Truth Duty Valour Episode 305 - Joint Operations
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- Опубликовано: 8 сен 2024
- UN operations in East Timor and Somalia demonstrated Canada’s need for an amphibious capability to help support ground and air units ashore. An amphibious capability also helps the Canadian Forces during emergency evacuation operations such as during the fighting in Lebanon in 2006. TDV joins members of the Army, Navy and Air Force as they undertake a grand experiment - a fully joint maritime force that sails with USN assets to the beaches of North Carolina to conduct a full-scale landing operation. This is history in the making on Truth Duty Valour!
Good to see USA and Canada working together
I was on the USS Gunston Hall during that training and OMG the storm was devastating. We had to stop in Norfolk to replace broken equipment and US vehicles. The lines broke aboard the landing barges so the vehicles on them started moving around As for the barges themselves the lines became loose or broke I can't remember but it became a frigging pinball machine inside the ship. The only vehicles that were super tightly chained and didn't move an inch were the LAV-III chained by our guys. Beginner's luck I guess, or simply more meticulous since it was the first time doing that kind of thing.
how is this channel not have more subscribers?!? every canadian should have already subscribed :p
I watched the Airborne doc by Truth, Duty, Valour and I found it interesting
Truth duty valor is awesome. Early seasons opening is way better though!
I remember when this show was on tv
Agree! Must be a Canadian thing eh! Great channel, I love it!!
You must be prooood of the Canadian Armed Forces. They were abooot in Afghanistan.
Just found this channel. It's Great. Subbed.
Same
Strong and proud 🙏
I love it when subordinates can out call a hi ranking official. Beach master overrule a commanding officer or above. Just nothing like seeing someone call out someone who is the boss. Usually never happens but it does on rare circumstances.
Cool channel this should be on TV
On the other hand I have this screen on a Sony TV so I guess its all good
#Canada #USA +1HP #Japan
14 years later, Canada still doesn't have an amphibious force????
Look up NTOG.
@@rickmcarthur7265 i am pretty sure that their role is boarding, not amphibious assault.
🇨🇦🇺🇸
Bravo zulu .goodjob comrades
They havnt been to Sea Long enough if they are not walking sideways when they hit the beach for the first few hours.
Juno Beach God Bless the Troops !!
No 144p option 360 min. I watch at 144p to save data
Did we optain amphibious capabilities, or did the plan fall short? I’ve haven’t heard of Canadian marines since, so i assume it did not work out.
Yeah the plan fell short
I have knock knees. Can i join Canada army with this?
3:40 contentious 5:00 Halifax, pay attention 13:30 vomiting starts, one of the worst feelings in the world 15:30 1944 22:40 realistic
45:04............. Won't take them long, to pick it up? Excuse me?
You can train "jointly" all that you want, but at the end of the day any military that doesn't have plans to fight alone is doomed.
Lol, what are you trying to get at
If you are trying to say that Canada doesn’t train on their own, you have absolutely zero idea of what you are trying to push here, pal.
So.... Canadian Marines???? Eh......
R S what? Marines are the superior fighting force ngl Canadian army boot camp is pathetic
SunnyD sucks Balls the Canadian soldiers have to do more than boot camp to become a soldier, they first have BMQ (boot camp) everyone even the navy and Air Force have to do BMQ then the army has to do battle school, all combined 6 months of training just to become a infantry soldier
the van doos wtf 😂 french people should say de mer rine instead of the marine
Its the Regiment's official nick name. When the 22nd Battalion CEF (Canadian Française) reached the western front with the 2nd Canadian Division being the only french speaking unit and all the others not being french fluent "vingt deuxième" was anglicized to "Van Doos" just like many names of towns and villages in France and Belgium. For example Ypres became "Wipers", Albert took on the English pronunciation or was simply refereed to as "Bert" etc... When the 22nd Battalion became the Royal 22nd Regiment the nick name stuck and is used with pride by the Regiment to this day.
@@puppetmaster532 thx for the answer, I know that im a french canadian. I just tought that it was a way of making fun of the french canadian soldier. Why cant english folks cant pronounce french word the right way it suck 😅
@@Martel33 i think more people these days could pronounce vingt deuxième due to mandatory french in schools, its purely a product of the era back when French speaking Canada and English speaking Canada were much more separated than they are now. The name has no derogatory connotations like most* regimental nick names, exceptions exist but they are never official nicknames lol