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  • - If the reserve parachute doesn't work the procedure is,

  • basically you're gonna hand salute the world

  • and you're gonna hit the dirt, 'cause you're gonna die.

  • Hi this is Jocko Willink, and this is The Breakdown.

  • [upbeat music]

  • This is the movie "Navy SEALs".

  • [dramatic music]

  • - What's our altitude?

  • - About 30,000, six miles up.

  • - HALO jump is high altitude, low opening.

  • You skydive through the radar, so they don't see you.

  • You go at such a high altitude that they can't pick you up,

  • and then you open your parachute at a low altitude,

  • where the radar isn't effective.

  • You'd be usin' this if you wanted to go somewhere

  • and you didn't want anyone to know you were there.

  • It allows you to get in without being detected.

  • HALO jumping is fun.

  • So if you're just training, you're gonna have a good time.

  • If it's night, combat equipment, HALO jump,

  • there's gonna be a little more intensity in a situation.

  • But if it's just a fun free fall that you're doin'

  • during the day for a good times,

  • everyone will have a good attitude

  • and be havin' fun with it.

  • Let's go back.

  • [tape rewinds]

  • Loading magazines, that's pretty unrealistic.

  • You should have your gear prepped

  • prior to the jump procedures.

  • - 45 minutes to the beach landing site.

  • - That's one thing they usually miss in military movies,

  • is in a helicopter, or an aircraft, it's so loud in there,

  • you can't just be having a normal conversation.

  • You gotta yell and scream at each other,

  • or write stuff down, or use hand and arm signals.

  • You know how much time, 30 seconds,

  • means you're 30 seconds from goin' out.

  • - What's a minute?

  • - This right here.

  • Super complex.

  • - [Man] Six minutes.

  • [dramatic music]

  • - If you had a long flight,

  • sure somebody might be readin' a book, why not.

  • Almost every mission that I went on was in a vehicle.

  • And in vehicle we weren't readin' books,

  • because when you're in a vehicle outside the wire,

  • then you have to be payin' attention

  • for ambushes and what not.

  • Outside the wire just means wherever you're stationed,

  • you have a perimeter and the perimeter's got

  • you know a wall around it, there's barbed wire on the wall.

  • Barbed wire, so therefore we're inside the wire,

  • and then the enemy is outside the wire.

  • You know C130 is the actual transport plane

  • that the military used for decades,

  • and now we have newer planes.

  • But I think this film is from 1990

  • and it's probably pretty accurate that a C130 would be used.

  • The C in C130, designates it as a cargo plane.

  • People think that it's bad flying in a cargo plane.

  • It's actually awesome.

  • And people string up hammocks and put down ground pads

  • and get in sleepin' bags, and it's like time travel,

  • 'cause you just go to sleep and you wake up

  • and you're at your destination.

  • I actually enjoyed travelin' in cargo planes, good times.

  • Lemme fast forward a bit.

  • [tape machine buzzes]

  • When you jump out of an airplane,

  • you're gonna have an altimeter,

  • which is gonna tell ya what your altitude is.

  • You're gonna have a parachute, and in this particular one,

  • where they're jumping above 13,000 feet,

  • you need oxygen, so they have oxygen on,

  • which is just an oxygen mask.

  • They're gonna depressurize the cabin,

  • so they can open up and that way you're not breathin'

  • that thin air.

  • That's why they need to put those oxygen masks on.

  • [dramatic music]

  • - Jesus Dane, who the [beep] packed your chute?

  • It doesn't look good, I wouldn't jump it if I were you.

  • - What's happening right there is actually pretty realistic.

  • Havin' your buddy check out your equipment.

  • In the SEAL teams,

  • and really in all branches of the military,

  • you rely each other to make sure you're safe.

  • The guy's checkin' the other person's pins on his rig

  • to make sure that they're gonna

  • deploy his parachute properly.

  • And then he's actually messin' with him,

  • which is pretty normal too.

  • If you know someone's scared of parachuting

  • then he's gonna get messed with a little bit more.

  • Never let anyone know that you're scared of anything.

  • Just keep it to yourself.

  • Someone on a team's called a jump master.

  • And that person is actually checkin' the navigation

  • and checkin' the position, and making sure

  • that we're exiting the aircraft at the right point.

  • There's an actual school that you go to

  • to become a jump master.

  • And inside a platoon of 16 guys, there'd probably be

  • two or three jump masters that could run a jump.

  • - [Man] Three, two, one,

  • [bell rings] go, go, go!

  • - That's real, yep.

  • The light system, where it's a red light, that means hold,

  • and when that light turns green, that's the signal to go.

  • [dramatic music]

  • You gotta remember that that aircraft's movin' very fast.

  • So if someone jumps and then you wait five seconds,

  • you're gonna be too far separated.

  • So yeah, you go out in a very tight group.

  • You stay close for awhile.

  • Once you get close to opening,

  • then you separate a little bit,

  • because obviously once your parachutes are open,

  • you don't want people hittin' each other.

  • So for a jump like this, you get to 2,500 feet

  • and you're checkin' your altimeter the whole way down.

  • You get a little separation

  • from the other members of the team.

  • This is your signal, it's called waving.

  • So everyone knows that you're about to pull your parachute.

  • And then you look in at your ripcord.

  • When you pull your ripcord out, your parachute deploys.

  • [dramatic music]

  • So what you should feel when you pull your ripcord,

  • is a little bit of a delay, and then something called

  • the pilot chute, it's a spring-load small parachute,

  • that thing jumps off your back and it grabs air,

  • and then that's what pulls out the rest of your parachute.

  • You're all of sudden pulled, it's like coming to

  • abrupt stop in the air.

  • So that's what it's supposed to feel like.

  • But as you can see, in this particular situation,

  • this guy isn't gonna feel a very hard shock,

  • because he's having a malfunction.

  • [dramatic music]

  • - [Man] Oh [beep]

  • - There's a buncha different things

  • that can go wrong with a parachute.

  • I had one malfunction in my career.

  • See that, there's a little square there,

  • right by his hands, above his hands.

  • It's called the slider and it actually comes down.

  • It's up with the parachute and as your parachute opens up

  • it slides down towards the base.

  • And sometimes that can get hung up.

  • It's called a hung slider.

  • And what it does is that small square of fabric

  • keeps the whole parachute stuck together.

  • That's what I had and my parachute was just not opening.

  • What do you do when your parachute doesn't open?

  • You follow the procedures.

  • You know we train really hard

  • to know what the procedures are.

  • And there's some things that you could do,

  • some procedures you can do, to try and get

  • to clear that malfunction.

  • So in my case, I was pullin' on the risers

  • to see if I could get that slider loose,

  • to start to come down.

  • It wasn't working.

  • I'm checking my altimeter, because at 1,900 feet,

  • I said okay, this parachute isn't gonna work.

  • And so then you go through your cutaway procedures.

  • You arch to get your body position correct.

  • You look at your cutaway, it's called a cutaway pillow.

  • You grab it, you pull that,

  • and then you look at your reserve handle,

  • you grab it and you pull that.

  • The first one cuts away your main parachute,

  • so that it's not gonna interfere with anything.

  • And there's actually a mechanism,

  • that when you cutaway your main parachute,

  • it starts to deploy your reserve parachute.

  • So sometimes you don't even need to pull the ripcord.

  • And hopefully you get a good solid chute at that point.

  • Which, I'm sitting here today,

  • which means my reserve parachute worked, thankfully.

  • There's been guys that have survived,

  • what's called a partial malfunction,

  • meaning that they have some fabric up above them

  • that's slowing them down a little bit.

  • But if you're goin' terminal velocity

  • and you hit the ocean, the ground,

  • it doesn't really matter, you're dead.

  • All right lemme play that.

  • This is the partial malfunction.

  • So you can see some of his parachute is open,

  • now if you hit the ground with that type of parachute

  • it's gonna be a real problem.

  • You're gonna be severely injured.

  • But if you hit the water with that kinda parachute,

  • I mean you have a chance.

  • - [Man] Get away ground.

  • - So there's a cut away.

  • - [Man] Pull out.

  • - And there is his reserve,

  • barely opens when he hits the water.

  • He had a decent amount of cloth over his head.

  • Once you hit the water, now you need to do a summary

  • of your crew.

  • And normally you'd be jumping out with a boat.

  • I think in this particular scene,

  • they commence immediately on a dive.

  • Which is, which is not very realistic.

  • The distance that you'd have to travel on a dive,

  • if you were to parachute in, you'd have to be at least

  • over the horizon, which is 12 nautical miles out to sea.

  • You're not gonna be able to dive 12 nautical miles.

  • There's no human diver that could do that.

  • So that's pretty unrealistic.

  • [upbeat music]

  • This is "Act of Valor".

  • - Black Bear it's Whiplash, have you loud and clear,

  • 70 mile to set.

  • - I think what they're tryin' to simulate here

  • is something called a rigid hold inflatable boat.

  • Which is a kind of common craft used in the SEAL teams.

  • It's actually used for these type of situations

  • that they're showin' right now in this movie,

  • which is movin' up a river way,

  • where you have a little bit more latitude

  • to use a bigger craft.

  • - Intended location is 15 Mikes.

  • - 15 Mikes just stands for minutes.

  • Mikes is minutes, it's kinda interchangeable.

  • So the things on their helmet.

  • This guy's got an actual light.

  • I don't know why he's got it pointing backwards,

  • but he's got a normal camping headlight.

  • And then the other thing that they've got

  • is a night-vision mount,

  • but there's no night vision on their gear right now.

  • Well we move underwater a lot, but we do it

  • while we're diving.

  • So appearing like that is not very realistic.

  • One of the hardest things about maintaining a weapon

  • is bringing it through the water, especially in the ocean.

  • This is regular fresh water, so it's gonna be

  • a little bit easier, but still,

  • when you get outta the water,

  • you have to make sure that the barrel is clear,

  • and you have to drain the water outta the weapon.

  • [dramatic music] [silenced rifle poufs]

  • Just because you're in the SEAL teams does not mean

  • that you are a sniper.

  • Sniper is a specialized school that guys go to.

  • And there's a buncha different schools.

  • You could be a communications expert, you could be a medic,

  • you could be a, what's called a breacher,

  • where you work explosives to open doors.

  • I was a communicator, so I went to a communications school.

  • I went to a ton of other schools on top of that.

  • But as far as major designations of school,

  • I didn't go to sniper, and I wasn't a breacher either.

  • [dramatic music]

  • Freeze this frame.

  • The reason you haven't seen a drone like this before

  • is because in terms of drone technology,

  • this is ancient.

  • These were very difficult to fly.

  • I mean nowadays they have little quad copter drones

  • that a five year old could fly around if they wanted to.

  • These were a lot harder to fly.

  • You had to be a little bit more of a pilot

  • to make 'em work.

  • It didn't take very long for these types of drones

  • to not be used by anyone.

  • For just about any mission, you're gonna try

  • and maintain security and silence

  • for as long as you possibly can.

  • And then the biggest thing

  • you wanna get on the enemy is surprise.

  • [dramatic music] [silenced rifle poufs]

  • [dramatic music]

  • Lemme pause it right here.

  • This is just kinda not realistic at all.

  • I guess they're tryin' to make things look cool.

  • It always surprises me a little bit,

  • because like I said it's the best job in the world.

  • You don't really need to do anything to it

  • to make it seem cool, it is cool.

  • It's awesome.

  • So as far as like a random dude

  • being able to put is his hands up

  • to time this sniper shot, it's dumb.

  • [dramatic music]

  • One of the things that makes

  • being in the SEAL teams difficult

  • is a lot of it is based around the water.

  • If you're gonna be wet all day,

  • guess what else you're gonna be?

  • You're gonna be cold.

  • And if you're in a cold environment, goin' in and being wet

  • is definitely somethin' that's gonna affect you.

  • We actually do use dry suits that keep us dry

  • as we go across.

  • A wet suit lets water in and it creates a very small

  • layer of water between you and the ocean

  • that actually stays warm.

  • A dry suit keeps you warm by keepin' the water

  • completely out, and you wear warmer clothes underneath it.

  • But then you have a problem of dealing with a dry suit.

  • I think one of the things that makes the SEALs good

  • is we have to deal with that water element all the time.

  • And so when we got out and perform missions

  • where there's no water involved,

  • it always feels a lot easier.

  • [dramatic music]

  • Freeze this frame.

  • When you go to sniper school, you actually build your own,

  • that's called a ghillie suit, what they're wearing.

  • And when you go to sniper school,

  • you actually build your own ghillie suit.

  • There's parts of it that you can buy,

  • but essentially they build those ghillie suits themselves.

  • And they will adapt that ghillie suit

  • for different environments.

  • So if they're in a jungle environment

  • they'll make it more green,

  • if they're in a desert environment

  • they'll make it more sand colored.

  • And just depending on what environment you're in,

  • you'll adapt your ghillie suit to match that.

  • [dramatic music]

  • The tap on the shoulder right there,

  • it just means hey, I'm the last guy,

  • and when I tap you on the shoulder,

  • that means you can leave that security position.

  • The problem with the hallway

  • is there's a lot of unknown space ahead of you.

  • Behind every one of those doors could be a threat.

  • So what you have to do, is you have maintain that security.

  • If somebody just throws a hand grenade down that hallway

  • it's gonna be a problem.

  • If somebody sticks a weapon around one of those doors

  • and starts shooting, it's gonna be a problem.

  • So hallways are definitely not somewhere

  • where we like to hang out.

  • The person that's lookin' forward has to maintain

  • that front security.

  • The person that's behind him, or maybe two people back

  • is actually controlling the flow of the rest of the guys.

  • [guns blast]

  • - I got two squares comin' out the back door.

  • - Everyone's wearin' a radio.

  • Certainly they'll utilize the radios

  • if you're outta line of sight of someone else.

  • Also you just use verbal commands.

  • I mean once the shooting has started,

  • we're not surprising anyone, so we'll talk to each other,

  • especially people that are in the vicinity,

  • rather than having 30 people in the element, all talkin'

  • on their radio tryin' to explain things,

  • it's better to have the groups that are isolated together,

  • communicate just verbally.

  • If you have to communicate with someone

  • that you're not within line of sight,

  • then you can get on the radio.

  • [helicopter whirs]

  • This is "American Sniper".

  • [helicopter whirs]

  • - [Man] You said HUI has a sniper in the Olympics,

  • but Iraq hasn't qualified a shooter in three games.

  • - The film is actually about Chris Kyle.

  • When I was a Task Unit Commander,

  • Chris Kyle was in Task Unit Bruiser, that was my task unit.

  • When the film came out, they actually had a screening for us

  • down in Coronado at SEAL Team Three.

  • That's when I saw the movie.

  • A task unit is two SEAL platoons combined together.

  • Then with a small headquarters element over it.

  • That's what a task unit is.

  • - Well that's 'cause Mustafa's not Iraqi.

  • - In this particular case what they're tryin' to show

  • is that the sniper's not gonna be alone.

  • He's gonna have some kinda security with him.

  • 'Cause if you're alone

  • and you're looking down your sniper rifle

  • then no one's covering your back.

  • In this they're showin' Chris with one other guy.

  • The reality of the situation in Ramadi,

  • which is where Chris was with me,

  • it wasn't just two guys, or three guys.

  • Most of the time it was seven, eight, 10, 15, 20 guys,

  • to maintain a sniper position.

  • Two things that are kinda diametrically opposed

  • that are goin' on when you're in a situation like this.

  • They all want some kinda protection,

  • which is why they're staying close to wall,

  • which is, that makes sense.

  • However, if you get too bunched up

  • and a roadside bomb, or an IED goes off,

  • a booby trap goes off,

  • obviously the closer you are together

  • the more people it's gonna wound.

  • Hey there's times when you get bunched up,

  • and you might be with two or three people

  • to hold down a corner, but any military individual

  • that's watching that, is not gonna get a good feeling

  • seein' everyone bunched up like that.

  • - [Man] Fire in the hole.

  • [explosives bang]

  • - I mean you couldn't see much of the breach,

  • but essentially what a breach is,

  • you put a big explosive breaching charge,

  • which are specially made charges,

  • that blow doors open.

  • You take a step back and blow the charge.

  • Yeah I mean that's pretty normal.

  • There's advantages to breaching as well.

  • So when you detonate a explosive breaching charge

  • that's gonna stun the people in the room too.

  • So there's some advantages, but there's also times

  • where you wanna maintain, you know, silence.

  • So there's advantages and disadvantages to both.

  • - Hey, you all mind if I roll with you?

  • - Hey man, any SEAL's cool by me.

  • - When we were in the Battle of Ramadi,

  • every operation we went out on we had Army, Navy,

  • Air Force, Marines, with us all the time.

  • I think this is representing a Marine Corps element.

  • - You're the one they're calling The Legend.

  • You got like 24 confirmed kills.

  • - Well lose count.

  • - If the situation's gonna call for him to have

  • like a really long reach, being able to shoot

  • very long distances, he probably gonna carry

  • a specialized long distance sniper weapon.

  • In an urban environment like this,

  • be pretty common just to carry one weapon,

  • that you can use a little bit in both environments.

  • - Hey what does that mean?

  • - Breacher up.

  • - Tappin' your helmet like that,

  • which actually the shooting hand came off,

  • Chris would not take his hand off his trigger

  • and be ready to shoot.

  • This right here is breacher up.

  • I talked about breachers earlier.

  • That means this door's locked, or the decision's been made

  • to use some kinda explosive breaching charge here.

  • [door bangs]

  • - Moving.

  • - Get down, get down on the ground right now.

  • Get your--

  • - Lemme break this down a little bit.

  • What's difficult about fighting in a city

  • is you have civilians that are running around

  • intermixed with the enemy that you're fighting.

  • One thing we have to remember about the Battle of Fallujah

  • is there was very strong warnings

  • to everyone that was civilians, to get outta the city.

  • And the people that stayed there were considered hostile.

  • - Get down, why are you here?

  • You're supposed to be evacuate this area.

  • Why are you still here?

  • - If you've been told that everyone in the city

  • is gonna be hostile,

  • then they're probably takin' the right approach.

  • Showin' Chris, sittin' there holdin' his weapon

  • on this little kid, Chris wouldn't waste his time with that.

  • He would move onto this adult immediately.

  • What you're tryin' to do is get control.

  • That's what you're tryin' to do.

  • You don't know what's happened.

  • When you walk into a room you don't know what's happening.

  • Things aren't as they seem.

  • So what you're tryin' to do when you get into a room

  • is you're tryin' to get control of the room.

  • I actually just mean, get control of the human beings

  • that are in there.

  • That could mean tellin' them to get down on the ground

  • and they're not moving anymore.

  • Cool, you have control.

  • Now you need to actually make sure

  • that they don't have any weapons.

  • Make they're not rigged with a suicide vest,

  • or somethin' like that, so that they can't attack you.

  • Clearin' houses, what you're doin' is tryin' to make sure

  • there's no bad guys in there.

  • If they're in the streets you could take 'em out.

  • But they're gonna go into buildings,

  • they're gonna go into houses.

  • It's the civilian populace that really suffers.

  • In Ramadi where I was, the civilians were the ones

  • that were suffering the worst

  • because they were catchin' it from both sides.

  • We would have Iraqi soldiers with us, or interpreters

  • that would talk to the family, and sometimes you'd sense

  • some uncomfortable situation, and then all of sudden

  • you realize there was a person in that house

  • that wasn't from that family.

  • Well guess what?

  • They were an insurgent, they were a foreign fighter,

  • and we could catch 'em and take 'em out.

  • [upbeat music]

  • This is "Lone Survivor".

  • - Way I see it we got three options.

  • One we let him go, hike up, probably be found

  • in less than an hour.

  • Two we tie him up, hike out, roll the dice.

  • He'll probably be eaten by [beep] wolves,

  • or freeze to death.

  • - Three?

  • - Terminate the compromise.

  • - You know in the SEAL teams most of the time

  • everyone has the same general idea of what we should do,

  • unless something is just grievously a bad call.

  • Then someone might say, hey boss,

  • that's not a good call right now.

  • But yeah, for someone in a small group like this,

  • they just talk too much.

  • This is not rare at all for a group of SEALs

  • to kinda discuss how we're gonna do somethin'.

  • Now ultimately, that decision rides on the commander.

  • And whoever's in charge of that element

  • is the one that's gonna say, hey this was my decision

  • and this is what we did.

  • You can't as leader, once you make a decision,

  • or once consensus comes in, and then things go wrong,

  • you don't say, whoa you know that's what everyone

  • wanted to do.

  • You don't do that.

  • You're the one with the final decision-making power.

  • You can get consensus, you can take suggestions

  • from other people, but ultimately when you're the leader

  • you're in charge, and you'll own that decision

  • that you make.

  • - We let him go, 20 more will die next week.

  • - Rules of engagement says we cannot touch them.

  • - I understand.

  • And I don't care.

  • I care about you.

  • I care about you.

  • I care about you.

  • I care about you.

  • - Yeah you get a very specific rules of engagement brief,

  • you know what the rules are.

  • They could be as specific as you're not allowed to cuff

  • females, or you're not allowed to enter a mosque,

  • or you're not allowed to go past a certain line on a map.

  • There's gonna be parameters

  • that you're allowed to operate within.

  • The big difference is in the SEAL teams

  • the briefing is done by the members of the platoon

  • and everyone kind of briefs their section.

  • So for instance, the point man will get up and explain

  • the route that we're gonna take

  • to get to the target area.

  • So that's all done by that point man.

  • Let's say the breach team is gonna go in

  • and do a breach on a wall, or on a gate,

  • the breach leader will take over that parta the briefing

  • and say, okay, once we get here, Bill you're gonna be there,

  • Joe you're gonna be here, breacher's gonna come up,

  • set the charge, then we're gonna take cover back here.

  • So everyone kinda individually briefs their portion

  • of the mission, so it's a collaborative effort.

  • The briefs, we try to keep the briefs to an hour.

  • You know after an hour,

  • there shouldn't be so much information

  • that it takes more than that.

  • And after an hour, guy's hard drives are full.

  • We want them to know the important things

  • and we want them to understand the flow of the mission,

  • and then once they have that, that's it.

  • It is a big deal to break the rules of engagement,

  • but at the same time, rules of engagement

  • are written in such a way

  • that if you think you need to do something,

  • to protect your troops, or the mission,

  • then you can pretty much do what you need to do

  • to make that happen.

  • And so this is a tough decision to make.

  • They wanna execute this mission.

  • They know they're goin' after a bad guy

  • that's killed Americans, and at the same time,

  • they got some people that they're suspect of,

  • but they can't confirm,

  • so it's a very tough decision to make.

  • [upbeat music]

  • This is Captain Phillips.

  • [dramatic music]

  • [men yelling in a foreign language]

  • - In this particular situation, it's a maritime environment,

  • it's on boats, and SEALs are the Maritime component

  • of U.S. Special Operations.

  • So if there's a strictly water operation like this,

  • it's most likely gonna be SEALs

  • that are gonna be executing that operation.

  • - Sir the pirates have just issued a threat.

  • - [SEAL Commander] What's the translation?

  • - [Radio Operator] If he moves again shoot him.

  • - That looks like it's just the control room

  • on a Navy ship.

  • That's what it looks like.

  • There's a buncha screens there.

  • There's a lotta communications going on in there.

  • There might be 10 or 15 people that are in there

  • observing what's going on,

  • and communicating with each other.

  • That's one of the things that we do all the time

  • when we're training is we shoot what we call

  • hostage scenarios.

  • So they'll put a friendly target

  • in front of a non-friendly target

  • and we'll have to go in and shoot the bad guy,

  • without shootin' the good guy.

  • My task unit conducted one hostage rescue,

  • during our deployment to Ramadi,

  • where we went in, rescued a 15, or 16-year-old kid,

  • that had been kidnapped by insurgents

  • and was bein' held for ransom.

  • Rescued that kid and it was successful.

  • Somethin' that we train for.

  • It doesn't happen very often.

  • Hostage rescues are very challenging situations,

  • because if you know a building's filled with bad guys,

  • well then you can be very liberal

  • in how you employ your weapon systems.

  • If you're goin' against a target

  • where you know there's friendlies there, like a hostage,

  • then you have to be much more discriminatory

  • in how you engage the enemy.

  • - [Man] Alpha Charlie Red, we are cool red at this time.

  • - Lifeboat, this is the negotiator, if you harm the hostage

  • we do not have a deal.

  • - I've never heard of a negotiation goin' down

  • in a military scenario, because we're assuming

  • that the people that have the hostages are hostile.

  • And what they need to do is die.

  • You know the SEALs that conducted this operation

  • are some of the best guys in the entire world,

  • and when they're gonna take a shot,

  • they're gonna be ready to take that shot,

  • and I don't know about this coordination system,

  • if they used it awesome, but if they didn't

  • it wouldn't matter, these guys are gonna get the job done.

  • - Stop the tow.

  • - Roger stop the tow.

  • [dramatic music]

  • - Execute.

  • [gun blasts]

  • - Generally, decentralized command

  • is what we're dealin' with.

  • So in that case, where the snipers are co-located like that,

  • they'd probably be just communicating amongst themselves.

  • You want your subordinate teams, when they launch,

  • you want them to have the green light to go

  • when things are ready.

  • So that's a little bit micro managed,

  • but I don't know how it unfolded exactly for real.

  • We do know one thing, they rescued that guy

  • and killed the bad guys, so credit.

  • A lotta my vocabulary is infected,

  • 'cause I was in SEAL teams my whole adult life.

  • I mean occasionally I'll get funny look

  • if I say check for instance.

  • That's one where, if you tell me something,

  • I might say back to you check.

  • That means I understand,

  • and I'm good with what you're sayin'.

  • No factor, which is, you tell me that something is going on

  • and I might look at you and say, no factor,

  • which means I got this.

  • Those are good ones because they're used a lot.

  • I mean you can use them in everyday life.

  • You know if someone says, oh no, there's traffic

  • on the highway.

  • No factor, I'll take the side roads.

  • Like just normal stuff like that.

  • But yeah there's a ton of things that we say

  • in the military, it's just the way it is.

  • You go into any organization they're gonna have

  • their own little words that they use.

  • That's just the way I talk now.

  • [upbeat music]

  • This is "Zero Dark Thirty".

  • [helicopter whirs]

  • - Helicopters are definitely one of the most common

  • modes of transportation, but again, it varies

  • from place to place.

  • When I was in the Battle of Ramadi,

  • the couple times that they did fly over the city

  • when we were there, they got shot at heavily.

  • Even to extract a wounded guy,

  • we'd have to get him outta the city

  • into one of the secure bases to get someone

  • in a helicopter.

  • Even for fire support, you know, in the Battle of Ramadi,

  • fire support was almost all tanks and tankers.

  • So God bless those guys for what they did.

  • But in a situation like this,

  • they're travelin' long distances, in Afghanistan,

  • they used helicopters all the time.

  • [dramatic music]

  • Dogs are pretty common.

  • Their senses that they have, what they can do.

  • To be blunt about it, you can put them in situations

  • where you wouldn't wanna risk the life of a human being.

  • They use them for sniffing for explosives as well.

  • They're great assets to have.

  • Yeah looks like they're just naming

  • what those helicopters are called and that's normal.

  • Different aircraft will have different call signs.

  • In this case, they're Prince52 and Prince51.

  • I think what they're tryin' to represent

  • is different phase lines of an operation.

  • So in other words, as you move in towards a target,

  • you'll have different marks.

  • When you get past those marks, you'll call them up

  • the chain of command, so everyone knows,

  • hey we're at phase line Alpha, phase line Bravo,

  • so everyone's kind of aware of where the mission is

  • as it takes place.

  • - Hey Justin, what are you listenin' to?

  • - Tony Robbins.

  • - Tony Robbins, really?

  • - You should listen to him.

  • I got plans for after this.

  • - Looks like he's got some noise canceling headsets

  • over his iPhone.

  • So he'd probably be able to pull it off,

  • crank up the volume.

  • [dramatic music]

  • That's just the border between Afghanistan and Pakistan.

  • Guaranteed to have a phase line at that border.

  • - [Man] We just crossed the border, now entering Pakistan.

  • - Pakistani comms, no chatter.

  • - Even though they've crossed into Pakistani land

  • they're not hearing any communication from anyone.

  • So they're sayin', hey look, we've gone into Pakistan,

  • but no one's talkin' about it, which is a positive sign.

  • [helicopter engine rumbles]

  • They're night vision it looks like in all of these.

  • Sometimes there's some more advanced goggles

  • that have thermal as well, but from what I can see

  • in these pictures, it just looks like regular night vision.

  • Yeah some of those are just even more advanced

  • night vision goggles that give you a better field of view.

  • Yeah people get adapted to them.

  • It takes you know, a couple hours of walkin' around,

  • then you're adapted to 'em.

  • If you come into a bright room and it bleeds out

  • your night vision, raise your head a little bit

  • and you can look underneath your night vision.

  • It's not that big of a deal.

  • Or you can just flip 'em up.

  • You go into a dark room, you can just kinda

  • knock your head forward a little bit,

  • and those night vision will slip back down.

  • So everyone finds their own little techniques

  • on how they're gonna do it.

  • - 30 seconds.

  • [helicopter roars]

  • - Yeah, basically there's a big thick rope,

  • grab hold a that rope and you slide down

  • like a fireman goin' down a fireman's pole.

  • Pretty straightforward.

  • - Stay tight.

  • - Stay close so when the bird sets down and takes off,

  • you want your group to be assembled pretty closely,

  • until you start to move towards the target.

  • I'd say one of the big misconceptions that people have

  • of people that are in the SEAL teams

  • is that they're some kinda super human individuals.

  • You gotta remember that SEALs are just people

  • and they train really hard, work really hard,

  • to try and be good at our jobs, but they're still people,

  • and they're not just Terminator robots.

  • We watched a buncha movies of these different operations,

  • or these fictitious operations, but we gotta remember

  • that the SEALs, just like every other branch of the service

  • has taken massive casualties, not only in our history,

  • but in these recent wars.

  • So even though it might look cool,

  • you gotta remember that there's been real sacrifices made,

  • not just by the SEALs themselves, not just by the Marines,

  • and the Army, and the Air Force,

  • but the families that are at home as well,

  • that suffer those losses and live with those

  • for the rest of their lives.

  • We always have to remember what the real sacrifices are.

  • That was my Breakdown, thanks for watching.

  • [upbeat music]

- If the reserve parachute doesn't work the procedure is,

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Navy SEAL Jocko Willink Breaks Down Combat Scenes From Movies | GQ

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    紅紅 に公開 2022 年 05 月 19 日
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