Brandon Webb, The Red Circle: Marooned in Tahiti At Age Sixteen And A 3,000 Mile Journey To Hawaii.
In this excerpt from Brandon Webb’s, The Red Circle, he recounts his journey as he makes his way back from the Pacific back to the Peace.
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In this excerpt from Brandon Webb’s, The Red Circle, he recounts his journey as he makes his way back from the Pacific back to the Peace.
CEO and SOFREP founder Brandon Webb recounts in his book, The Red Circle, the story of how his family’s life changed.
In this excerpt from The Red Circle, CEO and SOFREP founder, Brandon Webb tells his experience aboard the dive boat, Peace.
Doctor Bob Adams graduated from the Naval Academy and became a Navy SEAL. While in the Reserves he finished medical school and joined the Army. He then found himself as the Chief Surgeon for Delta Force.
Our family moved every three years during my formative years. We were in Yokosuka, Japan, when President Kennedy was shot and killed. It was a Boy Scout Jamboree day. Our troop produced a display on first aid, and I staffed the booth. My uniform was ironed and creased, and my merit badge sash had fifteen […]
In part 3, SEAL Team 6 founder Dick Marcinko talks about SEALs in combat in the jungles of the Vietnam-Laotian border. An eight-man team against over 200 North Vietnamese regulars. They did have one advantage, artillery.
In part two of the SOFREP interviews with SEAL Team-Six founder Dick Marcinko, Dick discusses the origins of the SEAL Teams and their evolution during the Vietnam conflict.
During my time in the Navy SEALs I saw examples of very good and very bad leadership. When it was good, it was life-changing. Bad? Watch out.
In 1945, eight sailors from the USS Barb paddled to shore with a makeshift explosive to destroy an enemy train. Their legacy is alive today.
Special Warfare Combatant-craft Crewmen (SWCCs) are a critical link in the SOCOM chain, supporting Navy SEALs in most water-borne operations.
Without Remorse is Amazon’s latest Tom Clancy adaption. Does it hold up in 2021? Let’s watch it and find out.
The future of U.S. Special Operations will rely less on brawny door-kickers and increasingly on technologists armed with software.