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@randyross56304 ай бұрын
Damn Censorship here is Insane, I keep getting most Comments Auto Deleted, so I guess I can't Speak About How I Feel and What can be Done about the Subject Bad Guys of this Video... Can I personally even say Bad Guys on KZbin? There is a Monopoly on Free Things that Come Out of Your Mouth (not saying the Word after Free right after saying Free, probably won't Post if I personally do) between a few major Platforms, but I am not really allowed to tell you how I feel about that or what should be done, or my Comment won't Process Through the Algorithms... I can't even speak the words I want to... So I effectively can't really speak than, and do not have a Freedom of those sounds that come out of your Mouth now do I?
@Ashy_Slashy34 ай бұрын
I actually like hearing the stories that went down in south America. Do more of these please
@Dripi_weta4 ай бұрын
OEF was wild,,,,.
@xqt63394 ай бұрын
There needs to be a "The" in front of US, because right now the title reads US SPEACIAL FORCES. TOP SECRET. LATIN AMERICA OPERATIOM. It's not super readable imho
@rocko77114 ай бұрын
❤
@thepeachy_084 ай бұрын
Literally ghost recon wildlands I just put this here for the memes I didn't even watch the vid and now I have 4 thousand likes lmao
@michealkory46044 ай бұрын
Witerwee
@outtic4 ай бұрын
Saw the title and thought I have to come here to say this 😂
@concinnus4 ай бұрын
Clear and Present Danger was a book (by Clancy) and a movie decades ago.
@tonchanthol53294 ай бұрын
❤❤
@SpdWonder4 ай бұрын
kinda scary that you guys see this real life sht like only was a simple game :(
@koonelos4 ай бұрын
Clancy was right. Again.
@ZeCroiSSanT9504 ай бұрын
He's always right
@tonchanthol53294 ай бұрын
❤❤
@chartreux15324 ай бұрын
Did Clancy ever write about Che Guevara? I only watched "Jack Ryan" and never read a book by Tom Clancy but i guess i should. Regarding Che Guevara, there have been some released Documents of the German "BND" (basically our CIA) linking German War Criminal "Klaus Barbie" who was paid for quite a long Time by both the US and the BND to help regarding Communists in South America (where he fled to after the War). Once the BND and US Secret Services were done with Barbie, he got captured and prosecuted in France. So the Talk is that he wasn't captured until the 1980s because he was on the Payroll of both the US and German Gouvernment until then Prost & Cheers from Berchtesgaden in the Bavarian Alps
@cloudstrife52094 ай бұрын
Makes me want to get on Wildlands pvp. 👍
@Jorvaskrr4 ай бұрын
From beyond the grave.
@milowskiii58824 ай бұрын
As a person who grew up in Honduras for most of my life, I really appreciate the content revolving around Central American operations and events. It is often overshadowed by operations occurring in better known regions like Europe and the middle east. You're a real one for this video Chris, really appreciate this content.
@mannyb79493 ай бұрын
"It is often overshadowed by operations occurring in better known regions like Europe and the middle east" which is the intended goal.
@dtcdtc83283 ай бұрын
@@mannyb7949 C'mon bruh. They be fight'n overseas for our Freedom of speech , lower taxes, honest elections and second amendment, can't you feel the difference its made for us? Sheesh, why so ungrateful? 😂🙄😅
@Jeff45593 ай бұрын
You speak of proxy wars, the real US military profit is gained through Latin America. There is a reason you don’t see mainstream covering Latin American topics.
@jonathanramos84143 ай бұрын
@@Jeff4559which is ironic because latin America is our "back yard"
@juanthereloadguy85282 ай бұрын
My dad was a green beret who did missions In Honduras lol
@RoberinoSERE3 ай бұрын
A lot of Mexican special forces trained by the US at Fort Brag went to work for the Cartels and then became their own cartels like Zetas.
@_zammaz3 ай бұрын
Los Carteles existen porque los gringos les dotan de armamento.
@jonathanramos84143 ай бұрын
All the original gafe members of the zetas have been killed by the Mexican military. The last SF boss was herberto lascano z3 he was shot by Mexican marines in 2012
@davemccage79183 ай бұрын
You forgot to mention that it was actually Tim Walz that got the headshot on Pablo Escobar! He’s carried guns in to war you know.
@about10ninjas3 ай бұрын
@@davemccage7918 Found the cult member.
@sasquatch72343 ай бұрын
@@davemccage7918 Yea and Vance filmed it.
@Barca_azul3 ай бұрын
I had a buddy that went SF and was in 7th group. He mentioned some of the seasoned guys told him they would be get into tic's in Colombia up till the early 2010s while they were deployed "advising" Colombian forces.
@cirquemedia4 ай бұрын
Story #7: In 1986, Dutch Schaefer, the leader of an elite paramilitary rescue team on a mission to save hostages in guerrilla-held territory in a Central American rainforest, who encounter a deadly Predator... Dutch was the only man to survive the deadly encounter and fled on a helicopter. Unfortunately the Predator returned to California years later to wreak havoc on the streets of LA.
@chupacabra3044 ай бұрын
It was a different predator specimen
@Taskandpurpose4 ай бұрын
Classic story we’ve all been there
@joshschneider97664 ай бұрын
Yeah but remind me how that ended up for that one.
@KamBar20204 ай бұрын
Sinaloan and Jalisco Cartels: Make TEQUILAs Great Again 🥃
@bobafett22434 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@gallendugall89134 ай бұрын
I wonder if I was connected to one of these? I was in the USN and we were off the coast of Columbia in the '90s. We just did a patrol back and forth along the coastline for a few weeks with a SEAL team aboard doing secret stuff. They took over the room behind the sonar room where I worked - that room had a hatch to the top side where they had a bunch of stuff set up and covered with tarps. They would sleep on the floor in the sonar room. It was unnerving to be standing watch next to someone who could and would kill you at the hint of a provocation. Those guys were scary, but they were polite and they cleaned up after themselves - I remember I had to scrub the rest of the deck really hard to make it all match. They must have had some kind of cleanser that was really effective... or they're just really intense about cleaning.
@KABLAMMATS4 ай бұрын
Oh they're really love *cleaning* alright
@lennyjenkins99314 ай бұрын
Colombia*
@paddington16704 ай бұрын
Sunlight dish soap, the preferred soap for cleaning oil spots in parking lots.
@Stealth866514 ай бұрын
They wouldn't kill you at the hint of provocation, they'd simply restrain you or just go directly to your command lol. Granted, with the amount of steroid and drug abuse they're not the most stable people, but they at least know how to IFF lol.
@jed-henrywitkowski64704 ай бұрын
@@KABLAMMATS From Clorlox to lead, I agree that their good at cleaning!
@dangingerich25594 ай бұрын
I knew one of the guys who did this in the late 90s and early 00s. He had a heart attack while in the Army and was medically discharged, so he had to get a regular job. He had some wild stories about what he did there, outside of his official operations. He couldn't tell us anything about the official operations, or where he was, but his downtime produced some good stories.
@jed-henrywitkowski64704 ай бұрын
My dad was in logistics, while in the Army in the 1990s. He told me they shipped some trucks that looked like a cross between a HMWV and a Jeep south of the border. I don't remember if he specified the country or not. He was never deployed anywhere, but that doesn't mean he was sitting on his hands. I mean, it wasn't like he was in the Navy! (Sorry uncle lol).
@ghostwriter14154 ай бұрын
danbgingerich, jed, does the US military really put any "effort" into stopping these car-tel people? Anyone who knows anything about the AirForce should know: Cartel's will fail against against a GAU 20mm that fires 6000 rpms! There's no good excuse for a caravan of drug-gypsies to cause all this chaos!
@barryfoster62654 ай бұрын
He was part of JTF6….. later became task force north if I remember correctly
@TheNeighborOnThe3rdFloor4 ай бұрын
@@barryfoster6265There was always crazy stories about them at Ft Bliss. Humvees coming back with cocaine run flats and such
@KamBar20204 ай бұрын
Sinaloan Cartels: Ayyy Gringo hold our TEQUILAs 🥃
@lowsledАй бұрын
In 1986 our unit from Fort Belvoir Virginia (Engineers ) were deployed to Hondo to clear out the jungle for a airport landing field. This clip cleared up some question I had about that time...Thank you.
@rcwagonАй бұрын
I find your videos like this one very interesting. With many channels, I absolutely avoid any video over 15 minutes and seriously look for ones that are 5 minutes or less; because many channels spend most of the time in blah blah or "I am great, hear me". With yours and a few others, I am willing to watch because there is content there and you are not wasting my time. Thank you.
@mmtx734 ай бұрын
I can tell you this, I have an older cousin who flew helicopters in the army in the late eighties/early nineties. For the pretty much his whole time in-service he was stationed in Alaska. It was only YEARS later he admitted to us that the pretty much the whole time he was TDY in South America supporting our troops there.
@MattHuarez-yh9zj2 ай бұрын
Aka, fascist governments. From Guatemala to Chile, the CIA has destroyed their neighbors and themselves peace and future prosperity by destroying the peaceful existence of central and south americans. If Eisenhower never went stupid with geopolitics, all of the Americas, West Africa and south east asia would be strong American allies and protectorates. Nearly the entire western hemisphere would have adopted some form the constitution and the bill of rights. The world would have been truly free if that stupid domino theory was never picked up.
@SweetDreams-wt7voАй бұрын
What is TDY?
@paradiddlediddle863016 күн бұрын
I was a Huey crew chief in C. A. In 85-86. Always TDY no combat ribbons.
@mmtx7316 күн бұрын
@SweetDreams-wt7vo temporary duty. It means your permanent station is somewhere like Fort Knox or Fort Bliss, or Alaska, but you're sent elsewhere for temporary assignment.
@MattHuarez-yh9zj16 күн бұрын
@@paradiddlediddle8630 C.A. is central america?
@nocapbussin4 ай бұрын
Dude, the first Specialized Warfare units in Latin America specifically fighting the Cartels was from the US Coast Guard... And Americans really give it no credit because the DOD steals all the glory and the USCG is horrible at PR. Of all branches, it was the US Coast Guard going into the jungles like Dutch's team in Predator. The were called DIATs and they were in the jungles fighting since the 80s through mid 90s.
@Taskandpurpose4 ай бұрын
I did a whole video on how the coast guard is fighting the cartels narco submarines! I'll have to research more about this information sounds facinating
@hillbilly48954 ай бұрын
@@Taskandpurpose "Stand down Cappie, that shit is classified!" ~ DIAT
@KamBar20204 ай бұрын
Sinaloan Cartel: Ayyy Gringo, hold our TEQUILAs 🥃
@jamesfarrell83394 ай бұрын
Great comment I love it @@KamBar2020
@mvflp22184 ай бұрын
@@jamesfarrell8339hes spamming it in comments like a bozo
@Aikibiker14 ай бұрын
I used to work with a former Green Beret that did a tour in Colombia. The only story he would tell about that was that he got to shoot a bulldozer with a LAW rocket.
@Youtubesucks9993 ай бұрын
The missions were meant to be hidden, why would they expose themselves. This is a joke right. We went in and out untraceable.
@Vincent-vn7xo3 ай бұрын
@maltheri9833 🤣🤣🤣🤣
@tardactual87913 ай бұрын
I mean the fact he talked about it means it was probably training or something declassifed. I know some GBs and Psyops guys who have been to columbia. They don't talk about work but all the other fun shit they did @KZbinsucks999
@ComfortsSpecter2 ай бұрын
Oh Hell yeah!
@jonathanramos84142 ай бұрын
Shit how long was he in country for?
@r.b.ratieta6111Ай бұрын
Funny you bring this up, because I did some humanitarian work in South America (Ecuador), and out of the blue, we were asked to act as translators for the Ohio National Guard who brought in optometrists and dentists to set up a temporary pro-bono clinic. Was one of the funnest projects I ever worked on, and this was well over a decade ago. So after watching this, I'm suddenly starting to wonder whether or not that had been part of a "scratch your back" project that the State Department organized to help curry or maintain favor with the Ecuadorian government. One thing that stood out to me, about a week before the U.S. Army arrived, this random white guy showed up in town and could be seen talking with Ecuadorian dudes who often wore sunglasses. I actually met him through some mutual locals we knew, and he claimed to be from Denmark. A few days after he showed up, we got the call to assist the U.S. Army, and I instantly thought to myself the guy may have been an intel officer of some sort, scouting out the human landscape to see if it would be safe for the Army to set up shop. Just a theory, though. Only met him once, very brief. I always felt he was smarter than he led on. But yeah, watching this video reminded me of that, and suddenly made me think that maybe I was inadvertently involved in a "scratch your back" program tangentially tied to the politics mentioned here. Regardless, was super fun, and I'll never forget the Ohio servicewomen studying to become Optometrists because they were beautiful, smart and in great shape. Also, something I learned, when you work with Army soldiers in the medical field, O.C.S. is literally their big stepping stone. It's like Ranger School for medical staff; the women I worked with in Optometry all said they were looking forward, but super nervous for O.C.S. "I'm just one year away from my Bachelor's, and then its O.C.S., eeeee! I'm so nervous!" Great people, though. Fun project.
@CDNR7113 ай бұрын
The movie Tears of the Sun, in the movie took place in Africa. But, in reality it was based off of a mission done by JTF2 in South America.
@longsleevethong14573 ай бұрын
That movie was terrible.
@pandorin23483 ай бұрын
@@longsleevethong1457ima go watch it. I’ll b back with my review
@Vincent-vn7xo3 ай бұрын
JTF2 like Canadian special forces JTF2?
@CDNR7113 ай бұрын
@@Vincent-vn7xo yes, you can even look up the back story. No names, but verifiable
@Vincent-vn7xo3 ай бұрын
@@CDNR711 Thats cool, I never knew that! Thanks for sharing
@fidel-34704 ай бұрын
My father was involved in a lot of this, vietnam vet, 82nd, 7th, jungle warfare school, green beret. He doesn't tell me anything about it (I'm also prior service, OEF), and I've found that he's sort of ashamed of what he was involved in. I've learned that in the 1970's and 1980's the US Army had a pretty significant drug problem of military members abusing drugs, very involved in trafficking these drugs. In the 90's my dad moved on to working in the anti-drug LEO world and came to basically hated anyone who ever used a drug for any reason. He is an extreme hardcore anti-drug person. I think his big personal conflict came in, trying to reconcile his past. I suspect that one of the reasons we hear so little about US ops in South America is that when we peel back layers we can find a lot of criminal acts or unsavory actions, so those involved don't want to write books about it.
@jed-henrywitkowski64704 ай бұрын
It'd shatter, or at least damage the illusion veterans and their families need to believe in. Several years ago I saw a picture of an Abrams that suffered a mobility kill in 91'. A part of me could not believe... did not, want to believe it. Our most vaulted piece of armor was stopped dead in its tracks by a dude with some old Soviet kit.
@Patson204 ай бұрын
From the sounds of some of the reports unsavory means crimes against humanity
@CallSignWhiplash4 ай бұрын
It was off books to keep the Cartels from retaliation. OPSEC/PERSEC He struggled knowing the friends he lost were labeled as “training accidents” it’s called carrying weight because the truth is the burden
@jesus26214 ай бұрын
Was your father Rambo?
@michaelgarcia91394 ай бұрын
Yep, one of my work mentors also told me stories of how his captain made him snort powder after burning a grow op to "initiate" him.
@SuiLagadema4 ай бұрын
Funny thing: I trained with the US on the northern part of Chile due to the fact it's a desert. It was army, marines, navy, air force, everybody. It was just a normal FTX; some of us got the chance to further our training in the US as well. Edit: And yes, I'm 100% sure there were some secret squirrel operatives during the FTX as well.
@gringo17234 ай бұрын
While serving as a Contracted Employee in 1988 I worked on an Overseas U.S. Military installation. While there I began a relationship with a lovely lady, who just so happened to have a BROTHER whom was working as a Trainer/ Service Technician for the Colombian Air Force Helicopters. This Brother shared that he often ALSO went on routine Air Patrols serving as a DOOR GUNNER. 1988. Go Figure... ♾
@Talons133 ай бұрын
Nice. I may have or may not have had "friends" stationed at Diego Garcia in the 90's and 00's that "may or may not" have rerouted flights there and it, "may or may not" have been a CIA fob.
@mitchkamp84293 ай бұрын
I was a contractor for the 160th. Kurt Muse spoke at our compound in Ft. Campbell KY about Acid Gambit and his story was different from yours. The Little Bird was not shot down by crossfire. The pilot who I know personally flew the Little Bird on the ground to avoid RPG fire. That birds skids where touching the road while the chopper went through intersections and various streets in a high speed chase while returning fire to the combatants that were chasing the bird. Once the Little Bird cleared the hot LZ it flew out of there and got Muse to safety. Muse was arrested by Noriega’s forces for working with the CIA for broadcasting anti-Noriega messages on the radio. Operation Gambit should be made into a movie! I applaud the 160th for making that raid possible!
@Native_Creation2 ай бұрын
Yeah it definitely should, I believe an uncle of mine was involved in that operation and I never knew about it till a few years ago. He was also part of the first Gulf War.
@WarPigstheHunАй бұрын
No one ever talks about our successes. Iraq for instance was a complete success were it not for the jihadist vultures coming from all of the M.E and parts of Africa. The Iraqis are a united nation and contrary to popular beliefs, were against the terrorists. It was 3 way- no, 4 way war between the US, IRG remnants, Iranian backed proxies, and jihadists working for Al Qaeda. In the end we beat them all- or rather, Iraq did. We just flew air support. But all everyone talks about is not finding WMDs- tbf, Iraq did have old chemical canisters from the 1980's but not new ones that Bush claimed. In fact, the ISIS stronghold may have used those old shells accidentally as they were running out of good artillery to shoot. US soldiers were even sickened by unknowingly handling toxic VX/sarin cannisters.
@Yasinnguyen3 ай бұрын
My parents are from El Salvador and Nicaragua. I’m born in America and I love America and love my country. But also love my roots. My parents will appreciate it this video. Thanks man salute 🫡 from Texas
@longsleevethong14573 ай бұрын
Bout time to go back.
@OneOut13 ай бұрын
@@longsleevethong1457asshole.
@AlexVanChezlawАй бұрын
Your country's interference is the reason your parents left lmao what a hypocrite
@sbagwell98Ай бұрын
Does he still have the boots we gave him?
@kennethsanders7864 ай бұрын
Airborne insert is not obsolete. "Hop-N-Pop" gets personnel on the ground decreasing exposure of aerial resources, even though individuals have heightened risk if LZ is heavily forested.
@Buglife.3524 ай бұрын
The true jump out boys
@harrisonpeck1304 ай бұрын
@@kennethsanders786 not completely obsolete just at the bottom of the list of practical infil methods
@joshschneider97664 ай бұрын
@@harrisonpeck130 yeah why not just drive there 🤣
@joshschneider97664 ай бұрын
@@harrisonpeck130 and I think wingsuit is also militarized but hardly ever used. I bet that's cool to see though.
@harrisonpeck1304 ай бұрын
@@joshschneider9766 to be fair, airborne is still probably the fastest way to insert a force en mass. But not the most efficient way of doing it. I second just driving there.
@ilikespoons14 ай бұрын
Just 100 percented Wildlands on tier 1. I can't unhear the unidad helicopters.
@Blank556004 ай бұрын
*thousand yard stare*
@vamwolf4 ай бұрын
@@Blank55600next town over.... Their coming
@inversegaming62384 ай бұрын
Nomad out
@jakobhernavs99864 ай бұрын
and circo loco playing on radio
@Blank556004 ай бұрын
@@jakobhernavs9986 Ew god no.
@philmarek32724 ай бұрын
T&P, I was Military Police in an MI unit which supported the 'drug war.' In 1999 we lost a surveillance aircraft in Colombia. The 'crash' (shot down?) claimed my CO and some peers. One of the worst days of my life. Thank you for touching on the general SA story. It doesn't get enough coverage and there's so much more involved than people know. And F the FARC. IYKYK
@Redlight254 ай бұрын
@@philmarek3272 not in 99, but I know who went in and did their thing after birds went down
@kittytrail4 ай бұрын
that propensity, bordering on utter madness, of americans to go fcuk around in other's countries, spending countless trillions, while letting their very own country infrastructures crumble and institutions get captured by foreign agents, turning it into a -third world- 💩hole country never ceases to amaze me but not as much as when they found out... 🙄
@jonathanramos84143 ай бұрын
American contractors were also shot down by farc guerrillas in colombia
@michaeldavis38192 ай бұрын
I would say the FARC can go to Hell, but the fact that they kidnapped innocent children as young as 8 and brainwashed them into being child soldiers pretty much guarantees they're going to Hell.
@brandonrich63423 ай бұрын
I really enjoyed this long form (iceberg) video. Great layout and format and really great info!! Please continue this style, i really enjoyed it. Thank you.
@scablord90992 ай бұрын
I like the iceberg part. It's always good knowing a bit more about why conflicts start and whos involved. Thank you for all the videos this is my favourite channel
@MrProzaic4 ай бұрын
I approve all content involving Green Berets. Thanks!
@Taskandpurpose4 ай бұрын
Thanks ! I’ve been on a SF research kick lately
@angellomeli51184 ай бұрын
My dad was 7th group from 84’-92’. He was deployed to Nicaragua, El Salvador, and Honduras. He never talks about what he did back then and I’ve always been so curious about it. Haven’t been able to find much due to so much of it being classified but this video summed up everything. Thanks man.
@feministpicnicfallsapartaf36444 ай бұрын
Your dad is evil and a foul invader
@TheRusticCactus4 ай бұрын
3:51 It's important to note that the "Special Forces Groups" are specifically the US Army Special Forces, widely known as Green Berets. For those who didn't know, special forces in the United States are referred to as "Special Operations Forces" to avoid confusing other units with Green Berets.
@future_me_60674 ай бұрын
Blah Blah It all falls under SOFCOM.
@imjustanotherguy20074 ай бұрын
@future_me_6067 it's SOCOM or more specifically USSOCOM.
@feministpicnicfallsapartaf36444 ай бұрын
They are invaders
@TheRusticCactus4 ай бұрын
@@future_me_6067 Correct. I was giving this information so that people don't think that Delta Force or the SEAL teams are part of 5th Group or something.
@richardrose99434 ай бұрын
Not true
@silent_spitfire3 ай бұрын
It's great to hear stories about stuff that is realistically, not too far away. Great video, I learned a lot!
@bivvystridents37523 ай бұрын
I love how've you display the current issue of Foreign Affairs. America Adrift is essential reading.
@Michael-xr1wu3 ай бұрын
What are the books on the shelf under FA magazine?
@meskinthug55773 ай бұрын
Learn basic geography. 😂😂😂
@jamestizzy7034 ай бұрын
Thanks for asking which vid we wanted first! A man of the people
@lennyjenkins99314 ай бұрын
Fun fact, many of the troops trained by the Green Berets in El Salvador were Children. As the government went to schools to draft many of the School kids. One of the youngest being 12 years old. A couple of these went on to help start MS13 later on.
@jed-henrywitkowski64704 ай бұрын
Were at times our own worst enemy.
@MrGunhoe4 ай бұрын
That happens a lot around the world it’s normal sadly
@Gangsta11684 ай бұрын
@@jed-henrywitkowski6470you are your own worst enemy if you VOTED.. 💯💯
@jed-henrywitkowski64704 ай бұрын
@@Gangsta1168 Interesting. Why do you say that?
@Gangsta11684 ай бұрын
@@jed-henrywitkowski6470 when you VOTED, you gave power and consent to gangsters to dictate how you and others will live and die, and to do things on your behalf.. 💯💯
@jamess32414 ай бұрын
The whole video is awesome! Regarding your question at the end as far as whether or not we would like to see more videos like this. I can't speak for everyone else, but I can say this: the content you put out is awesome, well researched, and delivered in a way that I can understand very well. To be honest Chris you can do a 2-hour documentary about my hand and I would still watch it because of the way that you deliver your material. It's much appreciated, and please keep them coming
@jeengyim30723 ай бұрын
Ima have to say no we don’t need anymore like this..not that it’s accurate or anything but just to keep specialized units in the dark so work can be done..that’s why they are there..good info sure but everyone else don’t need to know..sure there are information that are opened source but all the extra stuff should be hidden. 🤘🏾
@gary3696Ай бұрын
In the early 80's my National Guard Combat Support Hospital deployed in support of a "Training assignment" in Honduras, long story short, they were overrun, all of their equipment was abandoned and while no one was hurt, they lost everything. Much of which was irreplaceable due to budget constraints. The state then decided to make it a Evac Hospital, needing much less equipment.
@davidcwitkin67293 ай бұрын
I love your historical analysis and deep dives into records, but I just LIVE for the way you absolutely mangle foreign words and names. It's so adorable. Please never change.
@JC_Musician4 ай бұрын
I’ve heard some crazy stories about this by a retired DEA agent!
@mikehinson59354 ай бұрын
I can only imagine
@ZetaMoolah4 ай бұрын
Same, he was a prof at my uni. Was deployed to Colombia all through the 80s.
@svenvanwier71964 ай бұрын
Buying or selling.... Thats a joke😅
@Make-Asylums-Great-Again4 ай бұрын
@@ZetaMoolah🆗
@jesus26214 ай бұрын
A dead agent?
@richwalter31074 ай бұрын
I supported these missions from Panama. (1st 2 parts of presentation) Thank you for explaining 4 years of my life in a way i can share.
@philmarek32724 ай бұрын
Thank you for what you did. I was Military Police supporting an MI unit in the late 90s, including the Canal handover.
@MrMuaythailifestyles4 ай бұрын
Cool imperialist hipocrit story bro, id be ashamed to admit that if i were you, you and your little gang of thugs will be a part of history, remembered as those who broke the rule of law and stole on behalf of your corrupt leaders. Lets see if another govt comes and tries to build a river across the u.s. forcefully for their personal benefit. But with Innocent blood on your hands you still want recognition.... i miss the good ol days when people felt shame.
@l-_-lForkBombl-_-l4 ай бұрын
Damn thanks for your service you are the people that make this nation great.
@Ulises-Gonzalez-31314 ай бұрын
@@l-_-lForkBombl-_-l what service? violating other countries sovereign territories to kidnap, torture, and kill their citizens following orders from corrupt US politicians that do the oligarchs's biding??
@Ulises-Gonzalez-31314 ай бұрын
@@philmarek3272 you are thanking a murderer of panamenian people, shame on you! o wait, you don't care because you are a sociopath.
@MVK_GS4 ай бұрын
A couple of things here. It is JCET, not JTEC. Also, no, a JCET (Title 10) is not a cover for any covert or clandestine operations (Title 50). JCET forces can not be leveraged towards unilateral operations nor operations alongside partnered forces. In fact, once a US Ambassador catches wind of anything like that, that entire element will find itself recalled and back to CONUS on the first flight out of there with UCMJ action to follow due to breaking US laws. If/when the US National Command Authority wants to conduct a clandestine operation, it will project the required forces using specific Title 50 operation authority. Also, SFC Greg A. Fronius was not a Marine. The picture (headshot) shown is that of a Marine. Fronius was from 3/7 SFG. Also, the Mexican Marines who took part in the operations mentioned here are not your average Marine unit (BTW, I understand it was not stated as so here, but I wanted to clear that up). As part of SEMAR, they are a Mexican Tier One unit with a significant degree of experience conducting special operations. Regarding Che, his last name is Guevara, not "Guavara." Why do I know? I served in 7th SFG for 15 years.
@gene_pool_exotics32614 ай бұрын
Thank you for your service.
@athrough94 ай бұрын
Yea, he is completely wrong about JCETs, nothing untoward there and US SOF elements from all branches participate. Easily verifiable info, guess he is entitled to a mistake or 2. Additionally 7th GRP ops down south are wild, if Eric Haney's book is to be believed, very wild.
@sh49024 ай бұрын
Im a 5th group guy. I always wonder what you guys get up to down there. Besides women
@FlyboyHelosim3 ай бұрын
Yeah, the JTEC/JCET thing was bugging me, too. Not to mention all the misspellings and mispronunciations. You really have to take these videos with a grain of salt.
@MVK_GS3 ай бұрын
@FlyboyHelosim I think this video was put together in a hurry to create content. The most egregious error was putting someone else's face when discussing Fronius' death.
@timbrown71328 күн бұрын
These are some of the most in depth explantion on milatry covert missions of the SF on youtube ,well done .
@reptiboy3 ай бұрын
I've been a pretty consistent viewer for the last year and love a lot of your breakdowns. Truly, I think these types of breakdowns help bring light to and make more palatable for the average American the vastness of JSOC operations globally. Simply put; do more.
@mixmix14874 ай бұрын
Great video. I was an 0321 man and a few of my buddies contract in South America now. Unfortunately they are on the “other side”. Recon and MARSOC guys training tactics and making money. Crazy stuff. Me, I’m just a stay at home dad now.
@joseluiszuno15673 ай бұрын
When you say other side? You mean the bad guys or US bad guys (CIA)?
@sueannoquinn67884 ай бұрын
I'm using my wife's tablet. I was a 13F with the 3rd BN 319th FA with the 101st. In August of 83, we were deployed to the Trujillo area of Honduras. Our mission was to train Hondurian Soilders how to use M-102 Howitzer and the adjustment of the indirect fire. While there, I bumped into a friend of mine that I served with when I was an 11C with D/1/506th. We were about 7 clicks from his camp. He was training the 11Bs of the Hondo Army. I later found that we were on a route that Cuba(?) used to run guns to insurgent groups on the Pacific side of Honduras. They had some of us repell onto a mountain top and build some bunkers that the FOs were to use, but one was facing the wrong way. It looked out over a big plantation that the bad guys been going through. We didn't see any because they stopped using it. We left in December. Our BN CDR got in trouble with the FatHats when we left. He left all of the howitzer and associated equipment with the Hondos. It made the Army give us new M-102s. They weren't to mad at him, because he retired a 1 star. A quick side story. We had an Army LCM attached to us. One of the crewmembers was a gunner for me back in 75-77 time frame with D/506th.
@delphinazizumbo86743 ай бұрын
and HOW MANY confirmed kills on sicarios did you get? none? that's not what this video is selling
@DavidEJacob3 ай бұрын
Can you attach a glossary to your story identifying all the acronyms you used :)
@delphinazizumbo86743 ай бұрын
@@DavidEJacob he just a grunt
@tomhenry8973 ай бұрын
Heard a similar story from a guy I served with in Germany and the year looks right They were ordered to leave their gear and weapons and when got back to the states all new issue was ready for them
@Rooksaho3 ай бұрын
I just have to ask, why did you feel the need to let us know your using your wife’s tablet😂
@NAFO_MythicPlague4 ай бұрын
Cappy thanks for this amazing video. I had known a person who worked for a company. He had to go into Columbia to get an asset out which did not go well. It pretty much ended when the asset was captured his entire family tortured in front of him along with the asset. The transportation leader had gotten wind of a snitch. He was the snitch but never talked even as they tortured him to death. I could tell you the ages of the children but there is no good that could come of it. This video was a good look into the operations that take place. And really makes sense when you look at the War on Drugs. That really gave the South American operations legitimacy and a legal path to wage a war. To bad we had to muck it all up.
@jonathanramos84143 ай бұрын
It's spelled colombia dude
@calvins49403 ай бұрын
This vid was definitely one of your better ones. Very informative, keep up the good work. Carry on!
@williamrhea35353 ай бұрын
As a retired special forces soldier I found your presentation very interesting. I was personally a 10th group guy and was not in the Know concerning the south of the border ops. A good friend 7th group guy was however and i will be contacting him for the skinny on the goings on down there. Thanks for your info.
@josemanuelrodriguez5024 ай бұрын
I'm from Honduras, specifically from an area near Nicaragua, during the 80s the US military built an air strip and a base. And they launched incursions to the nicaraguaan border from there
@joshschneider97664 ай бұрын
@@josemanuelrodriguez502 not surprising. They probably had a shell company buy a property and get it through to the right engineers what they wanted. Imagine a whole engineer company posing as corporate engineers 😂
@josemanuelrodriguez5024 ай бұрын
@@joshschneider9766 nooo, the honduran government build it, but the US operated it. You can see the deterioration of the airstrip on google earth time line. This are the coordinates 14°02'37"N 86°25'10"W
@gvibration14 ай бұрын
Did people you know support the Honduras government actions?
@josemanuelrodriguez5024 ай бұрын
@gvibration1 people here had no choice. If you were caught with a cassette from a considered comunist artists they send you to jail to be tortured or thrown from a helicopter. There's a lot of people who vanished during that time.
@josemanuelrodriguez5024 ай бұрын
@joshschneider9766 nooo, all the infrastructure is the government's property, but it was mainly used by the US military. If you see the airstrip on google Earth's timelapse, the deterioration is notable. It was used only during the 80s. This are the coordinates: 14°02'37"N 86°25'10"W
@chelechillen78484 ай бұрын
Salvy here. My Uncles fought in the Civil War. Two of them were sent to Fort Bragg and came back to form BIRI Atlactl and BIRI Belloso. They both told me that they would insert with American Special Forces and CIA.
@oldsoldier1814 ай бұрын
I remember very clearly Operation Golden Pheasant. My best friend went there. The troops from the 82nd they took with them (7th Group) were being pre-selected for Selection. They used it as sort of a "gut check" for troops wanting to go SF. As I recall him telling me, the terrain was absolutely brutal lol.
@pedrogunner97503 ай бұрын
I was not special forces but I spent 8 months training Colombia forces and also going out in ops and advising them. Towards the end of our stint army SOF guys started showing up and taking over from us. Great dudes to work with, so some wild stuff.
@markpatterson97423 ай бұрын
Great stories. I live right in between Eglin Air Force Base and Hurlburt Field Fort Walton Beach. The 7th Special Forces is right across from Duke Field. And the 75th Ranger regiment is right down the road as well. Its awesome to hear these stories of brave men and women.
@Catspajamas17764 ай бұрын
I like these videos lots of information and it’s interesting to think this is happening all the time
@mikehinson59354 ай бұрын
It has to be happening EVERYWHERE the US has some sort of interest.
@bandwoof4 ай бұрын
We got ghost recon wildlands IRL before GTA6💀
@DS-ej7zt4 ай бұрын
We got it before GTA1 stfu
@planetcaravan29253 ай бұрын
Ahhaahhahabahahabahahahaahhaha
@ThisPartIsAndrew4 ай бұрын
My best friend in high school was from Mexico. He was murdered by the blood gang after being enticed to join. I completely support any of these operations and I wish them to be expanded. R9X calling!
@chiapets25944 ай бұрын
Yea so they can have statewide govt sanctioned death squads more than they already have right
@Alex-gd3fk3 ай бұрын
@FarmerDrew im really sorry that happened to your friend and youve got to live with it man, and i understand why you feel that way, but the operations in mexico where delta force train and work with the actual established mexican government to capture cartel leaders are much, MUCH different then delta force funding, training, and fighting alongside revolutionary guerrila forces trying to overthrow a government. The latter is much worse. Its like the US military supporting the actual mexican army vs the US government backing the cartels organized into a revolutionary army in a mexican civil war because the US didnt like how the mexican government's policies were growing inconvenient for the US. If you dont want things like what happened to your friend to other kids in the future, hold your government to a higher standard and make it known that your government recklessly backing non-state actors with a history of war crimes, alongside racketeering and drug running to fund their warfare is absolutely unacceptable.
@ThisPartIsAndrew3 ай бұрын
@@Alex-gd3fk is not just that, is also media promoting blood gang with members like Cardi B
@REBELSCL3 ай бұрын
Love it.. Keep it up! I was a double major in college history/political science…. You’ve just answered a lot of questions I’ve had…As you learn more.. please keep us informed….. IE: How many troops do we have deployed and where are they located in Africa as well as in differing areas of the Middle East…. I’m sure in both Africa and the Middle East we are facing down Russians (and their proxies) as well in certain areas of Africa we might actually be facing the Chinese (looking after their investments) These are things that we need to know so we can respond to our government correctly with knowledge not assumptions….. We live in a time where correct information is critical….. Your video focused primarily on Latin and South America this area was claimed to be in”our” fear of influence i.e. the west.. our hemisphere.. Africa is much closer to both Russia and China than it is to us. IE: Their hemisphere /sphere of influence… We need to be very very careful… We’ve got enough to worry about with Iran and their affects on the Middle East as well as potential threats here… So let’s not go out of our way to piss off Russia or China any further than we already have… Does anybody really want to have a war with either of those guys or possibly both? As I said before information is knowledge ..knowledge is critical!
@tylersizelove752123 күн бұрын
I read Haney's book on the birth of the Delta Force. They were mostly trained for hostage situations. The selection process is absolutely brutal.
@mogreen194 ай бұрын
Harrison Ford and William Dafoe knew about this in 1994.
@3Dimencia4 ай бұрын
lol.. clear and present danger.. 🤭
@jesus26214 ай бұрын
President harrison ford
@StoryboardMindset4 ай бұрын
I'm just glad Domingo Chavez made it out.
@planetcaravan29253 ай бұрын
Patriot games
@nordlanderpolitics4 ай бұрын
Glossing over Oliver north with a glint in his eye lol
@MrBalonko3 ай бұрын
So basicaly USA special forces were cleaning up the mess created by other USA special forces.
@danielponcianodiaz1762 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@Native_Creation2 ай бұрын
Basically Afghanistan
@michaeldavis38192 ай бұрын
It happens a lot post WWII.
@Mixedpuppy2 ай бұрын
This was really good guys!!! Keep up the strong work!!!
@declanbrady51723 ай бұрын
Great Video Cappie. It's great to learn about military interventions that have never had much coverage or were kept completely hush hush. Nice one mate!
@JohnCurtinmadrid4 ай бұрын
The hate and separation created in the 80s and 90s persists to this day. I ran an NGO with a branch in Nicaragua for 20 years. We worked training doctors in hospitals mainly. Every morning, you would get the usual clinical meeting where maybe 50 doctors in a room gather to discuss the day´s cases. But in a Nicaraguan meeting, half the doctors stand or sit on the left of the room (the Sandinista Marxist faction) and the other half, or non-Sandinistas, would be on the right side of the room. There hasn´t been unrest in Nica for over 30 years, to give you an idea.
@gvibration14 ай бұрын
Why no tension between the 2 groups for 30yrs?
@JohnCurtinmadrid4 ай бұрын
@@gvibration1 Because after 30 years all that´s left is the ideology. It´s dificult to generate constant tension with someone you work, eat and socialise with so it´s diluted into small gestures to help you remember what you fought for .
@gvibration13 ай бұрын
@JohnCurtinmadrid no revolutionary urge left? That's a good thing, by the way. I was just curious as to how those tensions resolved.
@montyburnz4 ай бұрын
The fight against drugs needs many approaches and the special forces is an important one. However, the only way we will have positive effects on both sides of the border is targeting DEMAND. It is an American problem....we absolutely love/need to get high. This War on Drugs is an endless Afghanistan if you don't treat the user.
@jimmcfarland93184 ай бұрын
I wonder why so many people take drugs, with all the information available about the consequences, particularly the highly addictive ones. We need to develop character, not remedy foolishness.
@cyberfox9814 ай бұрын
Targeting demand is not at all good for business.
@chupacabra3044 ай бұрын
Legalize it , tax it and use taxes to fund and treat addicts who *actually* want to quit …watch addiction rates plummet Of course this is extremely unlikely because people believe that legalizing all those things would cause the end of the world. When in fact it’s a “forbidden fruit” dilemma Beyond that all the businesses built around the war would become obsolete overnight and they lobby to keep the money flowing ineffectively
@Kentuckyhunter584 ай бұрын
@@jimmcfarland9318 because people like drugs. You need to understand that good majority of addicts don’t want to clean and they don’t want treatment. The United States would literally have to force people into treatment and then to keep them from relapsing the supply of drugs into the US has to be cut off
@jimmcfarland93184 ай бұрын
@@Kentuckyhunter58 If they never used them, they wouldn't know if they liked them. Unfortunately, the US medical system prescribes stuff that are analogues to illegal drugs. Pig Pharma is to blame for a lot of addiction. Which is why I stay away from prescription drugs.
@SpatialDragon3 ай бұрын
Dude in 1984 I was a crew chief/door gunner on Hueys in Honduras. Part of what we did was transport and re-supply other groups from Ft. Bragg. A lot of different specialty mos' were stationed at Ft. Bragg. I worked with a lot of highly trained specialty troops and civilians back in the U.S. We were flying all over Central America. We were trying to stop the cartels, train the locals and prevent the human caravans we have been suffering from the last few years. I remember sitting thru bleary eyed briefings of all those alphabet groups. We landed in a marijuana field that looked like a jungle scene. Problem was it had all been sprayed with Paraquat earlier that day. Fun times.
@Taskandpurpose3 ай бұрын
Wild story man thank you for sharing, so many missions no one would have never known about
@paradiddlediddle863016 күн бұрын
@@Taskandpurpose I followed right behind you. I was a Huey gunner crew chief out Camp Blackjack. Very complex operations. No indications on my 214 I was ever there.
@prominence2826Ай бұрын
This is the 2nd iceberg style explanation video I’ve seen from you, and they’ve both been great 👍🏻
@thors_bane3 күн бұрын
Great work. I like both, rhe iceberg style and the complete deep dives.
@franciscogerardohernandezR19794 ай бұрын
Sounds great in theory, but once their contracts are over some end up working and/or training cartel goons, perpetuating the cycle. There is plenty of evidence around this issue.
@israelgarcia78014 ай бұрын
Yeah I’m starting to get the idea that even the drug dealers don’t want to actually do the job. Anyone could be offered a bribe and then blackmailed. And if you refuse the money , then you and your family disappear and someone else is put in place.
@alexlopez58003 ай бұрын
And also end up on the FBI most wanted list too
@l-_-lForkBombl-_-l4 ай бұрын
Operation acid gambit was insane breaking a U.S. citizen out of an enemies prison is wild.
@kittytrail4 ай бұрын
oh noes, the mighty good CIA asset called Manuel Noriega wanted a bigger slice of the pie and, lo and behold, an enemy he was labeled! 😹
@yashashgc34883 ай бұрын
From a local perspective it would be assaulting local prison to get an enemy prison out and in turn freeing hundreds of murderers, rapists and criminals.
@shanemcman36654 ай бұрын
The most famous South American Special Forces mission was made into a documentary when a team encountered an alien that detonated a small nuke upon capture
@javilo27974 ай бұрын
Whats the name of the movie. Sounds dope.
@swesleyc73 ай бұрын
Barely making it out alive on a chopper.
@PhilipEvang3 ай бұрын
Awesome! Definitely do more of these - they can serve as a historical reality checks...
@jnajjar2687Ай бұрын
I personally like the “rundown” style vids. I don’t always have the time and rarely the attention span 😮 for the deep dives with all the details. Great work Cappy carry on!
@harrisonpeck1304 ай бұрын
Listening to people really upsell JCETs is always fun😂
@rockycata60784 ай бұрын
Iran-Contra was rumored for years, and finally exposed once it became clear that the mission failed. Colombian mercenaries, who operated in Iraq. Even the Israeli IDF have a base-camp training for Latin American operations. US military now has operations in 4 theatre's on 4 continents. That's what an $800B DoD/Pentagon budget can buy. The recently captured 'former' US Navy Seal in Venezuela has put the region on alert, not everyone agreeing to US military operations. Whether the 'threat' from Washington to destabilize the region is real, there is clear resistance that the region is not going back to the days of "Yanqui Imperialism". How Maduro negotiates with his neighbors, as he tries to avoid being assassinated, will determine the rest of the century for Latin America.
@kokliangchew36094 ай бұрын
US military invention in Latin America, covert or otherwise, has been ongoing for over a hundred years. In the early 20th century, during the "Banana Republic" era of Latin American history, the U.S. launched several interventions and invasions in the region (known as the Banana Wars) in order to promote American business interests. US Marine Major General Smedley Butler (2 Medals of Honor and a Brevet Medal), who is the second most decorated marine after Chesty Puller, wrote this in his book "War is a Racket" (1935): "I spent 33 years and four months in active military service and during that period I spent most of my time as a high class muscle man for Big Business, for Wall Street and the bankers. In short, I was a racketeer; a gangster for capitalism. I helped make Mexico and especially Tampico safe for American oil interests in 1914. I helped make Haiti and Cuba a decent place for the National City Bank boys to collect revenues in. I helped in the raping of half a dozen Central American republics for the benefit of Wall Street. I helped purify Nicaragua for the International Banking House of Brown Brothers in 1902-1912. I brought light to the Dominican Republic for the American sugar interests in 1916. I helped make Honduras right for the American fruit companies in 1903. In China in 1927 I helped see to it that Standard Oil went on its way unmolested. Looking back on it, I might have given Al Capone a few hints. The best he could do was to operate his racket in three districts. I operated on three continents." In the CIA-backed Operation Condor (1975-1983), at least eight US-backed military dictatorships jointly plotted the cross-border kidnap, torture, rape and murder of hundreds of their political opponents in South America. Highlights of the operation was the Dirty War in Argentina (1976-1983) and General Pinochet's coup against President Salvador Allende of Chile (1973). Estimates are that at least 60,000 deaths can be attributed to Condor, with up to 30,000 of these in Argentina alone. The Central America equivalent to Operation Condor was Operation Charly (1968-1989) which produced the Iran-Contra Scandal. Between 1981 and 1986, senior Reagan administration officials secretly facilitated the illegal sale of arms to Iran, which was subject to an arms embargo at the time. The administration hoped to use the proceeds of the arms sale to fund the Contras, an anti-Sandinista rebel group in Nicaragua. So, any current covert military operations in Latin America is nothing more than a century old continuation of such operations and the successors to the Banana Wars, Operation Condor and Operation Charly.
@CatrachoDNYC3 ай бұрын
Well put, truth for the deniers. We have created a cluster f in Latin America that has resulted in extreme violence, poverty etc that has created mass migration to the US, these so called operations have served to increase in the case of Honduras the military know how on how to control the people of Honduras by means of repression, violence, assassination etc that have resulted in military, police, government officials, Congress people etc etc narcos who control and export drugs to the US. Honduras is a narco state.
@jonathanramos84143 ай бұрын
It all goes back to our monroe doctrine which was set up to oppose any re colonization of the Americas by outside forces. Namely the European powers like the UK and France
@BillAnderson-wq5gq18 күн бұрын
Cappy, all your videos are excellent, especially Ukraine. Thanks.
@gatorhkman2 ай бұрын
Outstanding post up!
@Stonewallgaston4 ай бұрын
A green beret in marine dress blues is crazy work! Marines can’t be 18x cause they are not in the army
@abefroman49534 ай бұрын
You missed the 3-day fire fight between the Navy SBU and FARC in 1991.
@paulanderson78934 ай бұрын
A Clear and Present Danger...
@Colskshreds4 ай бұрын
This country needs both a Jack Ryan and a John Clark
@wilhelmheinzerling53414 ай бұрын
Reciprocity... that's a clever name
@albert2d4214 ай бұрын
I'm reading the book right now
@KC_Smooth4 ай бұрын
RIP James Earl Jones
@UnfollowYourDreams4 ай бұрын
A clear and present danger... caused by your own actions. Export war = import refugees
@TheHk19662 ай бұрын
Love the video Chris. More like this please.
@KingdomHeartsKid0126 күн бұрын
Great Video! Very informative! Love your channel. 😎👍🏻
@visuals27634 ай бұрын
Heavily involved in the region yet things have only gotten significantly worse for American citizens. Typical JSOC activity, completely ineffective. for the American citizenry.
@michaelsobieszczyk32084 ай бұрын
My friend who is attached to 19th SFG got sent there as 35F
@tedmichel31074 ай бұрын
I think the war on drugs would’ve taken place of GWOT in an alternate timeline
@vandertuber3 ай бұрын
These are good Capy. Do more.
@graybice40693 ай бұрын
Great work, Cappy! I enjoyed this video. Keep 'em coming.
@kyledabearsfan4 ай бұрын
As always, I like the more fair and balanced perspective you provide. People hear intervention but only think negatively. Clear theres been situations were we've helped our allies. A shame that the average citizen has so little control and awareness of some of these though.
@Antonio_8684 ай бұрын
At least in the case of Mexico, the average citizen and politician tend to view defense cooperation with the US in a negative light (even more so when joint exercises are more frequent, and more and more American soldiers and instructors are entering the country).
@kyledabearsfan4 ай бұрын
@@Antonio_868 which is reasonable, if shoes were on the other foot, i wouldnt like it either. But its important to remember we have as much control over our government as they do.
@Antonio_8684 ай бұрын
@@kyledabearsfan Even more so if you take into account the historical background between both countries (Punitive Expedition, the war between both nations which led to Mexico losing half of its territory and Fast and Furious). I had read that by 2030 the air forces of both countries are expected to collaborate in joint operations.
@alexlopez58003 ай бұрын
Exactly
@alexlopez58003 ай бұрын
@SU_Plata Don't kill or enslave all your citizens once the Yankees leave. Like in Nicaragua...
@IronVigilance4 ай бұрын
Using the cover as "training personnel" to hide your direct action raids sound like what the Black Powder Red Earth story was built around
@mondomendez51654 ай бұрын
The military operations are a good stopgap, but they pointless long term in fighting cartels if the US can’t deal with is domestic drug abuse/addiction. American drug users fuel the Latin American cartel wars. Supply and demand, cartels have had to diversify their revenue making over the years, but drugs are still the biggest money maker for them.
@joshschneider97664 ай бұрын
@@mondomendez5165 look at Amsterdam in the 1970s vs Amsterdam now. They attacked demand via treating it as a disease. And that demand combined with strict enforcement of areas where users congregated and used hit the supply side and wham. If America genuinely did the same it would be a staggering loss to those people 😂
@joshschneider97664 ай бұрын
@@mondomendez5165 I would be shocked if most current cartel owners don't own a very diverse and very secretive portfolio of financial assets.
@kameronjones71394 ай бұрын
It definitely wont hurt the cartels in the long run. They will keep fighting and keep making tons money in some other way. While yes the us should help addicts the cartels will keep on going until their home country does something about it like el Salvador
@joshschneider97664 ай бұрын
@@kameronjones7139 that's probably also true 😂
@mondomendez51654 ай бұрын
@@joshschneider9766 Amsterdam is a good. I agree with legalization, regulation, and taxation to make it an actual market. Legal enforcement. Correct. The cartel do have other ways of making money. Local extortion on a mass scale throughout Latin America, taking over other businesses (Mexico specifically with avocado fields and domestic oil, or California weed stores being extorted across the border) And the cartels second biggest money market is human smuggling of migrants from these troubled countries. Coyotes are lucrative. What frightens me is Americans would rather become like the Philippines and solve the issue of addicts by treating them like the drug dealers. No dealers, no addicts. Equal harsh punishments for everyone.
@AffectiveApe3 ай бұрын
Your video consistency and topic matter is getting really good! Keep it up, really enjoying the presentation.
@dreamville96493 ай бұрын
Loved this vid Chris
@bradhuffjr7773 ай бұрын
What happened to the video about Trump's Foreign Policy?
@dguerra38384 ай бұрын
Honduran here, can 100% vouch that what you have said about Honduras is facts. LOL we like to party JTF-BRAVO 504 BOYZ woop woop soto-cano ghostiez
@AS-nu8sc3 ай бұрын
Are you also going to talk about how US Special Forces train soldiers and hitmen for certain cartels? Or how your retired operators hire themselves out to cartels as mercenaries?
@jonathanramos84143 ай бұрын
Most cartel gunmen are just kids dude
@Reyes_eАй бұрын
Yeah there bait, aka cannon fodders😂 pollitos de colores@@jonathanramos8414
@dissmr2 ай бұрын
Great job Chris,, truly enjoying your videos.
@ryan_the_red_490720 күн бұрын
Good video! No fluff and hadn’t heard this before
@karolean83424 ай бұрын
Odoo is a terrible product from my own experience
@CharliMorganMusic4 ай бұрын
It sounds terrible
@UnfollowYourDreams4 ай бұрын
Explains why latin america is this messed up.
@tomhenry8973 ай бұрын
Always been messed up
@alanlight77403 ай бұрын
Latin America has always been messed up, but probably the biggest uptick in being messed up was when it absorbed economic migrants from Italy and Spain in the early 20th century and then refugees from Spain after they had their civil war, in both cases because large numbers of people with self-destructive ideologies flooded the region. Similar to how the U.S. took a turn for the worse after refugees from the failed socialist revolutions of 1848 in Europe arrived in mass in the 1850s.
@UnfollowYourDreams3 ай бұрын
@@alanlight7740 that the US couped almost every latin american govt. at least twice under the domino doctrine doesn't mean that latin american politics are self-destructive. It just means the US isn't a democracy but controlled by a handful of billionairs who abuse the US power to protect their personal financial interests abroad. And you pay for all this with your taxes while living under the illusion that you have a choice, sheep.
@UnfollowYourDreams3 ай бұрын
@@alanlight7740 tell me you recieved your "education" in the US without telling me.
@alanlight77403 ай бұрын
@@UnfollowYourDreams - is it a complete coincidence that the one part of the world that resisted the influence of socialist ideologies is also the wealthiest large region in the world?
@Chuck_Hooks4 ай бұрын
But we are told there's no money to finish the wall
@UnfollowYourDreams4 ай бұрын
If you stop messing up other countries you don't need one.
@rowec64723 ай бұрын
Amazing video. Some stuff I'd never heard of. Keep it up brother!