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Home » Real Story Behind the Creation of Delta Force w/ Mike Vining@ Mike Drop Podcast (Transcript)

Real Story Behind the Creation of Delta Force w/ Mike Vining@ Mike Drop Podcast (Transcript)

Editor’s Notes: Most people know Delta Force from movies and mystery—but this is the first‑hand story from one of the original men who built it. In this episode of Mike Drop podcast, Vietnam veteran and retired Sergeant Major Mike Vining walks through a 26‑year career that spans bomb disposal in Vietnam, the creation of Delta, and some of the most consequential missions of the late 20th century. From crawling explosive‑filled tunnels in Cambodia to defusing live 500‑pound bombs inside active firebases, his calm, detailed recollections show the mindset it takes to run toward things everyone else runs away from. If you’re fascinated by special operations history, EOD, or the real human cost behind “elite units,” this conversation is going to keep you hooked for hours. (Feb 3, 2026)

TRANSCRIPT:

Introduction: The Man Behind the Legendary Photo

MIKE RITLAND: Ladies and gentlemen, it is an enormous honor and frankly humbling to have my next guest on the Mike Drop podcast. He’s a Vietnam veteran, he’s in the army for 26 years. A retired sergeant major, one of the founding members of Delta Force, and also one of the first EOD specialists. He’s participated in many of the American military operations that frankly have defined the latter part of the 20th century.

Not to mention as an explosive ordnance disposal technician and an elite special forces operator, he’s got more awards and accommodations than can really even fit on his uniform. He’s the author of the upcoming book Blasting Through, which comes in August of this year, 2026. Ladies and gentlemen, the man behind perhaps one of the greatest pictures on the Internet today, Sergeant Major Mike Vining.

MIKE VINING: Thanks for the introduction, Mike. Good to be here with you on the podcast.

MIKE RITLAND: Yeah, thanks for coming on and making the time. You know, it’s funny, I’ve seen that picture I don’t know how many times, and it never ceases to crack me up. And before we kind of get into the meat and potatoes of the interview, you know, that service uniform photo has become an Internet meme because of how kind of unassuming that you look in that photo and just the disparity or contrast between what most people would expect a guy with your career would look like versus how you come across in that photo. I’m curious, what was your first reaction when you first kind of saw it circulate?

MIKE VINING: Yeah, it started circulating on memes. I think what happened is I went on the website, Army Together We Serve, if you’re familiar with that. There’s the Air Force, Navy, Marine Corps, Coast Guard, Army Together We Serve. And I went on that and I posted that picture. That was my retirement picture I took, like, in November of 1998, and I put that on the website.

And I think some people saw it and were surprised or whatever. And so, yeah, it started circulating around on the Internet and with memes and everything, and they were just wondering who this person was because they never heard of it. Because for 20 years I was in the black side of Special Operations. So I was kind of out of sight for about 20 years, and then I just pop up. And so I think it was just a lot of speculation and curiosity.

MIKE RITLAND: Did it surprise you that it’s been as popular and prolific as it has been?

MIKE VINING: Yeah, yeah. I don’t know what people expect, what a soldier supposed to look like. You know, especially in special operations, I think they draw a lot of conclusions from all the movies that they see, these action movies, you know, and you just—we’re just average, everyday Americans.

MIKE RITLAND: Yeah. Well, I would say in terms of the way, you know, maybe the aesthetics that’s the case, but the mental component is, as I imagine you well know, there’s a pretty big distinction, and I’m looking forward to getting into your career, generally speaking, and especially, you know, being a founding member of one of the most famous units in existence.

Just before we get into that, I’m curious, what’s the last full book that you’ve read?

Reading and World War II Bomb Disposal

MIKE VINING: The last book I read, The Kaboom Boys. Elaine Peake wrote a book about her father who served in army bomb disposal. He was a captain in World War II. And so she wrote this book and so I’m reading it now called The Kaboom Boys. They’re trying to make it into a miniseries on TV.

So the book is not a biography of her father. It’s like, what would you call it? It’s a novel format, but everything happened in the book is true. Some of the, you know, her father’s name is true, but the men that served with her father have pseudo names. But you know, the other people, high ranking people, are real names. And so that’s what my last book I’m reading now.

MIKE RITLAND: Was there a specific or significant takeaway from it for you?

MIKE VINING: Well, yeah. Well, one of the things we’re trying to do with that book, Tim Gray from The World War II Foundation, who has, I don’t know, 40, 50 World War II documentaries under his belt, he now wants to do one on military bomb disposal during World War II. So hopefully we can get some funding to do the documentary. And I was asked to be one of the technical advisors on the documentary.

MIKE RITLAND: Oh, wow. That’ll be awesome. I hope that comes to fruition. It sounds awesome. If time travel were possible, where and when would you go? And why?

MIKE VINING: Time travel? I never thought of that. Where would I go? What period of time stands out? Well, you know, World War II is fascinating. And you know that was the beginning of US bomb disposal in World War II. Both the Navy and the army set up schools prior to us entering the war.