@@justinshades6652 I served in the US Navy and was in Guam & Diego Garcia. The people of Guam loved us bothering them with our money back in 1982. Diego Garcia was beautiful in 82 but we definitely were screwing it up the whole time in D G I never saw an indigenous person.
@@somedood9989 Is Diego Garcia is a 17 square mile horseshoe-shaped atoll in the Indian Ocean's Chagos Archipelago? I heard Diego Garcia is a 17 square mile horseshoe-shaped atoll in the Indian Ocean's Chagos Archipelago. Someone told me that Diego Garcia is a 17 square mile horseshoe-shaped atoll in the Indian Ocean's Chagos Archipelago. YMMV
Deployed there 2x 78-79/79-80 MCB 4 , living in portables and sea huts, building the anchor that became this. "The Rock" as we called it, was a life lesson, thats still with me today .
5:50 the usa, 50 year lease is due to expire in 2016?? well you don,t say? (2021 is an excellent year to use that same piece of info ;-) ) dumb copycat channels get instant dislike.
What's so f____g mysterious about it? It's a US military base that has high security and probably a lot of defensive armament. So what? (And it would be a little more listenable if it could pronounce archipelago.) 2 minutes of info crammed into 6 and a half.
I spend 12 years working on merchant and military ship and I have to said those were 12 of my best years in my merchant carrier. The island is gorgeous, is a paradise. Before I finish my merchant carrier I will go back one last time.
I'm happy for your but it enrages me that we cannot go to visit our own territory being a resident of Mauitius the legal owner of the island. The report fails to mention this.
@@richi2831 . So little regard for the inhabitants and the unjust removal of islanders!! Like you, I'm 'happy' that R Franco had 12 great yrs. I despair with human ignorance
@@isabellewhite3505 When the islands were first discovered there were no people on them... people were brought there when the plantations were brought in.
Lmao. There are plenty of areas residents of countries can't go. Back in the day ANYONE could just go up to the Whitehouse and have a chat with the president , now they record you as stand in front of the gates
@@isabellewhite3505 Diego Garcia was uninhabited when the Portuguese discovered it in 1512. Everyone on Diego Garcia was imported. So there is no valid claim since there are no natives - there were no indigenous people on Diego Garcia.
@@ChairmanMeow1 The usual reef fish. Snappers, groupers, sharks. Outside the harbor you can also catch tuna, amberjacks, wahoo, bill fish. My personal favorite was a bonefish in the harbor from a rented boat.
@hikawaokazaka7091 We were USAF, but stayed on the Navy side. With permanent lodging. Basic dormitory type lodging with a.c. Snorkeling and fishing are the main outdoor activities. They also have a great recreation center.
Well, I felt pretty secluded on Wake. Although, I wasn't assigned there. We landed there at night, and it was fairly dark. Like where's the effing runway !!! 🔥🔥🔥 Problem with the 'ol 141.
And why you are there its a thousand miles away from the US? When russia and china built base outside there country you are crying ITS A THREAT ITS A THREAT THEY ARE OCCUPYING OTHERS TERITORY 😂
@@mrbob9556 lol british dont have the rights in DIEGO GARCIA... UNCLOS alredy said that. What arw you talking about. Bro it's illegal occupation just like you accused to china lol. We can read, write and understand WE ARE NOT IDIOTS, 😂
That was my first duty station, Marine Barracks from 88 to 89, It wasn't bad as people made it out be, just having to know how to spend your time being productive. I got a chance to save 75% of my pay, which was a good thing for an 18-year-old LCpl. Good memories of that place.
I served in the merchant Marine for USNS Meteor which was a anchored prepositioned forward accessit. It was a roll on roll off (RoRo) ship with a Marine force of Armor and Infantry stationed aboard. To say the region was hot is an understatement, when sounding the fuel tanks I made the mistake of kneeling on the deck and got a second degree burn on my knee.
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Spent 3 mos at Diego Garcia as a Navy Diver tending LA class subs in the 80's. I remember spending $60 using the MARS telephone to call home for 15 minutes . You could buy a bottle of JD for $4 back then. First time I saw a Cricket match was on Diego. Still have my Diego Garcia Footprint of Freedom teeshirt.
@@markw999 When I was there in 84 you couldn't go into the water. I was a Navy Diver, and we were anchored out for 3 months tending subs. We dove from a platform between subs and the tender. But on liberty the water was off limits. Something about sharks and poisonous fish. In 3 months, all I saw was a few hammerheads.
JD Green From The Vietnam War Days. In 77, I Bought A Bottle Of Old Taylor Sealed In 1948, For $2. Rumor Was That The Navy Discovered A Huge Cache Of Alcohol On Guam And Sent It To D.G.
The mixers for the alcohol were way more expensive than the alcohol it’s self. Had to dry out a lot of our sailors after 6 months there. Best fishing and beaches in the world.
Stationed there from June 94-June 95, best duty station I ever served at and one I would gladly go back to in a heart beat as a Contractor. Some of the best Salt Water fishing in the world!!!
I was station there from 1985 to 1986 I was a technician for Navy Beoadcasting and during my time I have travel around the whole place many times I I haven't seen any secret prison, we had many USO events on Diego we even had the Dallas Cowboy cheerleaders do a show and it was great. The only thing that was regretful was no dependents was allowed to accompany us that's why it was considered isolation duty. We have bowling alley, restaurants, burgers joints, clubs, a outstanding gym facilities, base ball fields, cabanas for cook out panties, beaches was beautiful, fishing was great and plentiful. I enjoyed my time there.
In 1994 I worked for a company building radar stations on some sites around the world I worked on Ascension Island in the south Atlantic. Some guys went to Garcia and Antigua and Hawaii .Ascension Island have a few locals on it and its British but the United States is trying to force the locals out so they can expand the base.
Visited Diego Garcia more than a few times back in the 80's. Back when there were no piers, all ships anchored out, only 1/3 of the crew of each ship could be on liberty on the island at the time, and liberty boats took us back and forth from the ship to the beach. I stood my share of Shore Patrol there on duty days which always sucked because you had to deal with drunken sailors and break up fights. Good times.
The CIA has a black site there, right? The missing plane Malaysia Air MH-370 "vanished" in 2014 and is still missing to this day most likely landed there. It was the extraordinary rendition (aka abduction) by the CIA. 150 Chinese were on that plane including many high-ranking and very important scientists. People who were very very important to the Chinese government. People with "know-how". That "abduction" was basically a forced "brain drain". ...what's your take on that?
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Back in 1983/1984 my ship docked there for liberty and stores and I also was TDAfor about a week to go to my new duty station. I was able to find some oil paintings and tapestries while cleaning housing units. Very isolated. Very hot.
Did a Westpac in 1984. We stopped for refueling and some beach R&R. Great untouched white sand beaches with crystal clear water. 99.99%...of Americans have no clue about Diego Garcia and that’s a good thing.
99.9% of Americans have no idea there were native inhabitants on the Island before they were forced off, removed to accommodate the Base-lease agreement with the UK & US
@@Hawaiian80882 100% of you have no idea that there were NEVER any indigenous inhabitants of this place. There is NO native population. There were only people brought in to work the plantation and several generations of their descendants. But your tag clearly shows that you conveniently blame the white man for all the world's evils since that is easier than putting effort into learning facts.
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@@no1brittbarbiefanYeah they were farm workers brought there to harvest coconuts. The company that owned the coconut plantation sold it to the British Government to build the base so the (now unemployed) farm workers had to go.
Ha!! Me too, I was on the way to Somalia with the USMC, aboard the USS Peleliu, we were told we were needed in Mogadishu ASAP, so we caught a flight out of Singapore, stopped in Diego Garcia for a follow on flight that never happened, ended up staying on DG until the ship caught up with us 5 days later, had a good time, lounging on the beach, jet skiing, exploring a little.....
Was there in 1971, advance party, MCB 40. Arrived by ship (LSD) from Pt Hueneme Ca via Hawaii and Australia. Flew out 10 months later on a C130 off a soil cement runway. Best duty of my 4 years in the Navy
I was in MCB-40 from 66 to 68 mostly at Camp Shields, Chu Lai, Vietnam. When we were In Davisville (between deployments), we sent (under cover) surveyors to Diego Garcia to map it out for future development. I'm now a retired merchant seaman and in my career I sailed into Diego Garcia on multiple occasions. Can DO buddy. we need that place.
I was stationed there in 1983. It was nothing like it is now what an amazing transformation. When I first got there I lived in sea huts by the lagoon until a room opened up in the communications barracks. I was on the island defense force, but there wasn’t much there.
I have been there twice during my time serving aboard my command ship Truxtun CGN35. No piers so we were taken to shore by small boat. Only a handful of buildings that were being constructed to support the U.S. NAVY CB'S assigned to it back then. Remember playing "beer hunter" at one of the picnic shelters on the lagoon side with some buddies from my ship.
My helo crew and i flew there off of the USS EIsenhower in 1980 where we had lunch from a small shack selling burgers and 6 packs of beer.It has been greatly improved since then.
@@regregan5755 I’m not sure who it was maybe a navy guy living there because he opened all of the beers so i had to drink them there and not smuggle them on the ship.
I was stationed there for a year, 72 - 73. I operated the island power generation plant, lived in a 2 man plywood hooch on the beach. Extremely beautiful place. A year is a long time for isolated duty like that. Didn't even have a birth to dock a ship then, or any buildings to speak of. Had some beer-drinking donkeys though 😋
I ran the miniature golf course. My hooch had 12 straight guys plus 2 guy sailors. I was stationed at the receiver site. I wonder where his 2 man hooch was. I posted a video a few weeks ago. You or Doug the Thug might want to watch it.
@@islanddave8606 I was a steelworker E4 in NMCB 74 From January to December of 1973 and never saw a miniature golf course. I could have missed it I guess but I dont remember anyone ever even mentioning it.
Was there from Nov. 1971 to July 1972 MCB 1 was an experience you only get once in a lifetime , we relieved MCB 40 which made an amphibious landing to start it all . I left July 4 to get discharged , we then had C130 to Bangkok . Never regretted being there
When I was in Navy “A” school back in 1978, if we were not doing well in our training, the instructors would threaten to drop us out and we’d be sent to Diego Garcia. Yikes!! 😱 well many years later while serving on board the USS Nimitz in the Arabian Sea I was sent to DG for a month as a beach det coordinator. It was a PARADISE! Pure white sand beaches, cold brews, great fishing, and wonderful fun people that worked there!! Had I only known back in “A” school! Lmao!
Not necessarily military transport comes into Diego Garcia. In years past lots of contractors came in late at night. Some of them worked for Halliburton. Also there was lots of suits coming in right after MH370 came up missing. It went down South West of Australia.
@@bobbyglick5307 Above all the lies about MH370 , ( It would and could have landed there , night time , covid op , then flown on to the Netherlands to become MH 17 , ring any bells ? The Russians have a lot of evidence ) The big plus for the theory of it landing on Diego Garcia , was the twenty four scientists from Freescale Semiconductor ( the firm that designed and made all the nuclear technologies and electrics for missiles etc ) were on that aeroplane , were they whisked away to some underground laboratory . Funny how Lord Jacob Rothschild was the one and only person to inherit that very same company , very strange and unbelievable , nobody has connected the dots !!! Time will tell .
@@rickoliver2059 Not to mention Vice President Dick Cheney & George W. Bush both profited after the scientists on mh370 disappeared. I dont think the plane landed on Diego Garcia. I'm sure for a fact it did a water landing South West of Australia. One thing this video leaves out the United States doesn't lease Diego Garcia, that's just a cover. The island was used 5 years ago as a listening post for the NSA to monitor Inmarsat. I made a sat call late at night back in 2017 & before I finished the 15 minute call my conversation was recorded & people I was working with played it for me. At any given time since 2011 there's no less than 30 people scanning the Indian ocean.
@@bobbyglick5307 I`m afraid you`re way off course BG . No plane flotsam has ever been found off flight MH370 , that flaperon piece was fished up out of some very old junk . If it was off that plane , there would have been heaps of other pieces also found , but nothing . A flaperon does not just appear on it`s own . Did they think we were so dumb , another b.s. lie is they ( US Military ) knew exactly where MH370 was every second she was in the air , they really think we believe their story about losing sight of the plane . Another reason that the US uses Diego Garcia , is that it took control of the Island off the Brits for the purposes of having a deep harbour base for it`s military . The Americans even got the Brits to get rid of the local inhabitants before setting up camp so to speak , that in itself is a cruel and terrible story of human negligence and pain ! That Island has been set up for the War in the M. East plus having a close base to Africa , and Eastern Asia , even for shorter jaunts up to maybe Russia , who knows . So with all the b.s. that`s been spread by msm and the US Pentagon etc plus crazy presidents since those days , who can believe a single word uttered out from America and her hanger - ons . One day , the Russians will have a big birthday and spill all the beans and remind the world that they are now the greatest country in the world , militarily and economically and resourcefully .
@@rickoliver2059 Lots of underwater activities go on south of Diego Garcia. Testing underwater pods & thermite has been used there. I don't believe the Flaperon was from mh370 either. Captain Sully proved no pieces fell off his plane when he landed in the Hudson. The plance is still in tact at least 3 miles deep. That's why sonar isn't showing up & the fact the search area is in the wrong location. No one has searched more than 2 hours South West of Australia yet to date.
Diego Garcia is administered by the UK, the military base there is also under their supervision. Any American forces residing there, do so only at the UK's permission. Great place to launch a B-52 strike from.
@@stucrossland3719 No democracy in the US. At best of a good day what goes on in Washington is a malfunctioning representative republic. But only for the chosen few, with enough money to buy into clown car act.
Was there in the summer of 80. I was an OS on the USS truxton CGN- 35. Pulled up alongside tied up to the L.Y. Spears. Some of the Filipino Cooks would fish off the stern in the evening and you could see the fish swimming around. Nothing much to do there at the time but you were on dry land,get something to drink and waited on the M.A.R.S. station to call home.
Diego Garcia was historically uninhabited due to the total lack of water sources. The "Chagos Island natives" mentioned were brought there from other islands in the archipelago by the British to work on the coconut plantations in the early 1900s. There were indeed several generations born there, but Diego Garcia is not an "ancestral home" in the sense that these people did not inhabit the island prior to the French and then the British.
@@thirdnorthwind2176 There were no natives living on DG before the first Europeans started the coconut plantation around the beginning of the 20th century. This was because of the total lack of a natural water supply on the atoll. These people were Chagosians brought to DG from other islands. There was no "invasion", rather the commercial settling of a previously uninhabited island. Some of these people had been there for three generations, and had known no other home, so on an individual basis is was sad when the British moved them back to their islands of origin in order to make DG into a military base. They, however, had no ancestral claim to the island. This is completely different from, say, the inhabitants of Bikini Atoll, who were removed by the US for the nuclear tests. Please check your history before ranting about unconscionable white men.
It is a very beautiful base with guns on the shore left over from WW2 and one of the most spectacular coral reef that I have ever seen. Went fishing there off of a landing craft catch ing some really nice red grouper. Don’t know much about all that secret stuff but it really is a nice place to visit. Flew in and out of there while flying with the Airforce almost twenty years ago.
@@kani6855you obviously don't know what China is doing. Do a little research, and you'll find out that China is building islands out of reefs in international waters with disputed ownership claims. Or they find a little dirt sticking above the water in those same disputed international waters and build a massive military facility above that. That is completely different than Diego Garcia, which has a whole lot of natural land above water.
Spent 83 to 84 on the island. I think we were the last ones to live in the tin roof huts. CB’s started turning everything over to contractors. I know I was in first group to move into new barracks by cannon point, that are almost 40 years ago now. I think we were in the new barracks for about 2 months when the earthquake hit, craziest night of the whole year.
spent about 5 days on Diego Garcia during Desert Shield/Desert Storm waiting to fly to the USS Midway in the Persian gulf. Wasn't bad at all. They had a nice club, a good restaurant. When the Airforce brought B-52's and tankers there they had a good party on the beach. They had an outdoor movie theater and wild chickens and cats on the island. Also British police who would arrest you if you messed with the animals.
I was a contractor for military sealift comand during the 2nd war. I spent 11 months total. Couple breaks in Singapore. Turner club, brit club, the plantation house, cannon point Cafe, are just a few places I'll never forget.
And isn't it interesting that most of the comments here ignored that fact? International rule of law do not apply to Western nations. "Welcome to our fair and just world".
@@jon_nomad That and the bloody ethnic cleansing of the whole Chagos archipelago. Thinking about the hundreds of families that had their lives destroyed makes it harder to enjoy volleyball on the beach.
Did you know that Diego Garcia was uninhabited when the Portuguese discovered it in 1512. Everyone on Diego Garcia was imported - there were no indigenous people on Diego Garcia.
I was there from 1982 to 1983. It was isolated duty. I did not want to go there. I was stationed there "in accordance with the needs of the Navy". And now I absolutely treasure the memory of being there. If I could I would spend another year there. If you are there drink it in. And I don't mean the booze.
Was on the USS Monticello LSD-35 1971. We blew a hole through the reef to access the lagoon. Swim call every day for a week, shark petrol was set. Watched Russian Naval Ships cruising around outside the lagoon.
I was there for a few days in 1987 with the U.S. navy. We pulled in there to swap out some Tomahawk missiles. It looks like they built up that base a lot since I was there. It is a beautiful island.
Did two tours on the Rock .... '77 and '80 for 9 months a piece ... was a beautiful place. There is definitely a pier out into the lagoon - I was on the pier team building it the 2nd time I was there ... came into operation in '82
Stationed there from 77' to 78', "I" site Seabee field mechanic for base Support Facility, still fairly primitive back then by today's standards as the runway was being lengthened and the fuel tanks were going up....but we did have Diego Burger, and thanks to the P3 squadrons we also had fresh San Miguel beer in bottles.
Mcb 4 1972 to73 we were lengthening the runway, building the pcs barracks and paving the road down to the I Site, among others. I was alpha company heavy side mechanic.
You mean "donkey burger?" Was stationed there 1985-1986. Lived in great Holiday Inn style barracks Seabees built. Thanks Seabees! Great fishing, great chow hall, bad ships store that sold mildewed cigarettes, and too expensive Cable and Wireless phone calls. Had dinner at the Merchant Marines (?) restaurant many times. Highest point of the island was the swimming pool!
Stationed there Nov 77 to Nov 78. Worked at harbor ops, did alot of welding and oxy/acet work. I was glad I went there, and when my time was up. I was happy to leave. Would I do it again, YES!
@@richarderion4611 You guys and all the Seabees made the island into a habitable place for people to live. But, after viewing several more recent RUclips videos, you won't believe how the place is now. I remember driving our department shuttle bus, there was not any other vehicles on the road. Now, DG1 is like a busy highway. There's even a separate bicycle lane to keep safe road traffic. But you guys were the plank owners! Great job!
@@richarderion4611 I was there Sept 77 to Sept 78...first 6 months in the sea huts, then moved into the air conditioned modular housing. One of happiest days of my life was the day I left DG.
It was my first duty station from July 1984 to July 1985. The "Footprint of Freedom" had the best fishing , and plenty of fresh coconut trees-I almost got hit by a falling coconut great times 😁-coconut crabs, and beautiful water. Beautiful place.🎣🏝🥥🥥
Had a seatmate in college tell me he was stationed there for a bit, I responded in a hushed tone something dumb like that 'Isn't that top secret?'. He just nonchalantly replied 'nah dawg, was actually kinda boring.'
When I served in USMC Diego was designated as a forward gear staging area as well as refueling stop forward sir base as mentioned repeatedly in this video.
Went to degar to catch my boat on westpac 87. The thing I remember about my first visit was how cheap the drinks were, the things you remember as a 19 year old. As we left the lagoon, I got seasick but that changed the second the tossed me up on the flightdeck.
I was there for shield & storm. Beautiful cool island. We got a special permit from the Brits to go to the other end of the island and tour the abandoned plantation home, graveyard going back to the 1700's, etc. Really cool. There was a crashed airplane on the beach from WWII. I was there for three months, can't say I saw any secret jails or prisons back then, nor did the contractors that lived on the island mention anything. Really cool place to visit.
You left out the hundreds of (mostly) Philippino people who worked in services (restaurants, cleaning, stores, chow hall ect) who were essentially TCNs but also inhabitants of the island in the early 2000s when the USAF kept a presence there
I was there in Nov. 80 on the Uss El Paso for a week. I still have a glass of white sand from the beach. Our cruise book has a night photo off a Hammerhead next to the Captain's gig.
My father was there with the original landing party in early 1971. Has many cool pictures before the island was cleared and built up. Always wish I could of gone to see. Thanks.
My dad was in the navy in the 70's, 80's and early 90's and if you are affiliated with the Navy, this island is no big secret. If you aren't affiliated with the military in general, you likely have never heard of it but to most military families it's just another military installation. I don't know if it's still true, but it was kind of the same with the Army. My uncle was in the Army at the same time as my dad and back then, all roads led to Germany.
@Daniel McKinnon I was there 72-73 with MCB62. The runway was the worlds first Slip Form Paved coral agrigate run way. I wonder if it is still holding up
@danielmckinnon9627 denken & wissen ist was ganz anderes... denken ist, der irak hat atombomben & chemiewaffen. wissen ist, angeblich war man nur am öl interessiert oder sagen sie mir was sie darüber wissen? sie leben oder dienen dem land "der unbegrenzten möglichkeiten." nun, was denken sie zu wissen??? falls sie im allgemeinen überhaupt was wissen, woher wissen sie ob das was sie wissen glaube oder wissen ist?!?
MY home base was the captured Japanese Air Field that was made into the GUAM International Airport. When I was there the fall of Saigon, the Command asked if could use my FRENCH language skills to interview 1,000 Vietnamese Refugees. I was happy to try and worked with a Senior Naval Consultant named George. That was 1975. Soon I was in Uta Pah Thailand working on USS Mayaguez and Kao tong During these time I worked with the Admiral 7th fleet and he asked if I would go to Diego Garcia on a Temporary basis to install 36 highly confidential RADIOS and monitor the P3 Traffic and others all as RM for the US Navy. I was in a plywood shack on the beach and there were no civilians.
As a former veteran, I had Hurd stories about Diego-Garcia. I didn't ask or people didn't volunteer to tell. So I focus my energy to my missions I volunteer to do. If Uncle Sam said the Island is important to our mission- so be it..Besides, I loved Guam !
Was there Nov. '71 to Aug. '72. I was a fleet sailor TAD'ed to MCB 1, supervised the desal plant & potable water distribution. There was about 800 Seabees there including detachments. Living conditions were very primitive but then again so were shipboard conditions in the fleet on ships from the 50's through 70's. Suck it up. My time there & my job was one of the memorable times of my Navy career. Seabees then were the hardest working rough-and-ready Navy guys I ever worked with. I'm proud to have been one of them for a deployment.
Spent time on Dodge when the hostages were taken in Tehran. Part of a P3 aircrew The Seabees used to put a sentry on the carrier peir with a M14 to drive sharks away from swimmers.
Nice one. The fishing is still great, more places to eat/relax, MWR program is amazing, the white sand beach and water activities are hard to find anywhere else. Got here in 1990.
1980's on WesPac while in the Marine Corps: I visited the Atoll a few times, it's beautiful-tropical, fishing and diving is epic. I often wondered back then where were the local inhabitants?....I researched it upon returning home. If you know the truth behind Diego Garcia and it's native inhabitants and what the British Govt did to remove them from the Island, it'll piss you off. Absolutely! we need to assure our freedom and our way of life is not compromised....but it's O.K. to compromise others!
@@Anglo_Browza ...coming from a American period......we dont have no rights to point a finger of shame at anyone.......the trail of tears is a real event in American history
I was with ACB-2 out of Little Creek Va, Was part of the advance party to start building the base. We manned the 4 LCM-8's that brought everything and I mean everything ashore from ships in the harbor. We lived in tents with C rats for awhile until the crew from MCB-40 got the first huts built. Highest point above sea level was 7'. Watched MCB-40 clear the cocoanut trees with two big dozers with anchor chain between them. We visited the copra plantation a few times while it was still in operation. There was the remains of a WW2 PBY on the beach on the east side near the plantation also a few artillery pieces on the western tip. The Russians had a few ships watching us while I was there. The ACB-2 warping tug was pulling a septic line out to sea and the Russians were very interested in that so we made up a radioactive sign and put it on the buoy that marked the daily end of the pipeline. I'm sure they weren't happy about that ! Hopefully they sent in some divers for a sample !!. Was a amazing place after a year in Vietnam on Riverine duty. We flew out when the initial runway was completed in Oct 71. Arrived there on the USS Charleston LKA-113 in early February 1971.
Now if you were there as a Seabee you would not have had all that horrible time drinking . Working 10/14 hrs a day 5 1/2 days a week in the hot sun mail once a week of the damn Air Force showed up . For 10t years Seabee battalions and augment detachments from 4/5 Battalions with 40 to 100t men labored , total men on the island often exceed 1200 . Ya woe to me , nothing to do ! Try 2 / 9 month deployments the a detachment . I was with the 74th batt , the work experience, the detachment I was with had 125 men , I tell about the amount we accomplished, now one believes it . The 60 men I worked with were the best and hardest workers ya ever saw . After serving 23 years as a Seabee senior chief I am the proudest of these men of any I ever served with . I have been retired for 40t but I’m still a Seabee . 74x2/62/15 batt’s. Some should tell the story of Seabees building this base .
Diego Garcia belongs to the Mauritius "The General Assembly adopted a resolution today welcoming a 25 February 2019 International Court of Justice advisory opinion on the legal consequences of separating the Chagos Archipelago from Mauritius in 1965, demanding that the United Kingdom unconditionally withdraw its colonial administration from the area within six months."
The UK have objected the ruling and reaffirmed the British sovereignty over the BIOT, having originally purchased it from Mauritius for $3 million USD. The UK has also reinforced the strategic importance the BIOT plays in maintaining regional peace and stability. In short, Britain will not be giving it back.
@@dWFnZWVr UK and USA flaunting international law. China should sell nuclear submarines to Mauritius so that they can defend their sovereignty and conduct freedom of navigation missions through the Chagos Archipelagos. Then watch the hypocrites in London and Washington cry that China is being "hostile" and "aggressive".
@@stephenkolostyak4087 Nope. Taiwan is the Republic of China (ROC) and it was the ROC when it governed the mainland in the 1920's that it officially claimed the South China Seas islands. Even today the ROC on Taiwan still claim the SCS islands and the biggest one, Taiping Island, has continuously been administered by the ROC. So "western" challenges to Chinese sovereignty to the SCS islands is a challenge to both the People's Republic of China AND the Republic of China but most western media completely overlooks this historic fact.
Mauritius has never had a claim over Diego Garcia, let alone the entire Chagos Archipelago. The French claimed both and ran both from Mauritius. The French gave that mess up to the British under the Treaty of Paris. Prior to that mess the only thing Mauritius and Chagos Archipelago had in common was that they were separated by 2000+km of the same ocean. In fact about the only claim they do have is to being paid by the UK government *BEFORE* 1965 to no longer have to administrate the archipelago which the UK government was administrating by having claim over the entire lot anyways - not really sure who the genius was behind that, but whatever.
Guam Island: The Strategic US Military Base in Pacific Ocean ruclips.net/video/_3KlnRSTxr8/видео.html
wewe ni nani reply sai yes
The government just can't leave the Indigenous Native people alone, can they?
@@justinshades6652 I served in the US Navy and was in Guam & Diego Garcia. The people of Guam loved us bothering them with our money back in 1982. Diego Garcia was beautiful in 82 but we definitely were screwing it up the whole time in D G I never saw an indigenous person.
@zulu2049 Thank You for your service
@@justinshades6652 Even though I received a paycheck, you`re very welcome.
Thanks for repeating it all at the end, I had already forgotten.
I newer say twice, I never say twice!
Learn how the US and UK stole the Island .. kick inhabitant off the Island.
Did you forget that Diago Garcia is a 17 square mile horseshoe-shaped atoll in the Indian Ocean's Chagos Archipelago?
Just incase you forgot
@@somedood9989 Is Diego Garcia is a 17 square mile horseshoe-shaped atoll in the Indian Ocean's Chagos Archipelago? I heard Diego Garcia is a 17 square mile horseshoe-shaped atoll in the Indian Ocean's Chagos Archipelago. Someone told me that Diego Garcia is a 17 square mile horseshoe-shaped atoll in the Indian Ocean's Chagos Archipelago. YMMV
That's pretty neat. I wonder how big it is?
Deployed there 2x 78-79/79-80 MCB 4 , living in portables and sea huts, building the anchor that became this. "The Rock" as we called it, was a life lesson, thats still with me today .
How was your time there, and what life lesson did it teach you.
@@LordsBridge For one how to cope with what life throws at you.
@@williamladley4291can you please be more vague?
Whh do they repeat twice the same thing?
They repeating it 3 times
I think all these videos are click bait
5:50 the usa, 50 year lease is due to expire in 2016?? well you don,t say? (2021 is an excellent year to use that same piece of info ;-) )
dumb copycat channels get instant dislike.
What's so f____g mysterious about it? It's a US military base that has high security and probably a lot of defensive armament. So what? (And it would be a little more listenable if it could pronounce archipelago.) 2 minutes of info crammed into 6 and a half.
Yeah why.. hmmmm 🥴🍷🐵
Thanks
Bhai , send I neet it most than this RUclips guy
Didn't catch it the first time... Thanks for the repeat.
I had two tours there there, 1977, and 1981. Love the Hell out of it
I spend 12 years working on merchant and military ship and I have to said those were 12 of my best years in my merchant carrier. The island is gorgeous, is a paradise. Before I finish my merchant carrier I will go back one last time.
I'm happy for your but it enrages me that we cannot go to visit our own territory being a resident of Mauitius the legal owner of the island. The report fails to mention this.
@@richi2831 . So little regard for the inhabitants and the unjust removal of islanders!!
Like you, I'm 'happy' that R Franco had 12 great yrs.
I despair with human ignorance
@@isabellewhite3505 When the islands were first discovered there were no people on them... people were brought there when the plantations were brought in.
Lmao. There are plenty of areas residents of countries can't go.
Back in the day ANYONE could just go up to the Whitehouse and have a chat with the president , now they record you as stand in front of the gates
@@isabellewhite3505 Diego Garcia was uninhabited when the Portuguese discovered it in 1512. Everyone on Diego Garcia was imported. So there is no valid claim since there are no natives - there were no indigenous people on Diego Garcia.
I spent a month there. It was the best TDY of my military career! I was fortunate enough to take advantage of its world class fishing!!!
What kinds of fish are there to catch there?
@@ChairmanMeow1 The usual reef fish. Snappers, groupers, sharks. Outside the harbor you can also catch tuna, amberjacks, wahoo, bill fish. My personal favorite was a bonefish in the harbor from a rented boat.
@@javiertorres2193 Sounds awesome. Never had any of those besides tuna and amberjack!! FRESH seafood is one of my favorite things in the world.
What are the living conditions like there?
@hikawaokazaka7091 We were USAF, but stayed on the Navy side. With permanent lodging. Basic dormitory type lodging with a.c. Snorkeling and fishing are the main outdoor activities. They also have a great recreation center.
Gorgeous Island. Been through here a couple times enroute to deployment. Absolutely the most secluded you’ll ever feel.
Well, I felt pretty secluded on Wake. Although, I wasn't assigned there. We landed there at night, and it was fairly dark. Like where's the effing runway !!! 🔥🔥🔥 Problem with the 'ol 141.
And why you are there its a thousand miles away from the US?
When russia and china built base outside there country you are crying ITS A THREAT ITS A THREAT THEY ARE OCCUPYING OTHERS TERITORY
😂
@@GIVI727The USA builds and occupy by treaty and leases. China and Russia due by force.
@@mrbob9556 lol british dont have the rights in DIEGO GARCIA... UNCLOS alredy said that. What arw you talking about. Bro it's illegal occupation just like you accused to china lol.
We can read, write and understand WE ARE NOT IDIOTS, 😂
@@mrbob9556 the youtube deleting my comment again if they saw you are showing the truth😂
That was my first duty station, Marine Barracks from 88 to 89, It wasn't bad as people made it out be, just having to know how to spend your time being productive. I got a chance to save 75% of my pay, which was a good thing for an 18-year-old LCpl. Good memories of that place.
What are the living conditions like there?
My first duty station also. 1980 on a sub tender.
I'm a sincere and loyal Mauritian . please return the island as promised 60 years ago, we r not stupid anymore
Get the heck out of here
Good luck with that. Stupid or not, y’all ain’t getting it back.
@@simonaronas6816 Typical American imperialism mentality. Shameful and hypocrite!
You sold it to the UK and now the UK is leasing it back....keep up!
I served in the merchant Marine for USNS Meteor which was a anchored prepositioned forward accessit. It was a roll on roll off (RoRo) ship with a Marine force of Armor and Infantry stationed aboard. To say the region was hot is an understatement, when sounding the fuel tanks I made the mistake of kneeling on the deck and got a second degree burn on my knee.
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Spent 3 mos at Diego Garcia as a Navy Diver tending LA class subs in the 80's. I remember spending $60 using the MARS telephone to call home for 15 minutes . You could buy a bottle of JD for $4 back then. First time I saw a Cricket match was on Diego. Still have my Diego Garcia Footprint of Freedom teeshirt.
Still have My DG beach towel I got in '88.
Beautiful reef. Visited in '87 for a week. Everybody hated it but I bought a snorkel and mask and had a great time diving.
@@markw999 When I was there in 84 you couldn't go into the water. I was a Navy Diver, and we were anchored out for 3 months tending subs. We dove from a platform between subs and the tender. But on liberty the water was off limits. Something about sharks and poisonous fish. In 3 months, all I saw was a few hammerheads.
JD Green From The Vietnam War Days.
In 77, I Bought A Bottle Of Old Taylor Sealed In 1948, For $2. Rumor Was That The Navy Discovered A Huge Cache Of Alcohol On Guam And Sent It To D.G.
The mixers for the alcohol were way more expensive than the alcohol it’s self. Had to dry out a lot of our sailors after 6 months there. Best fishing and beaches in the world.
Stationed there from June 94-June 95, best duty station I ever served at and one I would gladly go back to in a heart beat as a Contractor. Some of the best Salt Water fishing in the world!!!
I was station there from 1985 to 1986 I was a technician for Navy Beoadcasting and during my time I have travel around the whole place many times I I haven't seen any secret prison, we had many USO events on Diego we even had the Dallas Cowboy cheerleaders do a show and it was great.
The only thing that was regretful was no dependents was allowed to accompany us that's why it was considered isolation duty. We have bowling alley, restaurants, burgers joints, clubs, a outstanding gym facilities, base ball fields, cabanas for cook out panties, beaches was beautiful, fishing was great and plentiful. I enjoyed my time there.
In 1994 I worked for a company building radar stations on some sites around the world I worked on Ascension Island in the south Atlantic. Some guys went to Garcia and Antigua and Hawaii .Ascension Island have a few locals on it and its British but the United States is trying to force the locals out so they can expand the base.
@@newyorkwanderer3290 yep, just like Diego... sad, sad, sad
Why nobody is mentioning the whore (slave) bars servicing the invaders? I saw them.
Visited Diego Garcia more than a few times back in the 80's. Back when there were no piers, all ships anchored out, only 1/3 of the crew of each ship could be on liberty on the island at the time, and liberty boats took us back and forth from the ship to the beach. I stood my share of Shore Patrol there on duty days which always sucked because you had to deal with drunken sailors and break up fights. Good times.
The CIA has a black site there, right?
The missing plane Malaysia Air MH-370 "vanished" in 2014 and is still missing to this day most likely landed there.
It was the extraordinary rendition (aka abduction) by the CIA. 150 Chinese were on that plane including many high-ranking and very important scientists. People who were very very important to the Chinese government. People with "know-how".
That "abduction" was basically a forced "brain drain". ...what's your take on that?
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I was tided up to the pier in the mid 80s… yes, there was a pier, but not all ships were permitted to dock.
I was ther in the 80's too, we conducted flight ops at anchor to keep the piolts qualified. USS Constelation CV-64
@V
Interesting story. Thanks.
Having been to this base, this video gave me a chuckle
Same here. Was there in the early 90's
What was your experience
@@tammystewart10 Mostly good. I'd go back given the chance.
@Richard Schiffman I was there during the Gulf War, so definitely more American's
Agreed... I work there now.
Spent 9 months on Diego in 1981 with NMCB-1. We were building up the base facilities and infrastructure. Incredible experience.
Back in 1983/1984 my ship docked there for liberty and stores and I also was TDAfor about a week to go to my new duty station. I was able to find some oil paintings and tapestries while cleaning housing units. Very isolated. Very hot.
what happened to the original native inhabitants of diego garcia? i guess the video doesnt do a good job of telling the whole story...
Ggg*get5
@@JasonC683 the french?
I was stationed there 2007-2008. When my one year was up, I begged my Supervisors to let me me stay, Paradise on earth :D
Stop saying the same information FFS
I was in NMBC 62, the second Seabee battalion to build the base. Loved swimming and ride the waves on air mattress off the point.
I was in NMCB-62. Was there in 1977.
Did a Westpac in 1984. We stopped for refueling and some beach R&R. Great untouched white sand beaches with crystal clear water.
99.99%...of Americans have no clue about Diego Garcia and that’s a good thing.
99.9% of Americans have no idea there were native inhabitants on the Island before they were forced off, removed to accommodate the Base-lease agreement with the UK & US
@@Hawaiian80882
100% of you have no idea that there were NEVER any indigenous inhabitants of this place. There is NO native population. There were only people brought in to work the plantation and several generations of their descendants. But your tag clearly shows that you conveniently blame the white man for all the world's evils since that is easier than putting effort into learning facts.
@@Hawaiian80882 they were not exactly native they were shipped by europeans
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@@no1brittbarbiefanYeah they were farm workers brought there to harvest coconuts. The company that owned the coconut plantation sold it to the British Government to build the base so the (now unemployed) farm workers had to go.
There is outstanding fishing on Diego Garcia!
Flew in for three days in 1993 as part of a British Military contingent, hosted by the Yanks and had a great time.
Ha!! Me too, I was on the way to Somalia with the USMC, aboard the USS Peleliu, we were told we were needed in Mogadishu ASAP, so we caught a flight out of Singapore, stopped in Diego Garcia for a follow on flight that never happened, ended up staying on DG until the ship caught up with us 5 days later, had a good time, lounging on the beach, jet skiing, exploring a little.....
Was there in 1971, advance party, MCB 40. Arrived by ship (LSD) from Pt Hueneme Ca via Hawaii and Australia. Flew out 10 months later on a C130 off a soil cement runway. Best duty of my 4 years in the Navy
I was in MCB-40 from 66 to 68 mostly at Camp Shields, Chu Lai, Vietnam. When we were In Davisville (between deployments), we sent (under cover) surveyors to Diego Garcia to map it out for future development. I'm now a retired merchant seaman and in my career I sailed into Diego Garcia on multiple occasions. Can DO buddy. we need that place.
I was stationed there in 1983. It was nothing like it is now what an amazing transformation. When I first got there I lived in sea huts by the lagoon until a room opened up in the communications barracks. I was on the island defense force, but there wasn’t much there.
When I was there in 1987 there were nice barracks and even a dance club. Crabs kittens and chickens were everywhere.
Bro how was it to live in the sea huts. Would be fun.
And may be dumb to ask is there stable internet.
@@dawn_alex in 1983...?
@@sebastiantevel898 My bad...
What about today??
@@susanb2015 The same in 1985, but the first time I was there in 81, they put us up in hooches that were up on stilts.
Went there in 1979. Anchored in the lagoon. Brilliant fishing, coconut crabs on the beaches, and cute little lizards everywhere.
Was it a navy or private boat
@@greatnorthern3481 Navy ...... private weren't allowed
I have been there twice during my time serving aboard my command ship Truxtun CGN35. No piers so we were taken to shore by small boat. Only a handful of buildings that were being constructed to support the U.S. NAVY CB'S assigned to it back then. Remember playing "beer hunter" at one of the picnic shelters on the lagoon side with some buddies from my ship.
Beer Hunter 😂😂😂😂😂😂
Its a beautiful place. I was there in 88 or 87 when I was in the Navy, it costs a 100.00 for a 30 min phone call I wish would have enjoyed it more.
The Chagos people want to to go back to their home too but US military occupiers wont let them
@@sisyphusvasilias3943 Sucks you guys got screwed
Was there around same time (USS COOK)…we were there about 4-5 days. Beautiful place. Hot as hell though.
@@jeffharder8706 Yeah those dungarees didn’t help either
@@sisyphusvasilias3943 But it seems that international court of justice does not apply to some western countries !
My helo crew and i flew there off of the USS EIsenhower in 1980 where we had lunch from a small shack selling burgers and 6 packs of beer.It has been greatly improved since then.
How did the burgers taste?
Thank You for Your service 🇺🇸❤️🙏
So who was selling burgers?
@@regregan5755 I’m not sure who it was maybe a navy guy living there because he opened all of the beers so i had to drink them there and not smuggle them on the ship.
@@moonar5820 pretty good especially compared to navy chow
Was there over Christmas and new years on a USO gig.
Great people. They treated us like gold!
I was stationed there for a year, 72 - 73. I operated the island power generation plant, lived in a 2 man plywood hooch on the beach. Extremely beautiful place. A year is a long time for isolated duty like that. Didn't even have a birth to dock a ship then, or any buildings to speak of. Had some beer-drinking donkeys though 😋
. You're correct, It was very rough. I was there nov '72- nov '73 I posted a video from then on Face Book on the Diego Garcia BIOT group. go watch
@@islanddave8606 wait, you said you were there in 1972 and 1973 as well? You two didn't know each other?
I ran the miniature golf course. My hooch had 12 straight guys plus 2 guy sailors. I was stationed at the receiver site. I wonder where his 2 man hooch was. I posted a video a few weeks ago. You or Doug the Thug might want to watch it.
@@islanddave8606 I was a steelworker E4 in NMCB 74 From January to December of 1973 and never saw a miniature golf course. I could have missed it I guess but I dont remember anyone ever even mentioning it.
I was there 73, 75. VP squadron rotation. Beautiful island. Wonderful climate. Diego burgers. Lots of seabees.
Spent 6 weeks there in 1986 with 2d Bn 6th Marines 3rd MarDiv and had a great time! The US Navy treated us well! Good food, cold beer 🍺 good training!
Spent 9 1/2 months there in 1976 with NMCB 62. I thought the "natives" were brought there to work the plantation. Beautiful sunsets!
Stationed at Diego Garcia 1981-1982. Great duty station! Would love to go back for a year.
Was there from Nov. 1971 to July 1972 MCB 1 was an experience you only get once in a lifetime , we relieved MCB 40 which made an amphibious landing to start it all . I left July 4 to get discharged , we then had C130 to Bangkok . Never regretted being there
Was there 72-73 MCB62 . R&R in Bangkok and LEAVING
I was there 1993 and 1994 it was really nice enjoyed having time to fish it was fun doing Tuna steaks thanks to the catch that day
Just loved this documentary mate, very nicely done.
When I was in Navy “A” school back in 1978, if we were not doing well in our training, the instructors would threaten to drop us out and we’d be sent to Diego Garcia. Yikes!! 😱 well many years later while serving on board the USS Nimitz in the Arabian Sea I was sent to DG for a month as a beach det coordinator. It was a PARADISE! Pure white sand beaches, cold brews, great fishing, and wonderful fun people that worked there!! Had I only known back in “A” school! Lmao!
Hula in 24 Languages
It is a very interesting island. While I worked for DOD with the US Navy I visited the island many times. You only visit by military means.
Not necessarily military transport comes into Diego Garcia.
In years past lots of contractors came in late at night.
Some of them worked for Halliburton.
Also there was lots of suits coming in right after MH370 came up missing.
It went down South West of Australia.
@@bobbyglick5307 Above all the lies about MH370 , ( It would and could have landed there , night time , covid op , then flown on to the Netherlands to become MH 17 , ring any bells ? The Russians have a lot of evidence ) The big plus for the theory of it landing on Diego Garcia , was the twenty four scientists from Freescale Semiconductor ( the firm that designed and made all the nuclear technologies and electrics for missiles etc ) were on that aeroplane , were they whisked away to some underground laboratory . Funny how Lord Jacob Rothschild was the one and only person to inherit that very same company , very strange and unbelievable , nobody has connected the dots !!! Time will tell .
@@rickoliver2059 Not to mention Vice President Dick Cheney & George W. Bush both profited after the scientists on mh370 disappeared.
I dont think the plane landed on Diego Garcia. I'm sure for a fact it did a water landing South West of Australia.
One thing this video leaves out the United States doesn't lease Diego Garcia, that's just a cover.
The island was used 5 years ago as a listening post for the NSA to monitor Inmarsat.
I made a sat call late at night back in 2017 & before I finished the 15 minute call my conversation was recorded & people I was working with played it for me.
At any given time since 2011 there's no less than 30 people scanning the Indian ocean.
@@bobbyglick5307 I`m afraid you`re way off course BG . No plane flotsam has ever been found off flight MH370 , that flaperon piece was fished up out of some very old junk . If it was off that plane , there would have been heaps of other pieces also found , but nothing . A flaperon does not just appear on it`s own . Did they think we were so dumb , another b.s. lie is they ( US Military ) knew exactly where MH370 was every second she was in the air , they really think we believe their story about losing sight of the plane . Another reason that the US uses Diego Garcia , is that it took control of the Island off the Brits for the purposes of having a deep harbour base for it`s military . The Americans even got the Brits to get rid of the local inhabitants before setting up camp so to speak , that in itself is a cruel and terrible story of human negligence and pain ! That Island has been set up for the War in the M. East plus having a close base to Africa , and Eastern Asia , even for shorter jaunts up to maybe Russia , who knows . So with all the b.s. that`s been spread by msm and the US Pentagon etc plus crazy presidents since those days , who can believe a single word uttered out from America and her hanger - ons . One day , the Russians will have a big birthday and spill all the beans and remind the world that they are now the greatest country in the world , militarily and economically and resourcefully .
@@rickoliver2059 Lots of underwater activities go on south of Diego Garcia. Testing underwater pods & thermite has been used there.
I don't believe the Flaperon was from mh370 either. Captain Sully proved no pieces fell off his plane when he landed in the Hudson.
The plance is still in tact at least 3 miles deep. That's why sonar isn't showing up & the fact the search area is in the wrong location.
No one has searched more than 2 hours South West of Australia yet to date.
Was There In 1973 With NMCB-74. And, In 1977 With NMCB-62. Great Memories.
Diego Garcia is administered by the UK, the military base there is also under their supervision. Any American forces residing there, do so only at the UK's permission. Great place to launch a B-52 strike from.
US democracy?
@@stucrossland3719 No democracy in the US. At best of a good day what goes on in Washington is a malfunctioning representative republic. But only for the chosen few, with enough money to buy into clown car act.
@LIZZYinTHECUT run for city council and judge it from the ground up 😇
@@sriunnam Good to know. Thanks 4 reply.
@@sriunnam india has no hold over Diego Garcia. It belongs to Mauritius
Was there in the summer of 80. I was an OS on the USS truxton CGN- 35. Pulled up alongside tied up to the L.Y. Spears. Some of the Filipino Cooks would fish off the stern in the evening and you could see the fish swimming around. Nothing much to do there at the time but you were on dry land,get something to drink and waited on the M.A.R.S. station to call home.
This feels like it was written by an AI lol
Diego Garcia was historically uninhabited due to the total lack of water sources. The "Chagos Island natives" mentioned were brought there from other islands in the archipelago by the British to work on the coconut plantations in the early 1900s. There were indeed several generations born there, but Diego Garcia is not an "ancestral home" in the sense that these people did not inhabit the island prior to the French and then the British.
so... the UK and US were justified in stealing the island from them?
The natives who were there before the invasion certainly considered the islands their home. Your explination is naive or is your conciousnes knocking.
@@thirdnorthwind2176 There were no natives living on DG before the first Europeans started the coconut plantation around the beginning of the 20th century. This was because of the total lack of a natural water supply on the atoll. These people were Chagosians brought to DG from other islands. There was no "invasion", rather the commercial settling of a previously uninhabited island.
Some of these people had been there for three generations, and had known no other home, so on an individual basis is was sad when the British moved them back to their islands of origin in order to make DG into a military base. They, however, had no ancestral claim to the island. This is completely different from, say, the inhabitants of Bikini Atoll, who were removed by the US for the nuclear tests. Please check your history before ranting about unconscionable white men.
probably another lie
@@agrajyadav2951 That is the history of Diego Garcia.
It is a very beautiful base with guns on the shore left over from WW2 and one of the most spectacular coral reef that I have ever seen. Went fishing there off of a landing craft catch ing some really nice red grouper. Don’t know much about all that secret stuff but it really is a nice place to visit. Flew in and out of there while flying with the Airforce almost twenty years ago.
And we get mad when China wants to do the same thing😭😭👏👏
@@kani6855you obviously don't know what China is doing. Do a little research, and you'll find out that China is building islands out of reefs in international waters with disputed ownership claims. Or they find a little dirt sticking above the water in those same disputed international waters and build a massive military facility above that. That is completely different than Diego Garcia, which has a whole lot of natural land above water.
Spent 83 to 84 on the island. I think we were the last ones to live in the tin roof huts. CB’s started turning everything over to contractors. I know I was in first group to move into new barracks by cannon point, that are almost 40 years ago now. I think we were in the new barracks for about 2 months when the earthquake hit, craziest night of the whole year.
spent about 5 days on Diego Garcia during Desert Shield/Desert Storm waiting to fly to the USS Midway in the Persian gulf. Wasn't bad at all. They had a nice club, a good restaurant. When the Airforce brought B-52's and tankers there they had a good party on the beach. They had an outdoor movie theater and wild chickens and cats on the island. Also British police who would arrest you if you messed with the animals.
I was a contractor for military sealift comand during the 2nd war. I spent 11 months total. Couple breaks in Singapore. Turner club, brit club, the plantation house, cannon point Cafe, are just a few places I'll never forget.
Diego Garcia is like the Midway Island of the Indian Ocean!
The only problem people were deported by the
Brits for a military U.S base ! A crime against humanity by these hypocrite western countries
I was there in the 1990's with a government contractor. Very interesting place...very useful
Ouh.. Diego Garcia make me remember,about Malaysia airlines MH 370..after landing in Diego Garcia.
Look where the lines of the flight ended. Right about there
Besides Diego Garcia ...Adak Alaska is another isolated US army post....
UN court unanimously ruled out that Diego Garcia is part of Mauritius and has been illegally split from Mauritius by the British
And isn't it interesting that most of the comments here ignored that fact? International rule of law do not apply to Western nations. "Welcome to our fair and just world".
@@jon_nomad That and the bloody ethnic cleansing of the whole Chagos archipelago. Thinking about the hundreds of families that had their lives destroyed makes it harder to enjoy volleyball on the beach.
Did you know that Diego Garcia was uninhabited when the Portuguese discovered it in 1512. Everyone on Diego Garcia was imported - there were no indigenous people on Diego Garcia.
Nonsense. It belongs to us.
Shut up n never put ur foot on this Island
I was there from 1982 to 1983. It was isolated duty. I did not want to go there. I was stationed there "in accordance with the needs of the Navy". And now I absolutely treasure the memory of being there. If I could I would spend another year there. If you are there drink it in.
And I don't mean the booze.
Was on the USS Monticello LSD-35 1971. We blew a hole through the reef to access the lagoon. Swim call every day for a week, shark petrol was set. Watched Russian Naval Ships cruising around outside the lagoon.
Jeeesus. The you way said “Archipelago” gave me a slight aneurysm!
It feel so wonderful being there on a small island with no other land near by
Thank you all for your service. God bless you forever.
Much appreciated
I was there for a few days in 1987 with the U.S. navy. We pulled in there to swap out some Tomahawk missiles. It looks like they built up that base a lot since I was there. It is a beautiful island.
Did two tours on the Rock .... '77 and '80 for 9 months a piece ... was a beautiful place. There is definitely a pier out into the lagoon - I was on the pier team building it the 2nd time I was there ... came into operation in '82
Stationed there from 77' to 78', "I" site Seabee field mechanic for base Support Facility, still fairly primitive back then by today's standards as the runway was being lengthened and the fuel tanks were going up....but we did have Diego Burger, and thanks to the P3 squadrons we also had fresh San Miguel beer in bottles.
Mcb 4 1972 to73 we were lengthening the runway, building the pcs barracks and paving the road down to the I Site, among others. I was alpha company heavy side mechanic.
You mean "donkey burger?" Was stationed there 1985-1986. Lived in great Holiday Inn style barracks Seabees built. Thanks Seabees! Great fishing, great chow hall, bad ships store that sold mildewed cigarettes, and too expensive Cable and Wireless phone calls. Had dinner at the Merchant Marines (?) restaurant many times. Highest point of the island was the swimming pool!
Stationed there Nov 77 to Nov 78. Worked at harbor ops, did alot of welding and oxy/acet work. I was glad I went there, and when my time was up. I was happy to leave. Would I do it again, YES!
@@richarderion4611 You guys and all the Seabees made the island into a habitable place for people to live. But, after viewing several more recent RUclips videos, you won't believe how the place is now. I remember driving our department shuttle bus, there was not any other vehicles on the road. Now, DG1 is like a busy highway. There's even a separate bicycle lane to keep safe road traffic. But you guys were the plank owners! Great job!
@@richarderion4611 I was there Sept 77 to Sept 78...first 6 months in the sea huts, then moved into the air conditioned modular housing. One of happiest days of my life was the day I left DG.
I was there October 73 thru October 74. Beautiful place, but very isolated. Got to Bangkok for R and R.
Been there. Done that. Got the T-Shirt to prove it!
Same here pal n goin back soon
It was my first duty station from July 1984 to July 1985. The "Footprint of Freedom" had the best fishing , and plenty of fresh coconut trees-I almost got hit by a falling coconut great times 😁-coconut crabs, and beautiful water. Beautiful place.🎣🏝🥥🥥
Been there, done that; got the tshirt. It isn’t a mystery. 🤣
Had a seatmate in college tell me he was stationed there for a bit, I responded in a hushed tone something dumb like that 'Isn't that top secret?'. He just nonchalantly replied 'nah dawg, was actually kinda boring.'
When I served in USMC Diego was designated as a forward gear staging area as well as refueling stop forward sir base as mentioned repeatedly in this video.
Had the old base gym t-shirt with the pink crab squatting and the Marine Security Force Company t-shirt. Wore the shit out of them back in the day!
Went to degar to catch my boat on westpac 87. The thing I remember about my first visit was how cheap the drinks were, the things you remember as a 19 year old. As we left the lagoon, I got seasick but that changed the second the tossed me up on the flightdeck.
I was there for shield & storm. Beautiful cool island. We got a special permit from the Brits to go to the other end of the island and tour the abandoned plantation home, graveyard going back to the 1700's, etc. Really cool. There was a crashed airplane on the beach from WWII. I was there for three months, can't say I saw any secret jails or prisons back then, nor did the contractors that lived on the island mention anything. Really cool place to visit.
My dad used to love going Diego Garcia!
Was there twice in '87 after the stark insodent & absolutely loved it.
You left out the hundreds of (mostly) Philippino people who worked in services (restaurants, cleaning, stores, chow hall ect) who were essentially TCNs but also inhabitants of the island in the early 2000s when the USAF kept a presence there
Just add the whore houses to your list.
Most of them previously worked at Clark Air Base before Pinatubo blew up and basically leveled Clark.
Repeating the same thing three times was really appreciated. I get it.
I was there in 1976 catching up with my Seabee Battalion, NMCB-5. Spent 3 months there. Beautiful Place and got the worse sunburn I have ever had.
Me too on the top of my feet.
Was stationed there 82/83..would love to go back for a stroll on it..was there when they were transitioning from huts to barracks..
Can we see the tunnels and deferent levels under the base .
I was stationed there in 91-93, 2 consecutive tours with NSF/AirOps.
So you were illegally occupying the island like the russians are doing in ukraine???
I was there in 1980 with the Navy Seabees building up the living facilities and piers. LOVED it there. Was there for 6 or 8 months. I forget.
I was there in Nov. 80 on the Uss El Paso for a week. I still have a glass of white sand from the beach. Our cruise book has a night photo off a Hammerhead next to the Captain's gig.
Nice and appropriate target for the hypersonic Khinzhal missiles
If they can fly😂
Music way to loud mate. Can barely hear your voice.
turn it down? what are you 5 yrs old
Kobra Is that a bad thing in this case?
Was stationed there for 6 months in the early 80’s with a P3 squadron. Did a lot of snorkeling and got a great tan.
My father was there with the original landing party in early 1971. Has many cool pictures before the island was cleared and built up. Always wish I could of gone to see. Thanks.
this video makes it seem more mysterious than it is. I was there 3 years ago working as a contractor.
My dad was in the navy in the 70's, 80's and early 90's and if you are affiliated with the Navy, this island is no big secret. If you aren't affiliated with the military in general, you likely have never heard of it but to most military families it's just another military installation. I don't know if it's still true, but it was kind of the same with the Army. My uncle was in the Army at the same time as my dad and back then, all roads led to Germany.
They stole the island from locals. They literally displaced these people it wasn't just a plantation area
@Daniel McKinnon I was there 72-73 with MCB62. The runway was the worlds first Slip Form Paved coral agrigate run way. I wonder if it is still holding up
How about you tell me about 370
@Daniel McKinnon Malaysian airlines mh370
@danielmckinnon9627 denken & wissen ist was ganz anderes...
denken ist, der irak hat atombomben & chemiewaffen. wissen ist, angeblich war man nur am öl interessiert oder sagen sie mir was sie darüber wissen?
sie leben oder dienen dem land "der unbegrenzten möglichkeiten." nun, was denken sie zu wissen??? falls sie im allgemeinen überhaupt was wissen, woher wissen sie ob das was sie wissen glaube oder wissen ist?!?
MY home base was the captured Japanese Air Field that was made into the GUAM International Airport. When I was there the fall of Saigon, the Command asked if could use my FRENCH language skills to interview 1,000 Vietnamese Refugees. I was happy to try and worked with a Senior Naval Consultant named George. That was 1975. Soon I was in Uta Pah Thailand working on USS Mayaguez and Kao tong During these time I worked with the Admiral 7th fleet and he asked if I would go to Diego Garcia on a Temporary basis to install 36 highly confidential RADIOS and monitor the P3 Traffic and others all as RM for the US Navy. I was in a plywood shack on the beach and there were no civilians.
As a former veteran, I had Hurd stories about Diego-Garcia. I didn't ask or people didn't volunteer to tell. So I focus my energy to my missions I volunteer to do. If Uncle Sam said the Island is important to our mission- so be it..Besides, I loved Guam !
Finally, someone speaking FACTS!!
You sure you should trust Uncle Sam so blindly?!
@@robertwomack8653 Ever experience any military action Mr.Womack?
@@herbertgomez4112 maybe I have maybe I haven't... what's it to you?
Doesn't matter....the question is did the British kick out the natives there for the US?
Watching fullwatch done
Was there Nov. '71 to Aug. '72. I was a fleet sailor TAD'ed to MCB 1, supervised the desal plant & potable water distribution. There was about 800 Seabees there including detachments. Living conditions were very primitive but then again so were shipboard conditions in the fleet on ships from the 50's through 70's. Suck it up. My time there & my job was one of the memorable times of my Navy career. Seabees then were the hardest working rough-and-ready Navy guys I ever worked with. I'm proud to have been one of them for a deployment.
This video repeats itself a lot
Spent time on Dodge when the hostages were taken in Tehran. Part of a P3 aircrew
The Seabees used to put a sentry on the carrier peir with a M14 to drive sharks away from swimmers.
Truly a beautiful place.
I guess they just read through two different articles on Diego Garcia rather than go through the minimal trouble of merging them. Sheesh.
Nice one.
The fishing is still great, more places to eat/relax, MWR program is amazing, the white sand beach and water activities are hard to find anywhere else.
Got here in 1990.
Its crazy how this was never mentioned in the news. During the disappearance of the plane.
Spent 38 days there with Echo 2/4 back in 85. Would like to go back.
1980's on WesPac while in the Marine Corps: I visited the Atoll a few times, it's beautiful-tropical, fishing and diving is epic. I often wondered back then where were the local inhabitants?....I researched it upon returning home. If you know the truth behind Diego Garcia and it's native inhabitants and what the British Govt did to remove them from the Island, it'll piss you off. Absolutely! we need to assure our freedom and our way of life is not compromised....but it's O.K. to compromise others!
Coming from an America living in Hawaii
@@Anglo_Browza ...coming from a American period......we dont have no rights to point a finger of shame at anyone.......the trail of tears is a real event in American history
@@patrickpeter7499 it’s our island
@@Anglo_Browza that was directed for @hawaiian 8082
I was with ACB-2 out of Little Creek Va, Was part of the advance party to start building the base. We manned the 4 LCM-8's that brought everything and I mean everything ashore from ships in the harbor. We lived in tents with C rats for awhile until the crew from MCB-40 got the first huts built. Highest point above sea level was 7'. Watched MCB-40 clear the cocoanut trees with two big dozers with anchor chain between them. We visited the copra plantation a few times while it was still in operation. There was the remains of a WW2 PBY on the beach on the east side near the plantation also a few artillery pieces on the western tip. The Russians had a few ships watching us while I was there. The ACB-2 warping tug was pulling a septic line out to sea and the Russians were very interested in that so we made up a radioactive sign and put it on the buoy that marked the daily end of the pipeline. I'm sure they weren't happy about that ! Hopefully they sent in some divers for a sample !!. Was a amazing place after a year in Vietnam on Riverine duty. We flew out when the initial runway was completed in Oct 71. Arrived there on the USS Charleston LKA-113 in early February 1971.
Been here. Nothing to do but drink in the club.
Now if you were there as a Seabee you would not have had all that horrible time drinking . Working 10/14 hrs a day 5 1/2 days a week in the hot sun mail once a week of the damn Air Force showed up . For 10t years Seabee battalions and augment detachments from 4/5 Battalions with 40 to 100t men labored , total men on the island often exceed 1200 . Ya woe to me , nothing to do ! Try 2 / 9 month deployments the a detachment . I was with the 74th batt , the work experience, the detachment I was with had 125 men , I tell about the amount we accomplished, now one believes it . The 60 men I worked with were the best and hardest workers ya ever saw . After serving 23 years as a Seabee senior chief I am the proudest of these men of any I ever served with . I have been retired for 40t but I’m still a Seabee . 74x2/62/15 batt’s. Some should tell the story of Seabees building this base .
Fantasy Island!!! Great place to visit........
Diego Garcia belongs to the Mauritius "The General Assembly adopted a resolution today welcoming a 25 February 2019 International Court of Justice advisory opinion on the legal consequences of separating the Chagos Archipelago from Mauritius in 1965, demanding that the United Kingdom unconditionally withdraw its colonial administration from the area within six months."
The UK have objected the ruling and reaffirmed the British sovereignty over the BIOT, having originally purchased it from Mauritius for $3 million USD. The UK has also reinforced the strategic importance the BIOT plays in maintaining regional peace and stability. In short, Britain will not be giving it back.
@@dWFnZWVr UK and USA flaunting international law. China should sell nuclear submarines to Mauritius so that they can defend their sovereignty and conduct freedom of navigation missions through the Chagos Archipelagos. Then watch the hypocrites in London and Washington cry that China is being "hostile" and "aggressive".
@@motowntaiwan9079 shouldn't your username be "motownBeijing"?
@@stephenkolostyak4087 Nope. Taiwan is the Republic of China (ROC) and it was the ROC when it governed the mainland in the 1920's that it officially claimed the South China Seas islands. Even today the ROC on Taiwan still claim the SCS islands and the biggest one, Taiping Island, has continuously been administered by the ROC. So "western" challenges to Chinese sovereignty to the SCS islands is a challenge to both the People's Republic of China AND the Republic of China but most western media completely overlooks this historic fact.
Mauritius has never had a claim over Diego Garcia, let alone the entire Chagos Archipelago. The French claimed both and ran both from Mauritius. The French gave that mess up to the British under the Treaty of Paris. Prior to that mess the only thing Mauritius and Chagos Archipelago had in common was that they were separated by 2000+km of the same ocean.
In fact about the only claim they do have is to being paid by the UK government *BEFORE* 1965 to no longer have to administrate the archipelago which the UK government was administrating by having claim over the entire lot anyways - not really sure who the genius was behind that, but whatever.