weemadando wrote:Master of Ossus wrote:weemadando wrote:
Seals better than SAS in jungle terrain? You must be shitting me.
I meant to say "Delta," which is a better description of what I was thinking of. Sorry.
Sorry, keep going, I haven't quite laughed up all my internal organs yet.
OK, SAS Squadrons are split into Troops (Boat, Mountain, Vehicle, Parachute-HALO), additionally they have a rotation to CrW (Counter Revolutionary Warfare) and additional tours in Jungle, Artic and Desert theatres (Jungle Warfare is part of the Training for joining the SAS and failure of tht course as with the others means a failure to join the Service).
When on a particular rotation
all they train for is that subject. In a typical 3 year stint in the Regiment a trooper will be proficient in all those area's as well as a working knowledge of all the various Troop specialities. On top of this he will be expected to be an expert in one of 4 fields.
Signals, Languages, Explosives or medicine and be aquainted with the other 3.
The regiment as we know it was restarted during the war in the Jungles of Malaya where it fought (and won) a counter-insurgency war against Communist backed local terrorists in the 50's (since then Jungle Warfare is one of its mainstay core skills).
In Vietnam they successfully operated againt the Vietcong (along with Australian and NZ SAS units).
As to the Sniper statements someone made... I don't know where to begin. Once you're a sniper that's it. A Master Sniper Instructor in the SEAL's is probably as good as a Master Sniper Instructor in the SAS. They both have them.
And to the "Always bring back your dead", as Mike has pointed out, it's nice in theory but really how the hell are the relatives going to know with a closed casket. If there's no reason to lug a corpse back, then bye-bye corpse. In reality if your hit in Combat it is Self-aid, self-evacuation until the firefight is won. Survive that long and yeehaa, otherwise unlucky.