Nikita Khrushchev: The Red Tsar - Full Documentary

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  • @DGill48
    @DGill48 Год назад +915

    Sergei Khrushchev came to Woodstock Academy in Connecticut as a speaker while I was a teacher there, in the early 80's. He spoke for an hour and our students listened attentively. Towards the end, someone said "why didn't your Dad try to do something about Stalin?"......his face turned angry, he shouted out: "WHO SAID THAT ?" there was total silence for several seconds......then he laughed....and said: "that's why"

    • @unamisthekgb
      @unamisthekgb Год назад +32

      One of my relatives in the US was able to see that. But I forgot how they are called, all I know is they are dead by now after a shootout

    • @laurenjeangreenbean6301
      @laurenjeangreenbean6301 Год назад +33

      Absolutely beautiful. I will remember that. thanks for sharing!

    • @irmantaspakinkis3231
      @irmantaspakinkis3231 Год назад +2

      @@laurenjeangreenbean6301 😆😘🥰

    • @spheremechanicaldmartini224
      @spheremechanicaldmartini224 Год назад +12

      Exactly …that’s the way the world works in Soviet Union…

    • @KeithWilliamMacHendry
      @KeithWilliamMacHendry Год назад +2

      Brilliant!! 😁👍🏻✊🏻

  • @ebiyeyanga8003
    @ebiyeyanga8003 2 года назад +413

    While kruschev was speaking,a heckler shouted that he was with Stalin and did not oppose him.
    Kruschev asked who said that and the hall went quiet.He then proceeded to answer "now you know why I never challenged him".

    • @ivanzamudio5333
      @ivanzamudio5333 2 года назад

      Not only did he not opposed him he helped and took opportunities to better his career. F him and his family. At least they killed their own Russians they think they are the best bunch of slaves

    • @MrWhy6
      @MrWhy6 2 года назад +74

      Stalin's grip of fear has always amazed me. Not even Hitler had that much fear over his inner circle.

    • @sebastiang7394
      @sebastiang7394 2 года назад +97

      Hitler while off course being one of the biggest monsters in history seems to have been generally quite nice to the people around him. Many of his underlings seemed to have really loved him. That’s totally different from Stalin who was hated and feared by everybody around him. Except for the Röhm-Putsch in the beginning the Nazis also usually didn’t went after their own. Generals and politicians that got in an argument with Hitler were usually simply let go and not shot like under Stalin. Very different styles of “leadership“ and reigns of terror.

    • @ebiyeyanga8003
      @ebiyeyanga8003 2 года назад +8

      @@sebastiang7394 Thanks brother.You just said it all.

    • @maxoconnor5087
      @maxoconnor5087 2 года назад +52

      @@sebastiang7394 Stalin was arguably worse than Hitler

  • @JOHN-ZOV
    @JOHN-ZOV 2 года назад +812

    One thing this documentary failed to mention was that the United States stationed nuclear missiles in Turkey, and as a result of that the Russians stationed their missiles in Cuba, Khrushchev didn't just come up with a great plan to start a nuclear missiles crisis in Cuba. He was looking for a opportunity to get even with the US for placing nukes in Turkey. So when Fidel Castro asked Khrushchev for help that's when Khrushchev saw opportunity to get even with the US,and have the Nukes removed from Turkey.
    Khrushchev was successful in that regard.

    • @F_Bardamu
      @F_Bardamu 2 года назад +24

      Yeah go Nikita!

    • @Anthony-hu3rj
      @Anthony-hu3rj 2 года назад +27

      @@F_Bardamu It's not a soccer match.

    • @ID-pw8zb
      @ID-pw8zb 2 года назад +32

      @@Anthony-hu3rj it’s not called soccer.

    • @s.marcus3669
      @s.marcus3669 2 года назад +46

      You are correct, this is a very oft-overlooked tidbit of fact in the whole Cold War/Cuban Missile Crisis story!

    • @xzqzq
      @xzqzq 2 года назад

      Reportedly, early in his Administration, JFK ordered the missiles removed from Turkey, but it was not done....

  • @djengoelv
    @djengoelv 2 года назад +297

    Sergei, his son, is a formidable story teller. He chooses the words carefully and also in a funny manner, making this documentary even more interesting,

    • @loganzamanwalker8763
      @loganzamanwalker8763 2 года назад +5

      Soviet blood m8!

    • @myassizitchy
      @myassizitchy 2 года назад

      Yeah he's on many many documentaries even he knows how. Bad Russia sucks. Now and then

    • @Max-kw2hp
      @Max-kw2hp 2 года назад +3

      Ze legend!

    • @irmantaspakinkis3231
      @irmantaspakinkis3231 Год назад

      @@loganzamanwalker8763 -What did You wanted to say for this?!!🙃 What the sun of Nikita is homosovieticus, was'nt You?!!😊

    • @chobblegobbler2536
      @chobblegobbler2536 Год назад +1

      Ya totally lead by facts 😂😂😂

  • @welwynmanager323
    @welwynmanager323 5 месяцев назад +78

    - Gave Russians housing
    - Exposed Stalin
    - Removed Beria
    - Visited USA to establish contact
    - Resolved the Cuba crisis
    - He survived Stalin
    I think he did well

    • @thomashenebry8269
      @thomashenebry8269 3 месяца назад

      That's hilarious. He caused the Cuban Missle Crisis. He intended Crazy Casto, to incinerate 1/3 of the United States. But Kennedy caught him out and made Kruschev remove the missiles with his tail between his legs. He resolved nothing.

    • @gutsfinky
      @gutsfinky 3 месяца назад +6

      Other than the fact that he personally controlled the subjugation of the Poles in WWII I would agree with you. He definitely broke the mold in his later years. Maybe he'd seen too much by then.

    • @Chad-Tyrone-Pookey
      @Chad-Tyrone-Pookey 3 месяца назад +9

      Removing Beria is probably the most important thing. USSR under Lavrenty would’ve been as bad or worse than under Stalin.

    • @gutsfinky
      @gutsfinky 3 месяца назад +7

      @@Chad-Tyrone-Pookey for sure. Lavrenty Beria was an animal.

    • @Chad-Tyrone-Pookey
      @Chad-Tyrone-Pookey 3 месяца назад

      @@gutsfinky That’s why his comrades turned on him I think. Same in prison; pedophiles are getting the royal treatment.

  • @alexodonnell6191
    @alexodonnell6191 2 года назад +76

    6 minutes in and I am absorbed...and I have studied this area EXTENSIvELY ... brilliant, thank you from the bottom of my heart..

    • @timkbirchico8542
      @timkbirchico8542 2 года назад +7

      You need to read about the US led NATO had strategic nuclear weapons in Turkey before the Cuban missile crisis. This vid is subtle propaganda for those who are not educated about these issues.

    • @arturarturs5529
      @arturarturs5529 5 месяцев назад

      @@timkbirchico8542 was just away to point this out until I come across this comment.

    • @AceofDlamonds
      @AceofDlamonds 2 месяца назад

      @@timkbirchico8542
      it's not propaganda. They are using real historians too.

  • @StephiSensei26
    @StephiSensei26 2 года назад +204

    Documentaries like this are of such immeasurable value, because for too long we have been lead to think of our counterparts and adversaries as really terrible people. No one and no one system is perfect.
    Permit me to paraphrase: Winston Churchill: "Democracy is probably the worst system there is, but it's the best we have now".

    • @jarretc110
      @jarretc110 2 года назад +6

      except all this information is available elsewhere and in greater detail...

    • @toriidawdy8456
      @toriidawdy8456 2 года назад +7

      Aspects of daily like I remember in DDR were civic and touching . Watching an old frau get a sketchy citizen of season award was a sense of community I have never had here

    • @toriidawdy8456
      @toriidawdy8456 2 года назад +5

      "Let's go help collect the harvest" friendly wholesome comrades , mocha fix , and wonderful sandwichs oh.... No school on that day . It wasn't sleazy but somehow they paired up with a fetching field worker , I needed the state in those concerns

    • @ClaytonBigsby89
      @ClaytonBigsby89 2 года назад

      I think the people we've labeled monsters like Stalin and Hitler truly believed they were acting in a noble manner which would ultimately serve to benefit people. This doesn't vindicate them completely but it gets forgotten. On the other hand, the ideologies they implemented were void of any true moral substance. It should serve to remind us about the dangers of promoting a Godless society.

    • @Ghostshadows306
      @Ghostshadows306 2 года назад +6

      @Richter R. That’s exactly right and “terrible” is the biggest understatement of all time history to describe Stalin and the policies of that regime at that time.

  • @adamwatson6916
    @adamwatson6916 2 года назад +268

    Krushev did some great things for the Soviet Union . One of the biggest was improving housing for families . Before Krushev many families lived in communal housing often in just one room . He gave families the privacy of their own living space

    • @jjr1728
      @jjr1728 2 года назад +49

      He was a far better man than Stalin, that's for sure. Educated or not: he could see how normal Russians were living and had a dream that their conditions would be better than before. He did well, considering being torn between the old regime and his newer direction whilst keeping his usurpers and competition at bay so they don't get rid of him. He had to appeal to old and new.

    • @krishnachaitanya1220
      @krishnachaitanya1220 2 года назад +6

      @@GoalSoccer2 do you know which country have the highest rate of per capita incarcination .. TIA

    • @snackoman1577
      @snackoman1577 2 года назад +2

      @@GoalSoccer2 rent free

    • @krishnachaitanya1220
      @krishnachaitanya1220 2 года назад

      @@snackoman1577 😁😁😁

    • @evankulak5468
      @evankulak5468 2 года назад +14

      He started to move the USSR away from the horrors of communism.

  • @vectorfox4782
    @vectorfox4782 2 года назад +66

    History often forgets great leaders who inspired generations of peace through the mundane ambiguity of everyday life, but it is those very leaders that have let life continue to thrive. Thank you Mr. Khrushchev, it is because of you I am proud to be a Russian.

    • @olliefoxx7165
      @olliefoxx7165 2 года назад +11

      I can see why Khrushchev would be regarded well, especially after Stalin's reign.

    • @frankpaya690
      @frankpaya690 2 года назад +11

      @@olliefoxx7165 In Vladimir Putin there's a Stalin wannabe.

    • @exstazius
      @exstazius 2 года назад

      Still a criminal for estern europe.

    • @haroldcampbell3337
      @haroldcampbell3337 2 года назад +3

      Hilarious

    • @chesterswortham5197
      @chesterswortham5197 2 года назад +3

      Lol

  • @johnbarnett6924
    @johnbarnett6924 Год назад +14

    Men who influenced great change, since 1945,the year of My Birth,has become my latest passion,IN THEIR OWN WORDS,OR MOST RELIABLE SOURCES, Thanks for this post, John❤

  • @JayeEllis
    @JayeEllis 2 года назад +93

    The guy who compared him to the court jester forgot one key thing about court jesters - they were the ONLY one allowed to mock or dissent from the king.

    • @bosmerfromcanada3878
      @bosmerfromcanada3878 2 года назад +8

      How true...and still keep their tongue...or their head afterwards.

    • @Hothouse_flowers
      @Hothouse_flowers 2 года назад +6

      Lol 😆 🤣 and Stalin did just that!

    • @oleriis-vestergaard6844
      @oleriis-vestergaard6844 Год назад

      All in all a group of psycopats the lot of them - and the worst killer of the all was the Georgian terrorist going under the name of Stalin , Djugasvilly was his real name , killed own family and son captured 1943 at minsk and he avoided exchange of prisoners thereby signing his death warrant - generally death was a steady partner around Stalin and would think that he was ignorant and did not care of any humans .

  • @clawsoon
    @clawsoon 2 года назад +304

    What Khrushchev accomplished with the Cuban missile crisis was getting American missiles out of Turkey.

    • @Remuf
      @Remuf 2 года назад +46

      True, but sadly not mentioned very often.

    • @chrisbrown8640
      @chrisbrown8640 2 года назад +9

      The Jupiter Missiles were faulty and wouldn't have worked anyway....😄

    • @toriidawdy8456
      @toriidawdy8456 2 года назад +3

      Preventing a hugh calamity to this thing we call humanity is another. Kennedy had no idea about the tactical nukes castro had , or his desire to use them.

    • @ryanthompson2893
      @ryanthompson2893 2 года назад +6

      @@chrisbrown8640 I know an old man who was an engineer on the Jupiter program. He HATES those things

    • @thornil2231
      @thornil2231 2 года назад +20

      Now we want to put them in Ukraine...

  • @giannb5145
    @giannb5145 2 года назад +111

    I think he was very creative and bold on foreign policy (abandoning rigid communist dogma, gaining allies among Arab states such as Egypt, Algeria, Iraq and Syria, making India and Yugoslavia essentially partners (both remained non-aligned, but by the 1960s both were closer to USSR than the West), and promoting trade and better relations with a range of countries that were politically anti-Soviet but were willing to collaborate on some issues (from De Gaulle's France to the Shah's Iran).

    • @ralphsanchico2452
      @ralphsanchico2452 2 года назад +6

      You can do business with your enemies, just make sure, your resources are more plentiful and more valuable than his!

    • @tylerclayton6081
      @tylerclayton6081 2 года назад +6

      He lost China though, which was the best ally the USSR ever had

    • @giannb5145
      @giannb5145 2 года назад +20

      @@tylerclayton6081 Yes, but I think it was mostly due to Mao's decision to be independent, rather than anything Khrushchev could have done. Khrushchev actually increased economic and technical aid to China during the 1950s, but Mao wanted to drag him to a nuclear confrontation with the Americans over Taiwan. Also, Khrushchev had a lot of faith in leaders like Nehru and Nasser who were not Marxists, but were willing to ally with the USSR, while Mao believed in backing violent revolution and guerrilla struggles.

    • @Ghostshadows306
      @Ghostshadows306 2 года назад +8

      Well whatever you say Kruchev did it amounted to nothing because his fundamental philosophy was doomed from from the beginning. Namely Communism which may be sustainable for China, Vietnam, Cuba and North Korea, but wasn’t for the former USSR and the individual countries that were part of it. Kruchev was a true believer that Communism was a better system than Democracy, Capitalism or any other and he was categorically proven to be dead wrong. The USSR collapsed under communism and in some ways has never recovered from the thinking of Stalin, Kruchev and even Brezhnev. To portray Kruchev in some way that suggests he did anything significant that resulted in a better life for the people he governed over other than not being Stalin, is a distortion of the truth that is well documented. Isn’t that what the leader of a country is supposed to do? Provide a better life for the people who are citizens of it?

    • @ManteIIo
      @ManteIIo Год назад

      Well, well... if you were more educated than biased, you'd know it didn't collapse on it's own, but rather everything was being done by the west to bring it to an end.

  • @ohioskane363
    @ohioskane363 2 года назад +200

    Owning up to mistakes and wrongs that he committed and apologizing for them is a laudable quality. Imagine any of our (U.S.) Presidents doing that!!

    • @Kathakathan11
      @Kathakathan11 2 года назад

      Won’t happen ever, the true dynasts are in America, they will defend their legacy at any cost

    • @tylerclayton6081
      @tylerclayton6081 2 года назад +2

      @@ohioskane363 ​ This documentary never mentioned how he put everyone in little Khrushchyovka’s and called it a great deed. Search them up, most Russians still live in these sh*t hole Khrushchyovka’s. Meanwhile everyone in the US owned a house, two cars and a washing machine and didn’t have to wait in bread lines, all rare luxuries in the great USSR.

    • @tylerclayton6081
      @tylerclayton6081 2 года назад

      @@ohioskane363 And The US doesn’t make mistakes, you don’t become the richest, most influential, and most powerful empire in History by making mistakes.
      Show some Patriotism or you can get out of this great country feller, move to Russia or China, get a taste of reality in those hellholes

    • @DeltaStar777
      @DeltaStar777 2 года назад

      Please don’t compare the totalitarian Soviet with the democratic US with freedom never allowed in Soviet union

    • @Ghostshadows306
      @Ghostshadows306 2 года назад +1

      The wrongs of Kruchev’s predecessor he served under may be the worst in human history so owning some of the “mistakes” in condemning millions of their own people to death, can’t even be compared to any American President. You being older like myself should know that. You gave your opinion, I gave mine. No hard feelings, just realistic.

  • @armwrestling-like-the-vide6030
    @armwrestling-like-the-vide6030 2 года назад +68

    50:20 "No, No; I don't know what to call people who take the side of a man who murdered his own people. Because it would mean encouraging those who want to repeat that. And it is possible if we do not remain vigilant". ~ Nikita Khrushchev

    • @davidlafleche1142
      @davidlafleche1142 2 года назад +8

      How do we know Khrushchev DIDN'T do that?

    • @martinmarcinkevic3893
      @martinmarcinkevic3893 2 года назад +4

      I love how Western people perceive this guy as an outstanding leader, but real Russians don't think like that at all, he worked against his county...

    • @giannivandecasteele5267
      @giannivandecasteele5267 2 года назад +5

      @@martinmarcinkevic3893 could you please explain.

    • @exstazius
      @exstazius 2 года назад

      @@giannivandecasteele5267 he is a criminal for the whole eastern europe and Hungary in particular. Staljin or Krushchev no difference. Dictators

    • @LathropLdST
      @LathropLdST 2 года назад +3

      @@martinmarcinkevic3893 in a sense, so did Gorbachev and Yeltsin, right?

  • @tobyihli9470
    @tobyihli9470 2 года назад +199

    “Putting an end to mass murder makes him a great leader,”. Agreed

    • @anggaramadaalfatih4764
      @anggaramadaalfatih4764 2 года назад +1

      tapi tunduk sama persiden saya berasal dari indonesia sukarno di printah kan untuk mencari makam imam bukhori klau di temu kan baru berkunjung ke uni sofyet

    • @anggaramadaalfatih4764
      @anggaramadaalfatih4764 2 года назад +1

      kerna persiden saya negara indonesia sama sama tidak menyukai blok barat/nato /pbb,tidak menyukai negara amerika .runtuh nya negara unisofyet oleh amerika dgn propoganda seperti negara indonesia dgn bersama nya jatuh dan terpecah merasa ketakutan nya negara amerika oleh idiologi komunis berkuasa atas menang nya perang dgn nazi .di situlah memain kan propoganda amerika untuk menjadi polis dunia dgn ada nya negara adidaya .amerika sangt takut ada nya kerja sama mencipta kan senjata nuklir di negara indonesia untuk menghancurkan amerika kerna indonesia tidak menyukai negara amerika

    • @jhonfamo8412
      @jhonfamo8412 2 года назад +1

      @@anggaramadaalfatih4764 peace on 🌎

    • @jhonfamo8412
      @jhonfamo8412 2 года назад +2

      All politicians fail in the end. Or they die in office

    • @threatassessment606
      @threatassessment606 2 года назад

      @@jhonfamo8412 FDR

  • @anapezo3330
    @anapezo3330 Год назад +8

    Most excellent documentary about Nikita Khrushchev !!! Congratulations !!! Thank you so much for this valuable information !!!

  • @deadpool981
    @deadpool981 2 года назад +102

    I like how this just skips over how we put nukes in Turkey first pointed at russia before the Cuban missile crisis. And then how america also secretly agreed to remove those missiles

    • @haroldcampbell3337
      @haroldcampbell3337 2 года назад +6

      I like all the Marxist apologists here

    • @deadpool981
      @deadpool981 2 года назад +18

      @@haroldcampbell3337 Marxism is simply a critique of the economic system capitalism. Talking about how the US escalated us to the point of almost global nuclear annihilation with their foreign policy has zero to do with being a Marxist apologist. Facts don’t care about your feelings

    • @saltruis2432
      @saltruis2432 2 года назад +2

      @@deadpool981 zzzzzzzz

    • @deadpool981
      @deadpool981 2 года назад +4

      @@saltruis2432 cry about it

    • @tylerclayton6081
      @tylerclayton6081 2 года назад

      @@deadpool981 Putting Missiles in Cuba is far more escalatory, it almost resulted in direct military conflict between the USSR and the US with nuclear armed ships and Submarines staring right at one another. Putting missiles in Turkey didn’t do that. And those missiles in Turkey were old and obsolete, most wouldn’t work anyways.
      Russia is the one that escalates not the US. Putin hides behind nukes even now and makes nuclear threats pretty regularly.
      If you’re going to criticize the US from a nonsensical point of view than you get off our social media and GTFO of the western world. Go live in Russia or China, maybe then you’ll get a dose of reality about those authoritarian hellholes

  • @malamuteaerospace6333
    @malamuteaerospace6333 2 года назад +53

    And he was a great Soviet. Fought 2 world wars. Got rid of Stalinism. He's a great moral man who thought of his peoples suffering and did something about it.
    Peace my friend.

    • @toriidawdy8456
      @toriidawdy8456 2 года назад +4

      Right don't forgot being the only leader that cuba wasn't worth war . Kennedy was under alot of pressure and castro wanted escalation. His knot of war letter to kennedy was awesome

    • @toriidawdy8456
      @toriidawdy8456 2 года назад +1

      One last thing "Malamute Aerospace" is a great handle and even better concept!

    • @demef758
      @demef758 2 года назад +2

      Thank you for your comment, Senator Sanders.

    • @toriidawdy8456
      @toriidawdy8456 2 года назад +2

      I knew "yosemite sam " had idealogical purity ! It is rare in the cynical Realpolitik of warner brothers or the real cartoons of the loyal opposition. Humor as political commentary ? I wonder if it is either? Bugs bunny did seem to frustrate the old man. That was humor!

    • @stonefireice6058
      @stonefireice6058 2 года назад +9

      Did you lived under Khrushchev? I did. He was no better than the rest of them: playing political, reckless games, to ingratiate themselves. Teachers, engineers, scientists from big cities had to be brought to farms, to work and produce at least something, while local farmers were either drunk, or spent their days working on their own plots, so their produce could be sold in big cities at inflated prices. Shelves in stores were half empty, to buy anything we had to stand in long lines after all day work, and that was every day! To buy milk for children, women had to form lines at the store at 3am! Only few of us had fridges, never mind cars. My dad had to wait in line for 5 yrs to buy a car. Most of people in Leningrad ( where Im from) or Moscow lived in communal apartments, sharing a kitchen and a bathroom with 2 or even 5 other families. But being a Communist party apparatchik, would allow you to have a spacious, modern apartment, all amenities, a car and a summer home. One of my uncles was one of those- the Kremlin insider, in charge of all of their supplies. He knew Nikita, he new Gagarin. He and his wife traveled abroad as many times, as Bolshoi did.
      If you ever could see the Khrushchevs apartments ( he approved architecture)- concrete chicken coops with peeling walls, without insulation;, cracks with wind blowing inside;leaky roofs; rationed heat during cold months.
      I could go on, but, please, don’t praise a thief for not stealing more from you than he did.

  • @clickbaitcabaret8208
    @clickbaitcabaret8208 2 года назад +40

    Completely omitted the deal the Soviets brokered with the US to withdraw missiles from Cuba in exchange for the US withdrawing missiles from Turkey. It was a brilliant piece of diplomacy that allowed both sides to save face & a rare example of foreign policy decisions during the cold war actually working out.

    • @ManteIIo
      @ManteIIo Год назад +6

      It's always like that, history getting either rewritten or omitted purposefully. I can assure you that less than single percentage of Americans would know the cost of price winning ww2 for the Soviets who had the main brunt of it and suffered over 30 million casualties, instead they portrait it as they are the heroes who came and 'suddenly' ended the war.. when in fact they joined very last year when it was already more than obvious about inevitable Germany's fall. Not giving credit and omitting history always been rampant and wide-spread. That's a lesser degree like of using propaganda, due to the same effect it provides when people form a better opinion/view not based on whole picture but rather on biased one.

    • @leeannarose6384
      @leeannarose6384 10 месяцев назад

      Yes, and I believe President Kennedy was killed by CIA for working toward peace

    • @canoaslan1011
      @canoaslan1011 10 месяцев назад +1

      Absolutely right, Krushchev didnt back down, he was able to convince Kennedy Admin agree to pull the missiles from Turkey. Never done before and after that. Not that the nukes were ever pulled from Turkey. Till this day they are still at the base in Adana Incirlik, regardless. if anything thats a win for Niki I say

    • @A_Haunted_Pancake
      @A_Haunted_Pancake 5 месяцев назад

      @@ManteIIo It's not like it's some kind of grand conspiracy to bury the truth.
      Krushchev agreed at the time to keep that part of the deal a secret
      - Probably his biggest mistake, as that "defeat" emboldened his enemies back home
      and sealed his fait.
      So it might not be the whole truth, but it was the truth as people perceived it at the time.

    • @joshuaguzman7725
      @joshuaguzman7725 4 дня назад

      You mean Britain’s they where the ones fighting hitler way before the soviets

  • @johnschlesinger2009
    @johnschlesinger2009 2 года назад +55

    My father told me that when Krushchev and Kennedy met, Kennedy said that Americans had freedom of speech: you could stand outside the White House and say "president Kennedy's an idiot", and nobody would mind at all. To which Krushchev retorted that if somebody said that outside the kremlin, nobody would mind in the least!

    • @A_Haunted_Pancake
      @A_Haunted_Pancake 5 месяцев назад

      That's so funny if you don't think about it ...

    • @zarni000
      @zarni000 4 месяца назад +6

      Kruschev had a great sense of humor

  • @121hmike
    @121hmike 2 года назад +26

    one of the best documentaries about Khrushchev … as I seen many about him

  • @andrewdeen1
    @andrewdeen1 2 года назад +116

    my favorite documentary on this channel so far. the more cold war stuff the better, this is fantastic!

    • @alberthessler4047
      @alberthessler4047 2 года назад +2

      Just turn on the TV. Deja vu

    • @websterboose6003
      @websterboose6003 2 года назад

      @@alberthessler4047 ⁰

    • @absoluterefusal
      @absoluterefusal 2 года назад +3

      Not bad at all. I don't generally like well-produced, formulaic Western documentaries (eg history channel, etc) as they tend to be at least somewhat propagandistic. However, I do think this one was relatively unbiased.

    • @cbhlde
      @cbhlde Год назад +1

      Well, you got what you wanted: new cold war incoming! :)

  • @bubb5225
    @bubb5225 2 года назад +48

    Whatever you think about Khrushchev, you’ve gotta admit, he was pretty entertaining. For proof, read “Nikita Khrushchev’s Journey into America,” 2019, by Schoenbachler & Nelson.

    • @marleengevers
      @marleengevers 2 года назад +9

      There's a documentary "Khrushchev goes America" - it's really entertaining and interesting. It shows how the US wanted to make him look bad, but the public loved him for his staight talking. In the end he even gave his watch to a bystander.

    • @theemirofjaffa2266
      @theemirofjaffa2266 Год назад

      @@marleengevers now that's something I'll b interested in..lol

    • @marleengevers
      @marleengevers Год назад +2

      @@theemirofjaffa2266Thanks for your comment Emir ! The man who received the watch thought it might be very valuable, so he had it expertised. It proved to have a worth of 5 dollar, what even in the sixties was next to nothing.
      I find this so funny, iin the US it was about the money/worth, for Khrushchev it was about knowing what time it was. It says more about Americans than anything else.

  • @petermendoza1170
    @petermendoza1170 Год назад +9

    This was informative. Thank you. When one wants to be knowledgeable about history, the best source is through 'biographies '.

  • @brianarbenz1329
    @brianarbenz1329 Год назад +9

    Khrushchev was the first Soviet or Russian leader whose foibles and vulnerabilities were clear to the outside world. In that sense, he helped transform the picture those of us in the west had of the USSR from an irresistible power to a purely fallible state hamstrung by human limitations.

  • @jeffreymcfadden9403
    @jeffreymcfadden9403 2 года назад +55

    Nikita asked to go see the poorest section in New York City.
    So they took him there and drove around in the limo.
    Nikita became agitated. He insisted they take him to THE poorest section. They had done so.
    Nikita insisted that this was not the poorest section since all the homes/apartments had TV antennas.

    • @starguy2718
      @starguy2718 2 года назад +10

      When Nikita toured an IBM factory, he wanted to know who owned all those late-model automobiles, in the parking lot. Told the cars belonged to the hourly workers, Mr. K refused to believe that ordinary working stiffs could be paid so well. USSR factory workers certainly weren't paid that much.

    • @bob494949
      @bob494949 2 года назад

      America. Where the “poor” have nice cars, expensive cell phones, and big screen TVs. And their kids get so much free food at school, they’re fat.

    • @ВладимирКруглов-к9о
      @ВладимирКруглов-к9о 2 года назад +5

      @@starguy2718 The exhibitions of the US domestics in the USSR in late 1950s were like something from a different planet for Soviet people. It in one fell swoop showed the gaping distance in living standards. The Americans could dispense with ideological weapons (radio stations etc) after that, nothing could harm the "kommie dream" more.

  • @squamish4244
    @squamish4244 2 года назад +33

    For all his faults and foibles, Khrushchev was the right man at the right time. Unlike his predecessor, he had a soul.

    • @johnchristophersutton9706
      @johnchristophersutton9706 10 месяцев назад

      He may have had a soul, but he also had blood on his hands.

    • @zarni000
      @zarni000 4 месяца назад +2

      ​​@@johnchristophersutton9706everybody is a sinner. He did what he could given the circumstances.
      Our guys are responsible for even worse starting with fdr

    • @Ma007rk
      @Ma007rk 2 месяца назад +1

      That's better than having blood on your hands and not having a soul. At least Nikita Khrushchev did have something of a conscience. That's better than having nothing.

    • @danielchester9871
      @danielchester9871 Месяц назад

      ⁠@@zarni000l😊😊

    • @danielchester9871
      @danielchester9871 Месяц назад

      @@johnchristophersutton9706
      😊😊😊😊❤❤❤😅😅😮😢🎉😂❤

  • @jimmorelli2478
    @jimmorelli2478 Год назад +2

    Wow. One of the best hours I've ever spent on RUclips. Amazing. Well done.

  • @alanaadams7440
    @alanaadams7440 Год назад +9

    My friend went to Russia in the eighties she broke her ankle there. She went to a hospital. She needed an x-ray they brought in a portable xray machine that was pre- world war 2. That is a tell tale sign of how far behind the Soviet Union is

    • @rcyadav9746
      @rcyadav9746 Год назад

      ​@@igurtsmajority malnourished politician billionaire owner of nation communism

    • @zarni000
      @zarni000 4 месяца назад +7

      But she didn't get charged. While if it was other way round the foreigner in the us woukdnt even get any treatment before they pay in advance. And they'd be ripped off if they paid ...

  • @mclaggen6144
    @mclaggen6144 2 года назад +47

    "I can destroy you once that's enough for me" is probably the best comeback i've ever heard

    • @fredh999harris8
      @fredh999harris8 2 года назад +4

      Yeah, I liked that one, too!

    • @A_Haunted_Pancake
      @A_Haunted_Pancake 5 месяцев назад

      The reason the Americans (and later the Russians as well) build arsenals that could
      "destroy the enemy several time over" was not because "that's totally bad ass".
      It was redundancy in case they got hit by a surprise attack
      that would take out what relatively few nukes you'd need, if all you considered was a first strike.

  • @wiggom
    @wiggom 2 года назад +7

    This is a brilliantly told political story of my time. Well put together, this is an intriguing tale for all political junkies.

  • @galapagos4154
    @galapagos4154 10 месяцев назад +1

    Keyifle izlediğim bir çalışmaydı. Türkçe alt yazı desteği için teşekkür ederim 🙏

  • @gunaseelan53
    @gunaseelan53 Год назад +8

    President Krushev with Bulkanin along with our PM Nehru visited our city Coimbatore in South India.
    Me as an elementary school student was standing in the croud along the road side We all waved hands and were happy to see tbe great leaders

    • @YadugovindM
      @YadugovindM 3 месяца назад

      Nehru..? Great.. leader ? 😅
      Highly arguable

  • @wooddog007
    @wooddog007 Год назад +5

    @3:25 ... so interesting to hear Khrushchev's son say "America has to treat us as equal" ... 1959 or 2023 ... Russia is still making this ridiculous demand.

  • @jeremylamovsky942
    @jeremylamovsky942 2 года назад +22

    I saw a picture from Nikitas trip to the US. It was him holding a hotdog saying "in the soviet union, we too have fine sausages" . "We will live better than you I can promise you that". It's 2022 and we're still waiting.

    • @angor4748
      @angor4748 2 года назад +1

      i mean is the other way around they are waiting for us to get under their level, and how things are going, there wouldn't be waiting a long time

    • @zarni000
      @zarni000 4 месяца назад +1

      Ussr is long gone though...and communism. So why are u citing kruschev? Maybe complain to Reagan and Gorbachev..

    • @fifikenenn1279
      @fifikenenn1279 4 месяца назад +2

      Knowing very well Northern american and Russia I 'm able to confirm that now we live better in Russia than in USA.

  • @adriansfreimanis
    @adriansfreimanis Год назад +3

    I liked this documentary a lot, thank you!

  • @phillymathguy8142
    @phillymathguy8142 Год назад +18

    An anecdote I remember from a newspaper article many years ago: Khrushchev commented about all the automobiles parked at each airport as he flew in. He said that the Americans must be moving them from the previous airport to the next airport before his arrival. He did not believe the explanation that, no, all of the vehicles were actually parked at each airport.

    • @christianherrmann8853
      @christianherrmann8853 Год назад

      der KGB hätte ihn informieren können. .....wie der Amerikaner so lebt .... aber auch er hat der eignen Propaganda vertraut.

  • @AdelongloPrado
    @AdelongloPrado 6 месяцев назад +2

    Krushev is like a super super star look at the crowd they were soo intetested to see in person one of the most powerful man during this Time..

  • @stonefireice6058
    @stonefireice6058 2 года назад +12

    About Cuban crisis. From August of 1961 through1963 my brother was teaching course of Electric Engineering at Havana University as one of several specialists from Russia. I remember his letters and photos from 1962, when he was describing all happenings around Cuba. His classes were dismissed for over a month with all his students taken to defend Cuban Revolution. At exactly the same time, my husband( future husband) - a US Air Force officer, was sitting in his B52, with all engines running, waiting for the command to fly to Cuba. I thank providence and level- headed resolution of the crisis: I have my beloved hubby and my brother alive!

    • @SILOPshuvambanerjee
      @SILOPshuvambanerjee 2 года назад

      This is called luck

    • @chiragmehta8212
      @chiragmehta8212 2 года назад

      Wow

    • @kxkxkxkx
      @kxkxkxkx Год назад

      The "Level headed resolution" was when Lee Oswald shot JFK's head level with the ground 🚩 Kennedy was planning to invade Cuba again in early 1964 with Manuel Artime

  • @willyD200
    @willyD200 2 года назад +24

    Khrushchev was a exceptional leader for the Soviet Union at that time. I believe he would have accomplished even greater achievements had he not followed directly after the despot ,Stalin. Imagine trying to make decent decesions with peers who were still influenced by the Stalin system . Fair little doc. , well done.

    • @Magik1369
      @Magik1369 2 года назад

      What exactly did Krushchev accomplish besides sending the Soviet Union down the path of its own self destruction and bringing the world to the brink of nuclear catastrophe? Go ahead. List 1 positive thing that the commie Khrushchev accomplished. Khrushchev was a loser like all Soviets.

    • @sorryi6685
      @sorryi6685 2 года назад +1

      @@Magik1369 Abolished Gulags, reduced censorship.

    • @thunderbird1921
      @thunderbird1921 2 года назад +2

      Some wonder if the Cold War would have been near its intensity if Stalin died in 1946 (he was in poor health around that time) and a man like Khrushchev had taken over. Relations between the Soviet Union and United States probably would have still been rough and at times sour, but the most provocative actions were mostly done by Stalin (Berlin Blockade, enabling the Korean War, etc.). But Stalin died in 1953. Alas, what can be said? The tyrant sent the world on a 40+ year journey of chaos, tyranny and feuds.

  • @hypnophonz
    @hypnophonz Год назад +2

    Excellent documentary. Very well produced. I subscribed.

  • @withapulse2000
    @withapulse2000 Год назад +3

    just stumbled across this channel and now subscribed. Absolutely fascinating. I do wonder how much domestic mainstream television advertising revenue is utterley wasted and lost as I'm sure i'm not the only person to only watch the first 15 mins of tv for the evening news only then just switch to You tube for the rest of my night's informartion and entertainment. Talking to friends almost no one watches TV anymore.

  • @richardshiggins704
    @richardshiggins704 2 года назад +78

    You may take the man out of the bog but not the bog out of the man . Sergei , his son seems refined and well educated . In politics make sure to have a dog because he will be your best and unquestioning only friend in the end . Excellent documentary .

    • @dodge-ut6ti
      @dodge-ut6ti 2 года назад +7

      IT'S like what President Truman said If you want a friend in Washington get a dog.

    • @nicog7975
      @nicog7975 2 года назад +1

      Wtf is a bog??

    • @bretthowell5592
      @bretthowell5592 2 года назад +2

      @@nicog7975 A swamp person

    • @itsolivier
      @itsolivier 2 года назад +1

      @@bretthowell5592 INDEED. Bog the origin of the european imagination

    • @Ghostshadows306
      @Ghostshadows306 2 года назад +1

      Who’s the dog and what a does a bog have to do with it? Are you saying that Kruchev and his son couldn’t get their dog out of a bog? Or that Kruchev’s son was in a bog and couldn’t take his dad or his dog?

  • @johnfromdownunder.4339
    @johnfromdownunder.4339 2 года назад +16

    To destroy is as easy as breathing, never be proud of destruction,it's creation that is the real wonder.

  • @nhungtran-uo2ud
    @nhungtran-uo2ud 2 года назад +14

    He truly believed in the system of communism. I’m quite moved by his candid analysis of the huge contrasts between him and John F. Kennedy.

    • @A_Haunted_Pancake
      @A_Haunted_Pancake 5 месяцев назад

      Sadly / fortunately, people truly, truly believing in something
      has no influence on a things actual validity.

  • @SammyB-Habebe
    @SammyB-Habebe 2 года назад +6

    Amazing documentary thank you 🙏

  • @TheChintu-il3sq
    @TheChintu-il3sq 2 месяца назад +1

    A legendry leader! Khruschev was the one who laid foundations for strong Indo Soviet relationship. Greetings and Namaste to our Russian brothers from India! No matter come what may we will stand with Russia, long live indo russo friendship❤

  • @Boatperson
    @Boatperson Год назад +3

    Fascinating - thank you.

  • @knockitdown20
    @knockitdown20 2 года назад +35

    This documentary skipped over malenkov and how kruschev kicked him out. It was Malenkov who succeeded stalin before krushchev

    • @mikeshinoda2093
      @mikeshinoda2093 2 года назад +2

      Watch the movie "The death of stalin"

    • @siegridthomas9674
      @siegridthomas9674 2 года назад +1

      I r ememer that...lived in Germany at the time...

    • @ВладимирКруглов-к9о
      @ВладимирКруглов-к9о 2 года назад +1

      Well, the Soviet system of power was complicated so no-one actually succeeded Stalin as such. There were different positions of power and there was an authority of one person. But yeah, Malenkov's absence is a weak point as his was a different strategy of reforms to the one Khrushchev pushed. It would've made a tale more nuanced. But it seems to have been centered on the external politics, so no place for that interesting discussion.

    • @typenull3367
      @typenull3367 2 года назад +2

      @Z80 Hahahahaha like communism is democratic

    • @amcespana2150
      @amcespana2150 Год назад +1

      Kruchev poisoned Stalin, murdered Beria and then got rid of the weak-hearted Malenkov

  • @wot1fan885
    @wot1fan885 2 года назад +6

    One of the greatest documentaries. Fair ans balanced opinions.

  • @kimmoj2570
    @kimmoj2570 5 месяцев назад +2

    26:46 No country will join Russia into abyss. Putin has forgotten that no one want to live in terms dictated by Russia.

  • @felixbaxter352
    @felixbaxter352 2 года назад +25

    Wow. What balls. That little talk to the Germans? Incredible.

    • @andykerr3803
      @andykerr3803 2 года назад +14

      He was not wrong or exaggerating. He certainly played a major role in their defeat. To call them "the remnants" was as funny as it was cruel... The brutal truth to this day.

    • @A_Haunted_Pancake
      @A_Haunted_Pancake 5 месяцев назад

      Yeah, He sure stood up those near all-powerful Journalists!
      I mean, they could have written nasty articles about him when they got home
      and what could he, a humble general secretary of the Soviet Union, do to them?

  • @pietrietveld1842
    @pietrietveld1842 2 года назад +7

    verry impressed document realy thanks for sharing .

  • @Sulurianxx
    @Sulurianxx Год назад +10

    How a documentary discussing the cuban missile crisis doesn't mention the removal of U.S. missiles from Turkey which I learnt about over 30 years ago in university is beyond belief.

  • @sanagirlqueen
    @sanagirlqueen Год назад +2

    Extremely great documentary bro supremely awesome kidoss

  • @antidepressant11
    @antidepressant11 2 года назад +7

    This was an awesome doco

  • @ShitterMcGavin
    @ShitterMcGavin 2 года назад +18

    That was so very well done and just an absolute pleasure to get to enjoy. Thank you!

  • @kshitizsiwakoti6982
    @kshitizsiwakoti6982 2 года назад +18

    He did improve the lives of his citizens through his communal housing policy

  • @MikeJones-rk1un
    @MikeJones-rk1un 2 года назад +18

    Some of the most believable parts of history don't become known for 70 years or more, if ever.

  • @BavonWW
    @BavonWW 2 года назад +7

    38:26 There are newsreels that quite clearly show Krushchev banging the desk with his shoe. What happened to those newsreels?
    Now you are making me question my own memory. "Get Factual" what's with the either or reportage?

  • @gordonduffett5138
    @gordonduffett5138 Год назад +2

    What an excellent documentary.

  • @wiesiarybicka5891
    @wiesiarybicka5891 2 года назад +28

    He was put into power as because he was considered an easily manipulated harmless idiot by those powerful who everybody feared. Instead he skillfully out maneuvered and the rest and grabbed whole power by himself.

    • @TheOtherOtherJoey
      @TheOtherOtherJoey 2 года назад +2

      Precisely like Putin

    • @sorryi6685
      @sorryi6685 2 года назад +1

      But ultimately he was desposed in 1963

    • @martinmarcinkevic3893
      @martinmarcinkevic3893 2 года назад +5

      @@TheOtherOtherJoey Putin way more clever than this guy

    • @gregorywhite9095
      @gregorywhite9095 Год назад

      And that's how the Soviet system worked for the benefit of the people. Just wonderful.

    • @gerrelldrawhorn8975
      @gerrelldrawhorn8975 Год назад

      Putin is a case of Dunning-Kruger. He thinks that he knows it all. That allows him to have only a handful of advisors. NK was initially aware of his educational deficiencies. But by the 1960s he became arrogant, but he did retreat from making "Only I can save Russia " statements. And went quietly into retirement...perhaps to save his life.

  • @LalaShwante
    @LalaShwante Год назад +1

    Very very interesting story you provide us. Thank you.

  • @SY-jq4yw
    @SY-jq4yw 2 года назад +72

    Kruchev was no fool when he executed Beria.

    • @andykerr3803
      @andykerr3803 2 года назад +21

      They are still digging up murdered young women in Beria's former gardens... The full truth will never be known. For that action alone Krushev was an angel, a godsend. Imagine if Beria had succeeded Stalin...

    • @SY-jq4yw
      @SY-jq4yw 2 года назад +2

      @@andykerr3803 Absolutely, Russia can’t afford another Stalin, however Putin is becoming one.

    • @historyeditz8326
      @historyeditz8326 2 года назад +6

      @@SY-jq4yw well to be fair Putin has point as nato expanded even after 1997 promise towards Russia but he should consider dialogues rather than an invasion.

    • @frisianprideworldwide
      @frisianprideworldwide 2 года назад +8

      @@historyeditz8326 russia also promised Ukraine to not invade them if they gave up thier nukes

    • @sorryi6685
      @sorryi6685 2 года назад +12

      @@SY-jq4yw Beria would have made Stalin look like a saint. No women in USSR would be safe

  • @alfredawomi2340
    @alfredawomi2340 2 года назад +18

    WoW, never saw any Leader's Of The World getting that type of reception which Soviet Leader Nikita Kruschuv got.

  • @esrefcelikcelik8789
    @esrefcelikcelik8789 2 года назад +35

    He seems much more approachable and saner than putin. At least he smiles and laughs.

    • @Perririri
      @Perririri 2 года назад +14

      Ironically, Khrushchev gave Crimea to the then Ukrainian SSR; but Putin took it back!

    • @esrefcelikcelik8789
      @esrefcelikcelik8789 2 года назад +2

      @@Perririri Russians have written and writing innumerous bloody chapters in the history.
      I thought those horrible wars and massacres were over. Thanks to Putin, I lost my belief in peace and hope.

    • @robertowarren7007
      @robertowarren7007 2 года назад +4

      I think Putin is a robot... 😉

    • @chinguunerdenebadrakh7022
      @chinguunerdenebadrakh7022 2 года назад +8

      Putin does smile and laugh. It’s just usually creepier…

    • @sonye-jin6737
      @sonye-jin6737 2 года назад +2

      @@Perririri Yup 😎🇺🇦

  • @martinhaughey5745
    @martinhaughey5745 Год назад +1

    This is an incredible documentary.

  • @patrickfennell6372
    @patrickfennell6372 2 года назад +27

    Say what you want he was cruel, nasty, but in his early years smart. He served bravely in WWII

  • @moistymeyer4672
    @moistymeyer4672 2 года назад +6

    very insightful

  • @johnathan7249
    @johnathan7249 2 года назад +11

    After watching this video, and think about Viet Nam, my conclusion is: For a guy such a military background, how poor Eisenhower was at foreign policy. Seems to me that the Cuban Missle Crisis and the Berlin Wall were the mistakes of Eisenhower. Can't blame Nakita for feeling betrayed by Eisenhower. And of course, the war in Viet Nam goes without saying.

    • @jimcanadian494
      @jimcanadian494 2 года назад

      Eisenhower had invited Kruschev to the U.S. he accepted and toured the U S ...I believe that Eisenhower later visited Moscow...Kruschev was invited a 2nd time to the U S ......but a month later was betrayed by the U S when Eisenhower sent a U2 SPY PLANE to spy on the U S S R ....so the Russians shot it down and jailed the pilot temporarily....Kruschev was furious and never trusted the Americans again. Check your history..l remember that incident...lt was aBIG DEAL at the time

  • @williamusrex6417
    @williamusrex6417 2 года назад +6

    That was excellent. Thank you.

  • @johnobrien8398
    @johnobrien8398 2 года назад +20

    How sad it is to have those beliefs and wanting to control millions of people with fear but you yourself live like a king 👑

    • @rakhimukerji7937
      @rakhimukerji7937 2 года назад +8

      That happens in So called free world.and often people move money to avoid.paying tax

  • @johndover3626
    @johndover3626 2 года назад +3

    Khrushchev saved Cuba from a full scale American invasion of the kind Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia was to experience only a few years later.

  • @marblox9300
    @marblox9300 2 года назад +28

    I love my country the U.S.A. but we need to stop being the worlds bully.

    • @AzaadAlly
      @AzaadAlly Год назад +3

      You right 💯 and that will be it's downfall

    • @archivaldogutierrez7439
      @archivaldogutierrez7439 Год назад +1

      Bully of the bully = China

    • @henryseidel5469
      @henryseidel5469 8 месяцев назад +1

      Indeed it is high time for the US to change policies. Have a look at the BRICS States, they are already occupying almost the whole area of Asia: Russia, China, India, Iran plus South Africa, Saudi Arabia and Brazil. They will form an enormous economic power the West cannot stand any longer. Times are changing.

    • @rowenalegion8493
      @rowenalegion8493 8 месяцев назад +3

      your not a bully to the Philippines

    • @karylhogan5758
      @karylhogan5758 3 месяца назад +1

      @@henryseidel5469won’t even get off the ground 😂

  • @thestreamoflife1124
    @thestreamoflife1124 2 года назад +8

    Excellent documentary

  • @427max
    @427max 2 года назад +8

    This American historian is also honest and and amazing

  • @Sugianto-tc7sx
    @Sugianto-tc7sx 2 года назад

    Aku subscribe,, kontenx keren salam kenal dari saya 🇮🇩 Indonesia Balikpapan Kalimantan timur

  • @elainekerslake6865
    @elainekerslake6865 2 года назад +8

    Doesn't matter where they are placed .Britain was full of nukes all pointing to Russia. At RAF Newton near Nottingham the sign outside near the A52 had an arrow pointing east with Moscow 1900 miles written large. In Lincolnshire I would see the silo doors open and nuke tips appearing when the equipment was being checked. Wherever a Russian travelled they would know they were the target.

  • @MadisonCollieUwU
    @MadisonCollieUwU 2 года назад +3

    Despite my dislike for Russia I cannot help but admire a few of their leaders. Khrushchev is one of my favorite.

    • @geoffgane7550
      @geoffgane7550 2 года назад

      If only Tsar Alexander II hadn't been assassinated in 1881.

  • @bryanroberts3652
    @bryanroberts3652 Год назад +5

    This documentary has some incredible flaws. Here's one: the Berlin wall was built to stop a huge outflow of East Germans to West Germany that went on throughout the 1950s and had become an existential crisis for the East German regime by 1961. To say that the wall was built to defend East Berlin from a western attack, which is what Matthias Uhl does here, is absurdist historical revisionism at its finest.

  • @sifridbassoon
    @sifridbassoon 2 года назад +2

    very interesting! especially the comments by his granddaughter.

  • @nhungtran-uo2ud
    @nhungtran-uo2ud 2 года назад +8

    He was certainly a very interesting character .

  • @asullivan4047
    @asullivan4047 2 месяца назад

    Interesting/informative/entertaining. Excellent still-motion ( B&W ) photography pictures enabling viewers to better understand what the orator is describing. Along with guest speakers describing actual facts from fiction-!!!?😉

  • @damarmar1001
    @damarmar1001 Год назад +10

    The man who gave Crimea to Ukraine. Thanks a lot Nikita

  • @likklej8
    @likklej8 2 года назад +27

    Don’t forget he gave Crimea to the Ukrainian soviet socialist republic.

    • @toriidawdy8456
      @toriidawdy8456 2 года назад +2

      I heard that for the first time just this year I will the first to admit the academic silo of the american university gave little insight to the ethnic and issues of nationality of the ussr during my studied

    • @likklej8
      @likklej8 2 года назад +3

      @@toriidawdy8456 I think Nikita Khrushchev was a Ukrainian? If I’m wrong feel free to correct me I think it was in 1951/2?

    • @toriidawdy8456
      @toriidawdy8456 2 года назад +5

      @@likklej8 ethnic russian father who moved his brood to Ukraine to work the coal mines

    • @toriidawdy8456
      @toriidawdy8456 2 года назад +1

      I am pretty sure of this . Taubmans book and Mcnamara fog of war.... I source

    • @likklej8
      @likklej8 2 года назад

      @@toriidawdy8456 thanks that goes on my reading list

  • @krishnaraoragavendran7592
    @krishnaraoragavendran7592 2 года назад +16

    Kennady: I can destroy you several times over.
    Khruschov: Once is enough for me to destroy you.

  • @RajuSagiGayatriMata
    @RajuSagiGayatriMata 2 года назад +14

    Mr. Nikita Khruschev was a simple and honest Soviet leader.

  • @glps6167
    @glps6167 2 года назад +5

    Excellent.

  • @miltononyango
    @miltononyango 2 года назад +3

    amazing doc...what has changed in 2022 ...america then vs russia then and now 2022 are two different scenario...amazing

  • @shlmel
    @shlmel 2 года назад +10

    When I watched "Ivan The Terrible" and This Documentary, It's as though I can puzzle together pieces of Putin's pattern. A lot of similarities between the Putin and Ivan and also Putin and Nikita. Yet Putin's story is still being lived right before our eyes.

    • @shlmel
      @shlmel 2 года назад +1

      @Sven P that's the cliff notes version.

    • @JustinLee-jm5wn
      @JustinLee-jm5wn 2 года назад +2

      Power tends to corrupt, the throne looks omnipotent from afar. Take the throne to act and the throne acts upon you.

    • @shlmel
      @shlmel 2 года назад +2

      @@JustinLee-jm5wn yep.

    • @TF2Scout..
      @TF2Scout.. 2 года назад

      ​@@JustinLee-jm5wn true

  • @hasanchoudhurymd
    @hasanchoudhurymd Год назад +3

    Khrushchev was able to stop Stalinism and reverse some of the damages.
    He was somewhat a personality with humanity.
    He knew what he wanted but wasn’t a gambler.
    He probably did as well as he could, beginning from the deep hole and dangerous circumstances.

  • @888HUSKERS
    @888HUSKERS 2 месяца назад

    Great documentary!!!

  • @vladvaaa2499
    @vladvaaa2499 Год назад +2

    We love Khrushchev because he built Khrushchev houses for us

  • @jaimejaimeChannel
    @jaimejaimeChannel Год назад +1

    fascinating - thank you.

  • @borkokostic4388
    @borkokostic4388 2 года назад +16

    N. Hruschev take Crimea from Russia and give to Ukraine in 1956 !

  • @michaelhaywood8262
    @michaelhaywood8262 8 месяцев назад +7

    Sergei Khrushchev [Nikita's son] died in June 2020, age 84.

    • @SuperGreatSphinx
      @SuperGreatSphinx 8 месяцев назад +1

      Thanatos

    • @DopaGuy
      @DopaGuy 5 месяцев назад +2

      I really want to confirm the info but this documentary seems, was shot before 2020

    • @opticscolossalandepicvideo4879
      @opticscolossalandepicvideo4879 3 месяца назад

      He shot himself

    • @DopaGuy
      @DopaGuy 3 месяца назад +1

      @@opticscolossalandepicvideo4879 you,sure?!

  • @martinampang3505
    @martinampang3505 11 месяцев назад

    Thank for sharing this

  • @Т1000-м1и
    @Т1000-м1и 2 года назад +5

    The best things to watch at 2 AM
    Edit 11 months later. No edit, just 11 months

  • @joeblow2069
    @joeblow2069 2 года назад +1

    You folks like Steve Buscemi's depiction of Khrushchev in the death of Stalin?
    An outstanding film.