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@sekaramochi Жыл бұрын
We need a bayonet and a hydrogen battery Do these come in in the box
@djraythefurry0420 Жыл бұрын
Thank you genuinely for covering this battle Simon. Plus not to mention the irony of Not even 2 hours before this was posted I was asking animation channels that make history content to cover this exact battle because I saw a channel called wendigoon cover this battle a while ago , one of those channels being yarnhub and the other being simple history . This battle in my opinion has the same effect as the Christmas event that happened in world war 1 where the British and Germans we're able to enjoy a Christmas together For a portion of all of them it was their last .
@nothanks9503 Жыл бұрын
Aye you Brit’s got freedom of speech?
@paulsheehan2998 Жыл бұрын
Yo Simon Are the bomb sites in Japan still radiated? The moon thing made me wonder. Perhaps a good video?
@barackobama934311 ай бұрын
Hey Simon! Since you are CLEARLY ASHAMED OF THE WHITE RACE... I was just wondering when you were planning to move from the Czech Republc to your VERY FIRST HOME IN A MAJORITY NON-WHITE COUNTRY??????? OR are you an IGNORANT HYPOCRITE?
@ignitionfrn2223 Жыл бұрын
1:00 - Chapter 1 - Nuking the moon 2:05 - Mid roll ads 3:30 - Back to the video 7:20 - Chapter 2 - Operation mincemeat 10:45 - Chapter 3 - Operation cornflakes 14:45 - Chapter 4 - Exploding rats 17:55 - Chapter 5 - The battle of castle itter
@canteventhough Жыл бұрын
... the moon? This is why aliens don't visit.
@Joze1090 Жыл бұрын
@@canteventhough It's wild that Simons team doesn't break the videos into chapters...
@canteventhough Жыл бұрын
@@Joze1090 I mean they kinda do, but they don't give us a table of contents. I'm looking at my comment. Seems wrong. I have a fever.
@memofromessex Жыл бұрын
One of the best military operations was Operation Outward - it used cheap, simple balloons filled with hydrogen and carrying either a trailing steel wire to damage high voltage power lines by producing a short circuit, or incendiary devices to start fires, using the prevailing wind to send these deep into the Third Reich. As cheap as effective - and almost completely forgotten about.
@lilesmw Жыл бұрын
Damn for real? And they don’t have a video about it!
@robswystun2766 Жыл бұрын
I think I've read about this one. There were also the operations where fake tanks, planes, and other fake weaponry was made and set up to trick the Axis powers into useless bombing raids or just to make them think Allied numbers were greater than they actually were in a given area. Surprised that didn't make this list, but they've probably done a video about it in some other list.
@darylcheshire1618 Жыл бұрын
Didn’t the Japanese do something similar with hydrogen balloons and magnesium? Aledgedly killed a US or Canadian family camping in the mountains?
@tomhenry897 Жыл бұрын
Dr. Felton does
@welshpete12 Жыл бұрын
Yes it did , the British did a similar thing in France . the wind changed direction blowing the balloons back to England . Where one, was found by children killing them.
@dudeinoakland Жыл бұрын
Carl Sagan remarked how silly it looked when we landed on the Moon and declared "we came in peace" to a lifeless rock, all the while conducting a war in Vietnam. It would be absurd if anyone had nuked the Moon and later declared peace to it!
@charlessaint7926 Жыл бұрын
One tiny operation that I read about was, Operation Stormtrooper. During the Korean War, a US Special Forces officer found a depot in Seoul full of Waffen SS uniforms, gear, and weapons. Why it was there we don't know. The officer had an idea. He went to his buddy who was planning an upcoming infiltration mission and convinced him to put the gear into use. In the night a fourteen men jumped in North Korea dressed head to toe in Waffen SS gear. They captured a dozen very confused North Koreans and got out via swift boats without a single casualty. According to author Ed Evanhoe, a Soviet ambassador handed the West German ambassador a formal complaint, charging German troops were operating in Korea. There's no record as to the German ambassadors response.
@mercenarygundam1487 Жыл бұрын
I was half expecting them to be wearing all white plastic armor and missing every shot. (Please get the joke)
@charlessaint7926 Жыл бұрын
I *didn't miss* the reference.@@mercenarygundam1487
@mercenarygundam1487 Жыл бұрын
@@charlessaint7926 Thank God, because this is the Internet, people might get the wrong idea.
@barackobama934311 ай бұрын
I'm guessing the German ambassador was far too busy trying to figure out how the World Almanac recorded an INCREASE IN THE EUROPEAN JEWISH POPULATION during WW2 if "6 million" were exterminated like diseased vermin...
@RogbodgeVideo11 ай бұрын
How can you respond to that?
@Talisguy Жыл бұрын
I don't think anything sums up the sheer insanity of the Cold War better than the nuke the moon project. In addition to everything Simon mentioned, it was later revealed that *the Soviets also considered nuking the moon.* It's seriously a miracle that we made it out of the 20th century. They were so committed to one-upmanship that they had to match or eclipse all of each other's moves, even when those moves were *colossally stupid.* It'd be hilarious if it wasn't all so existentially terrifying.
@robertwilliams-day320 Жыл бұрын
You missed the coolest part of mincemeat, to see if the letters had been read they fold them only once. When the letter where returned they looked at them under a microscope and could see multiple folds.
@FrankJmClarke Жыл бұрын
They put a black eyelash in the letter to check if the Germans or Spanish had opened it.
@ismarwinkelman5648 Жыл бұрын
@@FrankJmClarke Was that eyelash also Pam's? 🤓
@loicbazin105311 ай бұрын
In 2022 a movie about it came out
@S85B50Engine25 күн бұрын
Also worth noting Ian Fleming (the guy that wrote James Bond) took part in it
@oliverwoodcock5307 Жыл бұрын
Love the story of the battle of castle Itter. It needs to be made into a film.
@eugenebelford9087 Жыл бұрын
It pales IMHO against the other event when Wehrmacht and US Army fought side-by-side. Look up "Operation Cowboy". And this actually was (loosely based upon) made into a Disney movie: "Miracle of the White Stallions", 1963.
@harindavithana12246 ай бұрын
There is a song by Sabaton called "Last battle", if you have not already heard it.
@jeffdingle9677 Жыл бұрын
Don't forget OPERATION COWBOY on April 25th, 1945 where the collaboration of Wehrmacht and US Forces (commanded by General George Patten), saved hundreds of LIPIZZANER horses from the advancing Soviet army who where likely to to feed them to their starving troops. Operation Cowboy was fought in the Czechoslovakian village of Hostau (now Hostouň), in the last days of fighting in the European Theater of World War II. It is one of two known incidents during the war in which Americans and Germans of the Wehrmacht fought side by side against the Waffen-SS - the other being the Battle of Castle Itter in Austria. The Background After the annexation of Austria to Nazi Germany in 1938, the Lipizzaner Breeding Mares of the Spanish Riding School in Vienna were transferred to an experimental farm in the village of Hostau, in Nazi-occupied Czechoslovakia. The goal was to create a race of "Aryan horses". The head of the Spanish Riding School, Alois Podhajsky, was a famed German horseman and dressage expert, and had been a bronze medallist at the 1936 Olympics. He had also been an Austrian Army officer, and by 1938 he had been enrolled in the Wehrmacht with the rank of Major. In the final phases of World War II, Hostau was on the advancing path of the Soviet Red Army from the East, and the German soldiers in the farm were unenthusiastic about surrendering to the Russians. On the other side, to the West, the XII Corps of the American Third Army were also advancing toward the farm, commanded by General George Patton, racing with the Soviets for the liberation of the capital city Prague. German veterinarians at the farm, commanded by Lieutenant Colonel Hubert Rudofsky, were scared about what the Russians could do to their horses, as during the liberation of Hungary they had already killed the whole Royal Hungarian Lipizzaner collection. Then Luftwaffe intelligence officer Lieutenant Colonel Walter Holters, not part of the farm personnel but forced there due to fuel shortage, tried to arrange an agreement with the advancing US troops. Holters, a General Staff Officer, was senior to Rudofsky but they agreed about the goal of saving the precious horses, and a contact was made with the nearest U.S, unit in the area, the 42nd Cavalry Reconnaissance Squadron (of the 2nd Cavalry Group). The 2nd CG was famous for its daring deep strikes and was famed between German troops as "Ghosts of Patton's Army". Yet in spite of being a mechanized unit, many of the officers of the Group were horsemen and had served in mounted units before the mechanization, so they immediately planned a rescue operation. Furthermore, it seems that there was a meeting between Patton and Podhajsky, about a rescue operation of the horses, and for a source, the meeting between Holters and Colonel Reed was not casual, but planned before 26 April. The operation was not simple for a series of factors. First, German troops at the Czech border were not part of the agreement and would likely oppose the American troops entering the area. Second, many of the hundreds of horses were pregnant and most of the rest had just given birth. Finally, Czechoslovakia had been posted in the Soviet area of influence during the Yalta Conference and the advancing Red Army would likely not have agreed with the operation, had they reached the farm in time. General Patton, who agreed to the operation, gave orders to quickly create a task force, but available troops were scarce. Assigned were two small cavalry reconnaissance troops with M8 scout cars, some M8 Howitzer Motor Carriages and two M24 Chaffee light tanks and a screening infantry force of 325 men - the task force being command by Major Robert P. Andrews. The path was 20 miles long, into still German-occupied territory with thousands of German troops, including two understrength armoured divisions - among them being the 11th Panzer Division that a few days later would surrender at Passau. After having passed German defences at the border, with the help of an artillery barrage by the XII Corps, Andrews secured the farm but was then confronted with the task of evacuating the horses. As the horses outnumbered the men in the task force, Andrews enrolled many freed Allied POWs - British, New Zealanders, French, Poles and Serbs. Furthermore, he even gave arms to the captured German soldiers of the Heer and Luftwaffe. Finally he accepted the help of a Russian anti-communist Cossack Prince Amassov, who led a small force of Cossack cavalry that had deserted the German 1st Cossack Cavalry Division. After arriving at the farm Colonel Reed looked for vehicles to move the pregnant horses and new-born foals. Meanwhile Major Andrews turned over the task force to his deputy, Captain Thomas M. Stewart. Before being able to evacuate the farm, this composite force was attacked twice by Waffen-SS infantry, both being repelled with some dead and injured. The SS unit suffered more losses and eventually retreated. Immediately afterwards, Stewart managed to evacuate the horses, some mounted and the rest being herded, just before the first Soviet T-34 tanks appeared in sight. The Soviets avoided any confrontation and the operation was concluded when all the horses were loaded into trucks near the border and secured behind American lines. Bizarre or what...
@nenasiek Жыл бұрын
Damn, didnt know that, thanks for sharing
@dragonsdynamite64033 ай бұрын
You wonder why he didn’t reach the Reichstag first before them since he was technically ahead.
@sirridesalot66523 ай бұрын
Walt Disney made an excellent movie about that rescue. iirc, its title is THE MIRACLE OF THE WHITE STALLIONS.
@MichaelScheele Жыл бұрын
My late father served in the US Air Force's Strategic Air Command during the Cold War. He and his fellow airman got to see the DEFCON increase to DEFCON 2 during the Cuban Missile Crisis. He described it as "interesting."
@tomhenry897 Жыл бұрын
Lot of guys in found it interesting When recalled from civilian life to sit in Florida waiting to invade cuba
@ismarwinkelman5648 Жыл бұрын
Your father either had a talent for understatement, nerves of steel or perhaps even both? Either way, it must have been a privilege to hear stories about the Cuban Missile Crisis from the horse's mouth 😎
@Hebdomad7 Жыл бұрын
I mean, there was the time a bunch of sweaty greek guys took a city by hiding in a wooden horse...
@joelb865310 ай бұрын
Allegedly 😅
@sherylcascadden49889 ай бұрын
"Beep, beep! Boop, boop! Hello dere! Sputnik races giggling 'cross the sky. Red hands, red faces, join in the race as The space age begins with a surprise!" "Surprise" by Leslie Fish
@murrayscott9546 Жыл бұрын
Those stamps, if any still exist would be very rare and valuable. I wonder .
@stevenbecker5571 Жыл бұрын
They do exist today and are available in the marketplace, and they are indeed valuable if in good condition - a few hundred dollars for a nice example. Since they are valuable, forgeries exist of those stamps, too, and one needs to be careful before buying one. There were many similar examples of forged stamps used by both sides, all of them being fairly scarce and valuable today. They are not so rare that they are impossible to find, though - if you had the money, you could likely find some available examples for sale right now.
@djgeorgetsagkadopoulos Жыл бұрын
At this point in my life I have seen a ton of documentaries about WWII (Simon also played his part) This is the first time I hear for the battle of Castle Itter. Even if it was a small battle in the grand scheme of things, I think it deserves more public awareness just because of it's unique attributes! Today I can say I learn something new! Bravo!
@safillix Жыл бұрын
Look up sabaton "the last battle" they also have a history channel
@djgeorgetsagkadopoulos Жыл бұрын
@@safillix Thanks! I'll check it out!
@eugenebelford9087 Жыл бұрын
Not unique. Look up "Operation Cowboy". And this actually was loosely made into a Disney movie: "Miracle of the White Stallions", 1963.
@jasontoddman7265 Жыл бұрын
The idea of nuking the moon wasn't even entirely original at the time. A similar idea (involving a powerful electric bomb rather than a nuke being sent to explode on the moon) was a central part of a plot in the syfy novel "What Mad Universe?" by Fredric Brown back in 1949. It was an idea that - in the context of the novel at least - didn't seem questionable at all.
@bloodrunsclear Жыл бұрын
Americans and Germans fighting the S.S is a movie that needs to be made
@fozzyjericho6668 ай бұрын
The Band Sabaton made a Song about it, The Last Battle
@robchaplin1086 Жыл бұрын
The film Operation Mincemeat will Colin Firth is a great portrayal of its namesake as is Ben Macintyre's book.
@Nathan-vt1jz Жыл бұрын
I’m glad we landed on the moon instead of nuking it. 😅
@Sh4dowgale Жыл бұрын
0:13 that edit was super smooth!
@robswystun2766 Жыл бұрын
Growing up during the Cold War was weird. In the '90s we never really expected anything to happen, but there was always the thought in the back of your mind that the only thing "keeping the peace" was the fact that one country could destroy the planet ten times over while the other one could destroy it 100 times over. You just had to trust that no one was dumb enough to push the button first.
@PalmelaHanderson Жыл бұрын
I was talking to someone recently about the ethics of the US dropping the nukes during WW2. We eventually landed on "yeah, probably a war crime, BUT... the only reason no one has used a nuclear weapon in war since August of 1945 is *because* they were used in August of 1945." Let's say the bombs aren't ready in time, let's say Japan surrenders anyway after the Russians invaded Manchuria, it's easy to imagine an alternate world where the US never uses the bombs, then the world enters into a Cold War with everyone having much more itchy trigger fingers. Kind of a scary thought.
@timan2039 Жыл бұрын
The 90’s 🤔 I watched the Army flowing to South Floriduh when the missals were being parked in Cuba. Duck and Cover … sure.
@skitz042o2 Жыл бұрын
@@timan2039 i figured he meant the eighties, the cold war was over by 92. USSR collapse was around then.
@mitchsmith7472 Жыл бұрын
80s?
@leafyrox Жыл бұрын
Ha, I just asked if Simon would cover Operation Mincemeat, and here it is. Pretty amazing story. It's also dramatized in a Netflix movie by the same name.
@Jayjay-qe6um Жыл бұрын
In the album "The Last Stand" by the Swedish heavy metal band Sabaton, the song "The Last Battle" is about the Battle of Castle Itter. The board game Castle Itter: The Strangest Battle of WWII is about the Battle of Castle Itter.
@gearhead2255 Жыл бұрын
Ah yes, a fellow person of culture
@Ed_Stuckey Жыл бұрын
As a teen, I was both in awe and a bit frightened by Sputnik. If they could put a satellite in orbit, what else were they capable of.
@tinkerstrade3553 Жыл бұрын
My little brother was 2 years old, and I was already a veteran of early "Atomic Drills" which became "Duck&Cover". I wondered then if this would go on all my life. And sadly, in a way it has.
@billfaint6736 Жыл бұрын
1) Cholmondeley is pronounced as 'Chumley' 2) Glyndwr is pronounced as 'glin-doo-er' 3) There was a plan in WWII to arm icebergs as unsinkable battleships.
@Stonegolem6 Жыл бұрын
I too thought Project Habakkuk should have been on this list. Man-made icebergs full of sawdust, madness. Though since it never got past development, I guess it doesn't qualify as an operation.
@jefferyyoung6836 Жыл бұрын
Interesting note that at 20:42 you see the victorious defenders of the castle flying a Texas state flag. Makes you wonder, did someone remember the Alamo?
@hesjustthisguyyaknow Жыл бұрын
the 142nd infantry regiment that reinforced the defenders was based out of texas, which is why there was a texas flag flying.
@justinmason5042 Жыл бұрын
God bless Texas
@kitbag9033 Жыл бұрын
Hello Simon. Generally, the name Cholmondely is pronounced 'Chumly' 😊. Love the show, keep them coming.
@sherylcascadden49889 ай бұрын
I wondered when I heard it if that wasn't the case, but I thought "Simon is English, surely he knows that."
@who93878 ай бұрын
@@sherylcascadden4988 I think what hapenned was a small backward child (probably due to inbreeding) couldn' action speak their own name correctly and came out with "Chumley". It must have stuck (maybe they wer all backward inbreds !! )
@JessicaKinkade-gb3um Жыл бұрын
I grew up in Alaska during the 80's and mutually assured destruction was terrifying
@BikePappy8 ай бұрын
7:47 ‘fraught’ with danger.
@DuckAllMighty10 ай бұрын
So much crazy stuff happened in those 6 long dark years. The sheer ingenuity of the different spy services and military inventions is so incredible. Ofcourse it was horrible and we must never forget the sacrifices of the men that fought. Sabaton has made a fantastic song about Castle Itter called The Last Battle. Great video as always.
@5055hunter Жыл бұрын
If I remember correctly, the movie The Guns of Navarone featured an exploding rat! 😅
@frgv4060 Жыл бұрын
Given the environment on the Moon, radiation and all, it is far far more sensible than nuking Earth.
@SecretMoose Жыл бұрын
Operation Mincemeat also involved an Aston Martin race car driver turned MI5 agent. He drove the body down to the submarine in his Aston Martin. Very bond.
@lukedaniel7669 Жыл бұрын
He was driving a delivery van (it's in the photo in the video here), but as though it was a race car. I can't imagine what it must have been like travelling from London to Scotland at night in a blacked-out van being driven by a lunatic while sitting next to a very dead corpse. Ian Fleming worked in the office that came up with Operation Mincemeat.
@SecretMoose Жыл бұрын
@@lukedaniel7669oh my bad. You are indeed correct! I grew up near Gaydon (where AM is based) and locals love to tell the story haha. I guess they embellish a bit :)
@anthonybeal9069 Жыл бұрын
My favorite WW2 allied wonder weapon was the pigeon guided air to ship bomb.
@ferretyluv Жыл бұрын
Nah, the bat bombs were better.
@notmyworld44 Жыл бұрын
6:50 - As one broadcast journalist to another, you know very well, Simon, that you have no business editorializing as a reporter! But I get so darned tickled every time you do!!!! 😄🤣 Keep it up, friend. You are a bit of sunshine in my life.
@jacquiegardner7422 Жыл бұрын
Operation Mincemeat was incredible! Pronunciation made me giggle though - these are closer: Glyndwr = GLIN-dower Cholmondeley = Chumley (no idea why, it just is !)
@ShawnHCorey Жыл бұрын
If you nuke the Moon, you would have to do it in the shadow or nobody would see the pinprick of light. And rather than inspiring awe and fear in the world's population, they would be asking, "Is that it?"
@chanceallen3586 Жыл бұрын
The story of Castle Iter was a very inspiring tale of the value of morality and humanity during inhumane circumstances. That a German officer could see the importance of preserving the lives of high ranking enemies and was willing to reach out to another enemy for help, is very humbling. Great batch of stories. If people want a more indepth look at Operation Mincemeat in story form, mrballen has a video on it. In fact, out of sheer coincidence, I happened to watch it before this one, not knowing they tied into one another. Lol
@Dan19870 Жыл бұрын
Got an idea for another episode 'History's 5 Most Craziest Animal Usage'; 1. The American Bat Bomb 2. The Soviet Anti-Tank Dog 3. Mongol Fire Sparrows 4. Spy Whale and Dolphins 5. The United States Camel Corps.
@matthewwilson5548 Жыл бұрын
awesome! love to learn about all the interesting subjects on this channel.
@velvetine74 Жыл бұрын
Simon did an entire video about castle Itter over on his Geographics channel.
@captainspaulding5963 Жыл бұрын
Isn't Geographics one of the channels that Simon was only the presenter for and is no longer associated with?
@benallen7704 Жыл бұрын
@@captainspaulding5963yes
@velvetine74 Жыл бұрын
@@captainspaulding5963 I'm not really sure what Simons channel arrangement is but he presented a video about castle Itter over on the Geographics channel
@Seamonkey5558 ай бұрын
To be fair Sagan was a student and asked to do the math. The Soviets also had a project called E-4 to do the same, which explains why we studied this insane idea too.
@TheCanagoose Жыл бұрын
"And its the end of the line of the final journey enemies leaving the past. And its American troops and the German army joining together at last". -sabaton- the last battle.
@mohammedsaysrashid3587 Жыл бұрын
It was an informative and thrilled watching video...thank you Sir for sharing
@crwydryny Жыл бұрын
I actually had to check operation mincemeat as I was always under the impression it was a Scottish man who was used as maj Martin (I blame the man who never was). Interestingly records found in 96 claim it was a Welsh man while the royal navy in 2004 claimed it was a Scottish man
@bkayser05 Жыл бұрын
It's criminally sad that the Battle of Castle Itter hasn't been made into a Hollywood movie yet.
@Ciborium Жыл бұрын
The popular story of Operation Mincemeat is not the accurate version. The version with Glyndwr Michael was actually Plan A. However by the time they got the green light, there were problems. First, the body has been sitting in the morgue for weeks and looked very much deceased for an extended time, not the matter of hours that they needed to be convincing. Second, one of the effects of the poisoning was pneumonia, water accumulating in the lungs. The problem is that this wold be fresh water, not the salt water of the Mediterranean Sea. Any Spanish Coroner with a room temperature IQ would easily determine that this was not a fresh deceased man who drowned at sea but a ruse. Plan B, the version of the story that was kept hidden from the public until decades later, is that they used the corpse of a British Navy sailor. Around the time they got the green light, a British ship was sunk off the coast of Scotland by a German U-boat. Bodies of British sailors were washing up on shore and were stored in local morgues. Montegue and his team raced up to the site and stole one of the sailors to use in their plan. This solved their problems. First, it was a fresh corpse and looked hardly decayed. Second, he had salt water in his lungs. Of course, if it had come out that, instead of a worthless drunk vagrant, they used a heroic young man serving his country honorably, the public would have rioted over the heartlessness of their grave robbing.
@Pugjamin Жыл бұрын
What’s the source of this version? I’ve never heard or seen reference to this. In fact it wasn’t until 1997 that it was revealed that the corpse was that of Glyndwr michael. The public had no idea until that time of what happened, so there wouldn’t have been anything for them to get upset about. With regards to the autopsy, this was acknowledged that it would always present a problem, so British consul was present and pressed for the proceedings to be hurried along.
@razzle1964 Жыл бұрын
The irony being that, had the ruse been unsuccessful, we could be living under a very different regime. As it was, ‘desperate times …,’ etc.
@mikeyratcliff3400 Жыл бұрын
'Top shelf ' products have a completely different meaning in dear ole blighty matey !
@sekaramochi Жыл бұрын
Please please please never stop ♥️
@nbatch13 Жыл бұрын
I love the range of tactics and things tried in wars so much crazy genius ideas but just as many things like this that are more like slightly intense pranks 😂
@stevoplex Жыл бұрын
What happened to the German soldiers after the battle of Itter? Captured by Allied Forces? Free to go?
@archercolin6339 Жыл бұрын
There's a possible reference to the exploding rats in The Guns of Navarone, where David Niven's character places on when they are setting the bombs to destroy the eponymous guns...
@EpicgamerwinXD6669 Жыл бұрын
"Its so simple, it just might work!" You're a legend if get that reference.
@timan2039 Жыл бұрын
I thought Bat Bombs would have made the list.
@jaidog100 Жыл бұрын
As an American, I find the first bit to be accurate and hysterically funny 😆
@TheLaensman Жыл бұрын
Was kinda expecting the Australian Emu War to be on this list. Yes, Australia went to war, using machine guns against emus, and lost.
@mitchellculberson9336 Жыл бұрын
Was Mr.Michael pre-posthumestly awarded a medal for his unwilling sacrifice? The Victorian Cross maybe?
@benjaminkeay69122 ай бұрын
Excellent! You should do a video on the exploits of Agent Garbo.
@Ciborium Жыл бұрын
Don't forget Operation Keelhaul. This was the operation where the Allies *forcibly repatriated Russian soldiers and civilians* back to Russia. Even people who had fled the Russian Revolution and were not technically Soviet citizens were forcibly returned to Stalin, where they were immediately executed or sent to Gulag. Ditto Russian and Eastern European refugees. They were repatriated at gunpoint back to Stalin. The Russian Red Army POWs would be eager to go home, right? Well, no. Many did not want to go back because of the deprivations of Socialism but also because Stalin considered POWs to be traitors and assumed they had collaborated with the Germans to save their own lives. Red Army POWs were also executed or sent to Gulag. Thank the post-Churchill British Labor Party and the American Democrat Party and Pres. Truman for this horrific *crime against humanity.*
@peterhall85728 ай бұрын
Op mincemeat reminds me of the SBS motto " By Strength and Guile!"
@RogbodgeVideo11 ай бұрын
If there isn't already a movie/miniseries about The battle of Castle Itter, can someone please produce one?
@donaldwert71375 ай бұрын
21:16 Yes, indeed. That's all most weapons are supposed to demonstrate. The word "gun" is used to mean more than one thing.
@tiffanynajberg5177 Жыл бұрын
Nuking the moon doesnt seem so strange now that we have had a president that legit wanted to nuke hurricanes…
@TheOneWhoKnocks969 Жыл бұрын
You can't kill the urge
@tiffanynajberg5177 Жыл бұрын
@@TheOneWhoKnocks969i hate to say it but i am indeed kinda curious about what would happen besides the awful fallout…
@richtravis9562 Жыл бұрын
first seriously proposed by scientist Jack Reed back in the late 1950's, misunderstandings about radiation & TDS have killed the possibility of it ever seriously being considered. that, and predicting the outcome was thought to be nearly impossible.
@enisra_bowman Жыл бұрын
@@tiffanynajberg5177 given what ELSE did come from that "Very Stable Jeanius" ... most likely just a radioactive Hurricane
@jmatos31622 күн бұрын
I love these kinds of videos because they show how good the US is 😊 because what other government in the world regularly exposes the inner workings of its projects and secrets every quarter century or so …
@paulbarnett227 Жыл бұрын
Cholmondeley is actually pronounced as Chumly. Go figure. 🤣
@robertpearce8394 Жыл бұрын
See the Harry Enfield skits with "Chumley-Warner".
@michaelmcmillion482310 ай бұрын
Kinda weird that, after 50 years since we went to the moon, the latest development from NASA was a unmanned trip to the moon with crash test dummies to see if human beings might be able to survive the trip.
@sirridesalot66523 ай бұрын
It's not an operation but for something truly bizarre check out the Habbakuk aircraft carrier made from an ice and sawdust mixture.
@russellfitzpatrick503 Жыл бұрын
HAHAHAHA!!! Nice touch, using 'Technical Difficulties' to avoid getting demonitised for saying 'Balls' (or something equally childish)
@eugenebelford9087 Жыл бұрын
Well, actually Castle Itter was only one of two occasions Wehrmacht and US Army fought side-by-side. The other, "Operation Cowboy" (or Task Force Andrews), should IMHO considered to be even more important (not only because it directly involved General Patton or was even made into a movie by Disney). It was about rescuing the Lipizzan horses of the Spanish Riding School; a cultural heritage.
@mrquirky3626 Жыл бұрын
The exploding rats are nowhere near as bad as Russian's anti-tank dogs. During WW2, dogs were fitted with mines and trained to crawl under German tanks where the mine would be triggered destroying both the dog and the tank. Just another crazy WTF moment of that terrible war.
@johncmitchell4941 Жыл бұрын
Didn't help that the dogs often ran under the recognizable tanks they were trained with. That one didn't go far. 😕
@sam1812seal Жыл бұрын
Liked for introducing me to the wonderfully named general Gnaeus ‘The Big Hammer’ 👍
@Rych Жыл бұрын
Operation Cornflakes, 11:35 VT clip of cheerios. Good job XD
@williamunderwood8303 Жыл бұрын
Simon has been my escape at work since 2017
@montyhinton4971 Жыл бұрын
The 132nd was part of the 36th the only division that had a”lost battalion “ in both theaters of war. The36 th was the Texas Division. Men from eastern New Mexico and the Texas southwest and panhandle made up the division. Their field artillery was in transport to the Pacific when Pearl was bombed and torpedoed. The rest of the division was held up in transfer. Those transferred into the pacific were taken on the island of Java in 1941 The other battalion was lost in the European theater with the Nippon to their rescue in 1944.
@antiisocial Жыл бұрын
The castle one is wild
@kathrynblakeley982311 ай бұрын
19:09 to this day I don’t understand how no one has made a film loosely based on what happened
@frankmitchell3594 Жыл бұрын
You say that Nuking the Moon was secret, however I remember being given a book about 1960 with a picture showing a proposed moon rocket with the description that it would have two boosters, one each side, and 'may' carry a nukelear
@frankmitchell3594 Жыл бұрын
(don't know what happened there) .. and may carry a nuclear warhead.
@sekaramochi Жыл бұрын
Water bears water bears everywhere And not a drop to drink The moon mars and moons of mincemeat Black holes makes us all neighbors so please get on
@rh661 Жыл бұрын
I hadn't heard of OP Cornflakes before. Interesting, but probably very ineffective.
@bigsmiler510111 ай бұрын
-- @9:42 you show a map of "Greece & Sardinia" but Sardinia isn't highlighted. 🙂 -- Unless I'm mistaken (and I often am) Operation Mincemeat was to make the Germans think the D-Day invasion would be at Calais. BUT that's what the American movie says and Americans don't want to know there even were any battles except the one WE were involved in. (MOST Americans don't know all that the British were doing, e.g., Greece, Sardinia, +++.)
@RobfromNorCal3 ай бұрын
Q wasn't a character in the James Bond books. There was a guy named Smithers who worked in Q Branch, The Q coming from quartermaster. Who outfit people with weapons and gear. Q is only in the movies. And there is at least one movie with Smithers is in it and Q dismisses him.
@perrydowd92853 ай бұрын
Chomderley is pronounced "Chumley". My father attended a lecture he gave at HMS Cardington in 1946.
@valhallarchist951111 ай бұрын
The Battle of Castle Itter - Heralded in the song The Last Battle by Sabaton
@astronomenov99 Жыл бұрын
In the final days at Colditz Castle, the prisoners were in effective charge, but the German guards still patrolled the perimeter and battlements with empty rifles. They were hoping to fool any retreating SS troops into leaving them alone. The prisoners and guards worked together to survive until the Americans reached them.
@ahleena6 ай бұрын
I'd like to see a movie about that last one.
@cameron398 Жыл бұрын
You should do some research into the US' Bat Bomb. Hoping there is a day where this actually gets implemented.
@alexgibson79608 ай бұрын
You're telling me the military tried to blow up the moon... I don't even have words.
@lewiswestfall26875 ай бұрын
Thanks Simon
@keab42 Жыл бұрын
I was half expecting Operation Vegetarian to show up on this one.
@kantemirovskaya1lightninga30 Жыл бұрын
Castle Itter... those reinforcements were called by a guy on a bike lol amazing story
@frederickflores8152 Жыл бұрын
Sabaton wrote a song about the battle of castle itter. It's called the last battle, check it out
@ramonribascasasayas7877 Жыл бұрын
Cold war was the most bizarre period. So much to take from there...
@benwest90045 ай бұрын
A Pen and Paper. That's what Bespoke sent me in a box. I canceled right then.
@dragonsdynamite64033 ай бұрын
RAND through and through, Simon.
@multiyapples Жыл бұрын
Rest in peace to those that passed away.
@Morganstein-Railroad Жыл бұрын
As a you are a Brit, iI would have thought that you would be aware that Cholmondley should be pronounced as Chumley, in the same crazy way that Featherstone-Hawe is pronounced Fanshawe.
@AndrewC.McPherson-xf5zw3 ай бұрын
Great idea
@BURDYMAN7778 ай бұрын
These are the videos I'd like to see blazed! 😮
@seandillon1359 Жыл бұрын
My favorite weird but successful strategy was the ghost tanks.
@minisforerbody Жыл бұрын
Simon has mentioned Cholmondeley in multiple videos now, will someone please tell him how to pronounce it correctly 😂
@dope172510 ай бұрын
OSS (office of strategic services).Mincemeat. Cornflakes. Exploding rats.
@safiremorningstar9 ай бұрын
Here's a few things that you might not know and I'm going to listen to your telling of the story the man in question who died his sister being a Catholic wanted to get his body back for proper burial, they were never honest enough to tell her that he was serving his country in the only way a dead body could serve his country but they couldn't tell her that they could have easily pulled her aside kept her in a state of isolation for a period of two months and you know explaining to her look we're going to put you up in a safe house but we have to tell you exactly what's going on and why you can't get your brother's body back but don't worry he'll get a proper burial. He eventually would get a proper burial with his name on the tombstone.