The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Sept. 11 led Saddler to be a SEAL, a Senate candidate

- Patricia Murphy

Latham Saddler was a freshman at the University of Georgia on Sept. 11, 2001, when he watched the second plane hit the World Trade Center.

His roommate’s mother had called after the first plane struck the first tower to say something terrible had happened in New York City.

The attacks that day not only set the country on a path to war, they also sent an entire generation of young Americans from their dorm rooms to battlefiel­ds, looking for a way to fight back against what they had seen.

One of those was Latham Saddler.

“I was military age. I was a good athlete growing up, and I thought, ‘I should serve,’ ” Saddler said in an interview in his Atlanta office.

That decision eventually led to a commission as a Navy SEAL, deployment­s to Afghanista­n and Iraq, an assignment in the Trump White House to the National Security Council, and now, a run for United States Senate.

He’s one of four Republican­s running for the nomination to challenge U.S. Sen. Raphael Warnock, including Air Force Academy graduate Kelvin King.

Like many veterans today, Saddler still points to 9/11 as the beginning of the path he’s on now. But it wasn’t a direct route.

Already enrolled at UGA, he says he looked to transfer to

West Point or the Naval Academy, but was told he’d have to start over as a freshman the following year.

He researched other options and decided to become a Navy SEAL. But the elite special forces unit would require a serious resume, so Saddler ran for student body president as a sophomore and won.

He moved to New York after graduation to get profession­al experience and met a former SEAL who helped young recruits prepare to apply for admission.

“He said, ‘You don’t have a ‘blank’-ing chance of getting selected,” Saddler remembered. “It really was like having a humble pie just smashed in the face.”

So he went on to spend the next seven years working to have a better-thanblank’ing chance of getting in.

Saddler moved back to Georgia Tech’s Sam Nunn school for a master’s degree in internatio­nal affairs. He studied the Iranian language of Farsi, as well as Dari, which is spoken in Afghanista­n. He moved to Tajikistan for 10 months for language training and spent two more traveling through “all of the other ‘Stans’ except Pakistan,” before applying.

By then, the United States had invaded not just Afghanista­n, but Iraq, too. The wars that began with a flurry of patriotic intensity had started to drag on as more and more Americans lost their lives.

“But I wanted to be in the fight and I knew that the SEALS were in the fight,” he said. By the time he made it through SEAL training, he was 29 years old.

He deployed to Afghanista­n, where his team conducted night-time “capture missions.” Since he spoke Dari, it was Saddler’s job to get informatio­n

from Taliban fighters.

“I would question the guys that we would roll up and ask them, ‘Where are the weapons?’ ”

His later deployment­s to Iraq focused on training Iraqi Special Forces for the sorts of missions against ISIS that the SEALS conducted around the world.

Even as the wars dragged on, especially in Afghanista­n, he said his team continued to focus on the events of Sept. 11.

“Part of the mindset too was, ‘We haven’t had another 9/11. And we’re

gonna keep it that way.’ ”

His final assignment in the Navy was as the director for intelligen­ce programs to the National Security Council, just after Donald Trump was sworn into office.

He calls deploying for the Special Forces and then working the other end of the missions from the White House “a blessing, because I experience­d both so that’s really shaped the way I view things as a national security leader.”

It was also a significan­t part of his decision to run for the Senate.

He’d already moved back to Georgia to be closer to his family, but the events of 2020, including the deep divisions between Americans themselves, pushed him into the race.

“As a national security guy, I was already concerned about our external threats,” he said. “But to watch just the way we started dysfunctio­ning last year, it was a feeling very similar to the conviction that I felt after 9/11 to do something.”

Looking back on the 20 years since the attacks on the World Trade Center, the costs of the wars in Afghanista­n and Iraq have been impossibly high.

More than 4,000 American service members were killed in Afghanista­n, including 13 in the final days of American operations there. More than 2,000 died in Iraq.

I think frequently about the ones who died and the lives they left behind.

I wonder if the political leaders who sent them to war then would do the same thing again.

But some of the same young people who watched the planes hit the Trade Center are veterans now, intimately familiar with the costs of war and how to fight them. And, like Saddler, they’re running for office to be on the other end of the decisions the next time around.

“This is going to be a really hard anniversar­y for a lot of Americans, given what’s just transpired,” Saddler said of the American withdrawal from Afghanista­n, which he called a debacle.

But he tells his fellow veterans they did their jobs. And the United States military could topple the Taliban in less than the two months it took in 2001 if necessary.

“I wish I could get on the loudspeake­r and tell the Taliban, ‘Don’t forget how quickly we can come and knock you right back out of there again.’ ”

he first half of 2021 proved promising for Savannah’s beleaguere­d economy. While the tourism industry hasn’t quite recovered to what it was before COVID19 disrupted life, growth in the logistics and manufactur­ing industries boosted the Coastal Empire’s workforce during the first half of 2021, according to the “Economic Monitor,” a quarterly report from Georgia Southern University.

The monitor has been put out four times a year since 2000 and is aimed at helping businesses and elected leaders understand the current economic landscape.

“The economy is pretty much close to recovered, but that recovery is not uniform across different sectors,” said Michael Toma, Ph.D., GSU’s Fuller E. Callaway Professor of Economics, who compiles the reports.

The Coastal Empire has added 27,000 jobs since April 2020, when the job market was at its lowest. This brings employment to 99% of what it was in Savannah-Chatham in February 2020, just before the pandemic grabbed hold of Georgia.

But the rise of the COVID-19 delta variant paints a murkier future than the positive recovery Savannah and her neighbors have seen since January.

“Delta, I think, is going to constrain that growth a little bit in the near term,” Toma said.

The success of the ports helped carry the area’s economy during the worst of the pandemic’s impact, Toma added. “Port growth has been a real stalwart of the regional economy over the last year and a half, its employment level is roughly 14% higher now than it was pre-pandemic.”

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 ?? COURTESY ?? “This (Sept. 11) is going to be a really hard anniversar­y for a lot of Americans, given what’s just transpired,” Latham Saddler said of the American withdrawal from Afghanista­n.
COURTESY “This (Sept. 11) is going to be a really hard anniversar­y for a lot of Americans, given what’s just transpired,” Latham Saddler said of the American withdrawal from Afghanista­n.
 ?? EMILY GOLDMAN/GEORGIA PORTS AUTHORITY ?? November 2020 was the Port of Savannah’s busiest month on record. Growth in the logistics and manufactur­ing industries boosted the Coastal Empire’s workforce during the first half of 2021, according to the “Economic Monitor.”
EMILY GOLDMAN/GEORGIA PORTS AUTHORITY November 2020 was the Port of Savannah’s busiest month on record. Growth in the logistics and manufactur­ing industries boosted the Coastal Empire’s workforce during the first half of 2021, according to the “Economic Monitor.”

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