This study examines how William McRaven’s Special Operations Theory and Jim Storr’s human-centric perspective from The Human Face of War can be used as analytical tools to understand the tactical execution of the 2011 Operation Neptune Spear. While McRaven outlines six key principles: surprise, speed, security, simplicity, repetition and purpose that aim to generate relative superiority in special operations, Storr emphasizes the unpredictable and human nature of warfare. The purpose of the study is to consume both theories in order to structure and interpret empirical material regarding how the operation unfolded in practice, with a particular focus on human factors such as stress, initiative, and improvisation. Through a qualitative theory-consuming single-case study design, empirical material primarily from firsthand accounts and military analyses is organized according to McRaven’s principles with Storr’s concepts integrated to highlight how human dynamics influenced tactical decisions. The study uses both McRaven’s structured principles and Storr’s focus on human dynamics as analytical tools to structure and interpret how tactical decisions and actions are described in accounts of the operation. The study shows that using both McRaven’s and Storr’s perspectives enables a richer interpretation of how tactical decisions unfolded under conditions of uncertainty in Operation Neptune Spear.