One of the great things about the blogesphere is that on certain stories, you hear about them months, if not years in advance. The story of The One is the ultimate example. Here is a post on Froggy Ruminations from July 2005.
The story of this harrowing evasion will probably come out eventually, but while the account that I was unofficially given was not very specific, it is truly awe inspiring.
On September 17, 2006, Matt Burden, the founder of Blackfive and creator of the Someone You Should Know series, joined us on Pundit Review Radio to tell us more about The One and Operation Redwing, the deadliest incident in the history of the Navy SEALS.
On June 12, 2007 Marcus Luttrell’s Lone Survivor: The Eyewitness Account of Operation Redwing and the Lost Heroes of SEAL Team 10 was published. I can say without hesitation that this is a book that you will never forget. From the Washington Post,
If you’re looking for a true story that showcases both American heroism and Afghani humanity, Marcus Luttrell’s Lone Survivor: The Eyewitness Account of Operation Redwing and the Lost Heroes of SEAL Team 10 (Little, Brown, $24.99), written with Patrick Robinson, may be the book for you. In June of 2005, Luttrell led a four-man team of Navy SEALs into the mountains of Afghanistan on a mission to kill a Taliban leader thought to be allied with Osama bin Laden. On foot, the team encountered two adult men and a teenage boy. A debate broke out as to whether the SEALs should summarily execute the trio to keep them from alerting the Taliban. Luttrell himself was called upon to make the decision. He was torn between considerations of morality and his survival instinct, and he points out that “any government that thinks war is somehow fair and subject to rules like a baseball game probably should not get into one. Because nothing’s fair in war, and occasionally the wrong people do get killed.”
Luttrell opted to spare the Afghanis’ lives. About an hour later, the Taliban launched an attack that claimed nearly a hundred of their own men but also the lives of all the SEALs except Luttrell, who was left wounded.
Not long after that, the Taliban shot down an American rescue helicopter, killing all 16 men on board. Luttrell is sure that the three Afghanis he let go turned around and betrayed the SEALs.
But if nothing is fair in war, neither is anything foreordained. Luttrell was found by other Afghanis, one of whom claimed to be his village’s doctor. Once again, Luttrell had to rely on his instincts. “There was something about him,” Luttrell writes. “By now I’d seen a whole lot of Taliban warriors, and he looked nothing like any of them. There was no arrogance, no hatred in his eyes.” Luttrell trusted the man and his colleagues, who took him back to their village, where the law of hospitality — “strictly nonnegotiable” — took hold. “They were committed to defend me against the Taliban,” Luttrell writes, “until there was no one left alive.”
The law held, and Luttrell survived, returned home and received the Navy Cross for combat heroism from President Bush.
I cannot recommend this book with greater enthusiasm. Absolutely incredible.
That is the table setting for this awful story about worthless scum who deserved far worse than they got. Miss Underestimated has the infuriating details,
Marcus was at home, it was late at night and he was awake. He heard a gunshot outside, told his mom to stay inside, and when he went outside he saw a group of punks standing around his yellow lab named “Dasy,†lying dead in the ditch. These punks had shot Dasy with a .357 and killed her. Dasy was very special to Marcus, because she served not only as his therapy dog, but her very name was an acronym for the members of his SEAL team who fought and died in Afghanistan – Danny, Axe, Southern Boy (Marcus) and Yankee.
Marcus chased these punks over four counties, and he nearly shot the driver. Finally the Rangers caught up with these punks in Huntsville, TX
Uncle Jimbo from Blackfive added,
I watched it live on Beck and the biggest worry I had was that Marcus was going to say that he had actually shot the bastards and they would pan out and show that he was live from jail. He has more control than that though and simply chased them down in his truck and ran them into a road block. It was a heinous, despicable act and the weasels who did it will soon understand just how much they screwed themselves. I got calls from David Bellavia and then from Marcus’ Dad Pops soon after. We all were saddened by the shittiness of it, but happy that Marcus didn’t drop the hammer. Godspeed DASY.
Did you catch his side comment that he “doesn’t sleep at night”. That chilled me to the bone. Being The One carries an incredible burden. That he has to go through something like this here at home is just sickening. I didn’t think there was any way I could have more respect for Marcus Luttrell than I already did. What a man.
It is always a true pleasure to welcome back Michael Yon to Pundit Review Radio . Michael is a former Green Beret who is currently one of the world’s leading independent citizen journalists covering the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan from the front lines. Michael is a truly independent journalist, fully supported by his readers. If you appreciate this kind of independent, trustworthy reporting from the world’s hot spots, you can support Michael via Pay Pal at his website or by sending a check to,
Michael Yon
PO Box 5553
Winter Haven, FL 33880
Over the years, we have interviewed Michael dozens of times from Iraq and Afghanistan. This weekend, we caught up with him in Laos as he is preparing for another long embed with the troops in Afghanistan. Joining me in talking with Michael were Mass. State Police Sgt. Jim Deyermond as well as Bruce McQuain from Blackfive.
We discussed Michael’s recent article on Obama’s Afghanistan strategy, which he finds lacking. We also talked a lot about the challenges specific to fighting in Afghanistan, from the culture to terrain. We also spent some time talking about the training required of the Afghan police and military.
What is Pundit Review Radio?
Pundit Review Radio is where the old media meets the new. Each week we give voice to the work of the most influential leaders in the new media/citizen journalist revolution. Called "groundbreaking" by Talkers Magazine, this unique show brings the best of the blogs to your radio every Sunday evening from 8-10 pm EST on AM680 WRKO, Boston's Talk Station.
The Someone You Should Know radio collaboration began more than three years ago. Bruce McQuain, a 28-year veteran of the Army who served in Vietnam, joins us every Sunday evening at 9pm on WRKO to tell us a new, incredible story of bravery and heroics on the battlefield .
This week were touched by an email we received from Massachusetts State Police Sgt. Jim Deyermond. Jim’s longtime friend Kevin Dupont from Chicopee is a 52-year old Army National Guard soldier who volunteered to go to Afghanistan. Kevin was severely injured in an IED explosion while riding in a humvee. He has suffered expensive burns and he is fighting for life at US Army Burn Center at Brooke Army Hospital in San Antonio, Texas.
Here is an excerpt from Sgt. Deyermond’s email,
I write this letter to ask for your help in getting Kevin’s story and sacrifice out to the people of Massachusetts and to his hundreds of friends throughout New England. Kevin is no spring-chicken. He is 52 years old and after graduating from Chicopee, Massachusetts High School he enlisted in the Marines. After serving two tours in the Marines, Kevin returned home and joined the Massachusetts Army National Guard. While serving with the Mass Guard, Kevin has been assigned to the Counter-Drug Program. During his service with the Guard, Kevin has worked with almost every law enforcement department in the state. He has also been assigned to two FBI (H.I.D.T.A.) offices and to the United States Coast Guard Intelligence Unit in Boston. Kevin has hundreds of friends in law enforcement in Massachusetts as well as the other New England states.
I haven’t heard of one news story about Kevin since he was wounded. I am hoping that you will be able to let people know. Kevin volunteered to be deployed to Afghanistan. He didn’t have to go. He could easily have stayed here in Massachusetts doing his National Guard duties instead of where he is now, lying in a hospital bed unconscious, with feeding and breathing tubes keeping him alive and bandages over most of his body.
Kevin and his family need our support, emotional and financial. There is a website set up where you can read about Kevin and leave a message of thanks, support and encouragement for him and his family. Please pay them a visit here.
Jim and his friends have also set up a tax deductable charitable organization to raise money for the family.
Blue Skin Foundation
256 Doyle Road
Holden, MA 01520
What is Pundit Review Radio?
Pundit Review Radio is where the old media meets the new. Each week we give voice to the work of the most influential leaders in the new media/citizen journalist revolution. Called “groundbreaking” by Talkers Magazine, this unique show brings the best of the blogs to your radio every Sunday evening from 8-10 pm EST on AM680 WRKO, Boston’s Talk Station.
Last night I was joined in-studio by Jay Fitzgerald of Boston’s most financially stable daily paper, the Boston Herald and the outstanding Hub Blog as well as Todd Hyten, aka Armchair General Savin Hill, for a discussion about the sudden, near-death experience of the Boston Globe specifically, and newspapers in general.
There was a great deal of schadenfreude among the callers who won’t be shedding any tears over the Globe’s demise. I can sympathize and appreciate those feelings, for sure.
The point I tried to make was, for all their liberal leanings and biases, we still need to the Globe to do the kind of reporting necessary to keep an eye on the hacks on Beacon Hill. These people already run unopposed about 90% of the time. The thought of them operating without media coverage is scary.
We need the Globe, not for their liberal world view, but for the reporting on state government. If you think reform is nearly impossible now, what do you think will happen without the Globe around?
For one, Marion Walsh would be making $175K and in her new hack-for-life position. It was Frank Phillips who broke the story and pushed it until we (taxpayers) got a happy resolution (Walsh taking a hike).
What is Pundit Review Radio?
Pundit Review Radio is where the old media meets the new. Each week we give voice to the work of the most influential leaders in the new media/citizen journalist revolution. Called “groundbreaking” by Talkers Magazine, this unique show brings the best of the blogs to your radio every Sunday evening from 8-10 pm EST on AM680 WRKO, Boston’s Talk Station.
Bruce McQuain from Blackfive joined us once again for Someone You Should Know, our weekly tribute to the troops. Bruce spent 28 years in the U.S. Army and he is a veteran of the Vietnam war. He brings a perspective and understanding to these stories that we could never match.
Tonight, Bruce told us about two amazing Vietnam war heroes, Ed Freeman and Bruce Crandall,
His story of heroism has already been chronicled in the book and movie — 2002’s We Were Soldiers but he said that receiving the nation’s highest military medal was something he never expected and never could have scripted.
He is the second helicopter pilot to receive the award for actions at that battle in November 1965.
Then-Capt. Ed Freeman and Crandall volunteered to fly their UH-1 Hueys into the heart of combat in the valley after military commanders deemed the area too dangerous for aircraft.
“hat was the first real test of our helicopters to resupply and rescue guys in that way,” said. “Normally we’d never fly that close to the fight, and we didn’ like to fly in the dark. But when it turned as hot as it did, we just kept going into the night.
Freeman and Crandall, then an Army major, spent more than 14 hours evacuating wounded soldiers and resupplying the fighting force with ammunition and rations.
The Someone You Should Know radio collaboration began as an extension of Matt Burden’s series at Blackfive. Bruce does an incredible job with the series every week.
What is Pundit Review Radio?
Pundit Review Radio is where the old media meets the new. Each week we give voice to the work of the most influential leaders in the new media/citizen journalist revolution. Called “groundbreaking” by Talkers Magazine, this unique show brings the best of the blogs to your radio every Sunday evening from 8-10 pm EST on AM680 WRKO, Boston’s Talk Station.
As you know by now, I really support David Frum’s efforts to reform the GOP. He’s joined us twice since January to discuss what he is trying to accomplish.
David Frum on NewMajority.com,
Frum on the GOP’s Tube Socks problem,
David Frum on Glenn Beck,
The conservative writer David Frum said Mr. Beck’s success “is a product of the collapse of conservatism as an organized political force, and the rise of conservatism as an alienated cultural sensibility.â€â€œIt’s a show for people who feel they belong to an embattled minority that is disenfranchised and cut off,†he said
Watch these videos and tell me he is wrong…
| The Colbert Report | Mon – Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c | |||
| The 10.31 Project | ||||
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Michael Yon, the incredible citizen journalist, writes in the Washington Times this morning about Obama’s plan for Afghanistan,
There is little wisdom or boldness in the new strategy. It’s more like a 50/50 mix of hot coffee and cold cream, a compromise between national interests and domestic politics that makes the strategy neither one nor the other.
Greyhawk at Mudville Gazette wryly notes,
It’s almost as if telling one group one thing and another the opposite is some sort of proven path to success.
Almost. Read Michael’s whole column here.
He is heading back to Afghanistan soon and we hope to get more front line reports from him on Pundit Review Radio soon. In the meantime, check out our Michael Yon archives.