Brilliant work on the video, it's as quality as any mainline Ops Room release
@gottamakeanewaccsosad7 ай бұрын
Didnt think i would see you here, but agreed its super high quality tbh they just need good thumbnails and it would do well tbh
@loudgoosegaming5607 ай бұрын
Yooo Rimmy
@Brother_Geoffrey7 ай бұрын
Hello Mr rimmer
@Oldfaithful-ty1wg7 ай бұрын
3:51 I'm the great-grandson of Charles Green, and seeing him talked about in the context of his military career makes me very proud to be one of his relatives
@joereedsmith15317 ай бұрын
You should be considerably proud. of Lt. Col. Charles Hercules Green DSO. The youngest Infantry Btn. Commander in the AIF and one of if not the finest leader of men in WW2. His care for his troops was above all else. There was no leader more respected in the AIF. His leadership in Korea was legendary. His death in Korea shattered all hie men. They had lost a father figure as well as a Leader. Theres a couple of books about Charlie worth reading. He could have achieved General Rank well he would have given the chance.
@fisherman0707077 ай бұрын
They where all very brave men, both sides, just different causes
@demodan90417 ай бұрын
Be very proud! I've been reading a lot of books covering 3RAR in South Korea. Every single book speaks such high praises of Charles Green. I don't remember who exactly, but a very high ranking officer (possibly CO of 27th commonwealth brigade?) said that Charles Green was the finest commanding officer he has ever seen. His exploits in battle was legendary, and I believe if he was in command of 3RAR when Kapyong happened, it potentially could of gone better. (not dismissing Bruce Ferguson or 3RAR's performance, they done wonderful). Make's me very proud to be Australian
@R0d_19842 ай бұрын
I thank him for his service and sacrifices mate.
@bjsracer7 ай бұрын
Excellent presentation. Duty First.
@Nick-vu8yn7 ай бұрын
Excellent video, and better than others that I have seen - perfect timing as I am giving a presentation on the battle tomorrow!
@fisherman0707077 ай бұрын
2PPCLI of the Canadian Army fought at that important battle., pivotal battle in the war really. The Canucks and Aussies held firm, against terrible odds. 2PPCLI won a Presidential Unit Citation for that battle, a ribbon they still wear on their dress uniform.
@R0d_19842 ай бұрын
Yes mate, Thanks for being there with us.
@daviddavidson14177 ай бұрын
I'm pleased the Army is investing in some good quality media. Many, many more videos like this please.
@marcusluciani16206 ай бұрын
Seconded
@effectiveanimations6 ай бұрын
@@marcusluciani1620 Look at this guy :D
@mediapartners99506 ай бұрын
Another fascinating video featuring some incredibly brave Aussies and Canucks 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
@IanPayne-z5l7 ай бұрын
As a teenager, my cadet corps paraded weekly in Kapyong Drill hall in Griesbach Barracks where the PPCLI were stationed.
@whya2ndaccount7 ай бұрын
An impressive addition to the library depicting Old Faithful's efforts.
@jerichothirteen11347 ай бұрын
Absolutely top shelf.
@nathanroberts355Ай бұрын
My uncle jhon hardwick served with 3rd royal Australian regiment at battle of kapyong in Korean war and now he fully lieutenant colonel retired
@A_flower_for_a_name4 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for this video all the visuals that go along with the info helped me understand. I'm new to our Australian war history so I really enjoyed this video. 🙂
@covearmy4 ай бұрын
We're glad you enjoyed it!
@A_flower_for_a_name4 ай бұрын
@@covearmy Do you have any book suggestions for me to read about wars please? I'm new to it all.
@robinharwood50447 ай бұрын
I like the way you showed the old Canadian flag before shifting to the new one.
@MrMikeV007 ай бұрын
Phenomenal effort.
@lennytheleopard6 ай бұрын
Very interesting and well presented.
@sharpshooter_Aus5 ай бұрын
There is a fantastic doco on Amazon prime about this battle, it has veterans from Australia, China and Canada to speak on their perspectives.
@danielthunder98767 ай бұрын
Can we please get one of these for the Great Emu War?
@Rusty_Gold857 ай бұрын
Cant believe the accuracy they were able to stop 20,000 Msao Dong's with 300 Aussies and 3oo canadians and the NZ Artillery.
@xtxownage7 ай бұрын
That’s how it be.
@donttellmeitsraining81607 ай бұрын
Kiwi artillery performed brilliantly. They always punch above their weight.
@samogden44287 ай бұрын
Australians are notoriously hard to move.
@haydengoodall67676 ай бұрын
@donttellmeitsraining8160 161 battery may have " punched above it's weight" but ol narrator mate still thinks Kapyong was Australias fight and doesn't deem Enzed worthy of inclusion. Effing West islanders, pull those same stunts on ANZAC commemorations. No NZ all you get is AAC ( Make a hoiking noise ) commemoration.
@R0d_19842 ай бұрын
@@haydengoodall6767 How many did you lose? Were you on the front line?
@saxonost77 ай бұрын
I lived in Chuncheon for a year awhile back which is not far from Kapyeong. Difficult terrain to fight over, for sure.
@nandi1236 ай бұрын
American here. Australians always seem like such a friendly and laid back people. But then you see how they play football and read about their exploits in war and it become clear why no one wants to tangle with them.
@Clydesirota5 ай бұрын
I’ve had a lot of fun tangling with Aussie girls.
@grosey117 ай бұрын
As kids we heard a story from a veteran that their snap orders included that the enemy force outnumbered them at least 3:1. During a lull in the battle an officer checking the perimeter found this veteran asleep in his foxhole on the side of the hill and was rudely awakened and ask why he was asleep. He laconically answered, “I’ve shot my 3 sir”. Pointed to the evidence and resumed his nap.
@paulwilson54937 ай бұрын
Love to see more vid like this
@robbrowne88147 ай бұрын
Friendly fire is not very friendly 😢 Great historical presentation of an eclipsed war.
@recalcitrantrecidivist59277 ай бұрын
About ten yrs ago I was honoured to attend a dinner at a baracks in Adelaide with the surviving members of 3RAR. They were old then. I doubt that there are many left today. It was a wonderful event. I spent the night seated next to a general, a wonderful character, who was promoted in the field at just 24 yrs old. It took him just 6 yrs to make it from private to general. Such was the nature of this war. Their memories must be kept alive as they are always overshadowed by the events of ANZAC day, which falls the day before Kapyong day.
@alanbrooke1447 ай бұрын
In memory of 2Lt Dennis Fielden, RNZA. Killed in action on the night of 24 April while acting as a FOO with A Coy 3 RAR at Kapyong for which he was awarded an immediate MiD.
@aaronleverton42217 ай бұрын
Reg Saunders signed up for 2AIF, made sergeant by 1940 and when the post-war government decided a professional army was required he joined. By Kapyong he was a Captain and commanded C coy, 3RAR. And through it all he wasn't even a citizen, being an Aborigine and therefore excluded from official census counts, and the constitutional amendment via referendum changing this didn't occur until 1967.
@morgan974756 ай бұрын
Yank here. A salute to our Aussie cousins.....and the to the Pats. From Korea to Afghanistan, never fuck with the infantry.
@ronjohnson16587 ай бұрын
What were the names of the three Australian POWs captured at Kapyong? Also in what unit was Captain (Major Lewis) fighting? Thank you.
@Johnhealey-7 ай бұрын
3RAR just commemorated the Battle of Kapyong the day before ANZAC day. It should be taught in every school.
@MrMikeV007 ай бұрын
Those Canadians sure hooked in.
@nedkelly96887 ай бұрын
The Aussies would of too if had a better advantage for defence. Canadian hill was way better for advantage for defending.
@samogden44287 ай бұрын
The Canadians were on a small mountain. The Australians were on a very shallow rise. It didn't help that the Americans bombed the Australian position. All things considered, the Australians performed magnificently.
@nandi1236 ай бұрын
I imagine having your commander fly over and shout "You're on your own boys" simplifies the decision making process. Those were some incredibly heroic young men.
@musicmasterplayer453212 күн бұрын
@@nandi123 The Canadians were shaken up by Brigadier Burke's message, many wanted to flee. War hero Tommy Prince talked and motivated the young men into staying.
@Brslld5 ай бұрын
Quality over quantity
@SamuelRussell7 ай бұрын
The description of Soviet and Chinese aid prior to the declaration of War is a little underdone in relation to the contemporary KIMH (2001) Korean War. U Nebraska Press.
@jackbrady97387 ай бұрын
💯/💯
@billybloggs32147 ай бұрын
Infantry training Platoons at Singleton NSW are named after battles. Kapyong being one of them. Don’t miss the army at all. 🥤
@PaulinAsia_6 ай бұрын
Kapyong, I think, is one of the stand outs, not just in Australian military history but also Canadian military history. The action, or the lack there of, of the American Chemical Mortar Battalion was reprehensible. Although it sounds like the American tank battalion did solid work. There are so many blue on blue actions as a result of the lack of American battlefield awareness and assessment. Personally I believe American military training is seriously lacking, because they rely almost completely on advanced weaponry supremacy. Kapyong was an heroic defence, in an indefensible war of political power play and post WW2 chest beating.
@callumgriss54227 ай бұрын
i remember reading somewhere that chinese forces of the time didn't really have protocol to call off attacks, so once they started attacking, they'd feed units in at a linear rate until the entire force was exhausted, they won, or got wiped out. can't remember where it was though.
@xParoxysm7 ай бұрын
human wave theory i think
@hthring7 ай бұрын
also possibly a indignant opinion that you can only win. did the chinese have AT ?
@buryitdeep7 ай бұрын
Men of those days surely were the best of us.
@up_dogF17 ай бұрын
12:50 Why was the order for B Coy to fall back rescinded? Such a shame to order those men off the line only to have them fight their way back at the point of a bayonet and get pushed back.
@aaronleverton42217 ай бұрын
Info coming into HQ may not be organised or timely, leading to confusion. They may have been ordered off due to poor intel and then ordered back when that intel was superseded.
@hthring7 ай бұрын
his was a real cock up, poor soldiers
@markadams95297 ай бұрын
Bill ‘Slim’ Madden GC was my cousin
@garthdonovan53737 ай бұрын
Wow
@hthring7 ай бұрын
um, why the heck was korea split and given to usa to begin with ? who ever thought that would work out had rocks
@4564156045640564056319 күн бұрын
FFS learn history. Watch a couple of documentaries rather that make foolish comments.
@TheVanguard3334 ай бұрын
Canada was magnificent
@SurvivethePoleShift7 ай бұрын
How bout one on the Malayan Campaign, My Uncle George was with the 2/26th fought back to Singapore, where he went into captivity....They fought a good fight.
@SurvivethePoleShift7 ай бұрын
He was killed on Anzac Day 1945 in an Allied bombing raid on the Japanese Airfield at Sandakan Borneo. Lest we Forget 🦘🦘🦘🦘🦘
@xtxownage7 ай бұрын
Nice…
@Rusty_Gold857 ай бұрын
Watch the Chinese spy ops demonetize this baby
@thomlinford7 ай бұрын
18:41 my God they are berely old enough to shave... Sent to the slaughter... Very sad
@Matto_Harvo7 ай бұрын
Brave
@joereedsmith15317 ай бұрын
Back in the day they said there were no chinese or Russians fighting with NK. I spoke to a bloke once who seen chinese human wave attacks pouring over a hill. Tens of thousands of them and they were all just obliterated by Artillery and Air. Most of what happened was not released to a public sick and tired of War. Another thing he told me was about the cold. -40 when the coldest you have been is a snowy day in the Dandenongs. Men frozen stiff in place just like Russia WW2.
@aaronleverton42217 ай бұрын
Back in what day? It has been known since the Chinese crossed the Yalu that the Chinese were fighting in Korea. Why do you think Truman fired Macarthur? Because Macarthur panicked and wanted to nuke China.
@thegoatfather28317 ай бұрын
B
@thomasko87297 ай бұрын
conveniently leaving out that south Korea was the aggressor that crossed the parallel first. Haeju was taken by the south on the 23rd and eventually led to our nation being brought into a bloody conflict that is ongoing, has caused the suffering of millions and continues to cause tension in the Asia pacific
@jorgejustin4617 ай бұрын
this is a Myth. the two battalions that supposedly took Haeju, that being the 1st and 2nd of the 17th Ongjin regiment never set foot in Haeju. Communication was lost to these two units, the South Koreans claimed they had taken Haeju on the 26th and American Pacific command ran with it, only for the battered and utterly depleted battalions to show up on the 28th at Incheon Harbor. The theory you are referencing comes from and Indian Scholar called Karunakar Gupta, who looked at the report from Pacific command stating that Haeju was taken and ran with it. There is exactly zero evidence that the 17th Ongjin regiment took the area on the 23rd, and a literal mountain that they where attacked and essentially routed as early as the 24th. Oh and the only record of orders to the 17th in relation to Haeju are dated to the 25th. Gupta is what we would call, not a very good scholar. Who on earth takes the American Military at face value, I mean jeez.
@4564156045640564056319 күн бұрын
LOL, try being right Thomas.
@anaryl7 ай бұрын
This unfortfunately is lower than average quality compared to other documentaries and war histories. The narration and visuals are on point but there is an atrocious lack of detail and analysis. There's simply no point trying to cover this much historical material in such a short time - it doesnt do it justice.
@Matto_Harvo7 ай бұрын
Move on
@hthring7 ай бұрын
thanks, i watched another vid by this channel with similar comments , very well put together , but lacking some important details, not good to see soldiers not mentioned when its produced by army
@musicmasterplayer453212 күн бұрын
There is a more complete listing of facts in the Wikipedia article on the Battle of Kapyong. This vid gives the perspective of Australians only,
@SurvivethePoleShift7 ай бұрын
3rd show I've watched one after the other.....as a 66yr old "History Buff" that has "watched it all" I AM IMPRESSED! World Class doco's by the Australian Army Well I never... rj fishbourne ex PONPC, RAN Good Work Army [don't tell anyone I said that] 26 Apr 24