SEAL Team (2017) s01e06 Episode Script
The Spinning Wheel
Previously on SEAL Team Nate was hiding a burner phone from his wife.
The address we found in Nate's truck, You already went, didn't you? I mean, it's not like Nate was the first teammate we had to get some on the side.
This only proves that he wasn't the exception.
What the hell were you doing, Nate? I just need to worry about the mission, guys to my left, guys to my right.
Do that, there's not a SEAL alive who wouldn't want to roll with you.
JUMP MASTER: Second stick going up.
FINN (OVER RADIO): Bandit 1, five canopies, looking for a sixth.
Negative contact.
PILOT (OVER RADIO): Jumper in distress.
Falling to 3,000 feet.
Jumper appeared to impact ground at speed.
(GOATS BLEATING, GOATHERD TRILLING) (HORN HONKS) (TRILLING) S01E06 The Spinning Wheel ADAM: It's not often we have to have this conversation.
Thank God.
Not like this, anyway.
We'll be holding a service soon as we're done notifying Brian's next of kin.
Even though the death wasn't in combat, we're still going in person.
Frogman to family.
Only right.
That kid does two tours in Trashcanistan.
Not a damn scratch.
Then he burns in a faulty 'chute.
Them the breaks.
You see Spenser? ADAM: That doesn't make this any less of a tragedy.
Brian's loss hits our community hard.
Apparently, he was real tight with the Armstrong kid.
Part of his education.
- That's cold, brother, even for you.
- No, it's not.
If this kid falls apart every time he loses a buddy, he's in the wrong line of work.
ADAM: Damn good operator.
- He'll be missed.
- Tell you what.
Let's just wait till he loses a buddy in combat and see how he handles that.
Amen.
Spenser.
Yeah.
Brian's parents live in Lamont, California.
Yeah.
Yeah, he said something about outside of Bakersfield.
We're flying out.
(SCOFF) I'm sorry, what? You're Brian's authorized representative to notify his next of kin.
Ah, man.
Must Look, Brian, he-he never said anything to me about it.
Doesn't matter.
Brian specified you on his CACO form.
Why don't you pack an overnight bag? Civvies.
He specified that.
Wheels up at 0900.
(HELICOPTER BLADES WHIRRING) ERIC: All right, listen up.
Captain Garcia from JSOC's gonna read us in on the op that he's been building.
Captain.
GARCIA: We're looking at architectural drawings of a residential bunker designed by the same firm in Germany used to build 'em for Saddam.
As you can see, the plans call for four barracks-style guardrooms between two sets of blast doors.
Behind the second door, there's a utility closet and a small living area.
Now, what do you think I'd get a mortgage for on a place like that right now? (CHUCKLES) Ballpark.
This happy fella is Faraz Jelani.
He's a Yemeni fixer.
A source tell us he's the one commissioned the plans.
Wouldn't tell the Germans where he was planning to build.
Look, a guy works as a fixer in that neighborhood, of course he's gonna have a fortress, right? We don't think he was building the place for himself.
And we don't believe it's in Yemen, either.
Oh.
GARCIA: I suppose I don't need to tell you who that is.
Hold on.
You're saying you found Abu Hassan? We recently managed to place a tracking device on a vehicle belonging to one of Hassan's couriers.
We followed that vehicle to this location.
MANDY: You're looking at a limestone ridge in the Asir Mountains, about 50 miles northeast of Abha, in Saudi Arabia.
We believe these shapes correspond to the guard emplacements on the architectural plan.
And that would mean that this line would be the ramp down to the exterior blast doors.
Wait a second.
We're gonna make a hit inside Saudi Arabia.
Same Saudi Arabia that I'm sorry, that supplies more than half of the oil that we import from the Persian Gulf.
RAY: Is there any chance you're gonna tell us that the Saudis are on-on board, th-they're gonna help us with the snatch? Decision's been made not to include our Saudi allies in this operation.
Well, they're not gonna be our allies for long.
You sure they're protecting him? Not sure, but we can't assume they aren't.
GARCIA: Needless to say, the diplomatic and economic considerations are considerable.
But Hassan was Khalid Sheik Mohammed's senior operational commander.
And he's still directing al-Qaeda operations in Yemen.
Makes him the biggest fish we've gone after since bin Laden, and now, we believe we know where he is.
But to get DOD approval, we need to demonstrate an assault plan that doesn't risk a geopolitical catastrophe.
I'm sorry, we're gonna "demonstrate"? We built a full-size replica of the bunker inside a secure hangar.
Brass are inbound, as we speak, to view our rehearsal, soon as you all are up to speed.
This replica's already been built? We spend the last few days developing our assault plan.
SONNY: Okay, pump the brakes here.
Who the hell has been designing our assault plan? Keith, is Senior Chief Fuller there? KEITH (ON INTERCOM): Yes, sir.
Standing right here.
GARCIA: Perfect.
We're ready for him.
- I assume you all know Beau Fuller? - Gentlemen.
- GARCIA: Your Charlie Team leader.
- Ladies.
Last week, while you were in Africa, we got Charlie Team up and running.
Chief Fuller's gonna be running you through our operation as soon as our guests arrive.
I'm sorry.
Is that our plan or your plan? Because if we were involved in this whole process, first thing we would do, we'd get an intel brief, then we would all put our heads together - Afraid there's no time for that.
- There's no time for that.
I'm confident Chief Fuller's plan will get us our green light.
Thank you, sir.
I'd say we've got a real shot, assuming you fellas are able to keep up.
(CHUCKLES) Wow.
Garcia has a comedian here, ladies and gentlemen.
Gentlemen, I'm not gonna mince words.
This has the potential to be the defining op of our lives.
This is the one you'll tell your grandkids about.
Bottom line, I simply cannot stress enough the importance of getting this one right.
Get your game faces on.
This is General Tinsdale from CENTCOM.
Ms.
Burgess from State.
We want this op green-lit, these are the people we need to convince.
Now, as with all multi-team operations, cooperation and communication will be essential.
Now, as you can see, the exterior blast doors are only approachable via the kill zone, right between the two guard positions.
The door, 4,000 pounds of solid, reinforced steel.
Far as what we can expect to find behind that door, I'm gonna turn it over to Ms.
Ellis.
Hassan's bodyguard force consists of a dozen or so of his most loyal fighters.
These appear to be their living quarters, past which, we come to an interior blast door.
On the other side of that should be our target, Abu Hassan al-Qatal.
Chief Fuller will now run us through our current thinking for the infil.
Chief.
Thank you, sir.
We're looking at a direct helo assault.
Quick and dirty land right on the "X.
" 25 yards from the blast door.
What we lose in surprise, we make up for in speed and violence of action.
RAY: Look, uh, listen, seriously.
No offense, but we-we're not talking Afghanistan here, we're talking Saudi Air Defense.
What's the alternative? - A low vis drive in, drive out? - It'd be a lot quieter.
BEAU: Yeah, more risky.
Look, we have to assume we'll be compromised as soon as we hit the guards, anyway.
At most, the helo gives the Saudis another, what, 90 seconds more warning? Mandy, nearest Saudi force, how close? Oh, here.
Eight klicks east of the target, special police battalion in Tabab.
We estimate the minimum response time is 14 minutes.
Chief Fuller.
I trust you understand that we cannot engage the Saudis - under any circumstances.
- Oh, yes, ma'am.
We are aware, but we feel comfortable with that margin.
Some of us do.
SONNY: If we engage the Saudis, it's gonna get ugly real quick.
Again, under no circumstances can we cause damage or injury to any local forces.
Bottom line, however we do this, we got to be gone 14 minutes after our friends in Tabab get the call.
Further demonstrate our actions on target, I suggest we move to the full-size mock.
I'll have some refreshments brought down.
- If you'll please follow me.
- Showtime.
WOMAN: Mmm, refreshments.
Yeah, so I never knew you to buck for rank.
That what I'm doing? Oh, come on.
I know you know how many team leaders there are for every troop chief slot.
Preacher's getting close to retirement, you want to take his place.
Figure it's not a bad idea to show up the competition in front of Command, right? Wow, you know what? - That never crossed my mind.
- Yeah.
That's what well, there's a difference between me and you.
- Oh, that's just one of many.
- Yeah.
I guess so.
You want to tell me what that was about? History, man.
A lot of history.
Want to catch me up? - On Beau and Jason? - Yeah.
They went through Green Team together.
And Jason made team leader first.
So much for the brotherhood.
Come on, now, who fights more than brothers? Plus, now, there's always, "How many black team leaders does it take to screw in a light bulb?" I'm not gonna touch that one.
- Both of them.
- Ugh.
I'm just saying, I'm sure it hasn't been easy for him.
I can imagine.
But that does not excuse the fact that he is a little bit of a dick.
CLAY: You done a lot of these? ADAM: Next-of-kin notifications? Done four.
I guess I could tell you it gets easier, but, uh So what do you say? (CAR ALARM CHIRPS) Ah, you're overthinking.
There's no predicting what a parent'll want to hear.
Only thing you can do is go in, make the best of it.
"You never really know what's behind the door until you breach it.
" ADAM: How much you, uh, know about Brian's family? Just what he told me.
Their dad sells insurance, mom's a librarian.
Cul-de-sac, white picket fence, swing in the yard.
I guess someone's got to have that life.
You know where we're going? Uh, yeah, got an address for his mom.
Lucy Denise, 113 High Street.
There, uh, is there any chance you want to do all the talking? JASON: Hope they like the show.
As long as they leave some refreshments for the rest of us.
A shame we can't afford to build one of these ahead of every hit.
BEAU: To continue However we infil, this is the first door we have to breach.
Once we're on target, Charlie Team will engage both guards, then be primary to the breach.
- Naturally.
- Bravo will hang back to provide overwatch and, if necessary, support by fire.
Wow, keeping us really safe.
That's very thoughtful of you.
Well, we'll try to leave something for you.
As I was saying, after we breach and make entry, half of Bravo Team stays outside to maintain rear security, rest of Bravo falls on Charlie to clear the structure.
So, not only is Bravo Team split, but half of it is now with Charlie Team? BEAU: Yeah, don't worry about it.
I'll take good care of 'em.
Really? Because, you know what, in my book, I don't think you should split the teams.
BEAU: So what? You worried your scouts can't handle being away - from their scout leader? - (CHUCKLES): Oh.
Right.
Scouts.
All right.
Once we're through the blast door, we move on to the next stage of our presentation.
If you'll follow me, please.
JASON: This just keeps getting better.
This is the area where we're most likely to encounter resistance, the second blast door.
We clear this section, get set to blow the internal blast door, we figure we still got eight minutes to get in and out with Hassan.
- Another explosive breach? - Why not? How many noncombatants do we have on the other side of that door? Hassan has three wives, six children.
A couple lieutenants have families.
We have no idea what kind of security Hassan'll have in there.
I mean, could be half-dozen guys in S-vests behind this door.
I want 'em on their knees, seeing stars when we come through.
RAY: Could also be a bunch of kids.
Or there could not be.
Rules of engagement say, unless we see them, we have no obligation to assume they're there.
JASON: Or there could be.
I don't know about you, but I really don't want to see half a dozen kids dead on CNN.
TINSDALE: I believe I have a solution.
See, I was concerned about the children myself, thought we might find a way to distract them, keep them busy, out of harm's way.
So I had my staff pull stats on the most popular candies in Saudi Arabia.
The Galaxy bar seems to be a consistent top seller.
Figure if we issue each operator a dozen or so, you can pass 'em out whenever you come across the children.
That's good thinking, sir.
SONNY: Good-Idea Fairies drive all the way down here from D.
C.
to break our balls in person? No matter how popular the candy is, sir, we're not gonna be able to have that option till we get through that door.
Yeah, and we're not gonna be able to get through that door unless we blow it.
No, we cut it.
We don't have time to cut it.
How much time's that gonna cost us? Let's see, four-inch tempered steel? Take the Broco torch two, three minutes.
Doesn't seem to leave a lot of time to get you all back out - before the Saudis arrive.
- Look, the torch is too slow.
We got to blow it.
JASON: Sir, I'm confident my guys can make initial assault, get to this door, have plenty of time to burn it, secure HVT, and make exfil without killing noncombatants on the other side of that door.
You got two minutes.
We'll run it with the torch.
Let's do this.
ADAM: Maybe Brian got the address wrong.
His mom's name is Lucy Denise.
Maybe she owns the place.
(INDISTINCT CHATTER) Excuse me.
Any chance you know somebody called Lucy Denise? Is this some kind of joke? Not that we know of.
How-how is it a joke, Lucy Denise? Well, place is called Lucy's.
Been here going on 40 years.
One of the waitresses been here almost that long.
Name's Denise.
DENISE: So, that thing where cops are required to admit who they are, you ask 'em straight out That's just in the movies, right? - Uh, as we said, ma'am - Yeah, yeah.
You're with the navy.
I remember.
"Lucy Denise," huh? Well, guess that's me.
Oh, unless she's wanted for something or she owes you money.
In that case, I have never heard of her.
(CHUCKLES) Well, you found me.
So, you want to tell me now why you're looking? Brian Armstrong.
You know him? CLAY: I swear, ma'am, we're not we're not trying to jam anybody up here, okay? Brian Brian is a friend.
Brian's mom used to use this place as free babysitting.
She'd drop Brian off whenever she was out doing whatever it was she was doing.
He'd sit in a corner booth with a stack of books.
Would never drink a soda though, no matter how many times we offered.
Strictly water or milk.
Do you, uh do you have any idea where we might be able to find his mom? Oh, she passed away.
Brian couldn't have been more than eight, nine.
Went to live with his dad.
Use some coffee? Yeah.
We both could.
Long flight.
Well, have a seat over there.
That's where Brian used to sit.
I'll go fetch you some fresh.
I don't get it.
Said his mom came to all of his football games.
Said he talked to her every week.
ERIC: 14-minute response time for the Saudi cops.
Clock starts as soon as you engage the guards.
The most time-consuming portion of this op will be breaching the two blast doors.
If you fail to exfil with Abu Hassan in 14 minutes, we'll stop the drill and reset.
All right, boys, show us what you got.
I'll show you what I got.
(GRUNTS) MAN: Three, two, one.
Execute.
(MOCK GUNSHOTS) (BEEPS, STOPWATCH TICKING) Okay.
Sentries are down.
Fire in the hole! What in the hell was that? A breaching charge.
You think it was big enough? "P" for "plenty," baby.
You just turned a two-ton door into a two-ton obstacle, numbnuts.
(ARGUING INDISTINCTLY) Sir, will you excuse us a moment? - Eric - Yeah.
All right, look, you know what, I know that the book says to overpower the breach when there's no friendlies on the other side of the wall, but maybe we should start thinking outside of the book.
- Oh, for a change.
- What's that supposed to mean? The book's there to keep everyone safe.
Improvising's how people get hurt.
You know what, I'm not gonna have to tell one of my guys' widows that she and her kids just had her life cored out on account of I insisted on flying by the seat of my pants.
Hey.
Do I need to get in this? We're good.
Yeah, we got it.
It's nothing to worry about.
ERIC: Listen to me, all right? This is not Green Team.
We shouldn't be handling Green Team business.
Now, those people up there are losing patience.
So whatever's between the two of you, I suggest you let it go.
I'm not gonna tell you again.
CLAY: No swing in the yard, no white picket fence.
Starting to feel like a pattern.
Yeah.
WOMAN: Don't you move! Got my 20-gauge set straight at your spines.
Pull this trigger, both of you crap in bags the rest of your lives.
You're making a mistake, ma'am.
We're with the Navy.
I'm Master Chief Adam Seaver.
This is Petty Officer Clay Spenser.
WOMAN: Oh, Navy, huh? Turn around.
Nice and slow.
That's not a real good idea, bluff having a shotgun.
Not a real good idea, go snooping around abandoned houses.
Uh, you know the people used to live here? Some of 'em.
For a while, seemed like there were new people in here every couple of months.
Look, ma'am, a, um, friend of ours gave us this address.
We're-we're looking for a man named, uh, Samuel Armstrong.
- Any chance that rings a bell? - Friends of his? His son, Brian.
Good.
Sammy was a son of a bitch.
The boy was a good egg, though.
Used to wonder about him sometimes, what happened to him.
He join the Navy? I hope you all can keep him from turning into his old man.
You happen to know where Samuel went after he left here? Sure.
Son of a bitch finally got himself sent up to the penitentiary - in Salinas.
- Salinas.
- He still there? - No idea.
Child Services shipped the boy off to a state home.
Never heard from either one of 'em again.
Used to wonder about him sometimes, what happened to the boy.
You, uh you happen to remember the name of the state home? GARCIA: All right, sir, here we go again.
(BEEPS, STOPWATCH TICKING) DAVIS: 14 minutes.
Piece of cake.
They got to be faster out there.
(GROANS) (MOCK GUNSHOTS) (HORN BLOWS) ERIC: Time! (GROANING) (BEEPS, STOPWATCH TICKING) (CREAKING) It's better.
(MOCK GUNSHOTS) (THUD) (MOCK GUNSHOTS) (THUD) Ready to burn.
(HORN BLOWS) Time's up, fellas.
(GROANING, CHATTER) DAVIS: They'll get it.
They'll get it.
(BEEPS, STOPWATCH TICKING) (GROANS) (MOCK GUNSHOTS) (GRUNTS) (HISSING) Cut.
Cut it! Cut it! That's it.
(WHOOSHING, HORN HONKS) (DOOR CREAKS OPEN) Now that's it.
The op's off.
(GROANING) Oh, come on.
Sir, all due respect, there's not gonna be any plywood on the target.
- Or we just go explosive - MAN: Right.
- Not doing explosives.
- GARCIA: It doesn't matter.
Even before the fire, you were about to miss another time target, and nobody wanted to put their name on the op that started a war with Saudi Arabia.
Bottom line Brass feels the op's too risky.
They don't want to commit.
Oh, you happy? What the hell is that supposed to mean, sunshine? Playing the same plan we've had for the last few days.
Then the Great Jason Hayes appears, starts changing things up on the fly, just like always.
It's not my fault that your plan got all jacked up.
No, the only thing jacked up, man, is your attitude.
How about your ego? You've been trying to undermine me this whole time.
This whole time! Why have I been undermining you this whole time? Because you have one tool that you use for every job.
That charge you would have put on the interior of that door would have collapsed the entire bunker.
- That is your opinion! - Yeah, it is also my opinion that you devised a plan that would kill innocent people.
But then again, we all know how you feel about that.
You don't know there are gonna be civilians on target! You don't know that there won't be.
You know what, Jay? You love to talk about the Good-Idea Fairies.
Always want to talk about the Good-Idea Fairies, come late to an op, screw everything up with their lame-ass ad-libs.
But it never occurs to you that you are the Good-Idea Fairy.
Always trying to change things up, do something extra, remind everyone how much better Jason Hayes is than everybody else.
Yeah, but when somebody gets hurt, or gets killed, 'cause you couldn't be bothered to stick to the script? You seriously talking about Nate right now? "Hey, can't blame Jason Hayes for being aggressive.
" (INDISTINCT CHATTER) Break that up! Break it up.
Easy, easy.
- JASON: What do you got?! - Come on, Santini.
Santini, come on.
Hey! Hey, relax! Hey! You thought I was the one with the temper.
Relax.
Come on, let's go.
(INDISTINCT CHATTER) JASON: You know what? I'm not apologizing to that jackass, if that's what you want me to do.
Oh, what? Jason Hayes apologize? Perish the thought.
Yeah, perish the thought.
You know, when I was getting out of selection, Bravo Team was deciding which candidate from my Green Team class they were gonna pick in the draft.
You remember any of the conversations they had before deciding it ought to be me? I don't, okay? I was a 3IC back then.
Okay.
All right, well, let me ask you something.
You ever consider the color of my skin? Come on.
No, it's not about that.
It is not about that, do you understand me? As far as I'm concerned, jackasses come in one color.
Yeah, but this particular jackass is black.
- Yeah? And, so? - Look, I get it, man.
I never could stand Beau myself.
All right? He's an arrogant, uptight perfectionist with no sense of humor, and he won't think outside the box.
I get it.
He drives you crazy.
Good.
I'm glad that we see the same way.
Okay, well, how do you think he's seeing you? Better question do I care? He's seeing a white guy with slept-on hair, couple days' growth, and your shirt flapping almost as much as your mouth.
Thanks for that, Ray.
Really appreciate it.
Look, man, the point is, he's seeing a guy go through life the way he wishes he could.
Look, what do you even know about this guy? I know enough! I know what it's like starting BUD/S 150 guys, first day of Phase 1, I'm the only black face.
Night time surf torture, everyone laid out side-by-side on the beach, eyes stinging, mouths tasting like puke, salt and sand.
Every time a wave comes in, everybody's trying to cheat, right? Keep their head up so the sea water doesn't go back in your nose.
Instructors yelling at you to get back down.
The thing is, in the dark, Jace, it's hard to tell one white face from another.
So who do you think they call out by name? Huh? "Perry, you get your nappy head back down in that sand!" We chose you because you're a great operator.
No, you chose me because I was the best operator.
It's what you're not understanding, brother.
For me, for Beau, being great's not good enough.
You go outside the box, you're innovative, a self-starter.
If we do it, we can't follow the rules.
I'm not saying that excuses the way Beau is at all.
I'm just saying it's something you ought to at least take into account.
Got it, man.
I got it, all right? Look, I appreciate you talking to me, but did you hear what he said about Nate? You know what? You were actually the one who brought up Nate.
Really? Somebody gets killed 'cause I can't stick to the script? You don't think that's what he meant? You know what I think? (SIGHS) I think Nate's death has been eating at you for months now, and I think it's time you talked to somebody about it 'cause it's not going away.
Therapy.
Therapy Yeah, that's never gonna happen.
Maybe not a shrink, necessarily.
But me, Alana, somebody.
- That's not what we do, Ray.
- Yeah? Well, we also don't get into scraps in front of the brass and risk getting bounced out of command.
Look, how many friends have we lost? We never talk about them.
Why is so Nate different? You know what? Honestly, I really don't care about the why.
All I care about is figuring out how to fix it.
I told Naima we got scrapped.
She's making lunch.
You hungry? No.
I'm good.
I'm fine.
I got something I got to do.
Somewhere I need to be, okay? - I'm good.
- Okay.
Yeah.
Hey, Pete.
What's going on? Thanks for coming by, man.
Well, after all we've been through, hard to see turning you down for a drink.
Man, it's a little thick in here, isn't it? Yeah, probably the AC's broken.
Well, you want to go somewhere else? Hell, no.
Drink in the heat.
- Let's pretend we're back in Kabul.
- Hey, what can I get you? Can I get a beer and a shot of tequila? You in? - Yeah, make it two.
- Got it.
Okay.
How long you been back in Virginia? Oh, a couple months.
Sorry about Nate.
Yeah, I wanted to get back for the funeral.
I had to stay in JBad, finish a contract.
Yeah.
Um (INDISTINCT CHATTER, POOL BALLS CLICKING) Where'd you get that? Found that in Nate's burn box.
What do you know about her? Marjan.
You know that 'terp that you had, the one that disappeared? That's his wife.
Oh, yeah, I know that.
Well, after her husband disappeared, she assumed he was picked up by the Taliban, thought she was next.
- Right.
- Here you go.
- Thanks.
- Enjoy.
Thanks.
So she comes to you, right? And she asks you to get her out of Afghanistan.
Nate knew I had contacts at the border.
Right.
How'd she get to Virginia? Bad idea, Pete.
Well, what was I gonna do? Say no? You know what I owed Nate.
(SIGHS) Anybody else know about her? No, just my guys.
Now what are you worried about? You think the DOD'd go after Molly's pension? All it takes is one cake-eater to make an example out of somebody, man.
Must be nice, you know? Be an officer, seeing everything from 30,000 feet where it all makes sense.
Never having to be on the ground, see where people live, how messy it gets.
Right.
On the ground where people live, sweat.
Especially in the desert.
Thanks, Pete.
Thank you all for coming back at this late hour.
On a hunch, Jason asked me to check the thermal imaging of the compound, and we discovered that because the German design firm didn't know where this bunker would be constructed, there were unable to anticipate the challenges particular to the desert environment.
The extreme heat of the location appears to have forced Hassan to install a pair of AC ducts that don't appear on the plans we used to design our models.
Our analysis of the imagery suggests that two vertical ducts were drilled directly into the limestone cliffs, and connect to horizontal ducts inside the compound, and therefore, lack the secure countermeasures of the rest of the bunker's vent system.
So, by dropping through the air ducts, we bypass all sentries and blast doors, arriving here without alerting anyone to our presence.
Easy to beat the clock if it never starts.
- That's right.
- GARCIA: How big are the ducts? MANDY: We estimate three feet by three feet.
Crawl a few hundred feet with all that gear? - It's gonna be tight.
- Nobody said it was gonna be easy.
TINSDALE: What about the exfil? I hope you're not planning to climb back up that rope with your prisoner.
Well, once we secure the package inside, we will communicate with Charlie Team, they will clear inward as we clear outward.
We'll open the interior blast door and exfil together.
Chief Fuller, any objections? Well, that's damn right it ain't gonna be easy.
But at least this way it's possible.
I say we give it a shot.
Yeah, we'll give it a shot.
EMORY: Some of the children are only with us a few weeks.
Just long enough for their parents to get clean, or get their act together enough to regain custody.
A lot of them end up coming back.
Any ever get adopted out? EMORY: Uh, once in a while.
Mostly the younger ones.
Couples in the market for a little bundle of joy to jazz up the Christmas card aren't real eager to bring a surly teenager into their home, doesn't even share their DNA.
Most part, you're here after your tenth birthday, you're here for the duration.
CLAY: (CLEARS THROAT) What about, uh, what about foster care? That's a dice roll.
Department does what they can on their budget, but never weed out all the crazies, entrepreneurs in it for the check.
You ask me, kids are better off with us.
At least here, they know they're safe.
Our "library.
" Obviously, no one's giving us money for books.
Barely give us enough for food.
So, the older kids leave theirs here when they move out.
Uh, Brian's dad, we called Salinas place he did time But they had no idea where he might've gone after he got out.
Any chance you got some records somewhere might help us find him? Uh, I can check.
You want to come back to the office? You, uh haven't asked what I found out about Brian's dad.
I figured nothing.
Otherwise you would've told me.
He's dead.
Took a knife in the chest outside of a strip club a few weeks after he got out of Salinas.
(EXHALES) I guess that's not really a shocker.
Still.
It's a hell of a thing for a kid to have to carry, family like that.
Wonder how Brian managed it.
Apparently, he made up a new one.
(LAUGHS) I guess he did, didn't he? Shame he didn't live long enough to realize teams are all the family any of us need.
(CHUCKLES) "Teams are all the family you need"? What, did you see that on a recruiting poster somewhere? What about you? You were how old when you went to live with your grandparents? Five? I was five when my old man split.
Then, uh my mom, she tried to do the single parenting thing for a few months, and I was about six when she sent me to live with her parents.
They were missionaries, your dad told me.
Yeah.
Good people? Best I ever knew.
Think you'd have been better off if you, uh, stayed with your mom? No, I don't think so.
(CLEARS THROAT) Way I hear it, my mom was kind of a mess back then.
What about Ash? You could've moved back in with him.
I wanted to get as far away from that guy as possible.
Like I said, teams are your real family.
You don't know it yet, but you will.
ERIC: All right.
This will be a full run-through with live role-players.
Keep in mind, gentlemen, this is our final shot.
We miss our time, there's no more do-overs.
Make it count.
(CLEARS THROAT) Look, uh, before What I said - What you actually didn't say.
- Yeah, well either way, I shouldn't have got near it.
What happened with Nate, that's, uh that's war, man.
Appreciate that.
Doesn't mean I like you.
- But - Appreciate that, too.
All right, role-players are in place.
- How's it looking? - Bravo's ready.
Charlie, same.
All right.
Let's do this.
Charlie, same.
Bravo Team set.
We've reached the horizontal ducts.
Copy.
Charlie set.
Standing by.
Bravo Team moving to breach.
(MOCK GUNSHOTS) (SCREAMS) Hey.
Go.
Up.
Up.
Come on.
Let's go! Jackpot.
Target secure.
Roger, Bravo 1.
On my "go.
" Three, two, one execute.
Execute.
(MOCK GUNSHOTS) Go.
- That's a good workout.
- I told you they'd get it.
Nice job.
All right, boys, ENDEX.
What was the time? 12 minutes and change.
Two minutes to spare.
Okay, tell you what.
What do you say we run this again, huh? This time, why don't you give us some curveballs? Welcome back.
Find what you're looking for? Not really.
Oh, sorry to hear it.
Can I get you something? Be honest, ma'am, we were hoping you could sit with us for a sec.
A sec, I guess.
Slow morning and all.
Uh, look, ma'am I'm afraid it's our duty to inform you that Brian Armstrong died two days ago in rural Virginia.
At this time, we cannot disclose the nature of his death, but on behalf of the Secretary of Defense I'm not his kin.
As far as we know, he didn't have any.
(VOICE BREAKING): Oh, that's awful.
But what he did have was he had a lot of people who went out of their way to keep him safe until he could do that for himself.
And you're one of those people.
Think you should be proud of that.
(INDISTINCT CHATTER) (WHISTLES QUIETLY) (INDISTINCT CONVERSATION) - What's up? - Bad news, fellas.
Op's cancelled.
- Do we know why? - Do we ever know why? (WHISTLES SHARPLY) ERIC: According to Mandy, turns out Hassan wasn't even in the bunker.
Meaning he got spooked, took off? Or he wasn't even there in the first place.
Thank you for your hard work.
Tell your boys to get some rest.
Back at it on Monday.
Right.
Look at it this way.
Next time Abu Hassan shows up in that bunker, we don't have to sit around and wait for a green light.
All right? Maybe we get there in time.
Right.
- Yeah - Yep.
(LOUDLY): Ca-caw! Ca-caw! Ca-caw.
What is that? Cank bird.
- There's a cank bird? - Yep.
Shows up just before an op gets canked.
Like an omen.
It's Indian.
Well, Native American.
- SONNY: Anyone else hungry? - Yeah.
GARCIA: Yeah, I'm pretty sure one of them gentlemen clubs up on 17 just started a breakfast buffet.
Well, what the hell we waiting for? Let's make it rain.
I was a friend of Nate Massey's.
I know who you are.
You worked with him.
You're not having any tea? Not yet.
- Put it in your mouth.
- I'm sorry? Hold the sugar between your teeth, and drink the tea through it.
That's how I learned to drink it when I was a little girl.
Sugar in the t Like this? (CHUCKLING) Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
Okay.
That's how you drink tea in Afghanistan? That's how my family drinks tea in Afghanistan.
Do all Americans drink their tea the same way? No.
I didn't me I'm sorry, I, uh You know what, I should probably No, I I'm sorry.
Do you want to talk about Nate?
The address we found in Nate's truck, You already went, didn't you? I mean, it's not like Nate was the first teammate we had to get some on the side.
This only proves that he wasn't the exception.
What the hell were you doing, Nate? I just need to worry about the mission, guys to my left, guys to my right.
Do that, there's not a SEAL alive who wouldn't want to roll with you.
JUMP MASTER: Second stick going up.
FINN (OVER RADIO): Bandit 1, five canopies, looking for a sixth.
Negative contact.
PILOT (OVER RADIO): Jumper in distress.
Falling to 3,000 feet.
Jumper appeared to impact ground at speed.
(GOATS BLEATING, GOATHERD TRILLING) (HORN HONKS) (TRILLING) S01E06 The Spinning Wheel ADAM: It's not often we have to have this conversation.
Thank God.
Not like this, anyway.
We'll be holding a service soon as we're done notifying Brian's next of kin.
Even though the death wasn't in combat, we're still going in person.
Frogman to family.
Only right.
That kid does two tours in Trashcanistan.
Not a damn scratch.
Then he burns in a faulty 'chute.
Them the breaks.
You see Spenser? ADAM: That doesn't make this any less of a tragedy.
Brian's loss hits our community hard.
Apparently, he was real tight with the Armstrong kid.
Part of his education.
- That's cold, brother, even for you.
- No, it's not.
If this kid falls apart every time he loses a buddy, he's in the wrong line of work.
ADAM: Damn good operator.
- He'll be missed.
- Tell you what.
Let's just wait till he loses a buddy in combat and see how he handles that.
Amen.
Spenser.
Yeah.
Brian's parents live in Lamont, California.
Yeah.
Yeah, he said something about outside of Bakersfield.
We're flying out.
(SCOFF) I'm sorry, what? You're Brian's authorized representative to notify his next of kin.
Ah, man.
Must Look, Brian, he-he never said anything to me about it.
Doesn't matter.
Brian specified you on his CACO form.
Why don't you pack an overnight bag? Civvies.
He specified that.
Wheels up at 0900.
(HELICOPTER BLADES WHIRRING) ERIC: All right, listen up.
Captain Garcia from JSOC's gonna read us in on the op that he's been building.
Captain.
GARCIA: We're looking at architectural drawings of a residential bunker designed by the same firm in Germany used to build 'em for Saddam.
As you can see, the plans call for four barracks-style guardrooms between two sets of blast doors.
Behind the second door, there's a utility closet and a small living area.
Now, what do you think I'd get a mortgage for on a place like that right now? (CHUCKLES) Ballpark.
This happy fella is Faraz Jelani.
He's a Yemeni fixer.
A source tell us he's the one commissioned the plans.
Wouldn't tell the Germans where he was planning to build.
Look, a guy works as a fixer in that neighborhood, of course he's gonna have a fortress, right? We don't think he was building the place for himself.
And we don't believe it's in Yemen, either.
Oh.
GARCIA: I suppose I don't need to tell you who that is.
Hold on.
You're saying you found Abu Hassan? We recently managed to place a tracking device on a vehicle belonging to one of Hassan's couriers.
We followed that vehicle to this location.
MANDY: You're looking at a limestone ridge in the Asir Mountains, about 50 miles northeast of Abha, in Saudi Arabia.
We believe these shapes correspond to the guard emplacements on the architectural plan.
And that would mean that this line would be the ramp down to the exterior blast doors.
Wait a second.
We're gonna make a hit inside Saudi Arabia.
Same Saudi Arabia that I'm sorry, that supplies more than half of the oil that we import from the Persian Gulf.
RAY: Is there any chance you're gonna tell us that the Saudis are on-on board, th-they're gonna help us with the snatch? Decision's been made not to include our Saudi allies in this operation.
Well, they're not gonna be our allies for long.
You sure they're protecting him? Not sure, but we can't assume they aren't.
GARCIA: Needless to say, the diplomatic and economic considerations are considerable.
But Hassan was Khalid Sheik Mohammed's senior operational commander.
And he's still directing al-Qaeda operations in Yemen.
Makes him the biggest fish we've gone after since bin Laden, and now, we believe we know where he is.
But to get DOD approval, we need to demonstrate an assault plan that doesn't risk a geopolitical catastrophe.
I'm sorry, we're gonna "demonstrate"? We built a full-size replica of the bunker inside a secure hangar.
Brass are inbound, as we speak, to view our rehearsal, soon as you all are up to speed.
This replica's already been built? We spend the last few days developing our assault plan.
SONNY: Okay, pump the brakes here.
Who the hell has been designing our assault plan? Keith, is Senior Chief Fuller there? KEITH (ON INTERCOM): Yes, sir.
Standing right here.
GARCIA: Perfect.
We're ready for him.
- I assume you all know Beau Fuller? - Gentlemen.
- GARCIA: Your Charlie Team leader.
- Ladies.
Last week, while you were in Africa, we got Charlie Team up and running.
Chief Fuller's gonna be running you through our operation as soon as our guests arrive.
I'm sorry.
Is that our plan or your plan? Because if we were involved in this whole process, first thing we would do, we'd get an intel brief, then we would all put our heads together - Afraid there's no time for that.
- There's no time for that.
I'm confident Chief Fuller's plan will get us our green light.
Thank you, sir.
I'd say we've got a real shot, assuming you fellas are able to keep up.
(CHUCKLES) Wow.
Garcia has a comedian here, ladies and gentlemen.
Gentlemen, I'm not gonna mince words.
This has the potential to be the defining op of our lives.
This is the one you'll tell your grandkids about.
Bottom line, I simply cannot stress enough the importance of getting this one right.
Get your game faces on.
This is General Tinsdale from CENTCOM.
Ms.
Burgess from State.
We want this op green-lit, these are the people we need to convince.
Now, as with all multi-team operations, cooperation and communication will be essential.
Now, as you can see, the exterior blast doors are only approachable via the kill zone, right between the two guard positions.
The door, 4,000 pounds of solid, reinforced steel.
Far as what we can expect to find behind that door, I'm gonna turn it over to Ms.
Ellis.
Hassan's bodyguard force consists of a dozen or so of his most loyal fighters.
These appear to be their living quarters, past which, we come to an interior blast door.
On the other side of that should be our target, Abu Hassan al-Qatal.
Chief Fuller will now run us through our current thinking for the infil.
Chief.
Thank you, sir.
We're looking at a direct helo assault.
Quick and dirty land right on the "X.
" 25 yards from the blast door.
What we lose in surprise, we make up for in speed and violence of action.
RAY: Look, uh, listen, seriously.
No offense, but we-we're not talking Afghanistan here, we're talking Saudi Air Defense.
What's the alternative? - A low vis drive in, drive out? - It'd be a lot quieter.
BEAU: Yeah, more risky.
Look, we have to assume we'll be compromised as soon as we hit the guards, anyway.
At most, the helo gives the Saudis another, what, 90 seconds more warning? Mandy, nearest Saudi force, how close? Oh, here.
Eight klicks east of the target, special police battalion in Tabab.
We estimate the minimum response time is 14 minutes.
Chief Fuller.
I trust you understand that we cannot engage the Saudis - under any circumstances.
- Oh, yes, ma'am.
We are aware, but we feel comfortable with that margin.
Some of us do.
SONNY: If we engage the Saudis, it's gonna get ugly real quick.
Again, under no circumstances can we cause damage or injury to any local forces.
Bottom line, however we do this, we got to be gone 14 minutes after our friends in Tabab get the call.
Further demonstrate our actions on target, I suggest we move to the full-size mock.
I'll have some refreshments brought down.
- If you'll please follow me.
- Showtime.
WOMAN: Mmm, refreshments.
Yeah, so I never knew you to buck for rank.
That what I'm doing? Oh, come on.
I know you know how many team leaders there are for every troop chief slot.
Preacher's getting close to retirement, you want to take his place.
Figure it's not a bad idea to show up the competition in front of Command, right? Wow, you know what? - That never crossed my mind.
- Yeah.
That's what well, there's a difference between me and you.
- Oh, that's just one of many.
- Yeah.
I guess so.
You want to tell me what that was about? History, man.
A lot of history.
Want to catch me up? - On Beau and Jason? - Yeah.
They went through Green Team together.
And Jason made team leader first.
So much for the brotherhood.
Come on, now, who fights more than brothers? Plus, now, there's always, "How many black team leaders does it take to screw in a light bulb?" I'm not gonna touch that one.
- Both of them.
- Ugh.
I'm just saying, I'm sure it hasn't been easy for him.
I can imagine.
But that does not excuse the fact that he is a little bit of a dick.
CLAY: You done a lot of these? ADAM: Next-of-kin notifications? Done four.
I guess I could tell you it gets easier, but, uh So what do you say? (CAR ALARM CHIRPS) Ah, you're overthinking.
There's no predicting what a parent'll want to hear.
Only thing you can do is go in, make the best of it.
"You never really know what's behind the door until you breach it.
" ADAM: How much you, uh, know about Brian's family? Just what he told me.
Their dad sells insurance, mom's a librarian.
Cul-de-sac, white picket fence, swing in the yard.
I guess someone's got to have that life.
You know where we're going? Uh, yeah, got an address for his mom.
Lucy Denise, 113 High Street.
There, uh, is there any chance you want to do all the talking? JASON: Hope they like the show.
As long as they leave some refreshments for the rest of us.
A shame we can't afford to build one of these ahead of every hit.
BEAU: To continue However we infil, this is the first door we have to breach.
Once we're on target, Charlie Team will engage both guards, then be primary to the breach.
- Naturally.
- Bravo will hang back to provide overwatch and, if necessary, support by fire.
Wow, keeping us really safe.
That's very thoughtful of you.
Well, we'll try to leave something for you.
As I was saying, after we breach and make entry, half of Bravo Team stays outside to maintain rear security, rest of Bravo falls on Charlie to clear the structure.
So, not only is Bravo Team split, but half of it is now with Charlie Team? BEAU: Yeah, don't worry about it.
I'll take good care of 'em.
Really? Because, you know what, in my book, I don't think you should split the teams.
BEAU: So what? You worried your scouts can't handle being away - from their scout leader? - (CHUCKLES): Oh.
Right.
Scouts.
All right.
Once we're through the blast door, we move on to the next stage of our presentation.
If you'll follow me, please.
JASON: This just keeps getting better.
This is the area where we're most likely to encounter resistance, the second blast door.
We clear this section, get set to blow the internal blast door, we figure we still got eight minutes to get in and out with Hassan.
- Another explosive breach? - Why not? How many noncombatants do we have on the other side of that door? Hassan has three wives, six children.
A couple lieutenants have families.
We have no idea what kind of security Hassan'll have in there.
I mean, could be half-dozen guys in S-vests behind this door.
I want 'em on their knees, seeing stars when we come through.
RAY: Could also be a bunch of kids.
Or there could not be.
Rules of engagement say, unless we see them, we have no obligation to assume they're there.
JASON: Or there could be.
I don't know about you, but I really don't want to see half a dozen kids dead on CNN.
TINSDALE: I believe I have a solution.
See, I was concerned about the children myself, thought we might find a way to distract them, keep them busy, out of harm's way.
So I had my staff pull stats on the most popular candies in Saudi Arabia.
The Galaxy bar seems to be a consistent top seller.
Figure if we issue each operator a dozen or so, you can pass 'em out whenever you come across the children.
That's good thinking, sir.
SONNY: Good-Idea Fairies drive all the way down here from D.
C.
to break our balls in person? No matter how popular the candy is, sir, we're not gonna be able to have that option till we get through that door.
Yeah, and we're not gonna be able to get through that door unless we blow it.
No, we cut it.
We don't have time to cut it.
How much time's that gonna cost us? Let's see, four-inch tempered steel? Take the Broco torch two, three minutes.
Doesn't seem to leave a lot of time to get you all back out - before the Saudis arrive.
- Look, the torch is too slow.
We got to blow it.
JASON: Sir, I'm confident my guys can make initial assault, get to this door, have plenty of time to burn it, secure HVT, and make exfil without killing noncombatants on the other side of that door.
You got two minutes.
We'll run it with the torch.
Let's do this.
ADAM: Maybe Brian got the address wrong.
His mom's name is Lucy Denise.
Maybe she owns the place.
(INDISTINCT CHATTER) Excuse me.
Any chance you know somebody called Lucy Denise? Is this some kind of joke? Not that we know of.
How-how is it a joke, Lucy Denise? Well, place is called Lucy's.
Been here going on 40 years.
One of the waitresses been here almost that long.
Name's Denise.
DENISE: So, that thing where cops are required to admit who they are, you ask 'em straight out That's just in the movies, right? - Uh, as we said, ma'am - Yeah, yeah.
You're with the navy.
I remember.
"Lucy Denise," huh? Well, guess that's me.
Oh, unless she's wanted for something or she owes you money.
In that case, I have never heard of her.
(CHUCKLES) Well, you found me.
So, you want to tell me now why you're looking? Brian Armstrong.
You know him? CLAY: I swear, ma'am, we're not we're not trying to jam anybody up here, okay? Brian Brian is a friend.
Brian's mom used to use this place as free babysitting.
She'd drop Brian off whenever she was out doing whatever it was she was doing.
He'd sit in a corner booth with a stack of books.
Would never drink a soda though, no matter how many times we offered.
Strictly water or milk.
Do you, uh do you have any idea where we might be able to find his mom? Oh, she passed away.
Brian couldn't have been more than eight, nine.
Went to live with his dad.
Use some coffee? Yeah.
We both could.
Long flight.
Well, have a seat over there.
That's where Brian used to sit.
I'll go fetch you some fresh.
I don't get it.
Said his mom came to all of his football games.
Said he talked to her every week.
ERIC: 14-minute response time for the Saudi cops.
Clock starts as soon as you engage the guards.
The most time-consuming portion of this op will be breaching the two blast doors.
If you fail to exfil with Abu Hassan in 14 minutes, we'll stop the drill and reset.
All right, boys, show us what you got.
I'll show you what I got.
(GRUNTS) MAN: Three, two, one.
Execute.
(MOCK GUNSHOTS) (BEEPS, STOPWATCH TICKING) Okay.
Sentries are down.
Fire in the hole! What in the hell was that? A breaching charge.
You think it was big enough? "P" for "plenty," baby.
You just turned a two-ton door into a two-ton obstacle, numbnuts.
(ARGUING INDISTINCTLY) Sir, will you excuse us a moment? - Eric - Yeah.
All right, look, you know what, I know that the book says to overpower the breach when there's no friendlies on the other side of the wall, but maybe we should start thinking outside of the book.
- Oh, for a change.
- What's that supposed to mean? The book's there to keep everyone safe.
Improvising's how people get hurt.
You know what, I'm not gonna have to tell one of my guys' widows that she and her kids just had her life cored out on account of I insisted on flying by the seat of my pants.
Hey.
Do I need to get in this? We're good.
Yeah, we got it.
It's nothing to worry about.
ERIC: Listen to me, all right? This is not Green Team.
We shouldn't be handling Green Team business.
Now, those people up there are losing patience.
So whatever's between the two of you, I suggest you let it go.
I'm not gonna tell you again.
CLAY: No swing in the yard, no white picket fence.
Starting to feel like a pattern.
Yeah.
WOMAN: Don't you move! Got my 20-gauge set straight at your spines.
Pull this trigger, both of you crap in bags the rest of your lives.
You're making a mistake, ma'am.
We're with the Navy.
I'm Master Chief Adam Seaver.
This is Petty Officer Clay Spenser.
WOMAN: Oh, Navy, huh? Turn around.
Nice and slow.
That's not a real good idea, bluff having a shotgun.
Not a real good idea, go snooping around abandoned houses.
Uh, you know the people used to live here? Some of 'em.
For a while, seemed like there were new people in here every couple of months.
Look, ma'am, a, um, friend of ours gave us this address.
We're-we're looking for a man named, uh, Samuel Armstrong.
- Any chance that rings a bell? - Friends of his? His son, Brian.
Good.
Sammy was a son of a bitch.
The boy was a good egg, though.
Used to wonder about him sometimes, what happened to him.
He join the Navy? I hope you all can keep him from turning into his old man.
You happen to know where Samuel went after he left here? Sure.
Son of a bitch finally got himself sent up to the penitentiary - in Salinas.
- Salinas.
- He still there? - No idea.
Child Services shipped the boy off to a state home.
Never heard from either one of 'em again.
Used to wonder about him sometimes, what happened to the boy.
You, uh you happen to remember the name of the state home? GARCIA: All right, sir, here we go again.
(BEEPS, STOPWATCH TICKING) DAVIS: 14 minutes.
Piece of cake.
They got to be faster out there.
(GROANS) (MOCK GUNSHOTS) (HORN BLOWS) ERIC: Time! (GROANING) (BEEPS, STOPWATCH TICKING) (CREAKING) It's better.
(MOCK GUNSHOTS) (THUD) (MOCK GUNSHOTS) (THUD) Ready to burn.
(HORN BLOWS) Time's up, fellas.
(GROANING, CHATTER) DAVIS: They'll get it.
They'll get it.
(BEEPS, STOPWATCH TICKING) (GROANS) (MOCK GUNSHOTS) (GRUNTS) (HISSING) Cut.
Cut it! Cut it! That's it.
(WHOOSHING, HORN HONKS) (DOOR CREAKS OPEN) Now that's it.
The op's off.
(GROANING) Oh, come on.
Sir, all due respect, there's not gonna be any plywood on the target.
- Or we just go explosive - MAN: Right.
- Not doing explosives.
- GARCIA: It doesn't matter.
Even before the fire, you were about to miss another time target, and nobody wanted to put their name on the op that started a war with Saudi Arabia.
Bottom line Brass feels the op's too risky.
They don't want to commit.
Oh, you happy? What the hell is that supposed to mean, sunshine? Playing the same plan we've had for the last few days.
Then the Great Jason Hayes appears, starts changing things up on the fly, just like always.
It's not my fault that your plan got all jacked up.
No, the only thing jacked up, man, is your attitude.
How about your ego? You've been trying to undermine me this whole time.
This whole time! Why have I been undermining you this whole time? Because you have one tool that you use for every job.
That charge you would have put on the interior of that door would have collapsed the entire bunker.
- That is your opinion! - Yeah, it is also my opinion that you devised a plan that would kill innocent people.
But then again, we all know how you feel about that.
You don't know there are gonna be civilians on target! You don't know that there won't be.
You know what, Jay? You love to talk about the Good-Idea Fairies.
Always want to talk about the Good-Idea Fairies, come late to an op, screw everything up with their lame-ass ad-libs.
But it never occurs to you that you are the Good-Idea Fairy.
Always trying to change things up, do something extra, remind everyone how much better Jason Hayes is than everybody else.
Yeah, but when somebody gets hurt, or gets killed, 'cause you couldn't be bothered to stick to the script? You seriously talking about Nate right now? "Hey, can't blame Jason Hayes for being aggressive.
" (INDISTINCT CHATTER) Break that up! Break it up.
Easy, easy.
- JASON: What do you got?! - Come on, Santini.
Santini, come on.
Hey! Hey, relax! Hey! You thought I was the one with the temper.
Relax.
Come on, let's go.
(INDISTINCT CHATTER) JASON: You know what? I'm not apologizing to that jackass, if that's what you want me to do.
Oh, what? Jason Hayes apologize? Perish the thought.
Yeah, perish the thought.
You know, when I was getting out of selection, Bravo Team was deciding which candidate from my Green Team class they were gonna pick in the draft.
You remember any of the conversations they had before deciding it ought to be me? I don't, okay? I was a 3IC back then.
Okay.
All right, well, let me ask you something.
You ever consider the color of my skin? Come on.
No, it's not about that.
It is not about that, do you understand me? As far as I'm concerned, jackasses come in one color.
Yeah, but this particular jackass is black.
- Yeah? And, so? - Look, I get it, man.
I never could stand Beau myself.
All right? He's an arrogant, uptight perfectionist with no sense of humor, and he won't think outside the box.
I get it.
He drives you crazy.
Good.
I'm glad that we see the same way.
Okay, well, how do you think he's seeing you? Better question do I care? He's seeing a white guy with slept-on hair, couple days' growth, and your shirt flapping almost as much as your mouth.
Thanks for that, Ray.
Really appreciate it.
Look, man, the point is, he's seeing a guy go through life the way he wishes he could.
Look, what do you even know about this guy? I know enough! I know what it's like starting BUD/S 150 guys, first day of Phase 1, I'm the only black face.
Night time surf torture, everyone laid out side-by-side on the beach, eyes stinging, mouths tasting like puke, salt and sand.
Every time a wave comes in, everybody's trying to cheat, right? Keep their head up so the sea water doesn't go back in your nose.
Instructors yelling at you to get back down.
The thing is, in the dark, Jace, it's hard to tell one white face from another.
So who do you think they call out by name? Huh? "Perry, you get your nappy head back down in that sand!" We chose you because you're a great operator.
No, you chose me because I was the best operator.
It's what you're not understanding, brother.
For me, for Beau, being great's not good enough.
You go outside the box, you're innovative, a self-starter.
If we do it, we can't follow the rules.
I'm not saying that excuses the way Beau is at all.
I'm just saying it's something you ought to at least take into account.
Got it, man.
I got it, all right? Look, I appreciate you talking to me, but did you hear what he said about Nate? You know what? You were actually the one who brought up Nate.
Really? Somebody gets killed 'cause I can't stick to the script? You don't think that's what he meant? You know what I think? (SIGHS) I think Nate's death has been eating at you for months now, and I think it's time you talked to somebody about it 'cause it's not going away.
Therapy.
Therapy Yeah, that's never gonna happen.
Maybe not a shrink, necessarily.
But me, Alana, somebody.
- That's not what we do, Ray.
- Yeah? Well, we also don't get into scraps in front of the brass and risk getting bounced out of command.
Look, how many friends have we lost? We never talk about them.
Why is so Nate different? You know what? Honestly, I really don't care about the why.
All I care about is figuring out how to fix it.
I told Naima we got scrapped.
She's making lunch.
You hungry? No.
I'm good.
I'm fine.
I got something I got to do.
Somewhere I need to be, okay? - I'm good.
- Okay.
Yeah.
Hey, Pete.
What's going on? Thanks for coming by, man.
Well, after all we've been through, hard to see turning you down for a drink.
Man, it's a little thick in here, isn't it? Yeah, probably the AC's broken.
Well, you want to go somewhere else? Hell, no.
Drink in the heat.
- Let's pretend we're back in Kabul.
- Hey, what can I get you? Can I get a beer and a shot of tequila? You in? - Yeah, make it two.
- Got it.
Okay.
How long you been back in Virginia? Oh, a couple months.
Sorry about Nate.
Yeah, I wanted to get back for the funeral.
I had to stay in JBad, finish a contract.
Yeah.
Um (INDISTINCT CHATTER, POOL BALLS CLICKING) Where'd you get that? Found that in Nate's burn box.
What do you know about her? Marjan.
You know that 'terp that you had, the one that disappeared? That's his wife.
Oh, yeah, I know that.
Well, after her husband disappeared, she assumed he was picked up by the Taliban, thought she was next.
- Right.
- Here you go.
- Thanks.
- Enjoy.
Thanks.
So she comes to you, right? And she asks you to get her out of Afghanistan.
Nate knew I had contacts at the border.
Right.
How'd she get to Virginia? Bad idea, Pete.
Well, what was I gonna do? Say no? You know what I owed Nate.
(SIGHS) Anybody else know about her? No, just my guys.
Now what are you worried about? You think the DOD'd go after Molly's pension? All it takes is one cake-eater to make an example out of somebody, man.
Must be nice, you know? Be an officer, seeing everything from 30,000 feet where it all makes sense.
Never having to be on the ground, see where people live, how messy it gets.
Right.
On the ground where people live, sweat.
Especially in the desert.
Thanks, Pete.
Thank you all for coming back at this late hour.
On a hunch, Jason asked me to check the thermal imaging of the compound, and we discovered that because the German design firm didn't know where this bunker would be constructed, there were unable to anticipate the challenges particular to the desert environment.
The extreme heat of the location appears to have forced Hassan to install a pair of AC ducts that don't appear on the plans we used to design our models.
Our analysis of the imagery suggests that two vertical ducts were drilled directly into the limestone cliffs, and connect to horizontal ducts inside the compound, and therefore, lack the secure countermeasures of the rest of the bunker's vent system.
So, by dropping through the air ducts, we bypass all sentries and blast doors, arriving here without alerting anyone to our presence.
Easy to beat the clock if it never starts.
- That's right.
- GARCIA: How big are the ducts? MANDY: We estimate three feet by three feet.
Crawl a few hundred feet with all that gear? - It's gonna be tight.
- Nobody said it was gonna be easy.
TINSDALE: What about the exfil? I hope you're not planning to climb back up that rope with your prisoner.
Well, once we secure the package inside, we will communicate with Charlie Team, they will clear inward as we clear outward.
We'll open the interior blast door and exfil together.
Chief Fuller, any objections? Well, that's damn right it ain't gonna be easy.
But at least this way it's possible.
I say we give it a shot.
Yeah, we'll give it a shot.
EMORY: Some of the children are only with us a few weeks.
Just long enough for their parents to get clean, or get their act together enough to regain custody.
A lot of them end up coming back.
Any ever get adopted out? EMORY: Uh, once in a while.
Mostly the younger ones.
Couples in the market for a little bundle of joy to jazz up the Christmas card aren't real eager to bring a surly teenager into their home, doesn't even share their DNA.
Most part, you're here after your tenth birthday, you're here for the duration.
CLAY: (CLEARS THROAT) What about, uh, what about foster care? That's a dice roll.
Department does what they can on their budget, but never weed out all the crazies, entrepreneurs in it for the check.
You ask me, kids are better off with us.
At least here, they know they're safe.
Our "library.
" Obviously, no one's giving us money for books.
Barely give us enough for food.
So, the older kids leave theirs here when they move out.
Uh, Brian's dad, we called Salinas place he did time But they had no idea where he might've gone after he got out.
Any chance you got some records somewhere might help us find him? Uh, I can check.
You want to come back to the office? You, uh haven't asked what I found out about Brian's dad.
I figured nothing.
Otherwise you would've told me.
He's dead.
Took a knife in the chest outside of a strip club a few weeks after he got out of Salinas.
(EXHALES) I guess that's not really a shocker.
Still.
It's a hell of a thing for a kid to have to carry, family like that.
Wonder how Brian managed it.
Apparently, he made up a new one.
(LAUGHS) I guess he did, didn't he? Shame he didn't live long enough to realize teams are all the family any of us need.
(CHUCKLES) "Teams are all the family you need"? What, did you see that on a recruiting poster somewhere? What about you? You were how old when you went to live with your grandparents? Five? I was five when my old man split.
Then, uh my mom, she tried to do the single parenting thing for a few months, and I was about six when she sent me to live with her parents.
They were missionaries, your dad told me.
Yeah.
Good people? Best I ever knew.
Think you'd have been better off if you, uh, stayed with your mom? No, I don't think so.
(CLEARS THROAT) Way I hear it, my mom was kind of a mess back then.
What about Ash? You could've moved back in with him.
I wanted to get as far away from that guy as possible.
Like I said, teams are your real family.
You don't know it yet, but you will.
ERIC: All right.
This will be a full run-through with live role-players.
Keep in mind, gentlemen, this is our final shot.
We miss our time, there's no more do-overs.
Make it count.
(CLEARS THROAT) Look, uh, before What I said - What you actually didn't say.
- Yeah, well either way, I shouldn't have got near it.
What happened with Nate, that's, uh that's war, man.
Appreciate that.
Doesn't mean I like you.
- But - Appreciate that, too.
All right, role-players are in place.
- How's it looking? - Bravo's ready.
Charlie, same.
All right.
Let's do this.
Charlie, same.
Bravo Team set.
We've reached the horizontal ducts.
Copy.
Charlie set.
Standing by.
Bravo Team moving to breach.
(MOCK GUNSHOTS) (SCREAMS) Hey.
Go.
Up.
Up.
Come on.
Let's go! Jackpot.
Target secure.
Roger, Bravo 1.
On my "go.
" Three, two, one execute.
Execute.
(MOCK GUNSHOTS) Go.
- That's a good workout.
- I told you they'd get it.
Nice job.
All right, boys, ENDEX.
What was the time? 12 minutes and change.
Two minutes to spare.
Okay, tell you what.
What do you say we run this again, huh? This time, why don't you give us some curveballs? Welcome back.
Find what you're looking for? Not really.
Oh, sorry to hear it.
Can I get you something? Be honest, ma'am, we were hoping you could sit with us for a sec.
A sec, I guess.
Slow morning and all.
Uh, look, ma'am I'm afraid it's our duty to inform you that Brian Armstrong died two days ago in rural Virginia.
At this time, we cannot disclose the nature of his death, but on behalf of the Secretary of Defense I'm not his kin.
As far as we know, he didn't have any.
(VOICE BREAKING): Oh, that's awful.
But what he did have was he had a lot of people who went out of their way to keep him safe until he could do that for himself.
And you're one of those people.
Think you should be proud of that.
(INDISTINCT CHATTER) (WHISTLES QUIETLY) (INDISTINCT CONVERSATION) - What's up? - Bad news, fellas.
Op's cancelled.
- Do we know why? - Do we ever know why? (WHISTLES SHARPLY) ERIC: According to Mandy, turns out Hassan wasn't even in the bunker.
Meaning he got spooked, took off? Or he wasn't even there in the first place.
Thank you for your hard work.
Tell your boys to get some rest.
Back at it on Monday.
Right.
Look at it this way.
Next time Abu Hassan shows up in that bunker, we don't have to sit around and wait for a green light.
All right? Maybe we get there in time.
Right.
- Yeah - Yep.
(LOUDLY): Ca-caw! Ca-caw! Ca-caw.
What is that? Cank bird.
- There's a cank bird? - Yep.
Shows up just before an op gets canked.
Like an omen.
It's Indian.
Well, Native American.
- SONNY: Anyone else hungry? - Yeah.
GARCIA: Yeah, I'm pretty sure one of them gentlemen clubs up on 17 just started a breakfast buffet.
Well, what the hell we waiting for? Let's make it rain.
I was a friend of Nate Massey's.
I know who you are.
You worked with him.
You're not having any tea? Not yet.
- Put it in your mouth.
- I'm sorry? Hold the sugar between your teeth, and drink the tea through it.
That's how I learned to drink it when I was a little girl.
Sugar in the t Like this? (CHUCKLING) Mm-hmm.
Yeah.
Okay.
That's how you drink tea in Afghanistan? That's how my family drinks tea in Afghanistan.
Do all Americans drink their tea the same way? No.
I didn't me I'm sorry, I, uh You know what, I should probably No, I I'm sorry.
Do you want to talk about Nate?