Urban Valor: the podcast
Before Dustin Chappel ever stepped onto the battlefield, he had already spent his childhood fighting to survive. Separated from his mother at just two years old, Dustin endured years of abuse, instability, homelessness, and constant moves before eventually dropping out of school and earning his GED. After witnessing the attacks of September 11th, he felt called to serve and joined the U.S. Army as a 12B Combat Engineer. During two deployments to Iraq, Dustin conducted route-clearance missions, hunted insurgents, executed raids alongside infantry units, and survived some of the most dangerous streets in Baghdad. He describes a deployment where every patrol felt like "Russian roulette," facing complex ambushes, sniper fire, RPGs, and one of the most disturbing traps of the entire war... a body rigged to explode. But this story doesn't end on the battlefield. Dustin opens up about the sniper round that was meant for him, dragging his wounded squad leader out of the line of fire, and the long road home — his fight with PTSD, checking himself into treatment, rebuilding his life, and the work he does today mentoring fellow veterans. 👍 Like this video to support and show appreciation. 🗣️ Comment your support or ask any questions. Sometimes, our interviewees respond, and we at Urban Valor will do our best to respond as well! ✅ SUBSCRIBE to support Urban Valor and the courageous Veterans who tell their stories AND so you NEVER miss a weekly episode of our veteran stories. New stories every Sunday! Your engagement greatly supports our mission to share authentic and impactful veteran stories. ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ CHAPTERS 0:00 The Baghdad alleyway ambush (cold open) 1:15 Meet Dustin Chappel — Staff Sergeant, US Army 1:30 A chaotic childhood: Alabama, California & family separation 4:47 Reunited with his mother, sent to Texas 9:24 Dropping out, Job Corps & earning his GED 11:28 Joining the National Guard 16:50 Why he enlisted: where he was on 9/11 18:42 First tour, Iraq 2003 — weapons caches & munitions 21:12 The gate lesson from the future Sergeant Major of the Army 23:33 Second tour 2006: "Russian roulette every single day" 26:11 The brutal IED training range in Kuwait 28:45 The combat plane dive into Baghdad 30:40 16 days in — the shot that was meant for him 32:30 Complex ambush & the M203 through the window 36:03 The alleyway rescue — shells down his squad leader's back 41:04 Sergeant Clary gets shot 44:53 Picking up bodies & the body-borne IED 47:42 The promotion board — making Staff Sergeant 51:16 The pillowcase hostage rescue 54:56 The taxi driver shot in the head 58:27 The 7-foot plywood rifle punishment 1:02:47 His brother in Iraq — the Apache pilot 1:05:58 Coming home & the hardest transition 1:06:46 College, and the flag speech that changed everything 1:09:36 Recognizing the PTSD symptoms 1:12:49 Checking himself into treatment 1:15:57 Meeting his wife & starting to heal 1:18:32 Helping veterans today at Grand Canyon University 1:20:18 Becoming a grandfather & his message to live for today ━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━ #VeteranStories #IraqWar #ArmyVeteran #CombatEngineer DISCLAIMER: The views and experiences shared in this interview are those of the individual and are recounted from personal memory.
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