Mostly true, but when deploying explosive charges the SEALs like to put 3x the recommended amount on a target just to be sure. You should read how far out of the water Noriega's yacht was blasted into the air because the SEALs were putting extra hot sauce into the recipe back when we did some kinetic stuff in Panama.
USS Enterprise spelled out "E=mc^2" as she sets sail around the world with USS Long Beach, and USS Bainbridge on Operation Sea Orbit, July 31 1964, the fist all nuclear powered strike force. Task Force One had spent 65 days deployed, with 57 of them at sea, and steamed 30,216 miles in total without replenishment. They remade that photograph on the same exact carrier in 2001, commemorating 40 years of Nuclear Power.
Yep, actor, President of the Screen Actor's Guild, two term governor of California (with balanced budgets), and two terms President of the United States. And holder of a degree in economics.
"It's never a war crime the first time" That made me spit out my tea all over my laptop lol. I have never seen this guy but I am DEFINITELY subbing right now. Thank you Chris for bringing this guy to my attention !
Lots of people get amazed by the sheer strength of the US military but fail to recognize something even more notable. During WWII the US had ships deployed to war zones that were dedicated exclusively to the production and service of ice cream to the troops. Currently we have military cargo planes transporting 18 wheeler semi trucks converted to the production of Burger King for the troops in battle zones anywhere in the world. While everyone one else is focused on "trying" to get enough forces and supplies into place, the US does it with impunity to the extent that we have so much extra logistical capacity we can spend it on treats to keep everyone happy. That logistical prowess is what makes the US so formidable.
Those ice cream ships were concrete U.S. Army barges (BRL - Barge, Refrigerated, Large). The Navy had one and the Army had three. Besides making 500 gallons of ice cream a day with storage for 2,000 gallons, they carried 1,500 tons of frozen meat and 500 tons of fresh vegetables, eggs, cheese, and milk each. They operated throughout the Pacific theater. Due to being a barge not being able to get underway without an ocean tug like the Navajo class fleet tug, they had to be resupplied by refrigerated cargo ships. Those tugs were formidable little beasts in their own right. Lookup the USS Pawnee and how her crew defended the disabled USS Houston in tow from Japanese attacks in October 1944. The book "We Will Stand By You: Serving in the Pawnee 1942-1945" is a testament to devotion to duty.
Also, the other two ships sailing with her in that photo are also nuclear powered. If I recall correctly they were in the process of conducting an around the world cruise on all nuclear propulsion.
@@austin0351 those weren't the only ships with the aircraft carrier.....Air craft carriers travel with at least 3 to 4 surface ships and an attach submarine to escort it and protect it. They NEVER travel alone. My uncle was Navy for 30 years and spent a ton of time on an Air Craft carrier and said during the cold war if they were anywhere near Russia or China they had over a dozen surface ships and two subs escorting them. I'm betting the same for this one as they were going into known hostile waters.
You missed the greatest joke of the video. "I'm from the government and I'm here to help." Which Ronald Regan referred to as the nine most terrifying words in the English language.
@@siomhe8539 I guess a 22 year old German guy can be excused for not being up to speed on Reagan quotes. Maybe he should react to Reagans greatest quotes. I'd really like to see how he reacts to Milton Friedman though.
@@laneemerick6774 Not a particularly accurate statement, he merely continued the practice. US citizens have been skeptical about the government (State and Federal) to various degrees since the Founding (technically before, given English Common Inheritance both culturally and legally). The scope and skepticism about the government and its authority can be best seen in the Anti-Federalist vs Federalist debate.
Not even close. Why do you think our country's founders left England? Why did they fight a war for independence? Because the government was oppressing, rather than protecting them, and they had no say (or representation) in it. What government throughout history has ever been consistently trustworthy?
@@siomhe8539 "golf" is a lot more clear over a radio than "gamma." It's for the sake of clear comms not the Greek alphabet - emphasis on PHONETIC. The same goes for the numbers. For example "five" becomes "FIFE", "nine" becomes "niner," and "three becomes "tree." (This is where you say, "oh. ok.")
Even used it back state side working at a bank. Reading off a wire transfer and need clear communication even over poor connections. Still use it today reading off vin numbers in the shop over the sound of fans and impact guns. It's tried and true.
@@malcolmreynolds8574easy for anyone to understand, my mom uses it when telling people how to spell her name, Livia, which isn’t a totally uncommon name yet everyone thinks she’s saying either “Olivia” “Olive” or somewhat surprisingly “Emma” so she uses the phonetic alphabet to make sure people get it right
Specifically it's the NATO Phonetic Alphabet, all of NATO uses it and it was designed to be easily pronounced understood across as many different languages as possible. Prior to NATO the US(and UK) military had a different phonetic alphabet developed during WW2. That one was Able, Baker, Charlie, Dog, Easy, Fox, etc. Charlie, Mike, and Victor were the only ones that stayed the same through the different revisions until the current one developed in 1956.
8:34 "stragglers" means anyone lagging behind a group, anyone left behind. In this sense, he's saying they're trying to scare off anyone left on the ship before actually destroying it.
The Russians "taking pictures for history" is standard intelligence gathering to see what weapons are being used and how well they work. They do it to us, we do it to them. Yes, the end credit scenes are great when they are there.
They also have a chance to see what electronic changes like to the search radar frequency used for locking on weapons is and whether any upgrades may have been done to any older vessels. They were also looking for things like missile velocities, rocket motor upgrades, and how fast the crews reacted to situations. All valuable intel.
Quiet? That description already belonged to the "Swift, Silent, Deadly" Marine Reconnaissance companies that are out there being the eyes and ears behind enemy lines, before grunts or even frogmen arrive.
Screw that, Marines are beasts. Seals are great, but Marines maybe a step below, but I do not see anything significantly. Marines where men want to test themselves.
Seals= you dont want people to know tell way later Marines= If you want people to know what happens while its happening Both working together= You messed up really bad
I was there. The tanker escort mission was called Operation Earnest Will. When we would enter or leave the gulf through the Straits of Hormuz, Iran would light us up with their Silkworm missile radars. I was an Electronics Warfare Technician 2nd Class on the USS Merrill (DD-976), SAG B, during this engagement. The night before, our Captain told us to get some sleep. We were going to general quarters at 0730. At 0800 our SAG would destroy the Sassan Oil Platform, SAG C would take out the Sirri oil platform, and SAG D would take our a frigate. We went to GQ at 0730. We radioed the platform at 0745, stating "You have 15 minutes to evacuate the platform." then stated it in Farsi, then English, then Farsi, finally saying, "Have A Nice Day." (we had a CT onboard that spoke Farsi) We then gave them a 10 minute warning, then a 5-minute warning. At 0800 we radioed, "Has everyone left the platform, we are prepared to open fire," to which the platform responded, "We are not leaving." So, we were like, "OK" and started firing at the platform with our 5-inch guns. We had fired 2 rounds when they started shooting back with their 22-mm chain gun. Our Fire Controlman adjusted fire and took him out with ONE shot (yes, he was THAT good). Then he readjusted fire and continued with the anti-personnel air bursts (we were trying NOT to hit a toxic tank on the platform. We were supposed to trade off with the Lynde B. McCormick but her gun had dropped sync and was "walking" and they couldn't fix it in time. We wound up doing all the shooting on the Sassan oil platform. The Soviet Udaloy-class destroyer was collecting intel. We had a joke after the engagement: How does the Ayatollah inspect his fleet?... Glass Bottom Boat.. 😂😂😂
When God closes a door he leaves the Corps a perfectly good wall that a little bit of serious putty and a sufficiently caffeinated Combat Engineer can use to turn the structure in question into an open floor plan
If you read this. The phonetic alphabet was designed with one purpose with slight variations on a theme. No one word can sound like another in case of broken radio transmissions. If you hear trot then you know foxtrot was the word. All the words were so cool that it is now used in everything.
@@ninjabearpress2574 That's a good idea. Kingons are like Vikings - they'll insult your forefathers going back 117 generations. They probably have a good catalogue of curses.
@@Raggmopp-xl7yf Foxtrot Uniform Charlie Kilo! I, uh, learned that one from the Bloodhound Gang. 😂 It's still hard for me to say it without saying it to the melody of the song.
@@user-wc8fp4cx6c The USS Liberty was acknowledged by Israel as being mistaken for an Egyptian ship, this was during the 6-day war, and investigations proved it was a full mistake and Israel offered to do what they could for the victims and their families within 48 hours of the mistake. for the USS Stark, the government (the actual villains) used it as a jumping-off point to place blame on Iran and politically pressure them. Later it was the Joint Chiefs of Staff investigate and recommended Iraq be held accountable and the government at the time complied. This was followed by around 400 million dollars as compensation for the attack as well as other problems. Brindel, the captain, was also relieved of duty and retired as a commander for not defending the ship at all and Moncrief, the tactical officer, resigned as a result. So it's "don't touch our boats.... otherwise we will retaliate either physically or politically unless it can be proved it wasn't on purpose and reparations are made quickly afterward."
@@StrangeScaryNewEngland like it or not, he most likely just does it for entertainment; after all isreali-gaza/isreal-palastine things usually arnt as fun ti tslk about with all the current news coverage
I don’t care what your beliefs are if your American and that shit doesn’t give you an Merica Hard On your not right..🤩🤩🫶🏻🇺🇸🇺🇸 Proud to be an American. 🫡
Cough, Delta, cough. We had a SEAL team on our MEU, they didn’t seem better than the Rangers I’ve seen. Team 6/DEVGRU perhaps, but not the typical team. Unless I remember incorrectly.
Different mission set though: the SEALs will never be sent to do an amphibious landing (there aren't enough of them) while the Marines could probably take down most of the targets SEALs are tasked to eliminate -- they just won't make it home since being sneaky killing people quietly isn't really in the Marine Corps ethos (which is another reason we love them so much). And to what @charlesbryson7443 says... again, Delta is another animal entirely. DEVGRU and Delta are the most fungible units on the list but again they have a slightly different mission statement (at least on paper)... and DEVGRU has some really interesting auxiliary groups working with them: their proximity to DC and the specialized training and skills the EOD members attached to DEVGRU have make them uniquely qualified for jobs that Delta will never get as long as DEVGRU (or that unit in the Air Force that doesn't even have a name on paper) are able to respond within 12 hours.
@@charlesbryson7443When it comes to maritime operations, SEAL's are the top of the heap also SEALs are a force multiplier. it's like Tim Kennedy an Army Ranger once said he wouldn't want anything to do with fighting a SEAL anywhere near water. Peace.
I Have to Interject... My Only Son , is an Air Force Combat Controller, He'll jump with ALL your Spec Ops, then, they Have to Protect Him, while he calls The Bombs! Don't Believe Me? Read, Alone At Dawn...❤❤❤💙💙💙💚💚💚
Hi Chris 👋 US Navy veteran here (89-93). Not only is this my favorite #fatelectrician video, but this Operation was legendary the following year when I enlisted! 🙌⚓️
The last ship I served on was the one that finished off that frigate. With that being said what happened that day is kinda an understatement. These frigates are basically mini ferries with two jet engines powering it and more guns than a lot of whole countries navies. But these boats weren’t meant to take big hits like mines or missiles, because of that DC (damage control) training is huge and it’s why we don’t loose boats. An example of how important DC is look at how the Russians lost a bigger (all steel) boat from a single missile hit just last year, where as a less armored American frigate not only didn’t sink but was ready to fight (see USS stark)
Also, good to know the history of the USS Forrestal. Accidental launch of a rocket from an F-4 just before launching a sortie dumped all the fuel from an A-4 and ignited it and was cooking off bombs and fuel from the assembled and prepped aircraft on deck within 90 seconds. I forget the details... whether the firefighting team was just stranded or if they had perished but it took over 24 hours and help from other nearby ships to get the fire put out. That incident is why every Navy member is a firefighter.
Both Navy SEALs and Marines employ intensive physical conditioning and combat strategy education, yet their training adapts to different mission requirements, with Navy SEALs excelling in specialized, covert operations and Marines in expansive, rapid-response engagements. - I am an army brat meaning my dad is a USA army veteran who served during Vietnam in army intelligence and became an army jag ( judge advocate general- attorney) officer and worked in the pentagon then remained in the army reserves for many years. We lived In Bremerhaven, Germany when I was a kid. He always said the bravest guys he worked with were the helicopter pilots who flew in Vietnam.
The USS Enterprise has, in fact, eight nuclear reactors on board. My father served aboard the Enterprise in the 1980s and was on board for this event. He said the airplanes' crews painted silhouettes of boats on the sides signifying how many Iranian ships they'd taken out.
@@zmanftwx8023Well to be technical, it turned out they could have gotten by with only 2 of them but when it was designed the engineers assumed each reactor was the same as a standard boiler. A Forestall class needed 8 boilers so they used 8 reactors.
That's cool. I love hearing those kinds of stories. My dad worked on the Enterprise. He was a welder/pipefitter and was cleared to work on nuclear subs and got to work on the Enterprise. I was a kid and thought Star Trek - not aircraft carrier.
Idk how accurate this is, but I heard once that, in theory, or actually, practically (if there's a way to transfer power) dock at port actually power (or at least partially) a city if need be @@RDreamer
7:07 Yes, all branches of the Military use the phonetic alphabet, A = Alpha, B = Bravo, etc. Other “codes” can differ between different branches, but the Alphabet is the same
"Does anybody else need to find out what its like to chew 5 gum?" Thats the best line ive heard for a while. Also if you dont get the reference look up 5 gum commercials.
To add a little more to how crazy that A6 dive bomb run was. The A6 Intruders crew is not situated like the F14 with its Pilot in the front and its Radar Interception Officer setting behind them. Making for a sleek cockpit. The two person crew in the A6 intruder set abreast just as in a car. Making the cockpit so much wider and so much bigger an area for anti aircraft to hit. So that says even more on the intestinal fortitude that crew had on diving straight into that ships A.A.
"stragglers" is a word used for people who are essentially separated from a group/left behind. Google told me that "Straggler" in German is "Nachzügler" Example for the English meaning; In a marathon all contestants have finished, except for a few stragglers who haven't finished the race yet. Another example; The store is closed and everyone has left except for a handful of stragglers still inside.
Navy SEALs are more elite than Marines. The Marines are America's global expeditionary force. They're actually a department within the US Navy who serve as a second US army. Navy SEALs are special forces; they receive more training, and more advanced weapons & high-tech gear. It takes 4 years and $12M to train just one individual Navy SEAL.
Where did you find this ridiculousness? Cut 10 million off that bro. It's 2 million to train per seal. My God people sure are willing to just run off at the mouth even though they don't know a damn thing about the topic they're speaking on😂
When it comes to the training it's a 12-month run followed by an 18-month run of pre-deployment and intensive training and school. 30 months. Not 4 years. My God where did you get this ridiculous clown shoe information and why are you so willing to share your stupidity with others
Marines are the FIRST USA group what was set up before we became the USA and unlike the army the navy the airforce ( that was the army ari force ) once a marine alway a marine all others will say they are ex what ever branch
"You've done fucked up, I-I-ran!" I have absolutely no idea who I'm quotin'. Also, you don't screw with a country that has a defense budget big enough to fight God.
The E=mc² on the aircraft carrier does have a military meaning. It means for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. A.K.A. Screw with us, and you will feel our wrath.
@@ihatebofa6Loved reading about the Battle for Leyte Gulf and how an outfit of Jeep carriers, destroyers, destroyers escorts fought off Japanese navies center force consisting of battle ships, heavy cruisers and destroyers. The US outfit was doing aircraft support of the beach head. They fought so ferociously, the japanese commander thought he was facing fleet carriers and cruisers. The IJN stopped their attack and turned back and if they just persisted they would have done heavy damage to the landing force and to the American cruiser group guarding the southern flank. US navy group guarding the south completely destroyed another japanese navy group of heavy cruisers by employing the crossing the T formation. That would be the last time that maneuver will ever be used. Modern navy battles today will be long range ones fought with aircraft, missiles, and drones.
The Navy SEALs are considered the finest special forces group. The US Marines are considered the best overall fighting force. The SEALs are on a smaller scale, and are used for specific, and often secret missions.
It would help to get the terminology correct: Special OPERATIONS Forces (SOF) is the umbrella term that includes units such as Army SPECIAL FORCES, Navy SEALS, MARSOC, AFSOC, Delta, DEVGRU, 160th SOAR, and some others. All of them have some unique capabilities and some common capabilities, some unique missions and some overlapping missions. For example, Army Special Forces mission set includes (1) Internal Defense and Develoment and (2) Unconventional Warfare (building guerrilla forces in a foreign nation and then conducting guerrilla warfare). SEALS perform neither mission. BOTH SEALS and SF conduct strategic reconnaissance and direct action missions. Comparing these units to each other is like apples and oranges. When you write that, "SEALs are considered the finest special forces group," Oh, really? Considered by who? Videogamers? Your sources? People who have never served in the armed forces, or more specifically in special operations? Describing SEALS as special forces group tells me right away that you are not a veteran of "The Community". Why? No SEAL would want to be known as "special forces." And no Army Special Forces operator wants to be known as a SEAL. I respect all SOF units, having trained or served with most of them. I will say this about SEALs: They've got dynamite public relations, such as movies, videos, TV programs, books and all of that, to the extent that the average American has virtually never heard of all the rest of the Special Operations Community who also perform yeoman's labor and who, I might add, do not want ANY publicity. As a result, their missions remain unheralded. The nickname of Army SF to the public is "The Green Berets." However, SF members are known as "The Quiet Professionals," for a reason. ODA-572, ODA-575, HQ-5thSFG(A)
Retired Beret here. I've been asked countless times what special forces group is the most badass, and every civilian as well as most enlisted grunts go immediately to the Seals or the Berets. That is perfectly justified based on what the public is allowed to know, but every special forces operator will tell you different. The most badass special forces group is the Airforce PJs, and it's not close. Those are the dudes we call for help when the shit hits the fan.
@@4325air That’s exactly true and when I was in the Marine Corps, the recon or the Marines, you never heard about them or do & yet they navy seals and RECON pretty much do the same things or similar things. The biggest difference is that recon goes in and previously and goes in behind enemy lines, and they actually do reconnaissance work on top of other things that navy seal there, but they just do more of it as far as recon work
Fly is a loaded term here. He didn't die, but the plane very much did., and quite quickly. The F4 is an interceptor aircraft. It's a short range anti-bomber plane designed to create problems for bombers and convoys from a distance.
@@joe_dns4625 The real "flying" was done by that pilot in the A10 over Iraq when she had one or both engines get shot out and she still made it back to base.
Yes, you can usually tell the origin of munitions by their fragments. From the markings and serial numbers to the details of construction all is distinctive. For example with artillery shells no 2 countries attach the "driving band" (the copper band at the base of the projectile that engages the rifling in the gun and makes it spin in flight) in the same way so you can tell if a fragment came from German or British or French shell (say from ww1) simply by examining remains of the drving band. The same principles apply to things like sea mines, there are details that are unique to the way Iran puts those together
My Father served aboard USS Enterprise Naval Carrier and other USN Battleships. I remember being frightened as an young Madschen about 4 years old walking across the water onto the ship to watch Military Whites Inspection standing on the huge flat deck. Was pretty awesome.
Marines are essentially shock troops used as expeditionary units, embassy guards, etc. Seals are specialized demolitions and counter terrorist units. Kind of an apple and oranges comparison. Seals wont be storming beaches exclusively, and marines probably arent going to be doing a whole lot of infiltration. They tend to be as subtle as a brick through a window with a note attached saying "You're toast".
The eye of sauron was hilarious. Also, the scary thing about american missles is the fact that they don't aim for the engines. They aim for the cockpit of the aircraft. It's just that the aircraft are usually trying to run from the missles. Heat seekers do aim for the engines, but that it for that. They may be able to replace the equipment, but it takes longer to replace pilots.
I had the amazing experience of touring the USS Enterprise when it was docked at Bremerton, Washington. It was stunning! Huge! Also, I now live very near a US Airforce base. Watching the pilots practice and hearing the jets is incredible. We call it the sound of freedom 🎉❤
Samuel B. Roberts was loaded onto Mighty Servant 2, a semi-submersible heavy lift ship owned by Dutch shipping firm Wijsmuller Transport and carried back to Newport for repairs.
Americans debate the "Who's better, the Navy Seals or the Marines?" Question all the time. As the daughter of a Marine fighter pilot and the wife of a decorated Naval officer, I plead the 5th. 🤠
Depends on the situation. They both have their own strengths and weaknesses. Seals are more specialized Marines have a broader scope of training. So Marines have a wider range of skills, but Seals are going to be better in their specialized area.
Chris I am sending you Love from Pensacola Beach Florida USA 🇺🇸. I just watched your video of AL Bundy. American television. I Love you My Friend and I hope someday you will come to America 🇺🇸. Who knew A American what's a German to come to visit and stay with them. 😉👍❤️❤️❤️
"What are you doing? where not suposed to be killing things yet" had me so bad! My great grandfather was in the navy , anytime he came home he would sit us down and tell us "listen closly kids, have i got a new story for you!" we would sit there and listen. he told us was "its not the strenght of a man that makes him a hero its the size of his heart" true words. also edit: 7:35 it means for ever action there is a re-action meaning you blow up a boat where goilng to blow up all your boats and drop a sun on you. (nagaskai refrence)
SEALs are one of the US military's premiere special operations units. They are some of the best trained and equiped forces for covert operation, but often suffer when forced into direct combat operations as they're incapable of bringing to force all of their potential. Marines are often believed to be the greatest conventional combat force in the world. Marines are some of the most capable, aggressive, and creative infantry despite recently losing most of their heavy armor forces and often using less advanced weapons. SEALs squadsare great for keeping things quiet, Marine squads are what you send to kill everything in a building and then want them to level said building with a broom, a grenade, and a stick of C4.
The alphabet he uses is the NATO phonetic alphabet. Alpha, Bravo, Charlie, Delta, Echo, Foxtrot, Golf, Hotel, India, Juliet, Kilo, Lima, Mike, November, Oscar, Papa, Quebec, Romeo, Sierra, Tango, Uniform, Victor, Whiskey, X-ray, Yankee, Zulu. The idea is that in these words are 'unique' sounding words that begin with each letter in the English language, so there is less confusion when spelling things out over radio communications.
They're also unique enough that if radio communication is spotty and you only get part of a word it's still clear what letter was intended. No other letter contains Ike, so you know it's Mike. Fox means Foxtrot. It may seem obvious, but at the ranges and theatres it's meant to be used in, it's not always so clear. Just try spelling your name to some automated systems. Bob turns into Cod really quick depending on accents.
The reason the ship has E=mc(squared) on the ship is because it was the first nuclear powered carrier made by the U.S. Also, the letters you see on the deck of the ship are literally PEOPLE standing on the deck.
Einstein’s equation is spelled out by sailors standing on the deck. It was done to celebrate the power of nuclear energy as all three of the ships in the photo were nuclear powered. The USS’s Enterprise, Long Beach, and Bainbridge.
It would have been more meaningful to have spelled out "Newton's Third Law of Motion" on that aircraft carrier's deck (07:40). The law states that when one object exerts a force on another, the second object exerts an equal force in the opposite direction. Meaning that everything that Iran tries against the USA, is going to be met with an equal ("Proportional") reaction back at them.
No, E=mc squared is not about Newton. It’s Einstein. It’s the mass- energy equivalent. If you can destroy a piece of mass that is the energy you get from it. That’s how nuclear weapons work. A very small piece of mass is destroy but multiplied by the speed of light squared so you get a massive amount of energy released. Thus, the atomic bomb.
We actually had steak, lobster and ice cream for dinner the next night. We didn't think it would go so quick, so the 1st night we spent most of it at GQ.
To me the most impressive part is the US navy can assemble and deliver a strike group response halfway around the world in 4 days. Good response keep trying to close the slang gap.
Love your channel! Ive always wanted to go to Germany as my ancestors are from there they Americanized my last name from Brügger to bricker came from germany to Pennsylvania... always loved german history. Definitely subbed.
Incorrect. The F-4 made it back to base and managed to land. The F-4 is basically the definition of strap a powerful enough engine to something and it will fly.
“Don’t mess with the US” Or more accurately: don’t touch America’s boats. As far as an airplane losing a wing, a pilot in a modern military aircraft can easily evacuate a crippled aircraft using the plane’s ejection systems.
Chris, Check out the Fat electrician talking about Dan Daly "The Most Gangster Marine of All Time", you will enjoy that one, and yes there is sometimes something at the very end of his videos, so always stay until the end if you have time! Deb
If my father were alive today, he passed away Dec 2008 as an USN Master Chief Petty Officer, he served aboard this huge Carrier the USS Enterprise and he would tell you why Einstein's Relativity as written on deck. He was Naval Electronics Expert.
Marines are a sledge hammer, navy seals are a surgeons knife. They both have their uses and they do them well.
SEALs are a scalpel Marines are a chainsaw
@@ChuckHuffmaster fair enough. Precision vs brute strength.
It's true
Semper Fidelis
@@JoelAdams-j9x "marines are not accustomed to taking defensive positions, it's bad for morale"
Mostly true, but when deploying explosive charges the SEALs like to put 3x the recommended amount on a target just to be sure. You should read how far out of the water Noriega's yacht was blasted into the air because the SEALs were putting extra hot sauce into the recipe back when we did some kinetic stuff in Panama.
E=mc2 is there, because the USS Enterprise was the first nuclear aircraft carrier.
USS Enterprise spelled out "E=mc^2" as she sets sail around the world with USS Long Beach, and USS Bainbridge on Operation Sea Orbit, July 31 1964, the fist all nuclear powered strike force.
Task Force One had spent 65 days deployed, with 57 of them at sea, and steamed 30,216 miles in total without replenishment.
They remade that photograph on the same exact carrier in 2001, commemorating 40 years of Nuclear Power.
Also the enterprise was known as the big E.
Thanks
@@Adplusamequalsadam an "Iron E" perhaps? 😂
@@MrWCramer I remember looking this photo up a while back, I thought it was badass.
"The actor?!" 🤣🤣 That reference landed just right for me and I laughed hard enough that my cat gave me a dirty look for disturbing him 😂
Great Scott!
Yep, actor, President of the Screen Actor's Guild, two term governor of California (with balanced budgets), and two terms President of the United States. And holder of a degree in economics.
@@dking1836I think they were (%99.799) pretty sure he was referencing the line from Back to the Future.
Glad someone caught this before I did. 🤣
@@dking1836 The SNL portrayals of him were comedy genius... and nothing like today's opposition political humor.
"It's never a war crime the first time"
That made me spit out my tea all over my laptop lol. I have never seen this guy but I am DEFINITELY subbing right now.
Thank you Chris for bringing this guy to my attention !
If you enjoy The Fat Electrician, Habitual Line Crosser is really good content as well!
Oh boy you are in for some fun
The Fat Electrician is a marvelous story teller!
Check out the unsubscribe podcast episodes with him and habitual line crosser. Some of the best podcasts I've listened too
Lots of people get amazed by the sheer strength of the US military but fail to recognize something even more notable. During WWII the US had ships deployed to war zones that were dedicated exclusively to the production and service of ice cream to the troops. Currently we have military cargo planes transporting 18 wheeler semi trucks converted to the production of Burger King for the troops in battle zones anywhere in the world. While everyone one else is focused on "trying" to get enough forces and supplies into place, the US does it with impunity to the extent that we have so much extra logistical capacity we can spend it on treats to keep everyone happy. That logistical prowess is what makes the US so formidable.
Agreed, incredible supply chain!
Those ice cream ships were concrete U.S. Army barges (BRL - Barge, Refrigerated, Large). The Navy had one and the Army had three. Besides making 500 gallons of ice cream a day with storage for 2,000 gallons, they carried 1,500 tons of frozen meat and 500 tons of fresh vegetables, eggs, cheese, and milk each. They operated throughout the Pacific theater. Due to being a barge not being able to get underway without an ocean tug like the Navajo class fleet tug, they had to be resupplied by refrigerated cargo ships. Those tugs were formidable little beasts in their own right. Lookup the USS Pawnee and how her crew defended the disabled USS Houston in tow from Japanese attacks in October 1944. The book "We Will Stand By You: Serving in the Pawnee 1942-1945" is a testament to devotion to duty.
No way 😂
As the old adage goes, Amatures talk tactics, Masters talk Logistics.
Supply chain superiority will always win.
The special relativity equation was there because the U.S.S. Enterprise was the first nuclear-powered aircraft carrier.
Also, the other two ships sailing with her in that photo are also nuclear powered. If I recall correctly they were in the process of conducting an around the world cruise on all nuclear propulsion.
@@austin0351 Yep, TF 1 was The USS Bainbridge, USS Long Beach, and USS Enterprise, all Nuclear powered.
@@austin0351 those weren't the only ships with the aircraft carrier.....Air craft carriers travel with at least 3 to 4 surface ships and an attach submarine to escort it and protect it. They NEVER travel alone. My uncle was Navy for 30 years and spent a ton of time on an Air Craft carrier and said during the cold war if they were anywhere near Russia or China they had over a dozen surface ships and two subs escorting them. I'm betting the same for this one as they were going into known hostile waters.
Also if you didn't realize it but the "E=mc2" were sailors standing on the deck not painted on.
@@acratistrevour3901 Squiddies can stand in formation? Who knew!
Don’t Mess with U.S. Allies. The Boats might be sent.
Don’t mess with U.S. Boats. The Boats will start sending other things.
A new star may be born briefly.....twice
Reminder that ZOG is not the good guy you think it is.
@@aviator2252 Yeah, this one ✡
@@ahoyforsenchou7288 ZOG? dont know this acronym
@@aviator2252 He's trying to say zionists occupy the government as if that acronym keeps him off of any of the lists he deserves to be on.
You missed the greatest joke of the video. "I'm from the government and I'm here to help." Which Ronald Regan referred to as the nine most terrifying words in the English language.
I picked up on that and wondered if I was the only one. I was like 4 when I heard that
@@siomhe8539 I guess a 22 year old German guy can be excused for not being up to speed on Reagan quotes.
Maybe he should react to Reagans greatest quotes. I'd really like to see how he reacts to Milton Friedman though.
Yes, he started the trend towards not trusting the Government.
@@laneemerick6774 Not a particularly accurate statement, he merely continued the practice. US citizens have been skeptical about the government (State and Federal) to various degrees since the Founding (technically before, given English Common Inheritance both culturally and legally).
The scope and skepticism about the government and its authority can be best seen in the Anti-Federalist vs Federalist debate.
Not even close. Why do you think our country's founders left England? Why did they fight a war for independence? Because the government was oppressing, rather than protecting them, and they had no say (or representation) in it. What government throughout history has ever been consistently trustworthy?
I served in the US Army, yes the whole military uses what's called the "phonetic alphabet". Alpha, Bravo, Charlie, Delta, the works.
echo, foxtrot, golf...because that makes total sense as opposed to gamma :) got to love our great minds at work.
@@siomhe8539 "golf" is a lot more clear over a radio than "gamma." It's for the sake of clear comms not the Greek alphabet - emphasis on PHONETIC. The same goes for the numbers. For example "five" becomes "FIFE", "nine" becomes "niner," and "three becomes "tree." (This is where you say, "oh. ok.")
Even used it back state side working at a bank. Reading off a wire transfer and need clear communication even over poor connections. Still use it today reading off vin numbers in the shop over the sound of fans and impact guns. It's tried and true.
@@malcolmreynolds8574easy for anyone to understand, my mom uses it when telling people how to spell her name, Livia, which isn’t a totally uncommon name yet everyone thinks she’s saying either “Olivia” “Olive” or somewhat surprisingly “Emma” so she uses the phonetic alphabet to make sure people get it right
Specifically it's the NATO Phonetic Alphabet, all of NATO uses it and it was designed to be easily pronounced understood across as many different languages as possible. Prior to NATO the US(and UK) military had a different phonetic alphabet developed during WW2. That one was Able, Baker, Charlie, Dog, Easy, Fox, etc.
Charlie, Mike, and Victor were the only ones that stayed the same through the different revisions until the current one developed in 1956.
Marines are for a general “screw you” where navy seals are more for “u made it personal, and we are going to make it very personal” kinda approaches.
8:34 "stragglers" means anyone lagging behind a group, anyone left behind. In this sense, he's saying they're trying to scare off anyone left on the ship before actually destroying it.
*oil rig
Yes. Stragglers as in Nachzügler.
The Russians "taking pictures for history" is standard intelligence gathering to see what weapons are being used and how well they work. They do it to us, we do it to them.
Yes, the end credit scenes are great when they are there.
They also have a chance to see what electronic changes like to the search radar frequency used for locking on weapons is and whether any upgrades may have been done to any older vessels. They were also looking for things like missile velocities, rocket motor upgrades, and how fast the crews reacted to situations. All valuable intel.
Indeed
They also DEFINITELY took history photos as well just for it as well because JEEZ
Marines, loud.
Seals, quiet.
That's the main difference. Both can be your best friend, or worst enemy.
Quiet? That description already belonged to the "Swift, Silent, Deadly" Marine Reconnaissance companies that are out there being the eyes and ears behind enemy lines, before grunts or even frogmen arrive.
Screw that, Marines are beasts. Seals are great, but Marines maybe a step below, but I do not see anything significantly. Marines where men want to test themselves.
Seals= you dont want people to know tell way later
Marines= If you want people to know what happens while its happening
Both working together= You messed up really bad
I was there.
The tanker escort mission was called Operation Earnest Will. When we would enter or leave the gulf through the Straits of Hormuz, Iran would light us up with their Silkworm missile radars.
I was an Electronics Warfare Technician 2nd Class on the USS Merrill (DD-976), SAG B, during this engagement.
The night before, our Captain told us to get some sleep. We were going to general quarters at 0730. At 0800 our SAG would destroy the Sassan Oil Platform, SAG C would take out the Sirri oil platform, and SAG D would take our a frigate.
We went to GQ at 0730. We radioed the platform at 0745, stating "You have 15 minutes to evacuate the platform." then stated it in Farsi, then English, then Farsi, finally saying, "Have A Nice Day." (we had a CT onboard that spoke Farsi)
We then gave them a 10 minute warning, then a 5-minute warning. At 0800 we radioed, "Has everyone left the platform, we are prepared to open fire," to which the platform responded, "We are not leaving." So, we were like, "OK" and started firing at the platform with our 5-inch guns. We had fired 2 rounds when they started shooting back with their 22-mm chain gun. Our Fire Controlman adjusted fire and took him out with ONE shot (yes, he was THAT good). Then he readjusted fire and continued with the anti-personnel air bursts (we were trying NOT to hit a toxic tank on the platform.
We were supposed to trade off with the Lynde B. McCormick but her gun had dropped sync and was "walking" and they couldn't fix it in time.
We wound up doing all the shooting on the Sassan oil platform.
The Soviet Udaloy-class destroyer was collecting intel.
We had a joke after the engagement: How does the Ayatollah inspect his fleet?... Glass Bottom Boat.. 😂😂😂
10:15 Marines come in through the walls, Navy SEAL’s are already in the room, behind the walls and under the floors and you don’t know it.
When God closes a door he leaves the Corps a perfectly good wall that a little bit of serious putty and a sufficiently caffeinated Combat Engineer can use to turn the structure in question into an open floor plan
Love your description!
If you read this. The phonetic alphabet was designed with one purpose with slight variations on a theme. No one word can sound like another in case of broken radio transmissions. If you hear trot then you know foxtrot was the word. All the words were so cool that it is now used in everything.
I learned to spell my name in NATO phonetic just for amusement purposes, I felt like a five year old again.
Civilian here - whenever I want to curse I say: Whiskey Tango Foxtrot. Every time.
@@Raggmopp-xl7yf Since PNC Bank kicked me out for one muttered f-bomb, I swear in Klingon.
@@ninjabearpress2574 That's a good idea. Kingons are like Vikings - they'll insult your forefathers going back 117 generations. They probably have a good catalogue of curses.
@@Raggmopp-xl7yf Foxtrot Uniform Charlie Kilo! I, uh, learned that one from the Bloodhound Gang. 😂 It's still hard for me to say it without saying it to the melody of the song.
I loved that you said "the actor" 😂 i died that you know him because of that lol
Back to the Future reference for the win.
I know him also as a president, but yes that was a back to the future reference ;)
@@Chrisb.reacts you're awesome for that.
Well, the Gipper was a great president, but a mediocre actor. Lol
@AxeSwipe2011 was he?
"Don't touch our boats!" - America.
Why won't Fat Electrician talk about Israel's attack on the USS Liberty that killed 34 or Iraq's attack on the USS Stark in 1987 that killed 37?
@@user-wc8fp4cx6c The USS Liberty was acknowledged by Israel as being mistaken for an Egyptian ship, this was during the 6-day war, and investigations proved it was a full mistake and Israel offered to do what they could for the victims and their families within 48 hours of the mistake.
for the USS Stark, the government (the actual villains) used it as a jumping-off point to place blame on Iran and politically pressure them. Later it was the Joint Chiefs of Staff investigate and recommended Iraq be held accountable and the government at the time complied. This was followed by around 400 million dollars as compensation for the attack as well as other problems. Brindel, the captain, was also relieved of duty and retired as a commander for not defending the ship at all and Moncrief, the tactical officer, resigned as a result.
So it's "don't touch our boats.... otherwise we will retaliate either physically or politically unless it can be proved it wasn't on purpose and reparations are made quickly afterward."
@@user-wc8fp4cx6c Because he seems to only focus on the times that WE are doing the ass-kicking. Not sure why.
@@StrangeScaryNewEngland like it or not, he most likely just does it for entertainment; after all isreali-gaza/isreal-palastine things usually arnt as fun ti tslk about with all the current news coverage
Never touch our boats
I love the part where he says, "And we all know what happens next", and all you hear is the eagle scream to introduce the US to the story.
Hawk. Not eagle. Eagles don't make that sound. :)
Freedom has entered the chat...
I don’t care what your beliefs are if your American and that shit doesn’t give you an Merica Hard On your not right..🤩🤩🫶🏻🇺🇸🇺🇸 Proud to be an American. 🫡
I absolutely LOVE our military. They have such a great sense of humor
Fat Electrician is easily in my top ten favorite content creators, plus he gives me a FAAAAR better history lesson than I got in school.
Moral of the story. DONT TOUCH OUR BOATS
Don't even TALK about our boats! It gives me anxiety. - U.S. 😅
@@abell509who’s talking about our boats?!
@@abell509Don't even possibly LOOK LIKE you're going to touch the boats.
@@wordforger WHOS LOOKING AT THE BOATS!?
Dont worry enterprise she's not gonna harm you okay?
As a forner US Marine, I can easily say the US Navy Seals are THE most elite, and professional group the U.S, has, and probably in the world.
Cough, Delta, cough. We had a SEAL team on our MEU, they didn’t seem better than the Rangers I’ve seen. Team 6/DEVGRU perhaps, but not the typical team. Unless I remember incorrectly.
I was just about to say…uh Delta!
Different mission set though: the SEALs will never be sent to do an amphibious landing (there aren't enough of them) while the Marines could probably take down most of the targets SEALs are tasked to eliminate -- they just won't make it home since being sneaky killing people quietly isn't really in the Marine Corps ethos (which is another reason we love them so much). And to what @charlesbryson7443 says... again, Delta is another animal entirely. DEVGRU and Delta are the most fungible units on the list but again they have a slightly different mission statement (at least on paper)... and DEVGRU has some really interesting auxiliary groups working with them: their proximity to DC and the specialized training and skills the EOD members attached to DEVGRU have make them uniquely qualified for jobs that Delta will never get as long as DEVGRU (or that unit in the Air Force that doesn't even have a name on paper) are able to respond within 12 hours.
@@charlesbryson7443When it comes to maritime operations, SEAL's are the top of the heap also SEALs are a force multiplier. it's like Tim Kennedy an Army Ranger once said he wouldn't want anything to do with fighting a SEAL anywhere near water. Peace.
I Have to Interject... My Only Son , is an Air Force Combat Controller, He'll jump with ALL your Spec Ops, then, they Have to Protect Him, while he calls The Bombs! Don't Believe Me? Read, Alone At Dawn...❤❤❤💙💙💙💚💚💚
"Rule 1: Keep gas prices low
Rule 2: DON'T TOUCH MY BOATS!!!"
Nope. Other way around. Don’t mess with US/US Ally boats. Don’t raise gas prices.
You got em backwards!
“Does anyone else want to know what it’s like to chew 5 gum” I horse laugh every time.
One of the best lines in the video.
Hi Chris 👋 US Navy veteran here (89-93). Not only is this my favorite #fatelectrician video, but this Operation was legendary the following year when I enlisted! 🙌⚓️
Me, Air Force 89'-98' remember it well
Thank you for your service. I come from a big military family.
You will LOVE his Sargent Reckless video.
My favorite
Or Devil Duck
Ah the Legendary Horse themself
I only recently learned of them thanks to derpibooru!
Sooo yeah!
And they say Rule 85 doesn't exist!
The last ship I served on was the one that finished off that frigate. With that being said what happened that day is kinda an understatement. These frigates are basically mini ferries with two jet engines powering it and more guns than a lot of whole countries navies. But these boats weren’t meant to take big hits like mines or missiles, because of that DC (damage control) training is huge and it’s why we don’t loose boats. An example of how important DC is look at how the Russians lost a bigger (all steel) boat from a single missile hit just last year, where as a less armored American frigate not only didn’t sink but was ready to fight (see USS stark)
the russian navy's always been comically inept
Also, good to know the history of the USS Forrestal. Accidental launch of a rocket from an F-4 just before launching a sortie dumped all the fuel from an A-4 and ignited it and was cooking off bombs and fuel from the assembled and prepped aircraft on deck within 90 seconds. I forget the details... whether the firefighting team was just stranded or if they had perished but it took over 24 hours and help from other nearby ships to get the fire put out. That incident is why every Navy member is a firefighter.
@@ExaltedDuckThe primary and secondary fire fighting teams were all killed when the first bombs cooked off from the fire.
Thank you for your service. My dad was navy during Vietnam, he was stationed at Gibraltar.
The #1 rule since the days of John Paul Jones is don't touch our boats
Also a good Nick video.
"Baloney Mist Cloud Number" 1 caught me off guard.
One of my favorite lines; another is, “Who else wants to chew 5 gum, or are you ready to leave.”
5:39 "THE ACTOR????" I see what you did there, and massive props for that reference.
The Fat Electrician is phenomenal, you should definitely reaction more of his videos 👍
Straggler: someone who is not keeping up pace in a formation.
Also, one who remains after others have gone.
My favorite part of this whole entire story was the Russian frigate, "Im just here to take picture. For history" 😂
Both Navy SEALs and Marines employ intensive physical conditioning and combat strategy education, yet their training adapts to different mission requirements, with Navy SEALs excelling in specialized, covert operations and Marines in expansive, rapid-response engagements. - I am an army brat meaning my dad is a USA army veteran who served during Vietnam in army intelligence and became an army jag ( judge advocate general- attorney) officer and worked in the pentagon then remained in the army reserves for many years. We lived In Bremerhaven, Germany when I was a kid. He always said the bravest guys he worked with were the helicopter pilots who flew in Vietnam.
I don’t disagree with your dad on that one. We Were Soldiers shows this very well.
The USS Enterprise has, in fact, eight nuclear reactors on board. My father served aboard the Enterprise in the 1980s and was on board for this event. He said the airplanes' crews painted silhouettes of boats on the sides signifying how many Iranian ships they'd taken out.
Dear god eight reactors could theoretically power like a small city. I wonder how much power she was pushing at maximum capacity.
@@zmanftwx8023 for all intents and purposes, an aircraft carrier like the Enterprise is a small city.
@@zmanftwx8023Well to be technical, it turned out they could have gotten by with only 2 of them but when it was designed the engineers assumed each reactor was the same as a standard boiler. A Forestall class needed 8 boilers so they used 8 reactors.
That's cool. I love hearing those kinds of stories. My dad worked on the Enterprise. He was a welder/pipefitter and was cleared to work on nuclear subs and got to work on the Enterprise. I was a kid and thought Star Trek - not aircraft carrier.
Idk how accurate this is, but I heard once that, in theory, or actually, practically (if there's a way to transfer power) dock at port actually power (or at least partially) a city if need be @@RDreamer
7:07 Yes, all branches of the Military use the phonetic alphabet, A = Alpha, B = Bravo, etc. Other “codes” can differ between different branches, but the Alphabet is the same
"Does anybody else need to find out what its like to chew 5 gum?" Thats the best line ive heard for a while. Also if you dont get the reference look up 5 gum commercials.
I whispered “stimulate your senses”😂
To add a little more to how crazy that A6 dive bomb run was. The A6 Intruders crew is not situated like the F14 with its Pilot in the front and its Radar Interception Officer setting behind them. Making for a sleek cockpit. The two person crew in the A6 intruder set abreast just as in a car. Making the cockpit so much wider and so much bigger an area for anti aircraft to hit. So that says even more on the intestinal fortitude that crew had on diving straight into that ships A.A.
“picks up your board and throws it at the wall” 🤣🤣🤣 I’m dying
"stragglers" is a word used for people who are essentially separated from a group/left behind.
Google told me that "Straggler" in German is "Nachzügler"
Example for the English meaning; In a marathon all contestants have finished, except for a few stragglers who haven't finished the race yet.
Another example; The store is closed and everyone has left except for a handful of stragglers still inside.
Navy SEALs are more elite than Marines. The Marines are America's global expeditionary force. They're actually a department within the US Navy who serve as a second US army. Navy SEALs are special forces; they receive more training, and more advanced weapons & high-tech gear. It takes 4 years and $12M to train just one individual Navy SEAL.
Where did you find this ridiculousness? Cut 10 million off that bro. It's 2 million to train per seal. My God people sure are willing to just run off at the mouth even though they don't know a damn thing about the topic they're speaking on😂
When it comes to the training it's a 12-month run followed by an 18-month run of pre-deployment and intensive training and school. 30 months. Not 4 years. My God where did you get this ridiculous clown shoe information and why are you so willing to share your stupidity with others
Marines are the FIRST USA group what was set up before we became the USA and unlike the army the navy the airforce ( that was the army ari force ) once a marine alway a marine all others will say they are ex what ever branch
And ya'll can just guess what they spent the change on....
Thank you for giving the correct definition and not tht cute Lil description Britton gave😂😂Semper Fi Brother
10:09 let me put it this way my German friend, the Marines are your Seebataillon, the Navy SEALs are like your Kommando Spezialkräfte in comparison
"You've done fucked up, I-I-ran!"
I have absolutely no idea who I'm quotin'.
Also, you don't screw with a country that has a defense budget big enough to fight God.
The E=mc² on the aircraft carrier does have a military meaning. It means for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. A.K.A. Screw with us, and you will feel our wrath.
Wrong equation! 🤣😂🤣 It was because it was the first nuclear powered aircraft carrier.
Chris when you said “The Actor”….THAT WAS AWESOME!! I burst out laughing!
The USS Samuel B. Roberts is named about after one of the heroes of the Battle of Samar in WWII.
Ummmm…no. Samuel B. Roberts wasn’t at the Battle off Samar. The destroyer escort named after him was.
@@ihatebofa6Loved reading about the Battle for Leyte Gulf and how an outfit of Jeep carriers, destroyers, destroyers escorts fought off Japanese navies center force consisting of battle ships, heavy cruisers and destroyers. The US outfit was doing aircraft support of the beach head. They fought so ferociously, the japanese commander thought he was facing fleet carriers and cruisers. The IJN stopped their attack and turned back and if they just persisted they would have done heavy damage to the landing force and to the American cruiser group guarding the southern flank. US navy group guarding the south completely destroyed another japanese navy group of heavy cruisers by employing the crossing the T formation. That would be the last time that maneuver will ever be used. Modern navy battles today will be long range ones fought with aircraft, missiles, and drones.
The Navy SEALs are considered the finest special forces group. The US Marines are considered the best overall fighting force. The SEALs are on a smaller scale, and are used for specific, and often secret missions.
The Seals are a scalpel and the Marines are a chainsaw
It would help to get the terminology correct: Special OPERATIONS Forces (SOF) is the umbrella term that includes units such as Army SPECIAL FORCES, Navy SEALS, MARSOC, AFSOC, Delta, DEVGRU, 160th SOAR, and some others. All of them have some unique capabilities and some common capabilities, some unique missions and some overlapping missions. For example, Army Special Forces mission set includes (1) Internal Defense and Develoment and (2) Unconventional Warfare (building guerrilla forces in a foreign nation and then conducting guerrilla warfare). SEALS perform neither mission. BOTH SEALS and SF conduct strategic reconnaissance and direct action missions. Comparing these units to each other is like apples and oranges.
When you write that, "SEALs are considered the finest special forces group," Oh, really? Considered by who? Videogamers? Your sources? People who have never served in the armed forces, or more specifically in special operations? Describing SEALS as special forces group tells me right away that you are not a veteran of "The Community". Why? No SEAL would want to be known as "special forces." And no Army Special Forces operator wants to be known as a SEAL.
I respect all SOF units, having trained or served with most of them. I will say this about SEALs: They've got dynamite public relations, such as movies, videos, TV programs, books and all of that, to the extent that the average American has virtually never heard of all the rest of the Special Operations Community who also perform yeoman's labor and who, I might add, do not want ANY publicity. As a result, their missions remain unheralded. The nickname of Army SF to the public is "The Green Berets." However, SF members are known as "The Quiet Professionals," for a reason.
ODA-572, ODA-575, HQ-5thSFG(A)
Mostly just DEVGRU. I believe Delta is the best, though.
Retired Beret here. I've been asked countless times what special forces group is the most badass, and every civilian as well as most enlisted grunts go immediately to the Seals or the Berets. That is perfectly justified based on what the public is allowed to know, but every special forces operator will tell you different. The most badass special forces group is the Airforce PJs, and it's not close. Those are the dudes we call for help when the shit hits the fan.
@@4325air That’s exactly true and when I was in the Marine Corps, the recon or the Marines, you never heard about them or do & yet they navy seals and RECON pretty much do the same things or similar things. The biggest difference is that recon goes in and previously and goes in behind enemy lines, and they actually do reconnaissance work on top of other things that navy seal there, but they just do more of it as far as recon work
In other words. " DON'T TOUCH THE F# BOATS" LOL
I was a Marine aviation mechanic (brown shirt) aboard the uss okinawa in the gulf in 87-88,
Your analysis is good and humorous, thank you.
Thank you for your service.
That Iranian F4 pilot that lost his wing actually was able to fly his plane back to Bandar Abbas airport
Fly is a loaded term here. He didn't die, but the plane very much did., and quite quickly. The F4 is an interceptor aircraft. It's a short range anti-bomber plane designed to create problems for bombers and convoys from a distance.
Actually none of the Iranian F-4s were hit.
@@joe_dns4625 The real "flying" was done by that pilot in the A10 over Iraq when she had one or both engines get shot out and she still made it back to base.
Yes, you can usually tell the origin of munitions by their fragments. From the markings and serial numbers to the details of construction all is distinctive.
For example with artillery shells no 2 countries attach the "driving band" (the copper band at the base of the projectile that engages the rifling in the gun and makes it spin in flight) in the same way so you can tell if a fragment came from German or British or French shell (say from ww1) simply by examining remains of the drving band.
The same principles apply to things like sea mines, there are details that are unique to the way Iran puts those together
The USS Enterprise is just trolling Russia 😂
The Russian navy is Russia trolling it's self. 😅
I enjoy your commentary on the Fat Electricians videos. He's kinda intense and you kinda mellow the vibe.
My Father served aboard USS Enterprise Naval Carrier and other USN Battleships. I remember being frightened as an young Madschen about 4 years old walking across the water onto the ship to watch Military Whites Inspection standing on the huge flat deck. Was pretty awesome.
The fact we have a song called Bomb Iran made in 1980 is a testimony to how proud we are
It's basically a rewrite of Barbara Ann by the beach boys.
Marines are essentially shock troops used as expeditionary units, embassy guards, etc. Seals are specialized demolitions and counter terrorist units. Kind of an apple and oranges comparison. Seals wont be storming beaches exclusively, and marines probably arent going to be doing a whole lot of infiltration. They tend to be as subtle as a brick through a window with a note attached saying "You're toast".
The eye of sauron was hilarious. Also, the scary thing about american missles is the fact that they don't aim for the engines. They aim for the cockpit of the aircraft. It's just that the aircraft are usually trying to run from the missles. Heat seekers do aim for the engines, but that it for that. They may be able to replace the equipment, but it takes longer to replace pilots.
I had the amazing experience of touring the USS Enterprise when it was docked at Bremerton, Washington. It was stunning! Huge! Also, I now live very near a US Airforce base. Watching the pilots practice and hearing the jets is incredible. We call it the sound of freedom 🎉❤
Samuel B. Roberts was loaded onto Mighty Servant 2, a semi-submersible heavy lift ship owned by Dutch shipping firm Wijsmuller Transport and carried back to Newport for repairs.
Americans debate the "Who's better, the Navy Seals or the Marines?" Question all the time. As the daughter of a Marine fighter pilot and the wife of a decorated Naval officer, I plead the 5th. 🤠
Depends on the situation. They both have their own strengths and weaknesses. Seals are more specialized Marines have a broader scope of training. So Marines have a wider range of skills, but Seals are going to be better in their specialized area.
And Delta is better than both!
@@k-9741 Doubtful. 🤠
@@JulesfromHouston facts. Higher entry requirements, tougher training, better personnel.
I know the feeling. I have family that served in every branch except space force. I never state whos better at anything.
Stragglers are people who lagged behind as everyone else moves to where they are supposed to go.
"can you tell who made the mine?" Yes ,,,,yes you can
Forensic
You call them crazy. Us Americans call them BRAVE.
New subscriber here from the U.S.A. Good video bro😊 i love to watch ppl from other countries react to the insane stuff we do as americans
Love the Back to The Future reference....or at least I think it was lol.
It was
Chris I am sending you Love from Pensacola Beach Florida USA 🇺🇸. I just watched your video of AL Bundy. American television. I Love you My Friend and I hope someday you will come to America 🇺🇸. Who knew A American what's a German to come to visit and stay with them. 😉👍❤️❤️❤️
Same but in chumuckla
To quote Habitual Linecrosser - "DON'T TOUCH THE BOATS"
"What are you doing? where not suposed to be killing things yet" had me so bad!
My great grandfather was in the navy , anytime he came home he would sit us down and tell us "listen closly kids, have i got a new story for you!" we would sit there and listen. he told us was "its not the strenght of a man that makes him a hero its the size of his heart" true words. also edit: 7:35 it means for ever action there is a re-action meaning you blow up a boat where goilng to blow up all your boats and drop a sun on you. (nagaskai refrence)
"the actor?!" killed me 😂 I'm glad that movie held up as well as it did
The reason for E=MC squared is the nuclear propulsion of the carrier. He sometimes have bloopers is why they say to wait to the very end.
Chris I am a Country Boy in the South living on the Gulf of Mexico. I like and Care about you my friend. 😉👍❤️
Same! Except I live in Michigan 3 hours from the Canadian boarder… lol
@@alaina5958 😉👍❤️❤️❤️. Go Big Blue. 😉👍❤️❤️❤️
SEALs are one of the US military's premiere special operations units. They are some of the best trained and equiped forces for covert operation, but often suffer when forced into direct combat operations as they're incapable of bringing to force all of their potential. Marines are often believed to be the greatest conventional combat force in the world. Marines are some of the most capable, aggressive, and creative infantry despite recently losing most of their heavy armor forces and often using less advanced weapons. SEALs squadsare great for keeping things quiet, Marine squads are what you send to kill everything in a building and then want them to level said building with a broom, a grenade, and a stick of C4.
I love his commentary, I had to sub after watching this 😊
Thank you so much for sharing, Great video!
The alphabet he uses is the NATO phonetic alphabet. Alpha, Bravo, Charlie, Delta, Echo, Foxtrot, Golf, Hotel, India, Juliet, Kilo, Lima, Mike, November, Oscar, Papa, Quebec, Romeo, Sierra, Tango, Uniform, Victor, Whiskey, X-ray, Yankee, Zulu. The idea is that in these words are 'unique' sounding words that begin with each letter in the English language, so there is less confusion when spelling things out over radio communications.
They're also unique enough that if radio communication is spotty and you only get part of a word it's still clear what letter was intended. No other letter contains Ike, so you know it's Mike. Fox means Foxtrot. It may seem obvious, but at the ranges and theatres it's meant to be used in, it's not always so clear. Just try spelling your name to some automated systems. Bob turns into Cod really quick depending on accents.
@@LifesGuardian read my last sentence................................................
@@mu4990 Yes, and?
"the actor!" 😂😂
Technically the SEALs are the more exclusive group compared to the marines as a whole, but they serve different purposes.
The reason the ship has E=mc(squared) on the ship is because it was the first nuclear powered carrier made by the U.S. Also, the letters you see on the deck of the ship are literally PEOPLE standing on the deck.
Einstein’s equation is spelled out by sailors standing on the deck. It was done to celebrate the power of nuclear energy as all three of the ships in the photo were nuclear powered. The USS’s Enterprise, Long Beach, and Bainbridge.
It would have been more meaningful to have spelled out "Newton's Third Law of Motion" on that aircraft carrier's deck (07:40). The law states that when one object exerts a force on another, the second object exerts an equal force in the opposite direction. Meaning that everything that Iran tries against the USA, is going to be met with an equal ("Proportional") reaction back at them.
True, but it would take a lot more sailors, and the individual letters would be smaller.
No, E=mc squared is not about Newton. It’s Einstein. It’s the mass- energy equivalent. If you can destroy a piece of mass that is the energy you get from it. That’s how nuclear weapons work. A very small piece of mass is destroy but multiplied by the speed of light squared so you get a massive amount of energy released. Thus, the atomic bomb.
“Sailors onboard the aircraft carrier spell out “E=MC2 x 40” on the flight deck to mark forty years of nuclear power service”
the funny thing was, around this time, Iran was considered to be one of the strongest militaries in the world, like top 3-4
We aren't pranking you, Nick sometimes includes extras at the end.
Lol sucks the first one he waited for didnt. That has to be a little confusing.
We actually had steak, lobster and ice cream for dinner the next night. We didn't think it would go so quick, so the 1st night we spent most of it at GQ.
Lmao I loved this! " MERICA!"
The USS Enterprise is known as "The Big E".
To me the most impressive part is the US navy can assemble and deliver a strike group response halfway around the world in 4 days. Good response keep trying to close the slang gap.
7:09 no that’s just more of a universal labeling system. A for Alpha, B for Bravo, etc, etc. The military uses it many many other things use it too
"DON'T TOUCH OUR BOATS"!!!
Love your channel! Ive always wanted to go to Germany as my ancestors are from there they Americanized my last name from Brügger to bricker came from germany to Pennsylvania... always loved german history.
Definitely subbed.
Not all of his videos have a post credits scene, but a number of them do.
Yes, the Iranian in the F-4 was killed. Even if he ejected, Iran isn't sending any rescue teams to the middle of the Persian Gulf.
Incorrect. The F-4 made it back to base and managed to land. The F-4 is basically the definition of strap a powerful enough engine to something and it will fly.
As habitual linecrosser would say "DON'T... TOUCH... DA BOATS"
Alpha, Bravo, Charlie. Delta, Echo, Fox...military talk so letter cannot be misunderstood.
“Don’t mess with the US”
Or more accurately: don’t touch America’s boats.
As far as an airplane losing a wing, a pilot in a modern military aircraft can easily evacuate a crippled aircraft using the plane’s ejection systems.
The Sammy B may have gotten extra care because of the history of it's Namesake ship, in WW 2.
As the saying goes, her Momma didn't raise no bitch
Chris, Check out the Fat electrician talking about Dan Daly "The Most Gangster Marine of All Time", you will enjoy that one, and yes there is sometimes something at the very end of his videos, so always stay until the end if you have time!
Deb
If my father were alive today, he passed away Dec 2008 as an USN Master Chief Petty Officer, he served aboard this huge Carrier the USS Enterprise and he would tell you why Einstein's Relativity as written on deck. He was Naval Electronics Expert.
Very good reaction. And I subscribed, because you asked so kindly!
Like the habitual line crosser always states.Don't touch the boats😂😂😂
And yes no matter what don't touch are boats 😂😂😂