"First much of the reporting in the book will be denied and denounced by the department of State and the US government. This is not because the facts in the book are not true but because the government is not required to acknowledge their truth."
Code Over Country is a book about the corruption of America's number one poster child for military efficiency and how a group that was originally made up of people who "would be in prison if they did not join the army" ended up, yup, you guessed it - committing a bunch of crimes.
"What the service never reckoned with is that the qualities that draw men to be SEALS are the same qualities that undermine their effectiveness"
The thing to understand, and that Cole drives home, is that from the beginning SEAL Team 6, or DEVGRU (which is the actual name for the unit, but it's as sexy as a hemroid so no one uses it) was doomed to be a flawed organization. Founded by Richard Marcinko, a man who based candidates off weather they could party hard, commit crimes, (something that breeds the harrowing line later in the book, "Seal team six skirted the line between being criminals for the state: and just old fashion criminals" ) and how much he liked them - there was to say, absolutely no ethical thought placed into what might happen if you teach a bunch of men to ruthlessly kill people.
Marcinko was the SEALs, his ideology is what founded the core of the organization, and gave way to so many of its problems. There is something dehumanizing to the SEALs that elevates them above acting with civility. Marcinko, who would eventually be court marshalled and labeled a felon, never to step on a naval base again, is heralded as a hero in the general public and started a sinister trend for ex-SEALS .... becoming a celebrity.
"Marcinko had been many things in his career: a hero in combat, a felon, a fable, and ultimately a celebrity.... probably should have been served as a cautionary tale for the generations of SEAL's to follow. Too many saw in Marcinko something else - a model to aspire to."
This is the main take away I got from Cole. That SEALs Team 6 is not about serving America, but serving oneself under the guise of American Nationalism. The reason that the SEALs get famous is because they leave in disgrace. There is irony in launching men who could not conduct themselves properly enough to maintain their service into the spotlight because of their military service. If they were good at military service, they would still be in the military.
"The SEALs represented an inherent contradiction, for all their specialized training and elite capabilities, many struggled with the foundational almost rudimentary ethical actions: to not steal, to obey authority, to tell the truth. They were ill equipped to confront failures and the accountability that came with them."
It was also heart wrenching to hear how much pain this small percentage of fucked up SEALs would cause for other service members. From Eddie Gallagher, who stabbed a man in the neck as a medic was working to stabilize him, and then took a photo with him as a prize, to Matthews leading a group of men to STRANGLE A GREEN BARET because he LEFT THEM AT A PARTY. I find it concerning that these are the men we are giving weapons to and trusting to go and make decisions about who gets to live and die in foreign conflicts. These men do not need an AR-15. These men need a therapist and the one ethical MMA fighter who was fired after teaching men how to critically and ethically make decisions. "Deloff and Matthews in particular refuse to take responsibility for their conduct. Somehow neither they're training nor their elite military experience provided them with the road map for doing the right thing." The one thing they don't teach the SEALs is how to be a good person.
There is something deeply ironic about the SEALs relying on secrecy and black box operations to be successful in their mission, and then spitting out veterans who bust down Penguin Publishing as soon as they get their discharge papers (and in one case even sooner). The SEAL code explicitly states that it is with great honor the SEAL's never receive credit for what they do, and yet the two commanding officers on the mission to kill Bin Laden were there because they wanted the bragging rights. And the kicker is that the only person who can unwrite the narrative by these two men has too much moral integrity and respect for the SEALs to ever speak out against them. Marcinko, even after leaving the SEALs was still influencing its members by being the first person to commit war crimes, jump ship, write a book, and get famous by selling the tale of heroism to men who desperately wanted to be SEALs.
Similarly, Chris Kyle, now famed from the movie American Sniper, was under investigation for shooting unarmed civilians by the SEALs, left to be portrayed by Bradley Cooper in a biopic, and made a bunch of money. "While shooting the unarmed spotter could be a justified shot, firing on unarmed civilians trying to render aid is a war crime. At least twice Kyle was accused of shooting unarmed civilians." It is harrowing to think that this is the norm. There is no justice. There is only fame. The public does not care about the criminality of it all because the spectacle outweighs their guilt. "Violence creates its own parallel universe"
There is something in the back of our brains that tells us it's okay to play Call of Duty violently and brutally because we know real soldiers aren't like that. And then we get passages where Cole describes the Red team of SEAL Team 6 who got custom hatchets to carry with them in order to scalp their enemies like this is a Black Ops map and you are fighting Hassan the fake terrorist. This is not a game, and these actions have real consequences on how America is seen.
"The hatchet says we don't care about the Geneva Conventions"
Cole's describes the problem that you can not enforce the rules of war when your soldiers do not think they are fighting against a human enemy. Coles describes the SEALs seeing the men in Iraq and Afghanistan as animals that needed to be slaughtered. How can you uphold car crimes in court when everyone in power doesn't think that the people dying count as human? It's genocidal tactics to dehumanize the enemy in order to make the killing easier.
This goes into the sympathetic point in the book which is how do we deal with SEALs, men who are waking up, getting their morning coffee, and then going and killing several people each day? How does the military hope to keep these men mentally stable and respectful of the ethical implications of death and war? "The military built a killing machine after 9/11 and the SEALS started to take pleasure in their role serving the country as the government's most lethal tool." Cole is sympathetic to this plight but he in no way excuses the crimes that rack up. From sexual assaults, to murder of other service members, to the abandonment of team mates - the SEALs are not even loyal to their own team members first, I would argue. They are loyal to the IDEA, to the BRAND, of the SEALs. It is more important that people think we are cool, then doing our job, then standing up for what is just, then protecting Americans even.
As Goodreads user Bonnie Rae put it, "I feel like an integral part of the American culture DNA is the near god-like respect and love for the military, and for Navy SEALs in particular."
The trials that are covered in this book have horribly unfulfilling endings, often times no justice is ever served because how can you put the backbone of American culture on trial and deem it guilty. No one wants to commit the SEALs because they are 'fighting for our freedom and if we take a closer look at what they are doing in the Middle East we might find that America is not built, in fact, on Freedom and Equality - but on mutilation and military occupation. Eddie Gallagher wasn't a war criminal because he was fighting for our interest. The other deserved it. The other isn't human.
Eddie Gallagher didn't give a shit about America. Eddie Gallagher just wanted to kill people.