The Irish Army parade before Ireland's President for life and display their latest weapon - the Sinead Launcher - lethal in confined spaces such as toilets and taxis.
@Leo D'Arcy you sound like a true veteran Leo. We thank you for your service and hope that the next generation of Irishmen shall not know the horrors of which you speak 🤣🤣
When did Irish people actually start taking the Irish army so seriously, lighten up it’s a comedy show. I blame RTE for behaving like Ireland is the US or Britain, pumping up the pixies with delusions of grandeur.
I've been looking 4 an episode were the irish tell story but after it's told to 1 person the second person puts there twist to it and it goes on and and on as each person tells there new version can any1 help me find it thanks
This is hilarious! Every profession is ridiculed now and again, from bankers, politicians to gardai and taxi drivers, so why not soldiers? At the end of the day it is a JOKE! You would have to be a bit dim witted to think that if you make a joke then you can't also respect the military at the same time.
I agree with your sentiment that people shouldn't get pissed off at a joke, but I wonder if you realise how close to reality this is 😂 if you knew that you would also understand why some immature Irish ultra-patriots are upset by it; it's because it's a little too accurate 🤣 - your freindly neighbourhood English squaddie
I could be completely wrong here but is the Sinead Launcher not in actual fact a very young Niamh Algar? To me it looks like her but like I said I could be wrong.
What a lovely Celtic Army,Portugal would love to joint this Army.We are sick and tired of Nato.This is alot more brilliant, in fact.All the best to our Irish friends.
From August 1988 until May 1991, Irish soldiers were deployed under the UN force UNIIMOG, on the border between Iraq and Iran to supervise the withdrawal of both sides' forces to within their respective borders after the end of the Iran-Iraq War. The Irish provided 177 of the 400 UNIIMOG personnel involved with the mission. The mission came to an end in 1991, when Iran and Iraq completed the withdrawal of their troops. A small number of Irish observers were also stationed in Kuwait from 1991 to 2002 as part of UNIKOM.
@@FannyShmellar Says who, you, did you were the uniform, my father gave 6 months in the Congo and had to fight in several different situations out there, you don't know what your talking about. Men did die in overseas missions in the UN.
72mossy I served 5 years in the Army, left in 2017. So yes, I do know what I’m talking about. There are some Sterling soldiers from the Republic of Ireland who I knew that served in the Royal Irish and Irish guards, but the fact remains the official stance of the Irish Army during ww2 was one of cowardice.
@@FannyShmellar @Someone Ah yes, Neutrality = Cowardice.... Eh no. But hey if you want to bring up WW2, let's talk about the fact that while technically neutral, Ireland favoured the allies over the axis. Germans shot down over Ireland were held in camps until the end of the war while allied pilots were sent over the border back to England, when the Germans bombed Belfast, fire services were sent from Dublin to assist in rescue efforts and, let's not forget, the fact that an Irish weather report delayed D-Day, therefore preventing it's possible failure along with other intelligence reports and reports of submarine movement near the coast of the island. Not to mention the 100,000 people who joined the British army or the civilians who died despite the country being neutral. And all this even with tensions between Ireland and England with the threat of another civil war breaking out if too much pro British sentiment was displayed But hey, if cowardice is what you want to believe, believe it all ye want, but for a neutral (there's that word again ye might want to look its definition up) nation I'd hardly say that Ireland sat back and did nothing even though they were well within their rights to.
RYAN MCelhinney Yes, Neutrality in a war like that is pure unadulterated cowardice. Right and wrong was clear as night and day, folk being gassed to death for the crime of being Jewish or gay. The Irish sat at home and closed the curtains, how pathetic. Yes, the ones with a sound moral compass joined the British Army and fought for what was right, but the official Irish stance was one of cowardice. Anybody staying neutral in a war like that were pure fannies, end of story. Embarrassing!
But it's a cultural issue in Ireland where we don't want any money spent on the army, air force (non existent) or navy (we are an island) and amongst developed countries we must be the weakest out there. Why is this? We always have the sore thumb of Northern Ireland where violence is very possible in the future so we have as much of a need for an army as Norway or Denmark have yet they are much much stronger than ours. For the limited resources we have , we have a decent army but it needs a bit more resources and money spent. They are a well trained infantry force and I respect them as an Irish person but I am embarrassed for Irish society that we don't care enough about having a bit better resourced defence forces. hundreds of years of oppressive foreign oppression taught us anything? It's important to have the means to defend yourself.
***** What function does any nations army serve? What function does the army of Denmark, Norway, Portugal, Belgium etc serve? We only spend half or less of what Norway spends despite having the same population. One issue we do have in Northern Ireland and is a possible security concern in the lead up to catholics reaching parity with protestants there. It doesn't serve Ireland to have an under funded laughing stock of military.
Olly I wouldn't go as far as a laughing stock. What good would doubling the amount of everything we have do? We'd be paying billions in infrastructure alone. Simply replacing the late 70s Navy ships is costing us €250 million (Lovely new ships too I must say, by the looks of them). Baldonnel would need a runway extension of about a kilometre, we'd need to actually buy troop carriers (A400Ms cost $80 mill a piece, I think they'll bring about 100 troops). Currently we charter jets every few months for troop movements. I don't have massive knowledge of the army, but in Curragh Camp there isn't much space. They could be rehoused, still at a massive cost to the army. What difference would we notice? None really.
***** I am not advocating some kind of big expansion of the military but just a well funded as in an extra 20% increase in spending or 1% of gdp which is a kind of minimum standard that the weakest of counties go by. So they can have that extra weaponry and equipment and maybe the air force can have a squadron of f-16s so we can actually have an airforce. The navy is needed to protect against drug smuggling and indeed other illegal activities at sea that involve smuggling of all kinds as well as illegal fishing.
Olly Don't get me wrong, I'm all for the navy, but F-16s? What function would they serve? The PC-6s serve their purpose, the only advantage is speed. In the unlikely event someone decides to invade, it's within our neighbour's interests to make sure they cannot succeed. Even at that, it's highly unlikely we'll ever see an Irish war. The only other uses for actual jets is if a plane over Ireland is not responding to either radio or transponder is turned off. In that case we use the LJ45 or GIV. There's a reason we retired the jets in the 60s (De Havilland Moth).
Irish Army peacekeeping mission which oversaw multiple masaccres and genocides. (Dutch Battalion which was supposed to protect UN's Protected Zone of Srebrenica and stood idly by while genocide in Srebrenica was commited sweat profusely)
You seem to be confused between Dutch and Irish, and you don't understand the verb "to oversee". Ireland has played small peace-keeping roles for a long time, not a bad record.
What make this funny to me is In the history of American Military over 50 % of Medal of Honor { Top combat award ] were earned by people of Irish decent.
@@q11q40 If want to upset any English ask ? Say I have heard of Irish Scot and Welsh Guards Highland Gurkha and Sikh regiments are there anu English units in Britihs Army.
@@ulsternationalist4109 the rest of these guys seem to hate you straight off the bat, while I just want to know how it actually takes your freedom? It would have to be an internal referendum to declare unity. On top of that it would not be tyrannical. Sure there would be financial troubles moving forward for the first few years, but with covid that is the direction things are headed anyway
Sure lookit, being Irish basically means relentlessly mocking every single aspect of Irish life, the army is by no means exempt. You can be proud of something and still constantly make fun of it at the same time
Still have a tusk from an elephant he shot. It’s been through a lot, yoga ball has bounced off it many a time, it fell on the floor a few times etc etc
Ireland says it's neutral.. Mmmm.... If so why do Russian bombers like to turn off their transponders when near the west coast?.... Yep, everyone is neutral till they get a hit..
I love how irish people are angry at this obvious joke. u think of Americans or Brits in the same situation and u don't see people ranting angrily at a joke in the comments. as an Irish person myself yes it is quite sad to hear your story but just get a laugh out of it, jesus
@@greatone7314 Swear down, and if we do it's extremely wet humor, as soon as you try to make dark humor or make a not so obvious joke it gets all serious and shit, I've found so few that are actually capable of taking a joke whether it be in Dublin, Limerick, Cork where fucking ever, everyone's a butthurt little shite who laughs at knock knock jokes only.
@@MuayThai_Don Yes he is but the the majority of paddies have no sense of humour at all. Self-pity and Victimhood blocks their sense of humour and Intelligence of course. .
@flip inheck We have our own Navy, who are actually decent, but our 'Air Force' is crap and wouldn't stop the Russians invading our Air Space. The United Kingdom would help us out on event of invasion.
Thatz A Fuckin Disgrace Most Of My Family Were In The Irish Army An Have Lost Familey Members In It . This Is A Big Diss Honor To Those Who Fight For Us Ever Day An Protect The Country
The Irish army is a peacekeeping force that ARE combat trained. We have the Irish Army Rangers wing who are trained for spec ops and overt and covert missions. They also aid the gardaí in searching for terrorists, wanted people etc. They fight in Afghanistan, Iraq, anywhere where they are required. All Irish soldiers go through a strict training program and work closely with the usa as regarding overseas peacekeeping. Most are there for peacekeeping missions but all are trained to fight because terrorists, extremists etc. Are not going to leave us alone just because we are wearing a blue helmet. I think this discrimination against the Irish and its military is just downright wrong.
i had a cousin who was stationed in a barracks for most of his time, ended up resigning because he was "fading away".. but i have two uncles also in the army who like their job.
I’ll admit I’ve watched this video several times, mainly because of the footage of the Sinead launcher in action.
Yep the sinead launcher is the wipen of the future Vladimir must be quaking in his boots
The Sinead Launcher is the actress Niamh Algar @@Minime163
To be fair I wouldn't mind coming under sustained fire from an enemy Sinead launcher.
@I Am Z1 Your right, but I think it's only a violation of The Geneva Convention to launch a Sinead round if the projectile is set to Menstrual.
@Leo D'Arcy you sound like a true veteran Leo. We thank you for your service and hope that the next generation of Irishmen shall not know the horrors of which you speak 🤣🤣
@@tireachan6178😅😅
Too soon
I've watched this over and over again. I can't stop laughing. Dave always nails it.He is so funny. The Sinead launcher had me in fits.
Ahh class isnt it. Its the 2 tanks gag that gets me evertime.. 😂😂
Doesn't take much then!
The last line cracked me up.
Haha I know! The way he says it so casually as well 😂😂😂😂
a whole bunch of unemployed men carrying riffles
My god that last bit was harsh, but funny.
I AGREE
And devastatingly true 😂😂😂
As a former PDF member who left for the British Army this is spot on
Traitor bastard
Traitor, Black n tan
Took the queens shilling, Traitor
@@stonewalljackson6456 grow up
@@vanpallandt5799 oh iam sooo scared 😨,
Yer man from Foil Arms and Hog there at 0:44
He is at 0:23, too
@@Martina-Kosicanka Well spotted to you both.
@@taintabird23 Thanks
There is 2 of em
They were in a few of the skits.
When did Irish people actually start taking the Irish army so seriously, lighten up it’s a comedy show. I blame RTE for behaving like Ireland is the US or Britain, pumping up the pixies with delusions of grandeur.
This is an RTE show.
It may be categorized as ‘comedy’ but it’s just not comedic; it’s stupid
@@Tellemore Its definitely funny. Hence why people love it. The Irish army are shite lad. Dont pretend otherwise
I've been looking 4 an episode were the irish tell story but after it's told to 1 person the second person puts there twist to it and it goes on and and on as each person tells there new version can any1 help me find it thanks
But it is funny to see RTE accusing anybody else of being a waster of taxpayers money
Thanks you for your service and thank you for making our nation strong and god bless you all and you are my family
What a excellent documentary.
this is my favourite episode
This is class😂😂😂👏👏👏
The march at the beginning is from a Spielberg movie about Americans in WW2
This is hilarious! Every profession is ridiculed now and again, from bankers, politicians to gardai and taxi drivers, so why not soldiers? At the end of the day it is a JOKE!
You would have to be a bit dim witted to think that if you make a joke then you can't also respect the military at the same time.
exactly. I reckon a lot of those offended are either too patriotic to take a joke or else they're ignorant on our tendency to joke about anything
Couldn’t be more right, 😂
I’m ex Irish army 24 years service I think it’s brilliant 😂😂😂
It’s funny because the Irish Army is a bit of a joke let’s face it 🤣 and I’m sure they would admit that themselves haha
I agree with your sentiment that people shouldn't get pissed off at a joke, but I wonder if you realise how close to reality this is 😂
if you knew that you would also understand why some immature Irish ultra-patriots are upset by it; it's because it's a little too accurate 🤣
- your freindly neighbourhood English squaddie
how do I get myself shot with a Sinead launcher?
Wonder what the song at the start is
Haha am Irish I think this is funny 👍👍👍👍😂😂😂😂😂
The sinead launcher hahahaha
i wouldn't see mr.drennan doing anything for the army. Eejit
Brilliant
As a lifelong British soldier I don't mind having me some of that Sinead Launched action .............sans pox
You can have her lad there's like a million of them.
@@Shay-bp7yt 🤣
Sans pox is impossible
I hear that Samsung are employing security guards at all their stores now...
...does this make them...Guardians of the Galaxy?
Legend tells it as it is highly entertaining and true of the government as well. More power to the man.
The Sinead launcher 🤣🤣🤣
Your icon is backwards
He wouldn't survive in the PC world we live in now!😪
I could be completely wrong here but is the Sinead Launcher not in actual fact a very young Niamh Algar? To me it looks like her but like I said I could be wrong.
Bloody mad lol - it's like Monty Python!!
0:41 one of the lads from Foil Arms and Hog
Nicely spotted, eyes like a UN Observer you have. Thank You For Your Service
Both of them, actually. Foil is there too
Watching this sketch after many years I've just realised Sinead is Niamh Alghar! What a career she has gone on to have 💚
Who?
Never heard of her🤔
ua-cam.com/video/l1ztHLAaxr0/v-deo.html
I'm Irish I should be offended but it's just funny lol
A real Irish person wouldn’t be offended
The FCA...summed up about right. 🤔😁🤣
The sinead launcher,,,indeed a weapon of mass destruction...
I know that David McSavage's material is dated, but the FCA was disbanded in 2005!
renamed
@Leo D'Arcy And it's still called the LDF by some.
What a lovely Celtic Army,Portugal would love to joint this Army.We are sick and tired of Nato.This is alot more brilliant, in fact.All the best to our Irish friends.
You know this is a comedy sketch yes?
Que raio de merda estás a falar?
Espero que estás a brincar...
Oh! Sinead launcher…like grenade launcher!
The Sinead launcher 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 finished!!!!!!!!
Im #PROUDTOBEIRISH
Where can I buy a Sinead launcher ?😂😂😂😂
Thats cold. Funny. But cold.
Looks about right LOL. what most people would think when they talk about the Irish army.
calling Irish women prostitutes kind of went really overboard
sinead launcher... fuck me dead lmao.
😂 genius
I have to say...
Pretty fucking accurate
whats the song
Did Spike Milligan write this ?lol
From August 1988 until May 1991, Irish soldiers were deployed under the UN force UNIIMOG, on the border between Iraq and Iran to supervise the withdrawal of both sides' forces to within their respective borders after the end of the Iran-Iraq War. The Irish provided 177 of the 400 UNIIMOG personnel involved with the mission. The mission came to an end in 1991, when Iran and Iraq completed the withdrawal of their troops. A small number of Irish observers were also stationed in Kuwait from 1991 to 2002 as part of UNIKOM.
Nowhere to be seen when the fighting happens though are they. Pathetic
@@FannyShmellar Says who, you, did you were the uniform, my father gave 6 months in the Congo and had to fight in several different situations out there, you don't know what your talking about. Men did die in overseas missions in the UN.
72mossy I served 5 years in the Army, left in 2017. So yes, I do know what I’m talking about. There are some Sterling soldiers from the Republic of Ireland who I knew that served in the Royal Irish and Irish guards, but the fact remains the official stance of the Irish Army during ww2 was one of cowardice.
@@FannyShmellar @Someone Ah yes, Neutrality = Cowardice.... Eh no. But hey if you want to bring up WW2, let's talk about the fact that while technically neutral, Ireland favoured the allies over the axis. Germans shot down over Ireland were held in camps until the end of the war while allied pilots were sent over the border back to England, when the Germans bombed Belfast, fire services were sent from Dublin to assist in rescue efforts and, let's not forget, the fact that an Irish weather report delayed D-Day, therefore preventing it's possible failure along with other intelligence reports and reports of submarine movement near the coast of the island. Not to mention the 100,000 people who joined the British army or the civilians who died despite the country being neutral.
And all this even with tensions between Ireland and England with the threat of another civil war breaking out if too much pro British sentiment was displayed
But hey, if cowardice is what you want to believe, believe it all ye want, but for a neutral (there's that word again ye might want to look its definition up) nation I'd hardly say that Ireland sat back and did nothing even though they were well within their rights to.
RYAN MCelhinney Yes, Neutrality in a war like that is pure unadulterated cowardice. Right and wrong was clear as night and day, folk being gassed to death for the crime of being Jewish or gay. The Irish sat at home and closed the curtains, how pathetic. Yes, the ones with a sound moral compass joined the British Army and fought for what was right, but the official Irish stance was one of cowardice. Anybody staying neutral in a war like that were pure fannies, end of story. Embarrassing!
you forgot thewy keep getting captured
But it's a cultural issue in Ireland where we don't want any money spent on the army, air force (non existent) or navy (we are an island) and amongst developed countries we must be the weakest out there. Why is this? We always have the sore thumb of Northern Ireland where violence is very possible in the future so we have as much of a need for an army as Norway or Denmark have yet they are much much stronger than ours. For the limited resources we have , we have a decent army but it needs a bit more resources and money spent. They are a well trained infantry force and I respect them as an Irish person but I am embarrassed for Irish society that we don't care enough about having a bit better resourced defence forces. hundreds of years of oppressive foreign oppression taught us anything? It's important to have the means to defend yourself.
What function would they serve? We don't need much of an army, and part of the reason could be to avoid future oppression.
***** What function does any nations army serve? What function does the army of Denmark, Norway, Portugal, Belgium etc serve? We only spend half or less of what Norway spends despite having the same population.
One issue we do have in Northern Ireland and is a possible security concern in the lead up to catholics reaching parity with protestants there.
It doesn't serve Ireland to have an under funded laughing stock of military.
Olly I wouldn't go as far as a laughing stock. What good would doubling the amount of everything we have do? We'd be paying billions in infrastructure alone. Simply replacing the late 70s Navy ships is costing us €250 million (Lovely new ships too I must say, by the looks of them). Baldonnel would need a runway extension of about a kilometre, we'd need to actually buy troop carriers (A400Ms cost $80 mill a piece, I think they'll bring about 100 troops). Currently we charter jets every few months for troop movements. I don't have massive knowledge of the army, but in Curragh Camp there isn't much space. They could be rehoused, still at a massive cost to the army. What difference would we notice? None really.
***** I am not advocating some kind of big expansion of the military but just a well funded as in an extra 20% increase in spending or 1% of gdp which is a kind of minimum standard that the weakest of counties go by. So they can have that extra weaponry and equipment and maybe the air force can have a squadron of f-16s so we can actually have an airforce. The navy is needed to protect against drug smuggling and indeed other illegal activities at sea that involve smuggling of all kinds as well as illegal fishing.
Olly Don't get me wrong, I'm all for the navy, but F-16s? What function would they serve? The PC-6s serve their purpose, the only advantage is speed. In the unlikely event someone decides to invade, it's within our neighbour's interests to make sure they cannot succeed. Even at that, it's highly unlikely we'll ever see an Irish war. The only other uses for actual jets is if a plane over Ireland is not responding to either radio or transponder is turned off. In that case we use the LJ45 or GIV. There's a reason we retired the jets in the 60s (De Havilland Moth).
Niamh Algar as Sinead!
Irish Army peacekeeping mission which oversaw multiple masaccres and genocides.
(Dutch Battalion which was supposed to protect UN's Protected Zone of Srebrenica and stood idly by while genocide in Srebrenica was commited sweat profusely)
You seem to be confused between Dutch and Irish, and you don't understand the verb "to oversee". Ireland has played small peace-keeping roles for a long time, not a bad record.
@@DanielDunne1 google "sarcasm".
Man the potato guns!
And David, didn't your Dad served as Minister for Defence?
The Irish navy is the only navy in the world that if a sailor gets out of a submarine he would get stung by nettles!!!
Our only sub to speak of is one chap with a oversized fishbowl on his head underwater eating a subway
Love it
@@lyca0n535 🤣🤣🤣🤣👏👏👏👏
Ah yes
Daiithí should do a skit on overseas aid agencies...maybe not though, in case it might be a family own-GOAL.
Mastery
Blind Border force missing
sure isn't it better to have them an not need them than need them an not have them ??????+
I couldnt-
Only good for chasing lads on scrambler's off the curragh
I wish is to be a irish soldier lol
Please, find a better career
@@resolutecub9977 it’s not a permanent job
sinead launcher.. lmao.
The part about the prostitutes isn't a bad concept. If you develope a sexual transmitted virus that only affects men it could actually work.
And they don't have diabetes
Sinead launcher 😂😅
What make this funny to me is In the history of American Military over 50 % of Medal of Honor { Top combat award ] were earned by people of Irish decent.
Similar to the amount of Victoria crosses earned by people of Irish descent in Britain
@@q11q40 If want to upset any English ask ? Say I have heard of Irish Scot and Welsh Guards Highland Gurkha and Sikh regiments are there anu English units in Britihs Army.
Why would you unlike this?
Because people are butthurt and offended over a joke at the Army's expense
Does the Sinead launcher have a stealth mode?
Oh no it doesn't because the Irish can't pronounce their THs
I dont see anything wrong with this video sound about right 😂🇮🇪
this is halirious hahaha I'm Irish and live this hhahaha
Slightly insulting
Well when ur people stop tryin to take my peoples freedom, we will stop taking the piss
Ulster Nationalist It’s broadcast on RTÉ genius
@@ulsternationalist4109 And your the one who took our land you bastard get out of our country
@@ulsternationalist4109 the rest of these guys seem to hate you straight off the bat, while I just want to know how it actually takes your freedom? It would have to be an internal referendum to declare unity. On top of that it would not be tyrannical. Sure there would be financial troubles moving forward for the first few years, but with covid that is the direction things are headed anyway
Sure lookit, being Irish basically means relentlessly mocking every single aspect of Irish life, the army is by no means exempt. You can be proud of something and still constantly make fun of it at the same time
why are you mocking the irish?
It's the Savage Eye, a satirical programme that makes fun of Ireland and its many aspects
Kgnot Gaultiery I know right
It's Irish.... We can make fun of ourselves
Im from Ireland im a pround Irish man. I should be offended but im not its fucking funny
this is funny shit. thats basically the irish army in a nutshell
unemployed men with rifles
phyllis brady Away you over do 6months in Syria you unemployed waste of spunk.
I am Irish and this was fucking funny
The Irish army went overseas to Lebanon on peacekeeping missions
Israeli target practice.
Yeah and all they did was drink beer and fall all over the place twisted 😂😂
Yeah we were glorified security guards.
@@ruger148 Israel is a midget nation
@@ruger148 lol
JAYSUS THIS SHITE COMEDY BELONGS IN THE 30'S
A neutral country with an army, whaaaa!
Sure what if we get invaded?
@@arianrhodhyde7482 already happened didn't go too well
@@Thomas-uf8si whaaaa?
@@arianrhodhyde7482 have you not read up on your history
@@Thomas-uf8si could you specify which time
There is no way this is real
It is 😂😂
i cant be offended because its true
funny
This is a joke we have a decent army it's not as good as britans or americas but we're OK not the best just ok
Brendan Joseph O'Neill 🤣🤣🤣
Accurate
😂
As someone who’s grandfather was in Congo in the 60s, this is hilarious 🤣
Still have a tusk from an elephant he shot. It’s been through a lot, yoga ball has bounced off it many a time, it fell on the floor a few times etc etc
Stay Neutral Ireland. No need to be caught up in this ol' bollix
Ireland says it's neutral..
Mmmm....
If so why do Russian bombers like to turn off their transponders when near the west coast?....
Yep, everyone is neutral till they get a hit..
in case you were wondering this is fake
I love how irish people are angry at this obvious joke. u think of Americans or Brits in the same situation and u don't see people ranting angrily at a joke in the comments. as an Irish person myself yes it is quite sad to hear your story but just get a laugh out of it, jesus
The irish have no sense of humour
@@greatone7314 Swear down, and if we do it's extremely wet humor, as soon as you try to make dark humor or make a not so obvious joke it gets all serious and shit, I've found so few that are actually capable of taking a joke whether it be in Dublin, Limerick, Cork where fucking ever, everyone's a butthurt little shite who laughs at knock knock jokes only.
@@NocFA Paddy likes to dish it but when it's back at them they go ballistic and wallow in self-pity. A childish people in essence.
@@greatone7314 The irish have no sense of humor? The lad making fun of Ireland in this video is Irish though.
@@MuayThai_Don Yes he is but the the majority of paddies have no sense of humour at all. Self-pity and Victimhood blocks their sense of humour and Intelligence of course.
.
My mistake. They weren't in afgan
This is a disgrace
It's the truth.
@flip inheck The Isle of Man doesn't even have a military. You rely on your neighbours in the United Kingdom.
@flip inheck We have our own Army, unlike the Isle of Man.
@flip inheck We have our own Navy, who are actually decent, but our 'Air Force' is crap and wouldn't stop the Russians invading our Air Space. The United Kingdom would help us out on event of invasion.
@flip inheck Ireland literally has a Navy.
Fucking brilliant!!!
lol
Thatz A Fuckin Disgrace Most Of My Family Were In The Irish Army An Have Lost Familey Members In It . This Is A Big Diss Honor To Those Who Fight For Us Ever Day An Protect The Country
Were they ever found?
@@ruger148 Yes they were down the back of the sofa along with 2 Euros in change and a boiled sweet .
The Irish army is a peacekeeping force that ARE combat trained. We have the Irish Army Rangers wing who are trained for spec ops and overt and covert missions. They also aid the gardaí in searching for terrorists, wanted people etc. They fight in Afghanistan, Iraq, anywhere where they are required. All Irish soldiers go through a strict training program and work closely with the usa as regarding overseas peacekeeping. Most are there for peacekeeping missions but all are trained to fight because terrorists, extremists etc. Are not going to leave us alone just because we are wearing a blue helmet. I think this discrimination against the Irish and its military is just downright wrong.
Don't think they are in Afghan or Iraq. I call bull shit
Are you saying the ARW were fighting along side the US and UK?
+phyllis brady they where given orders they had to follow them shut the fuck up
i had a cousin who was stationed in a barracks for most of his time, ended up resigning because he was "fading away".. but i have two uncles also in the army who like their job.
They are a laughing stock, dad's army would defeat them
Mc savage,poor show your privileged backround shold be exposed.
2008 drug dealers. Waterford