Navy SEALs, Delta Force, and SOCOM general - The most "Special" groups in the U.S. Military

“Tom conducts military-style boot camps at Town Lake and in north Austin, a job that he’s passionate about to say the least,” the magazine said."

So, SEAL Ian Fitzgerald was right. People charging money for "training" and the "SOF experience" should not be trusted. By the way, If I were to bet, both the Delta and the Boomer SEAL were fiending for drugs. It's just such a common habit that I think that's mainly it. I'd like to give the Delta dude the benefit of the doubt, but he's been given the thumbs up by Brent Tucker. Never a good sign.

But do you believe they'd do a fire sale that'd include a worn leather wrist strap, remembering a fallen soldier for 3k without mentioning they were in a tight spot financially? It seems too sus to me.

Le epic "Ghost Recon: Wildlands- Blow yourself up with a breaching charge DLC." is coming to consoles and Steam! A win for the gamers.
I still believe for the better of humanity and I really think that the Dodsens were in a tight spot. They know that there's autists lurking in certain IG/Reddit circles (even in Asia) that are crazy enough to bite the bullet and buy a so called "collector's item".

On the drug matter, they're all as a certain former Command guy described some two famous colleagues of him. Uhhh, "mentally unstable and unsafe".
 
Damn, what the fuck dude. What's wrong with these JSOC guys fucking up with charges. It's not fucking handling a Nuke reactor on a sub. Are they fucked up on ops?
No clue. the accident as described is unbelievable. Here are some live breaching demos done by ST6 for the Medal of Honor warfighter game they got in trouble for. Stick the charge on the door, attach the det cord, back up, blow it. Attaching the det cord to a charge in your pocket is just.. i don't even know what.

And he's the former Delta guy from Forward Observations with the bad blur breaching

described some two famous colleagues of him. Uhhh, "mentally unstable and unsafe".
c'mon. can't leave us hanging like that
 
Attaching the det cord to a charge in your pocket is just
Was there a det cord or was it a charge wirelessly triggered by a detonator and that detonator was the trigger for the one in his pocket and not on the door. Either way a career ending injury and lifelong disability that was uttlery self inflicted. Wonder if these guys feel shame and embarrassment, if they do he'll be feeling a lot of both everyday forever.
 
I still believe for the better of humanity and I really think that the Dodsens were in a tight spot. They know that there's autists lurking in certain IG/Reddit circles (even in Asia) that are crazy enough to bite the bullet and buy a so called "collector's item".
Good on you. Still the way they went about it was silly. It's true there are some "crazy" people, but those people still need a cool presentation. If he had framed it nicely, and put 500 bucks on it, and added the story about it and how he was selling it due to "hardships" it would have been an easier sell.
Was there a det cord or was it a charge wirelessly triggered by a detonator and that detonator was the trigger for the one in his pocket and not on the door.
No clue. the accident as described is unbelievable. Here are some live breaching demos done by ST6 for the Medal of Honor warfighter game they got in trouble for. Stick the charge on the door, attach the det cord, back up, blow it. Attaching the det cord to a charge in your pocket is just.. i don't even know what.
The way I'm interpreting the situation, knowing those guys, is that the following happened. There is a safe procedure for putting a door breach and detonating it.

Someone thought it "was too slow" and decided to change the technique to "make it faster" so everyone could get down in the killhouse at a faster time. That new way is something like being "capped in" and having the charge in your pocket with the cap, and whipping it out fast with one hand from a pocket, as you've got the detonator on the other.

In a moment of exhaustion, nervousness, drug stupor or fumbling, you can trigger the detonator and blow yourself up, especially if you are trying to do things "at high speed" and you are anxious to keep up with the speed. The Unit liked the "high-speed" so they kept the procedure.

Those are just my impressions of how and why it may happen so much.
Wonder if these guys feel shame and embarrassment, if they do he'll be feeling a lot of both everyday forever.
They have drugs and booze to mellow out both pain and shame.
Think about the most famous SEAL duo at the moment.
On this website, freedom of information is one of the things we value greatly. In the OP I've got the full name and address of Lt Col Galen Legrand Huss. It's public information and legal.

If you've got info you've got to share, share it or don't even mention it. Otherwise, this "ifykyk" and "you can easily figure it out" gossip-esque stuff is just a waste of posts and gets tiring fast. If you have something that is "unconfirmed" say to us it's "unconfirmed and take it as a rumor".
 
Someone thought it "was too slow" and decided to change the technique to "make it faster" so everyone could get down in the killhouse at a faster time. That new way is something like being "capped in" and having the charge in your pocket with the cap, and whipping it out fast with one hand from a pocket, as you've got the detonator on the other.
It's the fact that the trainer said there was also a charge on the door that's confusing. Maybe he misspoke. Running capped in and ND'ing before you place the charge on the door is at least understandable. Running capped in, forgetting the charge you prepped, putting a fresh charge on the door with no detonator, then detonating the charge you left in your pocket would be an insane mental lapse.
 
would be an insane mental lapse.
>Have the UH-60s hover a hostile city with RPG equipped militiamen. High-speed low drag. Daylight and don't bring water. No armored support either 'cause that's how we roll.

>What's the worst that could happen?


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Running capped in, forgetting the charge you prepped, putting a fresh charge on the door with no detonator, then detonating the charge you left in your pocket would be an insane mental lapse.
We can't assume he wasn't on drugs or drunk on the time, or seriously hung over or on a comedown from a bender, or had enough sleep or not utterly physically exterted at the time. These special forces guy are pretty much always either mentally or physcially drained, or both whenever they do anything. I can see just that situation pretty easily, confusing two different methods you've trained over and over and combining them in a moment like that seems plausible to me.
 
The way I'm interpreting the situation, knowing those guys, is that the following happened. There is a safe procedure for putting a door breach and detonating it.

Someone thought it "was too slow" and decided to change the technique to "make it faster" so everyone could get down in the killhouse at a faster time. That new way is something like being "capped in" and having the charge in your pocket with the cap, and whipping it out fast with one hand from a pocket, as you've got the detonator on the other.

In a moment of exhaustion, nervousness, drug stupor or fumbling, you can trigger the detonator and blow yourself up, especially if you are trying to do things "at high speed" and you are anxious to keep up with the speed. The Unit liked the "high-speed" so they kept the procedure.

Those are just my impressions of how and why it may happen so much.
There's no way I'd be able to be in a unit like that (aside from being a lard ass) if they were doing retarded shit like this
 
There's no way I'd be able to be in a unit like that (aside from being a lard ass) if they were doing retarded shit like this
>Uhh you seem like the kind of guy who needs to cut his steak in half to see if it's well done. Well, men with balls only belong in THE UNIT because we don't run with pussies like you!

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On this website, freedom of information is one of the things we value greatly. In the OP I've got the full name and address of Lt Col Galen Legrand Huss. It's public information and legal.

If you've got info you've got to share, share it or don't even mention it. Otherwise, this "ifykyk" and "you can easily figure it out" gossip-esque stuff is just a waste of posts and gets tiring fast. If you have something that is "unconfirmed" say to us it's "unconfirmed and take it as a rumor".
I was reluctant on naming and commenting around here since of what happened last time when the Instagram page gooners sent trolls to this thread.

I thought the clues were obvious. We're talking about GBRS Group here
 
After that story there's a description of a parachute accident that is similar to the rumors about a joint Delta/SAS accident in Iraq
Damn, it sounds horrible. "Don't let the thumbs up fool you."
😬 That should never happen. Why it's not a good idea to let guys with less than half the requisite number of jumps to be a civilian tandem master do it. The part where the trainer says he was breaking down crying during rehab makes me wonder again what the fuck the United States would ever do in something like the Russia-Ukraine war. No way that Elite Operator TM could handle the stress of a war.
 
what the fuck the United States would ever do in something like the Russia-Ukraine war. No way that Elite Operator TM could handle the stress of a war.
The main issue is that in a conventional force, Special Forces are meant to sustain attrition (Even without doing things like fucking up breaching charges and fucking up jumps). But the way the Navy and Army set up their SOF as untouchable rockstar killers, for recruitment purposes, is not going to gel well with the reality of a LISCO conflict.


Oh shit, new SRS is out with Leif Babin (The Officer who fought along Chris Kyle IN 2006 RAMADI) and it's 5 and a half hours long, fml :'( Even at 2x it's around 2 hours. Leif has a throat that sound like he smokes 2 packs a day and went to BUD/S with Shawn.
 
Can anyone figure out how much that ladder costs. Is it designed to look like that to be more combat effective or is it designed to look more sleek and futuristic to fit that aesthetic of the modern operator
 
Can anyone figure out how much that ladder costs. Is it designed to look like that to be more combat effective or is it designed to look more sleek and futuristic to fit that aesthetic of the modern operator
It's carbon fiber so it's lighter. Which does make sense for stuff you have to carry long distances
 
Can anyone figure out how much that ladder costs. Is it designed to look like that to be more combat effective or is it designed to look more sleek and futuristic to fit that aesthetic of the modern operator
If I fought DEVGRU I'd be fucking thrilled to get a ladder as loot. Rifles, scopes, NVGs (I'm not a peeping Tom) have limited use in daily life. But a ladder? I can fix shit with that and build my house. Change a lightbulb maybe.

As for the cost, I don't know, but surely it's above 5k, it's proprietary, and has a bone frog etched into it by the company (And a silly team nickname for it.)


Saw the Leif Babin interview with Shawn Ryan. Fucking kill me, what a chore.

I don't want to see another SEAL officer interview (unless it's Jason Redman). Leif when he speaks is so "politically" and "diplomatically" minded, that there's not RAW emotion out there. Also, there's too much about Christ and leadership and corporate world. Interestingly, Chris Kyle is barely mentioned. They must know...
 
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I think that some of those GRS agents had said that they were on the roof when their friends passed away or actions they took to secure the compound, things like that, were not factual. I mean, there was more than one or two instances
That's such a massive lie. Who actually has the incentive to lie about that?
 
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