
Chris Kyle is pictured on a training course for Craft International, the company he started after leaving the Navy. Credit: Courtesy of 5.11, a tactical gear and equipment company
Chris Kyle is a legend among U.S. Navy SEALs, where he earned the reputation as the most deadly sniper in all of American history. The true legacy of Chris Kyle, however, is less well known because it was shaped off the battlefield, outside of the public eye.
This is the legacy of a man who made it his life’s mission to help others, giving selflessly to live up to his own personal creed of service to his fellow man. Tragically, Kyle and fellow veteran Chad Littlefield lost their lives in service to that high ideal, shot by a troubled war veteran they were trying to help.
“Chris lived by a professional motto: ‘It is our duty to serve those who serve us.’ And he and Chad died honoring this creed,” Kyle’s brother, Jeff Kyle, said from TheBlaze’s Dallas studio on Monday.
Recipient of two Silver Stars, five Bronze Stars With Valor, two Navy and Marine Corps Achievement medals and one Navy and Marine Corps commendation, Kyle served four tours of duty in Iraq where he earned the nickname “the Devil of Ramadi” from insurgents for his deadly accuracy.
He returned home an American hero, and he died a hero. Kyle, 38, and Littlefield, 35, were killed on Saturday, Feb. 2, 2013, by a troubled veteran they were reportedly trying to help cope with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). He wasn’t trying to “treat” the troubled vet, he was simply trying to be a brother to a fellow serviceman who was having a hard time. Kyle proudly talked about regularly taking soldiers suffering from physical or emotional issues on hunting trips and other outdoor activities to provide comradery, friendship and support.
Littlefield, also a proud veteran, died selflessly trying to help a struggling veteran and serving alongside his close friend Kyle.
“Chad felt deeply about the values of family, compassion, friendship and loyalty, and was equally as passionate about his love of God and country,” read a statement prepared by the Littlefield family. “[He] died supporting his trusted friend Chris Kyle and a troubled veteran.”
And while many continue to focus on Kyle’s legendary military career, those who knew and loved him remain mystified by his huge heart and selfless character. His brother described him as an “amazing, loving father, husband, son, brother, friend and devout Christian who had a profound effect on the lives of those that he touched.”
Instead of retiring and settling down following his service as a Navy SEAL, Kyle dedicated his life to helping struggling veterans. In fact, just days before he died, Kyle told the Texan News Service that he wanted to be remembered as someone “who stood up for what he believed in and helped make a difference for the vets.” He didn’t brag about his impeccable record as a SEAL, how many kills he tallied overseas, or the many lives he ultimately saved.
Above all, he wanted his legacy to be about how he served others.
Listen to what is believed to be Kyle’s last interview before his death:
A perfect reflection of his character, Kyle gave all proceeds from his best-selling book “American Sniper” to the families of soldiers killed in combat. He told the Texan News Service that he regularly received tearful calls and thanks from military families.
“That means the world to me,” Kyle said in a recent interview. “There’s definitely still a lot of hurt from losing my guys or the fact that I got out and I felt like it wasn’t my time yet…Being able to do this makes me feel like I’m still a part of it and still giving back.”
Former Navy SEAL Marcus Luttrell on Monday referred to Kyle as the greatest SEAL he ever had the opportunity to serve with, on and off the battlefield.
“This man went above and beyond the call of duty,” he said. “Not only was he a volunteer in the military — to give service while we were in combat, then he volunteered to be in the SEAL teams, he volunteered again to be in the sniper program. And then once he was discharged, he took all of that energy and started giving back to the veterans that weren’t fairing so well.”
“What do you say about a guy like that? That’s a pretty selfless act,” he added. “Not many people have that in their heart…I miss you bro.”
Upon returning from the Navy, Kyle also founded Craft International, a military and law enforcement training company, and co-founded the FITCO Cares Foundation and other charitable events benefiting wounded and disabled veterans returning from combat.
He expressed a strong desire to spend more time at home with his wife, Taya, and their two kids, but felt as though he had an obligation to continue giving back to his fellow servicemen and women.
“Chris was a true American hero, having devoted his life to serving his country in combat as a member of the United States Navy SEALs and in training our military and law enforcement personnel after leaving the Navy,” Jeff Kyle said on behalf of the Kyle family on Monday. “We’re all saddened by his tragic death and America has truly lost one of its finest sons and a true patriot.”
Though his life was tragically cut short at age 38, Kyle gave more of himself to others and his country than most people can hope for in an entire lifetime.
Glenn Beck’s charity Mercury One has raised more than $128,000 from individuals wanting to honor Kyle. To donate to Mercury One’s Chris Kyle fund, click here.
To donate by mail:
Mercury One
PO Box 140489
Irving, TX 75014
Make checks payable to Mercury one but in the memo field please write “Chris Kyle Fund.”
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Related:
- Family of Slain Navy SEAL Chris Kyle Issues First Statement on Kyle’s Death: ‘America Has Truly Lost One of Its Finest Sons’
- Sister of Vet Charged in Murder of Slain SEAL Chris Kyle Told 911 Operator Her Brother Was ‘Psychotic’
- Timeline Begins to Emerge as More Details of Former Sniper Chris Kyle’s Murder Released: Here’s the Latest






















































































































TheCorsair
Feb. 7, 2013 at 9:41amKyle was no hero.
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Stockoneder
Feb. 7, 2013 at 9:27amKyle was no hero. He was a mass murderer who enjoyed killing. Hero’s don’t hurt people they help them and hero’s aren’t paid for what they do. If your job, a job you get paid to do, is to murder people how does murdering a lot of people make you a hero? To call Kyle a hero is nothing but statist propaganda.
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TheCorsair
Feb. 7, 2013 at 9:44amExactly. The cognitive dissonance of this statement: “This is the legacy of a man who made it his life’s mission to help others, giving selflessly to live up to his own personal creed of service to his fellow man,” is laughable. This man’s life mission was to kill people the State told him to kill. Serving his fellow man. Too funny.
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TexasTundra
Feb. 7, 2013 at 11:26amSo, you guys think a g roup of people that get their jollies amputating female body parts and murdering their sisters or daughters for refusing to be sold in “marriage” to the rich old pervert down the street don’t deserve to die? I got a newsflash-Chris’s targets died much more easily then the hostages beheaded on video with a dull blade!
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mb54
Feb. 7, 2013 at 9:56pmActually his mission was to save people if you cannot understand that you are looking at the world in absolutes.
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DoePop
Feb. 6, 2013 at 6:13pmChris took the killer with him and Chad because the killer’s mother had ask Chris to help her son!!!
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Grizzlyof5
Feb. 5, 2013 at 11:52pmOur prayers go out to his family. He was indeed a true Patriot and we will never know how many lives he truly touched and saved through his service to our country. May God bless his wife and children!
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kalayaan
Feb. 5, 2013 at 8:09pmA great loss for America…my sincere condolence to the family and loved ones…
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Stelex
Feb. 5, 2013 at 7:45pmPaulbot fest ……it’s like a bunch of hyena’s feasting on a dead carcass. Wow…………welcome to the jungle folks
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jadams1214
Feb. 5, 2013 at 7:54pm@STELEX I won’t get into the RP arguments but can you explain to me how taking a man released from a mental hospital a week ago to a shooting range is a good idea. I think Kyle and his friend are lucky that no innocent people at that range were killed. Kyle made a bad choice and it came back to get him but the other people at that range were exposed to it through no fault of their own. He of all people should know better.
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Stelex
Feb. 5, 2013 at 8:26pmObviously you have no “friends” and yes sometimes people surprise you. He was trying to help a fellow warrior. Was it a mistake …… obviously. But when you can tell someone is nuts you let me know. Because its and in exact science. Psychology is and imperfect science like it or not. If you’re so scared you wanna go down the road of labeling people prior to any act. Just on someones hunch. Yeah, good luck with that, I suspect you’ll be interred rapidly.
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jadams1214
Feb. 5, 2013 at 8:39pm@STELEX I won’t pretend to know the relationship between Kyle and the killer but if they were “friends” then surely Kyle knew of his recent mental history. If the man was not a “friend” then he took a stranger to a shooting range and put a gun in his hand. Either way he put innocent people in harms way with bad judgement.
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MAnn33
Feb. 7, 2013 at 11:22am@ Stelex.Agree with you. And to others how could you disrepct a man who served his country and died in it.We will never know the whole story. Dont judge. Too many haters. And we wonder why our country is falling apart. Not “One Nation” anymore
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jadams1214
Feb. 5, 2013 at 7:39pmIn another article posted on the blaze the killer’s sister says he was released from a mental hospital about a week ago. Who in their right mind brings a guy from a mental hospital to a shooting range for therapy. So much for responsible gun owner. Maybe Ron Paul was right.
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imperative
Feb. 5, 2013 at 7:59pmI want to give Chris the benefit of the doubt that he put forth efforts to ensure that it was a safe situation. But ultimately whatever caution he exercised was unfortunately not enough. Everyone makes mistakes, but sadly his was a very costly one.
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DTAP12
Feb. 5, 2013 at 9:37pmWho said Chris Kyle knew this guy had been to a mental hospital? Everything out there says Rouths mother approached kyle to help her son. You have no idea if Chris knew or not.
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jadams1214
Feb. 6, 2013 at 5:43am@DTAP12 If Kyle didn”t know the man well enough to know his mental history he also didn’t know him well enough to put a gun in his hand. Irresponsible either way you look at it.
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mb54
Feb. 6, 2013 at 12:10pmA great American was shot in the back by a lunatic. Try putting your blame on the shooter for once. We don’t even know what happened yet. At the very worst he was killed donating his time trying to help someone. But ya lets sit here and say how he was wrong for that.
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imperative
Feb. 6, 2013 at 2:25pmNo one is suggesting that the shooter isn’t the one to blame.
At the same time, it’s clear that Kyle made a mistake in judgement to take him there. This shouldn’t offend anyone. We all make mistakes, only most of ours don’t cost us our lives. He afforded this guy a measure of trust, and while commendable, it produced a tragic result.
This isn’t an attack on Kyle. It’s just a simple observation.
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mb54
Feb. 7, 2013 at 9:31amActually some people are suggesting that. Which is nothing new with the media which always looks for blame on why something happened and they never look to the person who actually is the cause.
Also veterans with PTSD don’t shoot other veterans. This man was mentally ill and the media is trying to call it PTSD. Americans currently don’t wanna address the mental illness issue and all the pills people are popping.
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Ming The Merciless
Feb. 5, 2013 at 7:30pmWhy did Kyle say he punched out Jesse Ventura. I haven’t heard Beck delve into that topic.
Why would Kyle say that he did when he didn’t?
Is lying honorable?
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mb54
Feb. 6, 2013 at 12:13pmBecause he did.
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TexasTundra
Feb. 7, 2013 at 11:29amHe punched out Ventura for saying he hated America, for saying another SEAL deserved to die because Bush was a war criminal, and for claiming to be a SEAL who served in Vietnam when he was a UDT who never got closer than the Philippines.
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Mil-Dot
Feb. 5, 2013 at 6:27pmHe was training SWAT goons to shoot Americans. Enough said.
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imperative
Feb. 5, 2013 at 7:26pm@MIL-DOT
This was my biggest concern as well. If indeed we ought to be wary of tyrannical government, then shouldn’t we be concerned that he was giving sniper training to domestic police forces?
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One-of-the-few
Feb. 7, 2013 at 3:34amMIL-DOT,
Just so we are perfectly clear, you would prefer a bunch of untrained men with guns responding to a hostage scenario or shootout thus significantly increasing the amount of collateral damage and civcas?
If the old saying “ignorance is bliss” has any factual basis, then you must be on cloud 9.
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imperative
Feb. 5, 2013 at 6:21pmI get that Chris Kyle was a brave and decent man, and that this is without a doubt a horrible tragedy. But why is TheBlaze posing article, after article, after article about him?
Let’s honor those who sacrifice their lives for our country, but let’s not deify them.
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Mil-Dot
Feb. 5, 2013 at 6:29pmCheck out the Blaze, flattening posts that don’t meet the glorification standards on Kyle. Yeah, I believe only one post so far on this story. Yeah right. What happened to the other 200 posts. Thought so.
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Tyler520
Feb. 5, 2013 at 6:47pmnobody is ‘deifying’ anyone, freak.
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Tyler520
Feb. 5, 2013 at 6:48pmsimmer down, freak – stop spamming the post.
Oh, and wipe your face – Ron Paul’s semen is dripping down your chin
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imperative
Feb. 5, 2013 at 7:17pm@Tyler520
Why does this offend you? Don’t you agree that we ought not heap too much praise on any one individual, but should instead keep a balanced perspective?
And why do you use grotesque, pornographic imagery to make your point?
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Stelex
Feb. 5, 2013 at 7:42pmImp…….thats what you portray. Very simple as are you.
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imperative
Feb. 5, 2013 at 7:55pm@Stelex
In what manner? Please explain what you mean. Do you have a disagreement with my original post?
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Stelex
Feb. 5, 2013 at 8:31pmWhat????? You deify your lord and master at every post. A couple articles about a true American hero puts a hair across your A$$?? You don’t have a clue as to whats happening in this country. You don’t. You really Don’t .
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imperative
Feb. 5, 2013 at 8:59pm@Stelex
Who is my lord and master? I honestly don’t know what or who you’re talking about. And I really can’t figure out why you seem so angry.
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AUsername
Feb. 5, 2013 at 9:59pmyeah i show respect for people who innovate or create things to help others not people who take away lives.
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mb54
Feb. 6, 2013 at 12:07pmIf you don’t understand it read his book. A trully amazing and heroic American.
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imperative
Feb. 6, 2013 at 2:33pm@MB54
I’m certain you’re correct and that he was an exceptional person, and certainly worthy of recognition. But for the amount of coverage of this, and the hostile reaction of some to the most innocuous comments, it really seems that Kyle is being lifted up higher than I would imagine he would want.
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Mil-Dot
Feb. 5, 2013 at 6:19pmI am sure that Kyle was a good soldier. That is not in question here. But, if he was training SWAT goons to pick us off, then, well, good riddance. I did not know the man. His skill is unquestioned. His bravery, exemplary. But his discretion is a riddle. . I understand that people need money to live and pay the bills. He was simply marketing his knowledge and getting paid for it. But, I would NEVER teach govt goons how to shoot Americans. That is what he was doing. Only God can judge a man. I cannot. He was a better man than me. But I just couldn’t side with the oppressors against the people.
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DTAP12
Feb. 5, 2013 at 9:42pmBasically anyone could go to the courses taught by craft.
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DoePop
Feb. 6, 2013 at 6:26pmYou idiots who are condemning Chris don’t know JackSh**!!!!!.. I’ve saw him grow up!!! He was very close friends with my son and daughter in law before he was famous!!! Knew that kid and his brother when they were throwing bags of corn into backs of trucks… Working for their dad!!! He was in FFA and the Rodeo club at school.. Jeeeeeez have some class!!!!!
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