Navy SEAL who killed bin Laden says America's 250th proves hard work still pays, warns of 'victimhood' culture
Former U.S. Navy SEAL Robert O'Neill, who is credited with killing Usama bin Laden, reflected on America's 250th anniversary, praising opportunities for those willing to work hard while urging Americans to preserve the nation's values amid what he described as a growing hatred of its history.
"As we come up on our 250th anniversary of being the greatest country ever, it's just the opportunity here from my personal experience that reminds me, and I almost get to a point where I'm jealous of younger men that were my age when I joined because they literally have the world at their fingertips," O'Neill told Fox News Digital.
"You can do anything, seriously, in this country."
O'Neill, who served with SEAL Team 6 during Operation Neptune Spear, the 2011 raid that killed the al Qaeda mastermind and chief, encouraged more young people to step outside their comfort zones and contribute to America’s success.
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"I'm able to attribute a lot of my successes in life simply because I left the house," he said. "I went to join the military, and I did. In this country, I just proved you can do anything by not doing one thing. I just didn't stop. I never quit."
Looking back on his service, O'Neill said it was a "great honor" to leave home, rise through the ranks on merit, and earn a place on a team chosen solely on ability, calling his experience an example of "the greatness of the country."
"That team was proof of equal opportunity," he said. "You have an equal opportunity to try out, but you're gonna be tested every day, and if you don't pass, we're just gonna get rid of you. But the team was built because of this country, and the country has the ability to do that over and over again."
As millions prepare to celebrate the anniversary, O'Neill acknowledged that not everyone views the milestone positively, blaming a growing "victimhood" mindset for turning people away from the nation's history.
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"Part of the issue is we stop teaching our kids the past, and we're actually raising a lot of victims," he said. "I don't know why the victimhood is here. Maybe it's because the country is so great, we have to look back on the past and invent problems, and that's what we're doing right now."
A driving force behind this growing disdain is "institutional cowardice," according to O'Neill, who warned that "if we keep importing the enemy and won't call it what it is," the country risks deeper political division and, ultimately, "civil war."
"We're at a place right now of institutional cowardice where we're importing people based on untruths because people in political positions know that they'll vote for them if they keep doing what they're doing," he said.
"Once that base starts growing, they're going to get rid of what was referred to by communists as the 'useful idiots.' It's growing right now. I mean, it's almost ironic that we can look over the ocean at Great Britain on an anniversary from a country where we gained independence, and it's not like looking at another nation. We're looking at a glimpse into our future."
O'Neill said the nation loses its strength despite its ability to "win anything with force," arguing America would need to "import the enemy in order to lose."
"We're seeing right now that we can win anything with force, but we need to import the enemy in order to lose," he said. "What I mean by that is if we get infiltrated, pound for pound, we're never gonna lose a fight. Instead of telling the truth, we just try to appease. That's what we're seeing right now. We win the wars that we're in until we involve too many laws that we make up ourselves."
But O'Neill said America can continue to succeed if it preserves its founding values, saying the country is "fragile" as "it's still an experiment."
Pointing to the British, Persian, and Ottoman empires as examples of powerful nations that eventually declined, O’Neill said America's 250-year run does not guarantee its future and people "need to reflect on our great nation and how it's very important that we keep it that way."
"We gotta realize that the American project, the experiment that it is, it's still worth continuing, and it's good to see that we made it 250 years, but also keep in mind, that's usually the lifetime of most empires," he said.
O'Neill said people should not take the country's freedoms and opportunities for granted, saying he has seen "true poverty and real dictators" and that "it's a blessing" to be here.
"We need to realize that we have been padded by two oceans, the Pacific and the Atlantic, and you don't want to do the whole 'don't know what you got until it's gone,' because this country is great," he said.