Throat Soldiers

Throat Soldiers




🔞 ALL INFORMATION CLICK HERE 👈🏻👈🏻👈🏻

































Throat Soldiers



News


Region & Country


United States




An Afghanistan war veteran's throat was cut after he begged for his life as he was killed during a drug...


By
Daniel Borunda, El Paso Times
|

Published May 25, 2017 11:49 AM


An Afghanistan war veteran's throat was cut after he begged for his life as he was killed during a drug robbery earlier this month, according to court documents.
El Paso police have arrested five people — including a Fort Bliss soldier and two former soldiers — in connection with the slaying of Tyler Kaden Croke on May 7 in an apartment on the East Side.
A Fort Bliss spokesman confirmed Monday that Brandon Olsen, 27, is stationed at the Army post and that Zachary Johnston, 20, and Adam Acosta, 19, were former soldiers stationed at Fort Bliss more than a month ago.
Police also arrested Tristan Hunter Chilton, 21, and Stephanie Fernandez, 28, both of Socorro. All five have been arrested on capital murder charges.
According to a complaint affidavit filed by a homicide detective, Croke was killed during a drug robbery at the Cantera Apartments at 1501 Lomaland Drive. Croke, 23, had served in the U.S. Army in Afghanistan.
The complaint states Chilton told detectives that Acosta entered the apartment with a shotgun and was followed inside by three other suspects.
Chilton allegedly told detectives that Olsen and Johnston wrestled Croke to the floor and that Chilton held his legs down, the complaint states. A neighbor later told police that she had heard loud footsteps and a man pleading for his life.
During the confrontation, Johnston allegedly stabbed Croke and cut his throat with a knife, Chilton told detectives, according to documents. Olsen then allegedly “finished killing the victim by cutting his throat with a knife while the victim was attempting to crawl away,” the complaint states.
Drugs were then allegedly taken from Croke's home. Fernandez is accused of driving a black Nissan Xterra used as the getaway vehicle, according to documents.
The types of drugs that were stolen and how Croke might have known his alleged killers were not disclosed in the complaint document.
Shortly after 1:30 a.m., police went to the apartment after getting a call about an unknown problem and speaking to the neighbor who had heard a man begging for his life, documents state. After getting no answer at the apartment, officers opened the unlocked door and found Croke's nude body face down.
Apartment security cameras recorded a Nissan Xterra with a Texas flag/Eskimo hut sticker on its rear windshield parked at the scene. A witness had seen four people enter the vehicle, which had a person in the driver's seat, on the night of the killing, documents state.
During the investigation, detectives happened to spot the Nissan with the sticker on Socorro Road and followed it to an apartment in Socorro, where the Mission Valley Tactical Unit set up surveillance, documents state. The Nissan was later pulled over for traffic violations.
The driver, Chilton, was interviewed at police headquarters, where he allegedly told detectives what happened to Croke, documents state.
Fernandez, who was a passenger in the Nissan when it was stopped, was arrested on charges of possession of methamphetamine and cocaine and traffic warrants, police officials said. Olsen was arrested later.
Johnston and Acosta were arrested in Las Cruces and are awaiting extradition to El Paso, officials said.
©2017 the El Paso Times (El Paso, Texas). Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
Get the latest in military news, entertainment and gear in your inbox daily.
Articles may contain affiliate links which enable us to share in the revenue of any purchases made.
Registration on or use of this site constitutes acceptance of our Terms of Service.
© 2022 Recurrent . All rights reserved.

Try refreshing the page, or try again later.
Something went wrong. Wait a moment and try again.



American Soldier's Throat Cut in Iraq: Video




This site has the video showing three American Soldiers in Iraq throats being slashed by Iraqi teenagers. It is disturbingly graphic.

I discovered the site via the Free Republic, I had no idea the site existed before it was posted on a thread there.

http://www.ogrish.com/

It is under the sub title "Execution"



Re: American Soldier's Throat Cut in Iraq: Video


Mr. Atta, with the greatest of respect for you posting this and bringing it to our attention - Sir, I really cannot bring myself to watch it.

It makes my blood boil.

Those young soldiers will be remembered with love.

It truly makes me cry that these young men and women are willing to fight and die for us.

I send their families my love and my uttermost respect and admiration.


.

Location: In the Socialist Republic of Canuckistan wherein the betrayal of our white race is in full swing.


Re: American Soldier's Throat Cut in Iraq: Video


In the video that I saw their throats were not slit, they were blown up.



$
$............$
...$...
$............$
$
HELP US SET JEWMERICA FREE




Keep Stormfront Alive & Growing


Re: American Soldier's Throat Cut in Iraq: Video


I don't find it entertaining to watch american soilders getting executed, so I choose not to watch. But if you wanna see it go ahead I guess



Re: American Soldier's Throat Cut in Iraq: Video


I couldn't find that one, although I did find the 3 iraqi men being executed by explosives.



Re: American Soldier's Throat Cut in Iraq: Video


I have not seen it (and probably won't). But Ogrish lists them as Iraqis rather than Americans.

Anyone seen it that can clarifty. Let's hope they arent Americans.



Re: American Soldier's Throat Cut in Iraq: Video

I have not seen it (and probably won't). But Ogrish lists them as Iraqis rather than Americans.

Anyone seen it that can clarifty. Let's hope they arent Americans.


Re: American Soldier's Throat Cut in Iraq: Video


Orgish is one of the most f'ed up sites on this planet. I remember back when Rotten dot com was hardcore and now that is like softcore when it comes to this psycho stuff.



Re: American Soldier's Throat Cut in Iraq: Video

Location: Spreading my vile "hatred" from one end of Canada to the other and damned proud of it!


Re: American Soldier's Throat Cut in Iraq: Video


Here's an airplane flying into a mosque, courtesy of Billy Roper and the folks at White Revolution ...

http://www.whiterevolution.com./video/nov182003du.rm

Ahhh, is that sweet or what?

All times are GMT -4. The time now is 02:23 AM .


Content Copyrighted ©1995 - 2022 by Stormfront
PO Box 6637, West Palm Beach FL 33405
Telephone: 561-833-0030

Powered by vBulletin Copyright ©2000 - 2022, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.



American Soldier's Throat Cut in Iraq: Video

Lounge Vent or ChitChat. Keep the less serious posts here.

Orgish is one of the most f'ed up sites on this planet. I remember back when Rotten dot com was hardcore and now that is like softcore when it comes to this psycho stuff.





-- Default for laptops/desktops

---- Responsive styleset (mobile friendly)

-- Red Responsive (in development)





Tunnel Rats: American, Australian and New Zealand military soldiers entering Viet Cong (VC) tunnels. Photo credit: Black Ink Clothing. What were these tunnels and how did tunnel rat soldiers come about?
The Viet Cong amassed around 250 kilometers of underground tunnels. This network connected villages, cities, and districts. The tunnels also hosted armament workshops, training depots, headquarters, and a variety of other facilities . They helped conduct military operations on behalf of communist forces. Though Americans, Australians, and New Zealanders claim to know these hideouts existed, they overlooked their size and importance . Equally , these countries failed to understand how difficult it would be to detect and neutralize such networks .
Read on to learn about the crazy booby traps soldiers faced, the creepy crawlies they encountered, and the damaging psychological consequences of such close combat . You can also learn about how these soldiers came about, who opted to become one, how they trained, and what equipment they used . Finally, this list will look at how successful these attempts were in the grand scheme of things. If you are squeamish or hate thinking about claustrophobic conditions, take this as a warning: gruesome facts lie ahead !
During the Second World War, the Vietnamese first constructed underground tunnels to fight Japanese invasion . In the 1940s and 1950s, the Vietnamese expanded these tunnels to hide nationalist guerrillas known as the Viet Ming . These guerrillas were fighting the colonial power of France. Major Nguyen Quot, an officer that spent ten years in these tunnels, notes that by 1948 they “already dug a tunnel system: each family, each hamlet, had a tunnel communicating it with others” . By the time the American army arrived, there were over two hundred kilometers.
Initially , America used hunting dogs to locate the enemy. Once the Viet Cong caught on to what was happening, they began to use the same soap the Americans used. This way, they smelled the same as the GIs and the dogs became unable to locate the enemy. The US army now sought alternate measures. Americans often carpet bombed areas under suspicion to try flushing out the enemy. The bombs caused earthquakes that destroyed the tunnels and their ventilation shafts. If it did not force the enemy out, those inside the tunnels often suffocated to death instead.
In a more direct attempt to seek out the enemy, US soldiers used portable turbines to blow CS gas into tunnel shafts they located . Again, those inside suffocated. Another method frequently used attempted to flood the area so badly that the enemy desperately sought to escape to avoid drowning . Using this tactic, they added yellow dye to the water to enable aerial observers to spot any entrances that ground troops had missed .
Yet, both of these tactics were not as successful as they hoped. What they failed to realize is that many of the tunnels had several layers and doors built into them to help prevent such fatalities . The Viet Cong built drain pipe ventilation shafts every 20 to 30 meters at an oblique angle to prevent flooding . Tunnels were also built in zig-zags to prevent the enemy from pouring in chemicals or shooting bullets over a long distance .
On average, tunnels in this underground network were 1.2 meters wide and only 0.8 to 1.8 metres high. As a result, sending a soldier underground, known as a tunnel rat, was often a final measure if all other methods had failed .
Amazingly, these tunnel rat soldiers were volunteers. Why they volunteered varied person to person, but one American soldier speculated volunteers were trying “sometimes to make up for problematic lives back home or to prove their manhood in truly testing conditions.” The same soldier noted that once rats conquered their fear, “assuming they survived, some even came to like their work… for the rats, the light at the end of the tunnel was usually a VC with a candle.’
In general, volunteers had to have common sense, be exceptionally brave, have an inquisitive mind, and have an even temperament. After all, it was a very stressful and dangerous job. A lot of the time, other soldiers thought these volunteers also had to be a certain type of crazy. In one interview, tunnel rat soldier CW Bowman recalled how his fellow colleagues bet money on the fact he would not live through his whole tour as the job was so dangerous. However, Bowman said that he was never that scared of the tunnels; he was so young he believed he was invincible.
In most cases, tunnel rats were engineers, infantrymen, cavalry scouts, or chemical specialists. They carried out tunnel rat duties as and when they needed in addition to any other duties they performed. A lot of the time it really depended on the size of the soldiers in the infantry division. Of course, the local Vietnamese population designed the tunnels with their own size in mind. Consequently, given the average smaller size of Vietnamese men, tunnel rat soldiers, by necessity, were the shortest, skinniest, and most limber men in the army: a maximum height of 1.58 meters.
Men most often explored these tunnels in pairs. One soldier would crawl about five meters behind the other to minimize the chance of death or injury if their leader activated a trap or a mine. This also allowed soldiers to help find and collect any wounded or dead comrades. The enemy used this to their advantage. In a 1977 interview with the Associated Press, a Vietcong survivor recalled how the Americans wasted so much time pulling their dead back that it gave them time to re-group and prepare accordingly.
As mentioned previously, tunnel rat soldiers were a last-ditch attempt and not the usual go-to solution. Every group would do things differently. If the army located an entrance and needed it explored, the team lowered a tunnel rat into the area to scout out the surroundings. Proceeding cautiously, they moved in enough until a fellow soldier could fit into the tunnel with them. From this point, they were to seek out enemy soldiers or potential hiding spaces where they may have once been.
Generally, while underground tunnel rat soldiers employed a “shoot first, ask questions later” method. If they hesitated at all, it is highly likely they would be the ones to die in such close confines. To avoid running into issues, tunnel rats remained very cautious of the number of shots they fired. After shooting a maximum of three bullets, soldiers would typically reload to avoid letting the enemy know when they were out of ammo.
The army sent in tunnel rat soldiers with the aim of locating the enemy, finding their resources, and cutting off their supplies. During one search and destroy operation, for example, a unit destroyed 6000 pounds of rice, 40 pounds of salt, 8 rifle grenades, 8 bunkers, numerous dwellings, and one 120-foot-long tunnel. One battalion also found an ‘underground complex that covered 2,000 meters and yielded cameras, films, printing presses, and type, in addition to the usual cache of weapons and ammunition.’ Shockingly, a US soldier even uncovered a missing M-48 tank buried six feet deep; the Viet Cong were using it as a command center.
According to studies conducted during the war, after one year of service, the hearing and smell of a typical tunnel rat became sixty percent better than that of an average man. Naturally, their opponents were equally as skilled in this department and so tunnel rat soldiers were careful not to clean too much, or use certain products in case their enemies smelled them coming. They harnessed their newfound abilities to help them with survival because unlike their enemies, they lacked experience in these small dark tunnels.
Overall , tunnel rat soldiers received little, if any, specific training. Some of the basic combat training (BCT) soldiers undertook helped though. BCT included lessons on hand-to-hand combat, chemical-warfare defense, map reading, first aid, bayonet fighting, guard duty, and the use of hand grenades . Most useful for tunnel rats, however , was the experience gained in the dreaded gas chambers . Here, leaders forced soldiers into specific chambers and made to recite their name, rank, and service number . It helped give them the experience and confidence to cope with gas, should they encounter it in combat .
Infantry Advanced Individual Training also helped them to deal more in-depth with other issues . Over eight weeks, soldiers learned about tactical skills, squad and platoon offensive and defensive tactics, and how to use certain weapons . Most helpful for tunnel rats, however , was the brief amount of training time spent detecting, removing, and laying booby traps . Though this article will explore specific examples later, these traps were particularly brutal in the tunnels . Soldiers learned to carefully probe the sides, roof, and floor of the tunnels attentively listening and trying to smell the enemy or look for trap doors .
Some tunnel rats were also fortunate enough to take part in Combat Engineer Advanced Individual Training . Since tunnel rats extensively used explosives to collapse tunnel entrances and destroy what they found inside, combat training was particularly valuable . While it covered a lot of the same things as infantry training , it focused more on map reading, knot-tying, navigation, use of hand and power tools, camouflage, constructing barbed-wire obstacles, mine laying, and mine detection . All useful to the experiences of tunnel rats.
Finally, some of the unique training centers would provide tunnel system replicas. The Tropic Lightning Tunnel Rat School at Cu Chi base camp provides an example of this. The center offered classes designed to show the best techniques of searching, detecting, and destroying hiding places . However , other than being underground, they were actually very different from the real Viet Cong tunnels .
Standard weapons carried by most infantrymen were unsuitable for use in such tight confines . Owing to the need for a flashlight, it was essential that soldiers could aim and fire their weapon with one hand. This meant naturally handguns were most commonly chosen. Lots of tunnel rats used the standard-issue colt. 45 calibers with a seven-round magazine as they were readily available. In 1966, the Army issued six tunnel-exploration tester kits. This kit included a S&W .38-calibre special model 10 revolver with both a silencer and aiming light. However , they were not popular among tunnel rats as the light was unnecessary, and the silencers were too long and did not function well .
A light tunnel exploration kit may also include items such as powdered CS, colored-smoke grenades, insect repellent, protective masks, a field telephone, a compass to plot the route, a telephone wire spool, probing rods, bayonets, a flashlight, entrenching tools to reveal and widen entrances, and a .22-calibre HD or MK I pistol . A heavier tunnel-exploration kit may also include nylon rope, body-armor vests, grappling hooks, work gloves, kneepads, and earplugs . Remote-controlled explosive charges and small smoke grenades kits were primarily to signal exit locations to fellow comrades .
Clothing-wise, it was a good idea to wear tight waterproof items to stop clothing from snagging on obstructions, leather gloves, and, if possible as mentioned knee pads to assist with crawling around . When it comes to headgear, some soldiers wore a helmet or a visored cap along with a microphone and/ or transistor radio attached . One of the other problems soldiers faced is the deafening sound of gunshots echoing through the tunnels . While tunnel rats often wanted to wear hearing protection to help lessen the consequences of this noise and avoid damage to their eardrums, they risked not being able to hear the enemy approaching . As a result, many tunnel rats often avoided using hearing protection while underground.
Despite the superior firepower of the American military, the determination of the Viet Cong was on another level entirely. In the 1940s Ho Chi Minh, one of the founders of the Viet Cong, stated “You can kill ten of my men for every one I kill of yours. Even at those odds, you will lose and I will win”. Secretary of State, Henry Kissinger, perfectly summarised the problem in 1
Wet Hairy Pussy Hd
Free Hentai Porn Tubes
Latin Title

Report Page