Inside the Team Room: Navy SEAL Snipers – Special Guest Kamal Ravikant
Listen in as these four unique men talk about the military, war, writing and life in general.
Listen in as these four unique men talk about the military, war, writing and life in general.
The Waterborne Infiltrations Course, aptly nicknamed ‘Ranger School on Water,’ pushed us to our limits, but it died a quiet death due to lack of support, a testament to the hard, thankless grind it really was.
Amidst the roar of engines and the thunderous explosions, the B-17 Flying Fortresses of the 390th Bomb Group delivered a devastating blow to the enemy’s war machine, forever altering the course of the conflict and the fate of occupied Paris.
The B-21 Raider, a ghost in the skies, promises a new era of stealth and power – America’s iron fist in the shadows of 21st-century warfare.
In Kochav Yair-Tzur Yigal, a sinister hum stirs fear of unseen tunnels, sparking a vigilant hunt to secure Israel’s trembling ground.
As the war between Israel and Hamas escalates, with mounting civilian casualties and a dire humanitarian situation, the future remains uncertain, and the aftermath is expected to bring significant regional consequences and profound political repercussions for both sides.
Join us on “Inside the Team Room: Navy SEAL Snipers” as Charlie recounts the adrenaline and close calls of Ramadi, including taking a bullet through his scope, and Brandon reflects on the evolving nature of SEAL missions pre and post-9/11 in an episode you simply can’t afford to miss.
In a dramatic escalation of maritime conflict, U.S. forces valiantly countered Houthi insurgents in the Red Sea, signaling a robust international commitment to safeguard vital trade routes against relentless, Iran-backed aggression.
In the smog-choked streets of Tehran, where the scent of rebellion mingles with fear, the Fatehin Special Unit prowls, a grim testament to Raisi’s iron-fisted rule, a shadow force weaving through the chaos like dark wraiths of the regime’s wrath.
In a defiant surge against the West’s suffocating sanctions, Russia’s military-industrial complex has kicked into overdrive, churning out a storm of steel and fury with a resilience and lunatic vigor that scoffs at the notion of being crippled.
In the shadowy dance of naval giants, where the USS Carl Vinson slices through the South China Sea like a diplomatic dagger, we find ourselves perched on the edge of an abyss, peering into the swirling maelstrom of 21st-century geopolitics, where every wave whispers of war and supremacy.
The incompetence of the Biden Administration in national security foreign policy, coupled with Congress’s inability to effectively cooperate and the failure of senior leadership to prepare for conflict, poses a grave risk of leading the United States into a disastrous and ill-advised war with Iran.