History & Warfare Now
History & Warfare Now
  • Видео 85
  • Просмотров 2 359 423
Impossible Peace: Dancing On A Volcano 1929-1931
As Paris lurched into 1929, it seemed on the surface (to those with deep pockets) that the party would go on forever. However, few saw the impending future claiming that these people were just hiding away from a harsh reality.
Просмотров: 176

Видео

Hitler's Olympics (Full Movie)
Просмотров 2842 часа назад
In 1930, Germany was awarded the privilege of hosting the 1936 Olympic Games. However, that gesture to bring Germany back into the world community became problematic, both domestically and internationally, when the Nazis took over the nation in 1933. What followed from those moral struggles was a tournament originally intended to foster international brotherhood being twisted into a nationalist...
Impossible Peace: Mussolini Is Always Right 1925-1929
Просмотров 2,9 тыс.16 часов назад
Exchange rates and floundering economies were not the only things influencing how and where people lived. The motor-car and other technological advances were transformative, though some clung tight to the past...
Impossible Peace: Just Like the Arabian Nights 1922-1925
Просмотров 42514 дней назад
In effort to keep peace, treaties were proposed to keep the aggressors of World War 1 under-armed. The ratio of military power was drastically in favor of the US and Great Britain. This might have successfully kept peace, if it was only given a chance.
Impossible Peace: The Lap of the Gods 1919-1921
Просмотров 42921 день назад
For four years during WWI, a life was lost every 25 seconds. After the carnage, a new age of prosperity and celebration was expected. However, that it would not be so simple. The economy and society had a lot of recovering to do.
Misty Experiment: The Secret Battle for the Ho Chi Minh Trail
Просмотров 29 тыс.21 день назад
Misty Experiment: The Secret Battle for the Ho Chi Minh Trail
Broadside: Emerging Empires Collide | 4K |
Просмотров 31 тыс.Месяц назад
The Dutch and English fought a series of deadly 17th century wars over which would dominate world trade.
The Taliban Gambit | Helicopter Warfare
Просмотров 20 тыс.Месяц назад
In Afghanistan, the combination of high altitude and dusty conditions make combat flying particularly challenging. When a covert U.S. Navy Seal needs to be rescued from a Taliban ambush, the crew must fly at night using night vision goggles, hugging every contour of the mountain pass. Landing on a tiny mountain ledge puts their flying skills to the test.
Vietnam Fire Fight | Helicopter Warfare
Просмотров 89 тыс.Месяц назад
In the Vietnam War, flying into the jungle produces a different kind of hazard. In a daring rescue mission, a desperate pilot cuts his own landing zone in forty-foot-tall bamboo. The crew comes under heavy fire as they return again and again to pick up more survivors from the bamboo circle.
Hacking Democracy (Full Movie)
Просмотров 324Месяц назад
Thanks to information technology, populist movements have increasingly mobilized public opinion and gained traction for people like the U.S.’s Donald Trump, Brazil’s Jair Bolsonaro, and Hungary’s Viktor Orban. Above all, populism is a set of techniques whose main feature is opportunism: Populists refuse to take sides, either left or right. They claim an exclusive capacity to represent the people.
Tomb of the USSR
Просмотров 150 тыс.Месяц назад
In 1979, the Soviet Union sent armored divisions into Afghanistan. The objective was to restore order in the newly allied communist country. But in just a few weeks, 150,000 Soviet soldiers found themselves caught up in a "counter-guerilla" war. Public opinion in the USSR turned against the occupation. This war played a fundamental role in the rise of perestroika and changed the face of the world.
The End of Red October: The Soviet Biohazard
Просмотров 52 тыс.Месяц назад
At the end of the Cold War, the Russian Navy, bereft of funds, abruptly decommissioned 100 nuclear powered submarines, leaving behind a massive nuclear waste disposal problem. Once the pride of the USSR, the Soviet’s fleet of nuclear submarines now lies rusting in the remote fjords of Murmansk. Now, a concerned team of engineers is tasked with cleaning up this nuclear mess.
The Day When Churchill Chose War
Просмотров 123 тыс.Месяц назад
On May 28, 1940, British officials prepared to deal with Hitler. They even suggested a mediation with Mussolini. Alone against all in his war cabinet, Churchill, using his wits and cleverness, convinced his collaborators to fight. Without him, the English government would have held onto the illusion of preserving its empire, and the course of the Second World War would have been very different.
The Day When Roosevelt Chose War
Просмотров 3,3 тыс.Месяц назад
The Day When Roosevelt Chose War
The Day When Hitler Lost the War
Просмотров 303 тыс.Месяц назад
The Day When Hitler Lost the War
444 Days: The Iran Hostage Crisis (Full Movie)
Просмотров 9 тыс.2 месяца назад
444 Days: The Iran Hostage Crisis (Full Movie)
Israel/Iran/USA: The Long War - Dialogue or War - Episode 2
Просмотров 13 тыс.2 месяца назад
Israel/Iran/USA: The Long War - Dialogue or War - Episode 2
Israel/Iran/USA: The Long War -The Origins of Conflict - Episode 1
Просмотров 4,7 тыс.2 месяца назад
Israel/Iran/USA: The Long War -The Origins of Conflict - Episode 1
Special Ops: In the Heart of Combat | Operation: HK 35
Просмотров 191 тыс.2 месяца назад
Special Ops: In the Heart of Combat | Operation: HK 35
Special Ops: In the Heart of Combat | Somalia: Hostages at Sea
Просмотров 289 тыс.2 месяца назад
Special Ops: In the Heart of Combat | Somalia: Hostages at Sea
Special Ops: In the Heart of Combat | Operation Chimere 31
Просмотров 162 тыс.2 месяца назад
Special Ops: In the Heart of Combat | Operation Chimere 31
Battle of Okinawa: Operation Iceberg
Просмотров 1,2 тыс.2 месяца назад
Battle of Okinawa: Operation Iceberg
New York: City of Riots
Просмотров 3662 месяца назад
New York: City of Riots
RFK: America's Lost President (Full Movie)
Просмотров 1 тыс.2 месяца назад
RFK: America's Lost President (Full Movie)

Комментарии

  • @stormywindmill
    @stormywindmill Час назад

    ........ "Without Spam, the Russian army would have starved "------ Nikita Sergeavich Kruschev.

  • @judithrob1591
    @judithrob1591 3 часа назад

    Sound is bad!

  • @theoderich1168
    @theoderich1168 4 часа назад

    This channel is obviously NOT dedicated to the truth ....

  • @reycesarcarino4653
    @reycesarcarino4653 5 часов назад

    Just Like The Muslims did to the Spanish only fof them Longer When it was Al Andalus

  • @reycesarcarino4653
    @reycesarcarino4653 6 часов назад

    30:16 Majorsamm

  • @jamestiscareno4387
    @jamestiscareno4387 10 часов назад

    Hitler got a little too big for his britches.

  • @mre2547
    @mre2547 11 часов назад

    Hard to imagine how everything would have went if Germany had kept focus on Britain, instead of crossing Russia. I don't think the Royal Air Force could have kept up. The same month Germany invaded Russia, Alan Turing cracked U boat communications.

  • @aldarmureldrik8789
    @aldarmureldrik8789 11 часов назад

    Churchil was one of THE Greatest Nazis in History😊. A Faschist and murder

  • @SiewPoh-gk5pj
    @SiewPoh-gk5pj 13 часов назад

    No body fights two or three countries n stupidly says victories, n Comes up with so many excuses later on,,,,, defender again russia n so on,,,,

  • @robm2362
    @robm2362 15 часов назад

    I can answer whole heartedly that in a convention war - china russia would def win .

  • @mattharvey8712
    @mattharvey8712 17 часов назад

    Bravo.......sea wolves........that's the guys ......cheers

  • @tnekkc
    @tnekkc 19 часов назад

    Everyone knows Napoleon made the same mistake 100 years earlier, but few know King Charles of Sweden made the same mistake 200 years earlier.

  • @johnabbiss43
    @johnabbiss43 21 час назад

    It’s a good documentary and very informative I can’t understand people who criticise the film It’s a great 👍🏻 story of Hope ❤

  • @sleepyjoe7518
    @sleepyjoe7518 День назад

    They were not rebels but Afghan Reaistance.

  • @sleepyjoe7518
    @sleepyjoe7518 День назад

    Soviets built schools, bridges, hospitals and roads for Afghans.

  • @sleepyjoe7518
    @sleepyjoe7518 День назад

    Why DGSE sponsors French Jihadists??

  • @JPSavage84
    @JPSavage84 День назад

    Good to see clips from Afghan: the Soviet Experience! Sergei Gayduk on his BTR is iconic.

  • @JohnMelbourne
    @JohnMelbourne День назад

    21:15 (The Rhineland) had been dematerialised. Surely you meant de-militarised Dematerialised is like a Teleporter does in Star Trek

  • @snakezdewiggle6084
    @snakezdewiggle6084 День назад

    Door gun is wrong. !

  • @JohChaser
    @JohChaser День назад

    NO REAL WAR EXPERIENCE

  • @philiplim6386
    @philiplim6386 День назад

    Looks relatively easy compare to the Philippines special forces training

  • @jrussell4711
    @jrussell4711 День назад

    Fantastic. An amazing documentary.

  • @nathanielcarreon5634
    @nathanielcarreon5634 День назад

    He believe his own BS

  • @melmack2003
    @melmack2003 День назад

    A woman told Sir Winston that if she were his wife, she'd give him poison......Sir Winston replied, Madam, if I were your husband, I'd drink it!

  • @melmack2003
    @melmack2003 День назад

    Sir Winston died in January of 1965; I watched his state funeral on TV at the age of 17. He loved the Queen and she loved Sir Winston.

  • @Williamscomponents-lq6ti
    @Williamscomponents-lq6ti День назад

    Germany would have won the war had the Allies not cheated. We would be living in a far more advanced society today had they not cheated like little weasels. Graduates of the Nazi youth program would have naturally become the leaders in US gov’t along with all other successful countries.

  • @christianwitness
    @christianwitness День назад

    Odd editing at the end. Geaix a. I. 😮

  • @theculturedthug6609
    @theculturedthug6609 2 дня назад

    Firebase Alpha 556.

  • @user-wu1ir5fm7g
    @user-wu1ir5fm7g 2 дня назад

    You can do more with 100 motivated and trained guerrilla hunter/shooters than with 1000 pissed off conscripts who do not want to be involved in a foreign war.

  • @LaPabst
    @LaPabst 2 дня назад

    Im 68 years old... I just missed this S*** by the skin on my teeth. Guess what, im not sorry.

  • @stadinh
    @stadinh 2 дня назад

    A PLA Special Force soldier V an Australian SAS in hand to hand combat, who will win. SAS will win every time.

  • @kirbrit1
    @kirbrit1 2 дня назад

    Old news. We've got a new maniac now

  • @7vince6786
    @7vince6786 2 дня назад

    Army with guns goes to Chad for humanitarian purposes. Please tell us the truth as guns are not symbol of peace. All these operations has hidden agendas.

  • @7vince6786
    @7vince6786 2 дня назад

    So Saudi Arabian citizens bombed trade center but USA and friends went to Iraq. Does this make any sense? This documentary seems to be pushing certain agenda as it is one sided. Only one side is interviewed. How do we justify this?

  • @user-wu1ir5fm7g
    @user-wu1ir5fm7g 2 дня назад

    The fact is the Soviet Union was a repressive totalitarian administrative surveillance police state. Who would want to live under such a regime? Clearly, the Mujahideen did not want to. The tribal people of Afghanistan owned and possessed firearms. That kept them a free people. Unarmed/disarmed people live under the heel of the people who run government because they (government people) have the guns. The Mujahideen kicked the Soviets out of Afghanistan. If they had been an unarmed people they would have lived under the communist yoke. Lessons to be learned by all people who want to be free.

  • @prickly10000
    @prickly10000 2 дня назад

    People act like Germany could not have beat the USSR. Change one thing like England making peace with Germany in 1940 and likely they would have. No Battle of Briton... No bombing of the industry in the west, No Africa. Germany already beat Russia in WW1. Its not impossible, even with everything that was happening they almost did it. Even in 1943, Stalin was desperate to get the USA and the UK to open another front.

  • @dgafbrapman688
    @dgafbrapman688 2 дня назад

    27:15 dude is shooting the ground right in front of him 😂

  • @user-zr2js5vs8b
    @user-zr2js5vs8b 2 дня назад

    Spacetime❤❤❤no war Fair 😮🎉❤

  • @user-zr2js5vs8b
    @user-zr2js5vs8b 2 дня назад

    Ha ha ha ha❤it

  • @jamesonoof5973
    @jamesonoof5973 2 дня назад

    yeah but do they get VA benefits

  • @Mr.MFuckingYTchangedmyname
    @Mr.MFuckingYTchangedmyname 2 дня назад

    That last Vietnamese soldier's fate haunted me for 10 minutes, I can't imagine going 40 years with that on my mind. And how did the Americans not stay in touch from the day their service ended? Anyway, true heroes, great storytelling.

  • @BillHalliwell
    @BillHalliwell 2 дня назад

    G’day H&WN, I’m a retired Australian journalist and author who served in the RAAF during the early 70s. For the past 15+-years I’ve been a military historian. For longer than that my special area of interest has been WW2. I guess, being an Australian it’s almost ‘genetic’ that I should dislike a lot about W. S. Churchill’s life and career. In a way, I did until I learned the first ‘golden’ rule of studying and researching historical topics; that is: never, ever impose one’s ‘modern’ worldview on figures from past generations. Before one even gets to implementing that maxim, it is a given that one’s research be, absolutely, the most accurate one can manage and, professionally, that usually means corroborating known facts from as many sources as is practicable. You, H&WN began this disappointing and slipshod anti-Churchillian diatribe by presenting a ‘self-confessed’ meeting between Churchill and others that was, according to you, never recorded for posterity. That, I have to point out, didn’t stop you from ‘making something up’, just the same. Not a good start and, worse still, not a good look. I stopped watching, for a time, at 10:23 because in that brief period you had racked around nine inaccuracies that I knew of, off the top of my head. As I don’t have the time or inclination to fact check all of your work; I know there’s more ‘fiction’ to come. The glaring, visual one was your depiction of Churchill dictating to a ‘weaselly’ looking male assistant with some unidentifiable junior British Army officer leaning over a desk, apparently doing nothing. Wrong. Mr Churchill did have a couple of senior male, civil servant secretaries but he never made them ‘take dictation’. Winston always had a rota of female typists available on a moment’s notice when at Dowing Street; in his underground command centre or when working on his books and articles at Chartwell, his home in Kent. Yes, he kept non-banker’s-hours and, yes, he was known to work wearing one of three favourite dressing gowns. None of them, I am certain, was “trimmed with lace”, as you asserted. Mostly, he liked to wear his collection of blue ‘boiler suits’ for comfort. Many ‘enemies’ of Churchill, “foreign and domestic’, have made much of his alleged ‘drinking to excess’, you included. This sticks in the minds of would-be historians merely because FDR’s or Truman’s casual drinking habits was not considered newsworthy of even a passing, mention. If it was Martini vs Martini with Winston; Franklin would have drunk the Englishman under the table. He was the personal guest of FDR long enough to know that was the truth. This touches on one of Winston’s strokes of pure political genius. At all costs, WSC had to convince FDR to commit to knocking off Hitler before he dealt with an attack from Japan which we, sort of know now, that many, ‘high-rollers’ in the States were expecting. Back in the days when I too tried to nail WSC for his drinking habits, I found that to be a ‘fool’s errand’. The facts are he didn’t take cognac, as you claimed he did during the day. His tipple of choice between meals were what we would call small half-shots of whisky, continually topped up with increasing amounts of soda water. Winston once bragged he could make ‘two whiskies and soda’ last over three hours, while he was writing or dictating… to a female typist. A lot of these drinking yarns were nothing more than envy, during wartime, when supplies of the good, ‘hard stuff’ was expensive and in short supply. The facts are; in that generation, casual drinking was rife and, generally, increased with one’s social standing. No one was going to tell the Prime Minister of Great Britain he couldn’t have a drink of whisky or whiskey, if he was drinking Jameson’s or some other Irish brand. (The former Irish drink was one of the official tipples of both houses of Parliament at the time and for decades after the war.) It’s true that Clementine often complained of his drinking; but only of the costs; similarly of Winston’s appetite for fresh oysters which had to be delivered to Chartwell, (then over 32 miles by old roads, from Billingsgate Fish Market, London). His liquid tastes, with meals, ran to good, old French reds and Champagnes, both difficult to obtain, at decent prices, considering that ‘teetotal Adolf’ was, at the time, the ‘ruler of most of France’. Then, Winston would have a Cognac or Armagnac; neat. (What, no complaint about his constant cigar smoking…?) After writing the above, I popped back to catch more of your ‘I Hate Winston Fest’. That’s your right, of course. I only urge you to get all your ducks lined up before you do it. For someone making a video about the most examined war in history; you toss facts to the wind or didn’t know them in the first place. You state that the retreat of British and French forces from the beaches of Dunkirk was the worst defeat in the history of the British Army. Wrong. Let’s take a look at the real death tolls during the retreat from Dunkirk: Around 16,000 French soldiers and 1,000 British soldiers Nowhere near that number were lost at the Battle of the Somme. On the 1st of July 1916, British forces had suffered 57,470 casualties, of whom 19,240 were killed. This represented the largest losses suffered by the British Army in a single day. Again, for instance; you messed up one of the most famous quotes from WW2 when you said that PM Chamberlain said, upon returning from Munich, “Peace for all time…,” when, in fact, he said “Peace in our time.” How tiresome. Perhaps you can have a whip around to buy a computer so you can look at official British Army figures or, at least, access Google for basic facts. Of course, like any good Aussie or Kiwi, it will probably take another generation before teachers ‘forget’ about Churchill for the all-out slaughter at Gallipoli. Sending HM’s warships up the Dardanelles was not a great move by the Admiralty. They were genuinely shocked when the huge guns up on the hills were able to pick off a fine selection of vessels. “Oh, I know,” said some four or five striper at the Admiralty to Winston, “Let’s do the biggest amphibious attack with troops onto enemy soil in history. We won’t have a practice run, you, know, somewhere slightly less suicidal. It’ll be alright on the night!” Mind you, I still haven’t seen ‘The Churchill Hanging’ document that pins, in writing, all those deaths and shocking decisions squarely on Winston; but he did have a significant role in the planning and implementation of the Gallipoli campaign. No hiding the fact he was at the top of the pole as First Lord of the Admiralty, so the total blame was his to bare. I have read enough of his private papers to know that the Dardanelles ‘stuff-up’ did weigh heavily on his shoulders for many years after the fact; and contributed to his infamous, chronic 'Black Dog' depressions. I recall watching the old man’s funeral on the telly in ‘65. My folks and their folks hated WSC with a passion, however, most of them did give him a few, begrudging, parting toasts for his part in defeating Hitler. Years later, reading about his life at Uni, I was struck with a thought, that I ‘greenly’ turned in an essay which suggested that ‘Prime Minister Lord Halifax’ might have had all of my European relatives either learning German or becoming just a few of the many more slaves Hitler and his lot would have had worked to death or summarily gassed or shot. Most Australians were keen to even suck up to Doug MacArthur as long as he drove the Japanese away from Australia without causing the slaughter of too many Aussies. You’ll pardon the cynicism; but that was the way they spoke of ‘Dugout Doug’ back then. Australian Prime Minister, John Curtin, a recovering alcoholic, with self-confessed zero military knowledge, kind of ‘lost it’ over the attacks on Pearl Harbor and the Philippines. He begged FDR for, “an American General” and troops to help defend Australia and New Guinea. Our everlasting bad luck was that FDR sent us Doug MacArthur not so much to help us out but more to keep Doug out of America. Not realistic? Well, Doug had said so many times he had absolutely no desire for high political office that FDR knew he would start campaigning as soon as he came home permanently. So, installed in his Melbourne, then Brisbane HQ; Doug MacArthur said to Aussie General (later Field Marshal) Sir Thomas Albert Blamey, of the ‘Diggers’ on the Kokoda Track, “Your troops are getting nowhere because they are not dying in sufficient numbers...”. I kid you not. Our General Blamey was a clever man and, once Chief Commissioner of the Victorian Police, between the wars. He knew how to ‘work a high-ranking problem’. General Blamey needed to know what MacArthur was up to with his “Gang” of notorious senior staff officers. Easy. Blamey had Doug’s HQ’s switchboard ‘manned’ with young, Aussie Army females, in civies. He also had Doug’s phones tapped. To cover this, he got an old Army mate, The Postmaster General, to tap all the phones in Brisbane to cover his ‘internal information gathering’. Then some of ‘Blamey’s switchboard operators’ got some bonus ‘pillow-talk’ intel…as well. And you, inferred Churchill was someone approaching ‘crazy’ for what he wore when not speaking at the Dispatch Box in Parliament. I can’t take your video any more. It’s a shameful waste of all of your viewers and subscribers time who trust they can rely on you for accurate information; not to mention my time. I’ll be steering well clear of your channel from now on. Yours sincerely, Bill Halliwell

  • @marcprins1671
    @marcprins1671 2 дня назад

    Yes, we should not forget history: Germany and Sovjets made an agreement to attack/devide Poland together! Brown and red terror, dictatorship! Indeed do not forget !!!

  • @kilcar
    @kilcar 3 дня назад

    The Chinese Army WAS IN SOUTH VIETNAM! My 199th Light Infantry buddy killed one, CHICOM uniform , papers and all, the CHICOMS were always in Viet !

  • @kilcar
    @kilcar 3 дня назад

    Thanks to SecDef McNamara, thousands of lives lost because of the " Whiz Kid" McNamara, who acted like he was a Soviet Mole, Intent on killing Americans and Aiding the Vietnamese Communists. God's Curse on Robert McNamara

  • @nors77
    @nors77 3 дня назад

    MAGA

  • @user-gi8oc4kl2o
    @user-gi8oc4kl2o 3 дня назад

    there is nothing against the special forces of the philippines.🇵🇭🇵🇭

  • @aleb.6615
    @aleb.6615 3 дня назад

    Tomb of usa yet