It’s Navy Federal Credit Union’s mission to help members reach their financial goals. Visit nfcu.me/3y3GGvz to learn more. They were founded over 90 years ago with the mission of helping military members and their families. That’s why they have products and services tailored to our community at any stage of your financial journey.
@28ebdh3udnav8 ай бұрын
@11:05 Correction, it wasn't president Johnson, it was president Ford
@Taskandpurpose8 ай бұрын
@@28ebdh3udnav thank you for the correction much apprecaited ! I'll go do push ups to make up for it
@makebradengreatagain20918 ай бұрын
My family uses Navy Federal, its pretty nice 👌
@CharliMorganMusic8 ай бұрын
Navy Federal is actually super great. I have honestly never had a bad interaction with them and they've stopped me from buying a stupid car.
@53cards928 ай бұрын
I’ve been told that NFCU can be a little more difficult to contact in person if you’re in a different branch. How true is that statement today? I’m joining the Air Force and I’m looking into moving my money to a more accessible bank
@Timmy_The_P.O.G8 ай бұрын
Mama always said North Korea is so ornery because they got all them teeth, but nothing to chew.
@Taskandpurpose8 ай бұрын
momma sure knows her geopolitics! gee wiz
@Timmy_The_P.O.G8 ай бұрын
@@Taskandpurpose well, 4 out of her 6 marriages were military. Hopefully she learned something other than being a clearing barrel.
@jed-henrywitkowski64708 ай бұрын
Literally lol, as I munch on crackers.
@jed-henrywitkowski64708 ай бұрын
@@Timmy_The_P.O.G😂
@MiguelDLewis8 ай бұрын
🤣
@arguekayes8 ай бұрын
Insane show of force just to make a statement to finish cutting the tree is so cool.
@TheIllcaster7 ай бұрын
He didn't tell the full story. Look it up. It is interesting and convoluted as it is sick and depressing.
@djjeeveslarue34997 ай бұрын
Ah yess.. world war tree
@Swagenstein7 ай бұрын
@@johnsterling6659 Always an underlying feeling of dread, no matter how much you can distract yourself with jokes. I wish it upon nobody
@jayewrite12566 ай бұрын
@@johnsterling6659 three words: Mad Jack Churchill
@stevenmqcueen75765 ай бұрын
Two American servicemen lost their lives. Not something I would describe as "cool."
@notaspy12278 ай бұрын
They see all the food they have and realize the US and South Korean Soldiers can actually March on foot and not collapse.
@Tray-sq2zr8 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@peterpanini968 ай бұрын
If you're good citizen of Korea and born rich you live good life.... 👍 just like in the west... communism around the world.
@DCresident1238 ай бұрын
Even such dumb propaganda works on you dummies huh
@budgetgaming48027 ай бұрын
@@peterpanini96 nah I'm broke and I'm not starving
@cabriskus47007 ай бұрын
@@budgetgaming4802same lmao, I don’t see families eating grass around me.
@jeffmcallister70408 ай бұрын
North Korea is truly the dystopian nightmare we all dread (Even the Chinese).
@matsv2018 ай бұрын
Chinese can sing after bon jovi. "We are half way there"
@dr.jamesdenton30518 ай бұрын
Nope, that's only what your western propaganda says. You don't know anything, your reality is shaped by mark zukerberg, biden the pedo, and google.
@wendwllhickey64268 ай бұрын
North Korea is full of northern hillbillies
@tsubadaikhan63328 ай бұрын
Check out Turkmenistan. They make North Korea look reasonable. The President of Turkmenistan, Gods Prophet on Earth, (His actual Title), decided different coloured cars made his city look messy, so he ruled that only white cars could be sold. That wasn't working quickly enough, so coloured cars started getting towed away, and you could only get yours back if you paid for it to be painted white. It's bizarro land, but richer than North Korea. One good thing the President does is he makes Government officials do a 22 mile mountain heritage hike every 2 years, while he screams at them from a helicopter that they're too slow. If they tried that in the USA, most of your Senate would be dead first outing, and you'd at least get some young blood in there...
@Interrobang2128 ай бұрын
A perfect socialist society
@sangmoon24648 ай бұрын
North Korea needs to identify an enemy to redirect their people's attention away from their own deficiencies. The US exercises are a convenient headline for North Korea to use as a scapegoat.
@milkdrinker78 ай бұрын
I mean, NK has some pretty valid reasons to resent the US. Joint military exercises are probably seen as constant reminders of all the pain they feel the west has inflicted upon them.
@tsubadaikhan63328 ай бұрын
Same with Iran.
@KrakenWind8 ай бұрын
@@milkdrinker7Nah, they lost a war THEY started and got pissy for it.
@jasoncarey1578 ай бұрын
@@KrakenWindlol... They didn't lose Mr military . It was the largest retreat in US history because China got involved..good lord
@sangmoon24648 ай бұрын
@@milkdrinker7 North Korea's pains were self-inflicted. Their victim mentality when they were the aggressor doesn't change that fact. This is from someone who was born in South Korea.
@lowdrag828 ай бұрын
I was stationed at Kunsan AB ROK. We did an annual exercise called Team Spirit and the North would always lose their minds.
@kel54238 ай бұрын
Kunsan 8th Security Police from 83 to 84. The Wolf Pack.
@irishcurse658 ай бұрын
8th EMS (AGE) Sept 85- Sept 86
@ranranran83168 ай бұрын
4/5 ADA Camp Casey ROK 1998 Stinger Missiles
@bluegillmich8 ай бұрын
Camp Castle, Engineer..team spirit 91
@wheredamoon7 ай бұрын
Because it... smelled like team spirit?
@mikepatterson64168 ай бұрын
My dad fought on the front lines of Korea for a year in the 1950s as a Seargant in the Marine Corp. He finally died last November. I think he freaked out the North Koreans also 😊. Seriously, I think he'd be asking to pursue peace at all costs. He woke up asking about the Artillery one night during his last week until he realized where he was. Freaked my mom out. Let's be careful what we ask for...
@jayklink8518 ай бұрын
I dated a girl whose grandfather was in the Korean War; he literally almost froze to death. Although, he rad a rather unusual, and pleasurable, experience towards the end of his duty. He purchased a sailboat in Korea (during the war), and despite having no maritime experience, sailed to Tahiti for a couple weeks.
@mikepatterson64168 ай бұрын
@jayklink851 That generation could do damn near anything they set their minds on. You would swear my dad was made of steel. Nothing phased him (yes, not even imminent death). I guess if you lived in hell for a year, nothing WOULD phase you afterwards.
@kevinong17358 ай бұрын
Ah, a Sergeant in the Marine Corps. 🦅🌎⚓️
@mikepatterson64168 ай бұрын
@@kevinong1735 Yes.
@tsubadaikhan63328 ай бұрын
North Korea still has about 100,000 artillery pieces pointed at Seoul, that can be fired any minute. Yet, somehow, the South Koreans are really chill about it. They're more worried their noodles are cooked right.
@timbray16088 ай бұрын
The Team Spirit exercises were defensive in nature. I flew F16’s at two different bases in South Korea. March is the earliest time of the year that the rice paddies and natural corridors are adequate for armor to invade from the North. The second echelon of North Korean forces are now on the DMZ with the first echelon. This dramatically reduces the warning time and response to an invasion from the North. The extra forces added during Team Spirit would negate those conditions.
@Taskandpurpose8 ай бұрын
great to hear from a pilot ! I agree, it's pretty obvious when you look at the training exercises are designed for defense. also looking at the types of assets and numbers it clear invasion is not on anyones mind.
@DAxt-sc1hm7 ай бұрын
Bingo-Bango, Brother.
@johnshackford7 ай бұрын
I served twice in Korea 94-95 U-2's and 2000-2001 A-10's. Simply put US forces in South Korea are there to fight a delaying action till their support from Japan arrives. As the popular saying goes we are nothing but a speed bump. PIL SUNG!
@donotneed22505 ай бұрын
I did Team Spirit 1976, 1977, 1980. That first one was wild. I had the chance to go down to Sea Range and watch our Hawk and Improved Hawks fire. I wasn't expecting them to move as fast as they do as I was concentrating while watching through binoculars. Thought I had snapped something in my neck when the first one took off...😂
@rodeleon28754 ай бұрын
@@johnshackford skivvy nine 84-85
@WrongwayF168 ай бұрын
You talked about the tree being cut down on the DMZ in 1976. I was there. I with HHC 1/23rd INF, 2nd DIV Camp Hovey. I also spent 3 weeks on the DMZ relieving the 2/9th INF so they could show they were combat ready. I remember in March 1976 our unit was air lifted on C-130's to the east coast of Korea for an exercise. I don't think we were told it was the annual exercise with the South. Interesting video.
@WrongwayF168 ай бұрын
I remember that time with the tree, since we just sat around cleaning our M-16's, over and over and over... Our commo shop was completely loaded on the vehicles in case we needed to bug out. I mean EVERYTHING. Even the stove for the shop was loaded. We were also within artillery range of the North. Most of the time we were just board waiting for something to happen or to be released back to normal duty.
@maurycykujawski63448 ай бұрын
@@WrongwayF16 Oh man, how old are you now?
@johnshackford7 ай бұрын
My older brother served at Camp Hovey 1981-83.
@donotneed22505 ай бұрын
That was my first Team Spirit. Arrived February 76 and left June 77. Back in country June 79-80 when President Park was assassinated and then all of the protests. KNP riot police makes other countries look like they're just getting started.
@alfredpaquin35633 ай бұрын
Lt. Barrett was a childhood friend of mine. A rough way to check out.
@aaronbresnick23678 ай бұрын
North Korea is always angry
@Av-vd3wk8 ай бұрын
My mom is too after my drunk ass dad packed up and left her for the waitress at Waffle House…
@M167A18 ай бұрын
@@Av-vd3wkbut did you see the rack on that waitress?
@ZenZone-x4j8 ай бұрын
@@Av-vd3wk WHAT no way is that true???
@arcturionblade10778 ай бұрын
More like hungry for attention.
@stark56798 ай бұрын
Hungry like the wolf. Feeding the anger pains
@ponz-8 ай бұрын
A seagull that lands in North Korea freaks North Korea out
@ExPatinUK8 ай бұрын
It better be fast, or it's dinner.
@ChrisLichowicz8 ай бұрын
@@ExPatinUK or it's shot as a western spy!
@tsubadaikhan63328 ай бұрын
Stealth Seagull.
@Roonasaur8 ай бұрын
@@tsubadaikhan6332 It should, birds aren't real.
@imapopo29248 ай бұрын
Well, yeah. Because when they see it on radar, they have to wonder.... Is that a real seagull or a US stealth aircraft that's about to make it rain flaming MiGs and aircraft parts?
@strikercwl8 ай бұрын
Wow Cappy I thought I knew my Military history, but you have been killing it with these deep dives into regional conflicts you have been doing lately.
@venonat808 ай бұрын
USA: 👁️ North Korea: That is an act of hostility! America wants war and we must respond in kind!
@m4albino2018 ай бұрын
What does Operation Paul Bunyan do to the NK? 😅
@NigelHatcherN4 ай бұрын
Really? you are not worth it.
@tamer17738 ай бұрын
My brother served on the DMZ in the late '60's during the "Second Korean War." After one of the North Korean raids the bodies of the dead Norks were brought to Panmunjon. At the direction of a US General, one of the bodies was brought into the Peace House and thrown across the table at the Nork poobahs. The Norks were quite perturbed by it.
@AnthonyLagunas-yv6br5 ай бұрын
If your brother told you this, he was telling you a story.
@tamer17735 ай бұрын
@@AnthonyLagunas-yv6br Were you there?
@AnthonyLagunas-yv6br5 ай бұрын
@@tamer1773 I served 4 tours in the DMZ. No officer would do that, in that situation.
@tamer17735 ай бұрын
@@AnthonyLagunas-yv6br My brother is still alive and corrected me on one one point. It wasn't an American officer, it was a South Korean officer who did it.
@AnthonyLagunas-yv6br5 ай бұрын
@@tamer1773 South Korean soldiers were feared in Vietnam. They did not play.
@ClericChris8 ай бұрын
Seeing a soldier get a whole can of beans and toilet paper would freak out NK. "Stop peeling fancy lids off your imperial bean cans...... Or you'll get nuked"
@theodoreparkin9828 ай бұрын
Glad to hear someone talk about the Korean war. I was pissed off when the News dept reporting that Afghanistan was the longest war.
@AlexFlodder7 ай бұрын
I'd argue that the 100 years war between france/britain was a bit longer. (116 years)
@theodoreparkin9827 ай бұрын
@@AlexFlodder it exposes how ignorant the news is.
@AlexFlodder7 ай бұрын
@@theodoreparkin982 The news agencies hire mainly monkeys who can type...
@janlim09168 ай бұрын
" *A sea of irradiated cobalt* "
@davidjones63898 ай бұрын
The US forced South Korea to abandon their own nuclear defense.
@fikretdemir48188 ай бұрын
Based
@breezyx9768 ай бұрын
upgrade
@elishh81738 ай бұрын
I dont think US with all its human rights violations and war crimes is a good world police and I don't think they will be that forever
@bruceco60808 ай бұрын
What do you think you been drinkin??😂😂😂
@robertclifton57957 ай бұрын
One of my greatest experiences while in the US Marines , was trying with ROK Marines . They are Warriors ! Semper Fi to Them 🙏
@joevaccaro66558 ай бұрын
Thank you to you and your grandfather for your service. 🇺🇸 the Korean War should get more attention and examination.
@davidjones63898 ай бұрын
I started college on an overseas military campus back in the late 80's, where in Lit 101, I wrote a short story about a war arena where certain types of drones were banned. The class tore it up as unrealistic and a pipe dream, what unit would give up a rifleman, for a drone operator? Drones will stop the North Koreans and protect Taiwan from China.
@joenull59458 ай бұрын
For the last decade, every 3-4 months, North Korea has been using drones to attack South Korea and in response the South Korean defense industry has developed all sorts of anti-drone defenses and weapons. Last few years, South Korean SWAT teams always deploy with anti-drone devices.
@viewer34128 ай бұрын
Human operated drones are prone to jamming. Near-peer adversary can neutralize them too easily. Just give it time, about four years, and there’ll be those drones you’re talking about. Drones need A.I. with target and terrain identification software. Can’t rely on human operators nor GPS in future when fighting near-peer adversaries.
@LeeviHokka1268 ай бұрын
@@viewer3412 This sounds like how the Terminator scenario will happen...
@kylenguyen73718 ай бұрын
No matter how sophisticated combat drones become, they will never truly invalidate or replace the presence of human elements. Riflemen and drones will grow to support one another in a combined arms approach to warfare. Think of Metal Gear Solid 4; you still had human soldiers/mercenaries/operatives on the ground despite the wider spread proliferation of drones like the Gekko and Metal Gears.
@NickScribe38 ай бұрын
@@LeeviHokka126You should try watching others movies. There are some good ones out there.
@grumblesa107 ай бұрын
Strictly speaking these are not "Joint" exercises, they are "Combined" exercises. "Joint" implies more than one service but NO allies. "Combined" includes "joint" but also coalition partners/allies.
@evilpandakillabzonattkoccu48798 ай бұрын
2:58 My dad was drafted in 1969 and to his surprise, they didn't ship him off to Vietnam but to Korea. While there, working as a radio engineer, his station was attacked by a small group of North Korean militants. They had killed everyone there by sneaking in silently and using blades instead of guns first, then went and put a finishing shot in those still alive. My dad was the only one to survive. He only lived because he had been on another person's body and, since both were stabbed, there was a considerable amount of blood...so, he played dead and waited until they left. ....that took longer than ideal, and he had some serious blood loss. he still managed to drag himself to help, though it was too late for everyone else. It always bothered me that, not only had he been stabbed and went through all that hell....only to, later, have to hide his injury (for some reason or another. he won't say. 🤷🏽♂️) and he never got a purple heart for it or anything. In fact, because he didn't have one and other people I knew did....as a kid, I found it hard to believe his story. Then I found his box of military documentation and he had received some sort of recognition from the army but...other than a piece of paper and a handshake, that was all he got. It took me years to finally convince him: "Dad....you are an army veteran. You served your nation when they called. Please, use the VA and their help." ......he, for years, refused to go to the VA because he 'didnt feel like a real vet' and thought the VA would share his opinion. They didn't and he gets great care from them now.
@evilpandakillabzonattkoccu48798 ай бұрын
@@gfys756 🤦🏽♂️ believe it or don't. I don't care. 🤷🏽♂️ makes me wonder, though, why youd make such an assumption? Why would I make that up, in your opinio? To what end, exactly? ...to impress *_you?_* 🤭🤣 Those are rhetorical questions. I couldnt care less about what you think and your opinion.... 🤷🏽♂️ ....they're of no interest to me. To be fair, I do understand your skepticism, but I wouldn't lie and *use my own father to steal valor on KZbin.* 🤦🏽♂️
@norrecvizharan11777 ай бұрын
@@evilpandakillabzonattkoccu4879 I don't think the rest of us are really doubting the valor and badassery of your dad for having gone through that. It's honestly just more like the part that feels bizarre to hear about is the VA being quick to give great care, as they're kinda notorious for finding every excuse in the book to go "hey look, it's not military related, we won't help!", or in some places being the type to drop a pin for someone to pickup, only to go "look see, your back is fine, you don't need help". Although I suppose on the flipside, an obvious stab wound is probably much easier to pass through the system, and there's also likely some areas where it's easier than others. Everything else at least sounds pretty damn rough and cool.
@donotneed22505 ай бұрын
I was Army 1974-81 and it took me some years to go to the VA and use some of my other benefits.
@dw34035 ай бұрын
He probably had survivers guilt. So glad you got him the care he needed.
@delascroix4 ай бұрын
I believe this story, shit like this is usually covered up when there was a major mistake made. When I was the mortar PL for my BN, the scout PSG was shot in the leg by an Iraqi Army patrol while he was doing his leader's recon (IA was literally doing the same thing). In the gunfight that kicked off, he was shot. When he recovered back in the US they made him sign some paper work to not talk about it with any media then they medboarded him out. So the army kinda sucks. On the flip side I'm so happy your dad is getting the care he needs. The Army does a good job making you think getting the help you earned causes a burden of some kind. Its just brainwashing. Glad he's getting help, I thank him for his service.
@JiraPets8 ай бұрын
It's great to see you have a SUPER LEGIT SPONSOR!
@MiguelDLewis8 ай бұрын
"One man's boring training exercise is another man's geopolitical crisis."🤣
@littlejimmy74028 ай бұрын
I was stationed with the 2nd ID in 2004. I started in Camp Stanley and ended up in Casey. As a MLRS crewman I was kind of afraid of being stationed there, some of the stories were straight crazy. Make no mistake, this isn't like being anywhere else. Technically, a shoe drops and Korea is at war again. The training isn't phoned in. If you like to shoot, you could shoot monthly on Uncle Sam's dime. You get assigned to a unit, You have a rifle and a qualification that week. An MLRS crewman in the states would probably shoot within 45 days back then. Soldiers took care of Soldiers, weekend 1 You would probably have some friends. I actually felt like I was doing a job there.
@DubhghlasMacDubhghlas8 ай бұрын
I was in Stanley in 2004 also but stayed in Stanely for the whole time. Just not in the arty unit in the Aviation support unit as medic.
@ranranran83168 ай бұрын
99 4/5 ADA Stinger Though Camp Casey
@littlejimmy74028 ай бұрын
@@ranranran8316 Home of my favorite Popeye's, or used to was anyway.
@ranranran83168 ай бұрын
@@littlejimmy7402 thing I miss was yahkeymando. Guess they are just fried dumplings 🤷 funny how the mind sticks to the small things in life
@Echo4Sierra41607 ай бұрын
I loved it when North Korea told Trump they have a button and he said I have a button too and it's a lot bigger than yours.
@jakesanchez72358 ай бұрын
My gramps served in Korea with the 1st Marine division. He was sent there in February 1951, was injured in April, but rejoined back with a different set of guys after getting out the hospital in Japan. After he came back from Korea the Marine Corps sent him to Nevada to witness an atomic bomb test where he sat in a trench with some other Marines & they detonated it lol. I have the news paper article about his Purple Heart, and when he was sent to Nevada. He just turned 94 a few months ago!
@battlefield31120118 ай бұрын
1976 is Ford, not Johnson
@bookman74098 ай бұрын
Big brain fart there, having LBJ serving through Nixon's (plus Ford's) terms, since that would violate the Constitution in a number of ways.
@matthewzito61307 ай бұрын
There's something else you didn't really touch on. The North Korean government relies heavily on the constant threat of war (real or imagined) to justify many of its own policies, as well as the many hardships endured by its people. It therefore makes sense that they would take advantage of joint military exercises to exaggerate the threat level posed by South Korea and the United States.
@Taskandpurpose7 ай бұрын
This is a great point I didn’t even think of that
@andyoertig20078 ай бұрын
I served 5 tours & 6 years with the old 2d ID (78-95). I was there for Team Spirit 78, 82, 84, 85 & 89! For my TS experiences, 78 was up by the DMZ in the Chorwon Valley! TS 82 onward was down by Wonju.... In 82, we drove our then M48A5 Tanks from Wonju through Seoul to Camp Casey!
@ranranran83168 ай бұрын
There is a museum tank on camp Casey painted with the face of a tiger on it called Hellzacom'en
@questerperipatetic48612 ай бұрын
Maybe you can tell me when did "Raise up!" first become the 2ID's unofficial motto?
@irishcurse658 ай бұрын
I was stationed at Kunsan AB Sept 85- Sept 86. March was the Team Spirit exercise. Other countries along with a lot of US troops would come in country and practice war games. The North always threatened war if we carried the exercises out. It was funny considering the size of the force there was at its largest. The Stars and Stripes (newspaper) would publish daily the skirmishes. We would see these fishing boats just off the shore of our base. Rusty old buckets but every once and a while one of them would have all kinds of antenna arrays. The ROK Army (South Korean army) would sink them regularly. Enjoyed my year there
@rogergadley99658 ай бұрын
I as in the Marine Corps in 1968. (Yeah, that 1968, that Marine Corps.). I became a close friend of an ROK Marine in our training unit. He told me he and his fellow South Korean Marine regularly sneaked across the border to attack and kill North Korean soldiers then quickly sneak back to South Korea. I gather the incursions were some sort of rite of passage exercise that were not official. He seemed to consider the incursions as great training for what he believed was an inevitable all out war with North Korea.
@ranranran83168 ай бұрын
The ROK got to live there we just come through on a Tour
@rudolfyakich66538 ай бұрын
Your tireless energy is amazing. You are always delving into topics critical to the national concern.
@johns60958 ай бұрын
I saw your notification an said “f yea”
@malcolmmarsonАй бұрын
Outstanding presentation. Being a Vet is a brotherhood that doesn't need explaining.
@theMightyWhytey8 ай бұрын
North Korea makes me sad… every single person there is a person. A hungry person with a family that they are afraid will be arrested. What can we do?
@KeithWestbrook-h9v8 ай бұрын
I did my year in Korea 89-90 it was crazy then, it's crazy now. Brings back real memories to hear the words Focus Lens again after all this time--thanks for that!
@Brian-----8 ай бұрын
There are 28,499 American troops in South Korea and now one lone genius NCO in Vladivostok. 😔
@TomDog58123 ай бұрын
I never fast forward through the ads on your channel the way I do with all the other channels on KZbin. You are able to make the advertiser's messages informative and enjoyable. My friends and I often purchase goods and services from companies who advertise on Task&Purpose and we know of many more people who do too.
@dmoney86028 ай бұрын
192 billion dollars in 1969 was a fuckton of money
@wowswc2 ай бұрын
Pretty sure Uncle Sam $$$ was majority of ROK's GDP for many years until their economy took off.
@MiguelLopez-uy2uu6 ай бұрын
My friend i could listen to you all day and not get bored. Just love your channel. you are very well informed. Stay safe.
@Jrude228 ай бұрын
Thanks for the knowledge buddy.
@MjolnirFeaw7 ай бұрын
Exactly the kind of content that brought me to this channel. And you never disappoint.
@notani35338 ай бұрын
Even if there're no joint execise, they'll just come up with new headline for 'provocation. '
@miriamweller8128 ай бұрын
The provocation is US fascism after they tried to genocide North Korea 70 years ago (after installing a murderous fascists in the south who mass murdered tenthousands of innocent civilians BEFORE the war, not even starting with all the shit he did during it) still standing there with a full army, waiting to finish the job. DIsgusting, but absolutelys no surprise when it comes to US fascism.
@colerape8 ай бұрын
You forgot the country wide alert in about 2000 when the PRK attacked the ROK Navy. It was a bloodbath with the People's Republic losing pretty much it's entire navy with little loss to the ROKs. I was there in the 2ID. We ended up with a Korean and American Presidential Unit Citation. The whole division responded to the conflict by going to unit basic load and manning all our vehicles and even started rolling to our staging areas. At the time we were given a lot of credit for the PRK backing down. That was my first duty assignment. As the Bn Chemo and Assistant S3 (and Night Battle Captain) at the exalted rank of O-1E. I learned quickly that my job was more than just "Nothin' but the coffee". 60 percent of the PRKs artillery ammunition was chemical and our unit was about 18 seconds from the PRKs forward artillery. While I was going to college I had been a 19K30 (Tank Commander) in the TxARNG. It helped pay my way through school and I got to meet a bunch of really great Americans. One of them was my 1SG, he had a 2ID combat patch for a tour in Korea in 69/70. So I had a pretty good notion what duty was going to be like in the ROK. We mostly trained conventional warfare, but every training event had elements of counter insurgency throughout. Even in 2000. EDIT: Lest I forget. This was during the time that there was a great deal of wrangling between the PRC and PRK because North Korean citizens were crossing their border to eat grass because they were starving. You can't make this stuff up.
@exmcairgunner8 ай бұрын
I was part of Team-Spirit’81
@Katze53358 ай бұрын
I just wanted to say I love your videos and while we’re both a little biased to the USA, you still give the facts. Thank you Chris!
@TamagoHead8 ай бұрын
Our adversaries are in trouble if Cappy is “average” equipped with “Spare parts!” Thanks for your continued service, and God Bless America and our Constitution!
@ThrashmIO7 ай бұрын
( 3:06 ) I did not expect a military blogging channel to be the first to hear "anything/all but X" used correctly in media. Gave the video a like just for this. Most of the time the phrase gets use to mean "absolutely the thing" as opposed to the correct "absolutely not the thing"
@dankdaze420698 ай бұрын
It's really cute when they Think they have a chance or can intimidate us when we have weapons that could literally take out 90% of their military infrastructure and just a few days😂... They just mad they know they have no chance against us
@halo1298308 ай бұрын
More like the first hour
@dankdaze420698 ай бұрын
@@halo129830 let's be honest our bureaucrats will somehow mess it up enough to give them a chance unlike desert Storm where they didn't have a chance to intervene and ruin it so yeah I'd probably be that quick or if the military didn't feel bad for them and didn't give them a chance like they usually do in other conflicts 🤔... And yes we've been so overpowered that our military personnel felt bad and decided to nerf themselves to give the other side a chance...
@halo1298308 ай бұрын
@@dankdaze42069 Vietnam all over again
@dankdaze420698 ай бұрын
@@halo129830 More like backstab nam rise of the corrupt bureaucrats and the drag out the war for more money agenda 😓... Imagine how many lives were lost just because of their corporate/normal greed
@tristanx35828 ай бұрын
They also have a number of nuclear weapons...
@matthewbartley27468 ай бұрын
As a member of Navy Federal Credit Union. I can confirm.. this "Bank" is amazing. I'm so glad I am lucky enough to do business with them. They're awesome.
@dfgdfg_8 ай бұрын
South Korean food is amazing. Gimme that kimchi and BBQ chicken baby!
@thelugash4 ай бұрын
I just assumed it was because the US military was doing drills and they are North Korea, but I'm not a student of geopolitcs 🤣
@Kyle-75678 ай бұрын
Us military drill: exist North Korea: me no like me angy me launch missile
@SilvaDreams7 ай бұрын
Why does North Korea freak out over the US drills... Because they remember "Operation Paul Bunyan" and still have flash backs.
@NuculearFallout18 ай бұрын
Love the channel, Great video!
@josephreilman85277 ай бұрын
Every time a drill happens NoKo wastes their own resources. It's kind of hilarious
@mhick33338 ай бұрын
Latitude 38 was picked kind of carelessly by some guy because the newly formed NATO had thier meeting at latitude 38 in san francisco
@petergray27128 ай бұрын
It created one of the worst borders ever devised by human hands. Besides being an idiotic straight line that ignored rivers and mountains, it cut through the center of the Ongjin Peninsula, which left the South Koreans defending the southern end with their backs pointed towards the sea. When the North Koreans invaded in June 1950, the ROK troops had no means of retreat and were completely wiped out.
@AntiFederalist588 ай бұрын
I have fond memories of Team Spirit 85 and 88. The Norks got real uppity when Seoul hosted the 1988 Summer Olympics, threatening to blow a dam flooding the Han River.
@fenrir8348 ай бұрын
3rd consecutive video of Cappy not mentioning he is Italian
@AnthonyOMulligan-yv9cg8 ай бұрын
Lol, Meatballs!
@ponz-8 ай бұрын
As an Italian we are about to disown for that😂
@douglasturner61538 ай бұрын
The way he uses his hands as part of his talk's is the dead giveaway. Only a true Italian can do it 😂
@chinesesparrows8 ай бұрын
Foget abou it-
@Dead_Pool_Rising8 ай бұрын
... He isn't. He's American. Italian is not a race. It's a nationality. We're you born in Italy? Do you live in Italy? If the answer to both of these questions is no then you aren't Italian.
@xRa017 ай бұрын
11:00 It was Gerald Ford not Johnson...
@PaulC0018 ай бұрын
while stationed in south korea (2dn inf div) i met a beautiful young woman who tested me several times. she never overtly asked military type questions just tested my resolve in fighting and defending south korea. one day after many months she suddenly disappeared and i was called in for questioning by several officers over a 3 day period about what i might have said to her and our general relationship. that's when i found out she was a north korean and that she'd surrendered to the south at camp casey. fun times.
@JohnDorian-j7x7 ай бұрын
What year was this? Was the spy's surrender intentional by her or did she get caught/found out? Also, was there any sort of statement or news story on it or her name/pictures?
@PaulC0017 ай бұрын
@@JohnDorian-j7x i'm not sure of the year, but it was around 1992, maybe '93. during my questioning they didn't give me much info about how she was found out. and what they did tell me i didn't fully believe. they did say i wasn't supposed to talk to others about it. i heard later that there were a few others in different areas that were caught as well. so maybe you can find stuff about a network of them?
@TheZamaron7 ай бұрын
@@PaulC001 Danm, imagine the 2 of you got married. "Well son, here's how I met your mother, she was at first a North Korean spy, but she defected, we bonded during our time when she was a spy, and eventually she was allowed to move back home with me and we married."
@johnnycaps18 ай бұрын
Awesome, you explained and filled in a lot of the blanks for me. There is much more nuance in the relationship between the North and the South. Great job.
@spiralofhope8 ай бұрын
I like the quiet recognition of Okinawa as an independent nation.
@dennisswartz49377 ай бұрын
My PSG back in the 80s was a survivor of the Ax Handle incident. When we deployed to a Team Spirit exercise he was kept from the field training because of what we now call PTSD. He was a good leader, but he never got over that.
@Xenophon18 ай бұрын
They are afraid that the next time Trump crosses the DMZ, he's going to fire chubby.
@collinb.85428 ай бұрын
What lol
@KopperRook4 ай бұрын
The same Trump that saluted a NK officer? Lol, no one is afraid of Trump. He released 5k Taliban prisoners, he believed Putin over his own intelligence agencies when Putin said Russia wasn't interfering in US elections, he says he will pull the US out of NATO. Enemies of the US LOVE Cpt Bone Spurs.
@khaluu20008 ай бұрын
Fun fact for NFCU. They offer an amazing CD rate starting at $50 for a dividend rate 5.3% APY. Extremely good if you want to start earning passive income. Heck sometimes they even out perform market rates at time if you pay attention. So compared to Chase, Citybank, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, and Capital One they generally outperform them (if not match) at times too in rates. USAA cd rates just stands slightly lower than navy federal but still just as good.
@rorytribbet64248 ай бұрын
Putting that upbeat jazzy funk/disco groove underneath this was crazy 😂
@Taskandpurpose8 ай бұрын
I feel like it helps keep things a little more light hearted instead of depressing and a bit of a downer sometimes : o but please let me know if you enjoyed the music or if you thought it was distracting , if enough people dislike it I can definitely change it
@ranranran83168 ай бұрын
@@Taskandpurposewhen I was in Korea in 1999 a south millionaire sent a million head of cattle across the border for the famine they were having. Got any info on the aid that does get in?
@lancejohnson14068 ай бұрын
Check your research, Cappy. Paul Bunyan was during the Ford Administration, not Johnson's. By 1976, both Andrew and Lyndon Johnson had assumed ambient temperature.
@MordaxTenebre8 ай бұрын
Screw Navy Fed, my dad was a retired E9 dieing from basically drinking himself into Alzheimer's. So my sister took stewardship for him. Instead of helping us get through the situation as we'd done business with Navy Federal since dad and mom joined the fleet. They refused to work with us even after having a court ordered stewardship appointment., They said they don't help or deal with these situations and must close my fathers accounts. That's it, no help, no compassion, NOTHING. My family and I will NEVER do business with them again. Screw them, their polices, and their bullcrap "oh we care" lies. Great thing to be dealing with as our father was self destructing in front of our eyes.
@muddgrub44027 ай бұрын
Another great job, Chris!
@nolongerblocked62108 ай бұрын
60 Patriot batteries is insane!! There's more Patriot systems in that one place than anywhere else on the planet
@miriamweller8128 ай бұрын
And utterly worthless for those +60 billion dollars they cost.
@RedStickLouisiana8 ай бұрын
I took part in these exercises way back in the 90s, the ROK military is a serious bunch of guys. The officers and NCOs are very professional.
@notribadsvault8 ай бұрын
I’m gonna guess it’s because they’re actual exercises with a practical purpose and not just for show like 75% of what North Korea does
@jasonaustin75648 ай бұрын
I normally don’t comment, but please do more stuff like this. I learn a lot from it and it’s really well put together. Thanks!
@42VS428 ай бұрын
I'm guessing because they'd call the buildup to an invasion a training exercise just like RU did with UA. Let's see if I'm right lol
@almostout8 ай бұрын
Spent a year in South Korea, and yes this yearly exercise was a mass flex had a blast doing them.
This was so great so much better than AI generated reports thank you so much
@einfisch38918 ай бұрын
God, the fact that we brought a military force equivalent to the military strength of most nations on earth in order to cut down a tree is why I love America.
@D.L.Hunter.Palmer8 ай бұрын
These videos where you cover economic, diplomatic and strategic issues, and how the military influences, and is influenced by those regional and international conditions/events are really interesting. You seem to have found a really good balance between typical 5 minute KZbin videos that barely scratch the surface, and full 1 hour+ documentaries.
@SocratesHog8 ай бұрын
In South Korea, it is no secret that the "defensive operation" actually inculdes sending 4 armor div into PyungYang.
@joekerr80378 ай бұрын
South Korean military is weak !
@SpookyEng18 ай бұрын
Offense is the best defense
@markg44598 ай бұрын
BS. North Korea invaded the south and continues periodic terrorist attacks. North Korea threatens nuclear attack of the south & only North Korea has developed nuclear weapons. All of Seoul is under artillery range of North Korea and is regularly threatened. But you are going to try and characterize the democratic, self-sufficient, free south as the threat. Foolish & blind comrade. We don't believe you.
@cladglas8 ай бұрын
except ROK doesn't have any armor divisions, much less 4. they do have 3 mech divisions; & 7 armor brigades, spread out to support the corps. mech divisions, nominally under VII Corps, are spread across the rear of II, III, & V Corps; not positioned to form an armored punch into the north & up to pyeongyang.
@joekerr80378 ай бұрын
South Korea does not have a strong military. North Korea will decimate them if China allows them.
@Paladin-11C7 ай бұрын
First off, as always, great summary. I served in Korea for 4 years in the 80s (11C) and as an Army Range Officer from 1994-2004. EXPAT here now. As a RO, I dealt heavily with ROKA commanders and was a key player in RSO&I and I can tell you 100%, Team Spirit was a defensive/counter offensive exercise. There was NO evidence of us attacking the DPRK. IMHO, I firmly believe Kim is NOT worried about invasion at all. He is using this for two reasons: 1. To keep his people and military in check (the mother hen approach). 2. As a bargaining chip at the international table. (I'm mad, give me a cookie) Kim is not stupid. He knows he would lose badly in any level of conflict. [Although he'd draw a lot of blood on the way out]. He knows flaunting fake tanks and antiquated equipment does not scare anyone, but maybe he can get milk with that cookie if he's REALLY mad. 😀
@edwhatshisname35628 ай бұрын
North Korea?... Crops?... What crops?... Unless you mean grass..
@DifferentM147 ай бұрын
At 10:58, it was President Ford, not President Johnson, who authorized Operation Paul Bunyan. This video is excellent work. Thank you, Cappy!
@little.rascal.8 ай бұрын
Crash Landing on You!
@matthew_natividad8 ай бұрын
DP
@enigmacrk2007 ай бұрын
I dont know if this still goes on but we used to have Ulchi Focus Lens every year when i was stationed in Korea. We would deploy for about a month full mop gear all around a shitty field problem but getting to see how freaked out the north got made it worth it.
@Vantud3918 ай бұрын
Why does Cappy so rarely make videos about the war in Ukraine or Israel now?
@MisterJae_wastaken8 ай бұрын
Nothing to talk about / project in work / controversial
@Taskandpurpose8 ай бұрын
there are 2 main reasons that I've been kicking around in my head. 1) I don't want to primarily be a news channel, I want to talk about things that have a lifespan of more than a month. 2) At a certain point it starts to feel like profiting off wars so I only cover them when I feel like I have something of real value to add to the conversion. I will be covering them more as I imagine some noteable changes will be happening this summer in both conflicts.
@traderghost8 ай бұрын
Good reporting! Keep up the wonderful work you are doing. Truly educational!
@sardonicspartan93438 ай бұрын
Oh please. They aren't freaked out. Kim dong short just rattles his saber once inwhile to get attention.
@joenull59458 ай бұрын
He a petulant Mman child throwing a temper tantrum in order to get attention in order to boost his ego.
@cladglas8 ай бұрын
bingo! they've known, for decades, that ROK/US isn't going to attack.
@BoraHorzaGobuchul8 ай бұрын
One does not exclude the other
@cladglas8 ай бұрын
@@BoraHorzaGobuchul it's not that one excludes the other, it's that the former isn't a thing; which is what his statement means. just as some take it for gospel, that NK developed nukes in order to defend itself; its nuke program is to coerce, not defend.
@BoraHorzaGobuchul8 ай бұрын
@@cladglas Tyrants like in NK are primarily afraid of their own population riding up and deposing them - that's why they (a) promote popular fear of the aggressive world and (b) seek to build up an army of well-fed guard dogs to defend them against such a potential uprising. I can see it with my own eyes as I live in Mordor which is also such a state. It would be a mistake however to dismiss the fear of the despotic leadership of a direct conflict with the West. They do fear it because they know that absent the nuclear option, they stand no chance in such a conflict should it materialize. Granted, this fear is largely theoretical as they have learned long ago to actually avoid doing anything that would provoke such conflict. But the fear is still deep inside.
@MatadorM97 ай бұрын
I don’t know if you have writers, but I think your videos are hilarious in addition to be very informative and with a unique perspective of a veteran.
@salted64228 ай бұрын
I do have to say I very much respect the operators of unit 124 for not harming the civilians who spotted them.
@MisterJae_wastaken8 ай бұрын
Unit 684 you should read about it
@bradpotter31978 ай бұрын
Commie
@iP0intNLaugh8 ай бұрын
@@bradpotter3197narrow minded.
@salted64228 ай бұрын
@@bradpotter3197 Consider removing the crayons from your orifices.
@spyfan625917 ай бұрын
reason NK gets terrified, they get reminded what they face if they attack SK every time we do exercises.
@MattCombs-ge7ki8 ай бұрын
Anyone else watching at work?
@matthew_natividad8 ай бұрын
Sucks my break ends in 5 minutes
@eddiemeeks71338 ай бұрын
When I was stationed in Korea in 1969 we did the drill in 30° below in the snow it was horrible.
@donwilkins30598 ай бұрын
President Ford, not President Johnson
@rowyerboat18 ай бұрын
Was that North Korean spec ops dude flicking lightbulbs as part of his training?😂 8:38
@MormanKamler7 ай бұрын
Hallelujah!!! I'm the favorite, $60,000 every week! Now I can afford anything and also support the work of God and the church.
@MormanKamler7 ай бұрын
This is what Ana Graciela Blackwelder does, she has changed my life.
@MormanKamler7 ай бұрын
After raising up to 60k trading with her, I bought a new house and car here in the US and also paid for my son's (Oscar) surgery. Glory to God.shalom.
@Byborger7 ай бұрын
I know Ana Graciela Blackwelder, and I have also had success...
@Byborger7 ай бұрын
Absolutely! I have heard stories of people who started with little or no knowledge but managed to emerge victorious thanks to Ana Graciela Blackwelder.
@MormanKamler7 ай бұрын
@Garez71 I will leave your information below this comment.