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Chris Kyle’s Murderer NEVER Saw Combat, May Have Been a Muslim Convert


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Report: Chris Kyle’s Murderer NEVER Saw Combat, May Have Been a Muslim Convert

 

 

February 3, 2015

 By Greg Campbell

 

While Americans have long appreciated the ceaseless service Chris Kyle gave his country until the very moment of his death, it is undeniable that there has been a revival and heightening of appreciation of the work Kyle did for America both in and out of the Navy.

 

 

With the recent runaway biopic “American Sniper” dominating the box office and America’s discussion of what constitutes a hero in our society, more and more focus has been shined on Kyle, his views on Iraq and, indeed, his untimely death.

 

Few know the intimate details surrounding Kyle’s death and out of respect, few wish to dwell on them, but choose to simply remember the unyielding patriotism and dedication for which Kyle will forever be known.

 

However, as we near the trial of Kyle’s accused murderer, Eddie Routh, Americans can’t help but wonder, “Why?”

 

According to a recent report on Allen West’s website, authored by Editor-in-Chief Michele Hickford, Routh not only never saw a day of combat, but worked in close connection with Muslim inmates and expressed sympathies for how they were treated.

 

Hickford writes,

 

The “conventional wisdom” says former Navy SEAL Chris Kyle was tragically shot and killed by a former soldier suffering from PTSD.

 

But perhaps there’s another version of the story no one wants to talk about. What if Routh had been converted to militant Islam in Iraq and sought Kyle out as retribution?

 

There are some disturbing facts about Routh you most likely will have never read.

 

According to The Warfighter Foundation, it is highly unlikely Routh suffered from PTSD because he never served in battle.

 

“Eddie Routh served one tour in Iraq in 2007, at Balad Air Base (the 2nd largest U.S. installation in Iraq), with no significant events. No combat experience. Let me say that again, he NEVER SAW COMBAT or any aspect of traumatic events associated with a combat deployment (i.e. incoming mortar or rocket fire). He never left the base, EVER.”

 

The Warfighter Foundation is a non-profit organization that used the Freedom of Information act to learn more about Routh’s history.

 

“[Routh] held a non-combat arms occupation of 2111 (Small Arms Repairer/ Technician or more commonly referred to as an Armorer),” the group reported. “Balad Air Base had a Pizza Hut, 24 hour Burger King, Subway, Popeye’s, Baskin Robbins, movie theater, and even a miniature golf course. It even had a strictly enforced 10 mile per hour speed limit!”

 

While Routh never served in battle, he did work as a prison guard overseeing Muslim terrorists at Bilad Airbase. Walid Shoebat posits that Routh could have interacted with the inmates and perhaps converted to Islam.

 

While there is no proof of any conversion, Shoebat says “During a phone call with his father, Routh expressed sympathy for the detainees and discontent over how the US was conducting the war as well as his reluctance to engage in combat” and “While working as a guard at Balad Air Base, Routh laments his [Muslim] prisoners’ poor living conditions.”

 

Shoebat says, “It is a known fact that Routh’s family contacted Kyle about their son’s diminishing mental health. Routh was admitted to inpatient psychiatric treatment prior to the events at Rough Creek Ranch, according to a report from the Daily Mail.”

 

Shoebat says, “Routh had been taken to a mental hospital twice in the past five months and told authorities that he was suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, police records show.”

 

However, just saying you have PTSD is also different than actually being diagnosed. While Routh may indeed suffered mental problems, PTSD may not have been one of them.

 

Nonetheless, the media will continue to focus on PTSD, which further casts doubt on our veterans and weakens our resolve for battle.

 

But the last thing the media would ever consider is that Routh could have been a convert to Islam. It’s an interesting and discomfiting theory.

 

And then there’s the matter of his beard with trimmed moustache. Of course we can’t engage in profiling, but…

 

Of course, the trial will be far more revealing than this report; however, considering that PTSD was not, in actuality, the cause of Routh’s apparent psychosis, one has to wonder what his motivation might have been.

 

We should further consider that as militant Islamists are willing to slaughter dozens of people in a jihad against a magazine that drew a cartoon that depicted Muhammad, maybe killing “The Devil of Ramadi” who sent a confirmed 160 enemies to meet their 72 virgins might not be such a stretch of the imagination. 

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“Eddie Routh served one tour in Iraq in 2007, at Balad Air Base (the 2nd largest U.S. installation in Iraq), with no significant events. No combat experience. Let me say that again, he NEVER SAW COMBAT or any aspect of traumatic events associated with a combat deployment (i.e. incoming mortar or rocket fire). He never left the base, EVER.”

 

Hate to bust your bubble but he was a combat veteran! He was deployed in a combat zone. I spent time in numberous bases and every one of them came under indirect fire at one day or another. Plus you convoy almost everywhere you go so the convoy is also subject to attack.
 

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