No matter how many times you watch about the Thai cave rescue, you'll be touched EVERY TIME. It's so so extraordinary... the fact that all of them came out alive, the fact that the kids and the coach had remained so calm and positive, the fact that the divers got them passed through such narrow passage ways... it's the rescue of the decade. And we will always remember the Thai ex-navy diver who perished...
I can’t get enough of this can’t stop watching and even though I watched it several times i still cried how this rescue was done thanks to all of the people that put their heads together to save this boys and this 2 are amazing along with the rest of the rescuers God bless them all 🙏🙏🙏
He saw it all from his TV and most of the reports from his son. I believe he died not long after the last person out. Since he stated he was glued to his TV, he saw it all.
Both Richard & Craig are eternal role models and heroes for all people everywhere. Sure, there were many in those few weeks in Thailand, but such humility and abilities should be applauded... So why do so many countries spend so much on wars??? when this is where we need to focus, on the positives and great people that achieve the impossible...
The tv was on all day till late. It was so,so nerve wrecking to watch! But that rescue was best ever. I thought I was watching a suspenseful sci-fic movie! And so many heroes and so many wonderful ppl helping to get this right. I think I watched ALL interviews and clips on here AND rewatched few of them later on..:-) And am so glad our two doctors received the recognition from our Nation for this amazing rescue..:-) so, so well deserved and so, so well done!
Don't know if there was too much science and technology. Scuba gear (that's the science and mechanics) maintained and used in the hands of seasoned experts, raw courage, and rigid ethics were the qualities of many individuals who pulled it off. There weren't even any accurate maps on good old fashioned paper. I agree with you on the rest, though.
What a wonderful story. Part of what I love about this rescue is the close bond between all of the teams of 2 rescuers. You can see the trust and affection between Harry and Craig, and it's a wonderful testament to what you can do when you have that type of teamwork and support. And for them to remain so humble is amazing too. I think they definitely deserved to be Australians of the year! (I'm American, but they get my vote.😂👍)
These are the super heros human in our history. I love you guys, may you live happy healthy so we can be alive. We are not afraid when you are present with us.
This video should have 100x the views. I've been reading and watching videos about the rescue, and I think this video, by far, best examines what actually happened.
Yes. But remember it was the Brits who came up with the plan. It was actually Rick Stanton. It was the Brits who actually swam them out. It was Rick who brought in Dr. Harris who did an amazing job. But lets give credit where it's due.
@@tommybofinA lot of credit also to the local governor , who had the humility to listen to advice from Vernon Unsworth and others to call for help from specialists like Rick Stanton , John Volanton and their teams , where many would have been too arrogant to admit that they couldn’t do it themselves ; a truly amazing case of so many people from different countries and different skills working together.
Thank you all heroes from around the world for this extraordinary mission. You will be remember in our heart forever. Sending love and gratitude from Thailand.
Rip to dom the team captain who died in England in 2023 from a head injury and the 2 Thai navy seals Suman gun an and the second navy seal who died from a blood infection contracted in the cave
@@linseyskelly9524I’ve been seeing online talk that he was bullied at that school. I hope not. 😞 Wasn’t it Dom’s birthday, and wasn’t he one of the boys who wanted to press further inside the cave? Can only imagine the survivor’s guilt was intense, especially after the 2nd Thai Navy Seal passed away from an infection he acquired in the cave. The boys were unlucky with the rains starting sooner than they usually did. They were just unlucky. I hope he had help with any struggle with guilt. He was just a child. All over the world, those boys touched our hearts. I hope and pray his family feels the world’s support. It’s devastating. Dom left us still in his teens. Rest In Peace, Dom. 🕊💙 You will be remembered forever.
You both are true Heroes…!!! Heroes doesn’t always comes with capes or well build six packs. With their true grit,determination,experience,expertise they make this rescue possible. 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Thank you so much and Congratulations to all the rescue intervenants !!! 👏🏼 😮 😢🙏🏼 ✓ 🏥🩺 ℹ️ : 👨🏼⚕+👨🏻⚕ ➛ Special Thanks to Dr Craig Chalen and his Friend Dr Harry Richard Harris for this Incredible but Beautiful Job that leads the boys alive... 👥 ✓ ☞ Greetings from France... 🤗 🗼🇫🇷 ✓ 👌🏼 🆒 🤝🙏🏼 ✓ 💦🤿🌊 ☤⚕️☤ ⚕️ ⛑️ 👏🏼 ✓
Thank you so very much for this. So many recounts are the US 'saving the day', not the international effort it was...and the huge role Australia played.
If was the British particularly Rick Stanton to masterminded the rescue. It was Rick who came up with the idea of sidation and Rick who brought in Dr. Harris. Credit where it's due.
100% correct. Rick Stanton was the mastermind behind the rescue. He picked the orher divers who took part. This program makes it look like the Aussies were the leaders of this rescue. They weren't. The Brits were. Dr. Harris of course played a huge part. So did his mate. But Rick and his mate John were the real leaders of this rescue.
@@tommybofin I think without Aussie mates would have Brit Divers and Thai navy seal just bought possible dead body, so both of this cool mate is make different too (I was there on that to help feeds those Divers)
They were mentioned and you weren't listening. It's 60 minutes Australia and interviewing Australians and their roles in the whole thing. They are all deserving of recognition and I know for a fact that interviews the British divers have done, have mentioned some people but they are the focus of the whole interview. Why because they are there and the others are not? Can't get someone else's facts if they aren't there. So stop the BS and move on.
I once swam up a small river into a cave in Laos....razor sharp walls, no light...it went about a mile...with a torch I saw a monk sitting on a cliff back in there in meditation...I was shocked beyond belief as he had nothing but his robes...no light with him at all...
To everyone saying that others saved the kids. Remember this is an Australian TV Show and they are interviewing Australians and the guys who won Australian of the Year. It's a not an American or English TV Show etc. They stated that 9,999 others saved the kids etc too. Give credit and bravery where its due! Gees.
What an absolute imbecile story about the human heart. The only thing that mattered was getting those kids out safely !! It didn’t matter what race or religion the children were or the heroes who risked their own lives to save theirs . Just an amazing rescue and a restoration of faith in humanity
its too bad Craig wasn't involved in the movie and documentary as much as the other UK team, since the whole rescue couldn't of happened without Richard Harris, his real buddy was Craig, and it seems these 2 go together as a package. Would've like to see Craig at least get mentioned in the movie!
You could say that about any volunteer in the rescue. Was every Thai Navy SEAL included in the movie? They stayed in the cave with the boys and coach and they were the last out of the cave. Don't take it so personally.
@@gregorythompson5826 no you couldn’t cuz dive buddies are people you trust with your lives. If your a diver you would know that. Craig and Harry go together. If Craig didn’t exist or join the rescue with Harry who knows if it would’ve worked. John and Rick were buddies. You don’t count one and not the other.
It was the evening of 2 July 2018 when British divers Rick Stanton and John Volanthen emerged from the murky, dank monsoon rainwater that had flooded Thailand's Tham Luang Nang Non cave system, immediately realising they had found what they were looking for ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-vYTqmZe2III.html God bless ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-60MzA4n11dw.html Total respect from a BSAC IANTD Diver
I wish to study the brains of scuba divers. I'm curious about what makes them take such risks. I have read that psychopaths seek thrilling activities or perform heroic stunts and accidentally save the day too. Because they live one day at a time.
they pull up to an abandoned coal mine in a lake and I think “don’t go in that water” and then they laugh at the posted sign that says “don’t go in this water” and they go in the water?.. I was thinking I might like to try this till then.
I don’t think they ever threatened that. It was just an assumption of that’s what would probably happen. Or at least that’s how I understood it. But I could be wrong.
On the interviews they had they also have flashlights and food to brought inside also a mobile phone .They go further because they want to see the beauty of the cave
He mentioned that the coach helped them preserve their batteries. They were exploring the cave, idk if you've been in a cave, but there is 0 visibility. They came in with flashligts.