Hd13 Hours- The Secret Soldiers Of Benghazi May 2026

But the mortar team had already adjusted their aim. A 120mm round—the kind used by conventional armies, not militias—slammed into the roof directly behind Rone.

The drive to the SMC was a gauntlet of hell. Streets that were quiet an hour ago were now alive with armed men in pickup trucks, waving black flags. The GRS drove with no lights, using night vision goggles to navigate the debris-strewn roads. Rone, in the lead vehicle, spotted a technical (a truck with a mounted machine gun) blocking the main road. "Hold on," he growled, and swerved through an alley, shattering a fruit cart.

Among them was Jack Silva, a former SEAL sniper with tired eyes and a quiet laugh. Tyrone "Rone" Woods, a towering former SEAL with a warrior’s heart and a father’s tenderness. Mark "Oz" Geist, a rugged Marine veteran who moved with the slow, deliberate caution of a man who had seen too much. And John "Tig" Tiegen, a no-nonsense contractor who trusted only his brothers. HD13 Hours- The Secret Soldiers of Benghazi

The GRS had failed to save them. The weight of that failure would crush any other men. But the night was not over.

Oz Geist took a second round, this time to the arm, shattering the bone. Tig was hit in the back by a piece of shrapnel. But they didn’t stop. They couldn’t. They dragged Rone’s body inside, covered him with a flag, and went back to the wall. But the mortar team had already adjusted their aim

At 12:05 AM, September 12, the second wave began.

The men guarding the Annex were not uniformed soldiers. They were ghosts—former Navy SEALs, Delta Force operators, and Marine Raiders who had traded their service stripes for polo shirts, tactical jeans, and Glocks hidden under untucked shirts. They were the Global Response Staff (GRS). Their official job was "diplomatic security." Their real job was to be the last line of steel between the Agency and the abyss. Streets that were quiet an hour ago were

And that is the secret of the 13 Hours: that in the darkest night, in a forgotten city, a handful of men with no official backup, no air support, and no hope of survival decided that the only thing that mattered was the man to their left and the man to their right. They did not win the war. But they won the hour.