“Speak the complete truth.” That is all our guest Michelle Black is asking from U.S. Army officials and AFRICOM (United States Africa Command), as it relates to the death of her Green Beret husband, Staff Sergeant Bryan Black. After interviewing the survivors of a deadly ambush, it became clear to Michelle that the deaths of her husband and several soldiers were avoidable – mistakes were made. This Gold Star widow is on a quest to learn the truth about her husband’s death, but military officials refuse to provide details. In the process, she has learned that there are careers being protected by masking the truth. As a result, Michelle has written the book: Sacrifice: A Gold Star Widow’s Fight for the Truth in an effort to bring attention to the inconsistent lies of the military and challenges in learning the real facts.
In this episode you will hear:
- I reached a point where I realized that my husband and all the men who fought and died alongside him were being completely dishonored.
- I realized that there were disparities between what AFRICOM said and what the men on the ground said that led me to believe we were purposely being misled to cover for the officers who were responsible for the mission.
- I realized that the upper-level officers who were responsible for the mission and pre-deployment training were not affected by the punishment or by the investigation.
- I had to make a decision. If they come after me and take everything, what are they going to do to me? I was doing exactly what I was supposed to do.
- God was with me. He was giving me the strength. I was the right person at the right time to do the right thing. What a shame if I hadn’t.
- Once I feel like I’m doing what I’m supposed to do and God’s behind me, there’s a different boldness that doesn’t exist in any other area of my life.
- I don’t want to waste what Bryan fought for.
- We hold those accountable who should be held accountable.
- I’m pushing for changes in the way military investigations are done, so we have better oversight.
- How can you lead people if you’re doing a poor job? It’s a good ol’ boy system no matter how good or bad a leader you are.
- You don’t have to accept what you’re being told if you know it’s a lie.
- The men on the ground want you to know the truth.
- You can do anything you set your mind to.