He thinks the most frightening thing would be not being able to plan. People used to talk about the great courage of my teams that would do these night raids, get on helicopters, and go right into enemy positions. And that’s scary. But we chose the time and place. We got our minds straight as we went in. I think of the young private on a checkpoint in Baghdad, waiting for someone to drive up with a vehicle-borne [improvised explosive device], just to blow up that checkpoint, and that private doesn’t control that. He can’t shoot everybody that comes near him, because most people are absolutely innocent. That private has almost no control and lots of time on his hands to think. When I look at courage, I look at the 18-year-old kid from you-name-it America, standing out there doing that. He doesn’t get to focus, analyze the Intel, and plan. He’s just out there, and we ask him to be brave. That’s pretty humbling.