"They're Insane" - US Soldiers Watched Australian SAS Do THIS To Boots

Опубликовано: 11 Июнь 2026
на канале: Australia’s Hidden War
13,122
328

🚨 Australian SAS HUMILIATED US Elite! They mocked "cut boots" — but Vietnam's monsoon rain got REVENGE! 💧🩸

1969, Phuoc Tuy Province. Perfectly equipped Americans laugh at "savage" Australian SASR. Their boots are NIGHTMARE fuel: leather sliced off, canvas tape instead of laces. "What poverty?!" — thought the Yanks.

But hours later, rain turned American "waterproof" boots into water balloons. Feet ROTTED alive, men limped in blood. SAS walked LIGHT — their method was GENIUS! 😱

What happened next? Lt. Clark grabbed a knife himself... Base officers were SPEECHLESS seeing "ruined" boots!

🔥 VIDEO REVEALS:
• Why SAS cut boots before every patrol
• How rain BROKE American military doctrine
• Real clash of two armies story
• Survival secret Pentagon tried to bury

👉 SUBSCRIBE — new SASR, Vietnam War, spec ops stories DAILY!
#AustralianSAS #SASRVietnam #VietnamWarBoots

⏰ YOU READING THIS? WATCH TILL END — FINAL SHOCKS YOU!


HISTORICAL CONTEXT (Vietnam War)
This story is set against the real operational environment of Phuoc Tuy Province, where the 1st Australian Task Force (1 ATF) operated from its base at Nui Dat during the Vietnam War.

Australian War Memorial unit records note that SASR squadrons (rotating through Vietnam between 1966 and 1971) were based at Nui Dat and acted as the “eyes and ears” of 1 ATF, conducting reconnaissance/patrol operations across Phuoc Tuy and nearby provinces.

Australian public-history material also highlights patrolling as a central feature of operations in Phuoc Tuy, shaping how units moved, observed, and controlled ground around Nui Dat.


WEATHER & TERRAIN (Why rain matters)
Southern Vietnam’s wet/monsoon season is commonly described as running roughly from May to October, bringing heavy rain and high humidity that can rapidly turn tracks into mud and make movement and sustainment harder.

Those conditions are part of why Vietnam-era forces placed major emphasis on fieldcraft and managing water, mud, and foot health in the jungle environment.


EQUIPMENT NOTE (Boot drainage context)
Vietnam-era “jungle boots” were designed with drainage eyelets to help water escape—reflecting how persistent wet ground and flooding could become a real operational problem.


SOURCES (for viewers)
Anzac Portal (DVA): Nui Dat / Phuoc Tuy background.


Australian War Memorial: SASR squadron/unit pages (Vietnam; “eyes and ears”; Nui Dat).


Anzac Portal (DVA): Patrolling in Vietnam.


Jungle boot (drainage eyelets background).