Friend,
I’ll be honest - it’s been a tough week…

I lost two legs and a finger serving our country in Afghanistan. Now, with the six month anniversary of Joe Biden abandoning our allies and betraying the thousands of men and women like me who sacrificed tremendously in pursuit of peace, it’s easy to get disheartened…
 
I’ve been fighting on my two metal legs to get accountability. But some days it feels like nobody is fighting beside me. It can feel that way because after 6 months, Biden still hasn’t been forced to resign, impeached or even acknowledged responsibility at all.  
 
Not to mention the fact that Democrats in Congress are giving him the green light to SHRED the evidence we need to hold him accountable.  
 
That’s why I’m reaching out. I need backup, and I’m hoping you’ll fight beside me. Can I count on you?
If you’ll indulge a slightly longer email, please let me explain why this is a particularly heart-wrenching disaster for me…
 
On the evening of September 19, 2010, I was moving across the battlefield in Kandahar, Afghanistan narrowing in on a high-value target. As a bomb tech, it was my job to clear the way for the rest of our team by finding and disposing of any improvised bombs. 
 
That was the night I discovered the last explosive device I ever found by stepping on it. I remember every moment of the explosion, down to my teeth rattling so hard I wasn’t sure that they were still in my mouth. The next thing I knew, I was in Walter Reed National Military Medical Center. I looked down to the end of my bed where my feet should have been sticking up, but they weren’t. 
 
Every day since when I wake up I am reminded of my time in Afghanistan. The remnants of this war are going to last me the rest of my life, but I am one of the lucky ones—I made it home.  
 
6 months ago Joe Biden sentenced thousands of Afghans who were our friends and allies to death. He got Americans killed and abandoned others behind enemy lines. He has not learned the most important commitment of our soldiers: we do not leave men or women behind.  
 
 
Another lesson I learned in the Army is that nobody can do it alone: we need our whole team to work together, especially when there are life or death consequences on the line. That’s why I’m determined to stay in the fight for freedom now. Even if my injury cut short my time on the battlefield in Afghanistan, I am going to keep fighting to protect my fellow soldiers and our allies.
 
To do that, we must come together to defeat Joe Biden, elect more conservative veterans to Congress and restore the America First agenda that President Trump championed.
 
Thank you in advance for your support. I need it this week more than you could possibly know.
Sincerely,
SSG Brian Mast, U.S. Army (ret.)