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10 MOST ELITE SPECIAL FORCES IN THE WORLD - YouTube
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Elite special forces are some of the best trained and most formidable units a country can boast.
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Whether emerging from the water to silently take out guards
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or storming a plane to rescue the hostages and eliminate the hostage takers,
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special forces take on some of the hardest missions and live some of the most secret lives in the military world.
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These troops are the ones that states look to in order to get the job done.
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Let's get started.
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Black Storks, Pakistan.
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The Special Service Group (SSG) is better known in the country as the Black Storks because of the commandos unique headgear.
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Their training reportedly includes a 36-mile march in 12 hours and a 5-mile run in 50 minutes in full gear.
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Only about 5% of recruits make it through to the Pakistan SSG due to the tough nature of this nine-month training course
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which also includes extensive hand-to-hand combat and an Airborne School.
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The Black Storks are trained for a variety of environments including mountain, desert, jungle and underwater.
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During the early Cold War, they trained and served alongside US Special Forces
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and more recently, the Storks have focused on local anti-terrorist operations, counterinsurgency and intelligence collection.
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In October 2009, the commandos stormed an office building and rescued 39 people
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taken hostage by suspected Taliban militants after an attack on the Army's headquarters.
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JTF2, Canada.
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JTF2 stands for Joint Task Force 2 and it's the jewel in the crown of Canada's special forces.
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They deployed to Vancouver in 2010, ready to intervene if terrorists took aim at the Winter Olympics.
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This group is trained to handle chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear threats
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against the worst case scenario, when a terrorist strike proves more than local police forces can handle.
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It's a unit that can be deployed against a wide spectrum of issues or crisises and it can be very low signature.
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Created in 1993, JTF2 expanded to several hundred members following the 9/11 terrorist attacks
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and has the most confirmed kills of terrorists in the world, having killed over a hundred top ranked Al-Qaeda members.
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Almost all of its operations are shrouded in secrecy and in some cases were even unknown to the Canadian government.
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Alpha Group, Russia.
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Now what about spetsnaz?
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Well, to keep it simple, spetsnaz is a general term for all Russian special forces.
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Within the Russian special forces, Alpha Group is as bad as they come.
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The KGB created this elite group in 1974
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and it is believed that it operates under the directive of the top leadership in Russia
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which is why most of its operations are classified.
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This force came to fame during the invasion of Afghanistan,
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during which members of alpha stormed the presidential palace in Kabul killing everybody in the building in the blink of an eye.
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In 1985, a group from this unit was dispatched to Peru to try and rescue four Soviet diplomats.
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When the diplomats were killed, alpha group allegedly hunted down relatives of the hostage takers and returned them to their families in much smaller pieces,
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to send a message to would-be terrorists.
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It apparently worked, for over 20 years.
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Sayeret Matkal, Israel.
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This Israeli special forces is focused in intelligence gathering and it often operates deep behind enemy lines.
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In 2003, Israeli taxi driver Eliyahu Gurel was kidnapped after transporting four Palestinians to Jerusalem in his cab.
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But the Sayeret Matkal unit located and rescued him from a three-foot pit in an abandoned Factory in a suburb of Ramallah.
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The most famous of their large-scale operations is operation Thunderbolt,
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which came to be after several terrorists had taken hostages on board of an airline which was flown to Uganda.
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Many hostages were released, but over a hundred hostages were kept in the airport terminal building.
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An assault force of Sayeret Matkal assaulted the position killing the terrorists and freeing all of the hostages.
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GIGN, France.
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France's elite counterterrorism teams are some of the finest in the world
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and have proven their abilities and bravery
over decades of dangerous operations.
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But unlike many anti-terrorist units, GIGN is also used in arrests of dangerous criminals, countering barricade suspects, wailing prison riots, VIP protection
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and other high-risk police operations within France or former colonies.
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Since its founding the GIGN has seen consistent action.
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Its members are considered absolute masters of hostage rescue and intervention
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especially in high-density environments like buses, ships, trains and airlines.
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Their faces are not allowed to be photographed fully exposed
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therefore they're often seen wearing tactical ski masks when operating in public.
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GIGN is known for innovation and technology applications and tactical methods.
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Their most famous operation is their assault on flight 8969
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which was an Air France flight that was hijacked on December 24th 1994 by the armed Islamic group in Algeria
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where the terrorists murdered three passengers with the intention to blow up the plane over the Eiffel Tower in Paris.
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When the aircraft reached Marseille, the GIGN stormed the plane and killed all four hijackers.
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The bravery of its members comes from their extreme training course.
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In fact the training is so extreme that the GIGN has lost more men during training than during their 1000+ operations.
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GSG9, Germany.
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The GSG9 was formed after the failure of the German police to rescue eleven athletes kidnapped by a group of
terrorists during the Munich Olympics.
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Five of the athletes, five of the terrorists and one police officer were killed during the rescue attempt.
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In their first major mission, they took a group of four terrorists who had hijacked a Lufthansa flight in Somalia,
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three of the terrorists were killed and the fourth captured during the rescue, but none of the 86 hostages were killed.
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Between 1972 and 2003, the GSG9 had successfully completed over 1500 missions
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and yet only discharged a weapon five times, two of which were to shoot the attacking dogs of people they were trying to arrest.
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An estimated 300 to 400 people now work
within the GSG9 but the exact figure is not known.
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Its work today concentrates on counterterrorism, hostage situations and disarming bombs.
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JW Grom, Poland.
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The Grom is the leader in Poland's anti-terrorism efforts.
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It was named after the Silent Unseen, which was Poland's elite World War II special operations unit.
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The Grom began its operations in 1990 and it mostly deployed in unconventional warfare roles,
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as they have special training in operational manoeuvring response.
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Since the terrorist attacks of 2001, the Grom has been deployed alongside US special operation forces in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere.
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During this time they have developed a close working relationship with the US Navy SEALs
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and have a well-earned reputation of being one of the fiercest and most competent special forces on the planet.
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Their training includes a variety of disciplines.
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All of the soldiers undergo the same specialized training in anti-terrorism and special operations
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aswell as frogman, sniping and parachuting.
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In four-men teams, each soldier must be
prepared to assume the respective responsibilities of his colleagues, should it become necessary.
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Approximately 75% of Grom personnel are trained as medics or paramedics and can speak multiple languages.
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In addition, each group is supported by several professional physicians.
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Navy SEAL Team 6, USA.
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You knew these guys were gonna have to show up some time, didn't you?
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The SEALs are an American special forces group created in 1962, which have achieved near-mythical status.
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This is in part thanks to Operation Neptune Spear, the mission in which SEALs killed Osama Bin Laden, the leader of Al-Qaeda in 2011.
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One interesting fact about this mission is that the aircrafts used in the raid were from Area 51.
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In fact specially modified helicopters carried Red Squadron of SEAL Team 6 to Pakistan for the raid on Osama Bin Laden's compound.
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The Black Hawks were fitted with top-secret radar spoofing technology, allowing US forces to slip across the border unnoticed.
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These stealth aircrafts were developed and tested at the infamous Area 51 near Groom Lake, Nevada.
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SEALs will usually penetrate behind enemy lines and finish their mission before the enemy realizes that they're there.
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One quality that makes them so effective on land, air or even at sea.
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In fact the word SEAL stands for SEa, Air and Land
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meaning that these soldiers can fight any form of threat, anywhere.
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The physical and mental strength required to make it in this force is ridiculously high.
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Training takes over a year and most applicants can't even get past the physical qualification test,
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which involves a lot of swimming, push-ups, sit-ups and running all accomplished in a very strict time limit.
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Get past that and you enter general training, pass that and you move on to SEAL qualification training
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which then opens the door to specialized training.
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all of this ensures the SEAL members are physically and mentally as tough as nails
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and capable of undertaking the most difficult operations in the world, wherever that may be.
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SAS, UK.
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No other elite special force in Europe can claim to be better than the SAS.
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The British Special Air Service, known commonly as the SAS, was created in 1941
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as a force which could operate behind German and Italian lines and support resistance movements against occupation forces.
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The training that a recruit has to go through in order to become part of the SAS is extremely difficult,
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since in addition to the 40-mile march, the two-mile swim and the push-ups, and pull-ups,
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you have to survive in the jungle to learn survival and navigational skills, after which you endure survival practice.
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The final test is a 36-hour interrogation session meant to break the candidates will.
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Not convinced this is better than the SEALs?
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It may help you to know that the SAS is also trained by MI5 and MI6 security and intelligence services, in order to undertake counter espionage operations.
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It's like having a SEAL and James Bond
all rolled into one.
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Their insignia bears the phrase "who dares wins".
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Number one: Delta Force, USA.
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Delta Force is a unit unto itself, composed of members from all branches of the military.
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The force is armed with cutting-edge weaponry and its operations remain highly guarded secrets
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but you can bet they're in the vanguard of any American led operation.
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Its members are not called soldiers, but operators and are said to shun the traditional philosophies of military life.
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They wear civilian clothes and they work for whomever needs them: for the army, the FBI and the CIA.
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It must be said however, that neither the United States government nor the military officially acknowledges the existence of Delta Force.
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It's only in recent years that vague references by the government to the group's existence has been allowed to go uncensored.
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Since its inception in 1977, stories of the Delta Force's exploits and missions have leaked out little by little, eventually forming a brief sketch of the unit.
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However the group has been criticized for undertaking missions that are on the fringe of regular laws governing the military.
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This causes some to worry that Delta Force has more power and less accountability than any military organization in a free democracy should.
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Delta Force is funded out of secret government accounts, away from the public eye
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and is believed to answer only to the president,
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making it one of the most, if not the most, elite special unit in the world.
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Why one of the most when we ranked it as number one you might ask,
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well, after all, the most elite special forces are the ones that are so secretive that no one knows about their existence.
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