know, recon and debt one and now Raider battalions. But so you got a Tulsa Major, he goes, we'll go down to the bowling alley on the main side. All the monitors are down there. And when you get up there, tell them I allowed you to come because I'm just a sergeant. I'm not a staff NCO. So I go down, well, the special duty monitors, you got MSG, you got drone instructor, you got recruiters, they're always together. Then you got all the MOSs that are there. We gotta remember, I've only been back from range school two weeks. I've got my Charlies on, you know, those short sleeve shirt and the green pants. I'm not 200 pounds. I'm at best 155. So I look like I got cancer. And I did, I got in the line. Kind of like back in SOI. I get up there and I tell the drill instructor monitors, I'm like, hey, I want to see if I can switch my orders. When you got orders, that summer, you know, next summer, he goes, you want to be in the drill field or you want to move forward in drill class? I said, no, I don't want to be in the drill instructor. He goes, well, as your command know, my SAR major sent me here. SAR major Westrop first saying, I'll go, you can give a call. And they're like, okay, well, he just talks to the gunny and mass sergeant from the recruiting station sitting right there and they're like, hey, this, well, one of those two, I don't remember if it was the mass sergeant or the gunny from recruiting, they're like, are you okay? Well, I'm thinking everybody wants to be a drill instructor, nobody wants to be a recruiter in the Marine Corps. You almost have to force them. So few elect. That's my mindset. So no, I'm fine. You know, I just don't want to be a drill instructor. And they're like, no, are you okay? Do you have a cancer or something? So now I just scratch my Ranger school a couple of weeks ago. And that's foreign to them too. Yeah, they don't know anything about that. They're all admin people. And I'm like, I lost 50 pounds in two months. I'll put it back on. And then, so they did. I got right across the street here, right next to drill instructor school, recruiting school. And I, yeah.

Speaker 1:
[68:32] And then did you go back home? Did you go back to Oklahoma for a year?

Speaker 2:
[68:34] Yeah, Claremore, the town.

Speaker 1:
[68:36] Right back to your, basically your hometown?

Speaker 2:
[68:38] Because, and this is the irony, when I got my orders, which was a couple months, I went to, you know, right after that, after a month, I went to Sardin's Course. So then they were sending us just school, school, school, school, training, training, leadership training, whatever. Well, I'd been back from Ranger School for a month, and they sent me to Sardin's Course, my leadership school, for six weeks, which, you know, blew that out of the water. I mean, that was, I should not have had to go, but Marine Corps makes you go to those. I was way more senior than anybody. It was real easy for me, and I was already back in pretty good shape. And then I get out of that, I go to Mountain Structors Course. And then I take leave for Christmas. And Gunnery Sergeant Steve Bell was working in that office in Claremore, Oklahoma. And he's a local boy, still friends there. He's a retired sergeant major, lives same town as me. I walk into that office, cocky as can be. And I'm like, hey, I got orders in June to go to recruiting school. I want to know what I need to do to get here to this office. He goes, you don't want to come to this office. Why not? He goes, where the, I think Oklahoma, RS Oklahoma Recruiting Station, Oklahoma was like third from the bottom of the whole country. They were doing terrible. I said, no, I want to come here. I'm from Pryor. And he is, you don't want to come here. I said, no, Gunny, I do. I want to be right here. And since I had switched to become a recruiter voluntarily and I did pretty good in recruiting school, they gave me RS. But because I'd greased the skids with Steve, when I checked in to RS. Oklahoma City in I think it was July, they let me come to his office. His boss had left. He was taking over. Best decision I ever made, greasing the skids with him. And so, yeah, check in to recruiting. I'm happy, close to my family. You know, my dad just two years before that had quad bypass. And, you know, at this point, I've had two kids. And my son's young. You know, he was born right before I went to recruiting school. My daughter was born in 92. So, okay, you know, come out here for three years, do my best. Well, it worked out great. Yeah, I got recruiter of the year. I got mentor of staff starting that first year. And then I almost became a career recruiter. They tried to talk me into it, go 84-12. And but what happens? September 11th, you know, I came off recruiting in 02, summer of 02. But when September 11th happened, I had been this time, we're already getting divorced. My wife moves back out here to California. I jump in my Jeep, take a week and a half's leave. I just cruise across country, see my kids. I'm back. I'm on my way back on the 40. You know, I kind of break off and do small roads on my way back. You know, I'd carry my ranger roll, my bivy sack, and I'd just, you know, pull my Jeep over wherever and heat up some food. But I was pulled into a gas station, getting gas in New Mexico, along 40. And that's when the second plane, I saw it on the gas station TV. And I just assumed that I'd be lucky enough to be brought back in to the job, Anglicore or something, which didn't happen.

Speaker 1:
[72:11] So what did happen? Where'd you go?

Speaker 2:
[72:12] I stayed. They kept me on recruiting till summer of 02.

Speaker 1:
[72:15] You just finished out your term of that.

Speaker 2:
[72:18] Yep. But in that same time, Master Sergeant Dillard, we had an opening at Dev Group. McNeil, Master Sergeant McNeil. He was going to retire and stay there because we have those Marine Billets there. And Det One standing up here at Pendleton. Hulbert Field was having an opening that Master Guns was retiring. Well, John Dillard, I was Staff Sergeant. All the Billets were Gunny, Minimum, or Master Sergeant. Well, I had John Master, I had Ranger School, I had done real well on the job. So Big John Dillard was like, what would you like? And I'm like, well, I don't know, you tell me what you think. Which do you prefer? And he goes, well, I've got somebody slotted, Freddy Fowler, the big guy was telling you about, he's going to debt one to be the fires rep there in the sport element. He goes, you can take Helbert or Dev Group. And I'm like, well, I'm not an East Coast guy. Never did any time on the East Coast, all West Coast. I'm like, but that'd be cool. You know, we're not doing anything sexy, maybe come out a little bit, but we're not doing the team stuff. And I'm like, that'd be cool. Well, my second wife's a Marine. She got orders at Okinawa. Because at this point, we're dating. And I'm going to chase her to Okinawa. So I call him up, I'm like, hey, can you get me orders to Okinawa, Japan? He's like, Spanky, you're going to go out and interview, man. I've already greased Skid, you're going out there. And I greased Skid because you're a staff sergeant. And they want a gunny mass sergeant. He is, I sold you. I was like, no, can you get me a place at SOTG, anywhere in Okinawa? Oh, right then, I burnt the bridge, I burned it. And, but that's what we do. Some of us, I'll say, I won't impose that on either one of y'all. So they find me a spot, 12th Marine Regiment, Okinawa, Japan, oh, sorry. Well, I get to Camp Anson, I don't care. I thought I could get an SOTG spot. Yeah, nothing for me there.

Speaker 1:
[74:29] They don't care.

Speaker 2:
[74:30] Yeah, I probably got a bad name at this point in the little community of Anglico, which is gone. And, but I'd done real well on Recruiting Meritorious Promoted, all that good stuff. I said, I don't care. You can put me where you want me. At this point, I'm thinking her. And, yeah, so just beat myself with a hammer or something. But, you know, still young, even though I'm not that young. Yeah, I'm almost 30. Well, okay, yeah, I'll get into it. But it opened up an amazing opportunity for me. And that's where I'm going to get to where we're going to be going here pretty quick, I assume. I'm there for about a year and a half. They bring me down to 312. Now, I know nothing about the artillery. They FATEDs, Advanced Filtered Artillery Attack, DATL system, all the computer systems they use for regiment, Marine Regiment level battalion fires. I know nothing about this. Good at patrolling, good at communicating, good at dropping bombs or SEAD missions. That's all I did at Anglico. That's our bread and butter. So send me down to 312 within the Master Guns at the MEF. Goes, hey, we got authority to build a new Anglico. He goes, you're about the only guy on the island that has Anglico experience. So I got to build Fifth Anglico. Yeah, when you think Dave Burks, Cesar Janay, all those guys, that was me and Major Krebs going once a month from Okinawa to Quantico, talking to all the monitors, asking for them to give us bodies. So you got to think 04 to our platoon deployment, the brigade platoon. We had not even been a unit a year and a half, and we deployed with Second Anglico. So I think for me, even though we didn't get the jump mission, which is actually better because jumping in Okinawa is a pain in the butt, tiny island often or go to Guam at best. So jumping there, I'm glad they didn't bring airborne operations back. Hard enough starting a unit bringing in marines to build a unit, especially when you got one, two or three year tours. And you're going to rotate up a year and a half for a full, or two and a half years, the unit has to do a full deployment. So that was amazing learning curve. You know, I was the staff in COIC until we would, and Major Krebs was the CEO until we would get a SIR major and a lieutenant colonel because it's a company but it's battalion command equivalent. So you're a command. And yeah, I got to build a unit. You know, got to implement the TONEs, got to, you know, go, me and the major got to do some.

Speaker 1:
[77:15] Did you build the TONEs yourself?

Speaker 2:
[77:16] I used the old first angle code.

Speaker 1:
[77:18] Okay, got it.

Speaker 2:
[77:18] Now at this point, second angle code and first angle code had stood up about eight months prior. You know, they didn't stand them up till around that 03 moment because as we're transitioning from Afghanistan to OIF and they knew that was a push or like we need to bring these guys back. It's so purple. Think about it. I mean, just like with all of our guys. So, you know, that's one of those dirt to dirt moments at headquarters Marine Corps when you save money during the 90s to chop up all the little units, you know, and then find out that the more and more purple we get, the more and more you need some of those units. But it is what it is. But it was an opportunity. It was amazing. You know, and at that point I had just picked up Gunny and I went to TASP school back here and I'm going to be running, you know, ops. I was ops chief technically. Once we got all the pertinent people in, I was going to be in charge of the JTAX, the training, you know, what I know about. You know, I won't say I was dumb at that. When it comes to operations, you know, for that type of environment, I'm pretty good at it. It's just the artillery side computerized. I don't know it. Never wanted to know it. Just like having a ruck on and walking around the woods. I mean, you can only do that so long. But it was cool, you know, bring a bunch of our artillery officers out here, you know. I remember the day Caesar and Dave came in, you know, they were super good dudes, you know, both being 18 drivers, you know. Burke was a major and Caesar was a captain. We're getting all types of the pilots, because as you know all too well now, Engelco is very aviation heavy on the Salts, sporting arms liaison teams. But to build it traditionally, but then when it came into play, they gave us the authorization to attach the second Engelco for that deployment. You know, we got to come back from Okinawa in September of 2005, start to work up. You know, get all the 400 quals for all the JTACs. And, you know, because we had 32 JTACs, so non-aviation guys. Well, Colonel Campbell being an old force guy who owned second Engelco, he totally deviated from the traditional Engelco mission where you have salt thick, maybe two thicks if you're lucky under salt, attached into a battalion or a company from a foreign element or the Army. You know, that traditional role. He said, I want four-man JTAC teams spread all over Anbar. Well, of course, I, you know, I talked my Colonel in in Okinawa and let me go on the deployment as the Ops Chief. I sold him, Colonel Schrader. I was like, let me go over and work in Al-Assad in the Ops. I'll left seat, right seat the second angle co-ops chief. And then when we come back over in a year, I can do that five-month training package with our guys in Okinawa and then bring the whole company over and we're going to have a bunch of new guys that rotated off on. So I sold him on it. Well, what's Colonel Campbell do? You're a gunny, you're a JTAC, you're one of the most seasoned shooters, you know, bomb droppers. He goes, why don't you take a team? So what's he do? He gives me the three junior guys in our brigade platoon, Bravo, Huerta and Mitchell. You know, they're both Lance corporals and Mitchell. And they're all physical studs. And here I am, 34 at that time. I didn't even tell you. After that deployment, they were talking about doing a total knee reconstruction on my left knee from that ACL reconstruction at 85, 86. So I'm like, I'm doing everything I can to at least get in the theater, because I hate sitting in Okinawa when these guys have been deploying for three or four years at this point. Well, Colonel Campbell gives me that luck, and I'm like, but I'll, like I said at the beginning, you tell me what to do, I'll do it. You know, they're the best of my building. I'm like, sir, if that's where you want me, and you're not like I don't know Caesar, but he's going to get a salt, which wasn't a traditional salt. He was a JT, as you know all too well, he was a FIC team, just like I was. He was my OIC at that level. But, you know, I'm definitely the more seasoned guy in, you know, at that point in my life. But man, I was always concerned those young boys were going to run my, you know what, in the dirt. Because all three of those guys are studs. They just didn't have much time because they hadn't been with us long before we deployed.

Speaker 1:
[82:00] So at what point, how far out did you know you were going to Ramadi?

Speaker 2:
[82:04] Not till we, they never, Colonel Campbell, because of that audible. Now, when we did our work up prior to taking off in January, it wasn't our whole team. It was basically just JTAX because we were going down to the proving grounds. You know, we're staying in Tucson and the Colonel treated us like we were SOCOM. I mean, Paraclete, I mean, he spent about a load of money on equipment training and all that for that few months. We got to Al-Assad, I think it was four days maybe, but it was all of us at the headquarters.

Speaker 1:
[82:40] You showed up to Al-Assad not knowing exactly where you were going?

Speaker 2:
[82:43] No, because he was in that manipulation of, we're breaking all these 30-some teams down. Dave could tell you better than I could. But you know, when I first got there, I got personal videos of me and the staff sergeant that worked for him for the technically the platoon. You know, and our troops, you know, our hooch there, I don't know if you ever went over to our little compound, that old para building they were in. Well, we probably weren't in there four days. And they called Caesar and he called me up and we went into the meeting. He said, hey, we're going to go over and we're attached to the first IA. I said, well, good, that's a traditional Englco mission right there.

Speaker 1:
[83:26] So first IA for those of you that don't know, it's the Iraqi Army. So it's like a, what is it? First brigade of the Iraqi Army.

Speaker 2:
[83:32] Yes.

Speaker 1:
[83:33] Who is stationed over with the first of the 506, just above Camp Corregidor in there. I don't know if I forget what that was called, the place above, like north of Route Michigan.

Speaker 2:
[83:43] Yeah, you had combat outpost, you had Camp Tiger, Camp Ranger, and then I forget that other one where they were in those three and the Alpha Company was in combat outpost with the tanks.

Speaker 1:
[83:52] So you're going to go over there and just basically embed with the IA?

Speaker 2:
[83:58] Yes. Yeah, do a traditional Englco mission, except not in a traditional TO&E, but a very robust equipment package. C-Spot 3s were brand new. I mean, Colonel Campbell pulled all his strings in from his background and force.

Speaker 1:
[84:15] Do you guys have two Hummers?

Speaker 2:
[84:17] Yep.

Speaker 1:
[84:18] Just decked out with the gear that you needed?

Speaker 2:
[84:20] Yeah, Caesar had, well, one Hummer for all four guys. So Caesar had one, I had one. And then we had a 240 for each of our trucks. You know, like most time where it was on the gun. But we went on one QRF from Camp Ramadi proper and did one dagger mission. I pulled a rotation and day after the dagger missions when we went over to Crogador. I mean, initially not Crogador.

Speaker 1:
[84:49] It was your first dagger mission, like one of the just night time route clearance.

Speaker 2:
[84:52] Yeah, I was just running an aircraft over looking for lollipops. Yeah, I just pulled it. They were kind of, you know, the way they were doing it over there is they just kind of put us in a rotation of interesting.

Speaker 1:
[85:01] The first time I went out on a dagger mission, it was at night. And you're like, they're using white lights and bright white light. You're all comfortable in the in the blue in the buffalo.

Speaker 2:
[85:12] No, I was following in an MRAP behind it.

Speaker 1:
[85:14] OK, you didn't want to know.

Speaker 2:
[85:15] I did one in the Buffalo. Yeah, that's impressive.

Speaker 1:
[85:18] Just like the fact that you can that you feel safe. I mean, I felt like because you never felt safe in a Hummer. You're like, you're just waiting to get blown up. But but in a MRAP, you just like get to look around. And it's kind of like the air air conditions kick in. You're kind of like, man, this is this is kind of awesome. And then they're like, stop. They stop and you go. And you start hearing them on the radio like they were prosecuted. And you're like, oh, so we're now we might get blown up anyways. But start digging. Those guys are freaking heroes, man.

Speaker 2:
[85:48] Yeah, that first you only did two dagger missions total. One at the beginning and one was a follow on when they brought them to Full Metal Jacket. We got a lot of good pictures out there. About the time your guys got there, I think. And that one I got to ride in the Buffalo. So I only did one in a Buffalo, one in an M-Rat behind the Buffalo. But yes, you're right. When they turn all that Christmas tree of lights on and they start digging, I'm like, this is retarded. And the second one I went on out of Corregidor, it blew the bucket off. It detonated and it was manual. But yes, so it wasn't long at Camp Ramadi before me and Caesar came over, initially checked in with the MIT team that was attached to them. And we had a couple of rooms set up that was going to be in the headquarters for the IA. Caesar didn't like that idea. And he said, I'm not comfortable with this. I said, well, whatever you want to do, sir. You know, so we drove across the road, to Corridor, check in with First 506. And that's when they gave us a couple of rooms in Full Metal Jacket. And yeah, that's February. Well, we drive across there. You know, we drive around for their COC, if you remember, it was just kind of that bigger building facing all the runoff. We drive around that little spot there where we had our HR 10 at one point. And we come around on the backside where the Palm Grove was, and the generators are sitting right there. And that's where that little courtyard was, kind of in the middle of, you know, and as soon as we get out of the vehicle, boom, right next to the generator. And that was the best wake up call any of those guys could get. And so right out the gate, everybody was like, OK, this is realistic, because we would hear the alarms a few days we're in Ramadi, at Camp Ramadi. But you know, what, Cregador is tiny as you know.

Speaker 1:
[87:45] Yeah, I was going to say Ramadi is such a bit, much bigger camp. You can get hit and you wouldn't even know it.

Speaker 2:
[87:50] It's laundry service and all kinds of crazy stuff there.

Speaker 1:
[87:53] But Cregador, you know it.

Speaker 2:
[87:55] Small arms fire go all the way across the camp. Especially when it would be sunbathing up on top of a metal jacket up there.

Speaker 1:
[88:03] So what were your first missions? Were you going out with just like whoever was going out? You said he started out like in northeast up in the more rural areas?

Speaker 2:
[88:15] Yes.

Speaker 1:
[88:16] That's where you guys started kicking it off?

Speaker 2:
[88:17] Yeah. So we started out from Cregador, either Jalaba or Sofia, whichever the most eastern was, right on the Euphrates, which I thought that's super cool. I'm walking around the Euphrates River. This is neat and it's traditional, supporting. Sometimes you get a company of first of all, I don't think it was first of all, I guess it was, a couple of the army guys. Well, then we're just doing their typical, clearing palm groves, going through. It wasn't like you're knocking talks and all that. You're just moved to contacting, I guess the best way I can put it, and draw them out. And which most of the time, I do a show for, show a force fly by. You know, maybe pop a gun run, maybe dump something small. But to me, that always seems pretty wasteful in those more rural environments because you, three guys with a gun, why would I spend all that money with a 500 pounder? You know, let's just go up there and do the traditional infantry, locate close, when destroy the enemy by fire maneuver. To me, that saves more money. But, of course, that would change, as you know all too well.

Speaker 1:
[89:23] So then, at what point did you start moving back more into the Malab?

Speaker 2:
[89:27] That was probably March, I would guess March. Not long. We probably only spent three or four weeks kind of working our way back because we did have some patrols by that amusement park. And then, matter of fact, later on, as we'll get to with your guys too, up there. But, yeah, maybe a month. And then, so we're at this point, it's got to be March. And then, late March, the focus of effort was going to be start clearing those different parts.

Speaker 1:
[89:58] Yeah.

Speaker 2:
[89:58] And your guys had to come in about that same time.

Speaker 1:
[90:00] We came in April.

Speaker 2:
[90:02] Yeah.

Speaker 1:
[90:02] We came in in April. That's when we got over to Corregidor pretty quickly. I don't remember the exact dates, but when we initially went to Corregidor, we spent a little bit of time in Corregidor, and then we went back, and then we kind of formulated the guys that were going to go over to Corregidor permanently, you know, in a permanent way. It was ended up being maybe maybe eight guys total of Seth's guys.

Speaker 2:
[90:30] Yeah, because you guys changed it up after the 13th of April.

Speaker 1:
[90:33] Yeah. Yeah.

Speaker 2:
[90:35] I'll never forget that day.

Speaker 1:
[90:37] Yeah. So that I'm trying to think, no, you know what? We when we went over for that mission that we were all going to do that big giant clearance of the Malab, right? So this is when the blue on blue happened.

Speaker 2:
[90:48] Yeah.

Speaker 1:
[90:48] And when we went over there, I took a big bunch of guys. So we had we had a pretty good group of guys. It wasn't until after that happened. Then we all went back to the Camp Ramadi and then we assembled a smaller group of guys that were going to go over and basically be embedded with the first of 506 and the 118 IA. So, yeah, we went when we went over for that big clearance in the blob where we ended up having the blue on blue. That was a pretty, we had a pretty big chunk of guys.

Speaker 2:
[91:18] I remember you had more people then because that's when Tony was downstairs. And after the 13th, that next day, when I went down and talked to him and talked to the guys, that's when it was like, whoa, okay, not seeing these guys around. And then Seth comes back and it's like, hey, let's work together. Yeah, if we know we're gonna be in the area together, let's kind of, which could call.

Speaker 1:
[91:38] Yeah, of course. Of course. And Hunter, did you listen when I had Joe Clayburn on? Yeah.

Speaker 2:
[91:44] Oh yeah, I had to watch that and see him again.

Speaker 1:
[91:46] Of course.

Speaker 2:
[91:47] That's awesome.

Speaker 1:
[91:47] Yeah, you're the gunny that I talk about. So when, just real quick brief, I had four little elements out in the field. I had an element with C2. I had an element with the Iraqi soldiers that were doing the clearance, which is I think where you started off your day, you're doing front line trace, the whole nine yards. I had, then I had two sniper overwatch elements out there. Real quick, just giving people the lay of land. We start, everyone's pretty much in a gunfight pretty early in the morning. And my guys, one of my sniper elements had moved across the road, just on the other side of the limit of advance. And a group of Iraqis that no one really knows why they did this, but they had the idea that they were going to go set their own perimeter on the area that was being cleared. They started running down. And from what I understand, you were like, where are they going? But you got to you got to follow front line traces. You just follow.

Speaker 2:
[92:44] Oh, yeah. Run down there with them. Held my guys up, said, hey, you just stop where they stop on that last building for that open court, if you remember that open thing. And I'm just running with them because it's dark. You know, it's just now getting purple, it's getting purple. And by the time I got to that metal gate, the driveway gate, not the personal gate, is when he took it, you know, right there at the door. And yeah, that's when I changed.

Speaker 1:
[93:10] So your Iraqis went in to get control of this building or set up an overwatch position. My guys were already in there. And when my guys saw a guy sneaking through the courtyard of a door that they had zip tied shut, one of my guys saw a guy with an AK-47. He looked at his Iraqis because we had, my guys had Iraqis with them too. Oh, this is enemy, shot him. Then now you got a down guy in the courtyard. You don't know who's in the building. You're assuming it's bad guys. You guys start engaging that building. But what do my guys do? Return fire. This is just a classic horrible blue on blue.

Speaker 2:
[93:53] It's insane.

Speaker 1:
[93:55] You, your guys or you called the QRF. The light QRF shows up. It's Humvees. The Humvees start dumping rounds into the building. My guys are inside receiving those rounds. And again, I mentioned some of these details. Like the fact that Matt Hasby, who is who like 11 hours earlier had been shot out of a of a sniper tower with a Diska. So now he's on the rooftop getting shot out with a 50, but he's knows a 50. He thinks it's a Diska. He's literally going. I can't believe these bastards found me again with their Diska. Because if you're thinking if you get started, start getting shot out with a 50 Cal, you're going to like, no, you know, oh, this is Americans. But he's thinking it's the Diska. Again, one of these horrible situations. So now my guys call the heavy QRF when I hear the heavy QRF call. I say to Joe Claiborne, hey, those are my guys. But let's go. So when we round the corner, the tanks are in front of us. The tank stops. Starts like I see red smoke. That was one of my indicators. It's quite why we're seeing red smoke right now.

Speaker 2:
[95:00] Me and him both pop smokes in that courtyard at the same time.

Speaker 1:
[95:04] So I get out. I think I said to you, I was like, hey, what's going on? And you go, there's moose in that building right there.

Speaker 2:
[95:12] Yeah. And I go, first time we ever met.

Speaker 1:
[95:14] Yep. That was the first time we ever met. Maybe in a briefing, we might've like glanced, exchanged it up, but I go, hey, what's going on? Gunny, and you go, hey, there's moose in that building right now and they're bringing it. And I was like, and something didn't add up in my head. And I looked at Z, my SEA, I was like on me and he followed me over, kicked open the door and I see Tony inside. And he goes, and I said, what happened? And he said, I killed a guy in the courtyard and then they brought it. And I was like, hey, it was a blue on blue. And he gave me the look of, you know, what the hell. And then I came back out. I was like, hey, where's where's Clayburn? He was up on the roof. I got to him. I said, hey, man, it was a blue on blue. He's like, what? And I said, yep. So that's, you know, the quick dump from my perspective, or whatever other detail you want to add.

Speaker 2:
[96:04] Well, that was, you know, when he, when I got up, it was right when I got to the gate, when I heard the round go off. And then that the guy that was right behind him, he just started screaming. And I tried to stop him at the gate. And then I run back, because remember the bill, they were going to go firm in that last building. And then there was that empty lot that had that big dipsy dumpster. And then you had that road long axis. And then your guys were in that house. And I'm inside that big old place there. So I kind of run back and forth. I'm trying to call one of the guys to give me some more men. And then my guy, my, you know, Mitchell Wharton Bravo, they come up and gun him where you want us. So you get up on the roof, get calm, get me an aircraft. Call the battalion command, tell them what we got. I want to run back down here. So I grab two of the Jundis. We come back over. We go just inside that gate. They had a toilet, that outdoor toilet right there. So we pop into there. Now, I might add, this whole time I'm suppressing. Every time I get close to the building, I'm, so I got the Jundis shooting. I'm waiting for the army to come up. And the gun trap, I didn't call the QRF until my air was denied. And that's when I call QRF and request a tank.

Speaker 1:
[97:27] Yep, and I'm pretty sure you got your air denied.

Speaker 2:
[97:31] Thank God.

Speaker 1:
[97:31] Because I, my SEA and me were like, hey, we don't, we don't know exactly where our guys are. Like, do not drop right now.

Speaker 2:
[97:38] No, thank God.

Speaker 1:
[97:39] Yeah, yeah, thank God.

Speaker 2:
[97:39] I'm glad you guys were there, like you and Joe talked about. So glad because being on the ground and running it all, all my focus of effort, and this is bad on me, but my focus of effort, because you remember, Caesar's independent, I'm talking, my guys are straight to Battalion Command. I'm thinking, get air, they killed it, and I don't care if it's-

Speaker 1:
[98:01] Of course.

Speaker 2:
[98:01] Who it is that gets killed when I'm working with them. I'm gonna treat them no different than anybody else. So in that mindset, I'm gonna treat whoever killed them the same way. And that's the hardest part of that day, when it came to, when I saw them coming out of the building, when you were there, that, that's the worst, you know. I know for you guys, it's big. Marine Corps has always been huge.

Speaker 1:
[98:28] Right, that's the worst.

Speaker 2:
[98:29] Because it was such a big thing throughout our warfare of it happening. But so come back in, I'm surprised, and I'm waiting to get the truck come up. I'm, you know, I'm on my imbider and I'm calling back over to Mitchell and I'm like, hey, where's my air, where's my air, where's my air? And he's denied, so I come back over and I'm like, okay, I'm kind of running back and forth. Well, me and those two, we decide we're not going to go grab the body yet. And we start running back and they're saying, oh, I see a grenade roll right by that DEFCY dumpster. So not that they're going to understand they're Jundies. Most of them, they don't, they didn't speak English. Most of those guys, I just grenade drop, wounds a guy in front, kills a guy behind. And then, you know, that's where in that one video that Steven knows, I remember they gave it to me when I was in the hospital. You see the one guy run up and he throws the belt, you know, for the, you know, his belt, whatever it was. Throws that belt down and you hear him going off and then you hear me go bang on that. Cause at this point I'm Winston, I'm Winchester. I fired 13 magazines. So once that gun truck, that first gun truck, waiting for the tank to get up there, you see it in the video, I, right as I'm banging on it, I do that for real. Follow me, cause I want that 50. I want to walk that 50 right where I want them until that tank gets there. But right before he started that video, that that army lieutenant was in the front seat. I'm like, give me all your mags. Now thinking back, I should never do that. Give me two. But I'm like, give me every, well, they had just gotten the 35 rounders. So I was excited. It's ever a standard 30s. And yeah, so once I got the truck up there, I started suppressing. And that's when I saw the movement on the rooftop by that big satellite dish. When I, you know, the old school six foot satellite dishes. When I saw, cause now it's, you know, right before that tank came up, before I popped the smoke, it was just getting good enough light.

Speaker 1:
[100:26] Yeah, that's another thing that was, there's so many little holes in the Swiss cheese. That crypto changed at two o'clock in the morning. I don't know if you remember that. Like it was, there was just thing upon thing upon thing.

Speaker 2:
[100:37] It sucked. It was terrible. And worse, that is probably my worst experience ever. I mean, honestly, that's way worse than what happened to me. Because if, you know, when I saw the movement on the rooftop through the mouse holes, cause you know, I carried in four, two or three. Now I carried a couple smokes, always had a tube for a helo. But, you know, I carried 10 hand grenades and 10 HE rounds in my Nalgene, you know, I put Nalgene bottles in those. It was for that time frame, hand grenades and 40 mic HEs. So I remember I took my smoke out, load an HE and I'm like, that dish, where those holes were, I did, I sent one over that dish. Hope that didn't kill nobody. And then I hit that dish. And my intent was hit that dish and that frag pattern would get the two guys. So glad I didn't work out that way.

Speaker 1:
[101:29] I didn't. Yeah.

Speaker 2:
[101:30] So glad.

Speaker 1:
[101:31] And by the way, Matt Hasby, he was like, because he was the guy that was stuck on the roof.

Speaker 2:
[101:36] Okay.

Speaker 1:
[101:37] Another guy was, I think one more guy was with him who just like was able to very quickly like get down the stairs. But Matt couldn't move. And he tells the story now, of course, 20 years later, but he's like, oh yeah, I was just like waiting to die. He got his pistol out and he was like, hey, when these guys come up here, I'm going to get a couple of them. But like I'm going to die now and yeah, freaking absolutely horrible. And it's one of the it's one of the biggest focuses that I had when I came back and I took over training was to cause enough chaos and confusion that the seals that were getting ready to go on deployment to Iraq and Afghanistan. Every single troop that I put through for three years of training all had blue on blues because because we put them in situations that was going to be really, really challenging because it wasn't emphasized as much as it should have been. And the way it was emphasized during training for us was like, oh, you know, this would never happen. Number one, you have all seals. I'll tell you what, the percentage of it happening, if you only have seals goes down a lot, just like if you only have Marines, just like if you only have Iraqi Army, you put all those elements together, you throw the language barrier, like there's so many things that roll into it. And those, the Pat Tillman case is another one. But yeah, it's a bad one. And one of the things that bothers me is, there was a case of Blue on Blue in Vietnam with seals. It was x-ray platoon. And I knew it had happened, but they never debriefed it to where, to explain it to young leaders, like hey, this is way more, this happens a lot easier than you think it does. And I think that's one of the biggest things that I try to emphasize afterwards when I got home and started running training. It was like, you need to understand how, what a guy, when a guy is getting shot at, what their viewpoint is, the chaos, the fog of war, like all these things really come into play. And Joe Claiborne, highly experienced at that time, you, highly experienced at that time. By the way, with the Seals, we had Iraqi soldiers with them with the sole purpose of making sure that they can de-conflict. They had, they carried the little ICOM radios. We wanted to make sure that our interpreter could talk to the Iraqis on their ICOM radios, just given the communication. So even with all those protocols put in place, that was an absolutely freaking awful day. Yeah, and to the battalion commander, I went back and I went with Joe Claiborne. I don't know if you were with us, but we walked right up to his office and he was like, what happened? And I was like, hey, I pointed out, went through it on the map, like this is what happened. He was, and he was such a great guy. And he understood, he understood the chaos and the confusion that occurred. He was like, okay, guys, make sure it doesn't happen again. Get your gear back on because we have whatever it was. I think we had four more operations to do that day.

Speaker 2:
[104:48] But what it carries on.

Speaker 1:
[104:50] Yeah, yeah. Work carries on and I guess you had to go reload your mags.

Speaker 2:
[104:54] Yeah. And that wasn't, that's the honest, God truth. When you told me that, that did, it floored me, you know, because one, at this point in my life, I'm going to thank God for that, not get any worse than it did, but that mindset to me at that point was, you know, initial instinct. I'm going to kill everybody in that building. You know, I'm going to drop a bomb on it. I'm going to, they're shooting at me now and throwing grenades. There's all this other stuff going on. Yeah, I'm going to lay waste to it. And I think the whole effect, you all, you and Joe being in the positions that you were in, maintain, that's an important thing that I think most people don't even realize. When it comes to what you just described is having that command and control ability from the outside, visual, no visual, being able to determine common sense, the fifth principle of patrolling. Something ain't right. Okay, my guys are there, his guys are there. You guys went a little too far. This had, you know, just a bad situation. And, but thank God you guys saw enough to deny the error. Yeah, I was pissed at the point, but I went right to my training and said, okay, no air, get a tank. Okay, gotta wait for the tank to get here, get a gun truck. Cause we were walking, we had no vehicles that day. We're doing walking patrols like we had been doing for a while at that point. But yeah, April 13th, right? If I remember correctly.

Speaker 1:
[106:28] Yeah, I don't remember the exact day, but yeah.

Speaker 2:
[106:34] Just a few days from now.

Speaker 1:
[106:35] Yeah, yeah. So after that, so we got put like stand down investigation, the whole nine yards.

Speaker 2:
[106:42] Change uniforms.

Speaker 1:
[106:43] Yup.

Speaker 2:
[106:43] I remember that.

Speaker 1:
[106:44] Well, yeah, that's right. Like even that afternoon guys were, the Iraqis were putting like arm bands on, like with like just some kind of arm band that indicate, I think it had like a blue sticker or something. It was like trying to make the PID easier for everybody.

Speaker 2:
[106:58] Yeah, they were worried that I imagine you guys were worried.

Speaker 1:
[107:00] Oh yeah.

Speaker 2:
[107:01] Retribution might happen.

Speaker 1:
[107:05] I think, you know, one thing I will say is it seemed like everyone understood that like that was, that was, there was, there wasn't like hostility between, you know, like all my, not all my guys, but guys went to the dude's funeral because by the way, an Iraqi soldier got killed and a couple more got wounded. And, you know, we paid money to the family. We did our best, you know, like they understood. And that's one thing, you know, there was a, there was a seal captain who had been, who had been in the Marine Corps and he'd been the tail end of Way City. So when he showed up to like the tail end of Way City, yeah, and he's a guy that said to me, he goes, and I knew him beforehand, and he said, hey, Jocko, Way City, he goes, and I forget the percentage, a big percentage of casualties in Way City were friendly fire. And again, I wish I would have studied that more and known that more and been more aware of how easily it can happen. But you know, he's a guy that said, hey, man, and pretty much all the conventional commanders in Ramadi were like, oh yeah, you had a blue on blue. Kind of like, no one ever said like that's acceptable, but everyone understands that-

Speaker 2:
[108:28] Bound to happen.

Speaker 1:
[108:28] Yeah, it can happen. And I always, one of the points that I always like to make is like there was blue on blues with Humvees versus Humvees. And if you think about that, there's no vehicle in the world that looks like a Humvee, and there's only one, you know, we drive them, you know, friendlies drive Humvees. So if you're in a Humvee and you shoot at another Humvee, think of the mindset that someone has to have. That shows you how easily and how foggy things get. If you're in a Humvee and you shoot at another Humvee, like that's wild, but that happens. And so, and you know, it's another good Lafe wrote about an extreme ownership where same thing, like we had army guys, Chris Kyle sees a guy with a scoped weapon in a building, and Chris is like, hey, is there friendlies in that building? Lafe starts asking the company commander, hey, are you guys got friendlies in building whatever it is, 28? Army guy is like, no, we don't have any friendlies in there. He's like, well, we got a guy with a scoped weapon. Army's like, hey, kill him, because we lost guys from snipers. You know, I mean, Chris Leon, you know, is like, hey, we got a guy with a scoped weapon, kill him. And Chris is kind of like, I see him, he's kind of behind this curtain. And Lafe's like, hey, confirm, you don't have any guys in building, again, building 28 or whatever it was. And the guy's like, no, we don't. And you know, Lafe's like, hey, they say they don't have any guys in there between Chris and Lafe. They just didn't feel comfortable taking the shot. And again, part of the reason they didn't feel comfortable is because of this blue on blue had happened. So Lafe finally goes, hey, we're not taking the shot. And the army guy who we know is like, bro, okay. And he goes, we're gonna have to assault the building then. And Lafe is like, hey, we're covering your movement. You know, like, best we can do to support. And here goes the army to go to assault the building. And guess what building they leave? The building that Chris is looking at. And it's like, you know, one tiny decision of, you know, Chris putting a sniper round into an American soldier, you know. But again, because we had had that blue on blue, everyone was so much more aware of the possibility of it happening.

Speaker 2:
[110:34] So that's a bad situation leads to good SOP and TTP changes. You know, as bad as it. Yeah.

Speaker 1:
[110:42] Well, you hope so. If it gets debriefed properly and we definitely debriefed it properly. Like we went through every part. And I continue, by the way, when I was running training, I briefed that mission to every SEAL team and platoon that I put through training. Like exactly what happened. Here's the mistakes I made. Here's what I should have done better. Like just write down the list. When we got done with that, though, we got done with the investigation. Now is when I put together a crew of guys to go back out to Corregidor. And this is when you kind of built your relationship with the boys.

Speaker 2:
[111:13] Yeah, with Seth and JP and the guys.

Speaker 1:
[111:15] Yeah. And then how... So you guys now are out there starting to run missions. What was your off-tempo like with those guys?

Speaker 2:
[111:24] Well, the way I would talk with Seth, it'd be me, Caesar, because sometimes it'd be Caesar and Seth, and sometimes it'd be me and Seth, and it would be sometimes start off together, sometimes let's just link up at this point to kind of overlap because we know it's going to get heavy. And that was the biggest part of it. And I know it stemmed off of that previous blue and blue. And I always joked with Seth and said, you don't want to get in a scrap with me again, do you? And, you know, just good fun.

Speaker 1:
[111:52] Of course.

Speaker 2:
[111:52] Yeah, true respect. But the, yeah, it depended. Because there were days we did three foot patrols. And I'm glad we were doing it that way. Because after Kai, Kawe.

Speaker 1:
[112:05] Kawe, yeah.

Speaker 2:
[112:06] Kawe. Didn't know him super well, had met him a number of times. But when he got shot that day, I was doing Overwatch. And that's one of the, Caesar would normally go to the meetings. I don't care to be in those stinking command meetings. Because a few that I went, like the day after he got shot, when they were doing that extract, because I think it's what they were doing. They were extracting your guys had went up with some steak or snipers from the army and wanted to hide the extract by bringing those 1113s up. I got pretty angry. I went to that meeting with Caesar and, you know, Caesar did give me the, hey, Spank, you just mind your P's and Q's. Because I was frothing. Because the other problem I had was, you know, some of the senior staff and CEOs, because the admin CER major, not the command CER major, the admin CER major, we didn't see eye to eye in a lot of things because he didn't like the fact that I shared the hooch with my guys. Me being an E7, they'll be in two E3s and an E4. And he always came after me about that. I'm like, this is my team, this is our equipment. We got a ton of equipment. I'm like, I, with all due respect, CER major, I don't work for you. And then I went downstairs because CES are hooched up with all the Air Force, Major Francis and those guys that were supporting First Float 6. We had two different rooms upstairs.

Speaker 1:
[113:35] Yeah, I don't work for you, usually doesn't land.

Speaker 2:
[113:37] No, it doesn't. But I was just FYI. But we had a sign in our door that said Lightning 42 and all four of our name and ranks on it that one of the guys had printed up. So not like you don't know that's our room, but we're upstairs, Cesar and his guys are downstairs with all the ETACs and Major Francis and those guys. Well, we're kind of the, you know, I kind of wanted to be away because nobody was on the second deck at that time. They had a blow over for some CBs that came in to build a helo pad or something. And the other problem was those were technically all their overflow when they would bring people in. You know, especially right before your guys got there. And, you know, at that point, there was two soldiers in that whole building. And then, you know, we come in, Marine EOD comes in, and you guys come in. Well, total caveat. And our first room was around that whole corner, kind of back towards the generators, a little bit bigger. But we came back off patrol one day, and our nerp mortar came right through the ceiling, went and made it through the rebar, was laying on Bravo's rack. And, you know, we had the way we built those racks. We kind of had your sin pit with the poncho up to give you some privacy and gear on the top. And just the four of us in the hooch in a pretty good sized room. So, and, yeah. Bravo pulls back his poncho to get in the rack, take his boots off, and here's this inert mortar and made it through that roof, reinforced, went through that top plywood and landed and sat on this pillow. And he's like, God, I'm over there, set my Toughbook back up, you know, plug into the printer to print everything out from the patrol. And, and I like, you guys get out of here. So get out of here, go downstairs, go on the other side of the courtyard. I'm gonna go down. Well, thank God we had the two EAD right there, down in the bottom. Actually, they were right next to where Tony had hooched up there for a little bit. So I grabbed them, they're like, okay, yeah, I just failed. One, we were on patrol, thankfully. So we move around the corner, and they give us a building. So that made that Sar Major bad, but then the fact I was hooching, he goes, no, you need to be, and I'm like, that's my team. We go out together, we come back together. I don't need to be separated from them. That'll just slow down the process. We're living together. I can sit there and we, I brought a Proxima so I can pull up Intel stuff and the other stuff they give us early. Yeah. And we could go over any planning we need to do as a team. But yeah.

Speaker 1:
[116:12] So let's get to 16 May, 2006.

Speaker 2:
[116:16] Yeah, let's get away from 13 April.

Speaker 1:
[116:17] Yeah.

Speaker 2:
[116:18] Yeah.

Speaker 1:
[116:19] Um, so you guys are out. I actually, I got, I talked to Wes, Wes Baldwin and he gave me, he gave me his, I'll start off with his little, his perspective. He says that was an interesting day, which is a very West waves kicking this thing off. He says the decision was made that we were to leave our courtyard and foot patrol assault towards a shooter on a nearby rooftop. We very quickly got engaged by a talented shooter, all single shots. Four of us were shot in the firefight. An IA was hit in the hip, but fortunately was just superficial. Gunny took a round to the knee. Looked like he was stabbed in the knee cap with a pencil. Very small entrance wound, but the entire back of his knee was hamburger, venous and arterial bleeding. I told Huerta to hold pressure on Gunny's femoral artery to slow the bleeding, which he did very effectively. I tried to get a cat tourniquet on as quickly as possible, but the blood on my mechanic's gloves was very slick. I used my teeth to remove my gloves so I could grip the tourniquet better. Spanky's legs were huge and the stitching on the tourniquet was breaking with the force I was putting into it, trying to stop his bleeding. I had to put a second tourniquet on just above the first to completely stop the arterial bleeding. Then, I put two dressings over the wound on the knee to try and keep everything clean and protected. Werder was shot in the bottom edge of his chest plate. I saw JP Puke after the exertion of dragging Gunny and then run up to our overhead rooftop and engage the shooter while we were working on Gunny. Later that night, I was replenishing my Medgear when I realized that I had a round had passed through my Medgear and camelback. An exciting daytime patrol in the Malab was his final statement again. That's Wes. And so Wes was the seal medic out there with with Stoner and with you guys. And that was kind of his his take on it. But I don't think he's ever debriefed you on that. So I figured I'd give you a little debrief from his perspective.

Speaker 2:
[118:25] No, I appreciate that. It is good because I'm very glimpses of the memory.

Speaker 1:
[118:31] You know, there's pictures of that.

Speaker 2:
[118:32] Yeah, they sent them to me. So the only thing that the those two Navy, the videographer and the still photographer, they cut out. So when I pull back over and cross street, because I want to say JP, it was where to JP. I don't know who was behind JP when we kind of broke across to do that road. And we came up to that team where I think that's where I end up getting hit. It's right there in the middle of that intersection. I never let the guys walk in front of me, never. I was like, if something bad, I don't know how you thought about it, but for me, life, death, everything, may, meant, wound, it was never, everything in the middle was never a concern, I guess. And the guys will tell you that about me. I was, I'm not saying I'll have fear. I got fear, because I'll go back to what I initially told them, I'm not Billy Badass, I'm not anybody like that, but I guess mission always overtakes the fear aspect to me. But I definitely didn't want, early on didn't want the guys up front. I'll take point, I'll walk up there and look.

Speaker 1:
[119:53] So, in that retrospect, when you see photos or videos of me, except technically shooting, I, on my coat of strap, I'd be using my hands. I'd be talking to people. I'd leave it down. You see Wirt in the background. He's got the saw up, and the other guys are all up, and I'm just nonchalantly walking around there. But it was almost like when it gets ready to happen, that's why that day, because I think it was our third patrol that day. It was like right around 6 o'clock in the evening, if I remember correctly. I'm surprised he didn't tell you about the laughter we were having while I was trying to get myself my morphine. I'll get to that. I like telling that story about myself. But the, yeah, it's like we're gearing up. That Iraqi got shot first. I'm pulling the guys across. We're going to cross over, and we're going to kind of bound, do our immediate action, to get to that house that was on the corner where we believed, not realizing, I think Seth later on told me, we had the guys that were shooting up in the building, and the sniper in the overwatch, I think is what it was, what they were telling me. Well, I'm doing what I always do. I'm just focusing on gunfire. Let's get to that, get up here, not to enter the house, just to try to contain that until enough of the people come up, or we make a decision on what we're going to do. Yeah, one minute, I'm moving, next minute. Yeah, Earth kinda goes dirty. Yeah, I don't know, I'm confused. Why, you know, what the hell just happened? Because it didn't hurt at all. It was not painful at all. It's like my waist down went numb, like you're, when you sit on your feet and they start tingling, they go to sleep. So there was no pain, but you know, all the gunfire's going on, you know, everything is getting passed back and forth. But I was more confused. So, because as they didn't say, when I fell forward because of all the gear, when I came forward, you know, it pushed my boot on top of my magazines. So that first time when I fight, and then I was trying to push myself up, confused, gunfights going on, I'm hearing movement, yelling, just all the sights and sounds of that. I go to push myself up and I can't lift up. And I'm just confused. That's the best way to put it, from what I can remember. And I finally realized that my paraclete, or not all my paraclete vest, but my Cody strap, I disconnected the quick clip on it, and was pulling my rifle because my only instinct at this point is get your weapon in front of you. You know, get back to business because, you know, you're definitely not moving at this point, because my whole lower body is just numb and tingling. And it wasn't until, and this is what I didn't get, it was JP and Muerta, because they were the closest two to me. And this is them telling me after the fact. You know, grab my toe handle and my paraclete, and those two cock strong kids, because I was, you know, 200 body weight in those days, and you know, all the gear we carry. So good 270 to 300 pounds somewhere in that ballpark. They grabbed that and they ass ended me all the way over, because I was, at that point, I'd got the weapon in front, and I was just gonna shoot whatever. I don't give a crap what's in front. Kind of berserker mode, I guess. Not professional, but I said, I'm just gonna kill everything in front of me. If it flags, I'm gonna aim at it. And then when they flipped me over, I almost shot myself in the right foot. But back then, I shot both eyes open. So I'd look ACOG in the one, but I'd aim over it, especially in those situations. But they flipped me back over. And that's when I got, after I took my finger off the trigger when I saw my foot with my left eye, but then I immediately noticed that my left leg was just bouncing. Kind of keep the same as hamburger on the whole back. I don't know how bad it is. It's just bouncing back and forth. And then there's a lull. So I take that opportunity to reload and still kind of confused, you know, but not fearful, just surprised. I'm more surprised, not confused, surprised. And then especially when I'm watching my leg just bounces or drag, and then it stops. And then it goes again. That's when Warritt got shot. Didn't know that till after the thing. That's why I think, is it Tom? Yeah. When Tom came out to help JP? But then when they got me to the courtyard, and in those pictures, it's a pig trail. Mitchell's got blood all over it. It's just a pig. Thank God, Wes and those guys. But that metal framing on the gate they're bringing me through, the personal gate, my gear was stuck on it. So he and JP are just jerking. And I remember, and I'm like, they gave me a chance to clear the 203 round out of my tube. I just, at that building, I'm like, I'm going to aim at the window, and I'm sending in that building, because that's, we had thought that's where all the fire was coming from. But yeah, and then, yeah, Wes moves over to me, and they start to give me that courtyard, and Bravo, Steve, Bravo Stevens, or Stevens Bravo. He's, you know, he's really gunning down hard helping Wes. Wes is straddling me, my leg. He's trying to cut everything free. I remember Bravo is really pushing down on my femoral bridge, on my hip, trying to help slow the bleeding, because I was, I'm lucky.

Speaker 3:
[125:45] Yeah, you don't have much time with the femoral.

Speaker 1:
[125:47] Yeah.

Speaker 3:
[125:47] It's like three, four minutes.

Speaker 1:
[125:49] Total popliteal bridge, all that was going. Well, he's doing that. Well, then I started getting shocky. At this point, I start recognizing signs of shock. And I asked Wes, you know, because we had this big auto injectors of morphine. I'm like, if I'm going down, I'm going down high. You know, can I get it? No, Gunny, you're not ready yet. Gunny, you're not ready. I can't, you're not stable, Gunny, you know. And, you know, you kind of feel that. You know, I never lost lucidity, but you can just tell your body's revolting at that point. You see where it's kind of cutting stuff off, and, you know, your mind starts getting a little cloudy, and because it's doing what a body's meant to do in a traumatic situation, it's trying to shut down systems to keep you alive. I get why, you know, it was doing. But then one of those memories I've got is Wes got me, got both of them. He's kind of wrapping me together. We're waiting for that truck to get up there to throw me in there. And I'm like, can I, you know, can I go ahead and get my morphine now? He goes, you're good, Gunny, you're good. And this is, I know this is after 6 o'clock, because sun's not directly up. You know, I'm looking at that blue sky, we're laying in that courtyard in the middle of those people's driveway. And he's done a bang up job on me for however long it took. And of all the times I've practiced this over and over and over, I pull it out because, you know, I kept it on my embiter case on my chest. I kept it on the outside. And I don't know how I did it, but when I pulled it out, you know, you can pull it out, pop the cap, and it just slam in the, you know, in a thigh or something like that for someone. You practice it over and over, you pop that cap off, and then you just come around. Sometimes you got to reinforce the back with your pinky so that it gets a good push into the meat. And I did it, boom. That needle went right through my pinky and just squirted against that brick wall. And I'm like, what the hell? We start laughing and I just rip it out of my pinky and I just start jabbing at Wes and where to, because at this point where to came up, Tony, I got shot. And not knowing, dragging me, not dragging me, that good stuff. And I just, Jan, he's, you're gonna get nothing. I was like, damn, yeah, I was just going off. I was so angry with myself. Not only am I laying here, got him working on me to keep me alive. And, you know, I'm looking at this blue sky thinking, I can tell my body's going into revolt and I want to do it high if it's going to happen. And I can't even be high. And then they, about that time, that gun truck come up, because I remember Major Francis Mitchell and all those guys were there. They got me stabilized and they threw me across the lap of those soldiers in that gun truck. They just opened that door, both back doors, get me in there. Wes had strapped my legs together basically. And, you know, I'm holding my helmet. I don't even know where my rifle is. One of those guys kept my rifle. So, and I quit carrying a pistol at that point. It took up space. And so my pistol was under my pillow. But I've got my helmet in my hand. They throw me in that gun truck to take me to the end of Malob and Camelhump. You remember that? To have 1113 pick me up. They didn't want to bring it all the way down. So they, you know, they want to take me all the way down. Meet at the intersection. I'm listening to them, but I remember that gunner. That's one of those memories I have. They get me across the lap of these two soldiers. Yeah, I got blood all over the place. Stop the bleeding thing going. And that gunner, so fun. That gunner looks down out of the turret. I'm laying in the lap of these two young soldiers, and he goes, weren't you that gunny we're always getting in firefights with? And I'm like, yeah, I'm that gunny. Crap, finally bit me in the ass. Get me to the end of the block. Well now I'm stuck. You got the gunner, you got the guys, you know, you got the other four soldiers inside, but I'm laying across their lap. They can't get out from under me to, you know, get me out of the end, get me on 1113. But I remember that medic that was in the back of the 1113 comes over, opens that door and asks if I can walk. I throw my helmet at him because I was already holding it. And I'm like, you know, it just started to be retarded. But that was the most sickening feeling that and the chopper ride once they got the IVs in me to take me to, because, you know, they cut my leg off in TQ or wherever that hospital was, over by TQ. But the back of the 11-30, because I've never liked being in those things, any armor vehicle, I don't prefer it. But then in that chopper ride out of the combat outpost, that's probably the most uncomfortable feelings I've ever had. The most bare, don't have a weapon, don't know how to protect myself, don't have any control whatsoever. And that whole time, my lower body is still numb. I never had any pain up to the point when they put me under and cut it off. But I remember just asking that command sergeant major over at the combat outpost, I'm watching them write my name on the board when they're putting two IVs in me and I, it's just, can I have a cigarette? No, you can't, give me a cigarette. Who cares? Give me a cigarette, give me a cigarette. Because I always smoked the falling rain, Iraqi smokes with them back then. But yeah, that was that day. Yeah, I think they cut it off before eight o'clock at night.

Speaker 3:
[131:32] Yeah, and it's, you know, just sitting here thinking about this story as you're talking through it, you know, here it is, I talked about in the beginning of the podcast, like the teamwork between all these, if you didn't hear here, sure enough, you have SEALs, Marines, you know, SEALs are doing medical on you, but they're getting help from the Marines, Marines and SEALs dragging you out of the street, a Marine, and then who comes to pick you up? Army, like that's, you just can't, it's really hard for people to understand the bonds that was formed there. And then of course, you know, I always want to mention this too, you know, the guys that are out there training as medics, it's really hard training. The medic school for the SEALs is extremely hard, the special force, we used to go to, I don't know if, I'm pretty sure that West went to the Army, the 18 Delta, the short package for you guys. But we have, but now we do our own, but they're all just outstanding schools. And the fact that, you know, I tell people all the time, like if I needed to get shot, I would rather have a special operations medic there instead of some like doctor, you know, whatever normal physician because that's, they're just trained so well. And, you know, same thing like when Cowie got shot, guys were on him immediately. And, and even the, even the package that we put guys through for TCCC, right? Where, hey, I don't know how to, I don't know how to operate on anything, but I can definitely stop the bleeding. Like that's what, and guys had to do that and did that. So props to those guys. And then again, you know, just the teamwork of the guys being out there working together to get you out of there. And that's another amazing thing. You know, an advantage that we have these days is like, you know, you are off the battlefield in a matter of minutes, you know, and in a chopper in a matter of minutes. And just to have all that coordination, that golden hour of time, you know, just to get guys off the battlefield and is the modern military, you know, we just kind of witnessed that over in Iran with the guys that got shot down and getting those guys out, you know, from the giant country of Iran shot down and the efforts that went in to getting those guys back is like incredible, but that's the way America rolls.

Speaker 1:
[133:49] So. Yeah, especially that whiz-o.

Speaker 3:
[133:51] Yeah, no doubt, no doubt. I can't wait to hear the stories and get the debrief on what happened over there. You know, it's gonna be epic. So, you were conscious the whole way until.

Speaker 1:
[134:04] I never lost consciousness until just for, I'm the last member I have. When I say I've got mixed time drugs from in the hospital, kind of clouded some of the in-between stuff, I never lost consciousness. And when they did the, when they got me that combat surgical or wherever it was over by TQ, I don't know, Chopperlands, they put me on a big wheeled gurney thingy and rolled me in. It was like a male and a female. The female was wearing Scooby-Doo scrub tops. And I'm looking down, they're doing capillary refill on my left big toe. And one or the other, don't really remember clearly, one or the other looked at each other and just shook their head. But I remember she had Scooby-Doo scrubs. Don't know who was senior, who was who, don't know. That's the last memory I have. The next memory I have, I'm on NSC 17 on my way to Lawn Stool and I woke up in excruciating pain. And I have no clue on, I have no memory of Lawn Stool. Now, I was shot the night of the 16th, cut my leg off. I was in Bethesda the morning of the 19th. So we're looking at less than 72 hours from the moment of wound, initial amputation to checking into Bethesda. So a very quick process. So much so that my mom and my ex and my soon to be second ex at that point, we're all getting notified that the Marine Corps is flying into Germany because he is not looking good. And I think that's that spell I had somewhere in between there that I vaguely remember the pain. But I was VSI. I do know that at this point, I was able in 08 to look at my own, being working at the MEF, I was able to look at my own call where they were doing the notifications and from commands. So I was VSI. So I guess I got...

Speaker 3:
[135:54] Wait, what's a VSI?

Speaker 1:
[135:55] Very seriously injured.

Speaker 3:
[135:56] Okay, got it.

Speaker 1:
[135:57] And I think it was the blood loss. I think that's why they said they want to get them to Germany. It wasn't the injury. It was the blood loss by far. I'm looking at the pictures later on in this hospital. Yeah, I get that. It was a big drill. But I'm lucky.

Speaker 3:
[136:10] And when you remember being in TQ and you see the Scooby nurse, do they even do they even consult you at all about your leg?

Speaker 1:
[136:18] No, that's the only member I have. They might have and I don't know. All I remember is get me off the chopper and those gurneys have those big old huge skinny wheels. And they roll me into that, whatever it was. And I remember, don't even remember their faces. I just remember one was a female, one was a male and Scooby-Doo scrub top. And I remember the capillary fill and beyond that, and on a semi and care, you know, at this point, I mean, next thing I know, you know, got part of a leg gone. It's a big deal.

Speaker 3:
[136:55] You woke up or your first memory is pain on the flight.

Speaker 1:
[136:59] The C-17.

Speaker 3:
[137:00] C-17.

Speaker 1:
[137:00] Oh, yeah.

Speaker 3:
[137:01] Did they immediately put you back under?

Speaker 1:
[137:03] Yes. That was something I just recently talked to a guy about. So, I was, you know, somewhere in the middle of it, but I remember I was about midway up on the center gurney racks, and the jump seats are there, you know, from the C-17s, obviously. We've all been on them. Well, I woke up and I was in really, really bad pain. I can't even tell you the level of pain at this point. I just know I was in bad pain, and I was smelling Fritos. And what's weird is I have this, I know I was in pain, I know I was hungry, and I smell Fritos. And I'm assuming it's one of those Air Force box meals. Yeah, somebody's eating one on there. So that's the only emotion and the feeling I have in that point. Pain, hunger, help. And it seemed like within whatever timeframe, I don't know. But as soon as I motion that I'm hungry, I'm hurting, I was out. And I don't remember from there. And I don't really remember very well that first two weeks in the hospital. Because I went through 10 surgeries in two weeks. You know, debridements and revisions and all that stuff they did to me. It was surgery every other day. And so you're so medicated that, you know, I have glimpses. I don't remember getting my Purple Heart from General Hagee. That guy I talked about earlier, Steve Bell, he was Sergeant Major 112 in Hawaii at Kaneohe that I'd worked with on recruiting duty. He flew in from Hawaii with his wife and spent the first week and a half, almost two weeks with me, gave me my haircut the day I got my Purple Heart. I look at pictures, I look at videos.

Speaker 3:
[138:51] Don't remember it.

Speaker 1:
[138:51] I don't remember it. We went to the evening parade, I was in a wheelchair. We're all there together, him and I, common aunts, everybody's there. And I see the videos, I'm lucid, I'm communicating just like I normally would communicate, but I have no memory. About that third week, I started getting memory back.

Speaker 3:
[139:12] What was the emotional state when you realized you got no leg?

Speaker 1:
[139:18] You know, I don't... This guy, Jack Shielard, I met like a month ago, he finally hunted me down after all these years to give me a coin from Lawnstool. Met me in Iwasso, we had dinner, he's been doing this on his own thing. Including him, and this is fresh after 20 years of time, just a month and a half ago. Everybody said during that time that all I cared about was getting back to work. Now, cognitive ability on my part, third week at best, it never once bothered me. I think it goes back to my initial instinct of death, life. Anything in the middle is just react to it. Get past it, find a new norm, do whatever you gotta do. It never bothered me. Does it suck? Of course it sucks. You know, I wouldn't wish it on anybody. You know, I tell that to kids all the time that want to play with my cool robot leg. I'm like, you know, I normally tell them, you know, don't ride sharks. You know, I got all these scars from all the other upper body surges. I'll be like, don't ride bulls, don't ride sharks. They like to bite and they like to break your arm off. And kids get a kick out. They don't want to say, well, I got shot. That's boring to them. They just think the robot leg is cool. But yeah, I don't, I don't, it never once was affected me in that way. Never. Yeah, I'm happy to have life. Life is way more important than a leg. And I take it as luck. A lot of really close calls in that time frame. So, now as a different type of person, I look back on that was God's way to tell me to grow up. You know, you're older, you're higher rank, you should be out playing with the boys. You know, time to get back to real work, big boy. It's kind of the way I look at it. But it never once, the only fear I had was that I would have to get out. That is on Scott Sharif. You know, when I was waiting on the med board to come back, that gave me that feeling of 1995 again. You know, and so, when I came back on Permanent Limit to Do, or as I could stay, I'm like, well, that's the first step. So, but yeah, it never bothered me.

Speaker 3:
[141:43] And then it goes into the recovery. It sounds like relatively clean situation. In other words, like above the knee, it's horrible. You know, it's terrible. But above the knee, it sounds like there wasn't any major infections. Um, it moved pretty quick as far as and and by the way, it's one leg instead of two. That's a huge difference.

Speaker 1:
[142:11] You know, that's gunshot wound and live explosive.

Speaker 3:
[142:13] Oh, yeah, that's a no.

Speaker 1:
[142:14] That's what a surgical above the knee amputation based off the damage to the lower femur from the gunshot. So it's a it's all there's no blast injury. The elective to go above the fracture of the femur, not to cut you off, Jocko.

Speaker 3:
[142:27] No, no, no, you're that's that's the part that's the kicker.

Speaker 1:
[142:30] The healing process is much better because Dan Knosson, who I know, I know Dan very well. Yeah, like that's my mentor. I met him in Rob Jones blast.

Speaker 3:
[142:39] Don't know him that well, but I know blast like all those guys, those blast amputations are brutal. And then you have all the secondary damage from the explosives in the rest of their body, soft tissue, organ damage, all that stuff they have. So, yeah, this is that's what I didn't make that connection with why this, because you're like, you know, I wasn't hurt too bad. And even the fact that you're conscious, because these guys get blown up. It's like, you know.

Speaker 1:
[143:04] So much more trauma.

Speaker 3:
[143:04] Yeah, it's traumatic in so many other parts of their body as well. I mean, Dan Kenosan was like, you know, just devastated.

Speaker 1:
[143:15] Dan came to my retirement.

Speaker 3:
[143:16] That's amazing.

Speaker 1:
[143:17] I mean, I spent a lot of time with him when he got there in 10. You know, I was still out there then. I won't say we became friends. We were very good acquaintances. We traveled a number of times together on trips before he started doing the biathlon stuff.

Speaker 3:
[143:31] Yeah, good dude. So, but so you're you're recovery. You don't have to worry about these other blast injuries and all this stuff.

Speaker 1:
[143:38] It's a quick, you know, from May 16th till mid December. In that show, I started my med board in mid December, ran my first 5K in November. You know, I initially eight weeks, get out of the hospital, then moved me over to Walter Reed on my 35th birthday, was that day. Then, about a week inpatient, then released me for therapy, but I still have, you know, I still have a number of weeks, about a month before they'll take the staples out. You know, so I can't do, I can do physical nocturne patient therapy, but it's on crutches or wheelchair. You know, initially it's a wheelchair. That didn't last long, because I, in order to not go to the Malone House and get in the Fisher House at Walter Reed, the old Walter Reed, I had to be on crutches. Well, in order to be cleared to do that, I had to be able to go up and down stairs because there was no elevator in the Fisher House and all they had was upstairs rooms. So I proved that I can go up and down, you know, stairs on crutches. You know, I'll keep saying it, give me a task, tell me what the requirements of the task are. I'm gonna do it. Because I don't want to be in the Malone House, some of you don't know the Malone House is the old Walter Reed. It was basically a 10, 12 story hotel. And it was wild, wild west for wounded warriors and their families. I mean, there was constant stuff I want to talk about, sad, sad things of people doing there. I'm like, I've got a young daughter, you know, a second. I do not want to be in a Malone House. I didn't really want to be in DC. Not like I had any choice in a minor. But fortunately, proved very quickly before I even got my first leg, my temp socket, and we got in the Malone House. Much more family orientating. We got like eight or ten families in there.

Speaker 3:
[145:36] You mean the Fisher?

Speaker 1:
[145:38] Fisher Houses. Yeah, Walter Reed had three of them. And so you're in a family environment. You can have your own space and store food, you know. Malone House is basically a hotel with a restaurant at the bottom. You know, you don't have that opportunity to cook in the rooms or any of that stuff. And I didn't want no part of that, plus all that other extracurricular crap out of me around. My focus of effort was get back to work. That was my number one focus. So no, get away till your staples are out. Okay, wait, I'm gonna take my staples out. Oh, let's prove you can go up and down the stairs on your crutches. Okay, I'll prove it. You know, because I'm thinking I'm 35. I've been in the Marine Corps for 17 plus years. I'm, you know, I'm on a timeline here. You know, not fully knowing if they're gonna kick me out medically, because I don't know yet what's gonna happen with that. But my thing was get back as quickly as possible. And I don't care what I get back to. First task, get back on active duty from patient status. Next task, where's the Marine Corps need me? You know, and then so on. So that was the beginning.

Speaker 3:
[146:51] And so then when, how long did the process take? Is nine months until your med board?

Speaker 1:
[146:57] No, my med board was in less than six months, and I was back on active duty in 11 months.

Speaker 3:
[147:02] Bang.

Speaker 1:
[147:03] That's the problem. It took five men, five months for the Marine Corps to accept the med process. My rehab wasn't even five months. I mean, that's the weird thing. It took longer for them to figure out, yeah, you can stay on active duty. So at the 11 month mark, I was released from patient status and able to stay on active duty.

Speaker 3:
[147:27] And then where'd they put you?

Speaker 1:
[147:28] Fort Sill, Oklahoma.

Speaker 3:
[147:30] Oh, this is, you did some instructor time or something there?

Speaker 1:
[147:32] They, because at this point, I only got almost two years left. I'm gonna hit 20. So I don't knock them for it. I've got the MOS, I've been through piss off and all those training for, and built Fifth Anglico, I understood. I didn't realize how bad I would hate it. I mean, I didn't stay there very long.

Speaker 3:
[147:55] How long did you stay there for?

Speaker 1:
[147:57] Well, I got there technically checked in in mid-May and checked into one MEF for the 08 deployment in September. Long enough to teach one class, go through curriculum and development course and be checked off for instructor.

Speaker 3:
[148:09] You just didn't want to be in a classroom teaching. This is not your scene.

Speaker 1:
[148:13] No. But I thought, get out of the hospital. It goes back to everything I've told you before. Okay, you just let me back. I'll manipulate where I go from there. So that still is, even at that time, still my mindset.

Speaker 3:
[148:27] And your goal, did you have it, at what point did you decide your goal was to go back on deployment?

Speaker 1:
[148:32] Okay, so we were doing Alcatraz Challenge in San Francisco. And Colonel Clark Lethene is there as the aide to General Mattis. General Mattis is getting ready to leave because he's getting close to picking up four stars. So that 08 deployment, General Kelly takes over. We're doing the Alcatraz Challenge. Did pretty good. Swimming, I've always been pretty decent at swimming. And then once I learned the strokes and learned the proper and did it enough, I've always been a decent swimmer. I've just gotten better and better. But I came out of the water pretty fast. I mean, there's only five, six of us amputees there. Out of what, 600 to 900 people, whatever it was, 600 and something. Have you ever been up there for it?

Speaker 3:
[149:18] I have not been up there for it, but I've been up there before.

Speaker 1:
[149:20] Yeah, you ferry over right off the island, you jump off the platform and then you swim back. Me, Miami Point was the golden dome at Crissy Field. Depending on the current that day.

Speaker 3:
[149:30] How far of a swim is it?

Speaker 1:
[149:30] A mile and a half, nothing stupid. I did it in 40 some minutes. It's current, as you know up there. A current is, depending on what you're getting that day, which it's a morning swim.

Speaker 3:
[149:40] Do they plan it around a good current?

Speaker 1:
[149:43] No, I think.

Speaker 3:
[149:43] A beneficial current?

Speaker 1:
[149:44] No, I don't know. That I can't answer, but they have safety kayaks in the water to kind of keep you from going... There was only one time I had to get nudged by a kayak because I went hundreds of strokes before I really looked up and I'm aimed right at the Golden Gate Bridge. They nudged me, that's what got me. I'm like, yeah, the Golden Dome's my aiming point. I'm heading down to the Pacific Ocean. We don't want that. So they can say, because that current, when it's got that, you know, lateral currents, you know all about that. That current, when it comes in across where the old Presidio was, it's too, it's gotta be a too not lateral. I mean, it's fast. And so, you know, a little bit of this.

Speaker 3:
[150:26] You know, going back a little bit, because I know this must have landed on you, but Corporal Chris Leon gets killed. There you go.

Speaker 1:
[150:35] June 20th.

Speaker 3:
[150:36] June 20th. So you've been back in the States for like a month, and now one of your, the first Anglico guy killed since Vietnam.

Speaker 1:
[150:45] Yeah, Sergeant Major called me.

Speaker 3:
[150:46] Gets killed in Ramadi. And Sergeant Major called you.

Speaker 1:
[150:49] Yep. And our Sergeant Major called me. That was from 2nd Anglico, and let me know. And yeah, because then we had him, and then we had Pate, Captain Pate. Was one of the 2nd Anglico from there. He was our intel officer. They got killed, I think, in August. He was out of TQ, I believe. But yeah, when I heard about Chris, I was like, you know, and that sucks, you know. I'm sure Dave's talked to you a lot about Major Burke. Theo and Chris were best friends, where to? Both from the same area in California. You know, when they got to the unit, both communicators, during that initial build up, when me and Major Krebs are getting the unit build up. And it sucked. And then to hear the way it happened, you know, I'm glad it was... This sounds bad, but I don't mean it this way. Quick death. That's all I wish for anybody, if you're going to be put in that position, not bleeding out on the road. I know the guys told me, Sar Major told me that Huerta took it super hard because that was a month after me. And that probably bothered me more was what was going to be the, you know, obviously family. You know, Leon was a great kid. Cock strong kid, just like Huerta. Funny, those two together back in Okinawa.

Speaker 3:
[152:10] Just studs.

Speaker 1:
[152:11] Oh yeah, just good guys. That's the hardest thing for me was that... And I'm not saying what ifs, because I don't think what ifs matter. You know, should I have pushed so hard to get us over there as a platoon? But then I also got to rethink, you know, I don't know.

Speaker 3:
[152:35] It sucks.

Speaker 1:
[152:36] But what death doesn't suck? You know that all too well.

Speaker 3:
[152:38] Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:
[152:40] And, but, you know, they've named the, when my son was in Okinawa with Fifth Marines on UDP, you know, he went by the Fifth Anglico Headquarters. They're in Camp Hanson. You know, they've got, it's named after Chris, you know, and then they've got a little memorial for the three of us in there. You know, what do you, I don't know, what do you say?

Speaker 3:
[153:04] Yeah, but that had to, well, not had to, but I would imagine like going when you're, when you have the goal, what made me think of that was having the goal of going back over on deployment again, you know, knowing, knowing the cost better than anybody, you know, and then finally with losing Chris and yourself being wounded and now you're like, cool, you know what I'm going to do? Go back over.

Speaker 1:
[153:25] No, sure. I mean, but that's okay. So my thing, just like the initial part of it and the whole career, every time, all the stories I've told up this point, one thing has always resonated for as long as I can and the best way I can, I'm going to serve. I already know what it feels like to have it taken away. So the leg portion of it, I just wanted to be able to get back to a new normal for myself, but more importantly to prove to everybody, it was never an agenda to go back to Iraq or Afghanistan. It was never a personal aspiration. It was, I want to shut everybody up and let them know I'm normal. Limited. You know, there's limitations now that are blatantly obvious, but I will not do anything. I promised that to General Mattis back then. I promised General Kelly when we got over there. I said, I will never put a Marine in harm's way. That will not happen. I won't say I'll never put myself in harm's way, but I can only handle my, you know, I can take care of myself. I know what I will and won't do, and I'll never do that. But then there was that, you know, the hospital, you know, I left Walter Reed in September of 2006 and went down to Center for Intrepid in San Antonio. I just left. You know, they kept telling me 18 months minimum. That's what Walter Reed kept telling me. And I'm like, give me my task. Tell me what I need to accomplish to get out of here, to get my med board signed off on and see if I can stay on active duty. And they kept, don't worry about that, just get healthy. Don't worry about that, get healthy. And I was just like, no, I want to know what I can do to get out of here as fast as possible, because I've got that ticking timeline. I only have so many years left of me in the Marine Corps. And if I'm going to waste them here just to make 20, yeah, I'll hate myself for it. I will. I'll hate myself because, you know, I want to go on my terms. And that was my whole principle. My whole principle, I don't want to go early. I want to go out of my terms. I want to do as much as I possibly can to prove who can do it and who can't do it. Because that's the tertiary agenda for me. Let's push the boundaries. Let's get, you know, six months after me, we got that single above-the-knee corporal back over at Okinawa. Two years after I was in DC., we got Corporal Bradford, bilateral above-the-knee amputee, Coley Blind, got him to stay on active duty and work at the Wounded Warrior Regiment. You know, that became my goal after that deployment. But I'll get back to the hospital stay. I did. I told, you know, Staff Sergeant John Cephanowski, who worked at the Walter Reed liaison, I went into him and I said, listen, I'm leaving. I want to hate DC. We just had a triple amputee get mugged at the little mall area there in Maryland. Oh my gosh, I can't remember the name of it, doesn't matter, pretty close to Walter Reed. And they had a big courtyard where you watch movies. They rolled this kid, you know, in the parking garage. You know, no respect in that factor. A kid can't defend himself. I'm like, and plus I hate, I hated DC at that point. I said, I want out of here. And finally, I just told my ex's dad was there visiting. And I said, you guys go down and get a rental car where I'm in therapy. Because they kept telling me 18 months, and then they would tell me, I miss this factor, it's pretty important. One hour. You can do one hour of physical therapy, one hour of occupational therapy. I'm like, I have nothing else to do in the day. I'm going to go back over to the Fisher House. I'm going to twiddle my thumbs and sit there and look at this thing I've got missing. You know, I don't have a leg on. You won't let me get it. So it's just one thing after another. It just pissed me off. And so finally, I had enough. I really did. I said, go get a rental car. And I told the staff sergeant skiing at the marine liaison. They were like, well, he says, dude, you can't do that. You got no orders. I said, I don't give a crap. What are you going to do? And he kicked me out. And I wasn't trying to be the old guy, you know, the old Spanky, but I was pissed. I didn't agree with anything I was hearing because I kept saying, that's how I could give you that answer while I go so quickly. I'm a gunshot wound. I have no other ancillary problems here. And I think they built the task based off of blast injury. And I think their natural conditioned instinct for us as a patient was the highest probability of these blast injuries will re-injure themselves throughout the physical therapy process this many times if they do too much. And I think they just bought into that based off experience, I get it, but didn't plan for outliers.

Speaker 3:
[158:13] Yeah, yeah, and what, like 70% of the casualties in Iraq were IEDs. So that means they're looking at 70%, 70% of them they're going, oh yeah, this guy has a bunch of ancillary issues.

Speaker 1:
[158:24] And the ones coming in from Afghanistan.

Speaker 3:
[158:25] Yep, yep, both, yep.

Speaker 1:
[158:27] So that was the biggest kicker. They, you know, I'm sure you guys both understand this. I've never liked, I get cookie cutter when you need cookie cutter. I don't like cookie cutter when it's individually based. Okay, yes, I know the times for that, you know, depending. But for me, looking at it from a training perspective, I'm like, don't put me inside the cookie cutter that I don't form in. And that was my problem. And so I just, we got that rental car, we left, went to Oklahoma, picked up our truck, dropped in the rental car at Tulsa Airport and showed up a couple days later at Brook Army Medical Center San Antonio. I put my camis on, walked in there because at this point I got a leg. And I was still limping pretty good using a cane. Walk in and they don't know what to do with me. But John Sepanowski had called. The little corporal went, got the lieutenant colonel and they came out and I'm standing the front desk. They don't know I'm coming. And they're like, Gunny, what can we do for you? I said, well, I'm here checking in his patient. What are you talking about? We don't have you on the roster to be checking in with us. I was like, well, I was at Walter Reed and I left. I'm here. And long story short, they made it happen. Ski had called the other staff in CO and told them, can I ask you a little bit by that officer for not being a good Gunny at this point? But at that point, I really didn't think anything to lose. I didn't. And I didn't mean it to be bad. But if I didn't get out of that environment, I'd go back to the golf cart incident. I'm serious. But probably in a very bad way.

Speaker 3:
[160:08] So you do the swim at Alcatraz, and how does that lead to you going on deployment again?

Speaker 1:
[160:12] Well, because of Colonel Clark Latham being the aid to General Mattis, his wife, Wendy Latham being on Semper Fi fund, we had started that triathlon team, Team Semper Fi in 06, John Sepanowski. At that point, we missed all that. We had been doing all kinds of races, adventure races, sprints, all these different triathlons and endurance runs, endurance.

Speaker 3:
[160:35] And you were doing this for the Semper Fi fund?

Speaker 1:
[160:37] Yes.

Speaker 3:
[160:37] And you were doing this, was it all wounded athletes?

Speaker 1:
[160:41] Yeah, John Sepanowski was, and he was liaison. He built the team, there was about six of us, Dan Lascaux, Eric Santayana, me. We did it to raise money for Semper Fi fund with the secondary approach of getting us out of the hospital. Because this is still during my med board process, during my, you know, it started in late 06. And it fit perfectly because that early January of 07 up till May when I got back, I continued to compete with them. You know, it was one way to get me out because I'm not in physical therapy, I'm not in occupational therapy, I've got a rental house in San Antonio. I'm like, I need something to do. And Ski got a hold of me from Walter Reed and said, hey, I'm thinking about this. No, you guys got these guys down there, I'm going to come down. And so it raised money for Injury Maroon Semper Fi-Fun, what they were called then, one sure appreciation for everything they were doing for all of us to raise that money and awareness. And it was awesome because like the Alcatraz Challenge that time in 07, you got 600 plus people and you've got 7 of us I think that were amputees, one hand amputee and the rest are lower limb amputees. I was the only above the knee amputee on the team, most of them BK below the knees. And but you know what better way to figure out your, if you want to call it new personal best, whatever you want to call it, your limitation. Where's the boundary of my limitation? Is that, I never did triathlons before, I could swim because of the job. You know, I could run pretty decent back in the day, but you know, I'd gotten to the point before the amputation that was kind of doing me a favor. I might run a 19, 1935, you know, three mile run on the PFT, but definitely not 17, 18s anymore. The knee was just done. But it could teach me, and that led General Mattis, General Gray and all these big heavy hitters down, down there for that. Mike Thornton's there, you know, for the dinner, the fundraiser. Well, my ex is not ex yet, but she was a corporal in the Marine Corps. She's down there talking to Colonel Clark Lathine, General Mattis' aide and smoking a cigarette and going, because I got passed over. I'm a patient. He didn't get promoted as a patient, so I got passed over from Mass Sardin. She's eventing about that. She's eventing about just everything. That's my fault. And I come out there, and because I knew Colonel Lathine from his wife for the fund, I was like, babe, stop it. Leave him alone. And he did the proverbial, if I can do anything for you, what would you want? And I know I'm on the back end of, you know, I'm already at Fort Sill at this point. I'm still doing this competing, knowing that I've checked in, and I hate, I've done that one class, I've done that stupid curriculum development class, and that's like business when you're doing LIFO, FIFO, and all that crap, just wants to beat your head against a wall. I'm like, yeah, I'm not writing curriculum, and I'm not teaching classes. And it was like for staff level. So, definitely could do it, and I'd be a good proof source for it. I just hated it. So, that was my, sir, I'll take advantage of that. Can I go with General Mattis to Iraq in January? He goes, well, he's not gonna be going to General Kelly. I said, aye, aye, sir. Can I? If you can make it happen, I'm gonna go back to Fort Sillam. I'm gonna ask to do an individual augmentation request or an administrative action for him. Nice. Because Colonel Campbell and Sergeant Major Booker at the schoolhouse, he's an old force guy, Silver Star from, I mean, he's a very well-decorated force recovering. Colonel Campbell had been my CEO on the 12th Marines trip when I went off recruiting duty. So I knew them both from Okinawa and other things. And I got back and they were more wanting to see the medal and hear how the race went. And I was like, well, what would you think about this? And they both supported. They said, hey, you get it in. So I mean, I fast track, you know, through the command, fast track the administrative action form. They supported it. And Sir Mayor Booker got it to the headquarters from Marine Corps pretty quickly. And then it just set. It was just setting. And I don't know what, you know, I was getting angry because now I'm building my mind up. You know, I don't care what I'm doing, but I'm gonna, I'm going back. I'm going back. It's one of those hurdles I wanted to accomplish. Definitely not teaching a class. And finally, I asked Sar Major Booker, I'm like, hey, can you find out what the hell's going on with my package? It's been like two months now and they're gonna start, you know, I gotta be there by September. And, you know, if I don't get that, then this is out. And then I'll have to be an instructor. So he calls out, well, there was this Sar Major that was in manpower there at Quantico who had sat on it. He was sitting on the package because he didn't give a crap what people wrote. He didn't think it was appropriate that I would put the Marine Corps in that position to go back over and possibly get injured. So I did what I've done a few times in the past, I called Sar Major Marine Corps, Sar Major Carlton Kent. The 95 Okinawa trip, he was, he's an old rigger, parachute rigger, but he was our brand new Sar Major working for a colonel named Colonel Ben Sailor. Saunders Sailor is on Intermarine Semper FIFON. So I emailed Sar Major Kent and I'm like, yeah, this sucks, you know, Sar Major won't go back. It's like two days later, Sar Major called me and said, you're approved. And I'm like, okay, I gotta, you know, and that's supposed to be a 15 month, a 12 month in theater, three month worth of workup. And, you know, I wanted to make sure I wasn't gonna take away, but the master sergeant that I was gonna replace, he still had a good solid year and some change. So they were cool with it. And then that's how I get on the 08 deployment. You know, get out, you know, late September, early October, depending, you know, up here and stay in a hotel and do the workup, not much of a workup for G3. I mean, I'm kind of just the token GIMP. Like I was saying earlier, I really am. There's no reason in the world it should have been me to have those kind of opportunities. It really isn't. That's why I say I'm token GIMP. I mean, thank them. I do, I appreciate it.

Speaker 3:
[167:20] It was pretty awesome and pretty inspiring though. And you know what I mean? I mean, that's definitely for a lot of people looking at that, going, man, here's a guy that, you know, have been through so much and he's going out on deployment. That's pretty awesome.

Speaker 1:
[167:34] Well, I get that part and I've heard it before. What about that? Personal, you know, personal agenda I talked about already. More importantly, let's push the boundaries for these these Marines. I can't speak for Navy Safe Harbor. I can't speak for Army Wounded Warrior Program. I can't speak for the other branches, but I can speak for Marine Corps Wounded Warrior Battalion. It was brand new then.

Speaker 3:
[168:01] I guess that's what I mean. Like like token GIMP. I know you're saying it humorously, but it is a huge step. You know what I mean?

Speaker 1:
[168:08] Yeah, I don't want to take away from that.

Speaker 3:
[168:09] Thank you. That's the pathway for other people to be able to do it. And like you said, push the envelope, which is awesome. So and you were you working in ops on that deployment.

Speaker 1:
[168:18] Yes. G3A Force Fire Chief.

Speaker 3:
[168:20] This is what 2008?

Speaker 1:
[168:22] Yeah, it was January of 08 until I left early November of 08.

Speaker 3:
[168:27] So things are still going. Did you see Seth?

Speaker 1:
[168:30] Yeah, that's what I was kind of telling you ahead of time, sitting in the cell hall in Fallujah, me and Freddy Fowler. And we were 12 on 12 off. Yeah, he would be my opposite because it's seven days a week, 12 on 12 off, nothing sexy. And I see the look on his face and he just gets out look like, what the hell is this guy walking up or something? I can tell. And I just nonchalantly turned around and kind of like you and Joe were talking about the bar in Europe when he was over there. And I just see him, big old cheesy grin on his face. I don't know how he knew it was me. I really don't because that was that initial interaction even before Mikey stuff. And I just turned around or hugging like a couple of boyfriends or something. And right in the middle of the chow hall in Fallujah, which is a big chow hall. And yeah, we're sitting there and yeah, I wish I could have took him up in the octoone. I was talking about before when, you know, until he was like, dude, here's the code. You got to come over. Man, so good to see is so awesome and all this stuff. And we're going to go back to our money. I'm going to drive you down the street. You got shot on. And then which I say that that wasn't even the only cool thing. Some of my recon buddies from back in the day who are now senior, we were, I was going to do a jump at Al-Assad. First above the knee amputee to jump, sandstorm washed it out. Then they found my name, but they saw my name on the manifest, WE. Gibson. See, nobody knows me as William E. Gibson. Everybody knows Spanky. So put my WE. Gibson in my last four, I'll get on the jump. Yeah, that sand stormed out and then they caught it. Don't know how, somebody threw me under the bus or something. But yeah, the same with Seth. Just sitting there hugging at y'all, so cool to see him. He gave me a coin, he was like, I meant to give you this. I'm like, that's the first time I seen him since.

Speaker 2:
[170:14] Oh yeah.

Speaker 1:
[170:15] Those days. And then to have that surface warfare officer, the commander on the watch floor come over and say, go and talk to Gerald Kelly, they're asking for you to come over for Mikey stuff, Mike Cerelli and then, yeah. See, that stuff's so cool.

Speaker 2:
[170:34] Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:
[170:35] I just, I think just all of it fallen into place the way it does naturally. Sitting in that y'all, hugging him. The last time I seen him was me laid up, bleeding in the middle of the street.

Speaker 3:
[170:48] Yeah, that's wild. We were talking a little bit about the 11 AD reunion that took place down in Texas. And like Cowie, you know, you're talking about Cowie when he got shot, he linked up with the army soldier that picked him, that he was a driver, he was a Humvee driver who pulled up to like, you know, the chaos is going on and they need a Casavac and who shows up, an army Humvee shows up. There's no one, there's no like dismount troops to get Cowie loaded. So this guy jumps out of the driver's seat and throws Cowie in the back and brings him back to base. And like, that was the only time they ever met. And that was the last time they ever met. And here they were at the reunion, you know, so like you said, hugging it out, you know, one of the, I think it was Joe Clay, yeah, Joe Clayburn comes over, he's like, hey, he goes, is Cowie here? And I go, yeah. And he goes, I got the guy that put him in the vehicle on CASVAC. And I was like, yeah, I'll go get him. So yeah, it's pretty, pretty amazing.

Speaker 1:
[171:42] Well, on that note, did he ever say if a guy named Chad, is it Chad Ramsey? Yeah, Chad Ramsey, that was in Joe's unit. He got hit the week before me. And good kid. I mean, not a kid, same age as, you know, we are, you know, back then, he was just one of those troops that stepped up. I'm setting in Center for Intrepid. And there, you want to, you want to be in there four hours a day, be in there four hours a day. You know, we see something we're going to tell you to stop. You just stop. But other than that, we'll let you go. Well, or no, I'm sorry. It was Walter Reed. I stand corrected because the same time I ran into Joe after he had his injury. He's got the, you know, screaming chickens. This kid, well, he's got the shorts on, got this shirt on, and I'm like, hey, where are you at in theater? And we're in physical therapy. Yeah, it was Walter Reed. He's like, yeah, I was in Ramadi. I was like, did you get hit in a vehicle down off of the main road in Malab? He goes, yeah. He's like, man, I was QRF for a year. He was in the vehicle that the tank got flipped over on its top in late March, early April. But the ID was so big, it flipped the tank on top of its turret. He was QRF when they came out in their vehicles, had EMPs, or yeah, EFPs, sorry, and coordinated ambush for them and hammered them. Then they called all of us out to coordinate off until they could get the tank retriever to drag out that tank. And so we sat there for a couple, he was in that incident in one of the vehicles. And then, you know, run into him therapy.

Speaker 3:
[173:30] That's wild.

Speaker 1:
[173:31] And then find out he's in their unit. That's cool, small world.

Speaker 3:
[173:36] So then what came after that deployment?

Speaker 1:
[173:39] So after that deployment, I got, I put in, remember I got to hold Sergeant Major Ken again, while in theater. We were moving, we were closing Fallujah down. So me and the British Major, Major McDonald, we went advance party from the G3 to Al-Assad to build the new command. And then, so it was just me and the British Major down there doing all the G3 portions of it. So I put in, and we got to swim every day because I had that big pool at Al-Assad. I put in for a Congressional Fellowship. And it's the first time that the military had allowed enlisted Congressional Fellows. It's typically 90 to 92 officers a year. About 80 from the branches and about 10 to 12 from other, you know, non-government, or other government agencies. Well, the infinite wisdom of somewhere up in DC, they said, we're going to allow the Marine Corps to have the first two enlisted fellows. One for the House, one for the Senate. So I put in for the program. Thought, you know, because I'd been in Iraq for nine months or so at that time, or me and Major McDonald are up at Al-Assad, getting everything squared away. Yeah, I know my role. I don't need to be here. I'm sexy for camera or whatever. I'm not sexy, but the, you know, I'm a good new story for Jennifer Griffin or Ned Colt or all the other goofy people that interviewed me over there. So it's good news for the Marine Corps, but I'm better served probably using this time and my experience to help out, you know, Marines stay on active duty if they want to give them the same opportunity at that point I had. If I'm going to leave, I'm going to leave on my own sword or shield, not on someone else's. So where else better to do that than go work on Capitol Hill? So I put in, token GIMP, they approved me. Brad Simmons gets Senate, I get House. Got to be at Georgetown Government Affairs Institute in first week of December. So I had to leave in mid-November, get out of Iraq early, and then check into the GI course, which is the first two weeks of December, and then you get your placement for Capitol Hill, you know, which office you're going to work in, whatever. So everybody, and it's predominantly, there was about 40 Air Force officers. Dang. Ten Marine, I think total there was ten Marine officers and me and Brad, so 12 Marines total. The Navy had about 20, and the Army had about the equivalent somewhere in that ballpark, you know, maybe a little less than 20 on theirs. Biggest chunk of it was Air Force. They break you down into two classes, so you got about half and half, because pretty detailed classes. Basically, it's, you know, I'm not a Bill, I'm just a Bill, you know. Go back to the old cartoons from back in the day, telling us about Congress, not like any of us, especially me and Brad, him better than me. I'm like, if I don't sing the Mr. Bill song, yeah, there might be three understandings of co-equal branches of government. Back then, I didn't give a crap. But the, yeah, they all interview. I keep talking, Colonel Fernness, who is Office of Legislative Affairs at the House liaison. I'm like, when do I get my interviews? Because if you don't interview by Christmas, they're going on Christmas break. You're starting 1st, January 3rd or 4th. I don't know where I'm going. Well, little did I know, I didn't have to interview. Marine Corps had already worked it out. They put me in the House of Veteran Affairs Committee, which was a great opportunity because I got to work all four subcommittees for three months each. I got to do the amendment to the Affordable Care Act on the priority 138 status for the Department of Veteran Affairs. Because the first Affordable Care Act, as we only do well, was terrible for veterans. It's either zero to hero. You're either 100% or you're 0%. Anything in between doesn't matter. And that was my problem with that. So we started working priority statuses, to get that amendment to the legislation. And not just me, it was the whole team between the Senate and the House. I learned a lot with that. But I also learned how bad the legislation can be when it's rushed through. And that was the Affordable Care Act the first time. You know, first session on 11th. Well, after, you know, basically, in the middle of that year, I was training to do the Marine Corps Marathon, you know, come about August, July, August timeframe. Blew off my quadriceps, my odysseys to what's left of my femur. So in 09, I have, during that, I have another couple inches removed of my femur. Go through, I spent a week in the new wall or the old wall to read and then basically kind of starting over. And thank God that Congressman Booyer, who was a ranking member of House Foreign Affairs Committee, he was a Colonel JAG. I spent about six weeks away on the back end of my fellowship. And came back last couple months, worked on one of the committees, and then they had to figure out what to do with me. Brad Simmons got selected first sergeant, he's got to go back to the fleet. I'm a mass sergeant, General Kelly promoted me in Iraq in 08. So I'm like, now I had a bachelor's degree, but I don't. Yeah, it's just only ever been officers. Brad was easy, you get first sergeant, you got to go back to the fleet. You're leading marines out in the fleet. But a marine mass sergeant one legged it, you know, what do we do with him? So yeah, it took them a little while, and they figured out, put me in, Secretary Garcia, who was Assistant Secretary of Manpower Reserve Affairs, Reserve, F-18 driver, down in Corpus. And I got to be a special assistant to the Assistant Secretary.

Speaker 3:
[179:21] A special assistant to the Assistant.

Speaker 1:
[179:23] Yeah, exactly. Well, he had the, Veronica Valdez, the political appointment, because, you know, he's a political appointee. He had a political appointee assistant. Once again, I'm the token dip. I'm a floater. He can do anything he wants with me. I work directly for him. That's weird when you got a Navy three-star, a Marine three-star reporting to you, a bunch of SESs. Kind of wild when you got a Marine Master Sergeant at the table with a bunch of people. The Marine side, like Nadler, the Marine side knew me pretty well at that point. Navy side, not necessarily. Because Navy yard fell under my boss. But it was a good position because it was a proof source for Navy Safe Harbor, Windward Warrior Regiment.

Speaker 3:
[180:10] Yeah, it's solid.

Speaker 1:
[180:12] And a proof source at Redeploy. So I can better recommend yes or no on whatever injuries a Marine has, if they want to stay or if they want to redeploy.

Speaker 3:
[180:24] And is that the job you retired out of?

Speaker 1:
[180:26] Yes, my payback tour. That was my two, you got to do that utilization tour. I came and zoned for Master Guns in 2010 and I did a letter of do not promote. I just said, you know, because my contract is good till 13.

Speaker 3:
[180:43] But you just decided you're going to call it.

Speaker 1:
[180:47] Everything came to fruition. Everything did. I wanted to go to grad school. I knew I was getting my sons. They were still, you know, up around SLO, Templeton area. I knew they were going to be moving in with me. I was finishing up my second divorce, you know, living in Springfield, Virginia, rent a house. Dad's health was bad. Mom's freaking out about dad's health being bad. And it just aligned. Everything aligned. And I'm like, why? In the 0861MOSers, basically five, six Master Gun Billets in the whole Marine Corps. Now, if I keep pulling the token GIMP card, if I think that's going to be influential, like obviously it had been to redeploy, obviously it had been for my initial promotion over there, obviously it had been for me to get on the Capitol Hill. I did not want that. I did not want that effect to take away an operational seat, because you got to think it's one MEF, two MEF, three MEF, first, if second, if third Marine Division doesn't have master guns, then you have that floater that might stay in it, like Holberfield or Dev Group or after they get promoted. So I'm like, no, it's stars aligned. I mean, it's made common sense to me. I've achieved every, at that point, achieved everything I wanted, and I achieved a couple of things I didn't expect, the fellowship.

Speaker 3:
[182:07] Yeah, that's wild.

Speaker 1:
[182:08] And the connections. So I'm like, yeah, it's time.

Speaker 3:
[182:13] So put on your uniform for the last time, retirement ceremony.

Speaker 1:
[182:18] Well, technically, my dress, my dress blues, it was little until I squeezed myself into my deltas for my son's graduation.

Speaker 3:
[182:27] Oh, yeah.

Speaker 1:
[182:27] That was lucky. I've lost about 40 pounds since then. But no, it was because we did the Marine, you know, when you work for an assistant sec nav and you have a full bird colonel that is planning your retirement ceremony.

Speaker 3:
[182:40] A solid retirement ceremony.

Speaker 1:
[182:41] Yeah, it was cool. It was at the Marine Corps Museum there in Quantico.

Speaker 3:
[182:45] Nice.

Speaker 1:
[182:45] Yeah, all kinds of cool people there. And so, yeah, it was pretty neat. Way more, all I cared about was going upstairs and drink beer afterwards, get back my Hawaiian shirt and my shorts. But it was bitter. It was bitter sweet. My parents couldn't be there. They couldn't travel. Yeah, my kids are in two different directions at that point, because now I'm on the back end of the second and divorce. That kind of sucked. That sucked. I wish I would have been more proactive on at least having my sons. More importantly, it should be all. It sounds bad not to say all, but definitely my sons.

Speaker 3:
[183:27] Yeah. So then what was the plan when you retired? I know you're, like I said, like I kicked this thing off, you're actually fully retired now, but you did a couple of gigs after you got done.

Speaker 1:
[183:36] Yes. So intent grad school. That was the number one is I actually intended to get my PhD in clinical psychology, work for the VA psychologist. I've got street credit. When I've been pre-med before I got my degree in psych and business law, when I was still active, makes sense. You know, who should the VA want working with, you know, PTS and other veterans, then somebody that's got street credit they can trust. Because that's the biggest common denominator I saw in the VA and from friends I was mentoring was, I got some 27-year-old girl that knows nothing about my life. So I'm like, okay, makes sense. So I do go to school. Plus I'm getting used to having two sons. My transition was pretty quick and pretty, my personal transition was pretty tough. Where to bark orders, where not to bark orders. Now I've got, I'm feeding myself to now I'm feeding two 10 or 11-year-old that are just straight turds. And I'm being a turd at the same time. So pulling my boat paddle off the walls, giving one of them wax in the living room floor where the other one watches. And I just, it was such a difficult transition as I went from a single, newly single man in DC that was just worried about education and helping people to now I've got two little turds that don't know how to eat at the dinner table. And I might add that second check it's going out every month to another ex-wife. And it was just such a tough point. And it's four hours from where I grew up, where I live now. And so I take, I start school, Colonel Ben Saylor, Saunders Saylor's wife, Semper Fi, found Ben my Colonel in Okinawa in the 90s with Sergeant Major Kent as our Sergeant Major. That story. He's working for a company called Tandis and Diva, Tandis at the time. He gets a hold of me because he knows that, I think he was just looking out for me. Because I hadn't seen him in years, but his wife sees me all time with Team Semper Fi. He brings me on to be a consultant for that company, to work in between VA new build facilities, or like West Point when they were adding on, doing flooring advisement. And like in the hospital's role ability, some is so far out of my norm, but I took to it. I understood the law, I understood the VA regulations for purchasing. So it kind of boring, but he hooked me up. It was actually pretty, pretty good money. But then it started on my second year when I renewed the contract. It went from one to two jobs a month to two to three jobs a month to, okay, just an overnight or two, two overnight, or, you know, two nights on this one. My dad's driving four hours in that first year before I moved back to prior. Dad's driving down. His health was terrible. Mom can't, she worked. Why did I get out? I got out not to burden any of my family and to pay them back. Now I'm just back to burden them because I got a little greed on some money. You know, nothing on Colonel Saylor. Colonel Saylor is amazing. He's hooking me up. And so did some public speaking with PP&I. You know, that worked into a thing in Dearborn where they asked me to keep coming back and speaking once a month up there for a leadership and training seminar. It just all weighed on me. That second year combined, it's like dad's health's getting bad, which I'm super glad I did because this is 12, 13. My dad dies in 16. You know, my sons are now in junior high. They require a lot more guidance on my part, but I got to learn that guidance in that first year.

Speaker 3:
[187:27] No go-karts or golf carts.

Speaker 1:
[187:29] No, exactly. Or not just, you know, get down 12 count bodybuilders, you know, beat them with a paddle. You know, just all that raw emotion that I couldn't control. And that's on me. But once that all planed out, got the job with the VA, did that for 14 months, that went haywire. And I was doing claims and benefits. Yeah, I mean, perfect role for me. I know the law or I knew the law more then. So it was easy for me to write up claims. I had five offices. I work in each office once a week. I did 1,400 claims in less than 12 months. And no one in Oklahoma, out of the 16 of us that did it there for ODVA, Oklahoma Department of Veteran Affairs, maybe 16, 20, maybe 800, 700. But I didn't give a crap. I'm still in the same philosophy I had back in DC. I want to help veterans. Problem was when I would pick up on the BS portion of their story, I would call them out. And then when I call them out, I'd spin my leg around, bang my knee on the table, and I'd be like, dude, don't wind up me. I'm 90 percent. See, I wasn't 100 percent on the Marine Corps. I was 90 percent. After 20 plus years of service and above the amputation. But it was, I understood why. I don't have PTS. I have no mental health problems. At least that's achievable through a combat litmus test. The other factory might be a little goofy, bipolar. But, and I would spin my leg around, banging on the table, and I'd be like, hey, don't bitch me. You didn't get 100% man. I'm 90. And part of me just wanted to shut up and get out because you got mad somebody say they'll pecker and boot camp or something, and now you're 67 years old and you're trying to claim that some micro problem you had back then has affected your whole life. But you sat in front of me, clean shaven. That's the other problem. It's like everybody wanted to jump on the PTS bandwagon. And you can tell who really has it and who doesn't have it. And then there's levels of having it as we all know too well. Anniversary dates, you know, sights and smells and sounds can affect some. But the biggest ones was anniversary dates. Those emotions are, and that's our brain being natural. If we didn't have that emotion, I think that we're insane or pathological. But when you get somebody come in and complain in about 1978 boot camp, that started weighing on me too. And then it was the deputy director position when they were putting me in.

Speaker 3:
[190:01] You got PTSD from treating PTSD?

Speaker 1:
[190:03] Pretty much. Yeah, treating people that were faking it. Yeah, not all of them. I don't mean it that way. But everybody then, 2013-14, everybody was claiming PTSD. Combat, no combat, it didn't matter. I mean, I'm looking at their DD-214s or their discharge papers before Vietnam. And I'm pretty good at feeling it out. I've had a lot of friends have serious problems. And friends that have went all the way with that problem, as we all have, I'm sure. And then the ones that just self-medicate to the point of incapability. It's sad. But man, because of that sadness, don't fake it. Don't come in and lie because you want a stinking paycheck. Because I'm not doing it for, it took three shoulder surgeries and elbow reconstruction, finally bumped me over 100%. Well after I left the VA. So it was kind of like, that just, that part really got to me. And I know I gotta not judge and take each our own and that's our own problem. And lay in God's hands and I'm not to judge. But it did weigh on me.

Speaker 3:
[191:12] And what came after the VA?

Speaker 1:
[191:14] MC Petroleum, Mays County Petroleum. Buddy of mine said come in and start training and be the general manager.

Speaker 3:
[191:21] How'd you like that?

Speaker 1:
[191:24] Job was great. I was technically a marketing manager in training. Learned a lot about fuel, a lot about mobile products because we were a mobile distributor. All of Oklahoma, part of Arkansas, Texas and Kansas. So we did about 18 million a year as a small petroleum company. At one point I think it got closer to 20, 30, maybe a little bit more before the price started down during Obama when I came on board. But it was a learning curve, it was interesting, but it was just a job because I wasn't 100 percent. And because of my, I don't know if you understand how it works, is since I took a disability retirement, Marine Corps put me on a 60 percent, more than 55 for 22. But because I'm a disability retirement PDRL and I'm whatever level of VA compensation, I have to have an offset because they're both non-taxable incomes. So I have to subtract from my retirement to equal the VA. So it's just kind of long-winded, but it's a quagmire. So I was still working because I'm still paying child support on one daughter at this point, got the boys. You know how teenagers are, that gets expensive real quick.

Speaker 3:
[192:41] Because the food bill is freaking out of control with two teenage boys, come on.

Speaker 1:
[192:45] And two totally different directions on sports. So that was always fun, being a single parent. But then, but yeah, it pretty much, yeah, made it through it. Got pretty easy on them. Dad died in December 16. And, you know, that caused some, you know, Gunner went to the Marine Corps the next year and then Colt, you know, now they're just getting married and having kids. And, you know, like we're talking about, it's beautiful. I'm, to go from, I know you guys have a different look at it because of the fighting experience, the jujitsu, the discipline and all the stuff that, because you love it. And, I guess with me, when I decided that I was no longer going to work for anybody, you know, nine, ten years, nine, eight, nine years ago, something switched. Something switched in me that went, yeah, I'll still do a little travel, but I want to be a grandparent. I had grandkids at that point, because my oldest granddaughter is 14, and then her little sister is 11, and then my grandson, my oldest grandson is nine. All of it came into fruition of the fact that I wanted to be kind of like a stay at home person, and just enjoy something that I had not gotten to enjoy. But what I will say, with my wife Nadine, most wonderful one in the world, she's wrestled me down. She's amazing, domesticated me pretty well. I never don't have anything to do. I'm constantly working, my house is almost 120 years old. I'm constantly working projects. I'm using my planer. I'm using my joiner. I'm working with Cool Woods. I'm building cabins. I mean, I've constantly got something to do. And so I'm not bored. But it amazes me now, how did I ever get through back in those days? Because I have all the time in the world between grandkids and projects, how in the world did I ever get anything done when I was focusing only on the military, Marine Corps life? I don't know how I got anything done. Even mowing the lawn, I don't get it. But so retirement's not, I don't look at it as retirement. I look at it as I'm paying back my family.

Speaker 3:
[195:08] Yeah, that's awesome. No, it's outstanding. And when I was talking to you about the fact that you're just like completely fully retired, I know that that doesn't mean you're sitting around watching freaking TV all day, especially when you got what, seven grandkids?

Speaker 1:
[195:23] Yeah.

Speaker 3:
[195:23] It's outstanding.

Speaker 1:
[195:24] No, there's always something to do. And now we're into softball, t-ball.

Speaker 3:
[195:27] Oh, yeah.

Speaker 1:
[195:27] We're all kind of, it's.

Speaker 3:
[195:29] Yeah. You might be the chauffeur service. You end up chauffeuring a lot?

Speaker 1:
[195:33] No, it's normally me and it, but the biggest part is which ones we're going to go to. When we separate her, go to one, me, you know, because everything just never works in alignment. If I was showing you my calendar, I filled it out yesterday, updated all the way through the end of May, and I'm like, I caramba.

Speaker 3:
[195:51] You know when you have to create a calendar for your kids' sporting event, so you know it's getting crazy.

Speaker 1:
[195:56] Yeah, where I could look back a few months ago, my calendar might have, watch grandkids, watch grandkids, nadine massage, nadine massage. You know, maybe something to remind me, but nothing, except what I want to make up doing. And now it's like, I actually have to do something. So it's kind of wild.

Speaker 3:
[196:12] Yeah, that's awesome. It's awesome. So does that get us up to speed? That's where we're at now?

Speaker 1:
[196:16] Yeah, pretty much.

Speaker 3:
[196:18] So people can find you on, you're on Twitter, Twitter X, Spanky Gibson 71.

Speaker 1:
[196:24] Yes.

Speaker 3:
[196:25] You're on Instagram.

Speaker 1:
[196:26] Nope, not on Instagram. Yeah, I quit Facebook. Well, I guess I'm still on there, but I quit it five years ago.

Speaker 3:
[196:31] Okay.

Speaker 1:
[196:31] Almost six.

Speaker 3:
[196:32] We'll leave that one off. So your primary is, cause you're pretty fairly active on Twitter. You get on there.

Speaker 1:
[196:37] Yeah, I kind of jumped in there. I've been on there a little over a year and I don't know why. I'm not, I am.

Speaker 3:
[196:43] It's an interesting platform because it's just like one-liners. You know, it's just like, you're just writing one-liners all day and it can be a little bit addictive. You know, you start chiming in on stuff. And then I noticed you have a YouTube channel at Spanky Gibson produces. Is that right? I just, you just started it, right?

Speaker 1:
[197:05] Two weeks ago, I've done two videos and three shorts off the second video. I much like saying, yes, come here. I don't know what's going on, but I don't know if it's discernment. I, the anniversary, it's got, it's got to be this window of time. My brain is doing something where it just said, yeah, I bought a, yeah, I think it's not sexy like these, but I bought like a little Osmo action six camera, you know, decent deal, bought some extra lenses, but small. And I'm like, because I know like you or so many people that really have the leadership market are so amazing at it. I don't know. I just feel this call to communicate.

Speaker 3:
[197:51] Yeah, and share your lessons, man.

Speaker 1:
[197:53] Well, and that's, I don't know. I don't know. It's something was calling me in my in my my noodle really was. And I told my wife, Nadine, I was like, yeah, I think about doing this. And it's been going on for like six months. It's been going on for a while. And I, you know, it's kind of writing a book. You know, a guy, a teacher of mine wanted to write a book when I first retired. And I always said, no, no, you know, I don't I don't need to do things like this. I don't. But all of a sudden, this 20 year anniversary thought process, I think is changing. I don't know. It's hard to explain. My brain is wanting to do something. And I know I'm going to suck. You know, I have a I have a hockey smile. Yeah. And I'm I don't. And if nobody listens, I'm going to do it no matter what. You know, I was actually wanting to shoot a video yesterday, but we got surprised with Sutton again. And I like, well, I'll go in the garage and shoot it out there. And just because I was so angry about all the rhetoric on the ceasefire the other night, just just the blatant lying from different directions. And so I was kind of feeling that pull to talk about it. You know, just get in front of a camera. Like everybody always says, just get in front of the camera and let it go. You'll get better. Yeah. Downloaded all these different programming apps and one of 10 for thumbnails and downloaded that. Oh, that that ages me to the Da Vinci. Yeah, everybody was talking about that on entry level. Yeah, I got that down and I'm like started like, oh, yeah, I'm out of my wheelhouse on this one.

Speaker 3:
[199:32] I'm going to do so.

Speaker 1:
[199:33] But yeah.

Speaker 3:
[199:34] Well, the cool thing is, like, you know, like people are going to want to, number one, hear your lessons learned. Number two, like your family, you know, like your kids, you're going to be able to talk about things that your kids, your grandkids, your great grandkids will be able to listen to.

Speaker 1:
[199:47] Yeah.

Speaker 3:
[199:48] Wouldn't you love it if you had some, you know, you talk, you mentioned the fact that you wish you would have asked your dad more questions, you wish you would have asked your granddad more questions. You know, you had your dad serve in Vietnam, you had your granddad serve in three wars. The other one served in one war. Like, imagine if you could have those testimonials, you know, that's the same thing I always say, you know, with this podcast, like this perspective that you're given is like, someone's gonna listen to this, some Anglico guy is gonna listen to this in 10 years or 12 years or three years and learn something from it and be able to take away from it. And also, you know, like, wouldn't it be awesome to have, you know, John Basilone talk for three hours about his experiences in the Pacific campaign? But, you know, we didn't get it. So I think there's a lot of guys that are doing this now and I think it's awesome that people are doing this, capturing these stories because it's historical content and it's perspectives that people aren't going to have. I mean, the, you know, the Battle of Ramadi was, you know, look, does it compare to the big campaigns in World War II? Of course it doesn't. I've never heard anyone make that claim. But for our generation, it was pretty important. And for us guys that were there, it left a mark. And so to be able to pass on those lessons is just awesome. I'm sure the Spanky Gibson produces YouTube channel will capture some of those lessons as well, man. That's awesome.

Speaker 2:
[201:19] I hope so.

Speaker 3:
[201:20] Echo Charles, you got any questions?

Speaker 2:
[201:21] Yeah. Quick question. You mentioned something kind of real quick. I think when you were patrolling or something like this, you said looking for lollipops.

Speaker 1:
[201:29] Yes.

Speaker 2:
[201:30] What's a lollipop?

Speaker 1:
[201:30] So the lollipop, basically, when you get the lightning pod or a pod off an aircraft that's looking down a road. So say you've got a dagger mission or you've got a mobile patrol or foot patrols, you want to use your aircraft pods to scan the road to look for IEDs.

Speaker 2:
[201:46] Wait, what's an aircraft pod?

Speaker 1:
[201:48] Okay. So a lightning pod is basically a camera system at 15,000, 10,000 feet on that airplane that they can lock on. Then when you give them guidance for a bomb, they just put the 10-inch grid in the altitude and they can send it. So that lightning pod is like a zoom-in camera that can go down to Dave Birkenau better.

Speaker 2:
[202:07] Hell yeah.

Speaker 1:
[202:08] Couple meters. You can be at 15,000 feet and looking at one, two meter spread. So they can, we'll ask them to slew the pod and look down the road. And the lollipop is when you put an IED, when they would dig it in and then they would take the hot concrete to fill in the hole above the IED, it's round. And then it cracks the surface. So you get this lollipop signature that you can see. And yeah, it's just one of those techniques you learn going on. And yeah.

Speaker 2:
[202:39] So it looks like a lollipop down there straight up.

Speaker 1:
[202:41] Yeah, it's like a stick and a circle on the end. I mean, and yeah, so it's a lollipop.

Speaker 2:
[202:46] Yeah, yeah, yeah, cool man.

Speaker 3:
[202:49] Because they were they were hardcore, you know, they'd burn tires, melt the tar, dig the tar away, dig the dirt, bury the ID, put the dirt back in, put the tar back on, put dust on it, sweep it, broom it, and then throw throw dirt on it. And I mean, hard to see. Yeah, hard to see.

Speaker 1:
[203:08] Or like when they would do them in the curbs on the main roads, cut a curb out and just replace the curb with the ID. You never know. I mean, you got to give it up. They were reactive, innovative.

Speaker 3:
[203:24] They were working.

Speaker 1:
[203:26] Got to give it up. I mean, I never had any lack of respect for them. Even when we would enter some of the buildings, some of the houses, I would take my boots off. I would be in full battle rattle and I would have my boots on at the door with the guys setting out, bringing one of the turps and take notes. But I often wonder that, if the respect level is given naturally somehow on the battlefield. Because that was one thing I wondered. I never struggled with the amputation, but it was why through the knee? Why not Leon? Why not in the forehead? That's about the only thing I ever struggled with. Because if I had got put out of my misery, I would have had no choice. It would have been accepted for me. But I would have went back to the life or death. I don't matter I'm dead.

Speaker 3:
[204:20] Yeah. That's the eternal question, I guess. Echo Charles, any more questions from you?

Speaker 2:
[204:25] Well, no. I've heard the story many times from JP. It's been a pleasure to meet you in person.

Speaker 1:
[204:30] Tell him, hey, I haven't talked to him in a while.

Speaker 3:
[204:33] Yeah, it's always good, man, JP., you know, because he was, you know, he was 22, I think.

Speaker 1:
[204:40] All those guys, I mean, including Seth, what was Seth? Maybe 20s?

Speaker 3:
[204:45] Yeah, maybe 20, yeah, maybe 25, 26, something like that.

Speaker 1:
[204:50] Somewhere in that ballpark. You know, you have to think of me being the old guy in the whole group in full metal jacket at 34. Yeah, that's what's wild. And still running and gunning down a street, back and forth, back and forth, back and forth. But, went traded for nothing. It was an awesome opportunity to know those guys. You know, life situations suck about it, like with Seth and then, but yeah, you know, like my boys meeting Wes in Bozeman, Montana.

Speaker 2:
[205:21] Yeah.

Speaker 1:
[205:22] You know, just Seth in the middle of a chow hall, Fallujah and OA.

Speaker 2:
[205:25] Yeah.

Speaker 1:
[205:27] These funny little ironies that, and I truly believe that, that God puts it in front of me. And you know, to catch your attention, bring you in, because that's my life now. Other than grandkids, it's faith. You know, that's, my wife is the one, Nadine is the one that set the example for me to accept Christ. Because up, up to four and a half years ago, almost five years ago, you know, I was a heathen center. And you just happened to come out to that event within months of me, you know, coming down this new life.

Speaker 3:
[206:06] That's wild, isn't it?

Speaker 1:
[206:07] It is, that's what I mean. I, I don't know, you know, I'll never say karma because I don't believe in karma. You know, I don't, I don't go down that. But I do believe God pulls us at some reason, some direction, whether we want it or not. Because I've looked at those videos from 08 when I went back over, and I see the videos of me saying stuff like, well, if God wants me, he'll take me. When they would ask me, are you not afraid to come back over after getting wounded, no sex? I'm like, no, God wants me, he'll take me. Well, I wasn't a Christian. I didn't read the Bible then. I didn't look at life that way. I was just going with the flow and doing what people told me to do, and reacting to life. Now it all comes into this different mindset. I realize it more based off of her, just by her sitting there reading the Bible next to me in bed at night, and it just finally pulled me in, and then I start seeing these things that I must have been naturally releasing, but not recognizing way back then.

Speaker 3:
[207:06] So that happened after you guys got married?

Speaker 1:
[207:08] Yes.

Speaker 3:
[207:09] So she married the heathen?

Speaker 1:
[207:10] Yes. Center, straight center. Knowing that I had been, because she'd been married 19 years to her kid's dad, and then she called me in the hospital bed in 06, just friends because we know each other forever. I don't remember it, but I had them keep a notepad for me, everybody that called to write down their numbers so I could call them back. So this little green sheet notepad, she was in there, says, I remember talking to you. I don't remember talking to you, but it's in my notepad.

Speaker 3:
[207:43] I know.

Speaker 1:
[207:44] There you go. And that's why it's funny how that goes. Because I'm a completely different man, I'm a completely different person when it comes to kids. My kids see it in me on how I'm with the grandkids compared to how I was with them.

Speaker 3:
[208:02] Less taking paddles off the wall.

Speaker 1:
[208:04] Bingo. A little less anger. But my friends see the difference because I don't... I already quit drinking before that. You know, I mean, it's just this natural progression in my body. Because I was on a lot of meds. Four, three and a half years ago, four years ago, I was, you know, four eight fifty metformin, 20 units, Lantus, Jexion, Jardians, Centipel, HCTC. What were those for? I was type two diabetic. You know, when you saw me that time, I was two hundred and thirty two pounds. So now I'm one eighty five.

Speaker 3:
[208:39] And were you drinking back then?

Speaker 1:
[208:41] I was I was starting to stop drinking. And ironic, I was still working out and swimming and eating. The diet, the VA told me to. And so I could get off all these meds that are going to kill me. Well, two and a half years ago, I started eating animal based only. I had already well quit drinking because I knew as a diabetic that's terrible. But I was eating the fruits and the vegetables and the turkey bacon and the lean proteins and all that good stuff. And I'm still blowing an 8.1 A1C. I'm still severe diabetic. Then all of a sudden I just started eating nothing at steak and drinking water and a little bit of coffee in the day and dropped 40 some pounds and go back to a 5A1C. Do exactly opposite what the VA tells me. But that's me. I know that's not everybody. It works for me and I enjoy it.

Speaker 3:
[209:32] So you're just on the, are you still on the strict like carnivore type diet?

Speaker 1:
[209:35] Yeah, I cheat a little bit when a grandbaby brings a gummy bear to me. Or a little kitty gummy bears or something. I can't help myself. Happened yesterday. Little Sutton coming over.

Speaker 3:
[209:44] Did you go cold turkey? Did you just say, all right, I'm just gonna, I'm just gonna go carnivore right now?

Speaker 1:
[209:49] Yeah, two and a half years ago was, yeah, two and a half year, over two and a half years, August two plus years ago. I quit the meds, didn't even tell my doctor at the VA. I just straight up said, I'm not doing the meds. I'm gonna, I tracked all my food intake for 12 months. I tracked protein, fats, obviously no carbs, coming in in carbs. So it was mainly my protein to fat ratio and my overall, at that beginning, chloric intake. Then I realized at a point that I wanted to have a two to one ratio fat to protein ratio. So two fat pair over one protein.

Speaker 3:
[210:28] Is that in grams or in calories?

Speaker 1:
[210:30] Yeah, basically in grams, in grams. I quit count, I quit even mess with the calorie portion of it because I realized that it really doesn't. The biggest part was the two gram to one gram, if you want to call it that, two gram to one gram fat to protein ratio, which goes against everything we're told at the VA. Low fat, lean proteins, all that stuff. I ate a ribeye yesterday, haven't eaten since then. My satiety is always pretty strong. My energy level is crazy. Now, I quit working out about a year ago. I got back in the gym to that first six months. The certain things that come to us when our body starts going back to normal, the pub tent, and then hadn't had one of those in years because of diabetes and the meds, tracidone. I was on just like 18 pills a day. My body was revolting. Get on this and within six months, I dropped like 30 some pounds. My body, I had an energy level I didn't understand. I hadn't felt it since my 30s. Then the first year strict. First year, my doctor was like, yeah, I don't agree with this. You're not eating any fruits, any vegetables. No, I'm not eating any fruits. I mean, animal-based only. And matter of fact, it's gotten down to hamburger, bacon, steak, eggs, cheese. One meal a day within the first six, seven months. But when my A1C went from an 8 point something to a five even in the first year, he was like, you just keep doing what you're doing. I don't agree with you.

Speaker 3:
[212:06] Isn't that crazy that they can't say like, well, maybe we should spread the word on this? It's kind of wild.

Speaker 1:
[212:13] Well, it's out there. I think it's just all the, you know, up until probably the last six, seven months on the New Food Triangle or a pyramid.

Speaker 3:
[212:21] They flipped it.

Speaker 1:
[212:22] Yeah, that's back in our kiddie days when they came out with the, you know, crazy food pyramid. But I'd done it in pre-med. I'd taken the nutrition in school. I'd lived through the classes with the VA and everything was telling me, even being on the triathlon team, the coach going, you know, I want you 60, 30, 10, 60, 30, 10.

Speaker 3:
[212:40] What was the 10 fat?

Speaker 1:
[212:42] Yeah, so it was protein, carbohydrates, fat. And I'm like, okay, I remember something about this. But then I go completely against the norm for me. It works tremendously.

Speaker 3:
[212:54] And here you are feeling awesome.

Speaker 1:
[212:56] Yeah, oh no, it's amazing. And I quit working out and swimming over a year ago because I was so busy doing other things that I wasn't going, I should go, you know, not having the discipline to go because I'm putting a new roof on my garage or I'm totally redoing my garage or rewiring this or building these cabinets or doing stuff for other people. Finally got the point where I'm like, why am I paying 46 bucks a month for something I'm not even using?

Speaker 3:
[213:21] Well, we strongly recommend the home gym around these belts.

Speaker 1:
[213:24] I've heard you guys talk about it.

Speaker 3:
[213:26] Yeah, man, that's a gift. People don't realize what a game changer it is, especially 46 bucks a month. Like that thing pays for itself in a year for sure. You get a squat rack and some barbells and like, you're kind of good to go.

Speaker 1:
[213:39] Well, it kind of goes back to that too, because I remember back in the early, mid 90s, I'd bought one of those kind of all in ones to put in the garage. Yeah, but it was always get back to the, because I was never a big weight lifter in my early years.

Speaker 3:
[213:54] And there's the reality that I don't know what the percentage is, but there's a lot of exercise equipment that ends up with, you know, hangers on it and exactly, you know, whatever, like sell as a garage sale for a hundred bucks. People people sell that stuff on offer up in Facebook marketplace, like because they just don't use it. But if you get like the goods, like just a solid thing and you have like a simple, that's a good thing now. It's like you can come up with just a simple workout, you know, just and all of a sudden you look up, you know, and you feel good every feel even better every day. Because going to the gym, especially you got the grandkids like, yeah, all these things get in the way, you know, removes a lot of excuses the home gym does.

Speaker 1:
[214:32] Well, and yeah, because I've heard you guys talk about that and that same one I was somehow when I was mowing the other day. I really only want to go for the pull. I just stacked it and added the wife to it because I'll just lift light. Because I, you know, when I blew my elbow out, you know, and then the shoulders, I was like, yeah, I'll just lift light. I'm not going to get soon. And crunch or the Smith machine or the squat rack for me is hilarious because I'll just take my leg off and lean it on the bar. Because I don't want to chance hurt my hip. Yeah. And then, and I can center up that one leg. I'm not going to do much weight. I used to have a lot of fun in the gym. And then, but mainly was the pull. When my shoulders healed up and I was able to get back in there and swim two or three thousand meters, I just, that to me is running because I quit running a long time ago. And the pull was that way, but yeah, I probably should because I've got lots of energy.

Speaker 3:
[215:27] You do that or get some kind of erg, you know, like the rowing machine, but like you could get a ski erg where you're basically using your upper body to pull down and it's, but it's a cardio. It's more cardio.

Speaker 1:
[215:37] It's not strength based, but that's more important. You know, for me, it's having the cardio or having a natural get away from, you know, trying to stack up weight and get big or, you know, because I'm just retired. I ain't rolling around on a mat or getting hooked up with somebody and.

Speaker 3:
[215:58] We still over here getting after it, man.

Speaker 1:
[216:00] Yeah, it's awesome. You guys impressed me.

Speaker 3:
[216:03] Any other closing thoughts, bro?

Speaker 1:
[216:05] No, sir.

Speaker 3:
[216:06] Well, man, it's such an absolute honor to have you out here. Have you on this thing? Thank you for coming out. Thank you.

Speaker 1:
[216:12] Thank you. I appreciate it.

Speaker 3:
[216:13] I think there's a lot of people that are to take some more precaution around golf carts and alcohol. Those are known. Those are known bad mixing. Also, thank you for, you know, JP. I know Seth definitely told me this. Wes pointed it out as well. You know, the the the mentorship that you gave them on how to do combat in Ramadi, like that stuff kept my guys alive. So I never got a chance to thank you for that. So thank you for that. And I know, you know, thankfully you trained them up enough that when you needed them, they were there for you as well. And you know, again, like I said, it was you guys, your Marines, you know, our relationship with Anglico was just awesome. And it was an honor to serve alongside you guys. And thanks for coming out. And your service and sacrifice and your example for the next generation. We won't forget it, brother.

Speaker 1:
[217:09] Yeah, thank you. I appreciate it.

Speaker 3:
[217:13] And with that, William Spanky Gibson has left the building. Just kind of chatted on the way out. So awesome to see him. So many memories come back. And it's just great to see that he's here and he's getting after it, obviously. I'm before, during and after. What was your mental state when you lost your leg? Oh, I just had to do a new normal. Let's go. And the last part, when he was talking about just the shift in his life in the last five years, just on the path, as we like to say, on the path. So it's never too late. You know, you can make adjustments to your life right now, and you can be in a completely different area of operations, different area, a different level of capability in a matter of months. Are you going to see a change tomorrow? Most likely not. But you look up in a matter of months and in a matter of years, you're in a totally different spot. What do you say you lost 50 pounds?

Speaker 2:
[218:24] Yeah.

Speaker 3:
[218:26] Legit. So that's what we're doing. We're getting after it. We recommend getting after it. I say Jiu Jitsu. I say lift, sprint, run, swim, just get after it, man. And when you do that, you need some fuel. We strongly recommend Jocko Fuel protein. You need protein to maintain your strength, to build strength. That's what we're doing. jockofuel.com. You can get ready to drink protein. You can get powdered protein. You can get muscle drive. Maintain your muscles, even in periods of suboptimal nutrition. We have energy drinks. I've had one today. I don't think I'm having another one today because my energy is up, as they say. Solid. You have hydration. We have joint warfare. We have creatine. How's your creatine intake right now? Where are you at?

Speaker 2:
[219:27] Good to go.

Speaker 3:
[219:27] Where are you at?

Speaker 2:
[219:28] Two scoops. Two big scoops a day.

Speaker 3:
[219:31] How many grams per scoop?

Speaker 2:
[219:33] Well, you figure it's like five, so it's probably like eight or nine.

Speaker 3:
[219:35] Oh, you mean big scoop, meaning you're heaping scoop.

Speaker 2:
[219:37] That heaping scoop is what they call that one. Two of those a day.

Speaker 3:
[219:41] So you're probably taking at least eight, you think, per eight grams per?

Speaker 2:
[219:45] So you're at 16.

Speaker 3:
[219:47] Okay. All right. I'm up there solid 20.

Speaker 2:
[219:51] Solid 20.

Speaker 3:
[219:52] Like topped off.

Speaker 2:
[219:53] Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 3:
[219:54] You have five and five. Morning dry scoop?

Speaker 2:
[219:57] No, no, no. What do you do? Put it in the water with hydrate. Oh, that's a good morning mix, bro.

Speaker 3:
[220:03] It's a tactical move. jockofuel.com. Go get some. You can also get it in a bunch of retail stores around the country. I think we're in like 40,000 different retail locations right now. All right. So go get some. It's clean and it tastes good. Also check out originusa.com. We have American made goods, jeans, boots, jujitsu geese. I was just talking to Pete yesterday. Got some sneakers on the way. Yes, finally. It's been a while, but we got them. We got t-shirts, hoodies, jujitsu geese. We got everything that you need. And it's all made 100 percent in America, not made by Chinese communists, not made by slave labor, but made 100 percent in America with American made materials. Check out originusa.com.

Speaker 2:
[220:51] Also, don't forget about Jocko Store. Discipline equals freedom. If we have this mindset, we will be representing on the path as well.

Speaker 3:
[220:59] That's what we're doing.

Speaker 2:
[221:00] Discipline equals freedom. Good. Get after it. You know, a lot of cool merch on there. Also the shirt locker, which is the new design every month.

Speaker 3:
[221:09] Is that a subscription scenario?

Speaker 2:
[221:10] It is, in fact, a subscription scenario. So yeah, you can check that out. It's all on there. So yeah, some cool stuff on there if you like something.

Speaker 3:
[221:17] Right on. We got a bunch of books. We got, well, we got Put Your Legs On by Rob Jones, speaking of blast injuries, losing both your legs above the knee. That's Rob Jones. Very interesting the fact that when Spanky brought up the fact that he was a gunshot wound as opposed to a blast injury and just how much cleaner that injury, of course, I mean, like they're all horrible, but the gunshot injury, he's in there like pretty quick. That stuff is on track. Remember what Rob Jones had to go through? It's for awful infections, blast injuries. You know, everything is messed up. But he wrote a book about it, Rob Jones. It's called Put Your Legs On. Also, Dave Burke, you heard his name get mentioned a few times today. He was the part of that Anglico team, one of the Anglico leaders, as a matter of fact. In fact, he was the leader, never mind part of he was the leader of that crew. And he wrote a book called Need to Lead. So you might want to check that one out and you can learn to lead. Speaking of learning to lead, you can go to extreme ownership.com to take online leadership classes. And if you need leadership inside your organization, which you likely do, you can go to echelonfront.com and you can, well, you can bring echelonfront into your organization or your organization can visit with echelonfront and we can help you with your leadership, which will help you square away all aspects of your business and your life. Also, if you want to help service members who are active and retired, you want to help their families, you want to help Gold Star families, check out Mark Lee's mom, the amazing Mama Lee. She's got a charity organization. If you want to donate or you want to get involved, go to americasmightywarriors.org. Also check out heroesandhorses.org and finally Jimmy May's organization beyondthebrotherhood.org. If you want to connect with Spanky Gibson, he's on Twitter X. It's at spankygibson71 and he also has his own YouTube channel putting out knowledge at spankygibsonproduces and then for us check out jocko.com and then on social media I'm at jockowillink.com. Just don't spend too much time on there. Thanks once again to retired master sergeant William Spanky Gibson. Awesome to see you brother. So glad you made it home. So glad you carried on. Thanks for what you did for my guys. Thanks for what you did for the Marine Corps. Thanks for what you did for our great nation. And thanks to all of the personnel from the Army, Navy, Air Force and Marines that are currently on watch around the world holding the line for freedom. Also thanks to our police law enforcement, firefighters, paramedics, EMTs, dispatchers, correctional officers, border patrol, secret service, as well as all other first responders. Thank you for holding the line here at home and keeping us safe. And everyone else out there, this what you got right now? It's a gift. Every day is a gift. Every day is an opportunity. And we are blessed every day with the sunrise. But we only get so many of them. So don't waste them. And instead go out there every day like William Spanky Gibson and get after it. And that's all I've got for tonight. And until next time, this is Echo and Jocko out.