Read Modern American Snipers Online
Authors: Chris Martin
When the owner proved unable to do so, the Texan took matters into his own hands and gutted the dog.
“A lot of people were like, âHoly shit! We need to give this guy a psych evaluation,'” Davis said. “Chris admitted that people freaked out about it. But I would say, no, that is simply someone who is 100 percent mission focused. His job is to go out and save the lives of other Americans and he knew that this dog could stop him from doing that.
“He was able to put his feelings and conscience aside to do what needed to be done. There are not a lot of people that can do that anymore.”
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As JSOC adapted to the situation and developed increasingly accurate intelligence, the chaotic violence following the initial toppling of Hussein's regime slowly came into focus despite its nuanced and evolving nature.
A multifaceted insurgency composed of nationalist and jihadist elements was compounded by the escalation of an ugly sectarian conflict that cascaded into a full-blown civil war.
What had been loose and disparate armed groups congealed into larger forces as tens of thousands were killed in an ever-ratcheting series of attacks. Sunni suicide bombings compelled equally repugnant executions carried out by Shia death squads, which sparked the next round of the cycle.
Foreign influences driven by their own larger goals not only encouraged this intensification, they compelled it by pulling strings on either side of the equation.
While the United States cited dubious ties connecting Hussein and al-Qaeda ahead of the invasion as a motivating factor, the presence of American troops on the ground made the fear of al-Qaeda in Iraq (AQI) a reality. AQI solidified into a monstrously bloodthirsty faction, fanning the flames of civil war.
Superficially supporting the nation's Sunni population, AQI exploited the conflict to bring about more bloodshed and recruit new terrorists to wage jihad against the “infidels.”
The profile of AQI's leader, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, continued its stratospheric ascension. His notoriety was marked both by his boundless brutality (at a level that left even Osama bin Laden and Ayman al-Zawahiri uncomfortable) and his ability to continually slip free from the net as JSOC attempted to hunt him down.
Meanwhile, Iran quietly backed the Shia population. This was done as much to conduct a veiled war against the United States as it was to support their ideological allies and shape the future of Iraq to its long-term benefit.
The Iranian presence generally came in the form of intelligence, training, and armament that effectively transformed the extremist Shia militias into a proxy paramilitary army, but the Iranian Revolutionary Guard's elite Quds Force was heavily suspected of playing a more direct role as well.
With AQI and Iran dumping gasoline on an already volatile situation, matters were made even more complicated by the staging and smuggling of men and munitions across the border. This was not only in Iran, but also Syria, and, to a lesser extent, Jordan and Saudi Arabia.
Despite their fanatical differences, all sides with bad intentions viewed the coalitionâand the Americans in particularâas enemy number one.
The tactics utilized were among the most vile and gruesome imaginable. Wide-scale bombings of public markets, videotaped beheadings, mass executions in the systematic slaughter of innocents, and improvised explosive devices (IEDs) became the standard operating procedures of the rival factions in play.
Genuinely at risk of losing control of the situation in Iraq beyond repair, JSOC responded to this unique and extremely challenging set of circumstances by undertaking the most ambitious and revolutionary special operations campaign the world had ever witnessed.
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Then-Secretary of Defense Rumsfeld leveraged loosened restrictions to provide the Joint Special Operations Command with an open-ended mandate, unlimited funds, and a bolstered intelligence capability.
Meanwhile, he also shielded it from oversight, with the idea of transforming it into a proactive, standalone counterterrorism powerhouse. Continually frustrated with interagency feuding and the CIA's consistent inability to provide actionable intelligence to JSOC's special mission units in the early stages of the Iraq War, Rumsfeld hoped to free up the Pentagon's premier CT forces so that they might operate more freely and effectively.
However, shortly after taking command of JSOC, General Stanley McChrystal seized the reins handed off to him by the Secretary of Defense and did an about-face: he took “the Command” in the opposite direction Rumsfeld expected in order to complete the radical transformation he desired.
Rather than cut off ties and make the augmented command even more insular, McChrystal embraced the input of outside agencies and emphasized open lines of communication. This was done in an effort to slash through layers of bureaucracy, both inside JSOC and throughout its wider support network. Minimizing lost opportunities, JSOC radically ramped up its ability to collect, analyze, and act on intelligence.
Along with a dramatically enhanced internal capability as JSOC created new units and strengthened preexisting ones, McChrystal's inclusive approach also resulted in significantly improved relations withâand product fromâthe CIA, NSA, FBI, MI6, DIA, and other military intelligence units, conventional military forces, civilian contractors, etc. Anyone who could play a role in turning JSOC into a more effective machine was welcomed and empowered to do so.
The combined efforts of these entities, along with JSOC's authority to dominate ISR resources in country, eventually resulted in an “unblinking eye” of 24/7 surveillance provided by a fusion of imagery from satellites, UAVs, and manned aircraft in constant rotation. This allowed the Command to perform complex movement analysis, such as rewinding truck bombs or death squads to their point of origin, pinpointing the objective for the next direct action mission.
Now spurred on by unprecedented intelligence, Delta's gunfighters were truly unleashed. As this process was continually refined and perfected, the Unit slowly ratcheted up its operations tempo (OPTEMPO) to previously uncharted levels. By 2005, JSOC was executing multiple raids per night and hundreds per month in a relentless campaign to chart and dismantle webs of insurgents with Zarqawi's AQI network serving as its primary target and victim.
This effort was fueled by a system known as F3EAâFind, Fix, Finish, Exploit, Analyzeâin which each subsequent raid was rapidly processed in order to secure new intelligence with which to initiate the next series of direct action raids.
Operators in the field communicated directly with a wide range of intelligence personnel and leadership on a daily basis. Operations and intelligence (O&I) video teleconferences (VTCs) connected the warfighters to their enablers both back at the JOC (Joint Operations Center) and Stateside six times a week. This ritual connected and united a dispersed effort (dispersed both by its globally distributed personnel and their widely varied skill sets and experience) and encouraged decentralized decision making, further quickening the pace.
Collectively, this allowed JSOC and Delta Force to increasingly outpace and outmaneuver the adaptable terrorist groups that had proven such elusive targets prior to this transformation.
A retired Unit recce operator summed it up: “You know why we won in Iraq? And you know why Stanley McChrystal was the greatest general we've ever seen? The Internet and global real-time video conferences.”
In the words of McChrystal himself, “It takes a network to defeat a network.”
It must be noted that the early phases of this effort certainly encountered growing painsâto say the least. There are troubling stories of detainee abuse and questionable interrogation practices in secret detention centers.
It's been reported that frustrated task force members attempted to wring out the vast amounts of intelligence necessary to ramp up operations to the desired level. However, gradually the larger process built up its own momentum, lessening a sense of need to regularly engage in these sorts of objectionable activities.
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While McChrystal and his chief intelligence officer (or J2) General Michael Flynn have widely been credited as being the primary architects behind this “industrial-scale counterterrorism” approach, in reality much of the innovation was driven from the ground up.
In 2004, when McChrystal was in the earliest stages of conceiving this network, he was approached by then-Delta Force commander Bennet Sacolick, who presented the F3EA solution to the general.
This idea built and capitalized upon the tagging, tracking, and locating techniques the Unit had developed internally while hunting down the scattered fragments of Hussein's Ba'athist regime, including the dictator himself, along with its pioneering use of unblinking ISR.
John McPhee, a sniper with the Unit at the time, explained, “The government inherently does not know how to harness technology. We really got things working in Iraq when JSOC got out of the way and we ran the show.”
Long championed for its creative problem solvingâfrom dreaming up the modern spike strip to capture PIFWCs (Persons Indicted for War Crimes) in Bosnia to contemplating bicycle-mounted, cross-border offset infilsâthe Unit continued to deliver operational breakthroughs that helped fast-track the success of the new initiative. A pair of operators suggested a modification to an existing technology that, when utilized with specialized ISR aircraft, allowed for real-time target tracking. This also made possible the deep mapping of the target's network of associates and eventually the enemy organization as a whole.
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Both Delta's tactical and its research and development influence tend to trickle down and spread out wide over time.
The Heckler & Koch HK416 carbine was originally developed for, and in collaboration with, the Unit. It was widely adopted by Delta Force in 2004 and quickly subjected to an extensive trial by fire as JSOC had just started to cut a wide swath through Iraq's terrorist factions. It's since become established as the preferred assault rifle among elite military and law enforcement units across the globe.
Similarly, variants of the Knights Armament SR-25 have largely proven to be the weapon of choice among special operations snipers during the Global War on Terror. A semi-automatic sniper rifle that doesn't feel altogether unfamiliar to those trained on M4/M16 platforms, the SR-25 delivers a heavier 7.62
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51mm NATO caliber round versus the former's 5.56x44mm.
This makes the SR-25 useful to spec ops snipers both at a considerable distance and in more confined spaces, capable of dropping targets whether they're eight or eight hundred meters away.
However, the SR-25 didn't always have such a sterling reputation. And without the weight of Delta's influence forcing improvements along, it may have never come into such wide use by the nation's SOF marksmen.
The SR-25 was originally developed by Eugene Stoner in the early '90s as an improved version of his '50s AR-10 design. However, according to a former Unit operator, “It took a long time to get that gun sorted out. By all accounts now, though, it's a pretty damn good gun and you can thank Delta for that because they held Knights's feet to the fire. Knights was smart enough to know that if Delta no longer used their gun, that would have a horrendous effect on them. They were about the only organization that could really leverage Knights to fix the gun.”
The realities of the Iraq War whittled the rifle down into a shorter, more maneuverable weapon better suited to tight engagements. “It's really kind of your benchmark now. And what you're also seeing isâdue to the different kind of conflicts you have going on and the urban activitiesâhey, we don't need this twenty-inch gas gun. We can get by with a sixteen-incher and make the shots we need to make in an urban environment out to four hundred meters or so. And then if we have to do CQB, it's an easier gun to manage.”
The former operator continued, explaining, “The Mk 11 Mod 0 was the big turning point for that gun, which was really around post-9/11. That had a lot of upgrades and a lot of stuff that was really ramrodded on Knights to do.
“Delta bought a number of them. Previously, they were using M14s and they liked what the SR-25 brought to the table. But they had to have a big sit-down and create a list that said, âYou've got to fix this shit and we're going to give you X amount of time to do it. If you don't, we're getting rid of your guns.'
“That would have been the death knell of that gun.”
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Once fully up and running, JSOC's industrial operations dealt with its adversaries with all the regularity of a mass production line.
With a constant flow of intelligence guiding direct action elements, and JSOC's pull ensuring they were supported by close air support at all times, AQI found itself under an unrelenting assault of brass and lead, bombs and missiles, and ones and zeroes.
For Tier 1 CT units such as Delta Force, extreme proficiency in close quarters combat is considered a core competency, not to mention a source of pride and an area of distinction. In Iraq, the assaulters (and advanced assaulters) of the Unit were given the opportunity to demonstrate that capability on a scale previously unimagined. A staggering body count resulted.
If you ask them, operators from DEVGRU, the UKSF's Special Air Service, Polish GROM, and other leading units will insist that their respective outfit represents the global standard bearer in this particularly exacting and deadly arena.
The same, of course, is true with operators from Delta Force. Their claim is made with complete and utter conviction, confident that their counterparts know this deep in their souls as well even if they are unwilling to make the admission public.
While they would likely appear identical to the untrained eye, JSOC's special mission units take contrasting approaches to CQB. A former Delta officer described the Unit's style as “instinctive” and “explosive” while terming SEAL Team Six as “more controlled and rigid” when things get kinetic in tight spaces.