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I’m a nurse anesthetist and I wanted to be part of these guys so bad in my military days, when I was just a trauma nurse. These men are so good at what they do, the Ivy League medical institutions treat it like the NFL draft whenever these guys leave the military, they’re pretty much set for life, the CIA also has their own version of this team. Thank you so much for giving these gentlemen the visibility they deserve, please, give them their flowers.
@@ryguy8245 Its part of the special activities center (SAC) which is the paramilitary arm of the CIA, I don’t know their official internal designation, but they provide trauma care to Agency operatives & GRS personnel.
@@fathead1343 what stolen valor? I’ve never made a claim of being more than I am, a health care provider who also served. But I have intubated many gang members in trauma units I’ve worked in, are you one of the crips whose lives I saved?
I used to fly the bus for these guys, had a c17 converted into an airborne trauma and surgical unit. Saw them do neuro surgery at 40,000 feet to remove a blood clot from an operator. These guys are definitely the elite drs in the world!
C17 makes a Caddilac operating room with toilets and ovens! You might be thinking of the Critical Care Air Transport (CCAT) team, not the team in this video? CCAT are a conventional .mil team, not part of SOC or JSOC. Watching this video would make them scared. I commanded CCAT and AE (Aeromedical Evac) teams and got many a comfy flt hour in the C17. KC-135s were the worst. On the flipside, my later deployments with GST, SOST, then SRT (team in this video), the best air assets we had were Ospreys, Chinooks, and the cramped Blackhawks. Mostly if not always rotory. Cheers!
@@96SupraTTwhat was your observed differences between GST and SOST? Just higher speed missions and a more close knit trained as one team in SOST? Currently a CCRN starting CRNA school. I’m also curious if it possible to join a GST as part of ANG or if both require full time active duty to be apart of.
Neat to see this video. I'm former GST, SOST with one deployment with SRT. No one refers to any surgical team as JMAU. It's JMU now and that refers to the whole concept, not the surgical teams. SRT is the JSOC Surgical Resuscitative Team. Tier 1, although no one says Tier #s on any teams except SEALs maybe. Bless their hearts. SRT provides the forward/austere surgical capability to JSOC teams (DEVGRU and CAG). "Golden hour surgical support" as the PowerPoint presentations said. We staged just outside the Op providing our own security/commo. As for capabilities, we cracked open the chest of an indigenous SOF operator in the back of a rotary over pitch black East Africa to stop a bleed. He survived. A first. ...in Minecraft. ;) In comparison, "Tier 2" surgical teams provide support to SOC teams (SEAL, ODA, MSOT) as well as JSOC teams when needed. These would be GST and SOST for USAF. I forget the Army team's name - sorry guys AND girls. Yes girls. Teams are usually composed of a surgical PA, anesthesiologist, orthopedic surgeon, surgical technician/corpsman (only enlisted), emergency physician or surgical nurse as well as augmented by a medical planner.
@@besh7408 Sure. Hope this helps: GST = Ground Surgical Team (USAF) SOST = Special Operation Surgical Team (USAF) SRT = Surgical Resuscitative Team JMU = Joint Medical Unit JSOC = Joint Special Operations Command DEVGRU = Development Group aka Seal Team 6 CAG = Combat Applications Group aka Delta SOC = Special Operations Command ODA = Operational Detatchment Alpha aka Special Forces Team aka Green Berets MSOT = Marine Special Operations Team aka Raiders aka MARSOC PA = Physician Assistant. SRT is generally led by a PA regardless of rank
@@96SupraTT Im currently applying to medical school, was a former Marine Arty officer. Do you have any career advice for pursuing SOST or eventually JMU?
I was a quad zero corpsman attached to 4RECON and had the privilege to work alongside some phenomenal SARCs. One of them mentioned JMAU during a conversation, and I was under the impression these were guys testing out some seriously high-speed and cutting-edge medical technologies and skills. Never heard about them again. Guess I was far from their radar lol
You guys did well with this production, great job!!! In the days before JMAU they preferred to select health care providers, many were often former 18-D and SARCs. The provider who was with TF121 that assessed Saddam Hussein was a former Ranger Regiment member. I was hoping you guys can give details on the exact professions for members of this team. This will help those seeking to try out for them.
Wow, had no idea such an elite unit of doctors like that did so much! Can you also do a video on military medicine in general, how prospective people can enter the field via USUHS, scholarship, etc, what kind of training they can acquire once they join, and the different types of physicians in the military such as dive and flight surgeons? I would love to see a video on this!
As someone who can relate to this video, want a sweet doc job in the Air Force? It definitely ain't SOST or SRT, it's a Flight Doc/Surgeon. Those guys work less than a GS Civilian works after 5pm. They to wear the bags aka flight pajamas to the clinic and disappear for some flight hours whenever needed.
Awesome. Finally a bit of recognition for the medical folks. And people always think Spec Ops just shoot and destroy. Many wouldn't even believe you if you shared about a unit like this. Excellent....
I remember JMAU saving a Russian soldiers life in Aleppo. I was there and an 0321 man “assisting” FSA (IS). They literal probably saved us from a huge incident with the Russians. That was my last op. I realized after 12 years, I didn’t know what side i was on and the lines weren’t even blurred anymore, they were gone.
Some would be surprised how capable SOCOM medics are, even in surgery. I cross trained as a medic, became a Critical care RN, and used to help train 18D candidates at a major trauma center.
I think the hardest job in the world is being a JMAU/SOST team member. You need to be both a special operator and a field trauma surgeon, already some of the most difficult jobs in their world in their own right. The runner up would be a special operations diver and medic, such as SARC's, dive-qualified 18D's, with SEAL Medics and Pararescuemen also being extremely difficult because one must be proficient both as a Special Operations Medic and Combatant Diver. By the way GD, I'd appreciate it if you did U.S. Army Counterintelligence next.
if I was asked how I’d do it if I could redo my career in mil from the start, I’d 100% still go the pararescueman route. (Maybe trying out for SFOD-D would be a close #2, but nothing else comes close,I originally wanted to fly, but getting lasik was out of my pocket price wise at the time) that PJ Pipeline is something else for sure...packed with insane amounts of knowledge, yet grueling. it pushes every button you have, and those you never knew you had, and saying it try’s to break ya is an understatement, try’s to destroy you is more like it. Although somehow At the same time it’s trying to destroy you it’s also building you into something you never believed you could have been capable of.
@@101stairborne6 as far as I know he was not, but that’s info coming not from me directly, when I first heard about these surgeons, my mind hit the same place thinking he’d have been a great candidate. (Just because I know how great of a medic he was, and that he wanted to go further in medicine) but I had asked a couple guys who served with Jonny during Task unit Bruiser & had been in contact with him after if it was something he had already/had interest in perusing. I was told “not really”. Sorry for making you read all that for that reply lol.
@@GeneralDischargeI wonder if Jonny Kim who was a Navy Seal with a degree from Harvard Medical School was on of these guys 🤔 he’s an astronaut with NASA now
Love your videos brother have always learned all I could on our great men and women in uniform but your videos take the next step keep up the great work 😎👍
Good question. PJ's role is completely different. They extract personnel from behind lines and perform medical capabilities at the paramedic level. Surgical Resuscitative Teams as those mentioned in this video perform ANY and ALL surgical procedures utilizing a full surgical team and equipment capabilities rivaling a portable operating room. PJs are bad ass. We had an Air Force UH-60 with 2 PJs extract and bring us a GSW casualty right to our outpost in East Africa. We didn't even have to gear up. But we often setup close to the Op (just in case) providing our own security/commo, but it wasn't our job to go pop some noggins and carry people out of a kill zone to a helo, externally slowing a bleed, and inserting a IV for whole blood. That's a PJ. We stabilized after that. Then Aeromedical Evacuation transported to a "higher level" of care.
Is this the US equivalent to Canada’s MSRT? Small scale surgical team co-located at the site of the tactical team with facilities to provide DCR and DCS services to facilitate extraction of injured operators to Role 2 facility. Giddy up!
Are all the members of this team O-3 or above? If there are NCOs what roll do they play on the team. I would think someone to hand the doc a scalpel is a luxury for civilian doctors only.
All MDs in the military are automatically at least O-3 just for graduating or higher if they join later in their career with more expertise. Nurses start at O-1, and I’m not sure what PAs would start at, but just like the rest of special operations, everyone on the team will be very experienced and have rank to correspond. Medical Professionals in the military are also not line officers, so they don’t just command everyone on the team below them like a normal military unit, the rank is more a experience/pay marker than authority over a platoon, company, etc. for like officers. I’d imagine it’s not unlikely for the team to have multiple O-5s and 6s. Making O-6 for a normal officer is an outstanding career beating out many others on multiple boards but for doctors you just do your time and rank up and O-6 isn’t rare at all especially because the military is always short on them so keeps them as long as they can walk basically.
A lot of respect for Rangers, but I never heard of them being referred to as tier one (not that we called anything "tier one" back in the day.) Rangers feed into Delta quite a bit, and way more guys go ranger to special forces (green beret) than the other way around. We used to say to rangers "When you grow up you can get a green one." Of course, special forces isn't "tier one either. Rangers are a premier raiding group and often provide perimeter for JSOC operations, so they are certainly special. But they are not JSOC, and they are often referred to as elite light infantry. They are more tactical than strategic in use. Again, not taking anything away from these guys - they go through intensive training and are brave, tough guys.
@@yionnecantu согласен с вами! 75-й полк - прогрессирует и выходит на новый уровень - его структура - позволяет автономно решать большой спектр задач - перекрывая все три уровня 1/2/3. Не даром многие страны,относительно недавно - стали создавать аналогичные подразделения (Великобритания/Польша) - причиной тому высокий уровень и универсальность 75- полка. В современной конфигурации - это удачное сочетание кувалды и скальпеля - что ни в коем случае не заменяет другие части SOF - просто 75-наиболее универсален из всех. Всем хорошего дня!
I saw a podcast in which a guy was talking about some of the places that they had set the mobile ers in Syria and Iraq. The guy said the set up in houses, buildings, boats, and even aircraft.
No your not . Look at he goofy picture you like 14 years old bro. I like your study playlist too with UFC knockouts and lex Friedman clips . Very smart clearly
You could do a great parody video of the selection and training program for special ops cooks. We see them going through SERE training and they have to forage off the land, but they manage to create a delicious rabbit stew and a soufflé, only to get yelled at because they didn't use organic sea salt.
@@derfunkhaus I would have loved to have a cook on my team during that phase. LMFAO at rabbit soufflé. Cadre be like WTF and start punching people (in Minecraft of course).
So this is probably a dumb question, but this is different than the special operations surgical team that PJs deliver their patients to, yeah? Would be cool seeing a comparison between those two groups and their capabilities
This unit is a bit more specialized and a bit of a higher level than the Air Force SOST team you’re asking about. They would take the best of that unit and only work on certain special operators and certain detainees and sometimes civilians. The SOST that the PJs would bring casualties from a wider variety of people and aren’t as combat skilled or from special operators for the most part.
PJs are like paramedics and the helicopter the ambulance always transporting to a established medical facility. These guys are the pinnacle of battlefield surgery, intervention, and trauma resuscitation less than a few hundred yards from the front line gunfight in a tent, a field or a random dirt hut with a bad guy they just killed.
They both go through SOCM, the key difference medical knowledge wise, is the class after SOCM. 18D's go into SFMS(special forces medical sergeant) and CA medics go into CAMS(civil affairs medical sergeant). Delta's learn more about high level trauma and anesthesia, and CA will focus more on dental, veterinary, and water/food type area's...basically will dial down on what their mission set would require of them.
One other thing, in addition to the various military SOF medical units, the CIA's Special Activities Center has it's own medical personnel to support its operations.
SOST is under AFSOC (Air Force only). SRT (this team) is under JSOC. Similar capabilities, difference is who they provide surgical resuscitative care for. I made a more detailed standalone post. Deployed with both.
I was a young Special Forces CPT when I was selected by COL Beckwith after Eagle Claw in the standup of JSOC. I worked on commonality / interoperability of equipment between Army, Navy and Air Force Special Operators. I knew Charlie from 10th SFGA in Bad Tolz. Next I worked at Fort Belvoir for COL Jerry King, in “The Army of Northern Virginia”. USAISA. ISA “Grey Fox”. The unknown unit of the Army.
As someone who is pursuing Army surgery (I am a premedical ROTC student), I had NO idea this unit existed until this vid! I am likely transferring my scholarship from Active Duty to the National Guard, but if I stay Active, I will be interested in qualifying for this elite medical augmentation unit. Thank you for this info!
I am certain just like every other military member they are massively underpaid for what services they render. I hope they get the choice of starting practices and shit wherever they want when theyre done. They certainly deserve it. But guys like this do it for other reasons than money for sure.
@@psicodomPJs are like paramedics, and their helicopter is like an ambulance. Always transporting to a facility. These guys deploy on operations and are preforming battlefield surgery less than hundreds of feet away from gun fights.
@@asanti3748it isn’t special warfare. As much as they try and act like it, security forces (stop using SF) it isn’t special forces and it’s honestly just armed security guards with huge ego’s that feel like their special without ever having been tested.
@@CASmachine-yeit’s security forces dude. They are not tier two. Do you know what tier two means? If you did you would know Air Force security forces are not it.
No they dont. You have a false movie depiction of Pjs. These guys are the pinnacle of battlefield surgeries, intervention and traumatic resuscitation less than a hundred yards from the gunfight between tier 1 operators and the enemy.
Can you provide sources for this information? All references I've found about JMAU are Reddit-based and generally refer to it as the medical staff that's assigned to JSOC - not specially trained spec op medical staff. This is in contrast to Air Force SOST that are specifically trained as special operators that happen to be trained and experienced surgical staff
@@drmikesimpson they are not operators, but they do receive specialized training like SERE in addition to what’s described as “special operation specific training”
@@drmikesimpson any of the "Tiers" are just made up, but SOST is a part of AFSOC (720 Special Tactics): "tier 3" units are normal units that get the new stuff first. Their ability to setup operating rooms at the front line is precisely why they were created. The 6-person team is able to carry an operating room in specialized backpacks to the target. Their work in the fights against ISIS was incredible
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You have info on the 0211 MOS?
I’m a nurse anesthetist and I wanted to be part of these guys so bad in my military days, when I was just a trauma nurse. These men are so good at what they do, the Ivy League medical institutions treat it like the NFL draft whenever these guys leave the military, they’re pretty much set for life, the CIA also has their own version of this team. Thank you so much for giving these gentlemen the visibility they deserve, please, give them their flowers.
What’s the CIA version called?
Stole Valor, this mane a waiter @ Popeyes
GSC, the Grape Street Crips ♿🍇
@@ryguy8245 Its part of the special activities center (SAC) which is the paramilitary arm of the CIA, I don’t know their official internal designation, but they provide trauma care to Agency operatives & GRS personnel.
@@fathead1343 what stolen valor? I’ve never made a claim of being more than I am, a health care provider who also served. But I have intubated many gang members in trauma units I’ve worked in, are you one of the crips whose lives I saved?
I used to fly the bus for these guys, had a c17 converted into an airborne trauma and surgical unit. Saw them do neuro surgery at 40,000 feet to remove a blood clot from an operator. These guys are definitely the elite drs in the world!
Jesus my wife does that in a regular operating room and its still nerve racking can only imagine while flying
C17 makes a Caddilac operating room with toilets and ovens! You might be thinking of the Critical Care Air Transport (CCAT) team, not the team in this video? CCAT are a conventional .mil team, not part of SOC or JSOC. Watching this video would make them scared. I commanded CCAT and AE (Aeromedical Evac) teams and got many a comfy flt hour in the C17. KC-135s were the worst. On the flipside, my later deployments with GST, SOST, then SRT (team in this video), the best air assets we had were Ospreys, Chinooks, and the cramped Blackhawks. Mostly if not always rotory. Cheers!
Yeahhhhh that’s insane damn
@@96SupraTTwhat was your observed differences between GST and SOST? Just higher speed missions and a more close knit trained as one team in SOST? Currently a CCRN starting CRNA school. I’m also curious if it possible to join a GST as part of ANG or if both require full time active duty to be apart of.
Neat to see this video. I'm former GST, SOST with one deployment with SRT. No one refers to any surgical team as JMAU. It's JMU now and that refers to the whole concept, not the surgical teams.
SRT is the JSOC Surgical Resuscitative Team. Tier 1, although no one says Tier #s on any teams except SEALs maybe. Bless their hearts. SRT provides the forward/austere surgical capability to JSOC teams (DEVGRU and CAG). "Golden hour surgical support" as the PowerPoint presentations said. We staged just outside the Op providing our own security/commo. As for capabilities, we cracked open the chest of an indigenous SOF operator in the back of a rotary over pitch black East Africa to stop a bleed. He survived. A first. ...in Minecraft. ;)
In comparison, "Tier 2" surgical teams provide support to SOC teams (SEAL, ODA, MSOT) as well as JSOC teams when needed. These would be GST and SOST for USAF. I forget the Army team's name - sorry guys AND girls. Yes girls.
Teams are usually composed of a surgical PA, anesthesiologist, orthopedic surgeon, surgical technician/corpsman (only enlisted), emergency physician or surgical nurse as well as augmented by a medical planner.
Can you explain some of your acronyms? Kinda lost
“We” called it the “MAU” for short when I was around. #byinvitationonly
@@besh7408 Sure. Hope this helps:
GST = Ground Surgical Team (USAF)
SOST = Special Operation Surgical Team (USAF)
SRT = Surgical Resuscitative Team
JMU = Joint Medical Unit
JSOC = Joint Special Operations Command
DEVGRU = Development Group aka Seal Team 6
CAG = Combat Applications Group aka Delta
SOC = Special Operations Command
ODA = Operational Detatchment Alpha aka Special Forces Team aka Green Berets
MSOT = Marine Special Operations Team aka Raiders aka MARSOC
PA = Physician Assistant. SRT is generally led by a PA regardless of rank
@@96SupraTT Im currently applying to medical school, was a former Marine Arty officer.
Do you have any career advice for pursuing SOST or eventually JMU?
Met some of y’all on deployment when I was in a R2LM team. Badass af
I was a quad zero corpsman attached to 4RECON and had the privilege to work alongside some phenomenal SARCs. One of them mentioned JMAU during a conversation, and I was under the impression these were guys testing out some seriously high-speed and cutting-edge medical technologies and skills. Never heard about them again. Guess I was far from their radar lol
🇺🇸
Saw this unit in action at Bagram on a number of occasions, exceptionally impressive!
You guys did well with this production, great job!!! In the days before JMAU they preferred to select health care providers, many were often former 18-D and SARCs. The provider who was with TF121 that assessed Saddam Hussein was a former Ranger Regiment member.
I was hoping you guys can give details on the exact professions for members of this team. This will help those seeking to try out for them.
Thank you, glad you enjoyed!
Wow, had no idea such an elite unit of doctors like that did so much! Can you also do a video on military medicine in general, how prospective people can enter the field via USUHS, scholarship, etc, what kind of training they can acquire once they join, and the different types of physicians in the military such as dive and flight surgeons? I would love to see a video on this!
Flight surgeons please!
SOST
As someone who can relate to this video, want a sweet doc job in the Air Force? It definitely ain't SOST or SRT, it's a Flight Doc/Surgeon. Those guys work less than a GS Civilian works after 5pm. They to wear the bags aka flight pajamas to the clinic and disappear for some flight hours whenever needed.
You guys should do a JMAU vs SOST video comparison.
Thanks!
Saw this in Iraq in 09-10. Came in and set up in our Aid Station in the middle of the night and left as soon as the Operators' mission was over. Wild!
Awesome. Finally a bit of recognition for the medical folks. And people always think Spec Ops just shoot and destroy. Many wouldn't even believe you if you shared about a unit like this.
Excellent....
I remember JMAU saving a Russian soldiers life in Aleppo. I was there and an 0321 man “assisting” FSA (IS). They literal probably saved us from a huge incident with the Russians. That was my last op. I realized after 12 years, I didn’t know what side i was on and the lines weren’t even blurred anymore, they were gone.
Some would be surprised how capable SOCOM medics are, even in surgery. I cross trained as a medic, became a Critical care RN, and used to help train 18D candidates at a major trauma center.
I think the hardest job in the world is being a JMAU/SOST team member. You need to be both a special operator and a field trauma surgeon, already some of the most difficult jobs in their world in their own right.
The runner up would be a special operations diver and medic, such as SARC's, dive-qualified 18D's, with SEAL Medics and Pararescuemen also being extremely difficult because one must be proficient both as a Special Operations Medic and Combatant Diver.
By the way GD, I'd appreciate it if you did U.S. Army Counterintelligence next.
if I was asked how I’d do it if I could redo my career in mil from the start, I’d 100% still go the pararescueman route. (Maybe trying out for SFOD-D would be a close #2, but nothing else comes close,I originally wanted to fly, but getting lasik was out of my pocket price wise at the time)
that PJ Pipeline is something else for sure...packed with insane amounts of knowledge, yet grueling.
it pushes every button you have, and those you never knew you had, and saying it try’s to break ya is an understatement, try’s to destroy you is more like it.
Although somehow At the same time it’s trying to destroy you it’s also building you into something you never believed you could have been capable of.
I got a feeling Jonny Kim who was a Navy Seal with a degree from Harvard Medical was one of these guys 🤔 he’s a NASA astronaut now
@@101stairborne6 as far as I know he was not, but that’s info coming not from me directly, when I first heard about these surgeons, my mind hit the same place thinking he’d have been a great candidate. (Just because I know how great of a medic he was, and that he wanted to go further in medicine) but I had asked a couple guys who served with Jonny during Task unit Bruiser & had been in contact with him after if it was something he had already/had interest in perusing.
I was told “not really”. Sorry for making you read all that for that reply lol.
The JMAU changed it's name, it's just the Joint Medical Unit now. It's also adding additional personnel and getting a larger area in the JSOC HQ bldg.
My old PA in the 82nd made it in this unit. Pretty awesome stuff.
I got to know a few of these guys and they’re very humble and amazing at medical and tactics. It was truly a pleasure knowing these guys.
Holy Smoke i had zero idea there was a Tier 1 Medical Group you guys Blew my Mind also keep up the Video work too
The animations are getting legit!😂
now this is epic
Thank you for that very professional and educational presentation! Thats information that most Americans do not know! Thank you!!
Everyone needs a DR who can handle a Carbine and a Scalpel 😂
I know you generally stick to SOF but could you do a video on marine intelligence or what makes every branch’s intelligence different
Great idea, thank you!
@@GeneralDischargeI wonder if Jonny Kim who was a Navy Seal with a degree from Harvard Medical School was on of these guys 🤔 he’s an astronaut with NASA now
Pretty badass unit
You took my suggestion. You the man 💪🏽😎🐸🔱
Love your videos brother have always learned all I could on our great men and women in uniform but your videos take the next step keep up the great work 😎👍
Did not know these guys existed. Now im curious what other shadowy support units exist for JSOC.
Been waiting for this video..
That was awesome, thanks guys !
One of the most well known JMAU members is Astronaut (Col) Andrew Morgan. He has one of the most badass uniforms I've ever seen.
Would like to hear how/when they intersect with USAF Pararescue.
I was thinking that too. I thought PJs were teir 1 med
...or the 160th Flight Medics.
Good question. PJ's role is completely different. They extract personnel from behind lines and perform medical capabilities at the paramedic level. Surgical Resuscitative Teams as those mentioned in this video perform ANY and ALL surgical procedures utilizing a full surgical team and equipment capabilities rivaling a portable operating room. PJs are bad ass. We had an Air Force UH-60 with 2 PJs extract and bring us a GSW casualty right to our outpost in East Africa. We didn't even have to gear up. But we often setup close to the Op (just in case) providing our own security/commo, but it wasn't our job to go pop some noggins and carry people out of a kill zone to a helo, externally slowing a bleed, and inserting a IV for whole blood. That's a PJ. We stabilized after that. Then Aeromedical Evacuation transported to a "higher level" of care.
@@96SupraTTThanks for sharing your experience! Also, you have good taste in cars. 😉
@@fredrickgantzer7154not even close
Well that makes a whole different meaning to surgical strike
Special operations role 2 or sof- FRSS. Absolutely dope.
Thank you
Excellent video ..
I'm a Reconnaissance Marine. So I myself would like to see Recon type of content,
He's made like 2-4 videos about marine recon. He'd also made another few videos about the recon rope typing
Definitely search their page.. some good videos about the difference between force and battalion recon.. force recon and Marsoc
awesone. I may do this
fuck yea. dont quit
DONT EVER FUCKING QUIT
Is this the US equivalent to Canada’s MSRT? Small scale surgical team co-located at the site of the tactical team with facilities to provide DCR and DCS services to facilitate extraction of injured operators to Role 2 facility. Giddy up!
Much appreciated this video, know exactly where my place
Thank you
@generaldischarge DUDE!!! Why did you break the secret!!
Do a video about Blackwater PMC VIDEO!!!
These guys (and maybe girls) are double standouts. Fascinating stuff.
Are all the members of this team O-3 or above? If there are NCOs what roll do they play on the team. I would think someone to hand the doc a scalpel is a luxury for civilian doctors only.
All MDs in the military are automatically at least O-3 just for graduating or higher if they join later in their career with more expertise. Nurses start at O-1, and I’m not sure what PAs would start at, but just like the rest of special operations, everyone on the team will be very experienced and have rank to correspond. Medical Professionals in the military are also not line officers, so they don’t just command everyone on the team below them like a normal military unit, the rank is more a experience/pay marker than authority over a platoon, company, etc. for like officers. I’d imagine it’s not unlikely for the team to have multiple O-5s and 6s. Making O-6 for a normal officer is an outstanding career beating out many others on multiple boards but for doctors you just do your time and rank up and O-6 isn’t rare at all especially because the military is always short on them so keeps them as long as they can walk basically.
they only accept O-3/O-4 as applicants
A lot of respect for Rangers, but I never heard of them being referred to as tier one (not that we called anything "tier one" back in the day.) Rangers feed into Delta quite a bit, and way more guys go ranger to special forces (green beret) than the other way around. We used to say to rangers "When you grow up you can get a green one." Of course, special forces isn't "tier one either. Rangers are a premier raiding group and often provide perimeter for JSOC operations, so they are certainly special. But they are not JSOC, and they are often referred to as elite light infantry. They are more tactical than strategic in use. Again, not taking anything away from these guys - they go through intensive training and are brave, tough guys.
Разведка ,, Рейнджеров,, - LRRP - является операторами - 1- уровня.
75 ranger regiment is Tier 1, I believe there is 3 "Tier 1" units in Rangers. All the other are Tier 2
The Regimental Reconnaissance Company of the 75th Ranger Regiment was The Tier #1 group, only them.
They don't use Tiers anymore anyway..
@@yionnecantu Gotcha
@@yionnecantu согласен с вами! 75-й полк - прогрессирует и выходит на новый уровень - его структура - позволяет автономно решать большой спектр задач - перекрывая все три уровня 1/2/3. Не даром многие страны,относительно недавно - стали создавать аналогичные подразделения (Великобритания/Польша) - причиной тому высокий уровень и универсальность 75- полка. В современной конфигурации - это удачное сочетание кувалды и скальпеля - что ни в коем случае не заменяет другие части SOF - просто 75-наиболее универсален из всех. Всем хорошего дня!
What's the difference between these guys and the air force special operations surgical team?
hahaha. I'm loving the role-player footage. It's even better in real life though.
Omg this is so cool !!
Can y’all recommend any books about this unit ? ☺️
I saw a podcast in which a guy was talking about some of the places that they had set the mobile ers in Syria and Iraq. The guy said the set up in houses, buildings, boats, and even aircraft.
Do you remember the podcast? I have have similar experiences and would like to compare and contrast
damn, im a surgeon and this is my absolute dream
Go speak to an Airforce special warfare recruiter. I’m sure they can give you what some of the requirements.
No your not . Look at he goofy picture you like 14 years old bro. I like your study playlist too with UFC knockouts and lex Friedman clips .
Very smart clearly
@@JoeRogansForehead ok
@@sebastiana2060 electric operation game dosnt count 🤣
@@JoeRogansForeheadsurgeons can’t like ufc?🤣
In layman’s terms these people are the pinnacle of combat medics.
Not medics, thats degrading to their ability. More like Pinnacle of battlefield and trauma intervention,surgery, and resuscitation
At this point, make a special operation unit of cooks
You could do a great parody video of the selection and training program for special ops cooks. We see them going through SERE training and they have to forage off the land, but they manage to create a delicious rabbit stew and a soufflé, only to get yelled at because they didn't use organic sea salt.
@@derfunkhaus "i failed selection cause i couldn't acquire sea salt"
I was thinking the same thing.
@@derfunkhaus I would have loved to have a cook on my team during that phase. LMFAO at rabbit soufflé. Cadre be like WTF and start punching people (in Minecraft of course).
What do we do with the entire special unit of complete fat asses we create afterwards?🤣
So this is probably a dumb question, but this is different than the special operations surgical team that PJs deliver their patients to, yeah? Would be cool seeing a comparison between those two groups and their capabilities
This unit is a bit more specialized and a bit of a higher level than the Air Force SOST team you’re asking about. They would take the best of that unit and only work on certain special operators and certain detainees and sometimes civilians. The SOST that the PJs would bring casualties from a wider variety of people and aren’t as combat skilled or from special operators for the most part.
Now do one on the DOE shooty bois
How about a video on Air Force SOST? I hear they are the AF version of JAMU.
Can see the UAB Medicine names and badges in this video.
Can you become a JMAU while doing some work as a PJ? Can you sign up and be selected as one? How does one join JMAU?
does JMAU take applicants from all branches?
Yes. “Joint” medical augmentation unit.
Please make a video on how to observe target before assassination silently.
You earned my subscription today big pimp. This is dope as shit.
Thank you!
@@GeneralDischarge fa sho mayne
awesome
JMAU "First do no harm, then maybe some harm"
Does a special forces encounter heart attack during a operation?
Australian SOCOM has the same capacity but they are all shooters and can even be Saber troop commanders.
So you’re telling me underneath all the amour & vest& mags.. they’re wearing scrubs?
Firefighter and Nursing student Interested in a similar role currently
What can JMEOW 😹 not do... lettuce 🥬 explain.😂
Hey @generaldischarge just a quick suggestion....luv the channel but do you guys think you could have the sticker bundles in velcro patches 🙂?
So where do Air Force Pararescue fall in comparison to JMU?
PJs are like paramedics and the helicopter the ambulance always transporting to a established medical facility. These guys are the pinnacle of battlefield surgery, intervention, and trauma resuscitation less than a few hundred yards from the front line gunfight in a tent, a field or a random dirt hut with a bad guy they just killed.
Can you do Civil Affairs Medic vs Special Forces Medic ?
They both go through SOCM, the key difference medical knowledge wise, is the class after SOCM. 18D's go into SFMS(special forces medical sergeant) and CA medics go into CAMS(civil affairs medical sergeant). Delta's learn more about high level trauma and anesthesia, and CA will focus more on dental, veterinary, and water/food type area's...basically will dial down on what their mission set would require of them.
is it a FST ?
Where do SOST and SORT fall in or align with JMAU?
A lot of this footage is from the air force SOST...either way pretty sick...I personally will be shooting for SOST
What branch of the military are they in ? Army
Consider the French DGSE Service Action, the French CIA SAD/SOG
God Bless America.🇺🇲🦅⚡️⚡️💀✝️🙏🏻
What’s the difference between this team and 18 delta
Jmau is for when 18D guys want to go to the next level
What is the different between JMAU & SOST?
One focuses on JSOC, one focuses on AFSOC.
@@GeneralDischarge SOST supports "white" SOF.
One other thing, in addition to the various military SOF medical units, the CIA's Special Activities Center has it's own medical personnel to support its operations.
How is this team different from SOST? Just wondering
SOST is under AFSOC (Air Force only). SRT (this team) is under JSOC. Similar capabilities, difference is who they provide surgical resuscitative care for. I made a more detailed standalone post. Deployed with both.
I was a young Special Forces CPT when I was selected by COL Beckwith after Eagle Claw in the standup of JSOC. I worked on commonality / interoperability of equipment between Army, Navy and Air Force Special Operators. I knew Charlie from 10th SFGA in Bad Tolz. Next I worked at Fort Belvoir for COL Jerry King, in “The Army of Northern Virginia”. USAISA. ISA “Grey Fox”. The unknown unit of the Army.
As someone who is pursuing Army surgery (I am a premedical ROTC student), I had NO idea this unit existed until this vid! I am likely transferring my scholarship from Active Duty to the National Guard, but if I stay Active, I will be interested in qualifying for this elite medical augmentation unit. Thank you for this info!
can you make a video on south korean SF?
How do I join them as a PA?
Prob need a SOF background, or have years of deployed military experience to put in an application
Sounds pretty much like SOST
Which teir are they in?
1
Is the unit made up of all branches or. Mixture of
“Joint” they take whoever is qualified
I am certain just like every other military member they are massively underpaid for what services they render. I hope they get the choice of starting practices and shit wherever they want when theyre done. They certainly deserve it. But guys like this do it for other reasons than money for sure.
It’s this the role of the PJs in the 24th?
Or at least the PJs take the casualties back to where there is some medical infra
@@psicodomPJs are like paramedics, and their helicopter is like an ambulance. Always transporting to a facility. These guys deploy on operations and are preforming battlefield surgery less than hundreds of feet away from gun fights.
Is this a 6th tier1 unit? Or is this the air force's 24th sts' (air force's tier1 unit, previously documented) pararescue guys?
They're a joint medical unit supporting JSOC. They draw medical personnel form the Army, Navy and Air Force.
@dsumner1234 ahh ok. I was only aware of the smu's being under jsoc. I wonder what other units jsoc has other than this and the smu's
@@denissavgir2881 There are a lot of units under JSOC, everything from intel to support units.
These are the guys that took care of n saved Tyler Grey
The most elite teams in the world have no attachments to anyone along with no finger prints
awesome video guys, Im wondering about career fields in the USAF and im wondering if you can do a video on the USAF SF DAGRE team?
Isn’t that security forces for special warfare?
@@asanti3748 yes, it’s SF at the tier 2 level
@@asanti3748it isn’t special warfare. As much as they try and act like it, security forces (stop using SF) it isn’t special forces and it’s honestly just armed security guards with huge ego’s that feel like their special without ever having been tested.
@@CASmachine-yeit’s security forces dude. They are not tier two. Do you know what tier two means? If you did you would know Air Force security forces are not it.
@@Mango10449 yeah I know, I said the detachment in talking about is tier 2, not all of security forces
Why does the voice sound different?
Sounds like SOST
what about usaf pj's? those guys jump out of perfectly good aircraft to rescue downed pilots.
No they dont. You have a false movie depiction of Pjs. These guys are the pinnacle of battlefield surgeries, intervention and traumatic resuscitation less than a hundred yards from the gunfight between tier 1 operators and the enemy.
Surgical team cuts supply lines!.
Surgical team target strict files and copyrights!. Being medic is basic among team, regardless is least deploy. Sabotaged too.
So basically, Trama Team from Cyberpunk 2077.
Can you provide sources for this information? All references I've found about JMAU are Reddit-based and generally refer to it as the medical staff that's assigned to JSOC - not specially trained spec op medical staff. This is in contrast to Air Force SOST that are specifically trained as special operators that happen to be trained and experienced surgical staff
SOST are not operators.
@@drmikesimpson they are not operators, but they do receive specialized training like SERE in addition to what’s described as “special operation specific training”
yeah, but it's pretty light by comparison. SOST is generally considered Tier 3 and never goes on target.
@@drmikesimpson any of the "Tiers" are just made up, but SOST is a part of AFSOC (720 Special Tactics): "tier 3" units are normal units that get the new stuff first. Their ability to setup operating rooms at the front line is precisely why they were created. The 6-person team is able to carry an operating room in specialized backpacks to the target. Their work in the fights against ISIS was incredible
@@brocephus1107 LMAO. You're adorable. I will let you return to your airlift club now. Stay in school lil fella.
Cool