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#AustralianSAS #VietnamWar #MilitaryHistory In March 1967, a US infantry company was pinned down on a blood-soaked ridge, screaming for help. Artillery was useless. Air support was blind. Then, four men appeared from the jungle. They didn't fire a shot or call in airstrikes—they simply moved like smoke. Minutes later, the Americans were saved. The US Captain later wrote a classified report containing three words that would haunt the Pentagon: "They're not human." This documentary reveals the classified reality of why American generals ordered their troops to stay away from the Australian SAS. It wasn't because the Australians were incompetent—it was because they were too effective. While the US Army relied on massive firepower, helicopters, and technology, the Australians—known to the enemy as "Ma Rung" or Phantoms of the Jungle—used silence, patience, and radical fieldcraft to achieve kill ratios as high as 100 to 1. Discover the cultural clash that the Pentagon tried to bury, from the controversial "smell doctrine" that disgusted American officers to the secret equipment hacks that made Australian soldiers invisible to Viet Cong trackers. 🔥 In this video: The "Segregation" Order: Why US Generals refused to let their troops fight alongside Australians. 100 to 1: The classified kill ratios that defied mathematical probability. The Smell Doctrine: Why Australian soldiers stopped bathing weeks before a mission while US troops used deodorant. L1A1 vs. M16: Why the SAS rejected modern American rifles for "outdated" semi-automatics. Ho Chi Minh Sandals: The shocking tactic of wearing enemy footwear to trick trackers. The Battle of Long Tan: How 108 Australians held off 2,500 enemy soldiers using "danger close" artillery. Disclaimer: This video is a historical documentary intended for educational purposes. #AustralianSAS #VietnamWar #MilitaryHistory #SpecialForces #History #MaRung #JungleWarfare #ColdWar #MilitaryTactics