Navy Seals vs Delta Force Training 😱 | Brent Tucker

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In this podcast clip from The Reed Morin Show, former Green Beret and a Delta Force Operator Brent Tucker details why Green Beret and Delta Q School is the hardest of any US military special forces, comparing it to training of Navy Seals and Rangers.

#podcast #military #operator
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Trained with some of these guys while I was in. Spent about a week with them, fucking fantastic dudes. Smart, well spoken, unassuming, fucking lethal, and great teachers. I was like a human sponge around them; I wanted to learn as much as I could. It was an honor to walk among those giants.

PawneeStormChaser
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My father was a old school GB . HE raised me always saying life is a learning lesson . Learn the details as well as the major lessons and lIfe will be easier and will hve more fun . I have lived my life by that saying and it has served me very well.... THANK GOD HE WAS MY FATHER .
R.I.P. DAD you are loved and missed !

jamespainter
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Couldn’t have said it better. I was never anything remotely special like those guys in the military. But I did pride myself on knowing everything I could about everyone’s job. That’s what makes a good soldier great. If the man to the left or right goes down you can fill in and complete their job?

ASVABWAIVERB
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Green berets are not only physically fit, but sharp as ever. Most are fluent in more than 1 language...

analogueoverdigital
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Correction: Six months at BUDs is only the ticket on the bus. After that, you go through SQT.

tealmclean
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I completed the SFOQC at Camp Mackall in 1976, at the USAIMA forerunner of JFK SWCS. My first assignment as a new SF CPT was to 10th SFGA at Fort Devens, Massachusetts. Upon reporting in, the Adjutant hands me orders to 1st Bn in Bad Tolz Germany. Where I worked for Charlie Beckwith. I became COL Beckwith protege, going with him to 1st Special Operations Command and then he brought me into the stand up of JSOC. He later transferred me to COL Jerry King in Fort Belvoir. To The Army of Northern Virginia, The Activity - USAISA. where as a MAJ I finished my service.

De Oppresso Liber

MAJ E.J. Passarelli USA (R)
USAISA
JSOC
1st Special Operations Command (A)
1st SWTG JFK SWCS (A)
1st Bn 10th Special Forces Group (A)
1st Bn 75th Infantry RANGER (A)

ejp
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My childhood best friend and I joined the Army at the same time. He went 18x SF contract and I went option 40 Ranger contract. By the time he finished the Q course, I already had two combat deployments to Afghanistan in Ranger Battalion. This would be my argument if we want to compare SOF pipelines. IMO, I don’t think longer means better, it all depends on the mission set.

BlackMamba-ulhn
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My uncle was a Green Beret in the 70’s and on. An officer later, too.
I idolized him as a child.

hedgemowerman
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CCT brother...2 years to make the minimum new guy on a team.

RussAllan-xi
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Can’t forget about Air Force PJs. It’s like a 2 year pipeline.

TommyGoguen
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By the time you've got you beret. You're just starting. That year was proving you're worthy and the right person to be there.
Your training's just began.

daz
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My mother told me and my sisters that my pop was in the 10th mountain division before he went through the ranks to later become a G.B. It makes sense why my dad was always gone on “business trips” lol and the fact that he spoke Arabic, twi, Portuguese, and French fluently

brendonl.
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I love it when people who have little to no real military experience equate training length to someone being “better” or “harder” like in these comments 😂

OR_Wolfhunter
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I was a cadet and go to go play “guerrilla fighter” with the green berets for a summer.

Their job is way different from the SEALs or whatever. They have to learn the nuances and complexities of infiltrating into enemy territory, linking up with a paramilitary force, and then training that force to become lethal and effective.

Becoming a green beret is a lot of physical challenge, but it’s also a lot of knowing how to work in ambiguous grey areas and situations with no clear path forward. Hell, their pipeline includes 6 months of intensive language training that is NOT easy to pass. So you can be the baddest meanest strongest toughest dude out there, but if you can’t sit down in a jungle hut across the table from a battle hardened warlord and convince him to work with you, then go find something else to do.

Alex-nhcl
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Seeing only a portion of what special forces deals with mentally, physically, psychologically in and out of the field is more than astronomical in itself to begin with. That takes someone with strong fortitude and mantel to do what they have to deal with on a daily in and off mission.... in and out of training. The job never leaves you mentally wherever you go, it goes home with you, it sleeps with you, it prays with you. You can stand next to one of them and both of you will see an entirely different environment right before your eyes.

htoldnavy
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Why is he disrespecting AFSOC?
CCT's minimum is TWO YEARS.

KINGRODP
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TRUST THE PROCESS! solid words right there.

Pterodactyl-knve
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MUCH and ETERNAL respect to the ENTIRE JASOC Community from a Retired Leather Neck.

AboveInfinity
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There’s every badass group you can think of, then the green berets and this is the exact reason.

devinnichols
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Bruh Pararescue training takes two years with a 98% dropout rate

CL-qocm