Love listening to interveiws w/Brent. He reminds me of the men who raised me but are now gone & theres a comfort in that. Seems like just a cool dude & glad he’s on Americas side.
@morrisdennis10 күн бұрын
Those delta guys have a very laid back, humble & meek spirit...
@rickybarksdale71507 ай бұрын
I served with 1st Special Forces Group 2007-2010 and I ran into a few Delta guys there and all I can say is ALL of them are some of the most awesome baddest men I’ve ever met.
@02JAN19707 ай бұрын
Nice stunt reel! Lots of scenes and some good work. Good luck in the industry!
@muriloninja3 ай бұрын
Considering the vast majority are mature men from Ranger Batt/SF....well no shit! Top tier hitters or "1%'ers!"
@tomwalker3893 ай бұрын
Since at least 30-40% of The Unit are from SF, you guys have something in common. But what is it about these Delta guys that stands out to you as a Green Beret?
@pJ-us2vl3 ай бұрын
@@tomwalker389He said he served with which means he either was attached or a support member like a Company supply guy or clerk at Battalion etc.
@dopplerboy45013 ай бұрын
Hey, brother. I served with 1 SFG in 2002-2005. Where were you stationed?
@hampuskjellin31278 ай бұрын
What an absolute man.... Second clip I watched will watch the pod later but WHAT A MAN...
@jbills72922 ай бұрын
think he’s into females dude. take it easy
@groovy3443Ай бұрын
You're glazing. Wipe your mouth.
@joeylyons454918 күн бұрын
Lol.
@DonaldMeyers-v8c8 ай бұрын
Man. He is a great story teller
@JohnSmith-xd8do7 ай бұрын
I tried out in 1987. Didn't make it. Had a fun adventure in WV
@LilHan-xq3pw7 ай бұрын
Fun
@kylezarnowski82855 ай бұрын
That's cool that u can at least say u tried...respect for that
@timesupwatchagonnasaynext99215 ай бұрын
What was your hardest point in the training at the time?
@JohnSmith-xd8do5 ай бұрын
@@timesupwatchagonnasaynext9921 I really was an Olympic class athlete. The test was mainly cross country land navigation with map and compass. I used the SILVA 1-2-3 method of map reading. I went to Ranger School three years later. I came in first in land Nav.
@bradleygonzalez11603 ай бұрын
Much respect 🫡
@FMD0237 ай бұрын
It’s amazing to hear about some of these guys experience about “the long walk.” Quite few it interviews I heard practically made a grown man cry and during that walk made those guys practically say I’m done, I quit just to hear “you completed the course.” I honestly think imo it’s roughly 40 miles and they want to see these guys broke down to see how far they would go before saying I quit. I love the fact that he’s not giving up too much about the process when he easily could have.
@weirdmood81027 ай бұрын
He " could", but most certainly CAN'T. He can obviously say anything he wants, but apparently, Delta guys don't much appreciate guys talking a whole lot about the unit. They 100% don't like talking about selection. So, he could talk, but he knows full-well that he would be black-balled and ostracized from the unit and no longer able to go back or to attend functions..... From the outside looking in, most of them seem to view that to be worse than any other possible punishment.
@Ry43deck7 ай бұрын
I didn't think selection was much of a secret tho? Isn't it just lots of rucking over varying distances with increasing weights for 4 weeks in the hills? @@weirdmood8102
@Gearparadummies2 ай бұрын
@@FMD023 He was more skilled at LandNav than most. A few candidates ended up doing 60/80 mile because they got lost.
@FMD0232 ай бұрын
@@Gearparadummies he said he could ruck but anyone who tries out for the unit is strong at land navigation. It’s the between events that gets people. Tom satterly is another unit guy that I actually respect becuase I reached out to him and lucky enough that he responded. For Tom he actually ended up losing his compass and realizing it 30 mins later, he had to backtrack 30 mins on his March and he luckily found his compass. Tom practically said he wanted to give up or he did at one point just for the cadre say he ended up passing and making it. If u never heard of Tom satterly, he ended his career as a sgt major in delta and one of the guys on the ground that got saddaam. I don’t know if he knows Brent but I am sure Brent served under his command.
@Gearparadummies2 ай бұрын
@@FMD023 There are several people who have talked about the ruck march. It's about the only thing known about Selection, as it was inspired by SAS Selection. Some of them even came from SF and still struggled with navigation mostly because the march is harder than just walking the distance. it's about choosing the most viable paths to make the ruck march more bearable. Eric Haney was one of the first ever to go through Selection, had combat experience in 'Nam and still got lost and walked a lot more miles than he should. Being skilled at Land Nav is one thing. Being skilled at Land Nav by the Unit's standard is another.
@ryanjordan72688 ай бұрын
One of them showed up on the FOB one morning. He was there then gone. I remember seeing his combat patch. Much respect, having the opportunity to work with SF in the Stan in 2006. Very professional warriors!!!
@GulagG4ry7 ай бұрын
SF isnt delta force....
@jbals84207 ай бұрын
@@GulagG4rybut delta force is SF
@zomb13706 ай бұрын
“In the stan” douche chills
@tonysmith40916 ай бұрын
Delta Force isn't SF. They fall under JSOC----a completely different command structure than SF (which belongs to USASOC). Some people take the name SFOD-D too literally and think that because of the name, that must mean that they "are a part of SF". Wrong. They are under JSOC. Some of it's members do come from SF or maybe Ranger Batt (among other places), but yea they are not SF.
@thekitchenvillain4 ай бұрын
They do wear Green, Tan, and Maroon berets though. They only change their flash
@U-TubeSurfer458 ай бұрын
Great job man. Keep going. The channel will build.
@DaltonFischerPodcast8 ай бұрын
Thanks bro! That is the plan
@JESUSisKING27158 ай бұрын
You could tell he was one of them and still is forever
@Dr.Ian-Plect7 ай бұрын
He's reluctant to talk about the selection process. But given how closely it is modelled on 22 SAS selection, you can draw reliable conclusions from the following. Here's a breakdown of UKSF (22 SAS and SBS selection)... PHASE ONE 1. Aptitude; Navigation & Endurance (commonly referred to as Hills Phase) 4 weeks of *DAILY* mountain marches navigating by map from point to point against an *unspecified* time limit. Typical schedule as follows (remember, these marches are EVERY DAY)... Week 1 15-20 km 40lbs weight+weapon, water etc. Week 2 18-24 km 45lbs weight+weapon, water etc. Week 3 20-32 km 50lbs weight+weapon, water etc. Week 4, Test Week; consists of 5 marches over 7 days march 1, 2 & 3; 30 km 60lbs weight+weapon, water etc. march 4; 35 km 60lbs weight+weapon, water etc. THEN, 4 hours rest and start the final march; Long Drag; *65* km 70lbs weight+weapon, water etc. 20-24 hour time limit (weather dependent). --------------- PHASE TWO 2. Jungle warfare, tactics, navigation ALL LIVE FIRE TRAINING. 6 weeks. Those who have passed phase one have to then pass jungle training. Training takes place in Belize or Brunei, deep in jungles. Candidates learn the basics of surviving and patrolling in the harsh conditions. UKSF jungle patrols have to live for weeks behind enemy lines, in 4 man patrols, living on rations. This includes yet more days of marches point to point. Jungle training weeds out those who can't handle the discipline required to keep themselves and their kit in good condition whilst on long range patrols in difficult conditions. Again, there is a mental component being tested, not just a physical. Special Forces teams need men who can work under relentless pressure, in horrendous environments for weeks on end, without a lifeline back to home base. ---------------- PHASE THREE Continuation; Foreign and new weapons skills, CQB training and testing in the world-renowned SAS Killing House where live ammo is used. Advanced infantry and marksmanship skills etc. Escape & Evasion & Tactical Questioning/Resistance to Interrogation The small number of candidates who have made it through endurance and jungle training now enter the final phase of selection. The likelihood of a special operation going wrong behind enemy lines is quite high, given the risks involved. UKSF want soldiers who have the wherewithal and spirit required to escape and evade capture and resist interrogation. For the escape and evasion (E&E) portion of the course, the candidates are given brief instructions on appropriate techniques. This may include talks from former POWs or special forces soldiers who have been in E&E situations in the real world. Next, the candidates are let loose in the countryside, wearing World War 2 vintage coats with instructions to make their way to a series of waypoints without being captured by the hunter force of other soldiers. This portion lasts for 3-5 days after which, captured or not, all candidates report for TQ. Tactical Questioning (TQ) tests the prospective UKSF men's ability to resist interrogation. They are treated roughly by their interrogators, often made to stand in 'stress positions' for hours at a time, while disorientating white noise is blasted at them. When their turn for questioning comes, they must only answer with the so-called 'big 4' (name, rank, serial number and date of birth). All other questions must be answered with 'I'm sorry but I cannot answer that question.' Failure to do so results in failing the course. The questioners will use all sorts of tricks to try and get a reaction from the candidates. They may act friendly and try to get their subjects chatting; or they stand inches away from their subjects and scream unfavourable remarks about the sexual habits of their mothers. Female interrogators may laugh at the size of their subject's manhood. Of course, a real interrogation would be a lot more harsh and the subject would not know that they get to leave alive when it's all over. That said, days of interrogations and enduring the stress positions and white noise break down a man's sense of time and reality. UKSF are looking for men who can withstand such treatment long enough so that the effects of revealing any operational information they might have can be lessoned by HQ. ------------------------------------------------------------ This is 6 months in, successful candidates for the SAS are now badged and report to Hereford, the home of 22 SAS. The SBS candidates still have a further selection/continuation phase to complete before being badged and report Royal Marines Poole, the home of the SBS. Completion of this 6 month selection course is NOT the end. They then start SF training (which never ends) and for the 1st year in particular are on probation; they can be sent back to their original unit at any time.
@02JAN19707 ай бұрын
Excellent write up! Perhaps the most concise and detailed explanation I have read to date. Nothing you mention contradicts the many stories I have heard, while also seemingly drawing out the same threads from all of the stories.
@Dr.Ian-Plect7 ай бұрын
@@02JAN1970 I appreciate that, thank you.
@marshalllapenta76567 ай бұрын
Question? Is this CLASSIFIED INFORMATION?
@Dr.Ian-Plect7 ай бұрын
@@marshalllapenta7656 No, this information can be compiled from public knowledge.
@02JAN19707 ай бұрын
@@marshalllapenta7656 Simply answered, no. Knowledge of the selection process for a military unit does not damage national security. It only gives an advantage to future applicants. From Wikipedia (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classified_information_in_the_United_States#:~:text=The%20United%20States%20government%20classifies,%2C%20Secret%2C%20and%20Top%20Secret.) "The United States government classifies sensitive information according to the degree which the unauthorized disclosure would damage national security. The three primary levels of classification (from least to greatest) are Confidential, Secret, and Top Secret."
@PaulMikolasuk-ue6gq2 күн бұрын
Glad you men are there hope the great spirit protects you and yours and keeps you going I can't say for others but I thank you for your service may you be one step ahead of the bad guys always take care
@Gearparadummies2 ай бұрын
Tripping while checking my map sounds totally relatable to me. Getting to the end of Delta selection not so much.
@FloridaManMatty7 ай бұрын
I’ve noticed that almost every guy who has talked about selection, and particularly the 40 miler, have all had some sort of serious lapse in judgement or they get lost or injured… Pat Savage always said they aren’t looking for the best guys - that they are looking for the right guys. And that’s why I think the time limit is still a very guarded secret - Because there isn’t one. I think they’re more interested to see who can recover from the inevitable fuck up. Eric Haney ended up doing something like 55 miles after taking the wrong trail. He didn’t piss and moan - He fixed the error and never quit. “Murphy” will ALWAYS have e a hand in any Operations and the right guys can adapt and stay focused on the mission at hand.
@jasonroberts52763 ай бұрын
First, I’m a civilian and not trying to be a poser. I have read some military history and biographies. Having said that, I have actually wondered if there really is a time limit or if it’s used as a psychological factor.
@k538473 ай бұрын
@@jasonroberts5276 If they decided to launch a search and rescue operation for you I think you have exceeded time.
@cliftonbrown40513 ай бұрын
No disrespectful rebuttal here However he actually says this quote not one but twice in the video here. Did you watch it fully?
@johnetterlee15804 ай бұрын
I'm pretty sure they are looking for exactly that, someone who faces failure and mistakes and presses on in spite of them.
@chrisclark60443 ай бұрын
Not always the best man for the job. It’s the right man for the job.
@reallyhappenings5597Ай бұрын
AND can perform at the job itself
@ROOSTER3337 ай бұрын
For any Delta guys on here, my uncle was Delta in the 80s, but just want y'all to know that we all appreciate seeing more faces of the Unit now. I think personally y'all are the tip of the spear and more people need to see you
@MaverickSteffen6 ай бұрын
I always wondered if these guys hallucinate during that 40 miler. We did a 21 mile ruck march, barely any water, and well into it I saw buildings and heard kids playing in a playground… it was 3am in the middle of the woods in Fort Bragg. I will never forget that.
@LudiCrust.3 ай бұрын
Same here. I think everyone hears voices & are lying if they say otherwise. It sounds like someone yelling from across a lake in a forest all muddled and you’re right about the buildings it feels like you passed by & didn’t think about it until after the fact. It’s a bizarre feeling.
@dave.of.the.forrestАй бұрын
In Ranger school, Florida phase, I totally saw a guy in a sailor suit with a platter of hamburgers. I was tripping ballz with no sleep. 🤣🤣
@nomadmarauder-dw9re28 күн бұрын
@@dave.of.the.forrestPopeye, Master Chief, or Admiral Halsey?
@ColKurtzknew2 ай бұрын
Knew 2 E6's from my former USASOC unit that went. Non selects. The only thing they said about it was that it was " the most professionally run military program" they'd ever attended and that all the cadre looked like civilians.
@abrahamornelas1602 ай бұрын
Thank you for this service.
@wolf7el35619 күн бұрын
The craziest part about the "Long walk", is that you're being watched the entire time & you don’t even know it. You're basically in a maze in the woods in West Virginia. Its timed, but they don't really care how long it takes you to finish the "walk", they’re watching & testing your problem solving skills & your mental resolve.
@JohnDutton2157 ай бұрын
Fun fact. His fall was seen!!!
@C.M.3433 ай бұрын
Eric Haneys book is so interesting when he talks from A to Z about that selection process, I actually find that part of the book the best. What a man has to do to get through it , seems impossible. So much respect for you all.🇺🇸
@DaltonFischerPodcast3 ай бұрын
Great read
@keycitywoodworksАй бұрын
His 40 story sounds like the beginning to a Boy Scouts movie with Kevin James as the pact leader. Except then he becomes an instrumental weapon of war
@justinsirois29557 ай бұрын
Great interview man! Seen Brett on few podcasts and he seems very chill on this one, could watch this all day, keep it up bro
@irishdefense777 ай бұрын
His name is Brent.
@DaltonFischerPodcast7 ай бұрын
Glad you like it man! Definitely will
@DaMainDude3 ай бұрын
"Tough job interview for a tough job, what it should be" -> sums it up great.
@TylerMatthewHarris3 ай бұрын
I dropped my map in SFAS in the middle of night in a freaking swamp. Got the bright idea to stab my chem light and drip predator blood everywhere so I could backtrack. Thankfully I found it
@KingTiger105887 ай бұрын
German KSK is modeled after Delta and their videos give some very insight.
@stephanromeo6848 ай бұрын
Good interview….its also gives me the feeling of the Shawn Ryan Show style
@DaltonFischerPodcast8 ай бұрын
Thanks man, definitely inspired by it
@Abefroman-lq3mdАй бұрын
Better than that arrogant clown.
@Mr-American5568 ай бұрын
As a former 75th guy that’s done multiple deployments with these types of operators the 40 mile that he’s speaking on your grip strength will be tested… you may or may not have two teams.. but my hint is your grip strength will absolutely be tested. You have 18 hours 19 if they like you
@damuffinman68957 ай бұрын
What was life in batt like?
@jollypirate237 ай бұрын
May or may not have two teams?
@Mr-American5567 ай бұрын
@@jollypirate23 I’ll tell you this Bret actually knows me… ask him about “boots” and “Lenny”
@@damuffinman6895 I'll answer you,,, RIP/RASP SUCKED, but fun,, it's weirdly fun.... Then once you get to your batt assignment,, you start REAL TRAINING,,, and shit gets real... But so worth it,,,
@Wide2point1x3bets8 ай бұрын
Well thanks for taking that one Brent
@powersv23 ай бұрын
As a clumsy guy, its good to know the never quit pays off.
@0hioboy3 ай бұрын
This guy looks like Sonny from the Seal Team show.
@MSL263172 ай бұрын
Wait, it’s not Sonny lol
@jeanetteshaffer82203 ай бұрын
Born & raised about 20 min away from where they take a walk in the woods of WV love running through the mountains.
@garygary88566 ай бұрын
i love that he won't say shit. Why would we want ANY OTHER ADVERSARY to have anything but FEAR that this man might pay you a visit - GOD I LOVE MY COUNTRY.
@joshowens2219Ай бұрын
Who cares if people know its 9hrs 59 minutes on a good day or 11hrs 11 minutes during a monsoon. Some things dont need to be so secret.
@GETGICLEAN2 ай бұрын
I had a run in with some Delta Guys when I was at Ft. Bragg - cold and smooth they don't play....
@nasty.habits16 күн бұрын
There was another dude I don't recall if it was the final navigation part of cag selection or RRD, but you're on your own, and you get dropped of at a specific place where the initial terrain to begin the land nav, but dude made it through this specific difficult terrain to kick it off, and realized he left his rifle at start off point, so immediately had to make his way back, then retake the initial terrain.
@adam9443 ай бұрын
A really good interview. States a lot if learned attributes.
@22cowboys7 ай бұрын
MY whole military logic of running slight jog uphill running down hill.. Has never failed me.
@byronomboy6 ай бұрын
Delta is the right guy for any job because they have a pool of guys with different backgrounds (of course mostly dominated by Rangers & SF) from SF, rangers to engineers to intel. One guy's experience is valuable to the team's input than nothing at all.
@TrippHartman2 ай бұрын
Selection is probably a drinking contest.
@omarbajilan488Ай бұрын
I have chance to meet this people 0607. In Iraq. This people are the most humble people I have ever met in your life.
@xusmico1872 ай бұрын
i dont like talking abut but here i go.. just to be a strap hangar, sheep dipped support asset to facilitate stuff, we had several NDAs.
@nomadmarauder-dw9re28 күн бұрын
Back a couple decades ago support people had a red and white flash. They called them candy stripers.
@bos6782Ай бұрын
Great content, love your podcast. Top notch.
@DaltonFischerPodcastАй бұрын
Glad you enjoy it!
@Bag-E3 ай бұрын
Not try to imply anything but his "studio" is very similar to Shawn Ryan's studio. It's dope regardless
@DaltonFischerPodcast3 ай бұрын
Inspired by it for sure
@tjlewishfield76572 ай бұрын
Seven five battalion we set perimeter for cag on occasion and even had Rangers on night missions with em
@Sharker240029 күн бұрын
"I can get pretty creative with my first mistake, but I'll never make the same mistake twice." Love it
@thomasgumersell96072 ай бұрын
Truly Delta Force along with the SAS. They are tasked with doing missions that are incredibly dangerous. Thank you for your service and my thoughts and prayers to all those KIA. 💪👃✨
@bruceyung707 ай бұрын
Wow! Incredible story
@BRobinson2821 күн бұрын
My guy Brent the joker Tucker give them the story when we was in the sandpit NE of Kuwait
@denisewaukau3478Ай бұрын
Endurance with a Never give up Attitude..Go Delta Force!
@jbird41658 ай бұрын
The mountains of West Virginia? Do y’all ever see hillbillies or monsters? Or junkies?
@ruckingrugger63658 ай бұрын
It happens more than you think...
@qp43678 ай бұрын
really good question, I'd like to know
@dsalet17 ай бұрын
I think it was Pat MacNamara who has a story of running into a hillbilly during selection.
@danielcampbell94577 ай бұрын
@@dsalet1 lmao, u beat me to it. hillbillies and voodoo priest's conducting rituals. fuxkin just try and imagine literally stumbling upon that type of scenario in the middle of bum fuk nowhere somewhere in the mountains of WV, during the most impactful event of his life up to that point. BY HIMSELF!.
@marylandflyer56707 ай бұрын
I could say the same thing about most states depending on where you are.
@WalkingNewYorkCity3 ай бұрын
Damn man...that rock ridge story is sick! wow.
@stevenpeyton74762 ай бұрын
Great interview.
@jeff-hh9mc7 ай бұрын
“Inside delta force” Eric Haney All you need to know.
@DaltonFischerPodcast7 ай бұрын
Great read
@sushibar7776 ай бұрын
Thank God for Delta Force and the other US Special Operations Forces. Each has different jobs to do, different roles to play, but we are better and safer for having them.
@SuperMulletguy7 ай бұрын
Great interview!
@DaltonFischerPodcast7 ай бұрын
👊
@alanjackson43443 ай бұрын
He is CORRECT!!!
@F110mech3 ай бұрын
What an incredibly story told by an incredible man! I. belt a dozen Delta guys guy takeover D.C. Unreal...
@celo.masenko2 ай бұрын
Lowkey sounded like a Dora ep at first but hella respect for pushing through
@therealericjackdanielsАй бұрын
Its like we want to recon everything and ruin the surprise haha
@em34ev3r7 ай бұрын
Delta force operators are close to what a demigod would be. Not HRT, not BORTAC, its these dudes and the SAS !
@SuperColonel917 ай бұрын
What about SEAL TEAM 6?
@iknowthetruth84797 ай бұрын
What a weird comment why are you mentioning HRT and Bortac
@em34ev3r7 ай бұрын
@@iknowthetruth8479 youre a weird dude, keep it pushing
@iknowthetruth84797 ай бұрын
@@em34ev3r Another dumb comment from you kid
@macabre197 ай бұрын
They're more elite than seal team 6.
@andrewschneider21217 ай бұрын
As a regular Army veteran I can only tell you how Delta Farce selection works. If anyone suggests we watch that movie they get taken out silently.
@TexasPoonTapa29 күн бұрын
??? Take your medicine brother
@alison216120 сағат бұрын
@@TexasPoonTapa😂😂😂😂
@JoshR8137 ай бұрын
This show gives me Shawn Ryan Show vibes. Similar set up.
@DaltonFischerPodcast7 ай бұрын
It should! Inspired by it
@Mike-n8y3w4 ай бұрын
“I don’t like talking about special forces stuff “ yet here he is voluntarily talking about special forces stuff. Some of these SF dudes are silly.
@qb6823 ай бұрын
People forgot the value of being an actual quiet professional
@jourdanshepard312 ай бұрын
He’s living the Creed of “Quiet Professional” the last thing you want to do is expose yourself in an Operationally secure area of work. Whether it Be Ranger Batt, Group or Cag/Devgru or SAS.
@erikpaulsen31118 ай бұрын
30 clicks and my feet, armpits or nipples bleed. Total shutdown without water.
@DaltonFischerPodcast8 ай бұрын
Sounds like fun
@alexscottthompson8127 ай бұрын
You should bring water
@reallyhappenings5597Ай бұрын
Seems like a solvable problem, what have you tried for skin coverage/lubrication?
@zachcarlson2857 ай бұрын
Anyone know what jacket he’s wearing?
@DaltonFischerPodcast7 ай бұрын
Nine line I believe
@therealericjackdanielsАй бұрын
What a story about the 40. I just gotta say, shit happens. It's always gonna happen. The man that is able to recover, adapt and over come quickest, has the edge vs the man that is not prepared for sideways and thus not practiced in the recover portion :)
@DGillian64063 ай бұрын
Oh shit, Brent was in Delta??? I always thought he was the cop and Tyler was Delta 😂
@DaltonFischerPodcast3 ай бұрын
🤣
@BigRed27 ай бұрын
Never forget the day i graduated selection …..that was 21 years ago
@efficientfuture3 ай бұрын
I did that and cut my knuckles pretty bad. That was probably halfway through the 25 miler
@nvrbetrwhoohoo39412 ай бұрын
Your studio sure looks like Shawn Ryan’s!😮
@DaltonFischerPodcast2 ай бұрын
Inspired by it!
@redrobin11932 ай бұрын
Can't do 40 miles without a map! Great story haha
@peppingasodaАй бұрын
I want to experience it, someday I will
@jake74635 ай бұрын
What jacket is Brent wearing?
@DaltonFischerPodcast5 ай бұрын
Nine line
@LudiCrust.3 ай бұрын
He’s a silly little goose that Brent Tucker 😂
@JohnDoe-i3q3 ай бұрын
I forget the 1960s comedians name this guy looks like. Oh yeah buddy hacket
@willeypoboy56078 ай бұрын
CAN YOU SAY SPEAR TIP?
@JohnDoe-i3q3 ай бұрын
Spear tip😂
@neiljohnson68153 ай бұрын
The first requirement for any special forces is to have a heavy beard.
@trezndawg42402 ай бұрын
I can relate to tripping!
@dominik23gammonАй бұрын
Night land for EIB I feel down a cliff lost my rifle lol 15 minutes of life was in hell. I never missed rally point while crying of bloody noise. VA claim denied if you get the joke!
@jakewes66422 ай бұрын
Why was the required distance set at 40 miles? Was this based off time available? Course constraints? Or was this a data driven standard using some sort of metric to do with a past conflict?
@reallyhappenings5597Ай бұрын
My guess, it's the calculated theoretical maximum that a person could walk without water in the worst conditions before dying
@tantan16263 ай бұрын
In my humble opinion i think its good to have secret and have things under control but the secrecy in these special units are a bit much. I think more people would have made it if it wasn't so secret. The selection is hard but the secrecy seems even harder.
@randomman0573 ай бұрын
They're not interested in people who can train for a specific scenario. They want guys who can adapt to what's right in front of them. Maintaining the secrecy of the standards during selection is vital to that assessment.
@romeofoxtrot3637 ай бұрын
Everyone knows how Delta force selection works…… Eenie Meenie, Miny Moe catch a tiger by his toe.,,lol SEMPER FI, Marine Corps most bad ass thing I could ever be a part of. America’s number one knife and gun club.
@onewarriornation6027 ай бұрын
Yeah, ranks down there with the Army Reserve Infantry. Keep jerking yourself off, though.
@DaltonFischerPodcast7 ай бұрын
Lol
@HeathenFitness2 ай бұрын
I’ve heard it’s a gentleman’s course
@MichaelMH042 ай бұрын
no in the chris interview on shawn ryan show he said it “wasn’t” a gentlemen’s course lol pay attention i know that’s where you thought u got that comment from
@asiggy182 ай бұрын
Delta selection seems pretty similar to SAS selection
@CulsCaveАй бұрын
Hills phase is the same yeah.
@Abefroman-lq3mdАй бұрын
SAS selection is even more Demanding.
@tommytuctuc6 ай бұрын
Almost as good as the SAS
@alwayson9993 ай бұрын
I don't know how else to say this, so I'll just say it. The stupidest and most embarrassing thing any boot could do was to go on and on about boot camp stories because they had nothing else to talk about yet since they hadn't deployed, or spent any time in country. Yet I'd wager that the majority of what I hear from these socom guys across all social media is... Stories from training.
@DanielGarcia-rz4qc3 ай бұрын
Is a having beard mandatory?
@mattstuttard1318Ай бұрын
SAS?
@locky48097 ай бұрын
I’m delta, ama
@trumpone44436 ай бұрын
Helmet sweetheart we aren't white sof.
@mihaimihai51812 ай бұрын
He looks like Rip from Yellowstone
@autonomousindividual77803 ай бұрын
Im convinced its just related to beard and tattoo evaluation.
@Booksonthebeachshow3 ай бұрын
We know about buds but we can’t know about selection wtf
@rakkmk24803 ай бұрын
BUDS is not Delta or CAG. DEVGRU has a selection as well, but no one knows about it.
@Nofacenocase16193 ай бұрын
It’s all over Reddit . He’s just being a gatekeeper
@Oyakat883 ай бұрын
come on open another crate...
@SanDiegoHarry13 ай бұрын
this is just funny - manbun soyboi interviewing a former spec op badass. That is FUNNY.
@DaltonFischerPodcast3 ай бұрын
There’s nothing wrong with being attracted to men Harry, you don’t have to hide it anymore! All are welcome here
@thickymcghee7681Ай бұрын
Pretty sure this guy is lying, and instead of the losing the map, he lost two Marshmallows he hid in his cheeks.
@jasonbare34722 ай бұрын
Delta Dork's 😂
@AsJimSeesIt-ox1sk2 ай бұрын
What is rucking
@DaltonFischerPodcast2 ай бұрын
walking with weight on your back
@krisholden53652 ай бұрын
The weight being equipment in your rucksack (backpack), hence the name.
@shermhart76176 ай бұрын
Delta fellow here, you do most CIA dirty work on the ground. Almost traitors but we served freedom so the happy merchants can prosper
@FOGguyPICTO3 ай бұрын
You were never a delta guy bud
@shermhart76173 ай бұрын
@@FOGguyPICTO bud you're not a guy, so sit down and let us adults talk.
@550BenzАй бұрын
@@shermhart7617that’s only the people who have been tested like , here’s 100k we’re gonna give to this warlord but you can take 50 since we told him he’d only get 50k. If u say yes then stage 2 is , here’s this payload of drugs we need you to take it here , if you pass then your really part of the club