Quote:
Originally Posted by P304X4
The more that comes out about what really happened the more the SEAL team leader and the Navy Brass look like jealous weasels. Not sure the chief should have received the Navy Cross much less the MOH.
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Can't speak for Navy brass but Pete Blaber disagrees with your assessment of Slabinski. Every one on that team should have received valor awards. This is outside my lane but it it rubs me the wrong way when someone describes another that volunteered to return to the X for a selfless act of bravery as a "weasel." They volunteered not knowing if they would live and awards weren't part of the equation. I can only imagine Chapman would be disgusted by people taking shots from the gallery at his teammates. He died trying to save the people being called "weasels" and it cheapens his sacrifice to imply those men didn't deserve it.
The narration of one of the ISR vids doesn't comport with Blaber's review and recollection. Some discrepancies according to Blaber:
1) There is no "bunker 1." It's an open cooking area where the donkey was colocated.
2) Chapman didn't attack after the SEAL team left. IR shows his temperature going down rapidly. Blaber believes both Chapman and Roberts were dead when SEALs moved,
3) The firefight the narrator attributes to Chapman's "2nd MoH" was actually Taliban fratricide. The narrator attributed fire on the rescue helicopter to Chapman but Blaber points out that Chapman would not have shot at the helicopter. One of the 2 bodies found were wearing Roberts goretex pants.
4) Blaber says a Marine O-4 staff officer unaware of the terrain or situation 1,000 miles and a timezone away was tasked by the 1-star in charge of the theater to "rescue" Roberts. He ordered that team to "assault" the Taliban position. Blaber believes that language is what led Chapman, a rather young Airman, to move towards that cooking area when the rest of the SEAL team moved in a different location in defilade. Blaber notes that Chapman's trigger finger was best served on the PTT button bringing in fire support, not as an assaulter.
Everyone on that team volunteered to return to the X where they were shot off only hours before with a known DShK covering the landing area. All deserved accolades for selfless bravery. They obviously cared for each other and the animus seems manufactured post operation. They all risked their lives for each other. They deserved better from some leaders and could have used a few weeks of acclimatization before being tasked with the original mission. It would have also been interesting if they could have assessed Roberts condition faster from IR. Post-mission showed he had a severed femoral artery after being shot on the ramp as well as a GSW to the head soon after falling. Blaber believed the IR showed he was dead within minutes and his clothing was obviously stolen. Finally, nobody that was there seems to have anything bad to say about Slabinski including Alan Mack and Blaber. Both are Army, not Navy or Air Force.
Blaber w/ Brent Tucker