As a younger man I used to think I’d be the hero smoking all the bad guys and coming out fine. Now that I’m older I realize there’s a solid chance I’d be like the first guy off the boat in saving private Ryan. Perspective is a hell of a thing
@FireflyAereids2 жыл бұрын
Agreed. After a little growing up, I realised I'm not as lucky and I'd be one of those guys getting shot too
@ShinzoX902 жыл бұрын
Hope you find your fire again someday. Sorry to hear life and your peers give you such a shit self perspective.
@akanji8285 Жыл бұрын
@@SALUTE-INT-S agreed, I’m simply stating how my perspective on the randomness of combat has changed with my age. And I’m not saying older men would be unwilling to fight a war they believed had a just cause, just that younger men tend to think “it won’t be me”
@Mountain_bonker4 ай бұрын
@@akanji8285Exactly, you can be a super soldier that can has been training his whole life for this moment, and get blown to bits by a 155mm shell. It doesnt matter if youre a good fighter or not, its all luck, with a bit of skill involved
@Thecelestial14 ай бұрын
That guy never got off the boat, drilled through his head and he was gone while still on the metal.
@-bandit-2287 Жыл бұрын
I remember as a kid going to my step dads air cav reunions. We went out to range in Gettysburg where they had things organized so that people could see what automatic weapons were really like. There was a line of 3 kids (probably ages 10-14) with instructors behind them while they fired AKs and he leaned over and said "see, it doesn't matter if it's a trained marksman or some scrawny little kid when bullets start flying in your direction. If you're hit, you're hit. It doesn't matter who pulled the trigger or how accurate they were." I'll never forget that lesson. That shit stuck with me
@RighteousJ4 ай бұрын
Thank you for this story. My son is not yet old enough to handle firearms, but I'll be using that as part of the lesson plan now.
@villainsinvitro4 ай бұрын
That's why America would make a great insurgency in defense of our nation. So many guns in the hands of the untrained given a crash course on ambush deployment and simple tactics and weapons management we could block and even push back any invading force from moving freely. Red Dawn really did portray the American spirit quite well. WOLVERINES!!!
@KingCraze223 ай бұрын
A gun is the great equalizer.
@nativekentucky7290 Жыл бұрын
We were drilled every damn day with " You enter every fight as if your enemy is smarter then you, stronger, faster, and has more intel then you. When your ego joins the gun fight, your kids are gonna meet their new Daddy at your funeral"
@Thecodeist Жыл бұрын
There’s no better mentality to enter a deadly engagement with. My pmi in boot camp taught the same thing even in mct all my instructors were all grunts who deployed and mentioned the same things in regards to ego.
@willymac5036 Жыл бұрын
What many people don’t want to accept is that every single enemy combatant is also a human being. Human beings are the most ingenious creatures ever to exist on this planet. If they are determined, they will find a way.
@nativekentucky7290 Жыл бұрын
@@willymac5036 100% agree
@ShitMyWifeWatches Жыл бұрын
Dude 👀 i remember a MSG Fawbush line when i hear it. 🤙 if you know you know
@GreenBlueWalkthrough4 ай бұрын
How the US thinks while also being that enemy.
@gregharbin3531 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for keeping it real. Far too many people have no clue and think getting shot at is like a movie.
@eigenvalue57752 жыл бұрын
Someone wise once said, "Get into a fistfight, expect broken bones. Get into a knifefight, expect to be stabbed. Get into a gunfight, expect to be shot." Warriors are to be respected. War is to be despised.
@thomast85392 жыл бұрын
I hope you dropped the mic after that sermon.
@anon_laughing_man Жыл бұрын
War is to be despised but it's looking inevitable.
@bibekjung7404 Жыл бұрын
ALMIGHTY Supreme God Kabeer
@Nate_Gray4 ай бұрын
❤
@sharpen-up3 ай бұрын
@@anon_laughing_man Closer today than ever before as well...
@gardnert12 жыл бұрын
My buddy was a Ranger, taking down an insurgent compound in Iraq. He was in the middle of tossing a frag into a spider hole about 5m away from him when the guy in the spider hole popped his gun up and sprayed. One bullet hit a grenade on his belt and detonated it. He ended up losing both legs and his right arm, even though the frag he threw ended up killing the insurgent. Sometimes it doesn't matter how badass you are, the other guy gets lucky (right before his luck runs out).
@flawless_Cowboy2 жыл бұрын
At least he got him back 💀💀
@Emperio-zc5zr2 жыл бұрын
@@flawless_Cowboy at least lol
@Spectre13012 жыл бұрын
Oh Jesus that's so scary! 😱I'm almost afraid to ask, but god forbid was his privates also injured or god forbid "lost"? Since as you said the grenade detonated on his belt and it is dangerously close to the groin and one of my worst fears in life is getting injured down there.
@ruck272 жыл бұрын
A lot of cqb, opponents will hit each other / kill each other
@Riskmangler2 жыл бұрын
Jeezus that's rough. Please thank your friend for his service and sacrifice.
@michaelmancini5773 Жыл бұрын
I’m Marine Recon retired, I’ve never been in actual firefight , I’ve done countless live action drills with real bullets coming down range , THAT is hairy enough to make you understand the fog and confusion of a firefight , the reason US forces fight so well, is we fight like we train, and pretty much, muscle memory kicks in, and you engage
@RedDawnReadiness Жыл бұрын
That’s why all capable citizens should train.
@Agent-Smith666Ай бұрын
That isn't why US forces fight so well. US military training is great don't get me wrong, but it's quite subpar compared to other powerful militaries such as the British for example. US forces fight so well because they can wreak havoc and easily replace anything that gets destroyed. In other words, American war tactics is bombardment with total destruction - this is why more British troops were 'taken out' by American friendly fire, than due to the enemy, during the Afghan war.
@lincolnpascual2 жыл бұрын
I was the guy that got hit in his first gunfight. Lucky for me, it was only a graze. Still took me off my feet. Unlucky for me, the graze was across my cheek. I was terrified. Guy next to me smacked me across my face, trying to shake me out of it. Lol he hit me so hard my nose bled. Back in the fight after that. 03 was fucking crazy, brah.
@mantis_toboggan_md2 жыл бұрын
I bet that scar is tight
@decespugliatorenucleare37802 жыл бұрын
@@mantis_toboggan_md a mark to bear with pride, to serve israel
@mantis_toboggan_md2 жыл бұрын
@@decespugliatorenucleare3780 What in the hell are you even on about? We're American.
@DasOrmur2 жыл бұрын
@@mantis_toboggan_md 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 Yes, yes you are...
@mantis_toboggan_md2 жыл бұрын
@@DasOrmur Do you have anything worthwhile to say?
@johncannon3593 Жыл бұрын
The main thing that surprised me from daytime battle is you don't really see tracers unless you are right on the bore axis of them (hopefully outgoing). I had a tanker trying to direct me onto a target saying "follow my tracers" (from the tank coax gun) and I couldn't see where he was shooting. When I told him that, he said stand by...and fired a HEAT round. Definitely saw where THAT went 🤣 (and then proceeded to dump everything into the building).
@justinplaysguitar4 ай бұрын
You can see them when they barely miss the back of your head go past your ear. Very confusing cause had no idea they had anyone behind us but I guess in the mountains they are usually on at least 3 sides Shit sucked. The day I got shot there was 13 of us leaving a village on a goat trail cliff one way and wall on the other they had 180 to 200 against the 13 of us only 7 of us lived we all got shot. Kyle white got the Medal of Honor for that battle
@mike-kellydutkiewicz59912 жыл бұрын
I was in Fallujah and I can attest to the fact that gun battles in the daylight truly suck because you can see the magnitude of what is coming at you! Night fights can definitely be unnerving but somehow don't see as bad. You see your friends shot up and bleeding out screaming in pain and for corpsman! It was pure terrifying hell!! Thank God I made it home relatively intact, just some PTSD. I was one of the lucky there!
@remedy-18792 жыл бұрын
Falluja was hell. A lot of my time in Baghdad was just dodging ieds. By the time y’all took falluja back they switched from direct ambushes to daisy chains and trip wires. I’d honestly rather just have a fight. At least there would be an enemy to engage instead of calling 9 line and never having a good nights rest again.
@tylerbeach64652 жыл бұрын
@@HauptstadtLiebe dude, soldiers don't make political decisions.
@rickwhite12172 жыл бұрын
@@HauptstadtLiebe war is the way of the world buddy, pick up a history book
@thanglongnguyenvu38152 жыл бұрын
Just "some" PTSD? I mean...man, you make it sound like all you had was a bruise and that was it. Dunno whether to laugh at the phrasing or admire your balls of titanium.
@PhunkyMunky10 Жыл бұрын
I was at BIOP fixing to go home on leave and saw a bunch of Marines there. They said they were rotating home after Fallujah. They were jumpy. A mortar hit the runway, as almost always happens, and I felt bad for them. I knew they’d been in some shit. I tried to tell them they weren’t targeting us, the Iraqi’s were just trying to interrupt air operations. It seemed pointless. They were looking for cover; I don’t blame them. My deployment was pretty mellow comparatively. A few fights, IED’s and a shitload of VBIED’s we responded to. Scary enough but not like you guys.
@thachester2 жыл бұрын
Craziest thing that humbled me up when I was younger was a show on The Military Channel...don't recall the name but they took special forces guys and put them in a scenario. One was a big tanker ship at dock where an unknown amount of hostils had taken the crew hostage. Only thing that stands out to this day, there was a helicopter platform maybe 40'x40' with a set of stairs down one side. One of the Seals was clearing the deck, goes to clear the platform and moves up the stairs, well just prior to that one of the hostels had just moved up to the platform. Mind you the hostels were also Special Ops guys acting, they spooked each other simultaneously and both panic fired, 20 ft away from each other both these 2 highly trained and prepared men completely whiff. That always stuck with me. No matter what amount of prep, training, drills, you can still get caught off guard, you can't predict every situation possible. Cause the second you think you're good enough...you're not.
@frankiehitman26102 жыл бұрын
I believe you're talking about the show Special Ops. It was with Wil Willis who is a green beret and the people he went up against were from all the branches of the military. I used to watch that show too. I remember an episode they did at Linda Vista hospital in Los Angeles. They all kept hearing voices and noises throughout the hospital not knowing that the place was extremely haunted.
@luislongoria66212 жыл бұрын
@@frankiehitman2610 Haunted PA? Guess they never cut the comms. There must be a blooper reel somewhere. Keeping your cool can be a big ask when people are doing dumb stuff just for laughs. I don't think that kind of entertainment would last very long without some side bets to keep it going. Sounds like a charity fundraiser
@thomas_jay2 жыл бұрын
The biggest mistake one can make on a battlefield is underestimating the opponent.
@6gunbeaufordiii5142 жыл бұрын
another mistake is flinching at shadows that aren't there
@oneballwizard4062 жыл бұрын
Ya I'm sure these spec ops guys wouldn't know a thing
@bolobalaman2 жыл бұрын
*Better tobe paranoid and stay strapped or clown your enemy and realize later that u the one about to get your cheek clapped* - Sun Tzu circa 1992 Compton, LA
@coffeemcbee12 жыл бұрын
I stay Cherry, baby
@omarbueno98342 жыл бұрын
Sun Tsu-the art of war
@nattybumpo43842 жыл бұрын
My Father was pinned against the seawall on Tarawa with hundreds of dead Marines floating in the surf behind him. They moved on in daylight and it sucked. He went on to carry a flame thrower on Iwo, the Marine I'm named after died there. It was all two way, day and night. Peace is where sons bury their fathers, war is where fathers bury their sons...Herodotus
@HulksterRunsWild Жыл бұрын
Iwo Jima was insane. (opinion)
@GTH3214 ай бұрын
Amazing
@delightschwartz21552 ай бұрын
Very appropriate quote. Thank you.
@aname54552 жыл бұрын
I am a vet. I am older now. I never, never, never, ever forget the sacrifice, dedication, and shear fortitude required to complete the objective and survive. We like to think positive, but Sir you remind us that combat is not always, and rarely is, accurate. THERE ARE NO GUARENTEES. Good stuff here. Please keep it up.Thank you.
@bastianbezon26872 жыл бұрын
a breath of fresh air to hear people give the enemy their due credit, thank you
@christophersanders50072 жыл бұрын
I had a Grandfather that was in the 17th airborne at the Battle of Ardennes (Bulge). About 80% of his company got wiped out, but he survived. I asked him one time how it was he survived, and so many others did not. He replied..."I kept my head down". I guess that meant he stayed under cover 100% of the time, unless he was ordered to move.
@fewik85672 жыл бұрын
Well nobody is John wick and in nature the most successful hunters are all silent, patient and hidden, that's why special forces are so valued. Tiny squads of men and women that could never beat an army, but that army doesn't know where they are or that they're even coming, special forces are so unpredictable and they just prod the opponent making other ground forces lives a bit easier, you can only hide from something you've seen and know about.
@jackdwyer45842 жыл бұрын
My grandfather was also in the airborne forces at Ardennes. (I think he may have been in the 17th as well. He got folded into another division during his tour, so I can't always remember without looking it up.) One night his company was dug in and the Germans (a lot of them) came up behind and just started pulling them out of their foxholes and executing them. They were so outnumbered all they could do was just sit tight and hope the Germans didn't find too many of them. They found every single foxhole except for the one my grandpa was in. He and the guy he was dug in with were the only two men who survived in their company. Kept in touch the rest of their lives.
@YTStopCensoringFreedomOfspeech2 жыл бұрын
It's nothing more than math and physics, if the enemy has more combatants dumping rounds at you and your men, being in cover increases your survival. However, they can also maneuver on you if you aren't checking their movements. If your side has fire superiority, then of course being out of cover doesn't have as much danger. It's effective propaganda to encourage the infantryman to not hide in cover a lot, that's combat ineffectiveness, it reduces the unit's overall firepower if soldiers are scared to aim and fire at the enemy. There is no kind of training that can help you figure out when you should stay out of cover to aim at the enemy or to take cover. Only through combat will you learn cues on when it is safe for you to hide or fight.
@1997LT1Camaro2 жыл бұрын
@@jackdwyer4584Holy shit war is so unforgiving. I’m a descendant from US army and also German. My grandmother and her brother both served german military during WW2. My American grandfather married her post war in Germany. Her brother was a pilot and was KIA. Lots of stories before their death.
@brianpalmer46432 жыл бұрын
Christopher...I would bet that if your grandfather had taken the time to explain himself, he would have said something like, "Well, I kept my head down when I could, but me and my buddies fought those rotten bastards tooth and nail. We were all freezing, but we couldn't stop shooting back, or I wouldn't be here. I just got lucky, I could've been shot a thousand times. I was no hero (although he was), but maybe I saved a few of my buddies. I know they saved me." I guarantee you your grandfather didn't keep his head down 100% of the time.
@scaleworksRC2 жыл бұрын
Way back when I was considering this path, I remember reading a SEAL story about a firefight where the dude got shot in the hand and in the heat of the moment he bit down and pulled on what he thought was the bullet sticking out the back of his palm, but turned out to be one of his hand bones that shattered in two. That, and the freezing cold water made it a nope for me.
@Garrison64 Жыл бұрын
When I was in basic at Ft Sill back in the early 80’s we went to the range at night once. They gave us two thirty round mags with every fourth or fifth a tracer. We were all lined up in foxholes. When they gave permission to fire we got to shoot across a valley at whatever we wanted to shoot at, and as fast or slow as we wanted. Between mags I stopped for a second to watch. All I could think was that I would sure as hell not want to be on the other side with all of that coming at me. Have never forgotten that. It made a big impression on me as to what it might be like to be in a battle.
@charlesedwards47052 жыл бұрын
Miss those topic videos and podcasts from Buck. Haven't seen one in a while. Thanks again for this content guys, it really helps.
@The_Mechanic_Dad2 жыл бұрын
I grew up in Fresno during the early and mid 90s, peak of the gang wars. I didn't have a choice but to learn how indiscriminate bullets are. After having a bullet lodge into me and my brothers' bedroom wall, and my Dad's Toyota pickup getting swiss cheesed, my Parents finally saved enough to move us away. Unfortunately, other people weren't as lucky.
@luislongoria66212 жыл бұрын
How well do you know your parents or your neighbors? There's no such thing as random gunfire even when the guy with the flag doesn't get hit
@The_Mechanic_Dad2 жыл бұрын
@@luislongoria6621 We lived in these trashy apartments with dozens of other families. I'm sure a significant amount of the teens were part of some kind of gang. The shootings we experienced there were mostly drive bys, although sometimes a gun fight would break out.
@TheMadHatter10-63 ай бұрын
What part of Fresno?
@sectorseven072 жыл бұрын
To be honest the majority of the time we fought during the day it was just both sides basically full autoing at one another based more off sound than anything. We got in a perfect L shaped ambush in Kandahar on Halloween 2009. The best I could see was the occasional muzzle flash. Then we got so close to them we could hear them yelling to one another. PKM was suppressing us from a grape hut and that's the thing I was able to actually see the best. The one confirmed kill I ever got was taking out a guy who was casually trying to walk away an hour or so after shooting an RPG at us. During that particular firefight I never saw any armed combatants but they definitely saw us.
@Graderman35872 жыл бұрын
I was in Kandahar in 09 that was a bloody place,I hated Kandahar everything was combative 🤣 just like the movie said even the dirt was hostile
@sectorseven072 жыл бұрын
@@Graderman3587 Yeah I was there from May 09 to July 10 and it was pretty intense. What unit were you in?
@Graderman35872 жыл бұрын
@@sectorseven07 1 RST MARINE RAIDER BATTALION MARSOC DET 1 mos 0372i spent 16 years in the Marines 9 of that was in Iraq and Afghanistan
@sectorseven072 жыл бұрын
@@Graderman3587 Nice
@Graderman35872 жыл бұрын
@@sectorseven07 in the years I've been home, Like Most vets I've had trouble dealing with things, Earlier this year I sat down trying to figure out why, Only thing I can come up with was,I miss it 💯,I miss that bond you get with the guys,I miss that adrenaline rush and being feared by the enemy, What I wish would stop is not being able to drive past a piece of trash that blew out of a truck on the road,or Constantly scanning roof tops at the stores for guys with a cell phone,Or always having to have my back against the wall so I can see everything coming at me,Or not being able to take my kids to their ballgame because dad might freak out and knock out a loud mouth father, Again. But I enjoy y'all's products and videos, And thanks for replying
@dave10962 жыл бұрын
I could not fathom the memories and emotions going through these two guys while watching that regardless of how unrealistic it may be. Guys are a special breed.
@USAMontanan2 жыл бұрын
I went to high school in North St. Louis and survived muggings, had a cocked pistol pointed at me and having stray bullets zipping past me so close I could hear them. I was too young to realize how dangerous it all was. I still can’t believe I survived all four years unscathed. Sadly I’m sure many of my classmates are dead now. Thanks for your service guys! You should quit drinking alcohol. Nothing good ever came from it.
@kxkxkxkx Жыл бұрын
You should eat a D
@johnburrows11792 жыл бұрын
Agree. I can tell you in Vietnam, my first two firefights I was scared shitless. I’m man enough to admit I don’t know wtf I was shooting at. It took me til me 3-4 firefight before I could get my adrenaline to the point where I could even concentrate enough to control my fire. I always laugh when I’m at the range, and guys get pissed caused they’re 1moa off at 100 yards lol. It’s a different ballgame when someone is shooting at your ass. Moas go out the door, you’re just trying to hit mass. Combat sucks. People die. But what’s the worst is when guys get their guts blown open and the screaming. Enjoy the range. Don’t ever wish for combat unless you’re insane. 1st Cav C troop 1/12 68-70
@johnburrows11792 жыл бұрын
@@SALUTE-INT-S of what I saw and experienced in firefights, most were 50 meters or less. Every ambush was close range. Most times you could not see them except a blur or behind cover. A lot of spraying and praying. Most were over in 4-5 minutes but that was enough. It felt like 4-5 hours. Everything was dense cover over there, no one fought in open fields. A few had shotguns which were great for the cover. We’re there kills at longer range? Absolutely. But none that I saw. Percentage of kills? No idea? All we had was a body count when we could find them. You never knew when you were walking into an ambush, you just prayed you weren’t hit, and could lay down enough fire to drive them off. The most surprising thing to me was the noise. Guns going off were deafening along with the screaming. Movies can’t show you that. My ears ring to this day. Hope that helped
@johnburrows11792 жыл бұрын
@@SALUTE-INT-S your guess is as good as mine. I would imagine the casualties rate would be less. But you have to remember, most fire fights were over so fast, there wasn’t a lot of time to call in accurate suppressive fire. We’re there longer fire fights? Of course. But vast majority at least for me were 4-5 minutes, a little longer. The noise once return fire began didn’t help. When you have 20 guys returning fire to an enemy maybe 20-40 meters away, hard to tell direction. And you’re not going to stick your neck up to check believe me. After 3-4 firefight you begin to learn how to react and how to tell where fire is coming from. You never forget the snap of a round going by your head or hitting the ground next to you
@timothyday85652 жыл бұрын
2:45 I used to tell my guys " stay in place behind cover" if you try and maneuver you may run into a round.
@Bttl719582 жыл бұрын
I think Terminal List did really good with first action scene. Two of the operators got killed once the fighting started, and the enemy's return fire was affective. Overall, it's just a super tense scene that looks super real.
@Adri-2422 жыл бұрын
Just watched it following your comment and hell yeah super intense!! Feels real AF
@aegonbreakspear91022 жыл бұрын
@@Adri-242 Amazing show! I started gym again after that.
@Adri-2422 жыл бұрын
@@aegonbreakspear9102 haha awesome!! 🔥💪💪
@bricehatcher83912 жыл бұрын
The opening scene where the two dudes just stand in a tunnel staring at a mounted machine gun? Lol. That part got me good.
@JTtheReptileАй бұрын
Terminal List was phenomenal. Not only did it portray a lot of that stuff fairly realistically (I think), it made it clear that Pratt's character kept surviving PRECISELY because he was just borderline superhuman and that much better than everyone else.
@tonyrisberg22012 жыл бұрын
Reading comments. And I just want to say from the bottom of my heart, thank you all for your service and I hope you all are safe and well and have a blessed Holidays. 🇺🇸❤️🙏🏻
@joesavant54902 жыл бұрын
I love that you called out other movies for not showing the 2-way range aspect of a gunfight. Also, the aftermath of a gunfight is oftentimes highly underplayed,
@cobyandcoby85562 жыл бұрын
Thanks for taking us all back to reality about warfare. People be thinking it’s like Call of Duty out there.
@ShinzoX902 жыл бұрын
Call of duty is much harder, you dont know what sacrifice is if you hadnt carried a team in TDM. IDGAF how many tours you did, come talk to me after you drop a nuke in nuketown little boy.
@sethrich5998 Жыл бұрын
I don’t know, I seem to die plenty in call of duty from seemingly random fire.
@Chris112494 ай бұрын
Yup. I remember the Rainbow Six game, there was nothing like it.. Very realistic in the sense that you take a shot and you're dead, or at least incapacitated. Same the other way around. Not sure why more games aren't like that. I think with VR someone will make something similar. But honestly I don't want to play it now that I'm older, I don't think these games are healthy since the graphics are too realistic now.
@davidruiz2474 Жыл бұрын
The craziest moment I had in combat was in Shkin, Afghanistan (OEF IV). I was with the 10th Mountain Division 1/87 infantry. Our task that day was to disrupt enemy rocket/ mortar fire hitting our FOB. Short story short what turned out to be a 13-hour firefight about 3 hours in one of the guys in our platoon (who had been in Operation Anaconda a few years prior) took off his k-pot, sat down lit a cigarette. I yelled at him between shots "What are you doing?" he just looked at me and said cool as fuck "I'm taking a break" all of us around just looked at him and laughed and kept on fighting 👌 RIP PFC Evan O'Neill KIA Shkin Afghanistan 2003 ... I'll see you on a distant battlefield brother "Vires Montesque Vincimus"
@johndang8874 ай бұрын
a pfc doing this is badass as hell😂
@neoteny74 ай бұрын
How do you have ammo to sustain a 13hour firefight?
@davidruiz24744 ай бұрын
@@johndang887 The guy that took a break was a Specialist. His name is Jon Salle 👍
@goofistmcnutty32802 жыл бұрын
On the point of the two way gun range. A buddy of mine who served and fought in real life combat told me some stories. One of which was another squad they ran with, and his squad called the other one the lead slingers because they'd always have a tone of ammo and they'd burn through it so fast. Calling them lead slingers started as a jab at them for spending more time shooting and missing instead of taking good aim and firing. But turns out, that squad was a damn highly effect squad. More shots down range just seems to mean more chances to hit a target then one shot with decent aim.
@grogdizzy58142 жыл бұрын
That's one reason why the new Sig service weapon seems like a step in the wrong directions. It shoots bigger rounds, but the mags hold less and you carry less.
@Veldtian12 жыл бұрын
@@grogdizzy5814 No more shield fire.👎
@JarthenGreenmeadow2 жыл бұрын
@@grogdizzy5814 You're a fool if you think conventional infantry units will ever be issued those. They'll be using m4s and m16s until judgement day comes. The STANAG is going no where.
@skillfuldabest2 жыл бұрын
Suppression fire has many many benefits. Fewer bullets flying in your direction gives you more room to manoeuvre and implement tactics.
@grogdizzy58142 жыл бұрын
@@JarthenGreenmeadow I hope not, but Sig got the contract and the Army hasn't really been making great decisions lately. Remember those awful digital ACUs that they made conventional infantry units wear?
@donaldlamendola13922 жыл бұрын
All facts. Not to mention the T-ban don't just hit you on impulse. They have Soo much tactical patience it's scary. They always waited till we were almost done with our patrol and tired.
@brutal28262 жыл бұрын
My Senior DS and 1SG in basic hammered on this concept a lot during our FTX. Your enemy isn't always going to be impulsive and fire at you as soon as they see you, if they're smart they'll map your routes and just wait until you've got no energy left before engaging you.
@cpK054L2 жыл бұрын
@@brutal2826 that's how they got one of ours killed... watched how he looked for IEDs... then had one planted on a doorframe, just for him...
@Troupe_Master2 жыл бұрын
@@cpK054L im sorry man i hope your ok
@SubParPilotАй бұрын
We lost 12 my first deployment. Literally all 12 were from IEDs. They were everywhere @cpK054L
@Last_Chance.2 жыл бұрын
I've had a lot of younger guys ask me how it is to be a gun fight and I always tell them the same thing. You don't want to know.
@Morningstar_Actual2 жыл бұрын
Fake machismo vibes
@jerryj30472 жыл бұрын
🤣🤣👍.Had the same experience. I was wearing a Sniper International Competition t-shirt. A boy who was with his father asked me. I want to be a sniper, what should I do? I told him to complete his education and then think about being a sniper. His father gave me the thumbs up
@christophercollins8682 жыл бұрын
Worked in emergency medicine for 18 years, both on an ambulance and in a trauma center. It never fails, "whats the worst thing you have ever seen?" Ill just stare at them for a minute, then politely tell them I wont answer their question. For some its just an innocent curiosity but others just want to hear the glory. But there is no glory in the "worst." When you CANT save that baby thats weeks old, its fucking horrible. TV and movies dont want to show that stuff. They are always going to SAVE that kid. That bystander is always going to pull a (miraculously concious) victim out of the blazing car or house, with no respiratory protection and they both live. Its just not fucking like that 🤷
@christophercollins8682 жыл бұрын
In my career, Ive seen one truly heroic moment that would have been beautiful on TV. But it still resulted in both victims dying.
@jerryj30472 жыл бұрын
@@christophercollins868 "whats the worst thing you have ever seen?"I don't give a shit I would say, I saw Forced abortion in a gypsy house dead baby in a plastic bag, puke and shit everywhere that was heavy
@vinn9952 жыл бұрын
Retired GB here. Sean is absolutely correct, daylight gunfights are the worst. Sean highlights multiple reasons why that is. I’d like to add one more dynamic as to why daylight gun battles suck so bad is because generally speaking the enemy doesn’t leave the battlefield, he generally stays and fights, keeps shooting on what Sean says is the “Two way range.” Two way range is absolutely right, and here’s the clincher gunfights are violent engagements measured at the speed of bullets, you’re not dodging them like in The Matrix. Fact: The longer the gunfight lasts the greater the odds you are catching a bullet. The best way to survive a gunfight is to end it as soon as possible, as quickly as possible. Or break contact and call for fire and/ or air support. Daylight gunfights suck PERIOD.
@Breaker20052 жыл бұрын
Why is there an emphasis on daylight? Are nighttime gun fights more bearable?
@vinn9952 жыл бұрын
@@Breaker2005 generally, especially regarding Afghanistan the enemy does not have night fighting capabilities, mainly night vision that allows them to operate and see at night. If they do have night vision it’s usually maybe 1 or 2 guys that got their hands on some night vision gear. But the vast majority don’t have it. Americans however, especially SOF, every man has night vision, and we have many types of night vision, like FLIR, thermals, enhanced latest generation NVGs, this is a huge advantage for us over the enemy at night. We can see them but they can’t see us. Our night fighting technology gives us a huge advantage over them. But during the day you don’t use night vision and they can see us too, so they stay and slug it out with us. For Taliban forces daytime is for gunfights, nighttime is for laying in and emplaning IEDs.
@wombatburrito58962 жыл бұрын
Civi here . My biggest fear would be running out of ammo before the enemy and then it being broad daylight and having no cover or concealment to be able to break contact and retreat. Your there till the other is dead. I suppose that goes hand in hand with don’t underestimate the enemy and a failure to plan is a plan for failure
@thanglongnguyenvu38152 жыл бұрын
Can I ask what a "two way range" is? The dude in the video did mention it but I still don't quite get it.
@justinchennhp222 Жыл бұрын
@@thanglongnguyenvu3815 a two way range means people are shooting down it from both sides. It’s a firefight On one side you have the soldiers who are shooting at the enemy down range. And then the enemy is also shooting back at the soldiers. A one way range would basically be target practice or shooting an enemy that isn’t shooting back
@razablanco37662 жыл бұрын
I remember being in a guard tower outside Kandahar in 2 in the after noon and clear skies. I was taking sniper fire from the village, called in that I was taking fire and didn’t know where. My plt sgt, ssgt, and Team leader all came to my pill and we could hear the rounds go past our head but could not find where it was coming from. The dude ether ran out of ammo or knew he couldn’t be there that long bc 5-10 min it stopped. Sent a element into the village and couldn’t find anything.
@cpK054L2 жыл бұрын
I'm going to put money that it was an 8 year old learning how to shoot for the first time. because if that was a Chechnyan sniper, best believe you wouldn't be breathing.... because... apparently they like to shoot the throat.
@TerryRajsombath Жыл бұрын
Yeah. I'd say a real big con to a firefight during the day is that it's so much harder to see the enemy. It's like being a bat. Usually the enemy is set up someplace far enough where, maybe across a valley where you won't be able to quickly locate or maneuver on. It becomes a mix of seeing where the rounds land and hearing where it's coming from. Direction and distance quickly formulates in your mind as you scramble for cover. Hearing the rounds snap overhead or really far away helps you figure out when you can move and for how long. At least with night time, it's much faster to identify where the rounds are coming from and conceal behind cover. During a late night firefight, I was running to my battle position and saw a tracer rounds splatter the earth just 5 meters in front of me. Stopped real hard and hugged the nearest hesco, haha. Personally, hearing a mortar fly overhead was the worst because there was just enough time until impact for me to wonder if it'd find it's way to me. Sorry for the long story. Just brings back a lot of memories.
@DJTheMetalheadMercenary2 жыл бұрын
Well said bro. Daytime firefights and ambushes in urban IRQ were infvckingsane too, darting in and out of windows, alleyways, popping up on rooftops then darting away, pure chaos from all sides.
@nunyadambusiness69022 жыл бұрын
Don't forget manholes & drainage pipes...
@DJTheMetalheadMercenary2 жыл бұрын
@@nunyadambusiness6902 True, we didn't encounter too many people hiding in those when I was there but I've seen and heard other times where they were.
@nunyadambusiness69022 жыл бұрын
@@DJTheMetalheadMercenary I can only remember going under a city once, but we did a whole recon from it & you could infil like that... people don't realize...
@DJTheMetalheadMercenary2 жыл бұрын
@@nunyadambusiness6902 For sure, I remember a year or two before I was in Sadr City and Baghdad there was a big sweep of the existing sewer tunnels and municipalities, found some caches down there but I didn't hear much else on it. More commonly, the terries would just bury caches around the area or stage them in safe houses or random places, their network was wild.
@DJTheMetalheadMercenary2 жыл бұрын
@@lukewarm7744 If you want to have an actual discussion, don't be a troll and spell my name right-- otherwise, you can kindly foxtrot oscar.
@sugewhitejacoby86542 жыл бұрын
I could tell how focused you guys were watching that scene. Watching that has got to wake up some deep feelings and memories.
@Veldtian12 жыл бұрын
Combat trauma is the coolest trauma.
@cpK054L2 жыл бұрын
@@Veldtian1 it's actually not....
@tukalors7577Ай бұрын
Love how real and truthful you guys are I am glad to watch your channel!!
@nobody-ly9ef2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing your knowledge and experience......I wish your whole team a merry Christmas.
@natebaker88212 жыл бұрын
I had no clue I've been able to share the mat with a Green Beret much respect Sean see you soon !
@ivan59462 жыл бұрын
I remember I played airsoft once (yes absolutely nothing like real gunfights, only slight similarities) in my late teens, with a couple of friends (Marines) & I was creeping 3 minutes into play, pop! pop! I'm out, (didn't know where it came from) fuck that's it?! I just started! Happened a few more times later. If that's in a game, I thought, I can't imagine how crazy dangerous it is in real life. High respect to the service men & women, who put their time, life & body on the line doing this.
@michaelford25174 ай бұрын
To all the veterans on here, THANK YOU FOR YOUR SERVICE!
@theblackboxpodcastshow17912 жыл бұрын
Let's not forget (to the guys who've never been in the Shit) Those guys on the other can SHOOT TOO. I think too many people grew up watching the A-team and things like Arnold in Commando, the hero never gets shot and believes "Hollywood" magic. Merry x-mas guys
@johnjr5782 жыл бұрын
Fax they shoot back and just as good as you think you are, they are too, they are generational warriors
@theblackboxpodcastshow17912 жыл бұрын
@@johnjr578 yes of course, you must never underestimate anyone in theater, have a warrior’s respect for your opponents ( as corny as that sounds).
@Stormkryptonian2 жыл бұрын
I think that's why a near peer fight would be so insane and it's being shown with the fight between Russia and Ukraine. People get bodied so fast when the enemies accuracy, gear, and training is as good as yours. And if they have NVG gear and what not night assaults without proper air support is a nightmare because they can see your lasers and gladly use that information to deadly effect.
@oz70nyc502 жыл бұрын
And usually when we're talking fighters in Iraq and Afghanistan, they've been shooting since before they had pubes. So they're REEEEEEEEEEALLY fuckin' good at it. Way better than your just touched a rifle for the 1st time in basic training ass.
@jackzimmer6553 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this video and for your service to our country. Much appreciated!
@The_Assassin_of_The_Gray2 жыл бұрын
Buck reminds me of an NCO I knew who was *_SOLID_* and really *_CARED_* about the Paratroopers he was responsible for
@thebestofj.fraley2 жыл бұрын
Been in a few. My last fight, I was gut shot when the very first round was fired. My buddy had his legs cut out with 3 round. We both hit the ground at the same time. There is no warning, no whistle or starting guns with blanks. It's on like donkey Kong and now.
@Culturalenthusiast-q1b2 ай бұрын
Thank you for this perspective. Those of us who know little to nothing about military tactics have a chance at gaining knowledge and humility from your experience.
@RB-vr7mq Жыл бұрын
At or around the 2:20 mark, something is brought up about people asking if they enlist what are their chances of getting into a gunfight... the response of "be careful what you wish for" is about the best I have heard. No false bravado, no BS, just the absolute reality of the person asking the question having no idea what they are seeking out. I will end this by saying I was "nobody special", in that my time was spent in relative peace of my 12 years. It took me a long time to realize how lucky I was to be that guy without a CIB, Combat Patch... trust me, I itched for it. I "wanted it" like most of the 18-20 something year olds around me at the time. Hell, I saw enough shit go wrong during training where people died or were seriously injured to realize pretty quick that actual combat would not be a forgiving environment, and surely not the romanticized one so many seem to believe in. If I even begin to talk about those training accidents, I get that imposter syndrome kicking in... because it was just training. Deaths and injuries were real, but I cannot imagine it is the same as being on the 2-way firing range except that maybe you expect it to happen there more than in training. Still, completely different animals. I did my time, I got out, and then the world fell apart a few years later, and I thank God for the young men and woman who stepped up and faced that Hell on earth for me. Guess this old farts point is, yes be damned careful what you wish for in life. Welcome home to all my Brothers who did see that Hell on Earth, thank you, God Bless you! You have no idea how grateful I am to you for what you did for us.
@randyballew8795 Жыл бұрын
Thank You, you still wore a uniform and trained just like the rest of us, it just wasn't you time.
@JayT1984 Жыл бұрын
Thanks!
@FNGACADEMY Жыл бұрын
wow thanks man!
@khaosgaming44382 жыл бұрын
The fact Marcus helped out with the movie is what made this movie as great as it is.
@davidlodigiani7292 Жыл бұрын
First, thank you both for your service. Thank you for helping us who have not had to be in harms way understand a tiny bit of what is was like for you. Your comments are so clearly based on your first person experience. I had seen the film you were commenting on and thought it had more realism than some others I've seen. Thanks for explaining was accurate about it.
@americandissident90622 жыл бұрын
Six firefights in Afghanistan for me… Only one was at night. The daytime fights were weird. It felt like they could see us but we couldn’t see them. Luckily they weren’t shooting very well.
@nickmitsialis2 жыл бұрын
I know I'm just a stupid Civvie, but whenever I used to watch those "helmet cam" doccos on National Geographic (or maybe even Restrepo), the thing that always got me was you could not see anybody. Maybe it's because the camera footage is not the greatest quality but I couldn't see anything from the baddies; no flashes, no movement, no bullet strikes either around them or around the Americans. Somebody once told me that the Tallywhackers would engage at the absolute maximum range of their weapons to avoid being seen.
@Grimdarkog2 жыл бұрын
@@nickmitsialis any war you see you wont see the enemy because thats how you avoid getting shot
@filthydisgustingape53542 жыл бұрын
@@Grimdarkog thanks! It's exactly what I say about folks in Ww2 who see a mk IV panzer and call it a Tiger Tank-- IF you spend time staring at the tank, you'll probably end up being killed
@cpK054L2 жыл бұрын
bruh, you were really lucky... my second deployment had like at least a WEEKLY firefight....sometimes even up to 5 days a week. they did give like 2 weeks off... but then again... that's because somebody gave the order to merc 50+ civilians that were peeking an LZ.... whoever gave that command is probably still in the brigs to this day.
@americandissident90622 жыл бұрын
@@cpK054L Well, I don’t really count the times we had our front gate blown up by a VBIED, or the green-on-blue shootings, or the guys throwing grenades over our walls, or shooting RPGs from the hills into our FOB, or “ROCKET-ATTACK” alerts because I don’t recall any US personnel getting injured by that stuff. But I was in and around Kandahar in 2013-2014. It was hot sometimes but not like the years before. Six was bad enough that I wasn’t really looking for more. Actually, the last firefight I was in was the night one. I only had a month left in Afg.
@garrickbradley67743 ай бұрын
Much respect! Thank you for your service and thank you for giving us the reality of conflict. Sobering!!
@cardillo2752 жыл бұрын
So true…if you see someone you probably get shot. Hardest part is determining where shots are coming from. 16 years in a combat zone Im 100% happy with never being in a gun fight ever again….just watching KZbins on Ukraine fights makes me glad im a civilian again. “Careful what you ask for” is the best advice you can get.
@jaysindefransisco1118 Жыл бұрын
You guys ate amazing. Thank you for your service and thank you for disclosing reality. Much luv and blessings boys. Real heros.
@jaysindefransisco1118 Жыл бұрын
Are * not ate. Bit I'm sure you eat amazing too😂
@jaysindefransisco1118 Жыл бұрын
Sorry phukin fone keeps wixing up my merds.
@jaysindefransisco1118 Жыл бұрын
My best friend is JTF2 special forces. I was also supposed to go this route with him. I chose to go travel and surf. Although i believe my friend to be a true warrior and the staple of what a man should be. Years of tours in Afghanistan have left him psychologically and spiritually broken. Many of his peers have committed suicide or just can't acclimate back int domestication. It fucking breaks my heart. And thte needs to be better support for you warriors coming home. Deepest respect and love.
@dodgefan152232 жыл бұрын
Nice to hear this from someone who knows what they’re talking about. Thank you both for your service.
@whiteprivilegedenier7459 Жыл бұрын
America is screwed, our combat vets draw their experience from a turkey shoot against a bunch of sub-90 IQ'ed Afghans right before we go into war against European men and Oriental men. America loses this one, wholesale.
@IOPERATEalone2 жыл бұрын
While in Ramadi we got pinned down near the 4 story..I'll never forget that battle! Cover was demolished and visibility was diminishing fast! This scene sent me right back!
@sword1111192 жыл бұрын
Very good video. So many gun owners in America get obsessed with tricking out their AR setup, thinking they're now untouchable. I've never been in a gunfight but I've always understood that the art of war is about tactics more so than the individual soldier or his weapon. Our nation was founded because the colonists understood this idea during the revolutionary war. We won by using our terrain to our advantage and implementing superior tactics on the battlefield, while the British were too rigid in their ways of thinking. Again I've never been in a gunfight, but based on my understanding it is best to keep a low profile and never attack head on, because like you said, it's a 2-way range. And based on the sheer odds of hundreds of bullets flying, one is bound to hit you.
@RamblingMan.2 жыл бұрын
I was fully prepared to go and die or live more so live when I was put on the deployment list and told that we were deploying but what I wasn't prepared for was hearing about people dying losing friends. Coming home is another thing too. I know a couple of my battles came home and we're just distraught and very isolated and they would eventually end up taking their own lives
@XoScottXo9 күн бұрын
Love the realness in what they are saying here.
@stevohisroyalhighness92652 жыл бұрын
I was deployed to The Stan during Restrepo with the 173rd in 07-08. Being in a bowl, shooting UP at targets give you a pucker effect like no other. The Tali have been at war for fucking years....They're no slouches, and daytime fighting neutralizes all of our nighttime advantage.
@joeyjojojr.shabadoo9152 жыл бұрын
It's unfortunate that it literally takes active War to speed up innovation, but had this event happened 10+ years later, they at a minimum would have had their own armed Reaper flying over top of them their entire mission, ready to engage a flanking machinegun nest that was blocking safer escape routes. These guys are legends under the circumstances.
@ik58522 жыл бұрын
well it was a recon mission. Now they never have 4 man recon SEAL missions because of this. These events change history and the way the military operates.
@sectorseven072 жыл бұрын
You would think that. But look at the SF team in Niger that got taken out. They're not always able to secure ISR for missions and if they do, there's always blocks of time ISR is not available, and then there's also unpredictable weather, etc.
@joeberger34412 жыл бұрын
@@ik5852 doing a Recon mission with 4 guys is dumb to begin with. In Marine Recon we'd never go out with just 4 guys especially without a single crew served weapon (Machine Gun). We always had 6, two of which were operating area fire weapons (SAWs and 240s). That, and we'd likely have had another team inserted a kilometer away to be able to provide support if needed. That, and we wouldn't just rely on satcom. These guys didn't have a single HF radio with them.. for a Recon mission that is horseshit.. with HF you can literally talk halfway around the world as long as the right antenna is set up. What else? Moving during the daytime: huge no no for Recon missions. Movements should be at night..daytime is where you harbor up in a Bush and lay low.
@Veldtian12 жыл бұрын
@@ik5852 Next time they'll hobble the goat herders with zip ties after releasing them to go home *after* the team has hiked halfway back to their exfil site so there's no chance the Taliban will be able to catch up to them.
@thomast85392 жыл бұрын
@@joeberger3441 Good on you Devil Dog. Thanks for saying what needed to be said.
@DavidJones-smiley2 жыл бұрын
Damn I love how honest you tell it! No B S you tell how it really happens ! Mad respect 💯👍🏻
@MickAngelhere2 жыл бұрын
I was in the Kyber Pass visiting the Kyber Rifles, we were being shown around when we heard gunfire. We went to the wall and looked in the direction of where the noise was coming from the officer said that it was two tribes having a go at each other. Then we saw two explosions and I asked the officer if those were mortar rounds, he replied yes and that’s not good. Next thing we know rounds started impacting the wall and it was time to get inside, bullets were flying all around us as we sprinted across the parade ground . We made it inside and how none of us were hit was a miracle. So there we having tea listening to the three way battle outside. As for the shooters we didn’t even see them.
@luislongoria66212 жыл бұрын
Lost in translation. Anyone can learn a language from a book
@jasonreisenberger12852 жыл бұрын
This proves the concept of accuracy by volume. That's why we always trained to establish fire superiority to suppress then maneuver. Then again I was an Army grunt in the 90's so things might have changed a bit. Not sure if it's better.
@pyeitme5082 жыл бұрын
Wish for video(s) about firearms fight at night with NVGs soon.
@cpK054L2 жыл бұрын
lol not when I was in. I'd rather use thermals. NVGs would have gotten me an instant 100% VA disability rating.
@Space_Brains2 жыл бұрын
A popular saying with my guys was that (as an Australian) the Ghan's spray and prey, but they prey really fucking well.
@IamDabaste2 жыл бұрын
Fuck this hit home. We were in a long distance engagement, had a opium dealer in custody so my team was falling back with him in custody. As we were peeling back I thought I finally had a bead on the shooter, saw a silhouette right by what looked like a bale of hay. Went to get my sights on and a round dropped 2 feet in front of my face and blasted me with dirt. I fucking had him but as that happened my team leader was peeling behind me and told me to move. I knew the guy had me just as I had him so I listened, got up and moved. Still regret it to this day, I know I could have gotten him but who knows if he would have smoked me first.
@nunyadambusiness69022 жыл бұрын
Rolling retreat? & DON'T forget to toss out the APS mines behind you...
@IamDabaste2 жыл бұрын
@@nunyadambusiness6902 Where he was shooting at us from was in the Georgian AO. We had already gotten into shit for pushing a gun fight into their area a month prior. So our hands were tied plus we had a detainee.
@nunyadambusiness69022 жыл бұрын
@@IamDabaste damn... that's when it really sucks... I remember when Georgia went down, but we were in Asia, so we missed it... 🤷 I'll never forget that chic walking out of the jungle & coming at me with that damn machete... Didn't even know she was a teenager till it was all over & that stays with you... some things Camp McCall can't prepare you for...
@timmutton61922 жыл бұрын
@@nunyadambusiness6902 The Christian boys summer camp?
@nunyadambusiness69022 жыл бұрын
@@timmutton6192 wtf are you even talking about?...
@unknownentrappment_ed3522 Жыл бұрын
Thanks
@FNGACADEMY Жыл бұрын
thank you!
@jdenmark12872 жыл бұрын
If they open up on you, it’s because they have achieved a tactical advantage, either height, cover, surprise, numbers or fire power. Oftentimes it’s all the above.
@jamesortiz53882 жыл бұрын
When your buddy catches one in the chest and you hear it and he falls over they're shooting at you.
@wilsonle618 ай бұрын
I remember in training (Miles Gear and Blanks) in the woods half the time I could not even tell what exact direction the rounds were coming from!
@escott38292 жыл бұрын
Old Military Saying "Aimed Shots Miss.. Random Shots Kill..." AND "It's Not The Bullet With Your Name On It Ya Gotta Worry About.. It's The One Marked.. To Whom It May Concern..."
@olly25152 жыл бұрын
This channel is both insightful and humbling. Thank you for your service and honesty! Makes me wish i made some different life choices... lol
@pyeitme5082 жыл бұрын
Wish for video about Captains in 12 men A-teams.
@luislongoria66212 жыл бұрын
Some guys get to lure the enemy out in the open ahead of the main force. That's where your PT comes from
@RunzWithScalpel2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing your knowledge and experience. Great video!
@HeavyJay14212 жыл бұрын
I don't want to get in a gunfight I just want to be prepared
@cpK054L2 жыл бұрын
lol. nothing will ever get you prepared.
@Troupe_Master2 жыл бұрын
you will never be prepared my guy...never
@HeavyJay14212 жыл бұрын
@@cpK054L already been down that road
@HeavyJay14212 жыл бұрын
@@Troupe_Master already been down that road what they domt tell you is state side firefights you have to do so much more to justify your actions
@Raphael-di3oc3 ай бұрын
real deal warriors talking at last! thank you, gentlemen, glad I found your channel. Everything I've heard matches my own experience with far less sophisticated, trained and equipped enemy in Africa, but an AK on full auto is a fearsome beast on any continent. And let's not get started on PKM - that 7.62x54 round is something else. If they know the terrain and set up the killing field properly, you're f*cked. Plenty good memories of good times with brothers in arms. Strength to you, keep up the good work. Salute!
@wrektem2402 жыл бұрын
IMO lone survivor is the most on point movie I’ve ever seen, beyond saving private Ryan. Great films. Great content gents
@homersimpson61673 ай бұрын
Your profile pic is epic
@johnmeyer81402 жыл бұрын
Gents, Good show. Enjoyed your comments on being engaged in a firefight during daylight. During my time in SOG all of our firefights were in daylight, before the US has good NOGs. J. Meyer, RT Idaho.
@kylirfisher2 ай бұрын
0:12 those are full casings right? like the bullet is still attached lol
@yungprophetmusic2 ай бұрын
Blanks
@kylirfisherАй бұрын
@yungprophetmusic na blanks don't have the bullet still attached lol
@yungprophetmusicАй бұрын
@@kylirfisher they’re moving too fast for you to know for sure from the shot, those are blanks, if it’s 5.56, blanks don’t look too far off
@lonewulfmo9128 Жыл бұрын
Nice listening to real soldiers and reading comments of real soldiers. I'm not a soldier but listening to real warriors is humbling.
@HooyahDeepsea2 жыл бұрын
Haha your first few are scary as Fuk and normally over fast !!! After a while the numbness sets in but the fear of what you can’t control is always there !!! Good communication and the support of your brothers always makes for a better time what makes it better is when your around your brothers stateside standing around a fire talking about the good times and bad times .. but the smell of your first gun fight never leaves !!!! 😂
@kingscrump Жыл бұрын
If you still think it would be easy, think about how Hunters accidentally shoot civilians because they think they are an animal in the woods. They can’t even tell the difference through the scope, after sitting there for hours.
@cri31822 жыл бұрын
Due respect to all ex nd present servicemen frm India🇮🇳 To get a perspective abt counter insurgency in other parts of d world u may hv a chat wid Indian army personnel (sm of them hv years of exp in kashmir, north-east besides being deployed in freezing Himalayan heights like Ladakh, Siachen). Wd love 2 see them in ur show.
@ricodsanchez67922 жыл бұрын
I guys r so delusional and arrogant. The Indians aren't going to do anything any better. You're lying if I say they will
@cri31822 жыл бұрын
@@ricodsanchez6792 i agree some are. But most r hardworking. Go check for urself
@ShirouneWF2 ай бұрын
I appreciate him sharing that piece of what reality is like.
@ejmolloy29542 жыл бұрын
I concur! It's like fighting ghosts. You're lucky if you see a runner. Damn near impossible to hit and you're fucked if they ain't armed. Thank God their marksmanship sucks balls. They still get lucky though...
@ejmolloy29542 жыл бұрын
Adding context, 03' Iraq invasion, 05'-06' Bagram AFG and 08'-09' Herat and Paktika Province AFG, 2 PH and unfortunately a mas cas incident.
@estebancampos29142 жыл бұрын
my squad got the combat action ribon for our unit and our first firefight was with the old baath party. they were hiding while pointing ak's and rpk's and yet the rounds were so close one round passed through a buddies blouse but missed his arm. we suppressed fire and hit them with 203's and an AT4.
@jacklamb29042 жыл бұрын
Like as a Brit grunt? Firefights daily’s for 6 month in Helmand, this shit confused me
@jerryj30472 жыл бұрын
we were under LT Col. Richard WESTLEY HERRICK 06 😎😎
@cpK054L2 жыл бұрын
Pretty sure the Brits have been in Afghanistan WAAAAY before NATO turned NA5 Even in Sangin, I saw a British unit have their wall of KIAs in PB Jamil dated 1991.
@Kendoe0341 Жыл бұрын
What I noticed about combat is the amount of noise, the dust and smells were intense, burning tires plastic and the sweet smell of decomp was almost over powering. After 32 years my ears are still ringing and I can still taste it in the back of my throat.
@williamflowers94352 жыл бұрын
I love the arrogance/ignorance of the people who think that these guys (Taliban, Mujahideen… ) who’ve been at war since the late ‘70s are gonna be incompetent. It’s their backyard and the weapons they have might not have the latest LPVO or $3500 IR laser but it’ll still kill you, especially when some 50yr old guy’s been practicing with it since puberty. Love Beers & Breakdowns… maybe we can get a Xmas day doubleheader???
@rileymorrisroe67432 жыл бұрын
So true, the average person deosnt take the time to inform themselves of this though, they decide to regurgitate false info told to them by other unimformed people
@breakznenta2 жыл бұрын
1870s bro
@joshuaday752Ай бұрын
I can't imagine possibly being blown up or seeing friends go down. I do not need to prove shit to anyone, that is terrifying, I wish I could be that kind of person, but I just don't think I am. To those that put themselves in those situations, thank you for being what you are.
@RodCornholio2 жыл бұрын
Always take the advice with a block of salt from the _tacticool_ gurus on KZbin - even if they were in gunfights. Read Wikipedia's _Survivorship bias_ . There's a host of reasons that could explain why they lived, and the tactics/strategies, etc. that THEY think kept them alive might not be what did it. If I had to guess, time-tested is probably one of the best ways to know if something will work. Empiricism.
@thomast85392 жыл бұрын
Or just throw everything, and I mean everything at the problem, AKA World War II. We won, they lost, end of story. To the snow flakes out there, grow up and be thankful.
@cpK054L2 жыл бұрын
no. you survived. that's it. there is no magic. there are no tactics. that's where the guilt kicks in.
@RodCornholio2 жыл бұрын
@@cpK054L It could be that the zealous advising of _tacticool_ gurus are their way of coping with survivor's guilt. Instead of facing the possibility that they were just lucky, they have built up a personal mythology; that they used some specific way to "win", but in reality it could have been a multitude of reasons.
@cpK054L2 жыл бұрын
@@RodCornholio DOUBT. my unit went combat ineffective, and i've had to watch my fair share of people turning into dust. I'm pretty sure the skull fracture that is causing my headache to this day was when that guys tibia bone literally flew into my face. But I'm not here judging tacticool videos in fact, I'm discovering it's just like a lot of veterans who went through this. it's difficult to talk about, because a lot of people don't really understand what you are really talking about. Hell, my own wife doesn't even understand, nor does she want to. All I can tell the VA is, yeah... my nightmares increase with stress I don't want to describe them because they legit freak even me out to where it wakes me up, ... and nothing really spooked me when I was in the military. They're most likely just grifters like Detroit Urban Self-Defense
@RetiredRadioChaser2 жыл бұрын
@@cpK054L "my nightmares increase with stress" ... I believe I know exactly what you mean. If I have no stressors in my daily life, I feel normal. If I have too much stress, the nightmares from Vietnam start and sometimes get so bad that I wake up when the bayonets stick into me. ....
@swghavoc Жыл бұрын
Real talk! Keep it coming!
@Graderman35872 жыл бұрын
Nothing glamorous about a gunfight,I wish now that I never enlisted,I regret the 9 years in Iraq and Afghanistan in the RAIDER'S everyday I have to find a reason not to Walk outside and feed my brains to the squirrels,It's not Hollywood,it doesn't make you a man, But combat will change your life forever,Not in a positive way either,But maybe it's just me but even after being home since 2016 I can still smell the death and gunpowder hear the screams of grown men crying and praying it's a horrible feeling to take a life and anyone who says it doesn't bother them is a liar
@mantis19772 жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing brother. Much truth.
@decespugliatorenucleare37802 жыл бұрын
there's much good to be done in the world: don't go away. even just a dog who might need a good man to take care of him.
@Graderman35872 жыл бұрын
@@decespugliatorenucleare3780 it's tough
@decespugliatorenucleare37802 жыл бұрын
@@Graderman3587 it's necessary, and temporary. once it'll be beyond, you'll think about how everything in the past seemed dark, and laugh about it. there's plenty of cool ass jobs that need smart people for it - and with cool jobs there's cool people in as well.
@Graderman35872 жыл бұрын
@@decespugliatorenucleare3780 I realize war unfortunately is a necessity, And I hope by me staying the 9 years that I did that maybe I saved a few young men's lives and spared them,Far as work I raise cattle and I have a small business building roads and parking lots, Plus I have a FFL license and a little store, But far as a social life not really,I pushed my wife and kids away because I didn't want to hurt them,I felt like I was holding them back and making them miserable,I never thought I'd be this guy,The guy that can't be around a lot of people or sleep through the night without waking up soaking wet from sweat I got home in 2016 and everyday gets worse, like today I couldn't even leave the house because I'm in one these moods where Im angry but don't know why
@austenpowers2 жыл бұрын
Nice to see an honest vid. Always thought Green Berets were top tier. Respect from the UK 👊
@williambotha58642 ай бұрын
Platoon, specifically the ambush scenes, and Lone Survivor are the two most realistic modern COIN warfare movies ever. Both brought back vivid memories for me. The only detail missing in Lone Survivor was the lack of detritus from the trees, leaves and branches being shot to shit ... and, to validate your first statement, we (SOF in Southern Angola) had a saying that "if you heard the first shot, you'd probably survive, if you didn't, it doesn't matter." And we hated fucking rocks.
@b199312282 жыл бұрын
1:20 Which is exactly why most common small arms tactics basically boil down to fire & maneuver. One team keeps the other side occupied with superiority of fire, while the other team close in from another angle which is the path of least resistance.
@bodazaphfa Жыл бұрын
If there’s one thing tallies know how to do and how to do well, that’s fight. Fair winds and following seas to the sailors that were lost.