Batlefied S2/E5 - The Battle of Leyte Gulf

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  • Опубликовано: 9 окт 2012
  • I do not own, nor do I or intend to profit from this content whatsoever. "Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use."
    All right reserved to:
    NBC Universal
    Directed by Dave Flitton, Andy Aitken, James Wignall
    Produced by Dave Flitton (series prod.), David McWhinnie, Ken Maliphant, David Rozalla
    Written by Dave Flitton, Andy Aitken, James Wignall
    Narrated by Jonathan Booth
    Music by David Galbraith
    Distributed by Public Broadcasting Service
    Release date(s) 1996
    Running time 6 116-minute episodes
    Country USA
    Language English

Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @Walkdogable
    @Walkdogable Год назад +70

    In my opinion, This is the greatest WWII documentary. Each episode cover in details the strategies, equipment, and actual battle implementations. The narrator is great.

    • @Seaquest112
      @Seaquest112 6 месяцев назад +4

      An excellent, well produced presentation.

    • @lukefarnham2119
      @lukefarnham2119 6 месяцев назад +2

      You ever seen "the perilous fight America's ww2 in color"?

    • @chloehennessey6813
      @chloehennessey6813 6 месяцев назад

      Check out Jon Parshall, the unauthorized history of WW2 as well as my personal fav history channel-Drachinifel.

    • @juanfervalencia
      @juanfervalencia 3 месяца назад +2

      they don't make them like that anymore, it almost felt like reading a book, nowdays is a waste of time, producers have become stupid and uneducated.

    • @aegontargaryen9322
      @aegontargaryen9322 Месяц назад

      The narrator was a gentleman called Tim Piggot-Smith ( fairly famous actor in the UK ). He’s passed on unfortunately.

  • @TheNeven87
    @TheNeven87 3 года назад +67

    God I miss series like this. Good detail, impartial, just facts.

  • @819jt
    @819jt 10 лет назад +342

    Best series on WWII so far; most thorough and not overblown to try to "lure" the viewer. If you want to actually learn about WWII, this is the series to watch. Thank you for posting this.

    • @DN-cz7rp
      @DN-cz7rp 5 лет назад +5

      sorry wrong. If you want to actually learn about WWII you need to read volumes of books. this crap is so full of errors and bs - the only way you can know this is by reading. Don't be discouraged though. Depending on how good a reader you are, it might take only 20 years. I've been reading about it for over 50 years and I have finally scratched the surface.

    • @chacdogful
      @chacdogful 5 лет назад +28

      No one is trying to get there doctorate in this crap. This is accurate enough not to complain like you are. If you’ve been reading this long and haven’t gotten your doctorate on it yet makes you no expert at all. Just a reader. Hey maybe the books are wrong.

    • @sneek14peek
      @sneek14peek 4 года назад +3

      Jeffrey Torgalski the narrative style.

    • @dennisbeals3809
      @dennisbeals3809 3 года назад

      L

    • @andreiacsinia5088
      @andreiacsinia5088 3 года назад +27

      @@DN-cz7rp This is an over-simplified though decent narative, a TV show for its time (made in the early '90s). It does have errors and misconceptions but it's not an academic tool nor does it claim to be. It is made for the general public and it does a decent job at it. Most books are full of errors and biases, as I came to be intimately acquainted during my years at the University (Contemporary/Military History). Step a bit down from the cloud of contempt and take things a bit more lightly.

  • @melvinbrantley8548
    @melvinbrantley8548 10 лет назад +390

    As a trained fighter pilot I had been assigned to Fighting Squadron 14 aboard Wasp during this engagement. Most of my flying was in defense from Japanese aerial attacks. What I didn't know was that in the preceding battle of the Philippine Sea, the Japanese aerial offensive force had been destroyed.
    It was here that our surface forces crossed the "T" of a line of Japanese forces entering Leyte Gulf from the South. the Japanese forces were nearly annihilated.

    • @ThroneOfBhaal
      @ThroneOfBhaal 4 года назад +28

      I would give an arm and a leg to hear more of your experiences! :O

    • @shawndouglass2939
      @shawndouglass2939 4 года назад +3

      @@ThroneOfBhaal please tell us more of your experiences 😊

    • @shawndouglass2939
      @shawndouglass2939 4 года назад +14

      This generation of pussies needs to hear it and thank you for your brave service and God bless you 🙏

    • @paulm.965
      @paulm.965 4 года назад +27

      Thank you for saving my nation. Filipino here.

    • @sethmellen1
      @sethmellen1 4 года назад +1

      DeusmVolt

  • @warrenmatha3424
    @warrenmatha3424 5 лет назад +91

    My father served in the 5th US Cavalry, First Cavalry Division. He landed at Leyte on 20 Oct. 1944. 65 years later, he described to me how he and his unit fought their way to the top of a high mountain west of Tacloban. From the top of that mountain, on the night the US Navy's battleships fought off the Japanese in the Surigao Strait by "crossing the T", he watched in the distance the tremendous flashes of the naval guns. He said it was like watching a lightening storm the likes of which he had never seen before..and which he never saw again.

    • @triciaanddennisb9548
      @triciaanddennisb9548 3 года назад +14

      My Dad landed in that day also, 24th. Div. ,19th. Infantry reg. He served all over the Philippines

    • @rhenmarson6317
      @rhenmarson6317 3 года назад +8

      Thanks to your father sir

    • @ronelboholano6928
      @ronelboholano6928 3 года назад +4

      the mountain west of Leyte is Mount Buga-buga or known as Buga-buga Hill

    • @dianamendoza2291
      @dianamendoza2291 2 года назад +3

      Thanks to your father sir for being part of our freedom from Japanese. My big salute and respect for them!

    • @isaiahkayode6526
      @isaiahkayode6526 2 года назад +2

      God bless you and your Father.

  • @kenc3288
    @kenc3288 4 года назад +28

    Excellent narrator. Great original footage and script. No computer generated nonsense.

  • @tin7996
    @tin7996 2 года назад +57

    I am from Leyte and I'm truly grateful to all the soldiers who sacrificed their lives and helped us during this battle. ✿ ♡♡

    • @mynamedoesntmatter8652
      @mynamedoesntmatter8652 2 года назад +9

      All the troops are, in return, grateful to the people of the Philippines who gave them aid and fought against the Japanese. The Filipinos were very kind to troops, and tried so hard (while in fear for their own lives) to help the POWs and the relatively few who managed to escape their savage captors. God bless the Filipino people.

    • @tedhernandez2394
      @tedhernandez2394 11 месяцев назад +4

      @@mynamedoesntmatter8652 I love the Filipino people!!! I've worked with them for many years.
      A kind and gentle people.
      Also? Their food is awesome!!!

    • @mynamedoesntmatter8652
      @mynamedoesntmatter8652 11 месяцев назад

      @@tedhernandez2394
      It’s unfortunate that I’ve never been there but I believe with all my heart in their warmness, kindness, and their undoubtable, unshakable bravery in the face of extreme adversity. The Filipino people I’ve met over the years here are all such fine people. I’ve had some dishes made with their recipes and one of my favorites is Ribs Mindanao which I used to prepare often, and some chicken dishes made with citrus. Those people have been through so much over the years and I pray for peace in their island homelands. God bless them, and I always thank anyone of them I meet in comments sections. They have always been so nice.

    • @chanceberg832
      @chanceberg832 11 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@mynamedoesntmatter8652 Agree 💯 even today Most Filipinos Should know .We have there back 110 % even against a Larger Country like China

    • @mynamedoesntmatter8652
      @mynamedoesntmatter8652 11 месяцев назад

      @@chanceberg832
      They more than deserve it, if it comes to that. I surely pray not, but the state of the geopolitical landscape doesn’t give anyone much in odds in the future.

  • @saquist
    @saquist 9 лет назад +97

    This was a MUCH better explanation of the Leyte Gulf than Battlefield's 360.

    • @jacksons9546
      @jacksons9546 9 лет назад +4

      I thought 360 did alright

    • @saquist
      @saquist 9 лет назад +21

      Go see for yourself. They don't waste time with interviewing people that weren't their and have no true insight on the battles.
      Prelude
      Leaders
      Strategy for Defense
      The Commanders
      The Opposing Forces: US Pacific Fleet
      US Weapons
      The Men
      Imperial Navy: Weapons
      The Men
      Eve of the Battle
      The Battle
      Order of Battle
      Formosa
      Phase 2: The Sibuyan Sea
      Phase 3: Decoy
      Phase 4: The Surigao Strait
      Phase 5: Samar
      Phase 6: Cape Engano
      It's extremely detailed and amazing comprehensive. Better than a wiki page

    • @jacksons9546
      @jacksons9546 9 лет назад +5

      saquist I understand, this video did much better. I just meant that 360 didn't do terribly.

    • @stuka80
      @stuka80 9 лет назад +10

      battle 360 is more for flash really. this one is straight out facts.

    • @jacksons9546
      @jacksons9546 9 лет назад +2

      stuka80 Yeah, makes sense. 360 has a more personal feel i guess. Vets n stuff.

  • @ralphdwonderllama3338
    @ralphdwonderllama3338 9 лет назад +198

    The vision of the USS Johnston, Hoel and Heermann charging out of Taffy 3's smoke-screen to attack the Yamato and the rest of the Japanese fleet is one of the greatest scenes in American military history. It was their heroism that saved the beachhead at Leyte and covered up Halsey's bullheaded blunder at leaving San Bernardino Strait unguarded.

    • @deriter64
      @deriter64 9 лет назад +25

      Kip Cecil Not just U.S. naval history, anybody's naval history. What the men on the Johnston and others achieved that day was incredible.

    • @ralphdwonderllama3338
      @ralphdwonderllama3338 9 лет назад +29

      Amazing how those destroyers even managed to stay afloat with all those big brass balls weighing them down.

    • @HaloFTW55
      @HaloFTW55 9 лет назад +5

      ***** Well... I personally rate Trafalgar higher.

    • @deriter64
      @deriter64 9 лет назад +34

      Jason Liu
      Apples and oranges. Trafalgar was a clash of powerful fleets of ships of the line. At Leyte light units of the USN charged against overwhelming, seemingly suicidal, odds in a desperate bid to save the landing force it was their duty to protect. I think even Nelson would applaud.

    • @HaloFTW55
      @HaloFTW55 9 лет назад +6

      ***** I acknowledge how the Destroyers fought like lions. But in terms of strategy, Halsey acted foolishly.

  • @CITADEL5
    @CITADEL5 9 лет назад +28

    The "Battlefield" series is by far the best videos on the Second World War. Thank you for posting this one Vasile.

  • @hattrick8684
    @hattrick8684 3 года назад +15

    My god what a beautiful thing this is. A history program that’s just that. No flair, no frills, no cgi(although cgi naval tables are excellent), just the story, facts, archival footage and pertinent information/backstory. This is truly an amazing throwback from my youth. This is one of the shows that got me hooked, if not THE show that got me hooked into history.

  • @philipsutcliffe6014
    @philipsutcliffe6014 Год назад +9

    I was impressed by the way this video stuck to the facts, no hypes, no crap and no opinions. It's a good demonstration of the difficulties faced by senior commanders once an operation has commenced, the importance of accurate post mission reports and how decisions made by relatively junior commanders can swing a battle either way.

  • @josephfuselier
    @josephfuselier Год назад +6

    Outstanding series! I highly recommend this series as it is factual. Historians would appreciate this collection. My Fad served under General George S. Patton;Old Blood and Guts. I later served in The Second Armored Division at Fort Hood, Texas in 1988. Went to Operation Desert Storm. General Scharwzkoppf was a excellent combat Theatre Commander. Like Patton he was always results oriented. Huge respect and honour to Special Operations Forces special thank you to SAS Teams. Tip of the Spear! Destroyed Iraqi Scud Missle sites.

  • @tomcrouchman
    @tomcrouchman 4 года назад +7

    I think i have watched this upload 100 times now...its my go to sleep show...i know it word for word now so i don't keep watching and actually fall asleep quickly.. This is my favorite part of the war These men were the greatest generation....

    • @johnhuettner2488
      @johnhuettner2488 18 дней назад

      I go to sleep with a 1,000 plus episode playlist of WWII shows playing on an endless loop.

  • @48thurkdisl98
    @48thurkdisl98 10 лет назад +45

    One of the best documentary series ever.

    • @DN-cz7rp
      @DN-cz7rp 5 лет назад +1

      ya if you like brit propaganda

    • @jason-gf8dg
      @jason-gf8dg 4 года назад +3

      @@DN-cz7rp or if you like the truth, twat

    • @mikelucas3119
      @mikelucas3119 3 года назад +3

      @@DN-cz7rp You obviously have no idea what you are talking about. I bet you are one of SOBs tearing down statues now. I am truly sorry for you sir - you should be ashamed!

    • @kidd32888
      @kidd32888 3 года назад +1

      @@mikelucas3119 tearing down racist slave owner statues are bad? What are you smoking?

    • @ludaheracles7201
      @ludaheracles7201 3 года назад

      @@DN-cz7rp truth

  • @texashoosier5874
    @texashoosier5874 9 лет назад +56

    This is a really good historical review of not only the Battle at Leyte Gulf but how events 2-3 years earlier led up to them. Really a good job !

  • @oilsmokejones3452
    @oilsmokejones3452 9 лет назад +238

    Love the detail in this series..more history and less sensationalist entertainment than other "history" (note I did not mention any names) accounts..

    • @fritsvanleersum3880
      @fritsvanleersum3880 5 лет назад +2

      Detail too is the better explosives used in the Amarican guns.

    • @discopoe
      @discopoe 3 года назад +2

      @@HamanKarn567 When something is shown on TV, it's a pretty good indicator for being utter bs.

    • @BiggestCorvid
      @BiggestCorvid 3 года назад +8

      @@HamanKarn567 I strongly recommend checking out @drachinifel 's work on naval history, he puts out quality, detailed vids.

    • @terrycaseyphd4608
      @terrycaseyphd4608 2 года назад +3

      I agree. This is perhaps the best documentary series on WWII for people who have more than just a superficial interest. For newer documentaries, historian/author Dr. Mark Felton's two RUclips channels are the best. He does excellent research, is always interesting, and is objective, does not pull punches, or have an agenda.

    • @Malorn0
      @Malorn0 2 года назад +3

      Drachinifel is a superb historiographer. I cannot recommend him enough.

  • @dannyudov6712
    @dannyudov6712 3 года назад +6

    The announcer's voice is the best in the business.! Great show.

  • @alexanderleach3365
    @alexanderleach3365 Год назад +11

    Best military series of all time. Leyte Gulf was the death knell for the Imperial Japanese Navy.

    • @rerickf
      @rerickf 9 месяцев назад +1

      I would agrue that the IJN was done after Midway. Lyete was the final nail in the coffin.

    • @nogoodnameleft
      @nogoodnameleft 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@rerickf Not really, because the USN lost Yorktown at Midway, which they could not afford to lose in 1942. Even after Midway they still ended up sinking about 30 U.S. warships (not just transport ships) at the Guadalcanal campaign, including sinking the two aircraft carriers USS Hornet and USS Wasp. It wasn't until after Guadalcanal when the USN could say that they decisively defeated the Japanese at sea. The naval battles of Guadalcanal were far more important than the overrated land-based Guadalcanal battles that the USMC overhype and overglorify to the detriment of the sacrifice of 30 sunken USN warships and 5,000 KIA sailors in the Guadalcanal naval battles.
      It wasn't until the Battle of the Philippine Sea when the Japanese naval aircraft and aircraft carriers were smashed and defeated. They still had a powerful surface navy and land-based aircraft which they used to devastating effect in Leyte Gulf. After Leyte Gulf all the Japanese could do was use kamikazes, which they used to devastating effect at Lingayen Gulf, Iwo Jima, and Okinawa. The Japanese even after they were supposedly defeated at the Philippine Sea in June 1944 still sank 3 U.S. aircraft carriers and killed 2,000 USN sailors at Leyte Gulf. The Arisan Maru hell ship with 1,800 U.S. POWs was also sunk during Leyte Gulf. So was the submarine (USS Shark) that sank Arisan Maru. Leyte Gulf was the greatest WWII naval battle by far and involved all types of ships and tactics. Kamikazes started at Leyte Gulf and all the sailors at Okinawa and Lingayen Gulf know how successful kamikazes were compared to disasters like the non-kamikaze Battle of the Philippine Sea.

  • @mikelucas3119
    @mikelucas3119 3 года назад +5

    Best series on WWII I have watched. I highly recommend this series to all who will listen. Just outstanding work - very nicely done. Sorry to say - it is extremely under appreciated. A lot of footage from The Fighting Lady - documentary about the USS Yorktown CV-10. Which, btw, is a museum in Charleston, SC - been there many times.

  • @clayronso3932
    @clayronso3932 8 лет назад +114

    I wish this series was brought back.

    • @LoneKharnivore
      @LoneKharnivore 5 лет назад +8

      "...their primary viewing audience..."
      Yeah, nobody under eighty is interested in WW2. That's why no video games have ever been set during it, right?

    • @joksizantos7520
      @joksizantos7520 4 года назад

      World War 3, 3rd season of the series

  • @MrTwotimess
    @MrTwotimess 6 лет назад +151

    Rule of thumb in a war - if an officer tells you to expect light opposition, prepare for Armageddon.

    • @roccospencer53
      @roccospencer53 4 года назад +2

      If you could do so much better, step the hell up and get a commission. Easy too judge from the arm chair.

    • @dirkusmaximus9268
      @dirkusmaximus9268 4 года назад +1

      NuxVom always prepare for Armageddon !

    • @kbanghart
      @kbanghart 4 года назад

      Except that you can only try to prepare for such possibilities in your mind, it's not like you will be getting any extra gear cuz you disagree with what you were told. Not that I have served, but I'm guessing this is true lol unless someone wants to set me straight

  • @jimloesel2849
    @jimloesel2849 3 года назад +68

    0:01 - 11:55 is a recap of the war in the pacific up to the battle of the Marianas
    11:56 - 19:54 talks through he rational of invading the Philippines instead of Formosa
    19:55 - 57:35 is the lead up to Battle of Leyte Gulf with the details of the ships and forces
    57:35 is when the Leyte Gulf battle starts
    1:13:10 is when the first navel battle starts

    • @friedrichs753
      @friedrichs753 3 года назад +1

      Thanks, this is really helpful!

    • @CFarnwide
      @CFarnwide 2 года назад +4

      Thanks! This is what I love about the Battlefield series. Nearly an hour before getting into the actual battle. The details leading up to the battles are crucial to understanding the whole situation.

    • @TrySomeFentanyl
      @TrySomeFentanyl Год назад +1

      Every single episode is structured the same.

    • @michaelking9818
      @michaelking9818 10 месяцев назад

      Thanks buddy

    • @mariavanessadejuras767
      @mariavanessadejuras767 7 месяцев назад

      god
      job im so proud of the pilipins

  • @Corristo89
    @Corristo89 7 лет назад +109

    This was essentially the naval version of the Battle of Kursk: The last chance to turn the tide before being completely overwhelmed by the opposing side's crushing superiority in men and material. After the IJN lost he Battle of Leyte Gulf and the Philipines, the war was basically decided and the Japanese military just stuck around and pretended that it wasn't, which resulted in countless, utterly pointless deaths.

    • @slayer35st64
      @slayer35st64 5 лет назад +4

      They fought because they wanted to protect their families and emperor maybe?

    • @slayer35st64
      @slayer35st64 5 лет назад +4

      I was talking about why they continued fighting not about why they did the war crimes they did that is a different subject

    • @Tagumbol-kz4fn
      @Tagumbol-kz4fn 3 года назад +3

      Corristo89 : America in the 1930’s had a sizeable population of anti war activists...it was indeed Providential that America still produced weapons so that they able to lend them to Russia and Britain in 1939 ( remember Murmansk Run for Russia & Atlantic convoys for Britain) had the weapons production been inadequate it could have been a different world today.... China is now a threat using economic influence & debt traps from South East Asia & Oceania to Cambodia, Burma, Sri Lanka, Kyrgyzstan, Pakistan , Iran & Turkey .... a pre meditated plan using economic, biological CCP virus & Technology & computer hacking ( Huawei etc) and military.... I hope America have enough energy to counter the China - Russia red tide rising....

    • @tommyl.dayandtherunaways820
      @tommyl.dayandtherunaways820 3 года назад +2

      I think battle of Guadalcanal was the last chance. At Midway, the Japanese were clearly superior and suffered a major setback. At guadacalanal the two sides were even, and the Japanese even managed to get the US down to only one carrier in the entire pacific theatre (Enterprise). But after the Japanese gave up on Guadalcanal, it was all over but the killing. The only question was how many lives was each side willing to lose? That’s what Leyte Gulf was all about. Even if the plan succeeded. Japan was not going to win the war. The US had already overwhelmed them in terms of manpower and carriers. All they could hope for was a Vietnam style impasse, that the public would get so sick of the massive casualties that they would demand a negotiated settlement. And the lives lost would have been massive, make no mistake. Imagine D-Day, but 100x worse. As was typical with Japanese losses in the war though, it was their own poor intelligence gathering that doomed them. There was never any question about their tenacity of their sprit, or the quality of their ships and commanders, but you can’t fight what you can’t see.

  • @MarshalBasset
    @MarshalBasset 8 лет назад +46

    The best account of that titanic fight ever.
    Honor both contenders.
    For US, certainly one of her numerous finest hours.

    • @peterharwood1430
      @peterharwood1430 7 лет назад +3

      What many people never hear about is that after the landings at Leyte the liberators did not sit on the ass but helped the local occupants to rebuild their lives. I have met many American ex-serviceman in Leyte and every one was an inspiration. Alas none left now but I feel privileged to have met them. Type into you tube Dulag hill 120 and you will see how much we respect and love those that gave a chance of a better life. I am back in UK and old man now but I be back soon.

    • @kbanghart
      @kbanghart 4 года назад

      @@peterharwood1430 were you able to get back?

    • @peterharwood1430
      @peterharwood1430 4 года назад +2

      @@kbanghart I have been exposing corruption in our Judicial and medical professions and the British foreign office has revoked my passport. I hope to get an honest judge to make a ruling on the return of my passport. I rebuilt the house destroyed in the Haiyan typhoon and it has a guest room if you would like to visit. It is just 100 meters from the South Pacific Ocean between Samar and Surigao. My admin officer is called Jennifer Aucila and her phone number is 00639465604246. Give her a call and she will collect you from Tacloban Airport as my guest. Take care my friend.

  • @southernwolverine8394
    @southernwolverine8394 10 лет назад +75

    I'm most impressed by two sets of ships for their bravery in the face of overwhelming odds: 1) the destroyers of Taffy 3 and 2) the IJN southern force in San Bernardino.
    The Southern force commander knew his force was likely to be destroyed and steamed into the teeth of the US fleet regardless, determined to keep to his part of the Sho plan. They had been spotted and attacked by carrier aircraft and kept on going while the far more powerful Center Force faltered in the Sibuyan Sea.
    The US destroyers of TF3 charged ships many times their size, fighting fiercely as faithful dogs protecting their masters, the carriers. Particularly, the USS Johnston and USS Samuel B. Roberts fought far beyond their weight class in defense of their all-but-defenseless countrymen on the slow, poorly-armored light carriers.

    • @zachsmith1676
      @zachsmith1676 4 года назад +3

      due to the IJN not having identity information for escort carriers, they assumed that they were fleet carriers and their escorts were Battleships, and thus loaded AP... a bunch of the carriers received many non vital hits due to the fact that it was AP so it went straight through... much later in the battle they realized their mistake and loaded HE which lead to the sinking of Gambia Bay

    • @sse_weston4138
      @sse_weston4138 3 года назад +3

      In a note of interest was Nishimura's southern force possibly also being a distraction like northern force with Ozawa's carriers. Of course Nishimura, his second in command, and the captain Yamashiro never lived to tell, but in a last message from Yamashiro as the climax of battleship and cruiser gunfire was raining down, Nishimura sent out "We proceed till totally annihilated, I have definitely accomplished my mission as pre-arranged. Please rest assured". Being that it is generally believed Nishimura was suppose to hit the transports rather than the deadly force he faces now, perhaps his force was always meant to draw away the bombardment force and allow Kurita to move in with Yamato and the rest of his ships.

    • @thenumbah1birdman
      @thenumbah1birdman 5 месяцев назад +3

      ​@@sse_weston4138it appears nishimura certainly saw it that way. He didnt mind dying either-he'd lost his son earlier in the war. Kurita also did not mind southern force being split off as it allowed him to increase his cruising speed rather than having to slow down for the lumbering Fuso and Yamashiro.

    • @sse_weston4138
      @sse_weston4138 5 месяцев назад +2

      @@thenumbah1birdman Didn't think about that aspect of it with regards to top speed being slowed. Sometimes I forget how slow the Fuso class were lol

  • @resistglobal-resettyranny2937
    @resistglobal-resettyranny2937 4 года назад +37

    The Japanese Navy lost the war in a single afternoon, courtesy of the US Navy. That was an amazing victory for the US.

    • @antonyberger1309
      @antonyberger1309 3 года назад

      a,, t

    • @antonyberger1309
      @antonyberger1309 3 года назад

      y

    • @resistglobal-resettyranny2937
      @resistglobal-resettyranny2937 3 года назад +1

      @@antonyberger1309 Too bad you never learned how to communicate in English.

    • @Natogoon
      @Natogoon 3 года назад +1

      Equal Opportunity War Criminal It’s probably just a toddler accidentally mashing some random buttons on his parents iPad.

    • @nicov5138
      @nicov5138 3 года назад +2

      i would say the japanese lost the war on midway, since it was there that they lost most of their carrier fleet, and most importantly, they lost a huge ammount of well trained crewmen and pilots

  • @opposegroup-think3328
    @opposegroup-think3328 4 года назад +10

    This was an impressive US victory.

  • @MandaR1GmA
    @MandaR1GmA 11 лет назад +46

    The United States of America was once our enemy. After the Spanish occupation, the Philippines became a colony of America. But in World War II, although Gen. Mac Arthur fled our country, he promised to return. He did. Our enemy of the past, became our ally, and still to this day our nations remain so. As a Filipino, I will always be grateful for the American soldiers who came back, fought, and died for our freedom.

    • @bodasactra
      @bodasactra 4 года назад +6

      I only wish we could work harder to improve quality of life together for both great peoples.

    • @phillipbrewster6058
      @phillipbrewster6058 4 года назад +1

      What do you think of the current dictator who has taken over the Philippines who is killing his own people on this war on drugs that he is waging? Which is actually a war on his own people

    • @phillipbrewster6058
      @phillipbrewster6058 4 года назад +1

      @Kill Joy let me give you a few accurate stats Portugal decriminalized all narcotics and provided real treatment at the will of the patient drug abuse among teens decreased 80% in 4 years Duarte the hunn murderer has been killing his citizens and the murdering has increased 80% in the last 6 years and you say he is not a killer drug abuse is a medical problem to be solved by medical drs authoritarian murdering dictatorships have not worked in 200 ears eventually there is allways an uprising

    • @TheJoseph0012
      @TheJoseph0012 3 года назад

      @Kill Joy Exactly, poor living condition lead to addiction. Maybe curb poverty rather than impose an authoritarian rule?

    • @williamkeene9032
      @williamkeene9032 Год назад

      Kamusta ka. You're very welcome, and I hope we remain staunch allies forever. Love the Philippines and plan on retiring there.

  • @dingdingalingthecat4924
    @dingdingalingthecat4924 10 лет назад +28

    Great documentry, I really like this series it's very analithical, logical and has no fluff to their nariritive.
    Thank much !!!

    • @DN-cz7rp
      @DN-cz7rp 5 лет назад

      the narrative is so inaccurate you need to read a lot of good books to get the facts

  • @christopherorourke6362
    @christopherorourke6362 10 лет назад +57

    My uncle William C. O'Rourke I was at the Battle for Leyte Gulf aboard the USS Southerland DD-743 which was the turning point of World War II in the Pacific. My father in law was in the U.S. Army on Leyte during that battle.

    • @NormAppleton
      @NormAppleton 10 лет назад +15

      Midway was the turning point. Leyte Gulf was the killing blow that wiped out the Japanese navy as a force for the rest of the war.
      Big salute to your uncle though for being in the biggest naval battle in history.

    • @ENLIGHTENMENTING
      @ENLIGHTENMENTING 10 лет назад +2

      My great admiration and thanks to you by that. The presence in war requires valour and courage, over all if is to liberate the world from tyranny. Thanks and Farewell.

    • @vn3332
      @vn3332 10 лет назад

      J
      Hh

    • @adrianncarillz9999
      @adrianncarillz9999 6 лет назад +1

      My Grandfather's father said that he killed a Japanese Leader
      He even showed me the sword

    • @dr.martiwolfe7824
      @dr.martiwolfe7824 5 лет назад

      Christopher O’Rourke, I would be grateful if you could put me in touch with your uncle and/or father-in-law if they are willing to let me ask them a few questions. I am not a professional historian, but I have heard that sleep deprivation played an important role in the Battle (s) of Leyte Gulf and

  • @defeatglobalism6141
    @defeatglobalism6141 2 года назад +10

    It was a crushing defeat for the Japanese Navy, courtesy of the US Navy.

  • @artsmith1972
    @artsmith1972 10 лет назад +7

    Thank you for the upload...! I can remember as a child my grandfather telling me about this (and other) Pacific battles, so it's really cool to be able to learn all the details of what happened. My grandfather was a gunner's mate on USS Benham DD-796, a Fletcher class Destroyer, which was part of task force 38 during this battle. He had some amazing stories that he told my brother and I when we were youngsters. Unfortunately, like much of the greatest generation, he passed a few years ago.

    • @isaiahkayode6526
      @isaiahkayode6526 Год назад +1

      God Bless your father and many others of The Greatest Generation of all time I salute to your Father and many other bravery.

  • @carlosa7598
    @carlosa7598 3 года назад +6

    I was there at the monument of General Mac's landing ceremony back in mid 2000's. Even Japanese military were there also drinking and shaking hands with one another. It even gave me tears though as US Navy sailor here in Japan, I'm glad we all came in peace for both the US, Japan and Philippines. Even today, Japan still supports the Philippines in many ways, including New Navy Ships and Other types of units, as well as Reconn missions for terrorism activities. Here in Japan, still has ceremonies for the A-bombs in Hiroshima and Nagasaki in early August. In December, the attack of Pearl Harbor. Now we all have a new war, the War on Terrorism. Stay safe everyone.🙏🙏🗾🌸

  • @shonc8338
    @shonc8338 5 лет назад +57

    My grandfather was at leyte gulf aboard the destroyer uss John w weeks. Manning a .22 mm anti aircraft gun

    • @chacdogful
      @chacdogful 4 года назад +7

      Shon C maybe you mean a 20mm ? You see a gun round made for squirrel hunting isn’t as effective against aircraft. As in the way you wrote “.22”

    • @jgja1931
      @jgja1931 4 года назад

      Woww thanks for him coming here in the Philippines

    • @mikealvarez2322
      @mikealvarez2322 4 года назад

      My late father-in-law was a side gunner on a bomber during WW2. Towards the end of the war he was stationed in the Philippines and there became romantically involved with a Philippino woman (this was before he met the wiman who became his wife) and they lived together. Last year as my father-in-law's health was deteriorating there was a young Philippino nurse at the nursing home. Every once in a while my father-in-law would tell out his old Philippino girl friend's name and tell her TO GET IN THE BED. My wife says her Dad always yelled and ordered the family around. Even so he was always a kind and generous soul.

    • @swrennie
      @swrennie 3 года назад +1

      @@jgja1931 (Of course, it took 46 years and a volcano to get them to leave again...😉)

    • @jgja1931
      @jgja1931 3 года назад

      @@swrennie lels colonization years

  • @stanleyjensen1950
    @stanleyjensen1950 11 лет назад +4

    These Battlefield documentaries never fail in their excellence. Thanks for posting!!

  • @motelluver945
    @motelluver945 2 года назад +5

    Excellent series. Tim Piggott Smith is the best narrator of documentaries ever. Soo relaxing. I know it's weird, but I listen to this or battlefield sounds to sleep to. I'm a Gulf War era veteran, but I've heard others say the same that weren't.

    • @Walkdogable
      @Walkdogable Год назад +1

      I have listened to this documentary off and on since the 1990s and I listen to it to sleep. The narration and sounds really help me sleep.

    • @plinthley
      @plinthley Год назад

      @@Walkdogable Same here!

  • @tkarlmann
    @tkarlmann 6 месяцев назад +4

    It is a shame that neither the USS Johnston nor the USS Samuel B. Roberts were mentioned by name in this video. From other accounts, these two ships fought way beyond what was expected of them and both were sunk. However, the ferocity of the fight in these two ships likely factored into the Japanese battleship Yamato -- the largest battleship ever built -- to turn and run! It remains a heart-wrenching story to this day.

  • @TheDispondentpatriot
    @TheDispondentpatriot Год назад +1

    I fall asleep to one of these every night..
    Never fails.

  • @Cthulhublanca
    @Cthulhublanca 10 лет назад +6

    Uncle Leo was ashore on Leyte itself when the battles were going on. He said at night you could see the glowing 14" and 16" shells passing over during land bombardment, and could feel a gentle bump off the ground when they landed. For some reason, he said what really struck him was that each of the shells was the same weight as a army jeep.

  • @Andrew_alxf21
    @Andrew_alxf21 Год назад +3

    Thank you so much Vasile. I enjoy all your ww2 videos. Better than other ww2 docs

  • @scottburrell677
    @scottburrell677 Год назад +3

    This was incredibly well done, thorough, and clarified much for me.

  • @TheBigFella
    @TheBigFella Год назад +2

    Thank you very much for taking the time to put this together - you did amazing work!!!

  • @garyloger9416
    @garyloger9416 5 лет назад +22

    These war footage never gets old.

  • @Jim5point0
    @Jim5point0 10 лет назад +3

    Interesting documentary. Thanks for posting

  • @nunyabeeswax186
    @nunyabeeswax186 9 лет назад +23

    By the way..the USS Enterprise CV 6 {the big E} made it all the way through WW2.Did a LOT of damage.After being damaged early on it was fitted with special radar and that bulge below to detect underwater attack.So a pre WW2 vessel made it all the way through did a huge amount of damage & the crew and vessel was awarded accordingly. Gotta love it. Even from an Army grunt such as myself

  • @sapphic_vomit
    @sapphic_vomit Год назад +1

    when I was younger, id watch this series on Military Channel, usually really early in the morning, around 5am, and see my parents before they went to work.
    its a great thing to sleep to, tbh.

  • @jeffreymartin8448
    @jeffreymartin8448 Год назад +2

    To this day, The Guinness Book of World Records lists Commander Evans on USS Johnston as the man possessing the biggest balls in history.

  • @brandall9481
    @brandall9481 5 лет назад +11

    My grandfather was a gunners mate on the USS Honolulu at the Battle of Leyte Gulf. It was his last combat experience. The Honolulu was damaged and he went to OTS. My other grandpa was fighting on Leyte in the Sixth Army under McCarthur.

    • @builtnotboughtmadeinphilip3955
      @builtnotboughtmadeinphilip3955 Год назад

      My Dad was there, Radarman on USS COLUMBIA CL-56 Columbia returned to the Pacific, covering the landings at Peleliu and taking part in the Battle of Surigao Strait on the night of October 24-25 during the Battle of Leyte Gulf. Whilst covering the landings during the Lingayen Gulf invasion on January 6, 1945, she was struck by a kamikaze, and was further hit by a second kamikaze three days later while laying close to shore due to the prior damage. Under repairs until June 1945, Columbia returned to the Pacfic, participating in the Allied invasion of Borneo and serving in the East China Sea when Japan capitulated in mid-August.

  • @eliasdeleone7059
    @eliasdeleone7059 8 лет назад +9

    This is a great series. I wish all the episodes were available in sequence. High quality documentaries overall.

    • @horacecunningham7832
      @horacecunningham7832 8 лет назад +1

      +Elias De Leone u can jus research them and compile a playlist

  • @Grunt802VT
    @Grunt802VT Год назад

    2023 I still watch this series!!!
    Combat footage is brilliant!!!

  • @JaqbMisiak
    @JaqbMisiak Год назад +2

    Best series ever

  • @SnakeKonig
    @SnakeKonig 10 лет назад +4

    i live near the this battle... you can see them below underwater if you pass them in boats...its so eerie with all those boats visible from above...

  • @garybruner4051
    @garybruner4051 9 лет назад +10

    Uncle Ray survived the sinking of the Hoel, one of the Taffy 3 destroyers. Spent 5 days on a raft watching fellow sailors die. Finally he swam to Samar, one of only 2 survivors of the 73 or so on that raft (and floater net). Those guys were all heroes…. This battle has been special to me since I became aware of it all back in the 1960s….

  • @DetroitKim
    @DetroitKim 4 месяца назад

    thank you for posting on youtube i've never seen this series before and was researching Leyte Island as this is one of many places my grandpa fought ....

  • @gayprepperz6862
    @gayprepperz6862 28 дней назад

    As rich and detailed as this series is, I so love reading the comment sections and learning about individual experiences of military personnel who were there at the time, or from their children relaying their experiences. So many footnotes of history that add to my knowledge of events. I salute the members of the Greatest Generation, and the children that help to keep their parents personal exploits and memoirs of events on a macro scale, alive. I hope my country can regain that pride and self respect again.

  • @donaldragland1607
    @donaldragland1607 4 года назад +17

    I found my Dads journal fromMay 26th1944-December 5th 1945. It details this battle he was there on last 26. He never shared this with us while he was living.

    • @marckg6950
      @marckg6950 Год назад

      Uncle Hap, short for Happy, came back from WW2 not speaking to hardly anyone. He functioned etc. In the 1960'she would lend the family his riverhouse several times, after we all got at his place he would always be on the porch close to a door, he would look at us, no happy smile,, look at the floor not speaking, and be gone in under 15 seconds. He saw too much in WW 2.

    • @builtnotboughtmadeinphilip3955
      @builtnotboughtmadeinphilip3955 Год назад

      My Dad was there, Radarman on USS COLUMBIA CL-56 Columbia returned to the Pacific, covering the landings at Peleliu and taking part in the Battle of Surigao Strait on the night of October 24-25 during the Battle of Leyte Gulf. Whilst covering the landings during the Lingayen Gulf invasion on January 6, 1945, she was struck by a kamikaze, and was further hit by a second kamikaze three days later while laying close to shore due to the prior damage. Under repairs until June 1945, Columbia returned to the Pacfic, participating in the Allied invasion of Borneo and serving in the East China Sea when Japan capitulated in mid-August.

  • @BJBFOREST
    @BJBFOREST 8 лет назад +5

    This battle included HMAS Australia and Shropshire; the destroyers Arunta and Warramunga; the infantry landing ships Westralia, Kanimbla and Manoora; the frigate Gascoyne; and the motor launch HDML 1074. Australia was the first ship to be hit by a kamikaze aircraft.

    • @HaloFTW55
      @HaloFTW55 8 лет назад

      +Withab BJ Well... Australia, New Zealand, and Canada are often overlooked.

    • @jameshope7933
      @jameshope7933 4 года назад

      Pretty sure HMAS Australia took several kamikaze hits and stayed on station.tough ship,tougher crew

  • @billotto602
    @billotto602 Год назад +1

    These are the best videos of WW2 ever.

  • @ParallaxVue
    @ParallaxVue 11 лет назад +1

    Excellent. Thank you for posting.

  • @SabraStiehl
    @SabraStiehl 10 лет назад +8

    The tragedy back then was that once MacArthur decided to bypass Mindinao nobody thought to cancel the invasion of Pelelieu 500 miles east of Mindinao. Many died there for no real reason.

    • @docbill25
      @docbill25 10 лет назад +5

      1. MacArthur did NOT decided to bypass Mindanao. . . The decision was made by the Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS), after ADM Halsey recommended that Leyte be invaded, thus bypassing Mindanao.
      2. Even if they had decided to invade Mindanao, the plan was to seize the Palau Islands. After the decision to invade Leyte instead, the operation to take the Palau Islands was not changed. Either way, Peleliu was going to be invaded. MacArthur had no input, as that operation was under the command of Nimitz.
      3. As an "Oh by the way" point of history, Halsey recommended to Nimitz that The Peleliu operation be cancelled and the troops assigned be used in the Leyte operation, but he was overruled by Nimitz.
      4. As another point of history, the 1st Marine Regiment at Peleliu was commanded by COL Lewis B. (Chesty) Puller, later Commandant of the Marine Corps.

    • @richarddavis1163
      @richarddavis1163 10 лет назад +1

      William Elwood
      Chesty Puller, my hero.

    • @richarddavis1163
      @richarddavis1163 10 лет назад

      *****
      Ha!

    • @goofygoobr
      @goofygoobr 10 лет назад

      General MacArthur had no problem sacrificing our men for his youtube moment at Leyte. Make no mistake he was a great tactician but his ego had failed him when it counted most. Too many men died so Mac could stand on the Missouri and declare "all hostilities over." I used to revere this man, No longer. Unlike other great US generals, he showed very little regard for the lives of his troops. I'm reminded of Gen. Sherman's relationship with his troops. MacArthur was loathed and despised not just by his subordinate officers but by the very men that executed his battle plans.

    • @lillyf40
      @lillyf40 9 лет назад +1

      Sabra:
      I agree. 23,000 U.S. troops died on Pelelu. That Island could have been bypassed
      and the 30,000 Japanese occupying it could have been left to starve.

  • @uniteagainstantifa7141
    @uniteagainstantifa7141 3 года назад +7

    General MacArthur and Admiral Nimitz were brilliant officers, and true American patriots. God bless their souls.

  • @williamlouie569
    @williamlouie569 6 месяцев назад +2

    Halsey never admit his failure to protect the land fleet when he left to pursue the Japanese carriers. He took the bait.

  • @MarkjosephSumande-mk7cf
    @MarkjosephSumande-mk7cf 8 месяцев назад

    Thank you guys

  • @gargoyles9999
    @gargoyles9999 10 лет назад +18

    The entire Japanese strategy in the war at least at the outset was the surprise Pearl Harbor attack to get the US to stagger back and be unable to stop Japans rapid initial advance. They knew that the US would eventually get its massive war industry up and running and knew it would then be turned on them. The plan at that point would be that Japan controlled and fortified so much territory that the US would decide that it would be too costly to try and take it back.

    • @DN-cz7rp
      @DN-cz7rp 5 лет назад +1

      really wow

    • @epicmickey2351
      @epicmickey2351 5 лет назад +3

      It would have worked if they didn’t bomb Pearl Harbor. That became a rallying cry.

    • @w.t.fpipedreamwithhopefull5538
      @w.t.fpipedreamwithhopefull5538 4 года назад +1

      They just didn't want Oil embargo.Hoped for a decisive battle to get America to sign a treaty. They should have invaded Russia with their Allie,Germany. The US are either very dumb or they knew Pearl Harbour was going to be attacked.

    • @bernardchong4527
      @bernardchong4527 3 года назад +1

      Im glad America step in if not i will be speaking Japanese now

  • @alexandruhagi
    @alexandruhagi 10 лет назад +3

    Really proud of you for uploading this. Good job!

  • @robertroberts5627
    @robertroberts5627 5 лет назад +2

    So much better than any history teacher in class could deliver

  • @juliodyarzagaray
    @juliodyarzagaray 3 года назад +1

    Thanks for posting this. Loved this series.

  • @ernestspencer4879
    @ernestspencer4879 11 лет назад +3

    Guadalcanal was the battle that really broke the back of the Imperial Japanese Navy. The U.S./Allies lost a lot of ships, but they could be replaced/repaired. The I.J.N. didn't have the ability to do that. Over time, the I.J.N. would inevitably grow weaker, while the U.S./Allied Navies only grew stronger.

    • @kelvinktfong
      @kelvinktfong 5 лет назад

      Ernest Spencer Chester Nimitz sent his old ships to the South Pacific. The newly built ships were massed at Pearl Harbor

  • @ENLIGHTENMENTING
    @ENLIGHTENMENTING 10 лет назад +3

    Thanks for the documentary. The planning of the battle is fantastic between the two more powerful fleets on the Pacific Ocean .The liberty returned to Philippines again. Farewell.

  • @jeffreymartin8448
    @jeffreymartin8448 3 года назад +3

    500 Japanese aircraft shot down by Task Force 38 during the Formosa raids. The F6F Hellcat had turned the tide starting with The Great Marianas Turkey Shoot. It could outclimb the Japanese yet was armored like a tank. With six .50 cal machine guns it was lethal and ensured that all other operations in the Pacific after it arrived on the scene were successful. Grumman Aircraft and an army of engineers and riveters across America delivered a superb fighter, a war winner.

  • @paulbrightner7757
    @paulbrightner7757 10 лет назад +1

    Great series and this episode is the best of the lot.

  • @joeyl8850
    @joeyl8850 4 года назад +11

    That was an awesome victory for the US Navy.

  • @phyllisowen3532
    @phyllisowen3532 5 лет назад +10

    My dad and uncle were in the USS McKee DD575

  • @stylembonkers1094
    @stylembonkers1094 4 года назад

    Great explanation, great footage.

  • @texastwostep
    @texastwostep 11 лет назад +2

    Vasile, Thank you for this awesome program!
    Paul

  • @peterbrittain1963
    @peterbrittain1963 3 года назад +3

    the suburb of elizabeth east in south Australia, streets are named after these great men and there ships ...kinkaide road, yorktown, midway , halsey, nimits and many more .. these brave men helped save my country .

    • @mynamedoesntmatter8652
      @mynamedoesntmatter8652 2 года назад +1

      Your troops fought with us, and in all fronts. Those brave men are to be commended and thanked.

  • @Moronvideos1940
    @Moronvideos1940 9 лет назад +12

    This is how you spell it.....BATTLEFIELD...Otherwise, excellent job of uploading all these episodes....Thank you

  • @johnzajac9849
    @johnzajac9849 Год назад +1

    Outstanding.

  • @kevins8434
    @kevins8434 Год назад +1

    Such a great documentary. Funny how it was the largest neval engagement ever yet if you were to bring it up in a conversation regarding history 99% of the public would be baffled

    • @philipsutcliffe6014
      @philipsutcliffe6014 Год назад

      Probablyt because even if the Japanese had succeeded in inflicting major casualties and possibly defeating the landings at Leyte Gulf it would not have altered the eventual course of the Pacific War, Japan was already defeated, just not subdued. Midway was more significant in changing the course of the war, an American defeat at Midway would at the least have extended the Pacific war by 3 to 4 years.

  • @onceanexile3762
    @onceanexile3762 10 лет назад +6

    my pappy-81st Infantry Division 323 Regiment, was the first ship there in the evening, by the next morning he said there were 5,000 ships as far as the eye could see.....

  • @richmcintyre1178
    @richmcintyre1178 3 года назад +4

    Watching Halsey take the bait makes me sick. I served in a Marine Airwing and I can tell you that estimates of battle damage, planes lost or ships sunk is ALWAYS overestimated. For example, 2 planes can encounter the same enemy plane and both will take credit for the kill. They are not trying to lie it is just the confusion of the battle. An Independent battle assessment is always needed when practical. The same goes for ground encounters. Until you've been in a pitched battle it is difficult sometimes to understand how these errors can occur but Halsey had information about the Japanese change of course but his ego got in the way. Admiral Oldendorf saved MacArthur's ass and Halsey's career.

    • @BobHooker
      @BobHooker 2 года назад +1

      Well because of the American material superiority and human capital superiority and they were able to win despite her blunders

  • @sneek14peek
    @sneek14peek 4 года назад +1

    I always enjoy the uploads you have again and again ..so much from ww2 always learned from the soldiers politicians dictators civilians ..
    thanks

  • @outdoors9830
    @outdoors9830 4 месяца назад

    This is what a documentary should be, pure doc.

  • @steveng8727
    @steveng8727 5 лет назад +3

    Incredible narrator & film clips

    • @DN-cz7rp
      @DN-cz7rp 5 лет назад

      ya incredibly stupid. can't even pronounce names correctly.

  • @rigamarrow
    @rigamarrow 9 лет назад +8

    They tried and tried to get MacArthur off the Astoria so the ship could be used as a fighting unit, rather than an army general's personal yacht but Marshall Mac would not be moved.

    • @paulmcclung9383
      @paulmcclung9383 4 года назад +1

      Say what you like about MacArthur; and much of it is true; he was not a coward and would have approved of using the ship as a combat unit with him on it. He would then tout his own valor.

  • @WildWaterIndonesia
    @WildWaterIndonesia 3 года назад

    Best I’ve ever found about Pacific War...!

  • @andrewparks6943
    @andrewparks6943 4 года назад +1

    As I watch this everything from my Military History class I took came flooding back

  • @TheNecrocoil
    @TheNecrocoil 11 лет назад +7

    I used to watch this so much on tv in the past, I miss the old documentaries that actually had content.
    Discovery channel / National Geographic have simply changed in social drama shows.

  • @antisocialist907
    @antisocialist907 2 года назад +6

    The Battle of Leyte Gulf was an amazing victory by the US Navy.

  • @1voyher1
    @1voyher1 10 лет назад

    thanks, great detail here

  • @delzworld2007
    @delzworld2007 8 месяцев назад +1

    The excellent narrator is not as given in the info above, but is in fact Tim Pigott Smith.

  • @Jodonho
    @Jodonho 9 лет назад +11

    42:45 Combustible, Vulnerable, Expendable.

    • @mbeighties8058
      @mbeighties8058 9 лет назад

      CVE USS Santee escort carrier. Way to go Dad

  • @ernestspencer4879
    @ernestspencer4879 11 лет назад +5

    Vasile, appreciate you uploading all these!

    • @ludaheracles7201
      @ludaheracles7201 3 года назад

      His narration is exemplary. Well researched content. Respect Vasile Luga! 💚

  • @johnt.4947
    @johnt.4947 4 месяца назад

    So cool to see Japanese footage. Thank-you for posting this!

  • @nicolascristoffanini6920
    @nicolascristoffanini6920 7 месяцев назад

    Excelente program

  • @hailherrosner
    @hailherrosner 11 лет назад +6

    WOW, there seems to be a separate War going on in the Comments Section, do these people know that WW2 ended 68 years ago? LOL!! Great series, thanks mate!!

  • @brb0713
    @brb0713 10 лет назад +18

    My father was a wildcat pilot on the carrier Savo Island , he said they were even dropping wing tanks of gas on the battleships

    • @Inquisitor6321
      @Inquisitor6321 3 года назад

      Every little bit helps.
      I bet they fired a barrage of curse words at them too.

    • @boypanot1509
      @boypanot1509 3 года назад +1

      Salute to ur dad

    • @gayprepperz6862
      @gayprepperz6862 28 дней назад

      I do so love to hear these oral accounts that would be lost to posterity if it were not for people like you. My thanks, and my reverence for your father, one of the many of the Greatest Generation! Respect...

    • @gayprepperz6862
      @gayprepperz6862 28 дней назад

      @@Inquisitor6321 Love it!

  • @michaellazzeri2069
    @michaellazzeri2069 Год назад +1

    At 29 y/o, my Father volunteered to fight for our nation. Because he had no birth certificate, the only branch that would take him at 29 , was The USMC. And, so it was that on 8/7/1942, he was in the very 1st platoon of The 1st Marines, to walk on to the Beach at Guadalcanal. Dad lasted 6 weeks of Hell, before Dengue Fever & " Combat Fatigue " nearly killed him. He was evac'd to New Zealand for 19 months, where he finally regained enough health to return to The USA. In Oakland, CA, he spent another 6 months before his Honorable Discharge, with The Navy Cross, & a small lifetime pension. Dad was part of The Greatest Generation, & he was my hero. I miss him every day. -------------------MJL, 76 y/o

  • @MegaTeacherg
    @MegaTeacherg 10 лет назад

    Thank you uploader