I love Andy’s textbook denial of the top secret underwater trident combat program. We know you guys fight with them. You don’t have to deny it anymore.
@@Bread-nx9fo The Navy literally have "armed" dolphins since 1965. Mostly stuff like using them to identify and paint targets using lazers, to harass enemy divers or underwater recovery. It's all covered under ABWS. As for underwater combat, it's a thing. It's also basically non-existent. The Soviets developed the APS style firearms for it, there are also current firearms like the P11 and ADS.
Fun fact: the filming of the airborne drop sequence of "A Bridge Too Far" was actually conducted by the UK 1st Airborne Division. So, the reason it looked so authentic is because it was done using actual Airborne troops, wearing authentic WW2 style chutes, wearing WW2 style uniforms and gear (including helmets and boots) from actual C46 aircraft. The scenes filmed from the point of view of the Airborne soldier was actually a former Paratrooper who jumped with the camera strapped to him. I seem to remember reading that they had a couple of authentic injuries on the jump, too, broken bones and such.
*Battalion but yeah so true also alot of it was filmed on location and the majority of the xtras making the jump did that very same jump for real there's even accounts of some of them not long returning home from captivity. My grandad was a sherman gunner with the 2nd armoured battalion Irish guards he finally made it to arnhem in the end in the 70s and broke down it tears he recelects being able to see the bridge from his position literally within eyesight
par for the course. my grandpa was easy company 101st and contrary to band of brothers the radio equipment he was carrying was actually destroyed after he crashed into a CHICKEN COOP. And they ALL had to keep going. they made him do a mail run for the fact that he destroyed the radio stuff. and so many close artillery and air raids were TOO close. well he was overturned in a beatle of the time while doing it and they stopped. and he did finish the mail run btw. read ed shames'es book. you'll know who my grandpa is lol. love that guy may he rest in peace .
I love listening to these veterans not just for their content but for their verbal and bodily communication in how they describe the contents explained.
My biases are showing but the former military surgeon, Dr. Rhee, was fascinating. I’m in medicine but in a far far far different field. I’m in geriatrics, so I deal with a lot of joy but also a lot of death. For Dr. Rhee speaking about confirming death in a hurry, really struck me.
@British Imperial Regardless of choice good luck, and look out for your boys. Not sure how corpsmen were selected for marine units, but being a corpsman could be a compromise for your clashing goals of Marine and medical personnel.
@@DylanJo123 No. basically, SEAL team 6, now called DEVGRU, are the best of the best SEALs. You already have to be a navy seal, finish your training, go on multiple deployments and get approval from your chain of command to apply, then you can apply for seal team 6. Even then, most candidates wash out during the training course even though they’re already combat veterans who’ve proven themselves time and time again. Once that’s complete, you get assigned to a unit and you’re the new guy again. These are the guys who killed bin laden. You won’t find info on people being past members as it’s one of the top secret units that basically denies even existing, such as Delta Force or the Canadian JTF-2
Andy stumpf has a podcast "Cleared Hot". He has talked about it numerous times, a long with having teammates from all branches of SF groups, including Devgru guys.
These military experts certainly open up our eyes to an even bigger reality that we may not be fully aware of. It's just fascinating to hear their perspectives.
I love Nicholas Moran. He just loves tanks so much that he doesnt care which film is on, if its got a tank he can find an upside and a reason to watch it. Plus i agree, Kellys Heros is a true masterpiece.
My grandfather is a combat vet in Veitnam. He said when guys came up or back from a patrol. They would donate blood on the spot. Giving blood in an active combat situation. I thought that was a crazy and surreal story.
I was a Navy Search and Rescue Medical Technician supporting HMM-365 / RCT-7 during the invasion of Iraq in 2007. I was on aircraft that landed under fire, within a stone throw of an active shoot out, to evacuate casualties. Other Corpsmen in I MEF CASEVAC reported similar experiences.
Royal Marine who served in Afghanistan and Iraq, I confirm what you are saying @chriscrumpler1665. Both British and US helicopters landed in hot landing zones. There's one case where an RAF pilot was flying a Chinook that got hit with a round that entered under the canopy, smashing the edge of the control panel, up through the seat between his legs, through his seat belt, shattering his O2 mask, skimmed his helmet before exiting the canopy. So yes, I witnessed several hot zones for casevac in both wars.
@@Cdr_Mansfield_Cumming One date and place i know 100% that Black Hawks repeatedly landed in hot zones for CASEVAC. April 2nd 2010, Isa Khel, Kunduz Province, Afghanistan
@@MrKolaros They were brave angels. The UK didn’t use smaller helicopters, they use Chinooks, a blood great big target. Mind you, in 2007 my Corps the Royal Marines, rescued a comrade using two Apache helicopters with two Royal Marines hanging onto the weapons pods. Amazing and brave, sadly the lad died. They repatriated his body. RIP Mathew Ford RM.
@@Cdr_Mansfield_Cumming There are stories about Cobra pilots in Vietnam extracting green berets off the edge of a river and the green berets holding on to the skids all the way back to base. And flying all the way back on a McGuire rig was basically the standard extract method for quite some time. More or less hanging by a loop... The STABO and SPIE rigs really saved a lot of people. There are stories of people passing out on the McGuires and dangling/falling. Having a clip point was a massive upgrade.
Big respect to medics! My Great Uncle was awarded a Bronze Star for saving 8 of 10 people he treated while under sniper fire on the first and while being ambushed the 2nd time. It was his 2nd BSM in Vietnam while serving with the 1st Infantry and 18th Engineers. Much respect!
Andy Stumpf is my personal hero, mentor, my aspiration in life and just a DADDY. This man is the real deal, so matter of fact, sober, reasonable, positive, it's almost too good to be all encompassed in one man. Always happy to see him and hear what he has to say. Cheers from Ukraine! 35th OBMP.
@@KamiKaZantA Absolute massive THANK YOU if you even donated 10 bucks to the effort. That can buy such needed batteries for electronic devices. Much love from Odessa.
@@timberwolfmountaineer873 Of course. €150 in cash and €300 in medical supplies so far, and I've talked to some wealthier friends who are engineers and they have been donating as well.
By far the most accurate part of Under Siege, is that Steven Seagal knows everything about everything: A SEAL that knows how to cook, fire gunnery on a battleship, ALL of the martial arts, as well as nuclear physics...yep, they nailed it.
Weird to see him back then, as a decent looking fellow. I mean he could never act, but at least he didn't look out of place in the movie. Now he's a manatee that mumbles a lot.
Apologies for any errors below, did this on mobile. The list is mainly for myself, but thought others might find it useful! 0:30 Act of Valor (2012) 3:49 Thunderball (1965) 6:38 National Treasure (2004) 8:54 Cherry (2021) 10:41 Saving Private Ryan (1998) 12:08 The Outpost (2020) 13:57 Hacksaw Ridge (2016) 16:54 Greyhound (2020) 20:22 Under Siege (1992l 22:24 Battleship (2012) 24:17 Black Hawk Down (2001) 26:40 The Falcon and the Winter Soldier [S1E1] (2021) 28:55 Jumanji Welcome to the Jungle (2017) 30:17 Fury (2014) 33:58 Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989) 35:32 Saving Private Ryan 38:32 Mission Impossible - Fallout (2018) 40:43 Godzillia (2014) 43:03bKingsman The Secret Service (2014) 44:44 A Bridge Too Far (1977)
@@jonsimpson6240 there are still ww2 vets around but they are quickly passing away, if you check out the memoirs of ww2 they are interviewing and having the few soldiers still around tell their stories. It’s a great UA-cam channel and I highly recommend watching their videos if you are interested is ww2 documentaries or war history in general
22:00 I was a professional fireworks-technician. Once I saw a guy, very muscular, about 330 lbs knocked out from the muzzle-flash of an 4 inch-firework. Afterwards he told me, it was like the hardest hit, he ever got into his stomach. Pretty obvious it was very dumb to stand so close.
WOW! This has got to be about the best UA-cam I have ever seen. Every one of the expert military veterans consulted deserves our thanks for their service. It's a tough call, but I gotta say Vernice rocked it! "No way a helicopter is going to fly on its side like that!" Yeah, right. This was an incredible show.
I love how you can see the excitement of a ten year-old boy seeping through the Admiral's ironclad demeanor, as he discusses the armor on those WWII ships.
Hacksaw Ridge really caught the brutality of war and soldiers who were already suffering from PTSD. When Ghoul asks a soldier what the front is like, he already had the 1000 yard stare and just said "they are animals".
Great compilation of military specialists. The seals parachuting with the smoke trails made me laugh. I thought it looked cool, I never thought about how it actually signals the enemy you're coming. I guess a lot of directors are like that- "It's not realistic!" "I don't care, it looks cool!"
They’re not going up against human enemies in Godzilla, I’m pretty sure the smoke is to let allies on the ground know where they are. The giant monsters aren’t going to pay any mind to a few smoke trails. Plus yeah, it makes for a cool shot
The Outpost features a member of the platoon that was really there during it. The way you see those guys die is very similar if not exactly how they died. The battle produced two Medal of Honor recipients.
Fascinating to hear from each of the presenters - they bring such a wealth of experience in a world so far removed from anything I know - I was riveted the entire time.
Loved the video! My uncle was in the 101 airborne during ww2. His was also portrayed in band of brothers ( the character that left battle of the bulge due to his feet). He was supposed to talk of the Band of brothers. He pasted away from throat cancer and he was is buried here in DFW. Every time i see static jump scenes make me think of him. I really missed his stories of WW2
Was it Joseph D. Toye? According to the Veteran’s funeral care website, he was considered the toughest of the tough by his comrades, and he was awarded 4 Purple Hearts and a bronze star after he lost his leg in the battle of the bulge.
Rhee is an amazing individual. Tge weight of having to decide on the fly who is "worth" saving. You don't have the luxury of saving everyone. If you waste time on a long shot, there could be 10 other guys you just sacrificed 😔 God bless him and all of them. My God he is so calm and composed. I just can't imagine how I'd handle that weight. Even if it wasn't him who killed them, farking aye it's really heavy to even think about.
Skydivers like to have competitions to see how much time it takes between when they open the parachute and when they touch ground. The person with the shortest time wins, unless that time is zero. - Warren Miller
What I find funny about Battleship is that they, for all intents and purposes, take a decommissioned Museum Ship and fuel/arm it in one afternoon just to run it at 30+ knots AND would just snap the anchor chains if/when it gets caught at something and that ~40-45 tons (assuming it's no-where near full-load) of displacement keeps on going...
If done years ago and with 1 of its sister ships not that one, fuel and ammo would not have been an issue due to the order that 2 of them had to be maintained in battle ready condition if needed. Don’t believe that order is still around though
@@grimalkin6676 I believe even then there was (still is?) huge difference between decommed Museum Ships and various levels of "Mothball fleet". I'd imagine recently mothballed Iowas being on the most Battle-Ready side but even then they'd not have Munition etc on board. Bringing cold Iowa to operation-ready status would take lots of time, even at best conditions. And you are right about rotation duty of Iowas, this indeed was and kinda still is the doctrine of USN CVs and other strike assets, tho I'd have to counter-ask: "Hawaii was isolated by the forcefield. Assuming "R&R Iowa" was inside the Dome and had remained unnoticed by the Alien ship (plot armor), why not use it instead? Why bother with the Museum?" Out-of-Rotation Iowa wouldn't really have been at Pearl and active duty would prolly had been sunk by the Alien by now and thus would recognize Museum-Iowa as a (possible) Threat.
@@Makapaa Well yeah of course, it would still take abit but they were meant to be maintained in good condition as per the order of the national defense act if needed for emergency and amphibious operations. Given it stated emergency I usually think could be returned to service in mabey a week? Still far from the movie but much more viable than what actually happens in the movie. And I don't know if both did but I do know one of the two that were being maintained did have some (Not a full load) of munitions for its guns on-board for a short period of time though by the time the act ended it no longer had munitions on it. Though overall I enjoyed the movie. And somewhat disappointed battleships won't ride out again. Though much more disappointed that the enterprise from ww2 wasn't made a museum ship with them. That is just an insult.
I love how he compliments the halo jump from Misson Impossible as being so accurate. It had me laughting all the way knowing, yeah, that had to look very realistic and everything had to be as it would be with a real halo jump. Because it was after all a real halo jump.
Outpost is based on The Battle of Kamdesh which was crazy. There was a lot of medals given out for that battle and there really was no where to hide as they were at the bottom of a canyon and the enemy was basically on top of them. Officers lost their job for putting a COP in that spot. Lastly the Paratroopers in WW II they were jumping and landing into bullets and flak that were coming at them so major major respect to all those guys.
I can speak for the submarine shots and some of the surface ship action, and I know for a fact that there where and are men in every military branch in every country that preformed extra ordinary and above the call of duty actions and I salute them all... This was the greatest UA-cam presentation clip I have ever seen...
Not only does the bullet make noise as the sonic boom passes, also makes a pretty good "thump" when it impacts, especially when the shot is suppressed.
You didn’t have to hit an enemy vessel with a 16 inch shell. Landing next to the vessel will cause a near hit. What that does is to buckle the hull plates by the power of the water concussions against the hull. In the movie it looks like a WWII vintage submarine. The damage against the hull and collateral damage against the machinery could cause it not to be able to dive, inoperable or even sink from the damage.
Only problem with your statement is that's a DD which would have only carried 5-in guns, not 16-inch ones. As for the shot underwater, that was with the 40mm AA guns which is a bit more interesting in what kind of damage would have been caused honestly.
24:50 That reminds me of the story about when the USS Wisconsin annihilated an artillery battery during the Korean War. They got hit once by an artillery shell and fired a full broadside which sent the Wisconsin 7 feet to the right from the recoil. Afterwards, the USS Buck (which was guiding it) flashed its signal lamp and only said "Temper, temper..."
USS Wisconsin didn’t move an inch firing full broadside. None of them did. That theory has been debunked many times. The guns have recoil slides up to 48 inches inside where the shock is evenly distributed through turrets foundation. The guns aren’t enough to move almost 58,000 tons of ship. The sideways wake seen in water is only from the muzzle blast. Rest of story is true
A helicopter could temporarily yaw 90 degrees but it couldn’t maintain flight that way. It would lose altitude quickly. And there are reports of uh-1 Huey’s (the aircraft performing the action in question) rotor blades chopping branches and small trees when landing in small lzs during Vietnam and being perfectly fine afterwards.
28:55 look back at Vietnam war history, Using the rotors to cut a landing zone happened. The rotors had to be replaced after, but they made it to base.
I'm at about 25:30 in video, first off as a combat vet who served in OEF, huge thank you for your service! (When we had to go out and threat was high, having air support "on-station" made me feel much safer, and when A10s or SWT went to work, the enemy was always effectively stopped from firing down on us using the mountains.) With all the threat from RPGs, I'm wondering if a "mini-CIWS" could possibly work on a helicopter to hit projectile before it was too close?
Just a wild guess that it would be hard to make it work. A CIWS is on a big, stable platform (a ship), preferably with a lot of clear area around it so it can engage targets easily, plus a lot of ammunition. I can only see a "mini-CIWS" mounted on the underside on a helicopter, which would make landing a little more difficult. The platform itself isn't that stable, due to much lower mass and being in the air, which would rock and push the helicopter around when firing (possibly). It sounds unfeasible and impractical, but not saying it is impossible.
1:05 the main thing I was also wondering about was the man I'm the water effortlessly catching this seemingly large body falling from relatively high above him with just his two hands.
Can absolutely confirm Doc's tales. Was in Ramadi for 15 months. They'll hit the chow hall, make calls over Big Voice, even come and wake you up because they had a list of where everyone was and their blood type. No idea if me and this guy were there together, but I can tell you that you start to resent the doc because he doesn't have to stand in line for hours.
23:30 The OTHER main fallacy in Battleship, when they dropped the anchor, is that it could actually catch onto anything. Battleships only had 400 meters of anchor chain per side, and it MIGHT work IF they were less than 4km from the entrance to Pearl Harbor, but any farther out and it wouldn't even reach bottom. The water just off the coast of Honolulu in HAWAII increases in depth steadily until you get 20km from Honolulu, where it's ~600m, then in the next 5km it increases to 900m and in the 5km after that the bottom falls out and the depth increases to 2000 meters (6500ft) deep. 30km is only 18 miles, JUST over the horizon from Honolulu ... go another 20km and that depth more than DOUBLES to 4400m (~14400 ft)
Haven’t finished watching yet but thinking back to the ancient warfare expert. I love the way the British expert never went over a 7 but kept all grades in like the 4 to 7 range but the navy seal is like 10 and 0/ can we do negative numbers?
I would love to see this entire panel get together actually watch a movie and give their full honest opinion on it, in terms of what's right and what is just totally Hollywood hyperbole based on their expertise
26:34 I thought that black hawk did get hit in the tail rotor in real life and pretty sure the crash and how it's positioned in the movie is almost identical to how it was on the ground in real life.
Both crashes in Black Hawk Down were accurately portrayed. Super 61 was hit in the tail rotor and immediately went down. The aircraft's nose hit a building and caused the helicopter to roll on it's side. Super 64 was called in to take 61's place above the battle and was struck in the tail before Durant had flown a single orbit of the area. The helicopter initially held together so they attempted to fly back to base but the tail rotor eventually failed causing them to crash into a bunch of tin huts. Durant and Donovan where able to keep the helicopter level so 64 crashed on it's belly and stayed right side up. Unfortunately, the crash was so violent that only Durant survived with a broken back. Both aircraft were hit in the tail because the Somalis' firing the RPGs aimed at the helicopter instead of leading it so by the time the RPG reached the helicopter's altitude, the grenade hit the aircraft in the tail. I'm a little skeptical of her because she claimed at 27:08 that these rocket pods carry 26 rockets... they don't. Those are M261 rocket pods which hold 19 rockets. You can clearly count them in the still picture as she's talking about it. It's concerning because a AH-1 pilot should know how many rockets are carried in one of the two rocket pods used by the US military. It's either 7 rockets (which is what the AH-1W usually carried) or 19 rockets (which the AH-1W usually did not carry due to weight). I don't know where she got 26 from. I'm not aware of any 26 shot aerial rocket pods used by any military.
I'm definitely learning a lot from these videos it's nice to get an explanation on rebreathers and what it's party like being in special forces diving underwater.
19:53 i dont like to step on the admirals shoes here because he does know most of his stuff, but the guns pointed at here are actually the destroyer's main armaments which on the Fletcher class destroyer (one of the most active WW2 destroyers) was the 5"/54. This was a dual purpose gun and was infact used in a primary anti air role for larger surface ships, but on a destroyer they would have been the main armament. Ther are what looks like 40mm AA guns in the background that are folded over so those might be what he is referring to and the editor just screwed up.
i trained under Dr. Peter Ree at the Naval Trauma Training Center in LAC/USC as an FMF Corpsman. Brilliant trauma surgeon looking back 20 years later as an ER RN
So I do have to say that in the greyhound movie it seemed like the fletcher/greyhound was using it 40mm bofers to fire at the water. They were ment for surface and air defense as well as its 5 main guns.
Seeing as how the guy is an old school Naval guy and he gets to see a battleship in a modern movie, even a ridiculous one, has to be pretty cool for him. Looking him up he served in the submarine fleet but who doesn't love to see a battleship blasting aliens?
As a movie that is accurate to the source material (a board game), Battleshio is one of the most accurate movies of all time. Ever notice the alien weapons look like pegs in the game.
I said this on the original video for this. Battleship is terrible. But it's so terrible, it's fun to watch. It's a guilty pleasure and I myself have watched in numerous times.
Gotta be brutally honest here. I hate military movies. Hate action movies. Especially hate Naval military action movies. But I'll be damned if I didn't get outta my seat and fist pump when they pulled that Battleship out. 😂😂
I really hope that Mr. Rhee will actually see or has actually seen the whole of Hacksaw Ridge. It's a damn good movie and not so much about the treatment techniques as it is about the medic himself.
On the subject of pressure waves from the firing of battleship guns, the guns on the Yamato and Musashi created such a shockwave when they fired that they could tear the skin off your face.
as a girl I am not heavily interested in war movies however I love history so I could listen to these guys - and gal - for hours, thank you for all the awesome info! all the movies getting a low grade - why not hire those guys for expertise, they can't be that expensive :-).
I love making a list of all the times the editors try to show an image of what the person was talking about to give context and got it completely wrong. Happens almost once a movie clip, its impressive.
1:00 now you know that Hollywood always has to do the seal reveal in modern war movies. 23:31 the tactic is called club hauling. supposedly it was used back in the days of sail. now whether or not it was a real tactic, I honestly don't know but that's what it's called.
😮when the medic/surgeon said how heavy a man is even for 2 to carry i immediately thought of Hacksaw ridge and that lad was a bean pole. Makes it even more amazing.. if thats possible. This is great content. Thanks guys.
I’d beg to differ on the landing a helicopter under fire. I am a ground medic and have footage from our FOB Aerostat of a medevac landing on our position in a fire fight. Those pilots are crazy and I love them for it
The movie Hamburger Hill gave my uncle nightmares who served as a medic in Vietnam. Hamburger Hill is a great battle movie that should more well known but is overshadowed by Platoon and Born of the Fourth of July.
I love Andy’s textbook denial of the top secret underwater trident combat program. We know you guys fight with them. You don’t have to deny it anymore.
Yeah and they also call dolphins with their aqua man powers to fight for them
@@Bread-nx9fo The Navy literally have "armed" dolphins since 1965. Mostly stuff like using them to identify and paint targets using lazers, to harass enemy divers or underwater recovery. It's all covered under ABWS.
As for underwater combat, it's a thing. It's also basically non-existent. The Soviets developed the APS style firearms for it, there are also current firearms like the P11 and ADS.
Fight with who?
Black manta
@@entombedmachine cthulhu
Fun fact: the filming of the airborne drop sequence of "A Bridge Too Far" was actually conducted by the UK 1st Airborne Division. So, the reason it looked so authentic is because it was done using actual Airborne troops, wearing authentic WW2 style chutes, wearing WW2 style uniforms and gear (including helmets and boots) from actual C46 aircraft. The scenes filmed from the point of view of the Airborne soldier was actually a former Paratrooper who jumped with the camera strapped to him. I seem to remember reading that they had a couple of authentic injuries on the jump, too, broken bones and such.
*Battalion but yeah so true also alot of it was filmed on location and the majority of the xtras making the jump did that very same jump for real there's even accounts of some of them not long returning home from captivity. My grandad was a sherman gunner with the 2nd armoured battalion Irish guards he finally made it to arnhem in the end in the 70s and broke down it tears he recelects being able to see the bridge from his position literally within eyesight
par for the course. my grandpa was easy company 101st and contrary to band of brothers the radio equipment he was carrying was actually destroyed after he crashed into a CHICKEN COOP. And they ALL had to keep going. they made him do a mail run for the fact that he destroyed the radio stuff. and so many close artillery and air raids were TOO close. well he was overturned in a beatle of the time while doing it and they stopped. and he did finish the mail run btw. read ed shames'es book. you'll know who my grandpa is lol. love that guy may he rest in peace .
I love listening to these veterans not just for their content but for their verbal and bodily communication in how they describe the contents explained.
They've had to explain stuff to junior enlisted. It like talking to toddlers sometimes
My biases are showing but the former military surgeon, Dr. Rhee, was fascinating. I’m in medicine but in a far far far different field. I’m in geriatrics, so I deal with a lot of joy but also a lot of death. For Dr. Rhee speaking about confirming death in a hurry, really struck me.
Wdym your "biases"? What exactly are you biased for?🤨🧐
I think they had a video starring him that was all about reviewing battlefield medicine/wound treatment scenes.
@@Kenny-od2tg They both studied medicine
@@Kenny-od2tg I’m in medicine, that’s my bias. I thoroughly enjoyed the medical portion because that’s my life.
@@thewandering01 Oh thank you! I will look it up.
Imagine how many lives that trauma surgeon saved. God Bless that man
if anything ever happens to me I want that man to be my doctor!!
Yeah that’s why I’m debating weather I wanna be a marine or an combat medic, I wanna fight but I also wanna make sure my comrades are okay
@@Berserker3624 whatever you decide I appreciate your service.
@@tobieone4918 don’t, I haven’t done anything worth appreciating just yet
@British Imperial Regardless of choice good luck, and look out for your boys. Not sure how corpsmen were selected for marine units, but being a corpsman could be a compromise for your clashing goals of Marine and medical personnel.
Andy's humbleness really is admirable. Andy wasn't just a Navy Seal. He was DEVGRU, Seal Team Six.
Is Seal Team Six the same as Seal Team Five? I can only find info saying hes been in seal team five. Im a bit confused
@@DylanJo123 No. basically, SEAL team 6, now called DEVGRU, are the best of the best SEALs. You already have to be a navy seal, finish your training, go on multiple deployments and get approval from your chain of command to apply, then you can apply for seal team 6. Even then, most candidates wash out during the training course even though they’re already combat veterans who’ve proven themselves time and time again. Once that’s complete, you get assigned to a unit and you’re the new guy again. These are the guys who killed bin laden. You won’t find info on people being past members as it’s one of the top secret units that basically denies even existing, such as Delta Force or the Canadian JTF-2
Andy stumpf has a podcast "Cleared Hot". He has talked about it numerous times, a long with having teammates from all branches of SF groups, including Devgru guys.
@@matthewgill8332 ok. So how does OP know hes been in DEVGRU? Unless he doesnt
@@thomasgreen1557 Having teammates from it and being a part of it are two different things bro
These military experts certainly open up our eyes to an even bigger reality that we may not be fully aware of. It's just fascinating to hear their perspectives.
Amogus
Thanks for the insight imposter 🙏
amazing knowledge
@@jaywethington1934 the team house is pretty dope too
@@globaladdict I'm a subscriber to it as well.
I love Nicholas Moran. He just loves tanks so much that he doesnt care which film is on, if its got a tank he can find an upside and a reason to watch it. Plus i agree, Kellys Heros is a true masterpiece.
Hey….my wife and I were just wondering if you still love Nicholas Moran?
My grandfather is a combat vet in Veitnam. He said when guys came up or back from a patrol. They would donate blood on the spot. Giving blood in an active combat situation. I thought that was a crazy and surreal story.
I was a Navy Search and Rescue Medical Technician supporting HMM-365 / RCT-7 during the invasion of Iraq in 2007. I was on aircraft that landed under fire, within a stone throw of an active shoot out, to evacuate casualties. Other Corpsmen in I MEF CASEVAC reported similar experiences.
Royal Marine who served in Afghanistan and Iraq, I confirm what you are saying @chriscrumpler1665. Both British and US helicopters landed in hot landing zones. There's one case where an RAF pilot was flying a Chinook that got hit with a round that entered under the canopy, smashing the edge of the control panel, up through the seat between his legs, through his seat belt, shattering his O2 mask, skimmed his helmet before exiting the canopy.
So yes, I witnessed several hot zones for casevac in both wars.
100% that guy stayed on a fob in a surgical unit. We had pjs come into hot lz all the time in Afghanistan the pilots were badass .
@@Cdr_Mansfield_Cumming One date and place i know 100% that Black Hawks repeatedly landed in hot zones for CASEVAC.
April 2nd 2010, Isa Khel, Kunduz Province, Afghanistan
@@MrKolaros They were brave angels. The UK didn’t use smaller helicopters, they use Chinooks, a blood great big target. Mind you, in 2007 my Corps the Royal Marines, rescued a comrade using two Apache helicopters with two Royal Marines hanging onto the weapons pods. Amazing and brave, sadly the lad died. They repatriated his body. RIP Mathew Ford RM.
@@Cdr_Mansfield_Cumming There are stories about Cobra pilots in Vietnam extracting green berets off the edge of a river and the green berets holding on to the skids all the way back to base.
And flying all the way back on a McGuire rig was basically the standard extract method for quite some time. More or less hanging by a loop...
The STABO and SPIE rigs really saved a lot of people. There are stories of people passing out on the McGuires and dangling/falling. Having a clip point was a massive upgrade.
Big respect to medics! My Great Uncle was awarded a Bronze Star for saving 8 of 10 people he treated while under sniper fire on the first and while being ambushed the 2nd time. It was his 2nd BSM in Vietnam while serving with the 1st Infantry and 18th Engineers. Much respect!
Andy Stumpf is my personal hero, mentor, my aspiration in life and just a DADDY. This man is the real deal, so matter of fact, sober, reasonable, positive, it's almost too good to be all encompassed in one man. Always happy to see him and hear what he has to say.
Cheers from Ukraine! 35th OBMP.
Take care out there in the Ukraine, I'll keep donating to the fight and urge others to do the same.
hey stay safe in ukraine!
@@KamiKaZantA Absolute massive THANK YOU if you even donated 10 bucks to the effort. That can buy such needed batteries for electronic devices. Much love from Odessa.
@@timberwolfmountaineer873 Of course. €150 in cash and €300 in medical supplies so far, and I've talked to some wealthier friends who are engineers and they have been donating as well.
@@timberwolfmountaineer873 good luck and stay frosty!
By far the most accurate part of Under Siege, is that Steven Seagal knows everything about everything: A SEAL that knows how to cook, fire gunnery on a battleship, ALL of the martial arts, as well as nuclear physics...yep, they nailed it.
Seagal is basically the real life version of what everyone used to joke about Chuck Norris being.
Weird to see him back then, as a decent looking fellow. I mean he could never act, but at least he didn't look out of place in the movie. Now he's a manatee that mumbles a lot.
Seagal still knows how to cook...have you seen him lately? 😂😂😂😂
@@joshpointoh Seagal like to believe he's the real life version of the mythical Chuck Norris.
He's been a SEAL for 76 years..
Apologies for any errors below, did this on mobile. The list is mainly for myself, but thought others might find it useful!
0:30 Act of Valor (2012)
3:49 Thunderball (1965)
6:38 National Treasure (2004)
8:54 Cherry (2021)
10:41 Saving Private Ryan (1998)
12:08 The Outpost (2020)
13:57 Hacksaw Ridge (2016)
16:54 Greyhound (2020)
20:22 Under Siege (1992l
22:24 Battleship (2012)
24:17 Black Hawk Down (2001)
26:40 The Falcon and the Winter Soldier [S1E1] (2021)
28:55 Jumanji Welcome to the Jungle (2017)
30:17 Fury (2014)
33:58 Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989)
35:32 Saving Private Ryan
38:32 Mission Impossible - Fallout (2018)
40:43 Godzillia (2014)
43:03bKingsman The Secret Service (2014)
44:44 A Bridge Too Far (1977)
I was hoping for a review of "Hamburger Hill".
@@nedludd7622 full metal jacket too
@ carstorm85
Thanks. I want to see Greyhound. - navy brat
💯
@carstorm85 Isn't A Bridge to Far (1977) the one with Stanisław Sosabowski?
The soldiers that were there have already confirmed that Hacksaw Ridge was realistic, and that the soldiers heroics that we saw in the film were true.
Didn't know any world War 2 vets were alive still to see hacksaw ridge.
I know they said that about the d-day scenes in saving private Ryan.
@@jonsimpson6240 there are still ww2 vets around but they are quickly passing away, if you check out the memoirs of ww2 they are interviewing and having the few soldiers still around tell their stories. It’s a great UA-cam channel and I highly recommend watching their videos if you are interested is ww2 documentaries or war history in general
@@jonsimpson6240 My WII veteran was still alive in 2016.
@@jonsimpson6240 Still about 3,000
@@carlmagrath6389 that's amazing. My grandfather was in Egypt after the war and he passed a few years ago.
22:00 I was a professional fireworks-technician. Once I saw a guy, very muscular, about 330 lbs knocked out from the muzzle-flash of an 4 inch-firework. Afterwards he told me, it was like the hardest hit, he ever got into his stomach. Pretty obvious it was very dumb to stand so close.
WOW! This has got to be about the best UA-cam I have ever seen. Every one of the expert military veterans consulted deserves our thanks for their service. It's a tough call, but I gotta say Vernice rocked it! "No way a helicopter is going to fly on its side like that!" Yeah, right. This was an incredible show.
Worst modern image. No seriously. Is she 13?
I love how you can see the excitement of a ten year-old boy seeping through the Admiral's ironclad demeanor, as he discusses the armor on those WWII ships.
Yeah too bad he's wrong about the ship moving when it fires
Hacksaw Ridge really caught the brutality of war and soldiers who were already suffering from PTSD. When Ghoul asks a soldier what the front is like, he already had the 1000 yard stare and just said "they are animals".
Whoever's running the show at Insider knows what the people want. Good supercut
Great compilation of military specialists. The seals parachuting with the smoke trails made me laugh. I thought it looked cool, I never thought about how it actually signals the enemy you're coming. I guess a lot of directors are like that- "It's not realistic!" "I don't care, it looks cool!"
I never used smoke on a night jump as no one would see it. Gave me a laugh. WW2 mass drops looked awesome. Good presentation from all of them.
They’re not going up against human enemies in Godzilla, I’m pretty sure the smoke is to let allies on the ground know where they are. The giant monsters aren’t going to pay any mind to a few smoke trails. Plus yeah, it makes for a cool shot
The Outpost features a member of the platoon that was really there during it. The way you see those guys die is very similar if not exactly how they died. The battle produced two Medal of Honor recipients.
This feels like a compilation of something that I have seen already..
It is. They are just milking the series now.
@@sihledotcom Exactly seemed too familiar
Yep, I’ll still put it on in the background of though
Idk y but alot of channels are doing this rn
Yeah screw these guys
How can you not love the SEAL'S sense of humour 😍😂 You just know his unit had abs of steel from all the laughing.
7:12 loved the passive aggression here :D
instantly you could tell he personally hated using those things
The Sailor that opened the hatch on the sub, was one of our swim instructors during basic.
Fascinating to hear from each of the presenters - they bring such a wealth of experience in a world so far removed from anything I know - I was riveted the entire time.
God Bless the veterans who spoke in this video. We are truly grateful for your service and I have the utmost respect for you all.
I still can't believe you guys got an admiral to contribute to this. Amazing work
Andy Stumpf is dropping knowledge?? I'm sold.
I felt that when he said he hates when torso wounds always have the actor spitting blood👍
Loved the video! My uncle was in the 101 airborne during ww2. His was also portrayed in band of brothers ( the character that left battle of the bulge due to his feet). He was supposed to talk of the Band of brothers. He pasted away from throat cancer and he was is buried here in DFW. Every time i see static jump scenes make me think of him. I really missed his stories of WW2
What was his name?
Was it Joseph D. Toye? According to the Veteran’s funeral care website, he was considered the toughest of the tough by his comrades, and he was awarded 4 Purple Hearts and a bronze star after he lost his leg in the battle of the bulge.
George Lomonaco and I really miss his storiesand cancer took him too soon@@Teslijah
@@orkusdorkusmaximus his name was George Lomonaco? Sorry, am I being too intrusive?
that is correct@@Teslijah
Rhee is an amazing individual. Tge weight of having to decide on the fly who is "worth" saving. You don't have the luxury of saving everyone.
If you waste time on a long shot, there could be 10 other guys you just sacrificed 😔
God bless him and all of them. My God he is so calm and composed. I just can't imagine how I'd handle that weight. Even if it wasn't him who killed them, farking aye it's really heavy to even think about.
Skydivers like to have competitions to see how much time it takes between when they open the parachute and when they touch ground. The person with the shortest time wins, unless that time is zero. - Warren Miller
LOL, pure myth. Anyone who did that would get banned from the Dropzone on the spot, and have their licence revoked.
@@24934637 but its funny hu?
What's impressed me most is the words " Confirming someone that's dead in few seconds is not easy to do"
What I find funny about Battleship is that they, for all intents and purposes, take a decommissioned Museum Ship and fuel/arm it in one afternoon just to run it at 30+ knots AND would just snap the anchor chains if/when it gets caught at something and that ~40-45 tons (assuming it's no-where near full-load) of displacement keeps on going...
With the power of AC/DC, anything is possible.
@@Burkutace27 Truth ^
You can go stuff your logic in a sack, sir 😤
If done years ago and with 1 of its sister ships not that one, fuel and ammo would not have been an issue due to the order that 2 of them had to be maintained in battle ready condition if needed. Don’t believe that order is still around though
@@grimalkin6676 I believe even then there was (still is?) huge difference between decommed Museum Ships and various levels of "Mothball fleet". I'd imagine recently mothballed Iowas being on the most Battle-Ready side but even then they'd not have Munition etc on board. Bringing cold Iowa to operation-ready status would take lots of time, even at best conditions.
And you are right about rotation duty of Iowas, this indeed was and kinda still is the doctrine of USN CVs and other strike assets, tho I'd have to counter-ask: "Hawaii was isolated by the forcefield. Assuming "R&R Iowa" was inside the Dome and had remained unnoticed by the Alien ship (plot armor), why not use it instead? Why bother with the Museum?"
Out-of-Rotation Iowa wouldn't really have been at Pearl and active duty would prolly had been sunk by the Alien by now and thus would recognize Museum-Iowa as a (possible) Threat.
@@Makapaa Well yeah of course, it would still take abit but they were meant to be maintained in good condition as per the order of the national defense act if needed for emergency and amphibious operations. Given it stated emergency I usually think could be returned to service in mabey a week? Still far from the movie but much more viable than what actually happens in the movie. And I don't know if both did but I do know one of the two that were being maintained did have some (Not a full load) of munitions for its guns on-board for a short period of time though by the time the act ended it no longer had munitions on it. Though overall I enjoyed the movie. And somewhat disappointed battleships won't ride out again. Though much more disappointed that the enterprise from ww2 wasn't made a museum ship with them. That is just an insult.
I love how he compliments the halo jump from Misson Impossible as being so accurate. It had me laughting all the way knowing, yeah, that had to look very realistic and everything had to be as it would be with a real halo jump. Because it was after all a real halo jump.
The parachute expert and I are similarly in awe of what the guys did for us in WW2. Thanks to all who served us!
Outpost is based on The Battle of Kamdesh which was crazy. There was a lot of medals given out for that battle and there really was no where to hide as they were at
the bottom of a canyon and the enemy was basically on top of them. Officers lost their job for putting a COP in that spot. Lastly the Paratroopers in WW II they were
jumping and landing into bullets and flak that were coming at them so major major respect to all those guys.
I can speak for the submarine shots and some of the surface ship action, and I know for a fact that there where and are men in every military branch in every country that preformed extra ordinary and above the call of duty actions and I salute them all... This was the greatest UA-cam presentation clip I have ever seen...
Not only does the bullet make noise as the sonic boom passes, also makes a pretty good "thump" when it impacts, especially when the shot is suppressed.
I need more insight from Ms. Vernice and Mr. Peter. They are both super knowledgeable and entertaining
"You shoot a tank until it burns or changes shape." What a quote!
14:53 you can see the image appear in his mind when he talked about it. Thank you for your service sir!
I really enjoyed this compilation of all the military expert reviews, but my lord the volume difference killed me
You didn’t have to hit an enemy vessel with a 16 inch shell. Landing next to the vessel will cause a near hit. What that does is to buckle the hull plates by the power of the water concussions against the hull. In the movie it looks like a WWII vintage submarine. The damage against the hull and collateral damage against the machinery could cause it not to be able to dive, inoperable or even sink from the damage.
Only problem with your statement is that's a DD which would have only carried 5-in guns, not 16-inch ones. As for the shot underwater, that was with the 40mm AA guns which is a bit more interesting in what kind of damage would have been caused honestly.
24:50 That reminds me of the story about when the USS Wisconsin annihilated an artillery battery during the Korean War. They got hit once by an artillery shell and fired a full broadside which sent the Wisconsin 7 feet to the right from the recoil. Afterwards, the USS Buck (which was guiding it) flashed its signal lamp and only said "Temper, temper..."
XD yeah and if I remember right that artillery shell was Basicly a mosquito bite. Didnt Even hurt it but still got wiped off the face of the map
USS Wisconsin didn’t move an inch firing full broadside. None of them did. That theory has been debunked many times. The guns have recoil slides up to 48 inches inside where the shock is evenly distributed through turrets foundation. The guns aren’t enough to move almost 58,000 tons of ship. The sideways wake seen in water is only from the muzzle blast. Rest of story is true
A helicopter could temporarily yaw 90 degrees but it couldn’t maintain flight that way. It would lose altitude quickly. And there are reports of uh-1 Huey’s (the aircraft performing the action in question) rotor blades chopping branches and small trees when landing in small lzs during Vietnam and being perfectly fine afterwards.
This is really awesome, hearing the point of view from them.
28:55 look back at Vietnam war history, Using the rotors to cut a landing zone happened. The rotors had to be replaced after, but they made it to base.
I'm at about 25:30 in video, first off as a combat vet who served in OEF, huge thank you for your service! (When we had to go out and threat was high, having air support "on-station" made me feel much safer, and when A10s or SWT went to work, the enemy was always effectively stopped from firing down on us using the mountains.)
With all the threat from RPGs, I'm wondering if a "mini-CIWS" could possibly work on a helicopter to hit projectile before it was too close?
Just a wild guess that it would be hard to make it work. A CIWS is on a big, stable platform (a ship), preferably with a lot of clear area around it so it can engage targets easily, plus a lot of ammunition. I can only see a "mini-CIWS" mounted on the underside on a helicopter, which would make landing a little more difficult. The platform itself isn't that stable, due to much lower mass and being in the air, which would rock and push the helicopter around when firing (possibly).
It sounds unfeasible and impractical, but not saying it is impossible.
@@KamiKaZantA A trophy style system would be more feasible
The Tuskegee Airmen patch on the pilot is nice. Love seeing the legends live on
"We use a new drug called 'ketamine'."
Biyatch I partied with k in the 90's lmao
Stumpf is legend.
I absolutely loved Hacksaw Ridge. One of my favorites
1:05 the main thing I was also wondering about was the man I'm the water effortlessly catching this seemingly large body falling from relatively high above him with just his two hands.
The AP Royal Oak on Dr. Rhee is very nice. 👍😍
man this is the coolest video I've ever seen on this channel yet! Really wanna see more of this type
So this is just a video combining all previous videos of the military experts reviewing scenes from film
Yes.
I thought I had seen em before lol I thought I was having deja vu.
cant we all just appreciate how great this video is
Who says we don't?
Andy Stumpf always seems like someone who does not bullshit and knows his stuff. Someone you would want coming to help you!
The compilation I didn't know I needed.
I swear to got this is the most ads I’ve seen in any single video, and it was always the same one. Thanks Cisco.
Can absolutely confirm Doc's tales. Was in Ramadi for 15 months. They'll hit the chow hall, make calls over Big Voice, even come and wake you up because they had a list of where everyone was and their blood type. No idea if me and this guy were there together, but I can tell you that you start to resent the doc because he doesn't have to stand in line for hours.
Thank you for everything. ❤
23:30 The OTHER main fallacy in Battleship, when they dropped the anchor, is that it could actually catch onto anything. Battleships only had 400 meters of anchor chain per side, and it MIGHT work IF they were less than 4km from the entrance to Pearl Harbor, but any farther out and it wouldn't even reach bottom. The water just off the coast of Honolulu in HAWAII increases in depth steadily until you get 20km from Honolulu, where it's ~600m, then in the next 5km it increases to 900m and in the 5km after that the bottom falls out and the depth increases to 2000 meters (6500ft) deep. 30km is only 18 miles, JUST over the horizon from Honolulu ... go another 20km and that depth more than DOUBLES to 4400m (~14400 ft)
Haven’t finished watching yet but thinking back to the ancient warfare expert. I love the way the British expert never went over a 7 but kept all grades in like the 4 to 7 range but the navy seal is like 10 and 0/ can we do negative numbers?
I don't think they could have found a better expert in his field than Admiral Foggo.
I would love to see this entire panel get together actually watch a movie and give their full honest opinion on it, in terms of what's right and what is just totally Hollywood hyperbole based on their expertise
Medic here: it was so awesome seeing my training connect to the silver screen. Soldier Medic, Warrior Spirit.
26:34 I thought that black hawk did get hit in the tail rotor in real life and pretty sure the crash and how it's positioned in the movie is almost identical to how it was on the ground in real life.
it did get hit in the tail rotor, after action pictures confirm it. Its one of the most realistic crashes in movies
@UCY06h9R72gYY5xRGFpEqPIQ pilots would fire the rockets, the gunner controlled the ir laser for hellfires, the hellfires themselves, and the 30mm
Both crashes in Black Hawk Down were accurately portrayed. Super 61 was hit in the tail rotor and immediately went down. The aircraft's nose hit a building and caused the helicopter to roll on it's side. Super 64 was called in to take 61's place above the battle and was struck in the tail before Durant had flown a single orbit of the area. The helicopter initially held together so they attempted to fly back to base but the tail rotor eventually failed causing them to crash into a bunch of tin huts. Durant and Donovan where able to keep the helicopter level so 64 crashed on it's belly and stayed right side up. Unfortunately, the crash was so violent that only Durant survived with a broken back.
Both aircraft were hit in the tail because the Somalis' firing the RPGs aimed at the helicopter instead of leading it so by the time the RPG reached the helicopter's altitude, the grenade hit the aircraft in the tail.
I'm a little skeptical of her because she claimed at 27:08 that these rocket pods carry 26 rockets... they don't. Those are M261 rocket pods which hold 19 rockets. You can clearly count them in the still picture as she's talking about it. It's concerning because a AH-1 pilot should know how many rockets are carried in one of the two rocket pods used by the US military. It's either 7 rockets (which is what the AH-1W usually carried) or 19 rockets (which the AH-1W usually did not carry due to weight). I don't know where she got 26 from. I'm not aware of any 26 shot aerial rocket pods used by any military.
One thing to note at in regards to the helicopters at 26:42 is they specifically don't have nose mounted guns or cannons.
Vernice Armour has got to be one of the coolest names I've ever heard
I'm definitely learning a lot from these videos it's nice to get an explanation on rebreathers and what it's party like being in special forces diving underwater.
Did anyone else notice Vincent J. Speranza in one of the parachute photos. Now there is a story in its own right. God bless him
19:53 i dont like to step on the admirals shoes here because he does know most of his stuff, but the guns pointed at here are actually the destroyer's main armaments which on the Fletcher class destroyer (one of the most active WW2 destroyers) was the 5"/54. This was a dual purpose gun and was infact used in a primary anti air role for larger surface ships, but on a destroyer they would have been the main armament.
Ther are what looks like 40mm AA guns in the background that are folded over so those might be what he is referring to and the editor just screwed up.
i trained under Dr. Peter Ree at the Naval Trauma Training Center in LAC/USC as an FMF Corpsman. Brilliant trauma surgeon looking back 20 years later as an ER RN
So I do have to say that in the greyhound movie it seemed like the fletcher/greyhound was using it 40mm bofers to fire at the water. They were ment for surface and air defense as well as its 5 main guns.
This might be the first time I heard anyone call "Battleship" one of their favorite movies 🤣
its kinda fun to watch stoned ngl
Seeing as how the guy is an old school Naval guy and he gets to see a battleship in a modern movie, even a ridiculous one, has to be pretty cool for him. Looking him up he served in the submarine fleet but who doesn't love to see a battleship blasting aliens?
As a movie that is accurate to the source material (a board game), Battleshio is one of the most accurate movies of all time.
Ever notice the alien weapons look like pegs in the game.
I said this on the original video for this. Battleship is terrible. But it's so terrible, it's fun to watch. It's a guilty pleasure and I myself have watched in numerous times.
Gotta be brutally honest here.
I hate military movies. Hate action movies. Especially hate Naval military action movies.
But I'll be damned if I didn't get outta my seat and fist pump when they pulled that Battleship out. 😂😂
I really hope that Mr. Rhee will actually see or has actually seen the whole of Hacksaw Ridge. It's a damn good movie and not so much about the treatment techniques as it is about the medic himself.
Peter Rhee for whatever reason seems like just a sweet guy he’s just like 😊, I see why Marines are so protective of Doc
On the subject of pressure waves from the firing of battleship guns, the guns on the Yamato and Musashi created such a shockwave when they fired that they could tear the skin off your face.
WOW! My Ming can’t even wrap around it…. Now I’ve gotta go watch the actual footage!
Fake news
@@TheNaturalGamer1 nope it's been extensively documented in peer-reviewed historical material
@@2stepsaway820 you mean your government propaganda
I am a historian who specialises in the field.
2:35 I thought that was called a :"Rhib Davit." "Rigid hull inflatable boat." I was an Aviation Ordnanceman for 8 years on the LHD-3 USS KEARSARGE
as a girl I am not heavily interested in war movies however I love history so I could listen to these guys - and gal - for hours, thank you for all the awesome info! all the movies getting a low grade - why not hire those guys for expertise, they can't be that expensive :-).
I love making a list of all the times the editors try to show an image of what the person was talking about to give context and got it completely wrong. Happens almost once a movie clip, its impressive.
1:00 now you know that Hollywood always has to do the seal reveal in modern war movies.
23:31 the tactic is called club hauling. supposedly it was used back in the days of sail. now whether or not it was a real tactic, I honestly don't know but that's what it's called.
😮when the medic/surgeon said how heavy a man is even for 2 to carry i immediately thought of Hacksaw ridge and that lad was a bean pole. Makes it even more amazing.. if thats possible.
This is great content. Thanks guys.
I actually love that this clip is 45 minutes long.. This can be my in-background work video.
Hey I was just wondering if you made this your in - background work video?
I’d beg to differ on the landing a helicopter under fire. I am a ground medic and have footage from our FOB Aerostat of a medevac landing on our position in a fire fight. Those pilots are crazy and I love them for it
I want to start a petition to rename the 'NavBoard' to 'SeaGlide'
26:42 That weapon placement on what seems to be an NH-90 looks rather scuffed xd
Fr, it’s in a static position, looks like the added elements of a plane on a Hind X Blackhawk X NH-90
Vernice Armour is a damn cool name to have esp as someone in the military
Absolute blast getting to see these people break it down for us. Killer line up
Why do i have the feeling I have seen this before... This is a compilation of all the previous military experts isn't it?
19:51, those are singular 5"/38 mounts, they are multipurpose. That is a Fletcher-class Destroyer.
WW2 paratroopers, a very special breed of man.
I loved hearing from the Doc and his training on blood loss!
19:30 I'm pretty sure those are 40mm boffers cannons
Ha! Boffer cannons, made of inflated plastic so you can have wiffle wars with the enemy! Bofors*, but close enough I suppose.
How do you know if they’re actually 40mm? They could be 38 or 39 mm maybe?
@@wizcorn9958 Because they are made to a western standard. Perhaps you are more used to Russian or China made weapons.
19:53
99% sure those aren't the AA guns the admiral is talking about haha
The movie Hamburger Hill gave my uncle nightmares who served as a medic in Vietnam. Hamburger Hill is a great battle movie that should more well known but is overshadowed by Platoon and Born of the Fourth of July.
People's faces who aren't used to Andy's humor 😆 Cleared Hot podcast people.
I’m here for it!