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M40 - What Marine is in this photo?

Bringing this back from the dead... one of the greatest threads on here!
@Rock two-five any progress on your book?
DW
Funny coincidence, as you posted your question about the book writing I was talking with another Marine Scout Sniper who has just released his book. He was giving me some guidance and feedback on how he was able to get his book published.
So to answer your question, I’m writing and I’m excited about it. This being the 40th anniversary of the Bombing in Beirut, I’ve been asked to be filmed for a Documentary. That’s been taking me off of my writing for a while, but I’ll be back at it as soon as filming is over.
 
why not. I read everything with a red pen in my hand...

As for getting it published... get an agent NOW. Not when it's finished. The Agent and publisher will want to.... guide it. Finished manuscripts almost never get published. And publishers won't touch books except through agents. Write a 1 - 2 page book proposal... and find books that are similar to yours (that sold well). Then find out what agent represents those books. And send your proposal in. If you get a publisher that wants it, they typically give you an advance and deadlines. Don't miss a deadline or they will hunt you down and kill you. No really. Anyway, it's really hard these days. Book reading is down everywhere. So publishers are really selective.

I am trying to find a video of a talk a couple of us did last month at the Norwich University Residency about getting published. It's short and has good info.

Cheers,

Sirhr
Were you able to find the video that you mentioned here about getting a book published?
 
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Funny coincidence, as you posted your question about the book writing I was talking with another Marine Scout Sniper who has just released his book. He was giving me some guidance and feedback on how he was able to get his book published.
So to answer your question, I’m writing and I’m excited about it. This being the 40th anniversary of the Bombing in Beirut, I’ve been asked to be filmed for a Documentary. That’s been taking me off of my writing for a while, but I’ll be back at it as soon as filming is over.
Any info you can pass along about when to see that documentary, and the title of that other Marine Scout's book would be appreciated.
Great to hear your book is moving forward!
DW
 
Any info you can pass along about when to see that documentary, and the title of that other Marine Scout's book would be appreciated.
Great to hear your book is moving forward!
DW
05087D39-130B-4DC0-8408-17775F7E889D.jpeg
The book is called Suffer Patiently by Brian Cramer, a Scout Sniper from STA 1/6 in Ramadi and Fallujah

“Suffer Patiently, Patiently Suffer” is a term used in Marine Scout/Sniper school, which if you haven’t heard, the brilliant Commandant of the Marine Corps has done away with…

The Documentary Producer (Michael Ivey) mentioned an initial showing in August at a National Veterans gathering of some sort and then at the Beirut Memorial gathering in October. After that I believe it will be released to the public.
 
That’s pathetic! The Corps is now woke and wussie-fied.
Thing is those dudes that were on the wall in Afghanistan were the real deal.

But after that I can’t imagine anyone stayed in for the right reasons.

You were either so close to leaving you had to stay to collect or you were unemployable except as a bullet trap for a corrupt regime.

That was August, 8 months into the destruction. I’m guessing few of that unit were post January 20, 2021 hires.
 
View attachment 8105453

The Documentary Producer (Michael Ivey) mentioned an initial showing in August at a National Veterans gathering of some sort and then at the Beirut Memorial gathering in October. After that I believe it will be released to the public.
Hey @Rock two-five , any info on where we might be able to see the documentary?
Hope your still writing : )
DW
 
Hey @Rock two-five , any info on where we might be able to see the documentary?
Hope your still writing : )
DW
That’s a great question…
There’s some behind the scenes drama going on with the film. It’s not going to be ready for it’s initial intended release of 10/23/23 for the 40th Beirut Memorial.
That has caused a lot of infighting with the people making thr film vs those that hired them. It’s a mess, but I’m pretty confident that the final version will be good regardless of it’s release date. The Director wants the story to be told a accurately and doesn’t want to rush it. Myself and the buddies I know who were there with me agree on that. Do it right, regardless of how long it tay. Hell it’s been 40 years. Why squabble over a release date?
Anyway, that’s all I know at the moment
 
The most accurate story is,usually,the story closest in time to the event or picture.Time,has a way of changing things in a mind,that’s why we have after action reports.They may not always be totally on the money either ,maybe on purpose,maybe because of action chaos , but still the freshest memory available at the time when recorded.
 
Not sure what your point is, but I wrote down the events leading up to and including each engagement within hours of the events. I still have them. Most have spots where my sweat made the ink run as it dripped onto the paper from my face and arms.
You’re right, time can cloud a recollection, but what I wrote can’t be factually challenged. Those kills and those thoughts from each encounter,are captured in real time.
 
Thank Rock two-five for what he's done. After all he got his picture in magazines and stuff. Now, it's all over the internet. If they gave him a dime for every time... :rolleyes: Well, lets just say you wouldn't worry where the mortgage or rent was comin' from.

As I stated in another post, I have no idea why we weren't involved in some way in Beirut. Not sure how Rock feels about it, but sometimes it seems like the U.S. Gov't sends you someplace and forgets about you. Wait!...You need food? Blankets? Well, try to source it there if you can. No, you can't do this, you can't do that... They still like to control. Now, go out and do the mission.
On the other hand, from what I heard, Beirut became the SEAL's training AO. Yes, they had real missions, but it was pretty well suited to bringing people up to a higher level. People got dead serious, or they got dead.

I always have to add this disclaimer. I get asked a lot who is tougher, Rangers or Seals. I know put 'em in a jar and shake 'em up... :rolleyes: right??

So, toughness is a mindset that anyone can adopt. I like to use the word 'better'. Rangers are Infantry with Special Ops capability. The training requires toughness and endurance. Most things you learn in the Rangers are pretty much advancements of infantry tactics. You get a LOT of hands on and time doing the tasks. Seals get a lot more vetting to even get to the training. Which also requires a ton of toughness and endurance. Both test you to see at what point you will quit. And when they do 'get there', they spend more time in intensive training on more specific tasks. They do get a higher level of quality training. We typically have too many people to to train to the specifics that they train on.

Better? On an individual basis, a SEAL is better because of that. If you were to talk about mission results quality. Again, SEALs. Because of mission requirements, they're kind of more like a scalpel, we're more like the hammer. Rangers today are a lot more like scalpels than we were.

Now, add to this mix the Marines. The 'composite' way their MEU's are set up has always made sense to me. Still quickly deployable. Infantry supported by artillery in one unit. This is great, except the infantry has no higher capability. If we/unit like us were attached, then the base unit could 'reach out' better. Small enough to be efficient and big enough to be effective. The whole point of being composite was so that you could be 'modular'. Put these guys with those guys for X-mission, put them with dem guys for Y-missions. The Marines struggle for enough money to handle even regular training. All the other 'pigs at the trough' services need to back off. That's politics though.
Who asks you who is tougher Rangers or SEALs? Quora is flooded with the same ridiculous questions of who would win or who is more elite or tougher, this unit or that unit? Rangers or Marines? Green Berets or Rangers? Delta or Devgru, etc, etc. It is a reflection of an ignorant fool. It reflects the lack of knowledge about special operations units, which is a good thing if it wasn't for the nonstop asking of such stupid questions. If you are going to compare units, you at least need to include their mission sets considering it is the entire reason for their existence. Army Rangers are the premier direct action unit in the world and have various other specialized expertise in their toolkit and are the subject matter experts of airport seizures. Navy SEALs are superbly trained in all environments and are the masters of maritime Special Operations; such as Oil pipelines at sea. That is the reason for their existence. One is not better than the other, it's comparing apples to oranges. They were not meant to be the same and trying to figure out which is better is just stupid, a complete waste of time. The real difference between the two is one writes books and looks for public glory while the other lets their muzzles speak for themselves. SEALs will never be able to lift that stereotype now. The truth is, I was honored to serve with them when I was deployed to Habbaniyah. The great Chris Kyle was just a fellow service member throwing lead at bad guys in a nasty town on the other side of the world. His kill count was many times the 160 amount. Confirmed kills are a joke, too. There is no set definition that gives a person a confirmed kill. They policed their dead like wizards unless it wa s a foreign fighter. The dogs took care of those corpses. War is a game of inches, hell millimeters. My belief is that a sniper is most useful when not hide site has not been compromised because an important role is to relay intelligence to leadership. The sniper does not need to pull the trigger. The main highway where 70% of the casualties were injured was called MSR Michigan. The amount of IEDs the enemy was able to plant is stunning considering tanks were stationed at all times Things could be a whole lot different

That is such rubbish I should not even respond yet I am unable to help myself. I was in Walter Reed after being injured in eastern Ramadi and all alone seeing the end product of the missions from before; seeing that a friend did lose his leg and we had many burn victims from the way the IEDs were used. Most went to Brooke Medical Center, but you want to go to hell, that was the place. Far worse than Ramadi and that is saying something. The suicides were as commonplace as veterans smoking cigarettes outside of the Fisher House. Had to listen to the heartbreak as the burn victims and amputees had their wives give up on them that they couldn't spend the rest of their lives with who had come home from Iraq. Luckily I had one person, an Army Ranger who was one of the 10 that had been hit by several grenades when a house raid went wrong. There were 10 injured, and many like him, had been wounded by 3 grenades landing next to their legs yet they travel with a wizard of a surgeon and not a single one became an amputee. He would show up to my room and make me go to church with him or go get sushi. I often wonder if I would have killed myself there if he did not take such an initiative to keep my mental health from suffering too much.

Most of Delta Force members were prior Army Rangers. The Army Rangers killed / captured more high value targets than any other special operations unit, including Delta and DEVGRU. You want to talk about tough, you clearly missed the stories about the unthinkable travel to rescue Marcus Luttrell.
 
I had a teacher in high school that would bring in old SOF mags. I got hooked on reading them after that.
I remember seeing that issue, that was the year I got married.

Mike
 
Comparison stories are as old as human kind,it motivates the pride in the young and untested,makes the older still solid veterans laugh in derision because they remember the experience of being scared while dong their jobs under fire and unfortunately the broken burned and maimed ones who looked into the dragons eye but only lost part of their lives and maybe live with pain the rest of their lives. .There are among these ,those who know the truth,those who believe they are the baddest asses, and after the first shit lands around them ,and the truth becomes self evident , then they all know they are only a soft fleshy bag of bones really easily mangled.
The stories will go on,just saw one on you tube comparing a NAVY seal and an FBI agent(,?) I kind of turned it off to watch a real bad ass- Sherlock Holmes!
Alpha Victor,sorry for your ,experiences,for your pain I salute you ,my respect is all I can give to you.
 
View attachment 8105453The book is called Suffer Patiently by Brian Cramer, a Scout Sniper from STA 1/6 in Ramadi and Fallujah

“Suffer Patiently, Patiently Suffer” is a term used in Marine Scout/Sniper school, which if you haven’t heard, the brilliant Commandant of the Marine Corps has done away with…

The Documentary Producer (Michael Ivey) mentioned an initial showing in August at a National Veterans gathering of some sort and then at the Beirut Memorial gathering in October. After that I believe it will be released to the public.
I had not heard of this new act of intelligence,I had not gotten over the idea of no tanks,and let’s not forget stress cards.
 
I see Suffer Patiently is available on Amazon. Will be purchasing shortly.