in syria, it won t make a lot of difference. a long time ago, i was in a war where body count was in our favor. we won every battle but we lost the war. if we are doing so well against isis, why are the iranians lead this fight to retake tikrit. this whole thing, based on a report i received over an hour ago from the american on the ground, the gun fights are fierce. they are taking place in and around saddam s hometown. the attack is been conducted by iraqi soldiers, shiite militiamen and led by the commander of the force. americans didn t know it was going to happen. americans aren t involved. iranians are providing the backup. what does that answer in terms of what influence we are going to keep on the ground in the aftermath if we succeed of throwing isis out of iraq. it doesn t bode well. great questions colonel.
my puddy said we my buddy said we all did it. why not say i did is it. it was not about me. other guys got my guy into the spot to take the spot. the analysts working for years deserved the credit. the pilot that got us on the ground and physically got into places by blowing up doors and breaking down stuff and holding security and then somebody gets a shot. it was not just it definitely wasn t me. it wasn t the team. it was the country. this was the entire country. rob served one more deployment in afghanistan, but then decided it was time. i stopped getting adrenaline in gun fights and that s dangerous. you can get come complaisant. somebody would come up to us and we would eliminate the threat. i realized that carelessness not carelessness, but come play sen see can get me killed and i want to be around for awhile. it was a long, hard process, but i was done 12 deployments and a couple of
well, we all did. why didn t you just say, i did it? it was not about me. my guys got one of our guys into a spot to take the shot. the analyst that found him, working for years, they deserved the credit. the pilot that got us there. the guys on the ground that physically got people into place by blowing up doors, breaking down stuff, holding security and finally someone gets a shot. definitely it wasn t me. it wasn t the team. this was the country. this was the entire country. we were just the means to the end. rob reserves one more deployment to afghanistan but then decided it was time to least military. i stopped getting adrenaline in gun fights. that s dangerous. you can get complacent. someone would shoot us, we would go up and eliminate the threat. i realized that kind of not carelessness but complacency could potentially get me killed and i want to be around for awhile. that was a long, hard process. but i was done with the 12
rob o neill s war is now over. his days of parachuting out of airplanes and chasing enemies of america are behind him. after more than 16 years of fighting for freedom, rob has returned to the mountains and trout streams of montana where it all began. rob, why is it that you say montana will always be home? well, look around. it s beautiful here. it s peaceful. it s quiet. i grew up here. and this is where everything started for me. and it s like the comfort zone. it is so quiet here. this has got to be so much different than the noisy gun fights that you were in for your entire career in the military. this a stress reliever? yeah. it s a stress reliever. it s nice to hear the water.
rob o neill s war is now over. his days of parachuting out of airplanes and chasing enemies of america are behind him. after more than 16 years of fighting for freedom, rob has returned to the mountains and trout streams of montana where it all began. rob, why is it that you say montana will always be home? well, look around. it s beautiful here. it s peaceful. it s quiet. i grew up here. and this is where everything started for me. and it s like the comfort zone. it is so quiet here. this has got to be so much different than the noisy gun fights that you were in for your entire career in the military. this a stress reliever? yeah. it s a stress reliever. it s nice to hear the water.