First time I ran into folks from the unit, I was NCO in Charge of our demo field ASP. Up rolls a U-Haul van and it backs up to my perimeter and two guys un ass the van and tell me they are going to store the van there over night. As the NCOIC I call up my chain and find out what’s going on. And I’m informed that they are members of the unit. So I have to inspect and inventory what in the van. Believe it or not it was full to the brim with every type of every of explosive that was in the Army inventory. And then an SUV pulls up and they jump in and disappear. Two days later they show up and secure the van and off they go. There had to be 6-700 lbs of bang in that van and they blew it all in one day.
Full Episode: ruclips.net/video/rSwopiav7p0/видео.html
I love listening to theses guys sharing their experiences. Experiences, not stories, you know? There's a difference.
Brilliant way to put it! Love that.
First time I ran into folks from the unit, I was NCO in Charge of our demo field ASP. Up rolls a U-Haul van and it backs up to my perimeter and two guys un ass the van and tell me they are going to store the van there over night. As the NCOIC I call up my chain and find out what’s going on. And I’m informed that they are members of the unit. So I have to inspect and inventory what in the van. Believe it or not it was full to the brim with every type of every of explosive that was in the Army inventory. And then an SUV pulls up and they jump in and disappear. Two days later they show up and secure the van and off they go. There had to be 6-700 lbs of bang in that van and they blew it all in one day.
I’ll have to use Google translate to read this back to me in proper English
Old school operators look like normal people. Today’s operator look like walking steroids