whether it was heber's or reality, in my mind, i felt no one knew that targets that as well as i did. i was going to take the necessary care to ensure that our pilots did not fly against targets that were unnecessary, that civilians would be taken care of, and that we did the best job we could, and got the targets when the job was necessary. i went in and work. i did a long shifts, 18 hours every day during the war. my compatriots at the cia, etc, and we dropped the bombs. i worked on many hundreds of air strikes. on the target sets where we were trying to kill saddam hussein, it was a limited target set. we have 50 missions -- we had 50 missions where we dropped emissions. in those 50 airstrikes, we had a grand total of zero successes. not only did we not get saddam hussein, we did not get any of the people on the deck of cards. as we went through the war, it was failure after failure. i would estimate about 250 civilians were killed in the air strikes that we did. i truly felt that we did the best job that could. and then left the pentagon on the 11th of april, 2003. this was days a