How Russia Lost the First Chechen War - Modern History DOCUMENTARY

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  • Опубликовано: 31 янв 2025

Комментарии • 2,4 тыс.

  • @KingsandGenerals
    @KingsandGenerals  Год назад +218

    🎥 Join our RUclips members and patrons to unlock exclusive content! Our community is currently enjoying deep dives into the First Punic War, Pacific War, history of Prussia, Italian Unification Wars, Russo-Japanese War, Albigensian Crusade, and Xenophon’s Anabasis. Become a part of this exclusive circle: ruclips.net/channel/UCMmaBzfCCwZ2KqaBJjkj0fwjoin or patron: www.patreon.com/kingsandgenerals and Paypal www.paypal.com/paypalme/kingsandgenerals as well!

    • @canale39youification
      @canale39youification Год назад +3

      Just out of curiosity, the those YT members/patrons exclusives will be eventually released on the "public" YT as well or do they remain exclusive?

    • @yannFZ
      @yannFZ Год назад +7

      @KingsandGenerals Next video would be "How Russia won the second Chechen war?"

    • @hybridarmyoffreeworld
      @hybridarmyoffreeworld Год назад +8

      Moscow horde´s war record :-
      1856 defeated by Britain and France
      1905 defeated by Japan
      1917 defeated by Germany
      1920 defeated by Poland, Finland, Estonia and all Baltic states
      1939 defeated by Finland
      1969 defeated by China
      1989 defeated by Afghanistan
      1989 defeated in the Cold War.
      1996 defeated by Chechnya
      2022 defeated by Ukraine
      WW2 won USA/Britain , meanwhile Stalin's officers were shot or sent to the Gulags. Millions went to the Gulags, including Solzhenitsyn
      Moscow's only victories come from invading smaller countries :-
      a) Hungary 1956
      b) Czechoslovakia 1968
      c) Moldova 1992
      d) Georgia 2008

    • @darthsidius9631
      @darthsidius9631 Год назад +1

      Beautiful music at the end

    • @cossack72zaporizhzhian
      @cossack72zaporizhzhian Год назад +1

      You are the best!!!

  • @imgvillasrc1608
    @imgvillasrc1608 Год назад +6337

    To get an understanding of how incredibly embarrassing this was for Russia, imagine if Utah seceded from the US and defeated the US military.

    • @dark_zAzas8052
      @dark_zAzas8052 Год назад +508

      Damn 💀

    • @Trooper-d2t
      @Trooper-d2t Год назад +372

      Or Wyoming...

    • @imgvillasrc1608
      @imgvillasrc1608 Год назад +1022

      ​@@yutian5884 Tbf, I chose Utah not because of land size but because the Mormons have a somewhat similar past history like the Chechens, and both groups also make up a majority of their respective state.

    • @ravenrise320
      @ravenrise320 Год назад +156

      A more likely scenario than one might think.
      Especially if Utah had any help from other succeeding states.
      One seldom considers what might have occured if the South had been more industrialized and had formed closer ties with other territories or foreign nations during the U.S. Civil War.
      The world and America might be a very different looking place right now.

    • @InquisitorXarius
      @InquisitorXarius Год назад

      @@yutian5884Look up Timeline 191 and you will see a ton of Mormon rebellions

  • @christopherjustice6411
    @christopherjustice6411 Год назад +3169

    My favorite fact about the Chechen wars. Basically every Chechen spoke Russian. Barely any Russians spoke Chechen. So the language barrier was really one sided.

    • @niall_sanderson
      @niall_sanderson Год назад +224

      A lot of ethnic subregions are like that. I don’t know the exact percentages off the top of my head, but the percentage of Québecois who speak English is much higher than the number of English speaking Canadians who can speak French

    • @snapdragon6601
      @snapdragon6601 Год назад +218

      They're probably running into the same thing in Ukraine, with most Ukrainians able to speak Russian but few Russians being able to speak Ukrainian.

    • @Canthus13
      @Canthus13 Год назад +125

      @@snapdragon6601 Yeah, but at least with russian and ukrainian, there's a shared vocabulary.. Not sure if that helps or makes it worse, though.

    • @vitsobotka6268
      @vitsobotka6268 Год назад +24

      Same goes for Ukraine. Many many ukranians speak Russian

    • @alkrimiy
      @alkrimiy Год назад +117

      @@snapdragon6601 people in Donetsk and Lugansk, even among pro-Russian militias, often can speak Ukrainian. What is really problematic for Russians though, it's Carpathian dialect. During the ATO (war in Donbass from 2014-2022) Ukrainians used 'Windtalkers' from Carpathian region to send messages. No one except them understand what they are talking about.

  • @ISAF_Ace
    @ISAF_Ace Год назад +1149

    I’ve always found early federation/late soviet events hard to track. Everything was happening in such a small amount of time that I often end up muddling events.

    • @WinstonMaraj-gx8sm
      @WinstonMaraj-gx8sm Год назад +12

      Read or listen to them over and over and it'll crystallise in you head.Like
      me

    • @swvwc8393
      @swvwc8393 Год назад +32

      The Federal Republic of Erusea did nothing wrong

    • @TheRezro
      @TheRezro Год назад

      Chechen war was staged by Putin.

    • @AquaTeenHungerForce_4_Life
      @AquaTeenHungerForce_4_Life Год назад

      You have to remember that Stalin, before Putin, had relocated MILLIONS of people, and the ones that survived weren't sent back home until the '60s. By then, Russia had "Russians" move in.
      They have done this to almost every country that had been a "protectorate" of the mighty Soviet Union. In reality, all they were doing was erasing the languages and customs of these countries and replacing them with Russian culture.
      Many "Grandmothers" today don't speak their native language, only Russian, because during the 70s & '80s, their culture was erased, and they were forced to speak Russian.
      It's the same thing the US Government did with Native Americans, which IMO are still getting screwed over to this day.

    • @JOSWAY787
      @JOSWAY787 Год назад +11

      The muddling up of all the events is both the effect and reason why it all happened so fast

  • @Artur_M.
    @Artur_M. Год назад +1726

    Interesting fact about Dudayev's career in the Soviet Air Force is that in late 1990, as comander of the base in Tartu (Estonia) he ignored orders to attack Estonian television and parliament in Tallinn.

    • @Artaban10
      @Artaban10 Год назад +410

      He has several interviews where he accurately predicts the seizure of Crimea and the war in Ukraine. According to him, Kazakhstan could be next..

    • @OcceanWavess
      @OcceanWavess Год назад

      Russians claimed he participated in Afghanistan war for USSR

    • @revolutionstudios5052
      @revolutionstudios5052 Год назад +285

      @Artaban North Kazakhstan is primarily ethnic Russian. Vladimir Putin would no doubt use that as a justification to intervene as he did in Crimea… if he had an army left over after this Ukraine fiasco.

    • @Artaban10
      @Artaban10 Год назад +13

      @@revolutionstudios5052 exactly

    • @rcco4556
      @rcco4556 Год назад +83

      @@revolutionstudios5052 If you think Russia is losing the Ukraine conflict you really need to reevaluate your trust in your sources

  • @abdullahbokov
    @abdullahbokov 11 месяцев назад +288

    Greetings from Chechnya and Ingushetia! Thanks for the video! I was 15 then.

    • @Wqghfxz
      @Wqghfxz 10 месяцев назад +33

      Slava to Ukraine

    • @zuesnastrio3062
      @zuesnastrio3062 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@Wqghfxzslava to no one but god

    • @Chehoslovak
      @Chehoslovak 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@Wqghfxz I stand with Urîne

    • @liudmylab2328
      @liudmylab2328 7 месяцев назад +1

      Please write what do you remember about that time?

    • @Chehoslovak
      @Chehoslovak 7 месяцев назад

      @@Wqghfxz as a part of 🇷🇺

  • @imadequate3376
    @imadequate3376 Год назад +654

    Insurgencies are hard to fight.
    Insurgencies that have the general support of most of the civilian population are damn near impossible to stamp out.
    Also, driving armored colums of BMPs not even including tanks into a city, specifically Grozny of multi level buildings and ruined structures is just begging for a RPG team to launch an ambush.

    • @Sola678
      @Sola678 Год назад +18

      It really depends on the situation

    • @Kamfrenchie
      @Kamfrenchie Год назад +32

      yeah, it's incredible that bad tactics like these were used.

    • @LemmingwayArk
      @LemmingwayArk Год назад

      ​@@KamfrenchieWell, my country was being invaded by the super-power Russia. We wanted independence by all means necessary. You mostly only heard the Russian side of the story. The Russians bombed Grozny and other small villages, shooting squads and airplanes dropping bombs in places where there were no rebels. So who is the scummy one? They came invading OUR lands.

    • @Killer-vi4ih
      @Killer-vi4ih Год назад +3

      The fighting was mismanaged on the Ruski side.....

    • @imadequate3376
      @imadequate3376 Год назад +16

      @Kamfrenchie the US has made similar blunders. I believe it was desert storm or the war on terror invasion of Iraq the marines pushed like 6 amtraks down a highway and through some towns and they got shot up the entire way and had a amtrak take a direct hit and basically limp to a bridge and the crew had to leg it to escape the Iraqi army following them.

  • @muslimkasumov6724
    @muslimkasumov6724 Год назад +979

    Chechen here: kudo’s to the makers of the video. As sad as the war was, hopefully it was a reminder to us all that a struggle against an invader is not always a lost cause - how big the power difference may be. I would like to thank everyone that supported us in those harsh times. Injustice, oppression and war will always be part of our human existence, but we owe it to ourselves to always stand on the right side of history and support any people striving for self-determination, freedom and peace. As the old Chechen adage goes: « victory or death »

    • @DiegoRodriguez-yc9rx
      @DiegoRodriguez-yc9rx Год назад +1

      or < for money i can suck good > the modern version of your adage.

    • @dontfuckingcry1965
      @dontfuckingcry1965 Год назад +52

      How can so many follow Kadyrov and help Russia invade Ukraine? I know that there are many Chechens who are at the front and who help Ukraine, but you hear more and more about Kadyrov and them there.
      I have a hard time understanding that a Chechen, are helping Russia.
      Kadorovites must be Russians, because I can't understand how you can join and call yourself Chechen and then help Russia...

    • @DiegoRodriguez-yc9rx
      @DiegoRodriguez-yc9rx Год назад +78

      @@dontfuckingcry1965 japaneses supports united states, even after some nuclear accidents in ww2, soooooooo.....

    • @iljenshumilin467
      @iljenshumilin467 Год назад

      ​@@dontfuckingcry1965maybe because Chechens don't want another war and why would Chechens help Ukraine which is a country full of bandera you think they would allow muslims or black people

    • @dontfuckingcry1965
      @dontfuckingcry1965 Год назад +20

      ⁠@@DiegoRodriguez-yc9rx hmmm Japan has not helped the US invade a country, there is little difference between supporting a country or actively fighting together and against another country.

  • @from_Ichkeria.
    @from_Ichkeria. Год назад +398

    my father and my uncles died in this war and our house still stands destroyed by Russian artillery, our president Dzhokhar Dudayev said in an interview with foreign magazines in 1995 that if the world community does not help little Chechnya in the war against Russia, after Russia defeats Chechnya it will try to take over Ukraine, then no one believed him!if you are interested, you can find this video, it is very popular among Ukrainians!

    • @BolshevikCarpetbagger1917
      @BolshevikCarpetbagger1917 Год назад

      The West's position on Chechnya is the underlining of their hypocrisy when it comes to the Russian war in Ukraine. The Yeltsin/Putin war in Chechnya was waged on a scale 100 times worse than anything Putin has done in Ukraine, and the West threw their full support to Moscow. Even Poland and the Baltics refused to recognize Chechnya's independence. My condolences for the loss of your family.

    • @konsy95
      @konsy95 Год назад +4

      Interesnij fakt, ja obiazatelno posmotriu. Mne kazhetsa Dzhokar bil chelovekom chesti i sovesti po ego podvigam i licom Chechni. Ne to chto seichas, k sozhaleniju.

    • @Joe-kq5sw
      @Joe-kq5sw Год назад +36

      If this "Nostradamus" was so smart then why couldn’t he predict a fucking su 25 coming to obliterate him

    • @mansd5131
      @mansd5131 Год назад +49

      ⁠@@Joe-kq5swHe did manage to escape from previous multiple attacks, but it’s still a risk when you are on a phone call with Russian government, and don’t know exactly how fast is the next rocket that they are about to send. But still, he needed to contact them in some way or another, because of the possible ceasefire.

    • @W4emTP
      @W4emTP Год назад

      Ur chechen?

  • @donskyy
    @donskyy 11 месяцев назад +29

    My undergraduate thesis is about this subject, so it's kinda refreshed me. Thank you so much

    • @BD-hm3fb
      @BD-hm3fb 2 месяца назад +1

      Awesome, what major if you don't mind me asking.

    • @donskyy
      @donskyy 2 месяца назад

      @BD-hm3fb Russian

  • @franciscodetonne4797
    @franciscodetonne4797 Год назад +403

    > The plan was to take the capital in less than two weeks, while outnumbering the enemy over 10:1 *with* air dominance
    > the fighting continued on for nearly 2 years
    Every superpower has its Vietnam or Afghanistan, eh? It's like a tradition or something.

    • @ieetpeople4003
      @ieetpeople4003 Год назад +129

      Except Russia has had...What, like 6 or 7 since world war 2?

    • @rizkyadiyanto7922
      @rizkyadiyanto7922 Год назад +3

      @@ieetpeople4003 list them.

    • @iordanvassilev8091
      @iordanvassilev8091 Год назад +170

      ​@@rizkyadiyanto7922 Budapest, Afghanistan, Chechnya (x2) and Ukraine are the examples that come to mind.

    • @Lttlemoi
      @Lttlemoi Год назад +19

      Funny you mention Afghanistan in that list.

    • @richardnixon7248
      @richardnixon7248 Год назад +30

      ​@iordanvassilev8091 they won in chechnya eventually, and the Ukraine war is ongoing

  • @mikemodugno5879
    @mikemodugno5879 Год назад +313

    You guys make understanding modern international conflicts way easier. I have always been interested in this topic. Thank you for covering it so well. Could you also cover the current conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh. It is not particularly well understood in the West.

    • @munteanuiulian7427
      @munteanuiulian7427 Год назад

      you can find a decent video by one of Simons channels, Warographics while we wait for KG to do their own

    • @Game_Hero
      @Game_Hero Год назад +2

      "current conflict", nah it's pretty much over at this point since months. Azerbaijan "won" the conflict and all armenians living there since centuries have fled, all overt public christian symbols have been removed to erase their former presence, Artsakh even officially dissolved itself at the end of 2023.

    • @bandera-12322
      @bandera-12322 Год назад +2

      So, Azerbaijan is a state in Asia, like Armenia, they have nothing to do with the Caucasus. The Karabakh Khanate was part of the Iranian (Azerbaijan) Khanate. The Soviet Union carried out ethnic cleansing here and evicted Azerbaijanis, settling with Armenians, we returned sovereignty over this place and our land was given to us. After that, the USSR collapsed, Armenia, with the support of the Russians, seized Karabakh and not only, in addition to 7 districts. We waited a long time while they carried out ethnic cleansing, as a result, Turkey got stronger and gave us weapons, like Russia gave Armenia. We took the chance while they were at war in Ukraine and got our own back. In our war, the number of civilian casualties is at the level of 5-6 people. This is so small, we conducted the cleanest operation in history, with the help of bayraktars from Turkey. Turkey also helped Ukraine, otherwise it would have been broken in the first days.
      We told the Armenians to stay, but they need to change their citizenship, half of them stayed. We saw how the West covered these events when we did everything for them, continuously delivering humanitarian aid, offering citizenship, laying down our arms. They were not even embarrassed that they themselves recognized the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan and said that there is no such Armenian Nagorno-Karabakh republic. We have done everything to make everything so safe and clean, to avoid civilian casualties. We didn't even attack the churches where the Armenian separatists were hiding, although one had to be blown up because of the artillery used there. But all the same, your media has made monsters out of us. Now I'm looking at the Middle East and how you cover the events. Perhaps the problem is still the religious barrier. You are ready to go to great lengths to refute your allies and dehumanize the enemy, without even knowing the reason why he is doing this and what the enemy was doing to him.

    • @AngelRobles-n1s
      @AngelRobles-n1s Год назад

      @bandera-12322 Turkey is a Christian Homeland and Constantinople was only recently changed to Islamabad. The Haggia Sophia, one of the most beautiful churches in all of Christianity. It was turned into a museum, and now Edrogon wants to turn it into a mosque. Turkmen invaders also murdered hundreds of thousand Christians during the Armenian Genocide. Azerbaijan is just another Christian Land that is currently occupied by Islamist. Please, don't spread lies anymore

    • @Game_Hero
      @Game_Hero Год назад +2

      @@AngelRobles-n1s And before that, a Pagan homeland, and during the Attaturk years until Erdogan, a secular homeland, your point? Not to deny in any sense the amount, intensity of human rights violations and attrocities against christian minorities and majoritarily non turkic peoples, yet by your own logic, this "christian homeland" is occupying pagan and zoroastrian homelands and it now magically ok to dehumanize human beings if they are "of the wrong nation" when they too have the right to a home and they too have religious minorities within their cultures, even if you don't like the majority one, you can't generalize.

  • @UltimateRaven
    @UltimateRaven Год назад +351

    Yeah, Dzhokar Dudayev was actually a very big martyr figure for Chechens that they even made a battalion named after him. This battalion is fighting for Ukraine even right now from 2014 onwards because they wanted their country to be independent again. I hope Chechnya becomes independent. Another figure to also keep note of is Sheikh Mansur who also has a battalion named after him fighting for Ukraine.

    • @babatundeolatunji8702
      @babatundeolatunji8702 Год назад +50

      I did a bit of research and a surprising amount of the Chechen leaders he mentions in the video ended up fighting for Ukraine, alot of them died there though like Isa Munayev.

    • @UltimateRaven
      @UltimateRaven Год назад +25

      @@babatundeolatunji8702 That's why I thought the name Isa Munayev was familiar because he was actually killed in Ilovaisk(if I remember correctly) due to the militias encircling the Ukrainian army during 2014.

    • @dylanvogler2165
      @dylanvogler2165 Год назад +24

      ​@UltimateRaven the militas were losing the battle. The orc army intervened though and that caused the encirclement. Where the orcs, showing why they are orcs, broke their agreement with the Ukrainians to let them retreat and instead shell the route of retreat.

    • @UltimateRaven
      @UltimateRaven Год назад +8

      @@dylanvogler2165 Yeah, that's what I want to say.

    • @akbarhammer7436
      @akbarhammer7436 Год назад +7

      Isa Munayev might have many stories to tell if he were still alive. Interesting and mystic person.

  • @Develpup
    @Develpup Год назад +81

    Loved this video, but wish there was more details on troop movements. I can understand if there wasn't much information. Perhaps the Pacific war series spoiled me. I enjoy seeing troop movements or battle plans come to life over a map. In this video, it was mostly just implied

    • @orotewilderness2913
      @orotewilderness2913 Год назад +16

      Guerrila warfare is really hard to track, so much minor events are forgotten by the writers and historians. Also, the war in the pacific was an extremely well documented war, especially by writings from the marine corps, this war was not, or such info is classified.

    • @4evermarx
      @4evermarx Год назад

      There is a great podcast 4parts that have much more details. Lions led by donkey have really good first chechen war episodes.

    • @TGBurgerGaming
      @TGBurgerGaming 10 месяцев назад

      This is more for the pro war crowd so they dont lose heart than anything else.

  • @davidsmith40769
    @davidsmith40769 Год назад +448

    From my understanding, they didn't "win" the 2nd one either. they made a deal with Chechen goons to keep their own in line. So basically Russians pay Kadyrov protection money.

    • @michael-gb3rn
      @michael-gb3rn Год назад +101

      I'm pretty sure there did win the 2nd war but only course the Chechen was split, Kadyrov faction decided to support Russia if there made him leader after the war so the Chechen soldier loyal to the country had to fight on two front.

    • @metehanakdagg
      @metehanakdagg Год назад

      @@michael-gb3rn I wouldn't say they ''won'' because If they truly would have won, they would be able to annex the country instead of making them a puppet. I'd say their side of the country won and they helped them win. They couldn't incorporate Chechnya into their country so they just work together while Checnya is a puppet on paper.

    • @zaurbekmairbekov6357
      @zaurbekmairbekov6357 Год назад

      The second war was a genocide like the first one but with no borders no damage was to big no casualities were to high no more were to much for putin to get revenge for the embarassement of 1996, when the Chechen leader Zelimhkan Yandarbiev (Vice President in Dudayevs Office, who got President after dudayevs death) talked to the President of russia in moscow in Kreml in Front of the eyes of the whole World like to a Child, where elzin follow the instructions of the Chechen Leader like a little dog, no one won the second war, many Chechens till today talk about the second war as a still on going war we say "this war", we talk about it in presents beacusefor us it dont end, all of our Leaders died foghting the enemie ALL OF THEM! not everyone can talk so proud of his Leaders who dont bow their Heads infront of the Enemy, the russians just killed and killed and killed everyone and everything more than 30% of our around 1 Million Population more than 42 thousand Children including in less than 15 years, they just dehydrate us and the whole beautiful Democratic West with his wonderfull human rights and women rights and everyones matters Slogans just watched how a whole Nation was Massacred in two wars for two decades and supported it with everything they can, cause the same Thing Was going on in Iraq Afghanistan not by russians but by the Rest of the Western World, like today in Gaza, Chechens dont Capitulated like the russians did in 1996 not one signature not one leader we just lost a battle like many many Times earlier but we dont stop for "break" until we have given the russians a very serious and terrifiyng hard battle, and we will rise again like we do for more than 400 years now and we again gonna try to get our freedom and take revenge on the russians for every women for every child for the injustice

    • @richardnixon7248
      @richardnixon7248 Год назад +37

      They did win it

    • @snapdragon6601
      @snapdragon6601 Год назад

      Yeah, you can see where all the money goes whenever they show Kadyrov in front of his palace wearing his designer label boots and the videos he's been posting online lately where he's handing out dozens of brand new SUV's to all his loyal henchmen..(Mostly Mercedes and other brands from the "evil, satanic West") - all that money is coming from Putin to Kadyrov for him to keep Chechnya in line.

  • @mgm661
    @mgm661 Год назад +287

    On 25:40 they mentioned a chechen Commander Isa Munayev. He actually later participated in war in Ukraine against Russia in 2014-2015. Unfortunately, he died in the Battle of Debaltsevo fighting Wagner merceneries.. He is a hero for both Chechen and Ukrainian ppl. A few streets and squares are named after him in Ukraine.

    • @даканца
      @даканца Год назад +6

      👍🏻 God bless

    • @hukumkerjasama304
      @hukumkerjasama304 Год назад +23

      free ukraine...free palestine, long live resistence

    • @W4emTP
      @W4emTP Год назад +1

      There was no war agaisnt russia in 2015 bro

    • @mgm661
      @mgm661 Год назад +19

      @@W4emTP the war of 2014-2015 started when a russian FSB agent, Girkin-Strelkov, illegally crossed the international border with a DRG group and started to capture government buildings in Ukraine, police departments, etc. Do you really think something like that could have happened without direct involvement/coordination with Kremlin, FSB and personally Putin ? You must be kidding me, dude ..

    • @W4emTP
      @W4emTP Год назад

      @@mgm661 source?

  • @HistoryteacherAlex
    @HistoryteacherAlex Год назад +273

    I remember that time very well. I was about the age I could have been conscripted to serve in the army. Most of my former classmates tried to avoid that because they were afraid of being sent to Chechnya as soldiers. Also there were some who were proud of their mission. They considered themselves as Russian patriots who saved the united country.

    • @cydia1720
      @cydia1720 Год назад +1

      Chechnya never belonged to russia there is nothing patriotic about wanting another peoples country for your own greed

    • @Game_Hero
      @Game_Hero Год назад +71

      "united country", yeah, the russian empire.

    • @nixx4401
      @nixx4401 Год назад +2

      ​@@Game_HeroUnited

    • @Game_Hero
      @Game_Hero Год назад +41

      @@nixx4401 The same way any empire is "united", by coercion and cultural economic imperialism and colonialism.

    • @AquaTeenHungerForce_4_Life
      @AquaTeenHungerForce_4_Life Год назад

      It's pretty easy to brainwash an 18-20 year old. In just recent memory, the US gov was all about killing Islamic Terrorists or anyone who looked like one and it had the same effect. Both were wrong.

  • @justworship0570
    @justworship0570 Год назад +86

    Salam from Dagestan ❤ my brothers Chechens are the best 🙏

    • @Balkanovic10
      @Balkanovic10 11 месяцев назад +6

      Doesnt dagestan support russia, also dagestan was on russian side during the chechen wars

    • @Ramz_an887
      @Ramz_an887 11 месяцев назад +10

      Not all Dagestanis were on the side of Russia.@@Balkanovic10

    • @rudolfpuchini410
      @rudolfpuchini410 8 месяцев назад +5

      Valeikum assalam brother from Dagestan 🤝

    • @VitoFranchesko
      @VitoFranchesko 7 месяцев назад

      @@Ramz_an887 All Dagestanis was Russian side stop lie ! During decenies you just deceive Chechens ! Take exemple Shamil and Baysangur who die like men and who surrender

  • @CMDRSloma
    @CMDRSloma Год назад +210

    I remember many Chechens settling in Poland after failed wars. As a Pole I wish them freedom and I think this will eventually happen.

    • @Nabil-js5xu
      @Nabil-js5xu Год назад +7

      I heared chechens look kinda European and thats why they integrated in European society pretty well.They are European muslims.Am I right? Waiting for your reply.

    • @Corazon-y5k
      @Corazon-y5k Год назад +6

      I'm glad that poland haven't become a superpower and lost most of its land for the benefit of Russia

    • @Zacharoni4085
      @Zacharoni4085 Год назад +21

      @@Nabil-js5xuThey didn’t assimilate well into France though.

    • @Nabil-js5xu
      @Nabil-js5xu Год назад +1

      @@Zacharoni4085 Oh are they the same as arabs and north africans?I don't put them with the arab,north african category though.

    • @houseplant1016
      @houseplant1016 Год назад +6

      ​@@Nabil-js5xuThey look the same as North African Arabs, I don't get what you mean by "category"? Making a general assumption is pretty weird, but yes there have been problems with French people of Chechen origin. Like the Chechen that attacked the teacher for showing a Muhammed drawing.

  • @DzhokharDudayev-kr9mi
    @DzhokharDudayev-kr9mi Год назад +77

    Not a lot of people even know this war took place. Good job making video about it. Thank god my mother survived this war, but unfortunately my father didnt.

    • @colecummings5104
      @colecummings5104 Год назад +1

      I dare ask how your father died?

    • @DzhokharDudayev-kr9mi
      @DzhokharDudayev-kr9mi Год назад +23

      @@colecummings5104 He worked at airport when it was shelled by russians. I never had the chance to see him cause i was yet not born when he died, only photos.

    • @colecummings5104
      @colecummings5104 Год назад

      Well that sad in your place. Say how your doing in life?better or worse. For me nothing happens to me for now...

    • @DzhokharDudayev-kr9mi
      @DzhokharDudayev-kr9mi Год назад +17

      @@colecummings5104 Well as I already said, I haven’t seen my father, so it doesn’t upset me as much as it would if someone who was with their father for many years and then lost him. I am doing much better since we leaved russia 10 years ago. Germany is so much better and cleaner place to life. For example when i lived in Oryol a city not that far away from Moscow, people used to throw away their trash in a big hole in the ground. Can you imagine what was happening in my head when i saw this and then compared it to what i saw in Germany?

    • @colecummings5104
      @colecummings5104 Год назад +2

      Dirty back in russia and clean in german I think in your head. For me. Might as well share mine. Most of life was peaceful. In Texas I will tell you it is hot everyday even in winter. Right now it is cold here in Washington state. I would tell you. It rains here often and cold here. For america. There is nice people. I am scared the fact "America is not doing good" would be my word. For now america is good. Say anything happens in Germany? I don't hear anything in germany? If not? That is okay. For me nothing happen in america.

  • @andreaslermen2008
    @andreaslermen2008 Год назад +25

    The "Lion Lead by Donkeys" podcast has a very good episode about this. It shows, how grim this whole thing was and how bad both sides suffered.

  • @XCHECHENX
    @XCHECHENX Год назад +24

    thank you for this video 👍🏼

  • @YeeeeGreg
    @YeeeeGreg Год назад +20

    Love the additional modern conflicts content!!!

  • @adamesd3699
    @adamesd3699 Год назад +59

    Basayev and a lot of Chechens had actually fought on Russia’s side in Georgia right before the first Chechen war. This gave them a lot of battle experience and also an insider’s look into the Russian army that they later faced in Chechnya.

    • @anonsweden8805
      @anonsweden8805 Год назад +8

      no; they wherena independent unit operating for abkhazia, they were not in or with russia

    • @anonsweden8805
      @anonsweden8805 Год назад +8

      but basayev later said it was a mistake

    • @timurdudaev7316
      @timurdudaev7316 Год назад

      they fought for freedom for whole caucas,not for pigsrussia

    • @vainahi
      @vainahi Год назад +11

      They didnt need any inside look of Russian army cause they knew them very well. They all served in soviet army.

    • @4evermarx
      @4evermarx Год назад +4

      Well Basayev is real shady one, worked with GRU and also with pakistani ISI...

  • @RetroRos101
    @RetroRos101 Год назад +192

    My father was conscripted in the Soviet Air Force in 1989 until 91. He told me that his commander was Dudayev, he personally shook hands with the guy and never said anything bad about him. Such a sad situation with how Chechnya ended up being forced back into submission.

    • @IIIIiii72827
      @IIIIiii72827 Год назад

      Nahhhh fam are u mad fuck u mean forced back Into submission chechnya submits to no one

    • @HHindsight
      @HHindsight Год назад +1

      @@IIIIiii72827 ?

    • @IIIIiii72827
      @IIIIiii72827 Год назад +12

      @@HHindsight what's so hard to understand

    • @HHindsight
      @HHindsight 10 месяцев назад

      @@Ktaurus26 yes Russia came along and sent the men as meat into Ukrainian front lines, they will be under the Ukrainian ground now unfortunately

    • @ronkledonkanusmoncher564
      @ronkledonkanusmoncher564 10 месяцев назад

      @@Ktaurus26😭😭😭

  • @Æthelsan
    @Æthelsan Год назад +294

    Next: Russian Invasion of Georgia 2008.

    • @KHN.RVA.28
      @KHN.RVA.28 Год назад +38

      Yes please...its something most people of the west didn't know happened

    • @giorgijioshvili9713
      @giorgijioshvili9713 Год назад +51

      i am glad you said it like that, many people blame Georgia for the war because of russian propaganda but in reality it was just russian provocation

    • @user-mhmd-ibrhm
      @user-mhmd-ibrhm Год назад +22

      Also the IDF invasion of Gaza

    • @Chiraqboy-Theplugshit
      @Chiraqboy-Theplugshit Год назад +20

      @@giorgijioshvili9713no one blames Georgia western media back then and now always made it very clearly it was Russia and only Russia’s fault they do not allow history from the Russian point of view to flow in the west too much

    • @giorgijioshvili9713
      @giorgijioshvili9713 Год назад +2

      @@Chiraqboy-Theplugshit good, because its a fact

  • @davitsurguladze6643
    @davitsurguladze6643 Год назад +216

    Dudaev was one of the Great heroes of Caucasia and Great friend of Georgians. We, Georgians, shall never forget his indipendent and resilient spirit 🇬🇪🖤

    • @LyndonLaRoucheArchive
      @LyndonLaRoucheArchive Год назад +16

      No he wasn't. He had no problem napalming Afghan villages during that manipulated conflict and he had no problem turning the Caucuses into a war zone on behalf of bloodthirsty British Geopoliticians.

    • @chiefmuttonchops8473
      @chiefmuttonchops8473 Год назад +17

      @@LyndonLaRoucheArchive "On behalf of bloodthirsty British Geopoliticians". ????? You on crack?

    • @LyndonLaRoucheArchive
      @LyndonLaRoucheArchive Год назад +2

      @@chiefmuttonchops8473 I'm not the one manipulating people into endless conflicts over the utterly ludicrous idea that because the British Royal family is descended from Jesus they have to rule over humanity.

    • @chiefmuttonchops8473
      @chiefmuttonchops8473 Год назад

      ​@@LyndonLaRoucheArchive Blasphemous heretic! How dare you decry the notion that the Royal family is decended from Jesus. This is so obviously true that it boggles my mind as to why their are unbelievers such as yourself. After the fifth battle of Snodland in 1543 the combines armies of Jesus and Bill Bryson defeated Joe Rogan in combat. Leading to the union of Jesus and King Eijaffajallajokull which the current Royal family are descended from.

    • @nihlo5861
      @nihlo5861 Год назад +9

      @@chiefmuttonchops8473 By his next reply he is definitely on crack

  • @robthomas3811
    @robthomas3811 Год назад +49

    Khattab and basayev were a couple of interesting characters

    • @schaihmansur8298
      @schaihmansur8298 Год назад +8

      Khattab was not really and interessting character. Schamil kept him arround because he spoke arabic and russian and he could get funding in the arab world, brave but even Basaev later commented that he knew that Khattab was only plaing his own agenda and not for the good of the chechen people. Most people wanted him out of chechnya.

    • @robthomas3811
      @robthomas3811 Год назад

      @@schaihmansur8298 oh ya I bet. He can be interesting and a scum bag at the same time.

    • @Apache-t9o
      @Apache-t9o Год назад +17

      @@schaihmansur8298 khattab left afghanistan after fighting the USSR invasion there. He has more experience than any chechen fighting the russians.

    • @Q8iAB
      @Q8iAB 11 месяцев назад +6

      ​@@schaihmansur8298complete bs

    • @antonius762
      @antonius762 11 месяцев назад +12

      @@schaihmansur8298Why hate one him he was literally way more battle hardened and experienced and knew how to beat Soviets just like he did to them in Afghanistan and Tajikistan this man was a Soviet/Russian slayer so underrated so undersupplied that if he was supplied good and had more men then Chechnya might of been independent, Ibn Khattab was literally mastermind in gurella warfare and was literally Rambo that and wasn’t killed in battle but by a poisoned letter.

  • @sapienthought1103
    @sapienthought1103 Год назад +111

    so if i understood right :
    if im a defender against an occupier and after i see my civilians targeted i decide to target theirs im the one labeled terrorist ? honestly playing with words has gone too far

    • @stillsaneexile6587
      @stillsaneexile6587 Год назад +3

      Chechens were called terrorists because of the terrorist attacks they constantly committed

    • @data544
      @data544 Год назад

      Deliberately targeting the civilian population in order to achieve a goal is an act of terrorism

    • @dylanvogler2165
      @dylanvogler2165 Год назад +35

      Terrorist: *noun*
      "a person who uses unlawful violence and intimidation, especially against civilians, in the pursuit of political aims".
      *adjective*
      "unlawfully using violence and intimidation, especially against civilians, in the pursuit of political aims."
      So yeah that's the textbook definition of terrorism. Of course, the other side can be just as much terrorists, but when you specifically target civilians, like Hamas, IS, etc, then yeah, you're terrorists. Which they openly state as such. They specifically say that they consider civilians a legitimate target and often specifically target them. With Israel and Russia, it becomes a lot more unclear because they claim they don't specifically target civilians but that it's "collateral damage." Which is often bs ofcourse. With both Israel and Russia having bombed places of which you know it will likely result in mostly civilian casualties, be it directly or indirectly. So there is an argument to call them terrorist as well.

    • @sapienthought1103
      @sapienthought1103 Год назад +1

      @@dylanvogler2165 lool i dont need someone to copy paste for me also do you realize how dumb your comment is ? so as long as i say im not intentionally targeting civilians and proceeds to kill thousands its unclear weather it's an act of terrorism or not you brought in israelhh the occupiers and the defenders since when illegitimate settlers who by their nation's law are part of the reserved army became civilians ? lool
      TERRORISM is just a word used by those in power to oppress the weak and defenders otherwise i see no difference between israhell usa russia... they are all terrorist states who target unarmed civilians in their wars dont embarrass yourself truth is clear for everyone who wishes to use his brain.

    • @dylanvogler2165
      @dylanvogler2165 Год назад +3

      @CL-ie5fz I am anti Russian and pro Ukrainian actually. My pfp is made in Kyiv (made during the war), but that's bs mate.

  • @IFRYRCE
    @IFRYRCE Год назад +11

    "“Alik, before it’s too late tell your men to retreat. Don’t do this, in any case, Alik you and I will die! What is the point of all this you and I will not survive. If we or I see you in the action, I wont show you mercy, just like you won’t understand? It’s better if you come to me as a guest. Retreat your men, have pity for their mothers, have pity for your guys, retreat your men. Give the order to retreat!”
    “I can’t do that”
    “Alik I wish that you survive this, but you better leave.”
    “I don’t have a choice. I have orders and will obey them in any case”
    Fucking recording gets me every time man.

  • @YoussefDaanBenAmor
    @YoussefDaanBenAmor Год назад +90

    Dzokhar Dudayev was truly ahead of his time, and its almost insane the people of Chechnya managed the emerge victorious against the Russians in the First War!

    • @maksimfrolov5918
      @maksimfrolov5918 Год назад

      This became possible only thanks to the policies of the traitor Yeltsin, who continued to ruin the country (especially the army) throughout his reign.

    • @monpacie1615
      @monpacie1615 9 месяцев назад +3

      Not exactly insane, if you understand how falling powers work. Weimar Germany 1919 could not even resist the new Polish Republic, although German Empire in 1914 could fight on three fronts simultaneously. The Roman Empire crushed other great armies, but at the decline of its powers lost to barbarians.

    • @porkerpete7722
      @porkerpete7722 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@monpacie1615gove them their flowers.

    • @VitoFranchesko
      @VitoFranchesko 2 месяца назад

      they won the first war man

  • @gladiator7269
    @gladiator7269 6 месяцев назад +47

    I am a Chechen from Grozny and the Russian Empire stole my childhood and youth from me and killed my loved ones. During these 2 wars, the Chechen people (1 million) lost 300 thousand people and 40 thousand of them were children. Now I'm trying to give my three children what I didn't have. Now I live in America

  • @balkangamer01
    @balkangamer01 Год назад +15

    Good video.. is there any videos going to be about Break Up Of Yugoslavia or Yugoslavs wars in upcoming future? Kings and Generals sure know on how to summarize the History events. Ps. Keep up the good work doing these videos.

  • @levimulder2334
    @levimulder2334 11 месяцев назад +4

    historymarche and you perfectly go together!

  • @chad3232132
    @chad3232132 8 месяцев назад +12

    This really was a fascinating war. Certainly one of the most shocking upsets in modern warfare history. A region of Russia with barely 1 million people won de-facto independence against the forces of a nation of nearly 150 million and a massive disparity in military forces and resources. I realize Russia was a disorganized mess in the mid-90's, but it was a major embarrassment nonetheless.

  • @user-fw4uh7ob2s
    @user-fw4uh7ob2s Год назад +88

    Good video, but there are some inaccuracies here.
    3:25 Chechnya did not "secede from Russia". It was declared independent (November 1991) before Russia emerged as a state (December 1991).
    5:15 Russia had imposed a blockade around Chechnya, meaning nothing came in or out.
    5:38 Dudayev had almost unanimous support from the Chechen people. The opposition was largely supported and funded by the Russian army since the beginning.
    7:56 Important to note here that the Chechen "air force" basically consisted of only trainer aircraft, except 3 jets which they couldn't operate.
    9:01 Basayev was a general of the army, and Khattab only arrived later in the war. So he had no part in the defense of the city.
    15:20 Many Chechen fighters were not armed, and had to acquire weapons by picking them up from killed Russian soldiers or from their dead mates.
    18:19 Where did you get the 85 KIA figure? The smallest estimates put the losses of the 131st Maikop Brigade at over 1000 soldiers, with others reaching 3500. The entire brigade was wiped out.
    20:39 Isa Munayev later went to fight for Ukraine and was killed in action 2015. He led the Dzjokhar Dudayev battalion which is still active.
    26:00 Bamut was only taken a year later, in 1996.
    27:17 There was no hijacking of a turkish plane in the First Chechen war so not sure what you're referring to. There was one in 1991 though to put pressure on Russia to end the state of emergency they announced.
    28:09 and 29:27 Notable mention. The 6th March operation was a prelude to the August 6th Chechen offensive on Grozny. The March attack was to plan and map out the Russian defences in the city to lay the groundwork for the Chechen retaking of the capital in August.'
    31:28 Most estimates put Chechen military deaths at around 3000.
    Keep up the good work! Feel free to reach out if you need sources/footage for future videos regarding Chechnya.

    • @mudzbe8414
      @mudzbe8414 Год назад +16

      He's blindly using Russian casualty figures...

    • @schaihmansur8298
      @schaihmansur8298 Год назад +11

      26:45, The Russian airforce bombs Basaevs family. That caused his extreme tactics.

    • @blackbaron6745
      @blackbaron6745 Год назад +1

      a biased channel or ignore team

    • @vitaliihalkin5836
      @vitaliihalkin5836 Год назад +6

      I was looking for a comment like this. There are so many omitted things here or just plain russian views😤 I’m so glad you wrote these corrections😊 Thank you.
      I’m pretty sure author wasn’t interested in the sources from the Chechen side of a story.
      It must be so painful to know that russians were deliberately killing civilians, destroying your cities, and yet you would be the only one called “terrorist” for attempts to draw attention to the genocide russia were doing.
      As a Ukrainian, I want to let you know, that I am so sorry that we hadn’t done enough to support your efforts. We were such a mess back then😢
      I really hope that Ichkeria will be a free country one day, with free people living in peace🤗

    • @lordpossumgton4599
      @lordpossumgton4599 Год назад +2

      But you won't mention, that Maikop brigade had 1200 man in total in three battalions and only about 450 soldiers of brigade entered the city
      They had heavy losses, but multiply it to the numbers three times more that total brigade numbers just ridiculous.
      You should learn something else than copium Asschkeria sources
      😊

  • @DutchSkeptic
    @DutchSkeptic Год назад +161

    Very interesting, and a better context and background than I have ever seen presented of the First Chechen War. The fact that the Kremlin throught they could capture the capital in 3-7 days shows they learnt very little in the 18 years thereafter... I do think that the animated glittering of the waters on the maps were a nice idea, but unfortunately a bit poorly executed. Not only is it distracting and somewhat annoying, around 12:08 half of Dagestan's land territory is flashing occasionally. This is where aesthetics hinder storytelling, rather than enhancing it, which they otherwise do very well in K & G documentaries. Just a minor point. :)

    • @TheRezro
      @TheRezro Год назад +3

      It is what we call a LaserPig Loop

    • @balabanasireti
      @balabanasireti Год назад +6

      Please nevee try to sound like a critic again.
      Thank you

    • @adamesd3699
      @adamesd3699 Год назад +1

      I actually liked the shimmering water effect. Didn’t find it distracting. But I can see how some people would.

    • @Україна-м6с
      @Україна-м6с 11 месяцев назад

      Why no one mentioned that Russia was back than unprepared, broke, weak and corrupt. They fought in a very hard terrain and had only young inexperienced soldiers

    • @TheRezro
      @TheRezro 11 месяцев назад

      @@Україна-м6с And what did changed? Russians did even have own separatist and PMC units back then.

  • @elitely6748
    @elitely6748 Год назад +27

    Good to be early for a brand new Kings and Generals video. I was studying this war a while ago and read how it began terribly initially and how the Russian peoples back home resisted this.
    Yet I never finished I only got to how close they were getting to the capital and was going to read the 2nd war.
    But thanks as always for covering this and educating us with such interesting history!

  • @giorgitavartkiladze3913
    @giorgitavartkiladze3913 11 месяцев назад +23

    Long live to Ichkeria and Chechen people! As a Georgian, will always stand by you!

    • @mastersafari5349
      @mastersafari5349 11 месяцев назад

      Long live free and independent peoples of Checnya, Abkhazia and Ossetia!

    • @sabcuaron5424
      @sabcuaron5424 9 месяцев назад +2

      thank you my georgian brother

    • @Huund63
      @Huund63 9 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you so much brother, we haven’t forgotten how you helped us during the battle with the Tatar-Mongols and in the Kazikumykh battle during the Dzurdzukis, Georgians have the best cuisine and culture🫂❤️

  • @joegagnon2268
    @joegagnon2268 Год назад +11

    One of the top tier channels for warfare history

  • @largosgaming
    @largosgaming Год назад +27

    The events surrounding the railway yard and the disintegration of the 131st motor rifle brigade deserves its own video (and a movie).

    • @Gleaves
      @Gleaves 11 месяцев назад +1

      Well, there's 1997 russian movie named Purgatory, based on these events. Never had been translated, have some myths, very dark, grim and terrifying, but generally correct in events

  • @ZWNH
    @ZWNH Год назад +8

    Nice video! Do you think you will ever cover the Yugoslav wars?

  • @sergiadamo2808
    @sergiadamo2808 Год назад +33

    It will be so great if you make the video on 2008 Russo-Georgian war, which by the way was the first European war in 21th century

    • @runajain5773
      @runajain5773 Год назад +1

      In that blakan region a lot of war

    • @martinusv7433
      @martinusv7433 Год назад +3

      ​@@runajain5773 That was in the '90s...

    • @realngga
      @realngga Год назад +2

      War in Abkhazia would be more interesting, since it lasted longer and there were lot more war crimes, brutal massacres and ethnic cleansing, 2008 war only lasted for 5 days, while Abkhazian war lasted for 13 months and 13 days.

    • @sergiadamo2808
      @sergiadamo2808 Год назад +1

      @@realngga yeah Abkhazian War was one of the most decisive but on the other hand tragic part of my country's rich history but i have several reasons why i prefer 2008 War:
      1. 2008 war was more large-scale and game-changing conflict with more massive, interesting and wide ranging diplomatic background: for example 2003 Rose revolution, which sparked modernisation reforms in Georgia and subsequently led to the other "Colourful Revolutions" in Postsoviet area. Moreover, Kosovo's announcement of indipendence in February, 2008. Which was the main factor of invading in Georgia as georgia-Abkhazia(so called "south Ossetia", in reality Samachablo, also) and Serbia-kosovo cases was heavily linked to each other in Russia-NATO diplomatic relationship and Putin even Remarked after Kosovo's independence day that Russia learned the lesson from the west rather perpectly and would answer them bitterly. It goes without saying he meant full-scale invasion of georgia in this "answer". Besides it, we can mention NATO'S summit in Bucharest in April,2008 where Georgia and Ukraine were rejected to become the newest NATO's members, which turned out to be "Green light" for Putin from the west to start the invasion of Georgia.
      2. August War turned out to be absolutely new challange for Eastern european security and for the concept of Small Countries' sovereignty, which was established after the dissolution of USSR. whereas the influence of Abkhazian War was rather modest and not worldwide compared to 2008 war. It was like Local conflict in the Caucasus region and not large-scale European conflict like the August war.
      3. Western diplomatic support. there was too modest interest and absolutely non-existed diplomatic support from Western countries to Georgia during Abkhazian War, otherwise French President Nicolas Sarkozy even brokered the Russo-Geoegian armistice personally and Tbilisi(Capital of Georgia) was scarcely saved from capturing(Russian army was only 40km away from the capital) thanks to diplomatic intervention of the USA.
      4. Russia's participation. Russia's involvement in Abkhazian war was inderect and was mostly limited to providing supplies and ammunitions to the separatist forces while in 2008, it was unprecentented full scale invasion in European country with Russian 11th army. The difference between the scale of Russia's participation in both wars was the main reason why the duration of Abkhazian war was a bit longer than August War's.

    • @wergrgwgg12
      @wergrgwgg12 Год назад

      mate learn Geography. Chechnya is also Europe. Even more than Georgia. Cause Georgia is partially in Asia. Whereas Chechnya is entirely in Europe.

  • @iraklisuladze1185
    @iraklisuladze1185 Год назад +70

    Btw together with Chechens, many Ingushs were also deported to the Far East by the orders of Stalin. Later, when Ingushs returned, Georgians left their homes untouched and even left cattle for them. Since then Ingushs have been the friendliest people for us, Georgians, in the Northern Caucasus.
    Hope to see them independent from this bloody Empire too.
    +1 to the video about the Ruso-Georgian war in 2008 when we barely survived (the heroes of war made it possible, RIP their soles), while only a few leaders of West supported us (especially Ukraine, Poland, and Balkan States)

    • @pinkpunk7084
      @pinkpunk7084 Год назад +12

      oh, u wanna see radical islamic state near your border. i see, dude.

    • @ВладиславВладислав-и4ю
      @ВладиславВладислав-и4ю Год назад

      ​@@pinkpunk7084Still better than Russia and its Kadyrov-type radical Muslims who beat a student to blood for not considering the Koran more important than all other books.

    • @sbeno5362
      @sbeno5362 Год назад +21

      @@pinkpunk7084 We have no enmity with the Georgians and we do not lay claim to their land, unlike Russia. They are our ancient neighbors and we have experience of good relationships. It is not entirely clear why we must have a radical Islamic state

    • @whitegoose2017
      @whitegoose2017 Год назад +12

      ​@@sbeno5362 People fall victim to radical ideologies when they are desperate for freedom I'd say.

    • @wergrgwgg12
      @wergrgwgg12 Год назад

      why would The West help you if your nation literally gave up and didn't fight against Russia? For The West to help any smaller nation against agressor there're 2 conditions: 1) the nation should support democracy. and 2) the nation should stand up and fight by themselves against aggressor. If these 2 conditions suit their expectations, then they help you. Georgia only met first criteria, whereas they failed in the second one. Georgians gave up and no one else is to be blaimed for that. And you should thank United States. Because the president of United States told Putin "If you invade Tbilisi, you will meet NATO forces there". And Putin decided to stop.

  • @oohlala444
    @oohlala444 Год назад +141

    I swear Russians got an obsession with doing complex military operations in three days lol

    • @AmiraMahad11
      @AmiraMahad11 Год назад +5

      They like to speed up things lol

    • @nik9401
      @nik9401 Год назад +16

      @@AmiraMahad11they like to speed it up from 3 days to 3 years

    • @ownSystem
      @ownSystem 11 месяцев назад +7

      Ukraine agrees and broke that rule 😂

    • @mastersafari5349
      @mastersafari5349 11 месяцев назад +2

      any% 3day speedrun

    • @lomik2384
      @lomik2384 10 месяцев назад +7

      Но ведь никто кроме Запада и диванных патриотов об этом не говорил🧐🧐🧐

  • @alpennys
    @alpennys Год назад +105

    Long live Ichkeria, Dudayev and countless Chechens who lost their lives as heroes, history will never forget you.

    • @thesamenickname123
      @thesamenickname123 Год назад +17

      thank you mate!

    • @MsBaltrax
      @MsBaltrax Год назад +13

      Long Live Ichkeria!

    • @Shamil_Ichkeria
      @Shamil_Ichkeria Год назад +5

      👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼

    • @dopecat15
      @dopecat15 Год назад +2

      lmao. Might as well say "long live Wakanda", fantasy places are fun.

    • @gugui156
      @gugui156 Год назад +5

      @@dopecat15 except this one was real, and if it weren't replaced by the caucasian emirate, it would still be the real one, but unfortunately it was dissolved by those who controlled the last bits of ichkerian resistance, so it must be reestablished as Ichkeria once the Ukraine adventure finally ends.

  • @Pridators
    @Pridators Год назад +124

    The nuclear power Russia attacked little Chechnya
    and the Chechens won the war, the Chechens had no aircraft, no helicopters and tanks, but they had a spirit that the Russians did not have! They fought with small arms
    Glory to the heroic people of Chechnya!

    • @hafor2846
      @hafor2846 Год назад

      @@TheBikeOnTheMoon
      Cope and seethe, my little Russaboo

    • @donrog5035
      @donrog5035 Год назад +26

      Well at the end of the day Chechnya lost when Putin came in power.
      You can have a strong army but if your leader is weak you won't perform well.

    • @zvonkobogdan9634
      @zvonkobogdan9634 Год назад +2

      They tried to preserve lives. At time they were also very econimicaly weak and bankrupt.
      Then they -Grozny-ed Chechnya and war was over.
      Similar is about to happen to Ukwane.

    • @r0498
      @r0498 Год назад +24

      Sounds like U.S. in Afghanistan

    • @GooseGumlizzard
      @GooseGumlizzard Год назад +3

      @@r0498 sounds like every insurgency ever

  • @prfwrx2497
    @prfwrx2497 Год назад +95

    When Dudaev was assassinated, the Wahhabis slowly but surely hijacked the national cause in Ichkeria, and turned the war from one of national liberation into a jihad. That doomed any prospects of international support for Ichkeria.

    • @HingalshDealer
      @HingalshDealer Год назад +25

      As a chechen I agree with that.

    • @NOKHCHlBORZ
      @NOKHCHlBORZ Год назад +22

      As a Chechen, I completely agree with you

    • @Hession0Drasha
      @Hession0Drasha Год назад +8

      Or any hope for a functional and prosperous society

    • @ansur9556
      @ansur9556 Год назад +1

      It still was better for us instead be under occupation of russia.
      We knew that russia woulde attack us again, so those Chechen's (Wahabi's "wich by the way is a russian given name - Propaganda") tried to free the whole caucasus from russian occupation....

    • @ansur9556
      @ansur9556 Год назад +1

      ​@@Hession0Drashait funktioned just fine if russia didn't invade us again...

  • @jvbiians2358
    @jvbiians2358 Год назад +45

    Inšallah they will be free. Love Chechnya from Bosnia ❤️

  • @PhilthySpectre
    @PhilthySpectre 11 месяцев назад +13

    Changing the street signs is brilliant, idk if something like that would work in the age of google maps, but still a great idea

    • @pepebeezon772
      @pepebeezon772 4 месяца назад

      Funny you think you can use google maps in a war when the phone network can shut down with a button

    • @lucamckenn5932
      @lucamckenn5932 3 месяца назад

      It is. Counter intelligence has and always will be the greatest weapon of war.
      Look, to the north, an armored column!
      It was actually several blow up tanks, a ruse, the real threat is behind you and beside you because you put all your concentration northward.

    • @marcofava
      @marcofava 3 месяца назад +1

      It did in Ukraine

  • @neerajoshi5473
    @neerajoshi5473 Год назад +8

    Can you also make a documentary like this on the Yugoslav wars

  • @andriisnihyr6497
    @andriisnihyr6497 Год назад +3

    Thank you for the video!

  • @kot-qn5pd
    @kot-qn5pd Год назад +9

    I recently saw a photo of a memorial of the victims of this war and it said victims of the socio-political crisis of 1994 “in general there was no war, but there was a crisis so serious that we had to bomb the cities from tanks and airplanes.”

  • @alfrancisbuada2591
    @alfrancisbuada2591 Год назад +7

    You guys always make me smile. Happy New Year!

  • @amangujar3308
    @amangujar3308 Год назад +92

    Always thought Dzhokhar Dudayev and Aslan Mashkadov to be quite the badasses. This should be interesting!

    • @Hamzat22
      @Hamzat22 Год назад +23

      They were. True gentlemen and warriors. Russia has not produced even one such character in over 100 years.

    • @unholycephalopod3019
      @unholycephalopod3019 Год назад +3

      What about the dissolving parliament stuff?

    • @user-fw4uh7ob2s
      @user-fw4uh7ob2s Год назад +12

      @@unholycephalopod3019Brink of war and there is not time to have everything go through parliament when you need to mobilise and make hasty decisions.

    • @Abba_Fan
      @Abba_Fan Год назад

      Yeah except all the terrorist stuff, other than that very peachy. Wonder why modern day Chechnya is a breeding ground for terrorists.

    • @wergrgwgg12
      @wergrgwgg12 Год назад +6

      ​@@unholycephalopod3019 was a parliament bought by russia. People who stayed there since Soviet times and they sold Chechnya to Russia. That's why Dudayev replaced them with those who supported independence

  • @thesamenickname123
    @thesamenickname123 Год назад +57

    07:41 such an epic picture. Dzhokhar was a General we must learn from. Such an intelligent gentleman. He inspired his small little nation to be the first ever nation to defeat Ruzzia. Imagine how nation of 1 million people proudly won against 2nd army of the world. Chechens have proven they deserved freedom. And they will be free again soon.
    If you learn more about Dzhokhar and his vision and spirit, you would agree with the fact that he is one of the greatest persons of 21st Century in the world.

    • @axmat3436
      @axmat3436 Год назад

      Knecht

    • @PhoenixAscending
      @PhoenixAscending Год назад +5

      The first to defeat Russia? I don't think you know their history very well

    • @charlie8344
      @charlie8344 Год назад +5

      ​​@@PhoenixAscendingFirst to defeat the Russian Federation, not defeat Russian Empire or Soviet Union or the Whites in the civil war. The Russian Federation that came as the Soviet Union dissolved in 1991

    • @PhoenixAscending
      @PhoenixAscending Год назад

      @@charlie8344 he didn't say Russian Federation did he. He said Russia

    • @abobanger9054
      @abobanger9054 Год назад

      ​@@PhoenixAscending "Russia" is what Russian Federation is usually called

  • @adampowell2144
    @adampowell2144 Год назад +98

    If people think that Russia will stop attacking Ukraine, if they merely sign a cease-fire, see this video and other videos on the next battle, the second Chechen war.

    • @Hans.Dewitt
      @Hans.Dewitt Год назад +9

      If Ukraine joins NATO, the equation will change completely

    • @benitocarbone2123
      @benitocarbone2123 Год назад +22

      ​@@Hans.Dewittwill never happen.

    • @thebalticpower2301
      @thebalticpower2301 Год назад +22

      ​​@@benitocarbone2123 Ukraine will join at some point, so deal with it.

    • @benitocarbone2123
      @benitocarbone2123 Год назад +21

      @@thebalticpower2301 it won't

    • @thebalticpower2301
      @thebalticpower2301 Год назад +12

      @@benitocarbone2123 It Will though so deal with it.

  • @Darkseidsolosfiction
    @Darkseidsolosfiction Год назад +32

    Could you do one about russo-Georgian wars? It happened 4 times. (Or Sochi conflict where ottoman empire Armenia and russian white army invaded Georgia and were defeated)

  • @Chechenec99
    @Chechenec99 11 месяцев назад +5

    I have been watching videos on this channel for a long time with subtitles turned on. When I saw this video, I was very surprised, thank you author, now I’m starting to watch it, I’ll like it right away.
    I am a Chechen, I live in Chechnya in the city of Gudermes, all Chechens want an independent country, but those who say this are called terrorists and are killed.

    • @heimstaden4588
      @heimstaden4588 10 месяцев назад

      What do normal people think of Kadyrov there?

    • @MasterZang
      @MasterZang 9 месяцев назад

      @@heimstaden4588 85% of Chechens hate Kadyrov. Nobody says it publicly (because they don't want to end up humiliated on TV or tortured in a dark cellar). But at home our parents have taught us all about him and warn us to be careful of what we say (yes, North Korea vibes). Between friends, from a very young age, we have an immense hatred for him.
      Regarding the diaspora, 99% of Chechens hate Kadyrov (if they didn't, they'd be in Chechnya right now).

  • @pepe_152
    @pepe_152 Год назад +4

    60 hours of Maikop Brigade is a surreal news documentary about the fighting in Grozny.

  • @Belerez
    @Belerez Год назад +1

    Good video , fella!

  • @joebetter
    @joebetter Год назад +108

    It's a joke, you can imagine how much military and ground equipment they had to oppose to such a small Chechnya.
    If Chechnya had the same global support as Ukraine does today, I can’t even imagine how disgraced Russia would have been then.

    • @Comando729
      @Comando729 10 месяцев назад +21

      Chechens are tough fighters

    • @magmegmigmogmug1476
      @magmegmigmogmug1476 10 месяцев назад +9

      It wouldn't work, especially with Russia's fragile state after the USSR dissolved. No one would want to risk nuclear escalation with a Nation that had nothing to lose.

    • @ImNotYaMateImYaFather
      @ImNotYaMateImYaFather 9 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@Comando729I am from Chechnya and yes we are very strong and scary whenever I meet a man I can see in his eyes that I have already won and most times his woman will also submit to me usually offering to give love with her mouth

    • @Daniel_15293
      @Daniel_15293 9 месяцев назад +5

      ​@@ImNotYaMateImYaFather Watch your mouth boy..if you're so hard come to central Park in the middle of the night or come to the chicago hood in the middle of the night at let's see how much of a fighter you are there 🤷🏻‍♂️

    • @ImNotYaMateImYaFather
      @ImNotYaMateImYaFather 9 месяцев назад

      @@Daniel_15293 I'm no boy I am 6 feet 5 inches tall and weigh over 130 kilograms,grew up kickboxing and playing rugby so you think it would be so easy do you think so?

  • @namide1
    @namide1 Год назад +16

    in fact it wasn't "in 3 days we'll take grozny
    it was :
    "in 2 hours with a parachute unit".

  • @banerjeesiddharth05
    @banerjeesiddharth05 Год назад +4

    Mind blowing and informative video 📹 👌 👏 👍 ♥

  • @sjoerddondersteen1337
    @sjoerddondersteen1337 5 месяцев назад

    'A Chechen and a Russian officer have a brief conversation' remains among the most melancholic & hauntingly tragic audio recordings on youtube.

  • @Shakeelkhan43211
    @Shakeelkhan43211 Год назад +9

    Please also make video on 2nd chechen war and also a complete video on rusaian invasion on Afghanistan from 1979 - 1989

    • @kristijankuzman9532
      @kristijankuzman9532 Год назад

      It wasnt russian invasion on Afganistan it was Soviet invasion on Afganistan!

    • @Shakeelkhan43211
      @Shakeelkhan43211 Год назад

      @@kristijankuzman9532 whatever it is one must got the point whatever it is ussr or. Soviet union

    • @Shakeelkhan43211
      @Shakeelkhan43211 Год назад

      Also dont try to be over smart 🧠

  • @Asaz12345
    @Asaz12345 Год назад +17

    Please make an account of the Civil War in Sudan. The 8 month catastrophe no one seems to be talking about.

    • @july9566
      @july9566 Год назад

      Nobody cares bruh , my country too of Mexico we’ve been in a narco war for 15 years and nobody cares about us lol

    • @iwillletyouchoose
      @iwillletyouchoose Год назад +3

      We care brother, our imam makes dua for Sudan every Friday. Love from India ❤

    • @Asaz12345
      @Asaz12345 Год назад +2

      @@iwillletyouchoose May Allah bless you exceedingly ❤

  • @KapitainZino
    @KapitainZino Год назад +16

    Great videos with a lot of information about the fist lost war of Russia. Good job indeed!

  • @danielvertens6787
    @danielvertens6787 Год назад +25

    Much respect and stay strong chechen brothers and sisters we love you from BOSNIA.
    We had also a hard time 1992-1995
    Never forget what atrocities and genocide did the Russian and Serbian forces did to our civilians only cause we are Muslims.

    • @sabsab3361
      @sabsab3361 9 месяцев назад +5

      Bosnia & Chechens & sadly many more = people who suffered injustice for their deserved freedom ❤️

    • @MaxWulf
      @MaxWulf 6 месяцев назад +1

      🟩🟩🟩⬜️🟥⬜️🐺🤝🐺🇧🇦 Thank you brother. Much respect to our Bosnian brothers☝🏻

    • @ЕгорТрегубов-щ8ю
      @ЕгорТрегубов-щ8ю День назад

      Свинка спок .

  • @thesamenickname123
    @thesamenickname123 Год назад +26

    26:38 I cannot believe that author called Basayev a terrorist but during the video he didn't call a single ruzzian soldier "terrorist". Even after the massa*cr in Samashki. Basayev is not terrorist. Basayev demanded to stop the war. Not to prolongate it. He would be a terrorist if he demanded money and helicopter. But he demanded to stop the war and that's all.

    • @mind-blowing_tumbleweed
      @mind-blowing_tumbleweed Год назад +2

      He literally called himself a terrorist. Also he is a recognized terrorist by USA and EU.
      Seeing your nickname, I didn't expect anything meaningful anyway.

    • @zurabavaliani8101
      @zurabavaliani8101 Год назад +2

      Even Maskhadov condemned him and as far as I know, Maskhadov called him a KGB agent, which is not far-fetched, he worked with the KGB while fighting in Azerbaijan and then in Georgia(Abhkazeti) which was supporting Chechnya's independence at the time and it was very counterproductive for the cause unless Russians used him. Kadirov is also another example, he fought with Chechens in the first war that does not mean he was a hero. Georgia will always support Chechnya but not people like Basaev or Kadirov.

  • @eastendbandit2898
    @eastendbandit2898 Год назад +8

    Would you consider doing a series about the bosnian war?

  • @wolfhound6396
    @wolfhound6396 Год назад +9

    Тузменый Совет трудящихся is a another channel that covered the events of Chechen wars especially the Maykop bridge as I believe it was called in very high detail, the channel is in Russian language, both the kings and generals and that video are magnificent, and I just love learning more about history from them!!!

  • @jackzhang8677
    @jackzhang8677 Год назад +13

    8:29 that’s not a picture of an Mi-24, but an Mi-26.

  • @Shakeelkhan43211
    @Shakeelkhan43211 Год назад +3

    Please make complete series video on Soviet union invasion of Afghanistan from 1979 1989.and also covers the major battle during the war

  • @vainahi
    @vainahi Год назад +2

    The New years eve battle deserves a video on its self. When whole brigade was annahilated, with the columns who where trying to help them. Only few soldiers could survive the battle.

  • @Cbx27
    @Cbx27 4 месяца назад

    Great documentary as always

  • @1998topornik
    @1998topornik Год назад +37

    No one expected that Chechens could put up such a fight.

    • @VigilantGuardian6750
      @VigilantGuardian6750 Год назад +29

      only naive ones didnt, they are known for having strong masculinity culture and religious discipline on top of it are super family focused and traditional plus numerously small and having been genocided already during soviet times they surely were ready to fight vs aggressors who already did bad vs them before

    • @Seyfullahalasiya
      @Seyfullahalasiya Год назад +1

      ​@@VigilantGuardian6750yup, just like pashtun,but chechen more stronger

    • @Anony8289
      @Anony8289 Год назад +1

      ​@@Seyfullahalasiya
      Dude ffs the pashtuns ain't got shit on anyone

    • @Artaban10
      @Artaban10 Год назад +12

      They should have expected this, because this was not the first war that the Chechens waged against the Russians. Chechens have been fighting against Russians for more than 300 years for their freedom.

    • @Anony8289
      @Anony8289 Год назад

      @jeweater420 i don't see how that's a problem

  • @JesusChristItsJasonFrog
    @JesusChristItsJasonFrog 11 месяцев назад +3

    « Surrounding Grozny in 3 days » lmao they love these 3 days initiatives 😂

  • @Artaban10
    @Artaban10 Год назад +113

    The planes that the Russians bombed before the start of a full-scale war were training planes and not combat ones.

    • @Aegis23
      @Aegis23 Год назад +11

      200 training planes? I doubt it.

    • @Artaban10
      @Artaban10 Год назад +36

      @@Aegis23 Yes, because the Russians never left heavy and offensive weapons in Chechnya, rightly fearing that these weapons would go to the Chechens. P.s If they were combat aircraft, why were none of these used by the Chechens?

    • @rockytoptom
      @rockytoptom Год назад +22

      @@Artaban10 They had maybe 10 pilots from the old Soviet military who actually knew how to fly or who had any experience at all. Not all 200 of those planes would be training units, they would be a mixture of stripped down, unequipped fighter jets and training and reconnaissance planes. It's baffling to me that this is what it is, but almost every retreating power in history has abandoned massive amounts of equipment and arms when they abandon a region. I'll never understand it.

    • @rockytoptom
      @rockytoptom Год назад +1

      @@Aegis23 You're right. There might have been 10 training units there, the rest would be recon and actual fighters but the fighters would have been bare of any weaponry, they may have left the units there but they wouldn't have left them armed and capable of causing Russia any actual damage in the future.

    • @chickenboi693
      @chickenboi693 Год назад +12

      ​@@Aegis23 they were mostly L29 and L39 trainer planes, but those planes could have been used in a light close air support role

  • @dbjungle
    @dbjungle 11 месяцев назад +1

    Very detailed! You guys should do videos on the campaigns against the indigenous nations of North America.

  • @-RONNIE
    @-RONNIE Год назад +1

    Thanks for the video

  • @BergmannSS
    @BergmannSS Год назад +35

    By the end of first Chechen war, the capital of Grozny was the most bombed city in Europe since London during the WW2. To put it in perspective the total population of Chechenia was just north of a million.
    It gotta be the smallest nation to ever face an empire, on and off for 300 years at that.

  • @ivluc1077
    @ivluc1077 11 месяцев назад +12

    From Saudi Arabia i send my love to my brothers and sisters in Chechnya , we pray for you and all the muslims who are struggling 🇸🇦❤️

  • @johnboxler8989
    @johnboxler8989 Год назад +4

    Great video. Love the detail as always

  • @Xiao_ying21
    @Xiao_ying21 5 месяцев назад +1

    @kingandGenerals could you do a video about the transnistrian war i always wanted to know more about that conflict plz

  • @WilliamSimpson-qn5tq
    @WilliamSimpson-qn5tq 7 месяцев назад +2

    This is a wonderfully detailed recount of the actual events. As an American who had just rotated home after serving in the first gulf war I didn’t pay much attention at the time. I was glad that the Russians were having a hard time unifying what was left of the Soviet empire.
    Thank you for putting out such a detailed recount of historical event that ironically would have so much sway on the future.

  • @ottomanosman2463
    @ottomanosman2463 2 месяца назад +2

    I am Turkish and our hearts are with Chechen people. They deserve freedom, a lot.

  • @fare-5174
    @fare-5174 Год назад +70

    There's more parallels to the Ukraine war than I could have imagined. Thirty years later, and Russia learned nothing. I hope that with the Second Chechen War, everyone else learned something about Russian "peace" treaties, and Ukraine won't walk into this trap when the current invasion is defeated.

    • @tugful
      @tugful Год назад

      @@TheBikeOnTheMoon типова кацапська гепа

    • @mitchjames9350
      @mitchjames9350 Год назад +3

      Ukraine has aid from other countries such as the US.

    • @JP-nu7tm
      @JP-nu7tm Год назад +3

      @@TheBikeOnTheMoon Russia never learn. 3 days operation to kiev turn to how many years now? Just like the video said, russia can take grozny in 3-7 days but what happened then?

    • @dugzamilza5212
      @dugzamilza5212 9 месяцев назад

      Learn what? Winner takes all. Everyone talking about stupid 3 days who said that of course CNN etc, not a single russian source said about blitzkrieg. Ukrainians are same as russians can fight.

    • @porkerpete7722
      @porkerpete7722 9 месяцев назад

      ​@mitchjames9350 doesn't matter. They don't have the air superiority. And the NATO training isnt doing the job. NATO doesn't specialize in Guerilla warfare, which is required against a better equiped army=Russia.

  • @birmanets
    @birmanets 7 месяцев назад +8

    Sheikh Imam Shamil asked a Russian general "Why do you want to conquer the Caucasus/Kavkaz region"?
    The Russian general replied "We want to bring civilization to you!"
    Sheikh Imam Shamil then asked a few Russian soldiers to take off their boots. The Russians did and their feet stank rotten.
    The Sheikh then asked a Chechen Mujahid to take off his boots, his socks were clean as Muslims wash 5 times a day...

    • @geniusssss
      @geniusssss 13 дней назад +1

      А потом русскому генералу перерезали горло? Или, может, его дочь похитили и чтобы быстрее получить выкуп - отрезали ей пальцы? Продолжение интригует.

    • @abdgdga.dbg.
      @abdgdga.dbg. 8 дней назад +2

      Тогда русский генерал попросил две в сырном.
      Конец анекдота.

    • @mainkraft-vg2rc
      @mainkraft-vg2rc 7 дней назад

      Ты нарушаешь неписаное правильно. Нельзя придираться к прозападным комментариям. По отдельности они- они из себя ничего не представляют​@@abdgdga.dbg.

  • @pigsimulator1337
    @pigsimulator1337 Год назад +2

    Very nice work

  • @loganvandyk7090
    @loganvandyk7090 27 дней назад +1

    Wow, changing street signs is a brilliant tactic!

  • @hasbolalultimatum
    @hasbolalultimatum Год назад +10

    Hello! Hey, the video wasn't bad, but it was very understated and not objective. By the way, I would also like to mention why Basayev took such a step in Budennovsk. In your video you mentioned how Russian troops took Shatoi and Vedeno. Vedeno is the place where Shamil Basayev was born, his 6 children, his wife, and 12 relatives were found there, and Vedeno was subjected to heavy bombing, there was no whole house left there. Relatives and family of Shamil Basayev were killed a week before Budyonnovsk. Then Basayev, angry at Russia, secretly gathered 200+ to take Russian officials hostage initially to Moscow, without warning Maskhadov and Dudayev about this. Initially, Basayev's goal was Moscow, but then, due to a lack of money to bribe the police, Basayev captured Budennovsk. Listen to Shamil Basayev's interview where he is in Budennovsk.

  • @The_8d-Maestro_1987
    @The_8d-Maestro_1987 Год назад +17

    My uncles freind fought in Chechnya and died his 2 Chechen freinds travelled from Chechnya to us in Islamabad to tell us the news and deliver the body.

    • @Seyfullahalasiya
      @Seyfullahalasiya Год назад

      Nice bro, I've never heard about Pakistani mujahid in chechnya, lots of Jordanian and also afghan

    • @UmarFarooq-nl4eq
      @UmarFarooq-nl4eq Год назад +1

      How did he ended up there from Pakistan ?

    • @The_8d-Maestro_1987
      @The_8d-Maestro_1987 Год назад

      He used to work with the Taliban as a small time gun man . he was very much what youd call a religous guy. So when he heard of Chechnya and the Russian invasion he found a group of guys going to join IBN al Khattab there so he hitched a ride.@@UmarFarooq-nl4eq

    • @The_8d-Maestro_1987
      @The_8d-Maestro_1987 Год назад +6

      @@Seyfullahalasiyathere are many Pakistanis that went there most never came back. In particular my uncles freinds father and brother had fought in Afghanistan.

  • @neerajoshi5473
    @neerajoshi5473 Год назад +3

    Can you also make a documentary on the South Africa wars

  • @zombarmk
    @zombarmk Год назад +26

    11:38 - "Grozniy in 3 days." Heard that one before...

  • @christopherhanton6611
    @christopherhanton6611 Год назад +9

    very good i forgot about the Chechen Wars . also, there are some Chechen vol fighting for Ukraine in the current war with Russia

  • @waqarbaig9779
    @waqarbaig9779 Год назад +21

    The fact that most of the times, numerically superior but practically inferior forces just turn towards civilians is Very shameful act and must be stopped/atleast opposed by the internal community. Destroying cities and towns is really barbaric. After so many years of, so called, civilized world... We are still living in a vicious world.
    As you can see, most of the time, this happens when the aggressor can't hold on in the field well and out of their humiliation, they turn the coward way.
    If you see this happen anywhere, then it would simply tell you whose has the right to defend them self and whose the aggressor.

    • @michaelwarenycia7588
      @michaelwarenycia7588 Год назад +12

      Russians have always been like this. In Ukraine we know.

    • @waqarbaig9779
      @waqarbaig9779 Год назад +1

      Not only Russia, their are other nations which are doing the same... 😢

    • @Zacharoni4085
      @Zacharoni4085 Год назад +1

      Only cowards attack unarmed civilians.

    • @xSavedSoulx
      @xSavedSoulx Год назад +2

      @@michaelwarenycia7588not just israel

    • @michaelwarenycia7588
      @michaelwarenycia7588 Год назад +1

      @@xSavedSoulx fair enough. Probably more examples than one can remember at any given moment

  • @sbeno5362
    @sbeno5362 Год назад +53

    I would like to add that Ingushetia remained part of Russia because of the Prigorodny district, which, according to the law on the rehabilitation of repressed peoples, was supposed to return to its composition. This land was included in Ossetia after the deportation of the Ingush along with the Chechens to Central Asia, and the Ingush hoped to return it. In 1992, the East Prigorodny conflict occurred and Russian troops, together with the Ossetians, actually committed ethnic cleansing, killing or expelling the Ingush from there. Most likely, this was a Russian provocation with the aim of forcing Chechnya to send troops there; Dudayev and the President of Ingushetia Aushev adhered to this position. After this, Aushev, a friend of Dudayev, spoke out many times in favor of re-unification with Chechnya and secession from the Russian Federation, but the moment was missed and Russian troops would not allow this to happen

    • @timurdudaev7316
      @timurdudaev7316 Год назад +2

      ingushetia marry with russia ,like cinderella,all you must know about ingushetia its they fought against Chehcnya in Caucas war when was imam Shamil and left us in 2 new wars

    • @sbeno5362
      @sbeno5362 Год назад +2

      @@timurdudaev7316
      like cinderella тов. Sa vash, the Ingush raised the Nazran uprising in 1858 with the goal of throwing out the Russian garrison from the city and becoming part of the independent North Caucasian Imamate. Our troops made several attempts to reach them, but were unsuccessful. I believe that we should judge peoples by their best representatives, not by the scoundrels who serve for the Russians.
      It’s hard for me to judge the Ingush for not joining the war on our side in the 90s. Today we see that not a single one of Ukraine’s allies openly enters into war, fearing the consequences. And Ingushetia is only 3,000 square kilometers and less than 200,000 people at the start of the war.

    • @VitoFranchesko
      @VitoFranchesko 2 месяца назад

      @@sbeno5362 blablabla

  • @kenricnarbrough8191
    @kenricnarbrough8191 Год назад +4

    A fascinating conflict. I hope the region can recover somehow.

  • @Apoc_Bone_Daddy
    @Apoc_Bone_Daddy Год назад +3

    I remember all the combat footage, memes, and comtent that came from this
    It's such an aesthetic tbh