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Marine Recounts Being Trapped in Burning Vehicle Before Comrade Rescued Him Across IED Field

Shawn Ryan Show · #305 AJ Pasciuti - Marine Scout Sniper on Hunting Juba, the Deadliest Enemy Sniper in Iraq · May 18, 2026
Marine Recounts Being Trapped in Burning Vehicle Before Comrade Rescued Him Across IED Field
Shawn Ryan Show
Shawn Ryan Show
#305 AJ Pasciuti - Marine Scout Sniper on Hunting Juba, the Deadliest Enemy Sniper in Iraq
"Chris O'Connor leaves his vehicle, leaves his weapon in his vehicle, but grabs a fire extinguisher out of his vehicle and runs across the 200 yards of IED field to get to my position."
AJ Pashutti described a January 2010 incident in Afghanistan where his MRAP hit an 80-pound IED, knocking the crew unconscious and starting an electrical fire. Trapped alone in the vehicle as fire spread toward ammunition, Pashutti prepared to shoot himself rather than burn to death. Lance Corporal Chris O'Connor then ran 200 yards through a confirmed IED field with a fire extinguisher and yanked Pashutti from the vehicle moments before it would have exploded.

About this episode

In this episode of The Sean Ryan Show, host Sean Ryan interviews former Marine Scout Sniper and Reconnaissance Marine AJ Pashutti about his 21-year career spanning multiple combat deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan. Pashutti opens by discussing his new book 'Dark Horse,' describing it as a love letter to the people who shaped his military journey rather than a self-aggrandizing memoir. The son of immigrants who grew up in poverty in Northern California, Pashutti enlisted after 9/11 despite having no military background or family tradition of service. He deployed to Iraq three times, including the 2003 invasion and the brutal Battle of Fallujah in 2004, where he served as a probationary sniper. His most significant accomplishment came in June 2006 when he killed the enemy sniper known as Juba, who had been terrorizing U.S. forces using an M40A1 rifle captured from four killed Marines in 2004. Pashutti spotted a Sony Handycam in a vehicle near an observation post and engaged after a tense standoff, later discovering the rifle bore American ammunition and serial numbers. He insisted the rifle be displayed at the Marine Corps Museum under the name of the original owner, Corporal Tommy Parker, rather than his own. The conversation takes a darker turn as Pashutti recounts killing two Iraqi civilians he mistook for IED emplacers, an incident he describes as his deepest regret despite being within rules of engagement. In Afghanistan, Pashutti lost his best friend and fiercest rival, Staff Sergeant Matt Ingham, when restrictive ROE prevented Ingham from engaging 40-50 Taliban fighters who subsequently ambushed and killed him and two other Marines in January 2010. Pashutti details the impossible choice he faced that day between abandoning his position to help Ingham or staying to protect an infantry assault. Throughout, he emphasizes the bond between warfighters and criticizes politicians who send troops into ambiguous conflicts without clear objectives, while maintaining deep reverence for the 'grunts' and riflemen who bear the heaviest burden of war.

Key takeaways

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