Why trench warfare is no longer a thing of the past for British Army

2024 ж. 28 Сәу.
243 420 Рет қаралды

Russia's invasion of Ukraine, where both sides have dug vast networks of fortifications, has meant trench warfare is firmly back on the UK military training agenda.
At Sennybridge Training area (home to the infantry battle school) there are around 300 meters of newly refurbished trenches, built in the style similar to those used by Russian and Ukrainian troops.
The fortifications, reminiscent of World War One, have become an integral part of the war in Ukraine and although British troops may build trenches differently, they need to know how to fight in them.
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  • Trench warfare will always exist.

    @Brookspirit@BrookspiritАй бұрын
    • When politicians agree on a stalemate

      @w.s.2102@w.s.2102Ай бұрын
    • ​@w.s.2102 we have trench warfare now and and a stalemate in Ukraine. What do you have to say about that Mr.Big Brains 🧠 🤔 😅

      @freedombro6502@freedombro6502Ай бұрын
    • Don't write 'and' twice dummy 😊

      @selfco8142@selfco8142Ай бұрын
    • Not when one side gets air superiority over the other, those trenches would be turned into graves.

      @dannyboi4111@dannyboi4111Ай бұрын
    • @@w.s.2102 All politicians care about is money in their pockets.

      @jammiedodger7040@jammiedodger7040Ай бұрын
  • A grim dose of reality.

    @jimg2850@jimg2850Ай бұрын
    • I dunno corporal Kentucky fried chicken looks ready

      @dstarboi9965@dstarboi9965Ай бұрын
    • if it is grim to you then you will be one of realities first of many causalities

      @Berserker3624@Berserker3624Ай бұрын
    • Such a tough guy comment.

      @viktor7712@viktor7712Ай бұрын
    • depends, god always has a plan for ya mate, says so in the book@@Berserker3624

      @dudechillgaming3324@dudechillgaming332429 күн бұрын
    • @@viktor7712damn what’s with all the random hating?? He didn’t even say anything that bad you absolute clowns

      @keeshans5768@keeshans576828 күн бұрын
  • It's actually just conventional warfare they're returning to. Trenches are a ubiquitous feature of conventional warfare. You're usually either defending in trenches or attacking enemy trenches. Western armies temporarily got away from that while they were doing counterinsurgency in the GWOT but they were always bound to return to conventional warfare as a baseline.

    @HamSandwich277@HamSandwich277Ай бұрын
    • We got away with it by manuevering along with fire superiority. Fortifying land you hold has been a standard since the days of slings and bows. High density troop movements supported by in depth logistics prevents trenches from being needed, like German blitzkrieg. If we had a 1 million fighter army, supported by 2 million in logistics. 12,000 rounds of COAX on M1 Abrams tank, its just sweeping along tree lines, hedgerows and drones confirming clearance.

      @1truthbegettingtold275@1truthbegettingtold275Ай бұрын
    • @@1truthbegettingtold275 If you don't mind me saying but you seem to be overestimating how effective maneuver warfare can be. The Battle of France is often touted as an example of how effective blitzkrieg can be but there were a lot of factors that gave the Germans a success there not least of which was surprise at how unexpected the attack was. As a basic tactic the Germans were never able to repeat that level of success later in the war against prepared forces. Bottom line is, even when you are doing maneuver, you're not just doing a mad calvary charge. That's what got the British and Germans both in trouble in North Africa when they outran their supply lines and then had to fall back hundreds of miles. It was the same for the Americans in the early days of the Korean War when they thought they could just chase the Communists right out of Korea. You have to deliberately move your troops, set up a defensible, dug in position so you have a base you can fall back to when you finally hit a established defensive line. I know that some people point to American successes in the two Gulf Wars but they weren't exactly dealing with a competent command structure. Saddam Hussein couldn't allow competent military leaders as those would have been a threat to his position. Assuming the enemy you're going to be fighting is that stupid may be a bit of wishful thinking that could get troops killed.

      @silverjohn6037@silverjohn6037Ай бұрын
    • Manoeuvre warfare is great if you get it done before the enemy is fully entrenched. Once they have miles of these trenches, bunkers, mines, wire etc it's nowhere near as effective.

      @meme4one@meme4oneАй бұрын
    • @@meme4one worst thing is, it might just make someone look at the TOG

      @Elenrai@ElenraiАй бұрын
    • @@Elenrai the whole conflict is as s show. Until Putin decides to withdraw or put in one giant push forward, this will be the status quo for a good few years to come.

      @meme4one@meme4oneАй бұрын
  • Imagine sipping tea in the trench and you see a $20 drone flying at you with a rpg strapped to it. Grim really of war now

    @Physica1_@Physica1_Ай бұрын
    • Meh drones are just another weapon. They'll find a way to equip ground troops with countermeasures pretty fast, I am sure.

      @Melior_Traiano@Melior_TraianoАй бұрын
    • @@Melior_Traiano the Russians have the anti drone guns but 1. Not every troop can be equipped with it. 2. You actually need to notice and be on the lookout for drones to aim and use the weapon so it’s still a pain for people even with anti drone weapons

      @Physica1_@Physica1_Ай бұрын
    • $20 drone that can lift a warhead? You should pitch that idea to the world and you might become a billionaire

      @foodistzen@foodistzenАй бұрын
    • @@foodistzen You can see Russians fpv drones doing it already

      @Physica1_@Physica1_Ай бұрын
    • you seem to know a lot about the russians. ukraine were fielding drones and anti drone countermeasures first@@Physica1_

      @James28R@James28RАй бұрын
  • I was talking to someone who said the Ukrainians and Russians were stupid for bringing back trench warfare but like I told him what else are they supposed to do with 1 mile+ sight lines with hardly any structures in between. It’s the only way to have cover when you’re trying to advance a front and not just patrolling from a fire base trying to get farmers to take shots at you

    @Jrob992@Jrob992Ай бұрын
    • anyone who is a layman saying some of the most well funded armies in the world are stupid should probably not be taken too seripously

      @mcpartridgeboy@mcpartridgeboy29 күн бұрын
    • The problem is most modern militaries haven't fought another conventional modern force in like 75 years. They have been fighting insurgencies. Trench warfare never went anywhere. It was just most people thought we wouldn't see another conventional conflict between two modern or semi modern forces in our lifetime.

      @pinkyskeleton5410@pinkyskeleton541029 күн бұрын
    • It’s a pretty unique environment geographically - it’s the steppe. Unless we’re fighting in Ukraine, on the Russian border, these are not broadly applicable skills Why they’re being taught in the BA, is bc our force is a force of trainers and consultants. Nobody is fighting in trenches here. We’re training decent men to fight slightly better in trenches there. End of. If you don’t think the MoD is a consultancy and training organisation, you aren’t looking mate. Time served. Almost career (Ret.). Now gtf

      @TheGonzogibby@TheGonzogibby28 күн бұрын
    • @@TheGonzogibby Most of Europe is flat, and last time Iran was in a war it was also Trench War

      @citizenfoffie7605@citizenfoffie760527 күн бұрын
    • @@TheGonzogibby Armenia and Azerbaijan have gone to war several times in the past few years and they too went heavy into trenches. And Bunkers when they couldn't dig down

      @80krauser@80krauser20 күн бұрын
  • the trench is the most basic form of defence, whether manmade of natural they will be used in every conflict

    @theodorrodriguez1800@theodorrodriguez1800Ай бұрын
    • Even in the Animatrix the war fought between man and machine over a hundred years into the future has trenches and giant laser artillery defenses

      @MrAsh1989@MrAsh1989Ай бұрын
    • Till the plowshaped deployable shield makes a comeback, protecting and deflecting incoming fire.

      @FuckGoogle2@FuckGoogle2Ай бұрын
    • Good observation, yeah it is pretty basic

      @moon_krendelsestate@moon_krendelsestate24 күн бұрын
  • They need a army in the first place to man said trench.

    @balasaashti3146@balasaashti3146Ай бұрын
    • "Person" the trench, you bigot!

      @meme4one@meme4oneАй бұрын
    • Just remember on the outbreak of WW1 Britain had a regular army of 80,000 today its 72,000 plus just over 200,000 reservists. If worst comes to worst, I honestly think Britain would be able to field an infantry force of over a million. Just as they had from 1914-1916 recruitment wise. Then having 5.5 million in the army alone served between 1914-1919.

      @Liverpool-1892.@Liverpool-1892.Ай бұрын
    • They just preparing how to face the Russians in the trench.

      @piyushsharan406@piyushsharan406Ай бұрын
    • @@Liverpool-1892. Yeah and unlike then the people who ran the country weren't arresting people for displaying the union jack down the street. Or importing and catering towards the boat people. Their military is in a recruitment crisis same as the U.S. No young men want to sign up for a nation that continues to talk about how they are the problem of society.

      @balasaashti3146@balasaashti3146Ай бұрын
    • @@Liverpool-1892. Maybe with the manpower but providing an army with support ...In the current situation, we would probably last 10 days!

      @zyphod@zyphodАй бұрын
  • Having served and trained in the Armed forces in the nineties, the training we got was live firing in the fire pits on the shooting range, whilst hugely smaller than a trench, it does make you realise about shooting from a safe point and how trenches however sodden save lives and give a bigger chance of a gun group to drop the enemy and gain ground. We’re trained how to use the environment that surrounds us for safety and advancement to drive or drop the enemy back. But I feel that this type of warfare should not have been dropped in the first place. After all camouflage and concealment isn’t always that easy, particularly if you are advancing from woodland into the villages or urban areas.

    @nickmander6088@nickmander6088Ай бұрын
    • Ironically, that trash rifle works ok for trench warfare... range at distance, compact for tight quarters.

      @jairustheadventurer3935@jairustheadventurer3935Ай бұрын
    • Right arm only for confined spaces? Good luck with it!

      @borismedovar9968@borismedovar9968Ай бұрын
    • You weren't infantry then.

      @zoiders@zoidersАй бұрын
    • We always ended each big exercise with an assault on a Russian trench system (they only went up to waist height). You literally had to fight your way through in a crouched position. Very hard back breaking work, especially once clear of the trenches you then assaulted buildings.

      @ghostwriter2031@ghostwriter2031Ай бұрын
    • ​@jairustheadventurer3935 Trash rifle? I've fired thousands upon thousands of rounds and never had a stoppage. Its incredibly accurate and manoeuvrable. I really don't get the hate

      @ilikelampshades6@ilikelampshades6Ай бұрын
  • Imagine living in a country where the rulers actively hate you and tell you they hate you and your way of life, yet expect you to go and fight on foreign soil in trenches for those same rulers. Orwell would have been shocked, his imagination wasnt dystopian enough.

    @geraltofrivia8529@geraltofrivia852924 күн бұрын
    • That's a terrifying though: all the effort Ingsoc goes through might just not be necessary.

      @adamcummings20@adamcummings204 күн бұрын
  • General Melchett: What seems to be the emergency Baldrick? Baldrick: Sergeant Gavin climbed into the trench! General Mechett: My Word! Stand down the company while we get an excavator!

    @booletpruf9091@booletpruf9091Ай бұрын
  • My great grandfather fought in the British army at the Somme I wonder what he would think today.

    @DarthVader-ux4uk@DarthVader-ux4ukАй бұрын
    • He’d be thinking why the hell am I being led by a nineteen year old girl that can’t carry a GPMG

      @willfletch5871@willfletch5871Ай бұрын
    • @@willfletch5871a 19 year old girl who was born as a male who now identifies as a 19 year old girl but because of the new 2027 laws she’s able to identify as 19 but she was actually born in 1979 as Bob who at the age off 45 decided to become 19 years old Sara so as to join the SAS and become the youngest girl ever to overcome the new tests to be chosen for the SAS, im actually a 12 years old kid but i identify as a 70 years old as I want to collect my pension

      @user-td8ls5mn5q@user-td8ls5mn5qАй бұрын
    • ​@@user-td8ls5mn5q.. if I didn't know better I might think you were pulling our leg :o)

      @siras2@siras2Ай бұрын
    • 😂😂😂😂quite crafty there mate​@@user-td8ls5mn5q

      @susbrody5983@susbrody5983Ай бұрын
    • ​@@user-td8ls5mn5qI'm a sloth. Don't tell me to work faster. I'm a sloth.

      @slartybarfastb3648@slartybarfastb3648Ай бұрын
  • 1982 with fixed bayonets is not that long ago.

    @3204clivesinclair@3204clivesinclairАй бұрын
    • 42 years ago is a bit

      @notnotadev@notnotadevАй бұрын
    • @@notnotadev Seems like yesterday. Same close fighting, with the added fun of drones.

      @3204clivesinclair@3204clivesinclairАй бұрын
    • Bayonets were used in Afghanistan.

      @zoiders@zoidersАй бұрын
    • The freakishly rapid and endless development of technology will only make the past seem further and further away

      @tapch0w597@tapch0w59726 күн бұрын
  • He ain’t raiding any trenches with that bergan counterweight

    @tomje7024@tomje7024Ай бұрын
    • Tell him there are some buckshee rations in there and standby for action.

      @meme4one@meme4oneАй бұрын
    • Pogybait on fishing rod.

      @Ranstone@RanstoneАй бұрын
    • 😂

      @johnwright7895@johnwright7895Ай бұрын
    • He’s Csjt Pisstank of the Yorkshire Pudding Regiment

      @dexus8762@dexus8762Ай бұрын
    • 😂😂

      @kieranprice5496@kieranprice5496Ай бұрын
  • Remember a few years ago, PM Bojo said the days of tank and trench warfare in Europe were over, and thus began to continue cuts. Look where we are now

    @battenburg6089@battenburg6089Ай бұрын
    • Bojo closed 10 London fire stations and removed 400 frontline firefighters from duty

      @paxundpeace9970@paxundpeace9970Ай бұрын
    • In fairness if you saw NLAW ripping through Russian tanks you’d think the same

      @cjjk9142@cjjk9142Ай бұрын
    • He was a Traitor, who lied to get in power and done nothing but implement WEF agendas.

      @dancampbell9090@dancampbell9090Ай бұрын
    • ​@@bhante1345Why surrender to Russia?

      @arberchabot8760@arberchabot8760Ай бұрын
    • @@bhante1345 only because he had no choice, Boris said he’d support him, Z changed his mind

      @cjjk9142@cjjk9142Ай бұрын
  • Back to the old school of infantry work

    @Ripper36068@Ripper36068Ай бұрын
  • It's good to hear them say they've learned from the Ukrainians. Too many professionals believe they know better than those who actually have done it. There is no more experienced army on the planet than the Ukrainians and Russians at this point. They should be training us.

    @slartybarfastb3648@slartybarfastb3648Ай бұрын
    • Ukraine isn’t trained in our warfare, they are working with no air support

      @cjjk9142@cjjk9142Ай бұрын
    • @@cjjk9142 We won't have air support either. Remove that notion. AA weapons are so good that running aircraft will be so risky and on the front the only things flying will be drones

      @mikechedzoy4866@mikechedzoy4866Ай бұрын
    • @@mikechedzoy4866 AA weapons?

      @AlchemistOfNirnroot@AlchemistOfNirnrootАй бұрын
    • @@AlchemistOfNirnroot anti-air, are you a bot. couldn't you figure that out, since we are talking about aircraft.

      @mikechedzoy4866@mikechedzoy4866Ай бұрын
    • @@mikechedzoy4866 Are you an A-hole?

      @AlchemistOfNirnroot@AlchemistOfNirnrootАй бұрын
  • May I just say, those trenches are DREAMY. Just look at those corrugated lines

    @armageddonready4071@armageddonready4071Ай бұрын
    • Seriously lol. Looking at the trenches in Ukraine some of them been exchanged hands and bombarded so many times they're like knee deep. New ones are straight up holes dug in the ground.

      @Russ92@Russ9218 күн бұрын
    • @@Russ92thatsvhow war trenches are, ukraine they were digging while being pushed and artillery

      @TruthPrevails24@TruthPrevails249 күн бұрын
    • Might put down a deposit

      @adamcummings20@adamcummings204 күн бұрын
  • The platoon sergeants course was archaic in the seventies when I completed it .Short sighted thinking on the part of incompetent general staff.Blimps all of them.

    @johnwright7895@johnwright7895Ай бұрын
  • With (cheap) drone technology everything changed. In my time some 30 years ago every soldier dug his own foxhole. Nowadays if you bunch together in a trench you become a tempting target. New innovations will always change the battlefield.

    @TerraRubicon@TerraRubiconАй бұрын
    • they will still continue joining foxholes into trenches to make supply routes etc. how else would they deliver supplies from one foxhole into another

      @CR-rm4iy@CR-rm4iyАй бұрын
  • I highly doubt they will find such well built and clean trenches in a real world scenario....

    @mauriciomdea@mauriciomdeaАй бұрын
    • We just dug a very basic trench in the Artillery because we never stayed in one location for very long due to sound ranging & counter bombardment. Obviously the infantry will did more complicated trenches for longer stays. The Royal Engineers or Pioneer Corps back in the day helped out too with digging our Guns in which was a bigger job. No doubt the Royal Engineers will help the infantry out too when digging out more long term positions

      @Stanly-Stud@Stanly-StudАй бұрын
    • They are built that way as they are going to be needed year after year for training so need to be robust. I remember reading a trench warfare textbook written after WW1 (there were quite a few written post war) and they basically said that the more chaotic and covered with debris the trench looked from the direction of the enemy, then the better it was, as it made life difficult for the snipers. No doubt something similar might apply today with drones, although with thermal imaging now getting more common different camouflage tactics will be needed.

      @Pesmog@PesmogАй бұрын
    • @@Pesmog Hey, what was that book you read? It sounds interesting

      @LayronPK@LayronPKАй бұрын
    • They were not deep enough and without a firing step , this would cause many unnecessary casualties . We fought and perfected trench warfare in WW1 and need only read the hard won doctrines of the time on trench building and warfare such as bite and hold . These trenches were not only too low but were straight not the sawtooth type in WW1 to stop explosions moving along a trench. The Ukrainians are losing badly so I don’t think we need to take tips off them.

      @pincermovement72@pincermovement72Ай бұрын
    • Give it time, the trenches there were condemned last year. This is a rebuild

      @ianmills9266@ianmills9266Ай бұрын
  • Aussie here- Good on ya lads

    @cpt_soban@cpt_soban28 күн бұрын
  • We did lots of trench clearing when I served in the very late 90’s.

    @ghostwriter2031@ghostwriter2031Ай бұрын
    • Yeah you probs did more than your lads in ww1

      @deeeeeeeench1209@deeeeeeeench1209Ай бұрын
    • @@deeeeeeeench1209 I served in the British Army not the Yank Army 🤣

      @ghostwriter2031@ghostwriter2031Ай бұрын
    • @@ghostwriter2031 well 🤣

      @deeeeeeeench1209@deeeeeeeench1209Ай бұрын
  • The pacing of the video is just right.

    @Grow_YouTube_Views_93@Grow_YouTube_Views_93Ай бұрын
  • A rather long video for saying "Being blown up sucks, so soldiers tend to do their best not to be turned into pink mist" Combat can't always be a war of maneuver, so when the attrition starts or the vehicles stop, you need to be dug in to avoid being plastered across a field

    @latch9781@latch9781Ай бұрын
    • Lmao

      @joebob4579@joebob4579Ай бұрын
  • i am ex forces and I think from my time to now - physical fitness is shocking

    @Patriot200011@Patriot200011Ай бұрын
    • and why don't they just link BMI/fat %/lung capacity to pay, with the higher/too low BMI for example linked to progressively lowered pay?

      @CR-rm4iy@CR-rm4iyАй бұрын
    • @@CR-rm4iythere is fat people in the military special in infantry unit , the old you are run time is longer time and fitness relaxed ,

      @danielbailey5849@danielbailey5849Ай бұрын
  • No way has that guy passed the personal fitness test, he’d block the trench

    @nealweightman3086@nealweightman3086Ай бұрын
  • Bayonets? Scary. All the best and stay safe. 🦘🇦🇺👍

    @robertthomas3777@robertthomas3777Ай бұрын
  • i wonder how much of the corrugated metal panels(2:01 side walls) used for holding up the sides of the trenches will be so readily avail. when the real trench warfare begins because that is considered luxury items in the eyes of a Ukrainian soldier at the real trenches.

    @al28854@al28854Ай бұрын
  • The entire British army there about 50 troops strong

    @tommclovin4328@tommclovin4328Ай бұрын
    • Half are extras from Albert Square.

      @benedictearlson9044@benedictearlson9044Ай бұрын
    • 100 if you count in kilos

      @Andre_Thomasson@Andre_Thomasson27 күн бұрын
  • Fighting from prepared positions will never go away. Whether it is in the form of a continuous trench system or in terms of mutually supporting dug-in positions, we will always have this sort of fighting.,

    @ogukuo72@ogukuo72Ай бұрын
  • Now you just get blown to pieces by drones when your in the trench.

    @johnn7614@johnn7614Ай бұрын
  • Defensive training exercises are always exhausting. Digging trenches is one of the hardest workouts you can do.

    @silverjohn6037@silverjohn6037Ай бұрын
  • A thumbnail of a guy holding the barrel and the laser tag training module.. mmm. A weapons course and a lot of PT should probably be on the agenda soon too.

    @wookie-zh7go@wookie-zh7goАй бұрын
    • Holding the barrel these days seems quite common. PT definitely, these guys are all too heavy to move quickly for long periods.

      @benedictearlson9044@benedictearlson9044Ай бұрын
  • This is heartbreaking

    @JEM2905@JEM2905Ай бұрын
  • What I love about people who fail to read about history. TRENCH WARFARE will NEVER go out of style. EVER. As long as you have men wanting to keep their body intact on a combat zone you will have trench lines and fighting holes. We just got used to maneuver warfare not two REAL armies going toe to toe like what is going on in Urkaine

    @shoktroop@shoktroopАй бұрын
  • Larger scale field forts will probably make a return Making a trench on a mound gives better sightlines For better cover you need complex shaps as not to create dead zones Defending a position feels like a callback to the 17th century with how good you need your cover to be

    @theprancingprussian@theprancingprussian29 күн бұрын
  • It's always utterly baffled me why anyone thought trench warfare would go away. Modern warfare is infantry and tanks with air support and artillery. Infantry and vehicles can't cover an entire country in one day, they need to stop and when they stop they get decimated by ordnance, so they dig in, move, fall back, take ground, change direction, dig in, take more ground, fall back. Trenches are always going to exist. "buhhh what about Afghanistan" I know we lost people over there and it's sad but it wasn't a war, it was a 20 year guerrilla insurgency. There's not many proper wars since WW2 in terms of conventional combined arms. But even things like Syria, Afghan, Bosnia and Kosovo involved a bit of trench. It's never going away.

    @CoffeeFiend1@CoffeeFiend1Ай бұрын
    • The Dutch Grebbe Line during ww2 comes to mind when reading this. Even though the Dutch already lost to the initial stages of the Nazi Germany invasion they were still able to commit to some crucial delaying actions involving trench warfare. The Finns during the winter war and well into the continuation war used trench warfare and was able to retain independence from communist influences thanks to that too, even though they lost the war they did not lose their identity and anymore of their territory since the soviet-suomi treaty of the continuation war only led to Finns reverting back to the borders of post-winter war treaty.

      @loafoffloof3420@loafoffloof3420Ай бұрын
    • One war and everyone thinks it’s like that. US fights by bombing bombing bombing until there are no trenches or drone controllers left. Play what you think is modern war all you want until the gorilla enters the room.

      @TheBooban@TheBoobanАй бұрын
    • Dude have you seen WW2? Just because Ukraine and Russia both have a nonexistent airforce, doesn't mean the rest of the world does.

      @honkhonk8009@honkhonk8009Ай бұрын
    • Every single FOB/COP/PB and other types of bases had trenches and raised ground foritifications. Trench is a type of fortification. Hesco barriers are like a trench.

      @1truthbegettingtold275@1truthbegettingtold275Ай бұрын
    • @@1truthbegettingtold275 Yeah they are still used everywhere but really a lot of people say that entrenchments don't exist anymore and that a lot of modern warfare has just been urban or patrolling around on foot or in armored vehicles. That is of course more predominant now but there's still been literally trenches in every conflict the world over to varying degrees. A conventional war is going to generally see them used to a greater extent which is what baffles me so much with peoples "shock". Even if war becomes almost completely autonomous in the future with drones, there will likely always still be human boots to varying extents and they'll be building trenches.

      @CoffeeFiend1@CoffeeFiend1Ай бұрын
  • Problem now is of course. Getting anyone to go in said trench. Seeing as we no longer have country to fight for anymore.

    @Manc-fh5we@Manc-fh5weАй бұрын
    • There is people willing to join the military, but if constription started people got no choice to Join , you got drones worried about them trenches warfare

      @danielbailey5849@danielbailey5849Ай бұрын
    • ​@@danielbailey5849Public sentiment towards the government in the UK is already horrendous, if they try and institute conscription it's not going to go down well.

      @mckendrick7672@mckendrick767211 сағат бұрын
  • Trench warfare is a crucial military doctrine even today

    @SergyMilitaryRankings@SergyMilitaryRankingsАй бұрын
  • Also the question of large minefields, rivers and dump areas and civilian shelters

    @WielkaStopa-qh1rr@WielkaStopa-qh1rrАй бұрын
  • Trench warfare has never been a thing of the past, that's simply a misconception. It's been perhaps the single most common defensive tactic for an army since the beginning of organized warfare, and will in all likelihood continue to be.

    @olbradley@olbradley28 күн бұрын
  • Is it normal to have your hand wrapped around the muzzle break/ BFA in this case?

    @cal5566@cal5566Ай бұрын
    • No lol

      @Osama-Bon-Jovi-01@Osama-Bon-Jovi-01Ай бұрын
  • Definitely didn't have the return of trench warfare on my bingo card before February 2022

    @LunaticTheCat@LunaticTheCat24 күн бұрын
  • Big fella with the gopping beret and barrel of a stomach ain’t raiding any trenches anytime soon 😂

    @mandoambo8221@mandoambo822127 күн бұрын
  • Gavin is a former member of MealTeamSix

    @CL-vz6ch@CL-vz6chАй бұрын
    • 😂 if they build trenches a bit skinnier me and gav will be in retreat

      @peterward4005@peterward4005Ай бұрын
    • Haha was gonna say that Gavin’s a bit fat to be a squaddie? 🤣 sums up our armed forces really. The people of Britain believe our army is great but in reality it’s awful

      @samuelmoore657@samuelmoore657Ай бұрын
    • The army is still great

      @peterward4005@peterward4005Ай бұрын
    • He's British so SBS (Special Burger Service)

      @cumbrainkiller@cumbrainkillerАй бұрын
  • Shocking beret on that instructor. Why are line infantry regiments wearing their berets like paras? 🤦

    @Luke_Sandy_High_Ground@Luke_Sandy_High_GroundАй бұрын
    • That's what I came here to say ..🤦🏻

      @darrensteele7880@darrensteele7880Ай бұрын
    • He wasn't exactly built for speed either.

      @tomgoff7887@tomgoff7887Ай бұрын
    • It’s been like that for ages now. No more capbadge in the centre of the head 🤣

      @ghostwriter2031@ghostwriter2031Ай бұрын
    • look at the mans weight...some leader he is. where will he lead his men? form the front of the buffet table?

      @Berserker3624@Berserker3624Ай бұрын
  • Parapets need to be higher and with irregular silhouettes. Also need firing steps for improved firing positions.These trenches were designed to health and safety protocols and are death traps with steel sheeting guiding and channeling mortar fragments left and right.

    @user-xw9if1nu8q@user-xw9if1nu8qАй бұрын
  • Fibua was full of lessons learned in the trenches now it's the opposite. Bullpups seem the way to go in such confined spaces.

    @Animation1138BH@Animation1138BHАй бұрын
  • 'new focus' i won't forget the consecutive days of digging trenches in CBRN kit. Infantry know what I mean

    @darleschickens3726@darleschickens3726Ай бұрын
  • I thought it would all be hover tanks and orbital strikes by 2024?

    @SD78@SD78Ай бұрын
  • Brings back memories of trench foot after living in one for a week in deep water

    @Frank-hn3yj@Frank-hn3yj29 күн бұрын
  • Trench warfare has been around for centuries and has never gone away.

    @barryalexander2909@barryalexander2909Ай бұрын
  • Great to see NATO partners sharing in the training (I'm assuming that bloke with the cap badge over his ear is from some foreign army?).

    @badgertheskinnycow@badgertheskinnycowАй бұрын
  • Trench warfare, in todays technical age, with drones, pin point artillery, missles.. that chubby instructor wont fit in a trench!

    @JohnThomas-hv3nd@JohnThomas-hv3ndАй бұрын
  • Trenches will never be a thing of the past as long as infantry and dirt will exist.

    @Vlad_-_-_@Vlad_-_-_Ай бұрын
  • What is being done to counter FPV drones? They are the best way of taking out enemy in a trench these days

    @adambaxter1248@adambaxter1248Ай бұрын
  • Hi from Ukraine! I want to express a huge thanks to the British people! I hope these trainings will never be needed, but better to know this already. We live in historacal times as you know. I wish you all to stay safe and be so cool that you already are. God save the King! 🇬🇧❤🇺🇦

    @awdey@awdeyАй бұрын
    • How are you doing there? Take care

      @becky2235@becky2235Ай бұрын
  • Didnt they get rid of trench digging during training? Im sure my intake was the last to do it ...... What was it 28 hours of pure digging The ITC record was 18 hours 😅

    @roughwalkers@roughwalkersАй бұрын
    • No.

      @zoiders@zoidersАй бұрын
  • Any fixed emplacement might have trenches to clear or provide defensive cover.

    @broxton579@broxton579Ай бұрын
  • How fast it all come round, ive gone from fob training, to conventional and now trench lol

    @thesimmertron2685@thesimmertron268529 күн бұрын
  • 3:00 what is that grip lol

    @ryanbeaman9566@ryanbeaman9566Ай бұрын
    • Warms your hands up. Very quickly.

      @CL-vz6ch@CL-vz6chАй бұрын
  • We should have a large enough airforce to give us the air superiority needed so this never becomes a reality. Sadly, this is the more ‘cost effective’ alternative that makes a politician happy.

    @dazady452001@dazady452001Ай бұрын
    • Modern Anti air weapons means no one will have air superiority.

      @mikechedzoy4866@mikechedzoy4866Ай бұрын
    • You will never achieve air superiority in a war against another country. AA systems just too good nowadays. So the trench warfare is the reality.

      @LayronPK@LayronPKАй бұрын
    • The Royal Navy has fewer men than the US Coast Guard.

      @Melior_Traiano@Melior_TraianoАй бұрын
    • While the politicians line there pockets

      @becky2235@becky2235Ай бұрын
    • Planes just get shot down now. They aren’t what they used to be.

      @user-tf4tv9bj4f@user-tf4tv9bj4f29 күн бұрын
  • All that is missing are the biplanes and broadie helmets, I hear the Maxim is still in use....😊

    @WAFFENAMT1@WAFFENAMT1Ай бұрын
  • I'm so glad the Militaries of the West are paying attention to what's going on and training for it.

    @fratercontenduntocculta8161@fratercontenduntocculta816129 күн бұрын
  • Didn’t know the French foreign legion were teaching British troops ?

    @user-mu3ik4re8w@user-mu3ik4re8wАй бұрын
    • Same lols

      @badgertheskinnycow@badgertheskinnycowАй бұрын
  • Let’s be honest, colour gavin Dillon is not a CQB specialist with that silhouette hahahah

    @mrjarhead6173@mrjarhead6173Ай бұрын
    • 😂😂

      @joebob4579@joebob4579Ай бұрын
    • The big man likes a pie.

      @CL-vz6ch@CL-vz6chАй бұрын
  • Damn - my grandad would recognise this. Grim indeed.

    @neilgriffiths6427@neilgriffiths6427Ай бұрын
  • The guy in the thumbnail is holding onto the gun by the blank firing adapter...

    @wallythewondercorncake8657@wallythewondercorncake8657Ай бұрын
  • NATO could learn a lot from experienced Ukrainian troops.

    @john_in_phoenix@john_in_phoenixАй бұрын
    • Sorry can say that again, learn what exactly, Ukraine troops got no military training, it mostly volunteers who been in the military, nato need learn drones and man power , equipment is need ,

      @danielbailey5849@danielbailey5849Ай бұрын
    • I wouldnt recommend learning from Ukranian troops. Unless what you want to achieve is a total Volkssturm annihilation. They did surprisingly well in the early stages of the war holding off the 200k strong RF, unfortunately for them Russia can make their own aircraft, tanks and shells, meanwhile UA relied on their soviet stockpiles and now on foreign aid. NATO doctrine is not compatible with the UA war, the most we learned from this war was how 2 evenly matched armies return to trench warfare and the terror of drone warfare.

      @rsfhaerdt@rsfhaerdtАй бұрын
    • @@danielbailey5849Ukraines volunteers would crush the U.K. military today.

      @user-tf4tv9bj4f@user-tf4tv9bj4f29 күн бұрын
  • I feel sorry for anyone in the army. Barely got a country lwft to fight for

    @skedtm@skedtmАй бұрын
  • All we need is "It's a long way to Tipperary" playing.

    @calthepeacelovingclover5935@calthepeacelovingclover5935Ай бұрын
  • Imagine fighting in the trenches and having $20 drones flying around trying to target you

    @superdoodle7668@superdoodle766815 сағат бұрын
  • From the look at that "color Seargent" it seems a cut in rations might be in order. lol. The weight watchers regiment. "Send em in...."

    @brand8590@brand8590Ай бұрын
    • He thinks BFT means burger fries to - go

      @adamsully5779@adamsully5779Ай бұрын
    • Colour Sargent

      @liveuk@liveukАй бұрын
    • @@liveuk Colour Sergeant

      @user-be1lo9zd7o@user-be1lo9zd7oАй бұрын
    • @@adamsully5779 :P :)

      @brand8590@brand8590Ай бұрын
    • @@user-be1lo9zd7o Here we go again. Everyone arguing over spelling not the utterly pathetic state of our useless armed forces. It's cut to the bone!

      @johnbobson1557@johnbobson1557Ай бұрын
  • Does the British dress code say that the beret must be pulled over the eyebrows?😂🤔

    @HrGott@HrGottАй бұрын
    • It's absolutely shocking looking ...

      @darrensteele7880@darrensteele7880Ай бұрын
  • 1:14 Backback model: The new guy

    @familymann454@familymann454Ай бұрын
  • stunned. The standard of that Csgt..... we will loose

    @scottblaney81@scottblaney8123 күн бұрын
  • It's all about getting close to the enemy. Inorder to mis gender them or body shame. But also really important to post dances on Tic toc and post selfies when dying your hair blue. Lots changed in the forces since the policy makers started serving the wishes of the world economic forum.

    @tonyporter82@tonyporter82Ай бұрын
    • Mis gendering?Have you not heard of the Geneva convention. In these worrying times with the threat of WWW3 looming and the Kremlins constant nuclear saber rattling. It really is a dark day when such brutality is considered to be a part of the modern arenas of conflict 😢😢😢

      @Eduardo-pc6gq@Eduardo-pc6gqАй бұрын
    • this n'wah ain't seen grass since covid

      @foodistzen@foodistzenАй бұрын
  • I'm shocked it's taken you guys THIS long to realise that these skills are needed again. OH and don't get me started on Armour and drones. For the life of me I don't know why has defense spending has not increased ? WHY can't the Govenment get a grip on our Borders? THE U.K. GOV needs to grow a set !

    @Wolfhound223@Wolfhound223Ай бұрын
  • 01:15 - imagine going to school with that backpack😁

    @jens8942@jens894227 күн бұрын
  • So professional but so many have died for Queen and King. Very well supplied and supported.

    @AccordGTR@AccordGTRАй бұрын
  • 3:01 why is he holding the barrel

    @watchonjar@watchonjarАй бұрын
    • Why not?

      @heycidskyja4668@heycidskyja4668Ай бұрын
    • ​@@heycidskyja4668 because that's where the hot gasses come out 😂

      @Osama-Bon-Jovi-01@Osama-Bon-Jovi-01Ай бұрын
    • @@Osama-Bon-Jovi-01 hand warmer

      @brigadgeneralvoid2508@brigadgeneralvoid250829 күн бұрын
  • Why take the King's shilling if the King's government implicitly hates the stock from which the majority of soldiers are drawn?

    @Waldemarvonanhalt@WaldemarvonanhaltАй бұрын
  • Everyone had given up bayonet fighting by 1982…except the ‘old fashioned’ British and the French Foreign Legion; too out of date in the nuclear age. It was needed and used on the Falklands. The Argentines had no bayonets. Other armies then re introduced it to their infantry syllabus.

    @mikewingert5521@mikewingert5521Ай бұрын
    • Wrong. Bayonet training was still a feature much later.

      @CL-vz6ch@CL-vz6chАй бұрын
    • @@CL-vz6ch In the army we were always informed that only the British and French still taught it up until 1982 for the reasons stated. Do enlighten us please. Which other armies taught it to their infantry?

      @mikewingert5521@mikewingert5521Ай бұрын
  • That shot at 1:09 is a shot of all the British Armed Forces personnel combined.

    @sirwi11iam@sirwi11iam9 күн бұрын
  • British Army🇬🇧 Best Army in the world!!!

    @Jack-eg8wg@Jack-eg8wgАй бұрын
    • Unfortunately there will be more people at this year's FACUP final at Wembley, than the British Army can put boots on the ground tomorrow......

      @martinthomas2759@martinthomas2759Ай бұрын
    • not for 30 years

      @Luke_Sandy_High_Ground@Luke_Sandy_High_GroundАй бұрын
    • That's a worrying thought ​@@martinthomas2759

      @becky2235@becky2235Ай бұрын
  • Sending british troops to the trenches was a waste in the first place... over 100 years later and they are still making the same mistake

    @brandonhallam51@brandonhallam51Ай бұрын
  • I have no idea why people thought it was a thing of the past, if you think about its use even in WW2, half a braincell would reveal its a infantry only environment which reduces the effects of mortars, artillery and explosions

    @Oddie-pb9ri@Oddie-pb9ri29 күн бұрын
  • Says it all really, he sounds confident that hes training for a cirtain deployment "We ARE going to encounter trenches, we ARE going encounter close quater fighting"

    @MrW582@MrW582Ай бұрын
  • Britain still has an army?

    @brianm3529@brianm3529Ай бұрын
    • Surprising isn’t it.

      @mrjockt@mrjocktАй бұрын
  • Lets be honest, we are not in a good place right now !!

    @paulmint1775@paulmint1775Ай бұрын
    • in what way?

      @BreakingWhite@BreakingWhiteАй бұрын
    • @@BreakingWhiteour army size is pathetic.

      @joeynyesss1286@joeynyesss1286Ай бұрын
    • @@joeynyesss1286Sgt. Gavin is doing his best to make up for that!

      @JamesG19771@JamesG19771Ай бұрын
    • @@BreakingWhite No National Air defence and a small army and a cost of living crisis !!

      @paulmint1775@paulmint17759 сағат бұрын
    • @@paulmint1775 what defence spending is ideal then? 2.5%?

      @BreakingWhite@BreakingWhite9 сағат бұрын
  • "in the business, we call this foreshadowing"

    @BritishColonist@BritishColonist29 күн бұрын
  • 😂😂😂 guy built like an unsmashed hamburger..

    @user-fc8iw6pc1w@user-fc8iw6pc1wАй бұрын
  • This is where the bull pup rifles shine

    @Boom-eo8ht@Boom-eo8htАй бұрын
    • you mean get mud and misfires

      @user-us5cl7xu5x@user-us5cl7xu5xАй бұрын
    • 1991 wants its joke back@@user-us5cl7xu5x

      @Luke_Sandy_High_Ground@Luke_Sandy_High_GroundАй бұрын
    • ​@@user-us5cl7xu5xrarely happens tbh

      @ianmills9266@ianmills9266Ай бұрын
  • The effect use of drones by Ukraine changes the game completely on trench warfare unless the threat can be countered!

    @Taffwildmanofthewoods@TaffwildmanofthewoodsАй бұрын
  • Trench warfare was the reality of Ukraine since 2015. Since 2022 every somewhat military interested person knows about it. In 2024 this video's title asks a question most subscribers can answer without skipping a beat.

    @KrokLP@KrokLPАй бұрын
  • If we have to send troops into trench warfare we’ve already lost and should go home With air superiority this just isn’t necessary and a waste of good men

    @cjjk9142@cjjk9142Ай бұрын
    • Exactly. Air power is the NATO way of war. Or at least the US. Russia wouldn’t have a chance if they fought the US.

      @TheBooban@TheBoobanАй бұрын
    • you will always need men to do the dirty work. We have been used to fighting unconventional insurgencies. fighting a country that has the capacity to counter the air support means this is necessary training.

      @lemonzest191@lemonzest191Ай бұрын
    • If you think you'll always have air superiority, you probably need a reality check because we're not expecting to be conducting counter-insurgency in the jungle or desert. Although it does beg the question whether conventional warfare against countries who you cannot gain air superiority over is even worth the price when you can produce small drones en masse.

      @mckendrick7672@mckendrick767211 сағат бұрын
    • ​@@TheBoobanPerhaps Russia alone might not. But how about Russia and China? I'm sure the last thing China wants is to be surrounded on all sides by the US.

      @mckendrick7672@mckendrick767211 сағат бұрын
    • @@mckendrick7672 with their entirely of nato and a war on the boarder, air superiority is guaranteed

      @cjjk9142@cjjk914210 сағат бұрын
  • Not sure how many LTs would be comfortable with the Instructor telling a group of aspiring SGTs that "as the Platoon Commander ..."

    @whya2ndaccount@whya2ndaccountАй бұрын
    • Understand the job above you in order to facilitate and enable it correctly. Always one round away from a promotion..

      @jaysea4705@jaysea4705Ай бұрын
    • @@jaysea4705Sure but when I was a LT, I had to have one conversation with the Tp Sgt as to whose Troop it was. The issue disappeared after that. Telling CPLs (aspiring SGTs) that its "their" Platoon will not prepare them well for their return to the Battalion.

      @whya2ndaccount@whya2ndaccountАй бұрын
    • @@whya2ndaccount Obviously you were not Infantry Sir (we don't have Tp Sgts). We do things differently. A Pl Sgt is the bloke who takes over if the Pl Com gets hit - so obviously those training to be Pl Sgts get taught to lead a Platoon. In fact even L/Cpls get taught the Pl Sgt job AND the Pl Commander role. Being Inf is dangerous.

      @badgertheskinnycow@badgertheskinnycowАй бұрын
    • @@badgertheskinnycowWe do similar Tp SGT understudies Tp Ldr and runs the Admin side. If the Instructor had said "in your role of supporting the Platoon Commander (i.e. understanding the tactics and plan) then it would have been fine for me.

      @whya2ndaccount@whya2ndaccountАй бұрын
    • ​@@whya2ndaccountGet over oneself !

      @darrensteele7880@darrensteele7880Ай бұрын
  • My father is has just retired from his 30+ years as a Combat Engineer in the Royal Australian Army and whilst he was in the ADF sold off the land that the School of Military Engineering (SME) had been located at for generations and relocated SME to Holsworthy Army Barracks however they decided not to create an in depth trench system opting for a much smaller trench system (more of a bunker) that can only be used to show soldiers the basics on how to build a basic trench system. I asked him if he thought this would cause issues later down the line and he said "No, we no longer use trench systems".......trench warfare has been around for just as long as firearms have and it will continue to be around in wars where it is standing militaries facing off against each other, it will never go out of "fashion" and it should remain within the training off all soldiers world wide. During WW1 most countries established sniper schools and then shut them down after the war with the mentality that snipers will never be needed again only to not have any snipers when WW2 started and they had to re-establish these schools. As a modern society we like to think we have learned from the past but the truth is the governments never learn and continue to repeat the mistakes they always make as is evident with trench warfare. Most modern militaries are under trained for a war against another nation with a standing military due to these mistakes. Whilst I feel modern CQB tactics can carry over to trench warfare trench warfare should always be taught. What the soldier was talking about being taught to the British Armed Forces for trench warfare are fox holes/fire pits that are meant for you to sit in and watch a specific front line and not move from location to location.

    @TheMegaAsh@TheMegaAshАй бұрын
  • When I was in the Marines we always had E-tools. When we got to where we were planning on staying, we automatically started digging in. The deeper you could dig, the better. Although, digging a long trench with an E-tool would cause you to die of suckage long before you died from battle lol

    @mikeingeorgia1@mikeingeorgia127 күн бұрын
  • At least with so few personnel the army won’t have to dig many trenches, every cloud and all that. 😂

    @mitchdaytonam3@mitchdaytonam3Ай бұрын
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