
We had to run all the way from the building to our outpost which was a safe area. We kicked out and threw smoke outside on both corners of the street. The sun started to rise and we’re all getting ready to get out of there because being out during the day time in Ramadi was way too dangerous especially for a small element. So we sat in all night and the snipers didn’t find anything. So we set up at the soccer stadium, because we had intel that the sniper was taking his pot shots from opposite that area.

With 249 SAWs, heavy weapons and stuff like that, and we’d set up with the Snipers for 1 or 2 days at a time. What my unit ended up doing was establishing SKT’s or Small Kill Teams, we’d take our Army Snipers that we had with us that were working in pairs, they would throw about five or six guys in with em. From while operating as a small sniper element searching for an enemy sniper.īetween us and the SEAL teams we’d been trying to find an enemy sniper who was killing a lot of guys at the time. Search Global Recon Podcast, or click the link in my bioīelow is an excerpt from GRP episode 20.
AFGHANI WAR COMMANDER KIXEYE DOWNLOAD
The latest episode is live! Like, share, subscribe, and download on ITunes. #GlobalRecon #Extortion17 #AdamBrown #SEALs #Devgru #GlobalReconPodcast #USNavy #USN #Specialoperations devgru usn specialoperations seals globalreconpodcast usnavy extortion17 globalrecon adambrown I called in and listened to one message after another and I learned that all seven of the men I had interviewed - John, Kevin, Brian, Heath, Matt, Tom, and Chris - had been killed in action the day before. My own happy grubby kids were in the back seat of our car when my cell phone indicated I had voicemail. Six weeks after my last interview, I was returning to civilization from my version of being off the grid: camping with my family. You know, your first impression lasts a relationship, and your last impression is with you forever.

I remember everything else about Adam also, but I will always remember the end. Had they been able to do another take on it, they would probably want it to go better. I have seen a lot of people go, not well. And if that happens to you, you hope you are in the right frame of mind that you are okay with it. It’s horrible for the family, they don’t want to hear that, but for us, the guys at our command, we’re okay with it. A warrior’s death, you can’t get any higher than that. “I either want to die in combat, doing my job right now, or live till I’m 98 years old and see my great, great grand kids,” one of them told me.
