Do Men Even Have Feelings - Chechen War

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  • Опубликовано: 28 дек 2021
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Комментарии • 12 тыс.

  • @milanvondrich9749
    @milanvondrich9749 2 года назад +47215

    Imagine having to fly to Afganistan, surviving the whole war with your comarade, coming home and after a few years, you have to face your brother-in-arms as an enemy.

    • @henryhunter4227
      @henryhunter4227 2 года назад +3128

      Imagine coming back and a few years later your country collapses

    • @kak42
      @kak42 2 года назад +813

      I mean, to be fair, it's Alik who decided to fight for the drunkard president that shot the white house (the soviet one) with a tank.

    • @zwgrafoug1351
      @zwgrafoug1351 2 года назад +1601

      @@kak42 you didn't even get it did you ?? whatever choice he made he would die anyways if he disobeyed the orders they would find him and kill him so welp he'd rather die fighting

    • @milanvondrich9749
      @milanvondrich9749 2 года назад +457

      @@kak42 You think a soldier has the right to choose what orders he follows and what orders he disobeys? A real soldier follows every order word for word, even when he knows these orders will get him killed. Yes, Jelcin was a drunkard and an idiot, just like the rest of the high command of the Russian army, but that doesn't change the fact that this is what soldiers do, they follow orders.

    • @kak42
      @kak42 2 года назад +543

      @@milanvondrich9749 Tools, lackeys, servants. That's who "follow orders". Soldiers fight for something they believe in. Aushwitz guards were "just following orders" too then. How neat!

  • @khuramhussain7162
    @khuramhussain7162 2 года назад +7459

    The line that got me:
    "If I see you in action, I won't show mercy, just like you won't. Retreat your men. It is better if you come as a guest."

  • @georgecordova8851
    @georgecordova8851 7 месяцев назад +863

    “Have pitty on their mothers” gave me chills cause no matter what country you’re from, no mother wants to lose her son in an armed conflict

    • @TawaraboshiGenba
      @TawaraboshiGenba Месяц назад +1

      I can think of one place, although it's contested whether it's a country or not.

    • @wolfsiejk
      @wolfsiejk Месяц назад

      @@TawaraboshiGenba for gods sake they are fucking human.

    • @sriyohesh3224
      @sriyohesh3224 29 дней назад

      ​@@TawaraboshiGenbaWhat place are you referring to?

    • @bebostrong1
      @bebostrong1 29 дней назад +1

      ​@@TawaraboshiGenbaIf ur referring to Gaza trust me ur wrong.

    • @mridstaid414
      @mridstaid414 19 дней назад +2

      Not even fathers oh wait they already died in war😔.

  • @jjtninja
    @jjtninja 11 месяцев назад +4457

    I'm not Chechen nor Russian, but I am a soldier.
    This hits hard.

    • @user-vz1ph6vo1k
      @user-vz1ph6vo1k 11 месяцев назад +92

      Thank you for your service regardless of what nation you're from.

    • @magosbiologiszhessnakram8530
      @magosbiologiszhessnakram8530 11 месяцев назад +43

      Honor to soldiers.

    • @tehokotkat
      @tehokotkat 11 месяцев назад +11

      But A BULLET hits "harder".
      "Dudes" should have made their "moves" more wise/earlier.
      No it's AKHMAT-land.

    • @wafflesandpancake69
      @wafflesandpancake69 10 месяцев назад +4

      huge respect to you!

    • @crip4etpio64
      @crip4etpio64 10 месяцев назад +11

      Меня много родни в Чечне погибло

  • @HingalshDealer
    @HingalshDealer 2 года назад +12395

    Both died in this war. Alik(Russian) and Lambada (Chechen)
    Edit: Lol when i saw this Video there were less than 1000 views now above million.

    • @nokokusovai4415
      @nokokusovai4415  2 года назад +1963

      That's interesting, I wasn't aware that the identity of the a Chechen commander was known.

    • @HingalshDealer
      @HingalshDealer 2 года назад +1559

      @@nokokusovai4415 Lambada is his nickname and his real name is ali adaev.
      If you understand russian this video is about him: ruclips.net/video/CNRNbBf5yp8/видео.html

    • @youtubeboxing719
      @youtubeboxing719 2 года назад +604

      AbuEnte TM may allah give him jannah

    • @HingalshDealer
      @HingalshDealer 2 года назад +243

      @@youtubeboxing719 amin

    • @zarits11mode23
      @zarits11mode23 2 года назад +128

      @@HingalshDealer amin 🇹🇳❤💎

  • @AgieSebie
    @AgieSebie 2 года назад +5038

    this fucking broke my heart, he's literally begging him not to do it because he doesn't want to fight him

    • @oasis1282
      @oasis1282 2 года назад +21

      A good method of torture

    • @barittos5585
      @barittos5585 2 года назад +2

      Alik is is brother ?

    • @AgieSebie
      @AgieSebie 2 года назад +278

      @@barittos5585 no but i think they were former comrades in arms

    • @barittos5585
      @barittos5585 2 года назад +6

      @@AgieSebie i dont understand they were formar comrades in Afghanistan fighting against who ?

    • @AgieSebie
      @AgieSebie 2 года назад +142

      @@barittos5585 afghanis i assume

  • @INSIGHT16
    @INSIGHT16 Год назад +5149

    The complete story is here :
    Mid-afternoon, the first battalion of the 131st MRB occupied the train station. Because of the radio black-out, they were unaware of the 81st MRR's situation. They separated from the second battalion from the freight station to the west, and from the third battalion on the outskirts of the city. The unit parked their tanks and armored personnel carriers around the station to wait for orders, around which time Chechen security minister Turpal-Ali Atgeriyev, who had served alongside Russian commanding officer Colonel Ivan Alekseevich Savin prior to the encounter and was worried about bloodshed on both sides (likely concerned for the safety of his old friend), extended a desperate plea to Savin (nicknamed Alik by Atgeriyev in the brief communication), proposing a negotiation for Savin to "withdraw his men and come to him as a guest", an offer which the latter had no choice but to reject due to having insufficient permission to call a ceasefire. Sometime after, a Russian communications officer heard the words "Welcome to Hell" on his headset. Shortly after, Chechen defenders in the depot buildings, the post office, and the five-story building surrounding the station opened devastating automatic and anti-tank fire. The surviving Russian troopers took cover inside the station, then the Chechens completed their ambush by setting it on fire. Colonel Savin radioed for help and artillery fire, but help never arrived
    Most distress calls from the 131st went unanswered. The second and third battalions of the brigade responded to the call for help, but were caught in layered ambushes before reaching the station. Both battalions were ordered to stay away from the Presidential Palace; this added to the trouble as the armored columns turned into alleyways, only to be destroyed by more of the layered ambushes.[7] After a small element of the 503rd Motor Rifle Regiment received orders to move during the early hours of the day, they immediately received friendly fire from the other Russian forces bogged down under heavy fire; they fought each other for six hours (there were many more such incidents, some of them organized by the Chechens). The 8th Corps reached the city center from the north, but were unable to save the units fallen into the ambush. No Russian reinforcements reached the railway station.
    At sundown, Colonel Savin decided to evacuate the wounded via the only working armored personnel carrier. After loading forty wounded troopers, the APC moved in the wrong direction (toward the center of the city). It eventually turned around to retreat along the same route, but was ambushed by Chechen anti-tank gunners; thirteen of the crew and passengers survived to be taken prisoner. On 2 January, Colonel Savin and his remaining officers abandoned the railway station. They found some abandoned Russian armored personnel-carriers. They attempted to escape, but were attacked by Chechen fighters. Savin died on the street from air-burst shrapnel beside his wrecked vehicle.[7] By 3 January, the 131st Brigade lost nearly 789 men killed (another 75 were captured, and only 160 reached safety), including almost all of their officers. In addition, twenty of twenty-six tanks and 102 of 120 other armored vehicles were lost. The entire Maikop Brigade of over 1,000 men was wiped out in sixty hours.[7]
    During this debacle, General Grachev proclaimed "the entire city centre and several districts of the city and its outskirts are under complete control of Russian forces".
    Source: Wikipedia, Battle of Grozny (1994-1995), Central Railway Station.

    • @LyonPercival
      @LyonPercival Год назад

      Goddamn, Russians really are animals.
      Any other western country that would have led to massive reforms and stripped down of ranks and even massive protests against whoever dumbass led to that conflict.
      But no in Russia, government sees people as meat to be grinded to further whatever their imperialistic aim is…. Chechens weren’t safe, Georgians weren’t safe, Ukrainians weren’t safe, Russian citizens aren’t also safe. Yet people just stay quiet obediently - waiting for their sons to be drafted while they watch Channel 1 - the best channel - which is also a government channel lol

    • @ZSASM7.62
      @ZSASM7.62 11 месяцев назад +100

      Thanks bro

    • @justarandomguyrandomguy5411
      @justarandomguyrandomguy5411 11 месяцев назад +14

      Ok

    • @wenterinfaer1656
      @wenterinfaer1656 11 месяцев назад +135

      There's not enough characters to write the "the complete story"

    • @fattony-yi2pu
      @fattony-yi2pu 11 месяцев назад +225

      On the part of the militants, the famous field commander Ali Adayev negotiated. Shamil Basayev's right-hand man and henchman, the chief of staff of the notorious Abkhazian battalion, who went through the Abkhazian war together with Shamil II.
      Ali Gadaev was known in Chechnya by the nickname Lambada - according to one version, when he was traveling to Abkhazia, in Stavropol in the KMV area, his car was stopped for inspection by traffic cops. However, an armed Ali pointed a machine gun at them and forced them to dance a lambada at gunpoint...
      Basayev considered Adayev one of the most promising and knowledgeable of his henchmen. Together they fought against the opposition of Umar Avturkhanov and Beslan Gantamirov in the autumn of 1994.
      The question of establishing Alik's identity is quite complicated. Who he was exactly, meant only "Lambada", who took this secret with him to the grave.
      The main version says that this is someone from the officers of the legendary 131st Motorized Rifle Brigade, who stormed Grozny on New Year's Eve-1995. But it was definitely not her commander - the commander who fell to the death of the brave was called Ivan Savin. And his call sign was "Caliber-9".
      It is assumed that Alik is the commander of the reconnaissance company of the Maykop brigade Oleg Tyrtyshny. Alas, he also fell in that New Year's assault on Grozny. But it has not yet been possible to prove one hundred percent that it is Oleg Petrovich's voice.
      By the way, I advise you to take less information from Wikipedia. A thoroughly hypocritical website that introduces misinformation and is edited for the benefit of its owners.

  • @Glebas442
    @Glebas442 Год назад +2673

    My russian dad was in the Chechen war. He was a minesweeper. They were climbing up a ladder, he was in front and he stepped with his left foot, but the guy behind him stepped with his right foot, he stepped on a mine and his leg blew up. They drove with him to the emergency room, but he died of the blood loss. My dad said, like some higher force or God himself saved him for the future. He has a medal from that war, he is still alive and well.

    • @RIPPER_0
      @RIPPER_0 Год назад +3

      Я не хочу тебя обидеть… но ты понимаешь что твой папа занимался терроризмом?

    • @user-ve6us1mu3w
      @user-ve6us1mu3w Год назад +87

      Очень жаль что жив

    • @SSSKrut
      @SSSKrut Год назад

      @@user-ve6us1mu3w спокойной, главное что укров скоро не останется))

    • @harmonize838
      @harmonize838 Год назад

      @@user-ve6us1mu3w с такой гнилью вместо мозгов, лучше себя пожалей

    • @redtwerd
      @redtwerd Год назад +210

      ​@@user-ve6us1mu3w твои отчимы?

  • @akonoka3356
    @akonoka3356 2 года назад +22280

    _"I don't have a choice... I have orders and I will obey them in any case."_
    gave me goosebumps all over my body.

    • @fried1537
      @fried1537 2 года назад +101

      Brainwashing is a powerful tool of the elites

    • @cheekibreeki9818
      @cheekibreeki9818 2 года назад +1549

      @@fried1537 It is not brainwashing, he was just doing what every soldier is expected to do, follow orders.

    • @user-dj5ev8ru1f
      @user-dj5ev8ru1f 2 года назад +913

      @@fried1537 he coudn't have done it. Even if they did retreat, he would bee punished and another commander would replace him

    • @DaleDixieMafia
      @DaleDixieMafia 2 года назад +51

      @@cheekibreeki9818 And they will die like soldiers. Just as the Russians in Ukraine fertilize the gold fields of wheat now. Surrender is the only way to survive when your commanders use you as Cannon fodder.

    • @user-li2ig3zt1d
      @user-li2ig3zt1d 2 года назад +70

      @@DaleDixieMafia ah do they actually? What do you know?

  • @AbdallahMehiz
    @AbdallahMehiz 2 года назад +14754

    "Have pity for their mothers"
    That line hits so hard i actually couldn't stop thinking about for days

    • @Truck-kun_01
      @Truck-kun_01 2 года назад +463

      Yeah it broke me how much he was begging for them to not waste their life, but what could they do. If they retreated they'd probably be punished severely.

    • @gambu4810
      @gambu4810 2 года назад +18

      @@Truck-kun_01 omg

    • @bruh-db8by
      @bruh-db8by 2 года назад +172

      @@asbestosfibers1325 yea bro being shut off and emotionless is so cool

    • @tascapte905
      @tascapte905 2 года назад +19

      @@asbestosfibers1325 You're either 12yo or 12IQ

    • @ohheyitscyber2848
      @ohheyitscyber2848 2 года назад +1

      @@asbestosfibers1325
      What in the actual fuck are you talking about

  • @mattj.7756
    @mattj.7756 10 месяцев назад +54

    Nothing gets me close to tears like hearing the final words of a man say, “I’m on the edge of life. BMPs burned out of action.”

  • @JunkoSSG763
    @JunkoSSG763 Год назад +73

    Holy shit man that hit the depths of my heart "have pity for their mothers" "have pity for your guys, retreat them"😭😭

  • @TheGladiatorsTv
    @TheGladiatorsTv 2 года назад +18434

    According to an article, Alik was Ivan Savin, a Russian Colonel who sent 1,000 of his men to what I think would have been the Central railway station to capture it. As heard in this clip a Chechen commander Turpal Ali Atgeriyev tries to console with Alik in an attempt to stop the attack. Alik refused because he was under orders and the attack went underway. While the battalion secured the perimeter with vehicles, a radioman heard the words 'Welcome to hell' on his headset before the battalion was attacked with automatic and RPG weapons fire. Alik called for support multiple times with his friends on the line inside the station building but nothing came. With most of the 1,000 he died fighting.
    copied from original video.

    • @AParticularlyConcernedCitizen
      @AParticularlyConcernedCitizen 2 года назад +2271

      That's pretty fucking brutal, but you can't say he wasn't warned. War never ceases to be the worst thing imaginable, no matter who's fighting it or why.

    • @c4ns3r53
      @c4ns3r53 2 года назад +2617

      @@AParticularlyConcernedCitizen also russian military have a tendency to just throw people to the meatgrinder

    • @yakutza3922
      @yakutza3922 2 года назад +1306

      @@c4ns3r53 our military is so 4ucking corrupted and our people is so zombie, that If tomorrow Putin will say that he is a furer and we are nazi russia, I'm 4ucking sure the half of the country will support this.

    • @khoichau8088
      @khoichau8088 2 года назад +522

      @@yakutza3922 Holy shiet, 1000 men last stand? Why this gave me 40k vibe.

    • @PyromaN93
      @PyromaN93 2 года назад +364

      @@c4ns3r53 to tell you more - federals was attacke all the way to Grozny, because someone in HQ just sold planned path of the army units. And they was ordered to not change it. Only general Rochlin was not obey this order

  • @kirikomori7874
    @kirikomori7874 2 года назад +8699

    Alik (Ivan Savin) Died while trying to evacuate the few remaining survivors of his 1000 men. While Turpal Atgeriyev, the man begging was seized from a Russian airport, falsely accused for the 2nd Chechen war which he had no involvement and suspected to have died from torture at the age of 33.
    May these men rest in peace and may the men that brought them to this tragedy suffer their rightful judgement.

    • @appalacha7278
      @appalacha7278 2 года назад +56

      😞

    • @deusexaethera
      @deusexaethera 2 года назад +347

      That moment when you're ordered to attack your friend, and you're too indoctrinated in the ways of nationalist warfare to say "fuck this, I'm out."

    • @Lipanj92
      @Lipanj92 2 года назад +19

      @@deusexaethera They were never friends to begin with, otherwise they wouldn't have turned guns against each other. Maybe the other side considered another a friend but it obviously was never truly mutual.
      I'm not surprised by stories like this at all since I don't see any of my friends as life long friends anymore. They stop being my friends and I start despising them the moment they start bullshitting over the land of my ancestors, my nation, and my language! Such people are nobody's friends! They are their own enemies!

    • @coolhippies1533
      @coolhippies1533 2 года назад +537

      @@Lipanj92 what the fuck are you saying mate? Being friends doesn’t mean your willing to give up your duty or job for them. Your taking the meaning of friends way too far 😂😂.

    • @jimj2683
      @jimj2683 2 года назад +270

      @@deusexaethera it is more that people are too afraid if the consequences of disobeying orders. Being shot or called a cheating coward

  • @AbzakhianMylerys
    @AbzakhianMylerys 6 месяцев назад +11

    Im circassian. Which is i see checens as our brothers. We had same enemies. We fought with russia. However we lost and we no longer have nationality and millions of people. We dead. We lost. But the day we dead, is the day which is we both will live forever and no one will ever kill us. Stay happy man. You will be in Jannah InshaAllah...

    • @user-sg7mj7zi5c
      @user-sg7mj7zi5c 6 месяцев назад +2

      Ну заплачь

    • @Chechen_voice
      @Chechen_voice 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@user-sg7mj7zi5cНе хрюкай❤

  • @movsar93mn
    @movsar93mn 9 месяцев назад +53

    As a chechen I can confirm the chechen war was hell on earth

    • @ilikedoggos2771
      @ilikedoggos2771 9 месяцев назад +12

      As a russian, I hope something like this would never happen again

    • @AstraCouple
      @AstraCouple 8 месяцев назад +1

      Any war is hell on earth. It doesn't matter where this war is going!

    • @movsar93mn
      @movsar93mn 8 месяцев назад +8

      @@ilikedoggos2771 me too. There's no winner in a war. We should live as friends and the,,brothers"

    • @PHILECHKA
      @PHILECHKA 7 месяцев назад +1

      Согласен ❤
      Всем, кто припоминает войну или гордиться этим, лучшего точно не желаю
      Очень много у меня друзей чеченцев, все дружелюбные и здравые парни, от которых 0 негатива

    • @deadlock_problem
      @deadlock_problem Месяц назад

      @@ilikedoggos2771 It's happening now and it will happen again if Putin decides he wants to shrink his population again by a few million by attacking Nato.

  • @bigty5474
    @bigty5474 2 года назад +9628

    I think we don't understand how important this "meme" is. It actually give remembrance of terrible events and it help future generations to discover them so that we'll never forget what happened

    • @robertmiles9942
      @robertmiles9942 2 года назад +218

      I don't know. From where I stand, it looks like every generation thinks they have to try it for themselves and see.

    • @RealNotallGaming
      @RealNotallGaming 2 года назад +35

      history teaches nothing

    • @ossiehalvorson7702
      @ossiehalvorson7702 2 года назад +53

      @@RealNotallGaming It has the potential to, but we always think the slight differences outweigh the immense similarities.
      "Well yeah, that happened then and it was awful, but our situation is different because (blah blah)."
      It's not different, and we're never going to truly realize that, so the lessons of our histories are moot.

    • @strivingtolearn4614
      @strivingtolearn4614 2 года назад +8

      @@ossiehalvorson7702 and it’s always one person deciding war, how can anyone with so much power think clearly?

    • @Kinko315
      @Kinko315 2 года назад +5

      @@RealNotallGaming you cant learn from what going to happen next, you only can learn from the past

  • @caveman8557
    @caveman8557 2 года назад +2592

    You can hear the pain in chechen commander's voice, he knew Alik and his men will be wiped out if they attacked. Talking to your friend before killing him is so heartbreaking

    • @celebrim1
      @celebrim1 2 года назад +185

      During the American Civil War, a naval commander bombarded a Confederate (Rebel) coastal fortification. After a very long fight, the fort lowered it flag and signaled that the flotilla commander should come ashore to accept the surrender of the garrison. The Admiral came ashore, to find that that the commander of the garrison had been mortally wounded. The commander of the garrison turned out to be his own son, and he gave his sword to his father and then died in his arms.

    • @ajaysidhu471
      @ajaysidhu471 2 года назад +24

      @@celebrim1 source

    • @lukesalvidge118
      @lukesalvidge118 2 года назад +135

      @@ajaysidhu471 yo mama

    • @c1n1kdtm50
      @c1n1kdtm50 2 года назад +7

      stop fucking believe everything. i dunno, you are some alternative at the west. CHECK INFO! you are so easily decieved there.

    • @celebrim1
      @celebrim1 2 года назад +44

      @@c1n1kdtm50 Deceived about the Chechnya war? It didn't even involve the west! All of this information comes from Russia, and was part of their appeal for healing between the Chechnyan and Russian people after two bloody Civil Wars and a forced reannexation of the province. What part of this do you think is deception?

  • @user_Prost0
    @user_Prost0 5 месяцев назад +37

    Грустно всё это слышать, когда всё понимаешь без перевода. Так же, как и: Мы просили всего 2 танка и сегодня, мы бы не отправляли 23 гроба, их было бы намного меньше. Мы сегодня отправили парня у которого 2 грудных ребенка и теперь они сироты...

  • @nyimdewan3353
    @nyimdewan3353 Год назад +12

    *"I don't have any choice.I have orders and I'll have to obey them"*
    Maaan,that sucks😢
    It has become a habbit of mine to randomly return to this video now 😢

  • @justinwhy6550
    @justinwhy6550 2 года назад +3835

    Unpopular opinion: Titanic is one of the least cryable among crying worthy movies
    Edit: now pls stop replying which movies made u cry😭😭

  • @_Cato_
    @_Cato_ 2 года назад +8270

    I don't think much of anything could compare to the heartbreak of a situation like this. You're willingly going to your death because you are duty-bound to your nation, but the ones you will be fighting to the death are men you know, who you've served with, laughed with, suffered with.
    What a horrible, ugly, heart wrenching situation.

    • @BoqPrecision
      @BoqPrecision 2 года назад +90

      Even when they served together, the Chechen was not seen as an equal anymore than African Americans are seen as equals in USA.

    • @totallylegitenergy2559
      @totallylegitenergy2559 2 года назад +103

      @@BoqPrecision if it was the 70's still, sure.

    • @BoqPrecision
      @BoqPrecision 2 года назад +45

      @@totallylegitenergy2559 Idk what you refer to, 70s wasn't the year discrimination magically ended against visible minorities.
      The narrative of this video is exploiting the tragic fate of the Chechen and conflating it with the ignoble decision by the Russian to continue following his empire's orders ...The reverse would have NOT been possible. But you guys don't want to go there, either out of lack of insight or honesty.

    • @eddiestevens8193
      @eddiestevens8193 2 года назад +251

      @@BoqPrecision do you really insist on bringing political correction to everything? I mean this has absolutely nothing to do with the way black people are treated in america. Racism isnt just in america you know

    • @BoqPrecision
      @BoqPrecision 2 года назад +54

      @@eddiestevens8193 You're not even making sense, just throwing around buzz words and contradicting (and making my point) in the end.
      Chechens were and are not treated equally in Russia with ethnic Russians. They're even called blacks as a derogatory remark.
      If you have something to contribute by all means I'm ready to have dialogue...buy otherwise keep your emotional outbursts and not thought out sentiments to yourself.

  • @flyback_driver
    @flyback_driver 8 месяцев назад +37

    Why do I keep coming back when this rips me apart everytime? This really is a work of art man.

    • @someguy2744
      @someguy2744 Месяц назад +1

      It's not (artificial) art, it's real.
      One of the top comments explains the context.

  • @aidanpysher2764
    @aidanpysher2764 7 месяцев назад +31

    I feel that this is one of the most heartbreaking videos I've ever seen. This is one of those videos that just hits you like a baseball bat. I showed my dad this, and I actually ended up shedding a few tears reading out the subtitles. I wish the US school system would teach about this and the Soviet Afghan war.
    I'm in the US military, and I can't imagine the horror of being obligated or forced to fight and kill people and friends I deployed with a few years before.

    • @abdulshahidalajev115
      @abdulshahidalajev115 4 месяца назад +1

      I was there in the second chechen war. I was a kid so didnt know what was happening. I heard war stories from my relatives who where older

  • @Roman-zq8wp
    @Roman-zq8wp 2 года назад +8852

    I have translated it in full.
    Chechen -- "Alik, come on, maybe somehow before it's too late, turn your guys back. Don't do this. Don't do it, it is not needed. In any case understand that you will perish and I will perish. What will be the point of that? Understand for yourself, who would win from this? Neither of us will win, understand? If I see you, it will be in battle... and then whether it is excellent for you or not excellent for you, I will not show you pity just as you would not to me, understand? It's better you come to me as a guest. Turn back your guys. There is no need. Have pity on their mothers. Have pity on them. Turn back your guys. Give the command."
    Russian -- "I'm not such a big commander to give such orders."
    Chechen -- "Alik, please understand correctly.. I, for example... to you from my heart, purely wish that you stayed alive of course but... you better get away."
    Russian -- "And I don't have that choice. I have an order and I will fulfill it in any case."
    1:37 - Borya! Borya! ... Borya stop, fuck!
    1:40 - So stop it fuck, eleventh, over.
    1:43 - Lyosha, I'm on the edge of life... BMPs burned out of action.
    1:47 -Squad 11, this is squad 10.
    1:51 - Squad 11, fuck, listen to me, this is not bullshit, we're all gonna die. We need a concrete decision made to evacuate.
    1:59 - Artillery is too close.. it's too close! Fuuck... close... under my ear! Under my ear you guys are firing! [own artillery landing him on]
    2:06 - [unintelligible]
    2:10- [unintelligible] how are you [unintelligible]
    2:14- Two cars [BMP]. Two cars made it though. Need to platform, fuck, to the platform!
    2:18 - [unintelligible]
    Between 1:51-1:58 I had to fill in a few words that I assume or think were being said. That was the hardest part to translate. The other sections I marked as "unintelligible" so maybe someone else can help me out with those. The music in the video makes it hard to hear what is being said in those sections.

    • @Roman-zq8wp
      @Roman-zq8wp 2 года назад +200

      @@crispy682 No problem and thanks.

    • @reload7522
      @reload7522 2 года назад +483

      2:14. He said: "Need to platform (perron), fuck, to the platform!"
      They were in railroad station and defend it

    • @Roman-zq8wp
      @Roman-zq8wp 2 года назад +114

      @@reload7522 Thanks. I updated my post with your translation.

    • @mohammedwhead324
      @mohammedwhead324 Год назад +37

      thanks bro

    • @bluetouch8435
      @bluetouch8435 Год назад +31

      Thank you for good job

  • @arenkhojayan6031
    @arenkhojayan6031 2 года назад +12859

    This is the most emotional, dramatic and saddest thing I have seen in a while. It hits so hard, especially after 1:35, where with beginning of hard rock starts the plea of Russians for help; "Borya, Borya stop!!!" , "I'm wounded, the vehicle is destroyed", "We are all gonna fucking die, it's not a joke you understand? We need quick help". That part should have been transtaled too, but it hits in different way when you understand all that without subtitles

    • @jonolas1626
      @jonolas1626 2 года назад +165

      Its actually post rock I think

    • @wowthatsbs
      @wowthatsbs 2 года назад +573

      And the reinforcements never came, shit is sad af

    • @halosnova1604
      @halosnova1604 2 года назад +125

      @@jonolas1626 yeah, From Roots to Needles - If These Trees Could Talk
      Funny hearing this song here

    • @jonolas1626
      @jonolas1626 2 года назад +27

      @@halosnova1604 appropriate also

    • @senioravocado1864
      @senioravocado1864 2 года назад +320

      I really wished they subbed that part cause I literally had no clue what they're saying until I found you... God bless them

  • @kkk_93639
    @kkk_93639 9 месяцев назад +13

    i'm from caucasian origin, I'm not normally a very tearful person, but this made me cry. I am currently living in Turkey

  • @Sttsfnd
    @Sttsfnd 8 месяцев назад +23

    "У меня нет выбора... У меня есть приказы, и я в любом случае подчинюсь им."
    это чертовски грустно, чувак

    • @dedinside1301
      @dedinside1301 7 месяцев назад +1

      Вот многие говорят что он бесчувственный , а что бы изменилось откажись он , а я вам скажу ничего , максимум поменяли бы командира на другого который бы уже выполнил , в войне нет победивших , есть лишь погибшие.

    • @trololoev
      @trololoev 7 месяцев назад

      @@dedinside1301 только потери были бы намного серьёзнее, т.к. афганские наёмники бы заминировали каждый дом.

    • @Chechen_voice
      @Chechen_voice 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@trololoevкакие афганские наемники?

  • @AmonMaximus
    @AmonMaximus 2 года назад +12877

    I am not an emotional person but this is heartbreaking to hear.

    • @alefmagnum207
      @alefmagnum207 2 года назад +6

      @@kirbyalamri4928
      Hold up, isn't that scene from a film?

    • @kirbyalamri4928
      @kirbyalamri4928 2 года назад +12

      @@alefmagnum207
      Was it a film? I didn't know can you show me the film?

    • @ruslankazimov622
      @ruslankazimov622 2 года назад +210

      Bruh, this is from Russo-Chechen war not Ukraine.

    • @user-ci4yw7vh1d
      @user-ci4yw7vh1d 2 года назад +153

      @@kirbyalamri4928 this is radio talks from first Chechen war, that's real and it is terrible

    • @alefmagnum207
      @alefmagnum207 2 года назад

      @@kirbyalamri4928 ruclips.net/video/pUh1icKbP8Y/видео.html
      Found it. Quite a ride to search The Search)))

  • @bayani7626
    @bayani7626 2 года назад +754

    Now imagine all the stories like this not recorded in history

    • @ShadowsandCityLights
      @ShadowsandCityLights 2 года назад +62

      I always think about those people who's lives and deaths will never be known.

    • @hamzaimran771
      @hamzaimran771 2 года назад +43

      History is written by the victors after all

    • @crosselsmith776
      @crosselsmith776 2 года назад +24

      This story reminds me of the Christmas Truce of WW1.

    • @shreder_0626
      @shreder_0626 2 года назад +2

      Because there are almost none to tell then

    • @twilightparanormalresearch186
      @twilightparanormalresearch186 2 года назад +4

      You only truly die if you’re forgotten

  • @ericpettersson4602
    @ericpettersson4602 11 месяцев назад +12

    This makes you feel more than any tv show ever can.

  • @HolyMoeFallout
    @HolyMoeFallout 10 месяцев назад +9

    10/10 video bro, Chechen war is some brutal stuff, RIP to all involved.

    • @maxwulf5648
      @maxwulf5648 10 месяцев назад

      Hell to all occupators!!

  • @eonni94
    @eonni94 2 года назад +4675

    I’m obsessed with this video. The desperate pleading in the Chechnyan man’s voice. The knowledge that Alik likely knew he was not going to make it out but had to obey orders. The desperate pleas over the radio when they’re inevitably ambushed. The thought of these men dying in a cramped APC. It’s unreal.

    • @alexandrualex1085
      @alexandrualex1085 2 года назад +34

      What they are saying after the dialogue of both commanders ?

    • @claudyfocan731
      @claudyfocan731 2 года назад +7

      Russians

    • @Silly_Illidan
      @Silly_Illidan 2 года назад +148

      Had to?
      This is why I don't like soldiers...this hollow sense of duty that doesn't equate to defending the countrymen but instead means following your superior's orders is what causes the most misery throughout history

    • @user-uy2pn3rk5i
      @user-uy2pn3rk5i 2 года назад +13

      @@alexandrualex1085 пролистай ниже, там есть комментарий почти со всеми сообщениями после диалога, в основном они сообщают что попали в засаду и подбиты, матерятся и просят подкрепления

    • @vasionok
      @vasionok 2 года назад +107

      Alik was executing orders, he was not "obeying" them. The subtitles make him sound like a victim, but he is actually quite assertive. He is a commander after all.

  • @abramay1382
    @abramay1382 2 года назад +1746

    So to explain what happened in this clip is that:
    The person who is begging Alik, who is a Russian Liteunent Colonel, to not attack is Lambada, a Chechen General from the Chechen war, now why is that? Well because these two men were actually brother in arms in the war of Afghanistan of 1979, they both fought together and survived the war and returned home to Russia, or in that time, the USSR, and then 3 years after the collapse of the USSR in 1991, the Chechen war began, and these 2 very close friends who spent years fighting with each other, suffered together, laughed together and joked together were now suddenly enemies, and Lambada is begging Alik to not attack as he doesn't want to fight and kill his friend, so, Alik, was in a tough decision, he really wanted to stop the attack, but he couldn't bare to think about disobeying his countries orders, and he attacked, with 1000 men, he died in the battle of Grozny, his 1000 men died as well, only a few men lived to tell the story of these 2 men.

    • @faunt07
      @faunt07 2 года назад +44

      Alik's unit suffered losses but survived.

    • @abramay1382
      @abramay1382 2 года назад +19

      @@faunt07 Yes, most of his men died, but some lived

    • @keithsimpson2150
      @keithsimpson2150 2 года назад +117

      Now Russia uses Chechen fighter squads for dirty work, like the CIA used Cuban American's in the 60's.

    • @damian597
      @damian597 2 года назад +32

      @@keithsimpson2150 yep it's funny how a slave army will obey its new conquer without question. After they have killed its leaders and obliterated it's home.

    • @damian597
      @damian597 2 года назад +26

      @@william6072 they literally bombed the cities flat and rebuilt them with stolen money and put in their own government in charge of everything, just getting richer and richer. The people who opposed them were killed and classed as terrorists. These were just regular civilians who wanted to live in peace just like today's Ukrainians. Millions escaped south. The rest sadly died and got there land taken and all army and such were taken over by Russia. The checnyans land was extremely rich just like Ukraine is.

  • @crimsoncreed3889
    @crimsoncreed3889 Год назад +278

    Every time I see this. Tears come out of my eyes.
    The bond of men as warriors. The brotherhood.
    Very little, if not nothing, can break that.

    • @povyouretiredbutdontwannasleep
      @povyouretiredbutdontwannasleep 7 месяцев назад +6

      "Alik, from my heart i wish you survive this, but you better leave"
      "I don't have much of a choice"
      you can tell he doesn't want to do this, but he has to

  • @irish-italianintrovert.8600
    @irish-italianintrovert.8600 11 месяцев назад +21

    Wow, that’s one of the most depressing short conversations between to sides in a war that I ever heard. 🥺

  • @dimachalov
    @dimachalov 2 года назад +5072

    In last moments of "Alik's" speech, he is calmly saying "Squad eleven, this is squad ten, listen to me this is not some bulshit, we all gonna die here - so think , think, we need concrete decision to be made to evacuate us". As person who can speak 3 languages, I feel sad for people as you wont be able to understand emotion in his words...

    • @dimachalov
      @dimachalov 2 года назад +403

      Despite nonsense comments to this video, his opponent Ali Adaev (" Lambada" his nickname) died in the same fight... Through radio recordings you can hear how Alik is begging for immediate help, in response he received "we got you, we doing all we can" - unfortunatly this is just a response to calm and lift moral of soldiers - nobody was coming.

    • @manofculture8666
      @manofculture8666 2 года назад +173

      The sad thing is, his fate was pretty much sealed.
      It was either follow orders and walk into death's doors, or retreat and face the harsh consequences.
      We need a new leadership standards worldwide.

    • @lionelt.9124
      @lionelt.9124 2 года назад +38

      Thank you for translating. I really helps to humanize the people and events in the video.

    • @LoserKidMusic
      @LoserKidMusic 2 года назад +1

      @@manofculture8666 won’t happen until the old gens (or boomers as we say) all die off and the current “young generation” get into power. But the future is blurry atm because most young people are against politicians so don’t want to get into politics for this exact reason (how crazy the current leaders are)

    • @martinguerre8220
      @martinguerre8220 2 года назад +6

      @@LoserKidMusic believe me. The ruling class is unaffected by generations, generational differences between plebs has no effect on them, they will stay the same

  • @Duskraven67
    @Duskraven67 2 года назад +2904

    Holy shit, I was not expecting to be hit that hard. Even though I don't know their language, you can just tell the pain and desperation in the first man's voice. Pleading with his friend not to throw away his life or the lives of his men. And to have "Alik" respond with a quiet resignation...knowing he has no choice. Knowing that his and his men's lives were already forfeit...

    • @60kai_57
      @60kai_57 2 года назад +7

      Its russian.

    • @Duskraven67
      @Duskraven67 2 года назад +117

      @@60kai_57 thank you, captain obvious. I said I didn't understand it, not that I didn't know what it was.

    • @marxistvalor
      @marxistvalor 2 года назад +31

      @@Duskraven67 you said you dont know their language, this can be seen both ways tbh.

    • @60kai_57
      @60kai_57 2 года назад +11

      @@Duskraven67 wtf you typed you dont know their language😂

    • @udyfrost6380
      @udyfrost6380 2 года назад +36

      @@60kai_57 By context, you can he meant he didn't understand the language

  • @marvininabox
    @marvininabox Месяц назад +1

    Literally the first cry in about 6 months to this. Thank you, I don’t know where else that was going to come out

  • @frostyboi7537
    @frostyboi7537 Год назад +2

    This short clip on this war has been stuck with me for weeks, it just hits so hard

  • @xtflogicalohio3044
    @xtflogicalohio3044 2 года назад +6347

    my uncle told me a story about his experience with having a friend on the other side. "A friend of mine was in New york some 20 years ago. it was 1999. I was a street cop, on my last patrol. my partner and I were called to respond to a break in. we hurried to the address and get out of the car just in time to see the perp in a mask, holding a gun on the home owner and his girlfriend. I hollered for him to stop and turn. he turned to me and my heart dropped. 'John?' I knew that voice. I served with him in The Gulf War. it was my old squad mate, Marco. My partner saw me hesitate and put 2 and 2 together. 'you know this guy?' I could only nod. my partner hollered once more for him to stop, and drop the gun. Marco.. he turned to shoot my partner, and I reacted. before I could process what happened, my sidearm was up and firing. one in the neck, one in the chest. It took a moment to sit and realize what I'd just done.. and when I did, I crumpled to the ground, numb. my partner tried to understand why I was so broke up over it after the fact, and didn't get it until I showed him a photo of Marco and I with our platoon. he knew then. I spent the next few years agonizing over it. Marco's wife and son... never looked at me the same way again. who could blame them? I took away a husband, and a father. to this day.. I almost wish I hadn't pulled the trigger. but if I hadn't, my partner might have died... in the end, I retired from the force after just 6 years. I find myself wondering every now and then, 'what made him turn to crime?'.. I suppose I'll never know." he died days after my 19th birthday. This reminded me of him, and what he once told me. thanks for reading one man's post. we'll never see each other in person, dear reader, but I hope you have a wonderful life.
    - o7

    • @areallyhappyarcticfox1240
      @areallyhappyarcticfox1240 2 года назад +164

      I’m sorry for your loss

    • @AtheismF7W
      @AtheismF7W 2 года назад +128

      I'm sorry for your loss. May you find peace.

    • @martinnovysedlak
      @martinnovysedlak 2 года назад +132

      Despite the badsituation, I think and feel you did the right thing, however painful. I hope that you found inner peace over this and if not, that you will find it soon. To serve and protect and you protected as your duty required. I wish you a lot of great days ahead in a fruitful long life.

    • @zacharynolan9553
      @zacharynolan9553 2 года назад +222

      Bruh this is a copypasta

    • @taimermega6447
      @taimermega6447 2 года назад +2

      U 2

  • @bababoey_
    @bababoey_ 2 года назад +1660

    Imagine being forced to fight against who you consider to be your friends, your family, who you shared and had many memories. You don't know what to do, give up on your humanity or your duty as a soldier for your nation

    • @vrrooooommmm123
      @vrrooooommmm123 2 года назад +23

      This is what happens when you attack brother countries

    • @user-mh9wd5jt3n
      @user-mh9wd5jt3n 2 года назад +11

      Если приказ преступный, то солдат обязан его не выполнить. Для этого есть конституция.

    • @goodboi101
      @goodboi101 2 года назад +4

      @@user-mh9wd5jt3n номер статьи

    • @user-mh9wd5jt3n
      @user-mh9wd5jt3n 2 года назад +1

      @@goodboi101 погугли, найдёшь.

    • @goodboi101
      @goodboi101 2 года назад +1

      @@user-mh9wd5jt3n не нашел(

  • @monkepotato3897
    @monkepotato3897 8 месяцев назад +7

    the way he said the last line and the fact that i am Serbian and can understand half of this makes it so chilling and cool at the same time

  • @gerardotarifaskorpian
    @gerardotarifaskorpian 2 года назад +321

    This is not a meme, this sadness

    • @KingshukMonsur
      @KingshukMonsur 2 года назад +22

      Meme's are harsh reality

    • @covid6942
      @covid6942 2 года назад +9

      Memes are a coping mechanism

  • @Romp-
    @Romp- 2 года назад +1284

    I hate how little modern history is discussed in public school it’s crazy how there are earth shaking conflicts that we don’t talk about there consequences and what happens to each side

    • @SamBrickell
      @SamBrickell 2 года назад +36

      God knows we have to talk about the "3/5ths compromise" every fucking year in school!

    • @Romp-
      @Romp- 2 года назад +33

      @@SamBrickell naw that’s important stuff too we just don’t take the time to discuss what’s happening currently

    • @cedric871
      @cedric871 2 года назад +44

      because it does not happen in the West, that's why. The Chechen war and the invasion in Georgia in 2008 should both be discussed more. Sadly, it is only when something happens at our doorstep that we will be taught about it.

    • @Aerosklice
      @Aerosklice 2 года назад +10

      Speak for yourself, I had a history class about the Chechen war. But it's true that a lot of modern conflicts aren't discussed too much simply because they are not really over yet, or it would be a history class from which you don't extract principles but just the story itself. It's not just simply because it doesn't happen in the West, because you can bet your ass that the Western richer countries have something to do with most wars around the globe.

    • @someoneinthecrowd4313
      @someoneinthecrowd4313 2 года назад +34

      Most people don't even know that Chechnya exists.

  • @NiskaMagnusson
    @NiskaMagnusson 11 месяцев назад +32

    the fact that this happened within living memory is utterly insane.... it's horrible to know that people who survived the Chechen war are now fighting and dying again in yet another war

  • @StudentOfKnowldge
    @StudentOfKnowldge Год назад +6

    Chechens & Bosnians would continue to shine in historical books of this Ummah.

  • @kaedespair
    @kaedespair Год назад +9779

    As a chechen who lost family in the war and now lives in Germany I'm crying very hard

    • @Ersenoy_Lomak
      @Ersenoy_Lomak Год назад +1

      Möge Allah Azzawajal deine Familie mit dem Paradies belohnen. Möge Allah Azzawajal die Sünden deiner Familie vergeben. Möge Allah Azzawajal dich mit deiner Familie in Jannah Vereinen. Ameen Ya Rabb.

    • @Yaennn000
      @Yaennn000 Год назад +417

      Bleib stark, Kamerad!

    • @kaedespair
      @kaedespair Год назад +292

      @@Yaennn000 danke das werde ich

    • @Elver_Galarga816
      @Elver_Galarga816 Год назад +66

      Damn :(

    • @JamesBond-wv9xz
      @JamesBond-wv9xz Год назад +216

      Remember Allah.

  • @spanisio
    @spanisio 2 года назад +2675

    The dialogue is between colonel Ivan Savin of the 131st motor brigade (nicknamed Alik by his father-name Aleksey, a lot of Chechens knew russian commanders personally because they used to serve together few years earlier in the Caucasus district) and unidentified Chechen commander (most probably Turpal-Ali Atgeriyev) just after Colonel Savin with his brigade took Railway Station. Chechens ask him to leave and come back as a guest and to show mercy to his troops' mothers. Later you can hear Savin asking for artillery support, reinforcements and later agony and cry for help after the station was stormed by Chechens from nearby buildings with grenade launchers and mortars. Savin and almost 90% of his brigade dies with all the equipment and armored vehicles (also due to friendly artillery fire).
    By mid-afternoon, the first battalion of the 131st MRB occupied the train station, unaware of the 81st MRR's situation and separated from the second battalion which reached the freight station further to the west, and from the third battalion on the outskirts of the city. The unit parked its tanks and armored personnel carriers around the station and awaited further orders. Somewhere within that period of time, a Russian communications officer heard the words "Welcome to Hell," on his headset. Shortly after, Chechen fighters, hiding in the depot buildings, the post office, and the five-story building surrounding the station, opened devastating automatic and anti-tank fire. The surviving Russian soldiers took cover inside the station, which the Chechens soon set ablaze. Russian commanding officer Colonel Ivan Savin radioed for help and artillery fire, which never came.
    Most distress calls from the 131st went unanswered. The second and third battalions of the brigade responded to the call for help, but were blasted at close quarters before even reaching the station. Both battalions were ordered to stay away from the Presidential Palace; this only added more to the trouble as the armored columns tried cutting down alleyways, only to be further cut down by ambushes.[6] When a small element of the 503rd Motor Rifle Regiment finally received their orders to move in during the early hours of the day, they immediately came under friendly fire from the other Russian forces already bogged down under heavy fire; they fought each other for six hours (there were more such incidents reported, some of them actually prepared by the Chechens). The 8th Corps reached the city center from the north but was unable to save the units that had fallen into the trap because of stiff resistance. No reinforcements ever reached the railway station.
    At nightfall, Colonel Savin decided to evacuate the wounded via the only working armored personnel carrier available. After loading 40 wounded soldiers on board, the APC moved in the wrong direction (toward the center of the city). It turned around and was ambushed by Chechen anti-tank gunners; only 13 soldiers survived to be taken prisoner. On January 2, Colonel Savin and his remaining officers abandoned the railway station. They found some abandoned armored personnel carriers and attempted to escape the area, but were attacked by Chechen fighters and Savin died on the street from shrapnel wounds beside his wrecked vehicle.[6] By January 3, the 131st Brigade had lost nearly 789 men killed (another 75 were captured, and only 160 reached safety), including almost all of its officers. In addition, 20 of 26 tanks and 102 of 120 other armored vehicles were lost as well. The entire Maikop Brigade of over 1,000 men had been wiped out in sixty hours.[6]
    At the same time, General Grachev announced that "the entire city centre and several districts of the city and its outskirts are under complete control of Russian forces".
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Grozny_(1994-95)

    • @alexandrualex1085
      @alexandrualex1085 2 года назад +38

      Now we understand how corrupt russia is

    • @andyf3269
      @andyf3269 2 года назад +75

      Thank you so much for this comment

    • @peterscasny2803
      @peterscasny2803 2 года назад +24

      @@alexandrualex1085 Always has been.

    • @user-uy2pn3rk5i
      @user-uy2pn3rk5i 2 года назад +121

      @@alexandrualex1085, все страны коррумпированны, просто у нас это даже не скрывают...

    • @ahosni2
      @ahosni2 2 года назад +2

      Thank you

  • @gavinmurphy7154
    @gavinmurphy7154 7 месяцев назад +5

    “Have pity for their mothers”
    That hurts

  • @wafflesandpancake69
    @wafflesandpancake69 10 месяцев назад +3

    "I have orders and obey them in any case"
    damn that gave me skin crawlin

  • @abdullajhonsamar9805
    @abdullajhonsamar9805 2 года назад +151

    "It is better if you come to me as a guest."
    This line broke my heart.

    • @geroutathat
      @geroutathat 2 года назад

      then invite me in and dont fight me.

    • @degisa544
      @degisa544 2 года назад +14

      @@geroutathat i guess you didn't pay attention to the video then

    • @osobov4726
      @osobov4726 2 года назад

      Перевод не совсем правильный, там говориться : ты лучше ко мне как гость приедь.....

    • @abdullajhonsamar9805
      @abdullajhonsamar9805 2 года назад +1

      @@osobov4726 но смысл тот же

  • @drphilmm1773
    @drphilmm1773 2 года назад +176

    I don’t know what is more heartwrenching. Being killed by your best friend or killing your best friend and regretting it your whole life.

    • @MrKj202
      @MrKj202 2 года назад +65

      They both didn't make it out of this war alive

    • @kak42
      @kak42 2 года назад +5

      "A kill is a preventive suicide"
      (like a preventive strike)

    • @mshevy9829
      @mshevy9829 2 года назад +15

      killing your best friend and regretting it your whole life.
      atleast my best friend doesnt feel the regret I have to endure every day.

    • @crosselsmith776
      @crosselsmith776 2 года назад

      The latter.

  • @philipsalama8083
    @philipsalama8083 10 месяцев назад +3

    "Have pity for their mothers".
    Little did they know that soon enough some of those mothers would be receiving VHS tapes of their sons being castrated, using addresses they found on letters home. The sheer cruelty that both sides inflicted on each other in Chechnya was unimaginable.

  • @GoRomeart
    @GoRomeart 5 месяцев назад +5

    Настоящий мужчина...
    Реально... выбора нет есть приказ...
    Серьёзно есть приказ и надо его выполнить

    • @youtubeuser8970
      @youtubeuser8970 2 месяца назад

      Я бы сказал настоящий раб, будь он настоящий мужчина выбор нашелся бы. А Чеченцы настоящие воины, (не солдаты, не боевики, не наемники) которые всегда имеют выбор поступить так, как они считают правильным и нужным.

    • @user-nz1ll7pj3o
      @user-nz1ll7pj3o 2 месяца назад

      ​@@youtubeuser8970и пусть дальше считают, время показало что из этого эффективнее

  • @AntonioDal.
    @AntonioDal. 2 года назад +691

    The Chechen commander was very charismatic.
    "its better if you come to me as a guest"
    "have pity for your guys (and their mothers)"
    "from my heart I wish that you survive this"

    • @ulrohermit1369
      @ulrohermit1369 2 года назад +19

      Kind man

    • @brandonlee4858
      @brandonlee4858 2 года назад +89

      Because him and Alik was brother in arms during the Afghan war

    • @teemuvesala9575
      @teemuvesala9575 2 года назад +20

      So many of you have issues even with reading comprehension... The Chechen and the Russian who talked on the radio were both veterans of Soviet army from Afghanistan war, they were brothers in arms and friends and now found themselves on opposing sides.

    • @rah4212
      @rah4212 2 года назад +8

      It said that he died from torture at the age of 33 after the war .

    • @ggoddkkiller1342
      @ggoddkkiller1342 2 года назад +26

      It is just false Chechens are warlike or radical people, they are actually very hospitable and friendly similar to Turkic people around them who heavily influenced them for centuries. But similar as those Turkic people if you invade their country and threaten their people you can expect the worst as they will literally do everything to defend them. It was Russians who made a deal with the worst/most radical Chechens out there aka kadyrov faction to suppress an independence movement and kadyrov faction is actually more hated than Russia by most Chechens...

  • @crapmaster5000
    @crapmaster5000 2 года назад +996

    My uncle is one of the "handful of men that survived"

    • @hayro252
      @hayro252 2 года назад +41

      How is he doing these days?

    • @x4n0n10
      @x4n0n10 2 года назад +31

      @@hayro252 ptsd

    • @romanianturk2101
      @romanianturk2101 2 года назад +135

      @@x4n0n10 that is what 12 million ukrainians will be experiencing once we defeat them. For god sakes don't give civilians weapons, conscript and train them for god sakes! Zelensky is a fool for doing such foolish move. You don't arm untrained civilians.

    • @krobathy2178
      @krobathy2178 2 года назад +133

      @@romanianturk2101 you usually don't invade another country. They might be arming civilians because of that but what do I know.

    • @petarpetkov3691
      @petarpetkov3691 2 года назад +114

      @@romanianturk2101 Tell this to your glorious shit stain of a leader Putin. Because he is sending young boys who are not trained and are working as teachers and such.

  • @FamilyEntertainmentStudios
    @FamilyEntertainmentStudios 5 месяцев назад +8

    Somehow, the fact I can’t understand their language makes this even more scary to me.

    • @user_Prost0
      @user_Prost0 5 месяцев назад +5

      You can't imagine how scary it is when you understand words without translation. It's very scary

    • @bigbools7778
      @bigbools7778 4 месяца назад +2

      Even without the subtitles, you can easily tell how desperate that man sounds; it's in his tone. He so desperately wanted to avoid bloodshed (more than what had already occurred) but he has no power to stop it. I truly cannot imagine being in such a situation, begging my friend to save himself & his soldiers - It's a type of pain I hope no one ever has to experience again.

    • @goldmane5350
      @goldmane5350 3 месяца назад

      ​@@bigbools7778 если бы он действительно хотел избежать кровопролития то не выступал бы в террористическую группировку

  • @Fivedeuce
    @Fivedeuce Год назад +6

    A true warrior does not fight because he hates what's in front of him but fight because he loves what is behind him

  • @wasawaman8262
    @wasawaman8262 2 года назад +283

    The fact they call each other by their names just gives me more goosebumps

    • @arctifire5709
      @arctifire5709 2 года назад +39

      They called each other with their nicknames, they were friends

    • @locoman535
      @locoman535 2 года назад +16

      @@arctifire5709 only best friends have nickname toward each other 😢

  • @user-ky2xq6rv7w
    @user-ky2xq6rv7w 2 года назад +150

    Actual translate 0:39
    "Я не такой большой начальник, чтоб давать такие команды"
    "I do not have such a high rank to give such commands"

    • @Viper4ever05
      @Viper4ever05 2 года назад

      what do you think would have happened to him if he didn't go in?

    • @heatr3d597
      @heatr3d597 2 года назад +3

      @@Viper4ever05 Why, he would get incarcerated of course

    • @Viper4ever05
      @Viper4ever05 2 года назад

      @@heatr3d597 seems like bullshit if It’s clearly a lost cause

    • @helgenlane
      @helgenlane 2 года назад +5

      @@Viper4ever05 they didn't know it was a lost cause, troops on the ground basically had 0 intel, commanders in HQ lied to them and gave unreasonable orders. There were many different divisions, brigades and regiments, so if he refused to comply with orders he would risk the whole operation and the lives of everyone else. His brigade wasn't even supposed to attack anything, they didn't have any tasks, they were just a support, but for some reason they were given an order to attack the railway station...

    • @Viper4ever05
      @Viper4ever05 2 года назад +1

      @@helgenlane what a waste of life.

  • @vladimirg.22
    @vladimirg.22 Год назад +4

    Didn't think that somebody can put this much despair, fear, pain, and anything else there is from war into a single 2 minute video...

  • @essencekymatic3468
    @essencekymatic3468 Год назад +1

    this video lives rent free in my head since i saw it

  • @craylert
    @craylert 2 года назад +601

    I’m a guy who surfs a lot in the internet and I saw a lot of messed up things out there, but these lines between these two men(I’m able to speak russian) hitting me so hard and putting me out of my current situation. Maybe because I’m able to understand them without subtitles.

    • @whyask535
      @whyask535 2 года назад +28

      You can understand emotions in there conversation

    • @poetdrunken5775
      @poetdrunken5775 2 года назад +3

      не думаю, что знание русского добавляет этому что-то вроде new layer смвсла

    • @mistertom1518
      @mistertom1518 2 года назад +2

      Can you tell me what is being said at 1:37?

    • @curtisthornsberry4236
      @curtisthornsberry4236 2 года назад +6

      even with just subtitles it's heartbreaking my dude.

    • @whyask535
      @whyask535 2 года назад

      @@mistertom1518 ruclips.net/video/_G7fZSRq-F4/видео.html
      Full video

  • @anusb4735
    @anusb4735 2 года назад +674

    the video really hits me hard when you hear the story of how those young boys charred to a crisp in compact IFV's.
    it just really gets me more than anything else

    • @blaisevillaume9051
      @blaisevillaume9051 2 года назад +33

      They all thought they were pretty fucking cool before their IFV's got rocked.

    • @Liam-rf1ey
      @Liam-rf1ey 2 года назад

      nice pfp

    • @fren2327
      @fren2327 2 года назад +83

      @@blaisevillaume9051 like Americans in there humvees before the IED blows them away.

    • @blaisevillaume9051
      @blaisevillaume9051 2 года назад +3

      @@fren2327 *their

    • @EtherPlex
      @EtherPlex 2 года назад +2

      @@blaisevillaume9051 dark humor at its finest

  • @user-bn9ik9wf7m
    @user-bn9ik9wf7m 11 месяцев назад +4

    "А я такого выбора не имею, у меня есть приказ и я его выполню в любом случае!"
    До слёз, как участник. Понимаю шкурой теперь!
    Это отличает нас от большинства армий и народов. Да есть претензии к власти, к жизни, ко всему окружающему нас. Но когда коснется дело чести, приказа, МЫ ДО КОНЦА!

    • @kavdanazoun9195
      @kavdanazoun9195 11 месяцев назад +4

      Чтобы тебе не приказали нападать на чужую страну убивать насиловатьи пытать невинных людей То До конца! Такое может сказать только бесчестная невольная собака

    • @kavdanazoun9195
      @kavdanazoun9195 11 месяцев назад

      @@battlekent ты про что и кого ? Алик точно не ингуш

    • @ctrdnaskelo2541
      @ctrdnaskelo2541 6 месяцев назад

      "Но когда коснется дело приказа, МЫ ДО КОНЦА! Это отличает нас от большинства народов."
      - Кому ты служиш?
      - Сарумя-а-а-ан

  • @dogeman3868
    @dogeman3868 11 месяцев назад +1

    This is such an inspiring quote.

  • @svenyes4078
    @svenyes4078 2 года назад +99

    ”Only the dead have seen the end of wars.”
    -Plato

  • @scout360pyroz
    @scout360pyroz 2 года назад +136

    There is a terrible sadness in such scenes. You cannot look away; you REFUSE to look away...because somewhere in your heart it feels disrespectful to the dead to avert your gaze.

  • @Eeeeethan09
    @Eeeeethan09 7 месяцев назад

    This video, is so beautifully done, like holy.

  • @aggazaw9008
    @aggazaw9008 Год назад +22

    "We don't cry for useless movies, we cry for sacrifice of bravest people"
    Men

    • @Mohamed.Atb67
      @Mohamed.Atb67 10 месяцев назад

      Les russe ne sont pas des hommes brave bien fait pour leur gueule

  • @MrRusskie99
    @MrRusskie99 2 года назад +156

    1:44 you can hear someone dying saying "I'm injured, BMP has been knocked out"

    • @Bitter_Biscuit
      @Bitter_Biscuit 2 года назад +14

      I fucking hate humanity
      That's heartbreaking

    • @fiftycaliber2972
      @fiftycaliber2972 2 года назад +2

      Saddest shit I've ever heard... You can literally hear him struggling to even speak

  • @alexandermihaylov3555
    @alexandermihaylov3555 2 года назад +557

    This is so sad because I think Alik knew he wasn't gonna go back home, but he didn't have a choice. Those brave men died with no support from anyone, though they begged for artillery, helos, ANYTHING all night... The last words that you hear after the conversation between Alik and the Chechen were his and his men's last calls for help, and their agonized screams as the Chechens stormed the railway station...

    • @2dcree426
      @2dcree426 2 года назад +28

      come on man he had a choice

    • @thatbasedfeliscatus577
      @thatbasedfeliscatus577 2 года назад +74

      @@2dcree426 imprisonment was probably the choice

    • @simmerke1111
      @simmerke1111 2 года назад +52

      @@thatbasedfeliscatus577 Knowing the Russians history, imprisonment would've been the easy way out.

    • @geroutathat
      @geroutathat 2 года назад +10

      @@simmerke1111 Knowing russian history? Like Poland got rid of russia by the peaceful solidarity movement? Czechia with the peaceful velvet revolution jingling keys over their head? Latvia, estonia, lithuania by the peaceful balkans way, just holding hands? If the russian people sit down and stop till their army returns then putin is done. If ukraine stops fighting and says they will just sit on the roads, russia fails. Everything in their history says that just saying NO to them causes them collapse. Fighting causes misery for years. He and russia have choices.

    • @marklang41
      @marklang41 2 года назад +32

      @@geroutathat why are you making it seem like these countries stopped a Russia Invasion through peace?!? The Velvet Revolution had nothing to do with an invasion. As for them guys not obeying orders and everything would be fine, wtf are you smoking? There would be major consequences. I mean you are smart enough to know that right? Maybe not tho. You did just try saying if Ukrainians sat in the street Russia would go home. No buddy, Ukrainian e would be Russia now if they just put down their guns. I mean Putins been shelling civilian areas from the start. I do agree with peace but sometimes you gotta let the bully know you aren’t taking their shit no more. Plain and simple

  • @redglintstonescholar7605
    @redglintstonescholar7605 Месяц назад

    This video lives rent free in my mind so much I’m basing a entire gundam fanfic around it

  • @GloomyEra
    @GloomyEra 10 месяцев назад +3

    This shit had me in tears

  • @snakey934Snakeybakey
    @snakey934Snakeybakey 2 года назад +223

    Alik (the Russian) and Lambada (the Chechnan) were actually old friends. they had served together as comrades in Afghanistan before the USSR broke up.
    Neither of them survived this war.

  • @theawesomeoone6
    @theawesomeoone6 2 года назад +837

    As someone who was deployed in a combat zone this hits hard. Everyone is cold and emotionless until it’s time to fight then that’s when you began to question everything. Like “why am I here” “do the enemy even want to fight or are they just following orders” but you still don’t hesitate because one thing you learn in basic training hesitation can be the difference between going home and being shot and killed

    • @Mortablunt
      @Mortablunt Год назад +36

      The weird part is captives, especially if you're culturally close. Like the war is half over, but there's still the question of violence is lingering. One of my weirdest moments was bringing a 20 pack of Pepsi for some Narco captives and they were afraid I was about to kill them after the conciliatory gift. I wasn't, I was just making sure they had proper rations. A lot of them were like us militiamen -- teens to thirties, looking for action, down for a good time.

    • @nahfriu2205
      @nahfriu2205 Год назад +6

      where were you deployed in if you don’t mind mine me asking

    • @theawesomeoone6
      @theawesomeoone6 Год назад +9

      @@nahfriu2205 Afghanistan

    • @theawesomeoone6
      @theawesomeoone6 Год назад +22

      @@Mortablunt well captives are used to being treated like shit so when they come across someone that actually treats them like a person they are afraid that it might be a ploy and I can’t say that I blame them I can understand where they’re coming from you’re a captive, and you’re alive one day, and they might decide to execute you the next day so there’s always going to be that fear of am I going to die

    • @qgamer
      @qgamer 11 месяцев назад +1

      so sad to be a professional assassin of civilians

  • @novanoir8309
    @novanoir8309 Год назад +4

    This is painful, they were both serve under the same flag, goes into the same war only to come back home and meet as enemies.

  • @newaccount6.7bviews3second7
    @newaccount6.7bviews3second7 7 месяцев назад +2

    I come to watch this video when i feel down. When there's none for you and feel you are the decider of your own fate. Brothers will turn against brothers,close ones will turn into strangers. This world is mysterious

  • @xornedge8204
    @xornedge8204 2 года назад +2281

    “Please, I want us both to survive.”
    “Have mercy for their mothers.”
    “I don’t have a choice, I have orders.”
    This brings a tear to the eye. War creates something that is beautiful at times, human union. Even though what happens during it is the complete opposite. Some of these gems will be remembered for years or decades to come. Maybe not centuries but it will leave a mark for the future. And maybe that mark will help change it.

    • @darkySp
      @darkySp 2 года назад +7

      @@BigBoss1R Don't say this as if they went there with red in their eyes. You may serve the military, but you don't have to follow their ideas. But you do have to follow their orders and kill when it comes to your survival. The enemy fights to survive, you and your brothers-in-arms fight to survive. It's a cycle of violence that ends with "peace treaties" made by people that were far and safe from the war. But not until innocent people and soldiers have lost their lives. I would kill people if I was on the battlefield. My survival, the survival of my brothers-in-arms and the wellbeing of my friends is more important than the guy in my crosshairs. And it would be the same for him.

    • @nassimnassim6019
      @nassimnassim6019 2 года назад

      You will definitely put it on your forehead and arm, rape lover, adorators of the antichrist and his red lens flare eye, alongside your others satan's sleeves. Especially your friends who loves to imply that "this is human nature" and therefore people's that are not like this are "non human".

    • @horscanigunger5098
      @horscanigunger5098 2 года назад +4

      Absolutely annoying that you try to find romantic situations in war! It ain't the slightest part romantic be that assured!
      My adoptive mother only spoke one time over the time she had to flee in WW II. No detail at all! Just too personal.
      1989 I have seen a family leaving their Skoda, on the side of the road, and running with two little kids. Second Prague Spring. And you can't imagine how fast they ran... Military soon behind roaring. Maybe not shooting because of German pupils.
      The look of fear on the face of the Mother, is really best described with our German wird Angst.
      I guess you are quite young.
      But pls leave the romantic BS aside out of any war.
      Speak English to some of the Ukraine refugees in Germany, or Kurds, Afghan people,
      Syria, Jemen, Ugandans... or any language you get along with.
      Human unite is the ultimate goal, we can't achieve if the leaders don't let us.
      And a leader who doesn't give a Fog about your life, is nobody to follow at all.

    • @giganigga132
      @giganigga132 2 года назад +5

      @@horscanigunger5098 говоришь правду, война у людей должна ассоциироваться с кучей горящих трупов, расчленёнкой, военными преступлениями, мёртвыми детьми. Поражаюсь дегенератам, которые хотят войны, при этом они не рвутся на фронт, а ведут интернет-войны вскликами о томчто Россия или Украина проигрывает в войне. С анархией у школьников должны быть такие же ассоциации как с войной, а то всё насилие почему-то у школьников романтизировано, даже стрельба в школе

    • @terrorgaming459
      @terrorgaming459 2 года назад +4

      They lived for 70 years happily exsept for 1939-45 but no one had any problems people had free jobs free housing then yeltsin came and runied everything people were trapped in different countries they weren't supposed to be in ridiculous

  • @paulsebastianmarbella9824
    @paulsebastianmarbella9824 2 года назад +90

    "Who will win this" in this line i finally now understand why in the times of war there is no winners, there's no victory, there's no price only suffering

  • @huskotabago
    @huskotabago Год назад +6

    This is true for all wars. Political leaders bath in glory, and in narcissism for deciding about life and death. Don't let them. Deny their orders. Then they have to reconsider their actions. If you do thy bidding, this happens what you experienced in this video and in any wars... ☮

  • @Crono911
    @Crono911 Год назад

    Men this is one of videos that I will remember it for the rest of my life
    This one change me

  • @SF7PAKISTAN
    @SF7PAKISTAN 2 года назад +1517

    I remember a similar story from I guess the India Pakistan war in 1965. After the partition, two Muslim brothers in the then British Indian Army decided to opt for different countries. By 1965, the older was a Colonel or Brigadier in a tank regiment in the Pakistan Army, while the younger was a newly promoted Major in the Indian Army in a tank regiment.
    As the 1965 war progressed, the units of both brothers were on the opposite side to one another. The Pakistani Brother ordered a small team of men to go behind enemy lines and probe the Indian unit for their strength, plans and if possible sabotage their equipment. This small team went out in the dark hours of the morning and finally reached the Indian unit. As the Indians were preparing to attack and warming up and starting their tanks, among the smoke and noise, the small Pakistani unit was able to do its job and assess their strength.
    The small Pakistani team, in search of Indian plans tried to look into the tank of the Indian commanding officer probably thinking it was empty. But as they opened up the hatch, they saw a man sitting inside. Before the man was able to shoot back, the Pakistani team shot him, gathered his map and notes and took his epaulettes as a proof of their action to report back to their commander.
    When they briefed the Pakistani commander after coming back from their mission, the commander was concerned that they had to shoot an Indian officer, but was glad that they were able to do their mission and come back with valuable intelligence. But when the commander asked for who the officer was and if they had any proof, they gave him his notes and epaulettes. The Pakistani commander broke down, as he recognized the epaulettes of an Indian major in the same unit as his brother was serving in. The Pakistani probing team, perplexed to their commander's reaction would later learn that their commander broke down overridden with guilt and sadness, as he had inadvertently killed his own brother.

    • @whatintheworld6413
      @whatintheworld6413 2 года назад +116

      You guys could have Greater India Country. But the blindness cause by the Religion people extrimist, not the religion itself destroyed your long everlasting Bond

    • @johnxina5126
      @johnxina5126 2 года назад

      @@whatintheworld6413 look at the religious extremism in present day South-Asia. Look at today's India and add to that 40 million more Muslims and half a dozen more ethnicities.

    • @Military_Buzz
      @Military_Buzz Год назад +19

      Some valid source ?

    • @silwatmahmud4672
      @silwatmahmud4672 Год назад

      @@whatintheworld6413 Muslims were being eradicated and exterminated, we had to strive for a separate homeland but what people dont understand is that it wasn't their people that caused this but their government. They hunted my great grand mother and her family. They narrowly escaped with my great grand father having been shot in his shoulder and almost losing his arm to infection. And now, well... As a pakistani muslim, I have nothing against anyone who doesnt have anything against me but I also have everything against the current Indian government and what they stand for. I do hope that those who manipulate the religious convictions and patriotism of our people are punished and I hope all can see the true meaning of the word and way of Islam.

    • @maximutherfuckinmilien6973
      @maximutherfuckinmilien6973 Год назад +143

      @@whatintheworld6413 “Bond”, what kind of bond do we feel towards India? It’s hard to explain it to an outsider but the banner of patriotism towards an entity called “India” never existed until the British came. Yes the region called the Subcontinent existed but it consisted of small kingdoms and people pledged their allegiance not to “India” but towards their kingdom, would an Frenchmen pledge allegiance towards France or Europe of course he would pledge allegiance towards France. The subcontinent was an region like Europe and like Europe there were smaller kingdoms with their own language, laws, customs and culture,then the Brits came and termed everyone as being the same. Even under the Mughals regions like Bengal, Sindh and others were proto-independent, The nawabs actually were the rulers. So for example a Bengali pledged allegiance to Bengal. And during the 20th century every ethnicity was united for the first time coming under the banner of their religion. Muslims and Hindus simply could not co-exist under one nation because of their differences and tensions.

  • @nightdweller2902
    @nightdweller2902 2 года назад +463

    This had me closer to tears than anything Hollywood has ever put out.

    • @Anonymous-qj3sf
      @Anonymous-qj3sf 2 года назад +74

      Hollywood releases American propaganda

    • @moisescruz3353
      @moisescruz3353 Год назад +11

      ​@@Anonymous-qj3sf 🗿

    • @spuditgang
      @spuditgang Год назад

      Because this is real and hollywood is just bullshit fake people

    • @bobramser3037
      @bobramser3037 Год назад

      @nightdweller2902
      Bcs you are a woman.
      ROFL.

    • @NagatoOPRESSORTHUGLIFE
      @NagatoOPRESSORTHUGLIFE Год назад

      This is reality you clown, it's obviously sure that it would be more emotional than any fictional piece. Wake up.

  • @OOTWL
    @OOTWL Год назад +2

    From Roots to Needles by If These Trees Could Talk, is the name of the song. Also this is a video that made me shed manly tears.

  • @luminaaeterna1259
    @luminaaeterna1259 Год назад +5

    The saddest part is that both of them would've remained friends if Chechnya was given independence when the CCCP collapsed
    Instead we had these

    • @Mortablunt
      @Mortablunt 4 месяца назад

      But Chechnya was allowed functional independence from 1992 onwards. And that was the problem. Sectional was unable to govern itself, so it fell into Civil War, and became infested with terrorists who began exporting violence, both to other countries, and to other parts of Russia. Because Chechnya would not govern itself peaceably, the Russian federation had to act to protect its people from being harmed by the violence coming out of Chechnya.

    • @deren2365
      @deren2365 4 месяца назад

      @@Mortablunt why u lying? the russians came into chechnya guns blazing shooting down women and kids and then when they got their asses wooped they resorted to carpet bombing and flattening the entire city. dont forget before this russians got their asses wooped by a literal microscopic country and then broke their promise to not invade chechnya again like cowards. the Dagestan cowards also betrayed their chechen brothers out of fear. the chechens fought bravely until the end.

  • @commandermicrowave4905
    @commandermicrowave4905 2 года назад +238

    This genuinely hit me in the feels bro

    • @toodddddd
      @toodddddd 2 года назад +6

      Yeah I cant get this video out of my head man

    • @blackpillr9kr428
      @blackpillr9kr428 2 года назад +5

      We are all here bro.

    • @faizanzeb9215
      @faizanzeb9215 2 года назад +7

      Bro this is just too sad

    • @vaahtobileet
      @vaahtobileet 2 года назад +3

      bussin fr lowkey af in the feels bro

    • @user-fz3ip3ke8p
      @user-fz3ip3ke8p 2 года назад +2

      @@vaahtobileet stop making fun of him bro

  • @EpochEmerge
    @EpochEmerge 2 года назад +385

    More complete version:
    On December 31, 1994, the 131st Maikop Brigade and 81st Motorized Rifle Regiment entered Grozny, promising to capture Grozny in 4 hours as a New Year present to President Yeltsin. But they were trapped: they entered the center of the city unhindered, and then they were surrounded. On the morning of January 1, 250 of the 700 federal troops and 100 armored vehicles that had entered Grozny left alive, among whom there were also wounded people and 7 armored vehicles. 450 people were left lying on the streets of Grozny forever. It took four hours to capture Grozny, but the operation itself lasted a long three months and was the beginning of a year and a half of the First Chechen War.
    Here is, in fact, the dialogue itself:
    [Chechen] Alik, come on, maybe sometime, before it's too late, take the guys away. Alik, don't do it, don't do it, don't do it. In any case, Alik, understand, you will die, and I will die. What good will it do? Understand correctly yourself! Who will benefit from it? You and I won't benefit from it, you know! If someone is not happy in Russia, then it must be solved at the government level, but not by force of arms. Politicians...
    - [Russian officer] Wait, I... What's your name again?
    - [Chechen] Come on, do it. Give the command. Tell your command. Before it's too late, that you've got men left, come on... Take them out of the city. Go away, Alik! Come on, you'd better come later, you and me... You'll visit me. We will... It's all right. But this, the fact that you came now, Alik... Now I see you - you're a great guy, and... If I see you in battle, you know, you're great, not great, already I will not spare you, as well as you me, understand? You'd better come to me as a guest, Alik! Take the guys away! Don't do that. Have pity on their mothers, have pity on them. Take the boys, Alik. Give the command!
    - [Russian officer] Well, I'm not so big a boss as to give such commands!
    - [Chechen] Alik, understand correctly... I, for example, just from my heart... and... purely, I wish that you stay alive, of course, but... go away better! If others do not leave - go away yourself! Take those who listen to you. Pull back the troops... [Interference] ...in a week... [Interference] ...done... [Interference]
    [Russian officer] I have no such choice. I have my orders and I'll carry them out anyway.

    • @HingalshDealer
      @HingalshDealer 2 года назад +16

      Good job bro

    • @janyogyog76
      @janyogyog76 2 года назад +6

      Thanks for deeper understanding of this video, you're the best

    • @konstanZX2
      @konstanZX2 2 года назад +7

      oh so there are missing parts of the dialogue in the video, interesting.

    • @user-qo2rw7bz7b
      @user-qo2rw7bz7b 2 года назад +4

      GJ all correct

    • @EpochEmerge
      @EpochEmerge 2 года назад +12

      You are welcome bros. War is hell.

  • @markodjuric4282
    @markodjuric4282 2 месяца назад +3

    This is the most important and heartbreaking video on youtube!

  • @cinnabonmaniac1489
    @cinnabonmaniac1489 11 месяцев назад +3

    If y'all havent yet, you need to read Chechen Blues. Antelope Hill has a very good audiobook version of it.

  • @darth_fyodor
    @darth_fyodor 2 года назад +61

    For anyone curious - both these men were killed within 3 days after this conversation

  • @user-rj2hx1ir8m
    @user-rj2hx1ir8m 2 года назад +1715

    чеченская война была очень страшной, а от этой записи все время мурашки по коже, очень душераздирающий диалог
    ещё из этого же разряда было видео, где солдат просил 2 танка, но начальство отклонило просьбу и погибло очень много солдат

    • @yomuria
      @yomuria 2 года назад +49

      И еще журналист(вроде), в которого попала пуля, и он такой он убил меня.

    • @user-pt4ic1qu5q
      @user-pt4ic1qu5q 2 года назад +5

      @@yomuria куда попала?

    • @thequetzalcoatl2287
      @thequetzalcoatl2287 2 года назад +1

      @@yomuria what do you mean?

    • @yomuria
      @yomuria 2 года назад +3

      @@thequetzalcoatl2287 ruclips.net/video/mUr28o8h1pg/видео.html

    • @yomuria
      @yomuria 2 года назад

      @@user-pt4ic1qu5q ruclips.net/video/mUr28o8h1pg/видео.html

  • @supamara923
    @supamara923 7 месяцев назад +9

    As a georgian neighbour, i hope you become independent again and we both gain our lands back

    • @sl_ipper
      @sl_ipper 7 месяцев назад +5

      Long live Ossetia!

    • @supamara923
      @supamara923 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@sl_ipper Ossetia doesn't exist

    • @sl_ipper
      @sl_ipper 6 месяцев назад +2

      In every way but on your maps@@supamara923

    • @adelalmohtaseb5261
      @adelalmohtaseb5261 6 месяцев назад

      @@sl_ipper 🤡

    • @adelalmohtaseb5261
      @adelalmohtaseb5261 6 месяцев назад

      One day all occupied countrys and regions will be free

  • @Charlie17883
    @Charlie17883 Год назад

    The music at 2:23 pairs so well with the information shown. Really shows how brutal merciless war is.

  • @elham7459
    @elham7459 2 года назад +464

    0:38 Alik said "Я не такой большой начальник, чтоб давать такие команды."
    Means "I am not such a big boss (higher rank) to give such orders", not "I can't give this orders", sounds similar but actually has a different meaning.
    If Alik retreated, he might get dishonorably dismissed or even arrested for treason, and someone will simply take his place (delay of his troops might also treaten the other safety). So he didn't have choices.
    Total 1000+ troops only 160 able to escape and 75 were captured. If Alik didn't command his own troops, there might be barely any survivors spared by enemy's well coordinated ambushes, even though his friend (in this video) warned him that them both will show no mercy in battle.

    • @arthurkarapetyan6246
      @arthurkarapetyan6246 2 года назад +30

      alot of the translation was very poor and wasn't close to what he was actually saying.

    • @se7ense7ens37
      @se7ense7ens37 2 года назад +14

      @@arthurkarapetyan6246 yeah I noticed that too, it’s a shame for those who don’t understand the language. I bet they get a whole different perspective…

    • @AbdoZaInsert
      @AbdoZaInsert 2 года назад +2

      @@arthurkarapetyan6246 Cooome on, do a full translation please.
      I understand the best language in the world, Arabic.
      But not Russian, help me out please.

    • @arthurkarapetyan6246
      @arthurkarapetyan6246 2 года назад +29

      @@AbdoZaInsert
      Turpal (The man trying to console Alik)
      -Alik, maybe somehow before it’s too late pull back your troops.( he says ребята, but it's more so generalization for troops).
      -Alik don’t do this, you dont have to do this.
      -Either way Alik, you will die and i will die, what will be the point of that? Try to understand who will win this? We won’t win this with you, don't you understand?
      -If you will survive this battle, for better or worse( is how i understood it) i won’t see you the way you see me anymore, do you understand.
      -Its better if we meet as guests( he says гости, gocti but its more so friends, than rivals on the battlefield)
      -Please, pull back your troops. Dont do this.
      -Have pity on their mothers. Pity them for me.
      -Give the order.
      Alik:
      -I am not in such a position to make that order.
      Turpal
      -Alik you have to understand that, from my heart i wish that you come out of this alive. It would be better if you left.
      Alik
      -Well i don’t have a choice, i have orders and i will fulfill them in any case

    • @fcogalvi7814
      @fcogalvi7814 2 года назад +26

      @@AbdoZaInsert there is no such thing as "the best language in the world".

  • @wernerheisenberg6806
    @wernerheisenberg6806 2 года назад +311

    I just learned about Chechen war and this gave me Goosebumps

  • @davethesteve
    @davethesteve Год назад +17

    Болка.. вечна слава на загинатите Руски момци. Поздрав од Македонија

    • @belarusianYugoslav
      @belarusianYugoslav Год назад +4

      Се надеваме дека никогаш повеќе нема да почувствувате војна.
      Поздрав Од Белорусија. ❤

    • @user-se7hc6dy6l
      @user-se7hc6dy6l 11 месяцев назад

    • @toha1729
      @toha1729 10 месяцев назад +1

      Гореть в аду рozzийским окупантам

  • @aronmarkovits5396
    @aronmarkovits5396 Год назад +3

    As someone who had been to chechnya and afghanistan in recent history, and had family members serve in said conflicts, this shit brings up memories. Memories i no longer want

  • @BigJennie
    @BigJennie 11 месяцев назад

    Ive never broke down in tears watching a video ever,the moment you start thinking about it you start to tear