By  Asher Price  AMERICAN-STATESMAN STAFF
    Updated: 5:38 a.m. Wednesday, May 4, 2011
Published: 9:57 p.m. Tuesday, May 3, 2011
A   demolition whiz, an expert parachutist and diver, a pilot of    mini-submarines and, at one point, an aspiring journalist if Rambo were a    Renaissance man, and a lot thinner and taller, he might look like  Bill   McRaven.
Long   before he devised the strategy for how to capture or  kill Osama bin   Laden, McRaven began preparing for a career as a  super-commando while   he was an undergraduate at the University of Texas.
McRaven,    55  and now a vice admiral, had been something of a bin Laden hunter    for at least a half-dozen years before successfully directing the  attack   Sunday as the leader of the Joint Special Operations Command.
McRaven,    who hails from San Antonio, began preparing for his storied career   with  the Navy SEALs, the elite special operations forces, while still a    member of the Reserve Officers' Training Corps at UT, from which he    graduated in 1977 as a journalism major.
"He   had drive," said  James Gruetzner, who was in the same Navy ROTC   battalion as McRaven. "He  went on extraordinarily long runs to stay in   shape. He was very  dedicated."
McRaven   grew up in a military family — his father, a  former football player,   had served as a pilot in World War II — and  early outings as a   10-year-old to scuba dive at the YMCA put him on the  Navy path, said   his sister  Nan McRaven, an Austin public affairs  consultant who serves   on the board of Austin Community College.
"He    became  very focused on SEAL training," said Curtis Raetz, who also   was  in the ROTC battalion. "He was able to lap us all no matter how   hard we  tried."
Students aiming to become SEALs were "fanatical" about physical training, said Greg Colchin, another member of the battalion.
"People    think of it as a physical thing, but it's also a mental thing," said    Nan McRaven, who said her brother has loved to read ever since their    mother compelled him to recite poetry as a boy. "He's focused, and he    has the humility for real leadership."
Eventually   he would become a  qualified diver, parachutist, demolition expert and   submersible pilot.  He also had smarts. He earned a master's degree in   national security  affairs,  and in 1995, he wrote "Spec Ops: Case   Studies in Special  Operations Warfare Theory and Practice," in which he   developed his own  definition of a special operation as one "conducted   by forces specially  trained, equipped, and supported for a specific   target whose  destruction, elimination, or rescue (in the case of   hostages), is a  political or military imperative."
Nominating   McRaven for a fourth  star this year, Defense Secretary Robert Gates   said the Joint Special  Operations Command "ruthlessly and effectively   (took) the fight to  American's most dangerous and vicious enemies."
At   its head was  McRaven, who "is reputed to be the smartest SEAL that   ever lived. He is  physically tough, compassionate and can drive a knife   through your ribs  in a nanosecond," a former commander told Newsweek   in 2004.
He    also has shown a capacity for contrition. In April 2010, a couple of    months after a special forces  team mistakenly killed an Afghan police    chief, a prosecutor and three unarmed women, McRaven pleaded for    forgiveness from a local patriarch, bringing with him an offering of two    sheep as part of a custom to make amends.
That followed McRaven's decision to tamp down commando raids in Afghanistan to avoid civilian deaths.
Whatever    successes he achieved remained outstripped by the specter of bin   Laden,  whose elimination, to use McRaven's own word, remained an   "imperative."
As    long ago as 2004, having already commanded the team that helped   capture  Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein — soldiers based at Fort Hood   also were  involved — he turned his attention to capturing Public Enemy   No. 1.
But he was stymied until this spring, when intelligence officers determined that bin Laden was in hiding in Pakistan.
McRaven    spent weeks working with the CIA on the commando operation, The New    York Times has reported, coming up with three options: a helicopter    assault using American commandos, a strike with B-2 bombers that would    obliterate the compound or a joint raid with Pakistani intelligence    operatives who would be told about the mission hours before the launch.
The decision, to swoop in with a crew of American commandos, was in keeping with McRaven's view of special operations.
In    2001 congressional testimony on military training, McRaven described    the two primary missions of Navy SEALs: "Reconnaissance and what we  call   direct action: raids, ambushes, swimmer sneak attacks and optical    clearance for amphibious landings," he said. "Most of these missions    originate from the water and require us to work in small units, behind    enemy lines at night, with little or no outside support."