One important lesson from the Cold War is that the enemy of my enemy is not necessarily my friend. I feel bad for all the civilians that got caught up in this.
@SlamboSVV5 ай бұрын
Thats why a healthy democracy is important
@johnnyharris5 ай бұрын
Exactly. We see the same pattern across a lot of our reporting. When so many groups play both sides of these wars, they get worse, last longer, and civilians always suffer.
@mindflowtunes28955 ай бұрын
Disappointing pattern, thanks for the video Johnny, I always enjoy your content ❤
@NickIggler19695 ай бұрын
@@johnnyharrisbetter help is a scam
@neilnelson76035 ай бұрын
@@SlamboSVVWhat did democracy do for Afghans and Iraqis after US invasion and occupation for the last 20 years?
@TheMrtennisman5 ай бұрын
This war ruined my childhood and made me an immigrant. I remember bomb shelters, sinister air raid sirens, and anti air craft rounds lighting up the night sky. The announcers voice on the radio. The glass windows that we taped Xs accross. The food coupons. Years later, I'm in Phoenix, AZ, swimming in the pool with my older brother and his college buddies. I see a plane, get out of the pool, get my toy gun, and start shooting at the - in my mind - "Iraqi" plane. I now know why my brother's college friends, many of whom were Iranians, started crying with the sight of a six year old me doing that. It left such a bad taste in everyone's mouth that they threw me a fake birthday several days later and got me the coolest gifts I have been given to this day: He-man, Battlecat, Skeletor, Two-headed dragon, She-ra...
@AJ55 ай бұрын
Innocent children are always the victims of conflicts. Thank you for talking about your childhood. People need to know what memories war leaves behind
@johnnyharris5 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing
@ytc31825 ай бұрын
@@johnnyharrisbetter help is a really bad online service, don't risk your reputation promoting them. More when you are deliberately ambiguous, some will believe that you were referring to better help when you mentioned how much having therapy for years helped you.
@YouTubeMaze5 ай бұрын
But I had no way to escape or migrate, and I burned and burned! And then caught up in the ideological illusions of this corrupt government in Iran and the dirty games of American politicians, until today.😢
@TheMrtennisman5 ай бұрын
@@johnnyharris Thank you for making this video.
@entropie1385 ай бұрын
After high school in 2000, I joined the Marine Corps. A year later, 9/11 happened. President Bush and his administration really hammered on the WMD and chemical weapons Saddam had and my unit was sent in March 2003 looking for these weapons. We got to Baghdad and didn’t find said weapons and my unit was brought back after only 4 months. It felt very fishy that I didn’t serve the purpose I was trained for. Another commenter came down on me for joining and being part of this campaign but (1) I never killed a soul on Iraqi soil and (2) I was a dumb kid out of high school looking to serve my country. But after feeling lied to, I left the service after my four years were up and never looked back. I’ve been looking to learn more about this point in time I was a part of to understand the motives and politics involved. These videos help fill in the gaps to my knowledge of this conflict and I greatly appreciate them.
@Base-q1g5 ай бұрын
i was 2 when 9/11 happened so i dont really know what it was like back then but i did have a high school teacher who was in the USMC and was in Iraq for First Battle of Fallujah. he did 4 years and deployed twice in that time and wanted to stay in but could not support being part of another Iraq deployment in addition to the PTSD he had from getting injured from a bomb. dont feel bad about serving your country, i did too with the navy but got a medical discharge within the first year. for me it was a blessing is disguise. i still dearly love this country but do not agree with everything it stands for today. this is not what our founding fathers had envisioned. as far as looking into the motives and the politics, something that has helped me understand it all has been looking into what congress was saying in the official record as well as old news coverage of events. for the deeper meaning follow the money
@RMAOMARSGAMING20015 ай бұрын
I can tell you that this video only scratches the surface of the lies and politics behind the scenes. Everything from 9/11 to Afghanistan and the Iraqi invasion were filled with corruption that killed millions in Iraq, Afghanistan and US soldiers who were lied to.
@highestqualitypigiron5 ай бұрын
It's messed up how the US government uses young impressionable kids as meat for their conflicts, even the soldiers don't know what they're fighting for, it's crazy
@joanmikeska84845 ай бұрын
Do not ever feel guilty for serving your country! Thank you for your service. Have you ever watched the Shawn Ryan show on KZbin? If you don’t I think you’d really love it, and it would be so good for you. There is a lot of support for military people, and their mental health. We do the best we can with the what we know at the time. I have no idea why people online want to be so rude and judgmental, but do not listen to it. EVER.
@thedesertdancer5 ай бұрын
Thank you for your honesty. I know many from the military who have told me exactly what you said as far the military and our government lying to them about the region and why the U.S. was at war. Joining the U.S. Military is no longer about defending our country anymore since we are the ones usually initiating war. I seriously doubt that Saddam Hussein would have imitated war with Iran unless he knew in advance that he had the full support of the U.S. I wouldn’t be surprised if our nation, the U.S., actually approached Saddam and told him to invade Iran. The U.S. has been itching to invade Iran ever since it could no longer buy cheap oil with the puppet king Shah Pahlavi that the U.S. installed in Iran. Unfortunately, Saddam had full support from the U.S. to invade Iran and nobody seemed to care that the illegal chemical weapons were used on Iranian soldiers and the Kurds.. Heartbreaking. I hate all wars and I know these politicians would never send their own children to fight their wars. Of course, once the U.S. used Saddam to fight its proxy war on Iran, they turned on Saddam. Suddenly, our government realizes that Saddam is crazy? Yeah right. We have the best military intelligence in the world so our government always knew Saddam and used him to fight Iran. Glad you realized what really was going on and glad you return safely home and without harming others. Please continue to educate people about your military experience and d about our government because nothing will improve in our government unless we all stand united to improve our government and hopefully stop our government from initiating wars and destroying people and their nations. I would love for that region and other parts of the world to enjoy the peace that the U.S. experiences. We can’t continue to enjoy this peace if our nation continues to get involved in the business of other nations and invading other countries.
@jimmynorton594 ай бұрын
My dad was in this war on the Iranian side, he told me about how hard it was to be in the frontline during the extreme heat of summer (45°C or 113°F and sometimes even more) while being short of water supplies. I pray for peace for all countries even though our region is full of conflict, let's spread more love towards each other and keep hate for war mongering politicians.
@fawazjarbo64483 ай бұрын
@@jimmynorton59 y’all got smoked
@Blazeb2343 ай бұрын
Lol, guess what happened to Saddam💀🐭@@fawazjarbo6448
@Saman-Xv1xj3 ай бұрын
@@fawazjarbo6448In your dreams lol you guys lost 4 wars 😂 🇮🇷💪
@blitzr23003 ай бұрын
The Middle East needs to change, the thought patterns there are backward and very hostile, only North Korea is worse in this behavior, they are not only hurting themselves but also their neighbors and the rest of the world. Iranians are smart they could be a beacon in the Middle East and an example to follow but tyranny has cast its shadow on this country.
@johnharris33353 ай бұрын
Couldn’t agree more Jimmy!! You are lucky your dad was able to share stories and provide perspective.
@majidfromiran85675 ай бұрын
As an Iranian and long-time fan of your channel, I wanted to take a moment to thank you for this insightful video on the Iran-Iraq War. It's a conflict that has had such a profound and lasting impact on the Middle East, and I'm grateful that you've brought attention to it. I would also encourage you to consider making more videos that focus on Iran and the complex factors that have shaped the country's present situation. As someone with a deep connection to Iran, I believe there is so much more of the story that deserves to be told. Your ability to provide thoughtful, nuanced analysis on geopolitical issues is truly valuable, and I think exploring Iran in greater depth would be incredibly enlightening for your viewers. Please consider making more content about Iran and the Middle East - it's a region that has had an outsized impact on the world yet is so often misunderstood. Videos like this one are invaluable for fostering greater awareness and understanding. Thank you again for your work. I look forward to seeing what other topics you tackle in the future... keep up the great work! Looking forward to more enlightening videos from you.
@mehrshadallahdadi59205 ай бұрын
بنازم داداش 💯🔥
@sino_diogenes5 ай бұрын
I hope Iran can return to democracy soon.
@amozeshkade95385 ай бұрын
فکر میکردم تنها ايرانی پیگیر ایشون من باشم😅😅 دمت گرم
@sepehrjc25815 ай бұрын
❤❤
@NavidZamzami5 ай бұрын
We have democracy @@sino_diogenes
@lucid2125 ай бұрын
Shooting a passenger jet and receiving medal after that is atrocious!
@MossadDid9115 ай бұрын
Just whyte ppl things. “Civilized”
@Storming3605 ай бұрын
And they say why Iranians hate us (however they don't hate them).
@scottkidder90465 ай бұрын
Do you really think only white people have done that before? When we say Western Cultures are civilized, I don’t think anyone in their right mind would be referring to this. And we don’t use one incident to define an entire culture and it’s values. I think everyone watching this who didn’t know about it in the West knows that that was awful and completely at odds with what we find acceptable. It’s also important to remind everyone that it could have been an accident. I completely understand why many are very suspicious of that narrative and that’s totally fair, but it’s not an impossible explanation. It’s not an excuse, it’s still totally unacceptable, and nobody should gotten a metal, that’s for certain. I wouldn’t be surprised if the US did that deliberately, but I also would not be surprised if they made a genuine mistake. That’s all I’m saying. Either way, it’s a travesty and nobody should have been rewarded for it. It’s a career-ending mistake.
@mrmap48755 ай бұрын
@@MossadDid911 everyone do this not just western or yt
@Hthewise5 ай бұрын
Yeah like what the fuck??
@nurustar015 ай бұрын
As a kurd myself with parents who lived in kurdistan in northern iraq during this war, thank you so much for talking about this 🤍
@johnnyharris5 ай бұрын
You’re welcome. We have a whole video about the plight of the Kurds coming soon
@goldmo24275 ай бұрын
Kurds should learn how to act .. they are Helping usa and terrorist destroy Syria now .. why don’t they just accept being part of a country as citizens ..
@claireindigo12005 ай бұрын
@@goldmo2427they shouldn’t accept being second class citizens in their own land. You wouldn’t so why would you ask them to?
@askfaisalmuslim5 ай бұрын
@@goldmo2427 u need to learn how to talk, and don't generalize 50 million Kurds, as if Kurds don't have different factions like other people
@eren33905 ай бұрын
@@johnnyharrisi already know the video will have a lot of anti turkish propaganda as always. let’s wait tho.
@OldManPaulАй бұрын
I really appreciate the way you displayed the war on a map. It made the content more interesting for me. Thank you.
@q-marshaeri53685 ай бұрын
As an Iranian and long subscriber of Johnny, I appreciate this video. 🇮🇷🕊🇮🇶
@mgs20145 ай бұрын
Speak farsi a little bit please.
@mgs20145 ай бұрын
@@عبدالرحمنعبدالله-ز4مwow wow persian hegemony really????last time i checked Iraqis attacked and killed Iranians pal!!
@ArabPirate5 ай бұрын
@@mgs2014 i am iraqi and i love iran dont let the one person make you think bad ♥
@mgs20145 ай бұрын
@@ArabPirate of course not,after all we're middle easterns we're all we got.
@iu25 ай бұрын
0:49 "being ruled by the Shah, a king that the US and UK had installed in the 50s after covertly overthrowing Iran's DEMOCRATICALLY-ELECTED leader." And, yet, Americans and Brits pat themselves on their backs because of their "freedoms" while their governments and military are invading democratic nations. Evil hypocrites.
@robertwilliam55275 ай бұрын
I am a Iraqi child of this war and is so sad for what happened to people from both sides, my cousin was killed in the infamous Al-Faw battle 1986 (not mentioned here), my brother served 3 years and survived, my father all 8 and survived (died 2004 from heart attack). Despite all that there are stories where soldiers saved the lives of soldiers from the other side, those are also true heroes imo. Coming from a Christian family Iraq ain't safe still for us, but that's on politicians not on people, I love the country and all my childhood friends.
@moeezart8355 ай бұрын
My dad served for 8 years. Before the war, he was ambitious, energetic, hardworking fella. After the war ended, he came back a totally different person. PTSD, depression and ended up with dying from cancer.
@PaldinAleihe5 ай бұрын
Hey brother, my family left Iran during this war as well. We're Christians from Iran and the country definitely wasn't safe for us back then as well.
@robertwilliam55275 ай бұрын
@@moeezart835 So sad, I feel the pain
@robertwilliam55275 ай бұрын
@@PaldinAleihe So true brother, praying for our brothers and sisters there to find some peace
@Gigi-xy2ip5 ай бұрын
You are exaggerating. There are completely Christian cities in northern Iraq, such as Al-Hamdaniya, Ainkawa, and Al-Qosh, and the Iraqi Minister of Immigration and Displacement is Christian.
@Naya_Manar5 ай бұрын
As an Iraqi, I can't get enough of these videos. Love to see the world what happened to us. And that it is not our father's fault that they were like this, it was because of war. Thankfully, everything is so much better and it's like day and night here, and not because of the "liberation", but because of the ppl who want just to live a normal life, a decent one. Thank you Johnny ❤️ Sorry for the typos, if any.
@LeftWingNationalist5 ай бұрын
I'm sorry for what us Americans did to your country. I served 04 to 08. I refuse to vote for warmongers.
@adambuss6545 ай бұрын
Your spelling we great, but the American's do this thing where if they can't win a war, they'll sell you lies about it instead.
@christopher58465 ай бұрын
The video has more misinfo and bais than the wiki article which is quite the feat. You're better off reading it tbh.
@2K9PATSY5 ай бұрын
Lot of people of woke up and don’t believe in the western mainstream propaganda, what damage was done to your country was a disgrace RIP to all the innocent people that lost their lives from an Irish man ☘️
@opax5 ай бұрын
@@christopher5846 Im Iraqi myself and halfway through the video and I think its pretty good so far 🤷 whats the misinfo?
@mariafont8826Ай бұрын
Uno queda con el corazón dolorido al entender cómo fue en realidad esta guerra y qué estaba pasando en aquel momento realmente, cuando las noticias que nos llegaban del conflicto no terminaban aclarando nada. Es una locura vivir así, guerreando, mintiendo y enloqueciendo a los pueblos solo por el poder. Gracias por tu trabajo. Uruguay
@DanielVanDyck5 ай бұрын
I was just in Halabja yesterday and cried... I'm visiting Iraq and the country has such a sad history. However in the past 5 weeks, the Iraqis have been so welcoming. So kind. Iraq is safe now and beautiful. Baghdad is such a fun vibrant city and Arabs and Kurds alike have shown me unwavering hospitality 🙏 Inshallah this safety continues
@AkshathAchar5 ай бұрын
Lol keep crying 😂
@arishkokoiy5 ай бұрын
I'm from Halabja
@DanielVanDyck5 ай бұрын
@@arishkokoiy sorry for everything that's happened to your people 🙏 Kurdistan is a wonderful place. I'm in Soran now, and it's beautiful here too.
@whitetown52805 ай бұрын
Kurds do not identify themselves as Iraqi but as Kurdistani and they have right to do so because their homeland is split between four countries by the French and British and yet the US follow their footstep. what happens to the Kurds is because of west since 1917. If it was not for us, the Arabs, Turks and Persians could never steal the land of the Kurds.
@adamaziz75025 ай бұрын
North Iraq is very nice not so much Basra where i come from progress is still slow and we’ve been forgotten
@fireant2025 ай бұрын
Noted: chemical warfare is a ok if you’re a US ally!
@FloofyMinari5 ай бұрын
Nope, the US eventually punished Iraq for it.
@fireant2025 ай бұрын
@@FloofyMinari eventually…when they were no longer a useful American ally.
@nyrodiana72515 ай бұрын
@@FloofyMinari not israil
@FloofyMinari5 ай бұрын
@@nyrodiana7251 has it used chemical attacks against anyone?
@nyrodiana72515 ай бұрын
@@FloofyMinari yes
@reyanidris43565 ай бұрын
I’m kurdish from Kurdistan (northern iraq)….great video as always. Just wanted to point out that the casualties from Kurdistan weren’t between 50-100 thousand, it’s actually estimated that they were around 182,000 casualties, between dead and some missing to this day, we call it the 8 years of Anfal…..basically most villages (around 5000, including our own village) back then were destroyed, people killed, and ofc the halabca genocide too. May all their souls rest in peace. And thank you for the great video keep em up.
@jspihlman5 ай бұрын
@@mason96575 I hope this is a bad joke, but in case it isn't, no. Curds and whey are byproducts of milk in the process of making cheese. Although they sound the same and have a similar spelling, that is coincidental. Kurds are the Kurdish minority people who live in various countries of the Middle East like Iraq, Syria, etc.
@lmoore66125 ай бұрын
The majority of the US Military (Present) have nothing but respect for the Kurds and I wish our leadership would do the same. We should be doing everything within our Powers to establish an independent Kurdistan State which is owed at the very least.
@jayyy34565 ай бұрын
You just want more war. No country would be giving up their territory to the Kurds. That's a stupid opinion to have. @@lmoore6612
@Zrs38205 ай бұрын
@@lmoore6612 'Yeah' and I'm sure Iran, Turkey and Iraq will just all that to happen right? Grow up and learn things first.
@lmoore66125 ай бұрын
@@jayyy3456 And you want to continue to oppress the Kurdish people. If war is necessary to free the Kurds from their oppressors, then so be it.
@thecreaturescorner539Ай бұрын
I am Iranian born in America. Growing up I would always hear stories from my grandma and family of Iran. Thank you for explaining this. You don’t understand how much it means to me to know what happened and why I can’t visit family I’ve only ever heard stories of. Despite everything It hurts that I can’t see a place my family dearly loves
@auroraprs9133Ай бұрын
Are they alive? Ask them come visit you pay for their documents or go visit them why not to do
@fieldfairy9845Ай бұрын
@@auroraprs9133it's dangerous for Americans to go to Iran right now. Well over a year ago, the state department advised Americans that were in Iran to leave
@matinisbeat67835 ай бұрын
I’m Kurdish my grandpa actually got gassed and my dad when he was a kid used to live in a border city next to Iraq but had to move to a village away from the border crazy to think my family went through all this while I live a comfortable life makes me so grateful for everything I have.
@MahmoudWaz5 ай бұрын
The Kurds have suffered greatly from saddam. Allah brings justice in the end.
@Bijitkurdistan5 ай бұрын
Same in halabja ❤️😔
@lewarzebari28943 ай бұрын
Xowa afoy bka bra gyan, shahid lay hamo xalk o ema o xwa shteke waya sart pe barz bkay
@45ent.475 ай бұрын
During the attack on halabja my parents and my relatives were there at that moment they barely escaped from that disaster, every night my father gets nightmares about the day when they fled halabja. At the end as a halabja citizen I appreciate your work and documentary and thank you for mentioning this tragedy.
@angel_seunggi46303 ай бұрын
long live my Kurdish friend Kurds are one of the most loved population in Iran .You are roots of Persia
@zhela58502 ай бұрын
it was horrific
@hana-ov1juАй бұрын
My dad and his family too. They fled to Iran who were taking in Iraqi refugees during the war. My uncle was killed.
@Donnasherwani5 ай бұрын
As a Kurd I went through several of these wars including the 1996 civil war, and after 13 years of displacement we fled and took a refugee boat to Australia :(
@duniagowes3 ай бұрын
From Indonesia? The jump off point?
@razalalai43823 ай бұрын
@@duniagowesyes
@coleb6474Ай бұрын
Johnny it’s videos like this that are really important. I consider myself at 40 now a pretty well versed historian but I actually learned a great deal with your video here. Please continue making videos like this. It’s important that we understand these recent conflicts for the purpose of current geopolitical realities. Great job to you and your crew 🙏🏼.
@gabalfelor17425 ай бұрын
Just woke up, made my cup of coffee, and saw Johnny Harris new post 3 minutes ago. My day is made!
@ecod7r5 ай бұрын
this war didn't shape anything. what Shaped the middle east is CIA/Mossad installing their agents as leaders of all Arab countries. Then if any of them decide to betray the contract they will replace him with another. My Iraqis, My oil, My Dune - USA and their Allies since 1920s.
@nicholasfernanda3675 ай бұрын
same here..but with dinner plate
@muhammedjaseemshajeef67815 ай бұрын
It's 6 pm here😂
@nevergiveup59395 ай бұрын
Why are we here in this life, why do we die, what will happen to us after death
@Aljur_Second_Lieutenant5 ай бұрын
War story makes your day? ☠️ that's wild. now come to training camp, sign the contract baby.
@am300k125 ай бұрын
As US politician would say : when it comes to middle east US pretends is like choosing between heart attack and stroke - you don’t want either, but it always chooses both (thanks to weapon manufacturers) I feel bad for the people.
@alainbut5 ай бұрын
Wrong buddy. We chose cancer. We try to stop with chemo, but it was stage 4 since day 1.
@Morotr755 ай бұрын
Maybe the US should leave the middle east alone for a change...
@isculptmemes5 ай бұрын
Choosing? the US is a uranium bar hidden in your pocket!
@OntologicalShock7775 ай бұрын
If there is no oil in this region like what happened in War in Myanmar, then U.S would not interfere with it.@@hamzak6437
@jerimeemccabe60365 ай бұрын
😂😂
@wowza19285 ай бұрын
My mom remembers the Iran-Iraq war very well. She lived in the city of Kermanshah, a major Iranian city near the border with Iraq and one of the most damaged cities during the war. And she was only 8 years old when the war started. My mom told me that schools were closed for most of the years. And one time she was walking near an oil field when Iraqi fighter jets started throwing bombs, and one bomb fell on an oil tank and the oil tank exploded, even though my mom had some distance between her and the Oil tank, the sound from the explosion damaged her ear. When I visited Kermanshah with my mom many years later, when we were crossing by that exact oil field, she explained everything. Everyone in Iran who is older than 45 and lived in the western half of Iran has memories about the Iran Iraq war
@ciaronsmith49955 ай бұрын
Yeah but now look. Iran rules Iraq (in a good way). Live in the present. Not the past. Iran hasn't been this influential since the Zoroastrian era.
@amafhh-bi3yh5 ай бұрын
@@ciaronsmith4995 Iran doesn't rule Iraq or any other country.its called friendship
@tonytooshort5 ай бұрын
@@ciaronsmith4995huh? Who tf is living in the past? You can't recount history now? Why are we even watching this video then. 🥴
@Passque6665 ай бұрын
@@amafhh-bi3yhnah, Iran literally rules proxies in the entire mideast.
@jakemiles44705 ай бұрын
@@ciaronsmith4995agree, Iran rules Iraq and the Iraqi people are very happy with this. Also Iraq will become Persia again within a few hundred years. Persia will become the biggest empire again in about 1000/1500 years , we are now taking a break of a few hundred years. But Persians are The smartest people in the world.
@omiddabir2 ай бұрын
It beautifully and unfilteredly explains the historical and devastating wars that affected me and my family.
@sarge_44125 ай бұрын
I was born 3 months after the end of this war and I’ve heard countless stories from my dad who was a tank driver for the Iraqi army and was wounded 3 times. The people didnt want to fight but the leaders forced them into the army and to fight and it was all for nothing. It makes me appreciate my dad even more. Thank you for this video Johnny
@ihdiadgdhwbad15 ай бұрын
At the beginning of the war, many iraqi civilians and even teenagers were forcefully recruited into the army including my dad when he was around 16, he fled to kuwait then jordan, some time later he flew to Sweden (late 80s) and now here i am, a born swedish citizen. the fact that we lost 500 billion dollars and a million lives during the Iraq Iran war. Forward we invaded kuwait and got bombed by like 4 different countries and having 661 imposed sanctions. During this time there was an uprising where up to a hundred thousand died. Going forward we've got the 2003 invasion followed up by a civil war and then ISIS pops up. How unfortunate, Iraq used to be the second richest arab country, our gdp growth was 6-8% per year (world top 10 in growth) I'd say atleast 1 trillion dollars lost due to these conflicts.
@mdhumayunkabirmdhumayunkab73875 ай бұрын
Yes They didn't won't to fight because at last they were Muslim and brothers but your leaders made them to fight.if Iran and Iraq didn't fight we could have not seen Palestine crisis 😕
@smileheee15875 ай бұрын
My mom was a doctor in Tehran at the time. She feels the same way as your dad.
@sarge_44125 ай бұрын
@@ihdiadgdhwbad1 Yes thats the story of many Iraqis. We moved to Jordan in 1995 then migrated to New Zealand in 2000 and onto Australia in 2017. Now im a dual New Zealand and Australian citizen but still feel a connection to my home land even though I left when I was 6 years old and would love to visit one day. Much love to all my fellow Iraqis every where in the world. Muslim or Christian ❤️
@hello626615 ай бұрын
My father served in the Iraqi army. Still has several nightmares a week to this day seeing scorched landscapes and desolate areas. I was born exactly 9 months after the war ended :)
@mytakelnflandwftpodcast4415 ай бұрын
Stop taking that sponsor
@ledizzy26345 ай бұрын
Exactly, I wish KZbinrs would do at least a tiny amount of research about their sponsors...
@misterycreeper61515 ай бұрын
It’s free money bro, you gotta do what you gotta do
@Drippygoku5 ай бұрын
Don’t watch his pockets, let the man eat
@mxyplex5 ай бұрын
Like every heavily youtube marketed product, scammy scummy behavior (kamikoto, raycon, manscaped etc). The irony of a investigative journalist not investigating nor being critical of practices is pathetically hilarious though.
@SyafiqAzrin5 ай бұрын
Even the vpn advert too lol
@seyediranball5 ай бұрын
I have 6 veteran uncles and all of them are still suffering from iraqi chemical attacks
@tapplayer59535 ай бұрын
My father was born in halabjah, and he was fighting for Kurdistan during this war. But when the war ended, he returned to the town and he saw dead bodies all around the place where he grew up :/
@TimurKhan-dn5vx5 ай бұрын
@@tapplayer5953 deathistan exisyç
@tapplayer59535 ай бұрын
@@TimurKhan-dn5vx what?
@tapplayer59535 ай бұрын
@@Mmahdich we are iraqi, but he was not treated well by the dictatorship, so him and others rebelled against iraq
@tapplayer59535 ай бұрын
@@Mmahdich thanks :)
@stock__s44 ай бұрын
My father served 7 years during this time as everyone who was of age had to serve compulsory time. He was an AA gunner in the capital of Baghdad and would tell me when Iran F4s would come, they’d fly low and fast, zoom and book tactics that he couldn’t do nothing to as he was using an auto cannon anti-air gun meant for WW2 planes on jets. Apart from these few stories , he never really mentions anything else and I don’t blame him as he must’ve seen some horrific things during the war and I don’t want to remind him or bring it up.
@KafshakTashtak5 ай бұрын
I still remember the Red Alerts when Iraq was bombing Tehran, and we had to go shelter. We lived in Tehran, in some neighborhoods close to the Nuclear Research Lab of University of Tehran, which was a primary Target fro Iraq. My mom's aunt was thrown into a wall by the shockwave when one of the bombs hit the University Stadium near her house.
@Trollcoyb5 ай бұрын
Jeez man, I'm glad you are OK. We all can hate on the internet but seeing a comment like this really puts in perspective what a small world we actually live in and how really close and interconnected we all really are. Why do we have to fight each other and deal with the consequences for the actions taken by the ones in power. So sad, I wish you and your family well. Sending love from the UK.
@FishareFriendsNotFood9725 ай бұрын
I'm going to be honest, I knew next to nothing about this war and found this video so informative and clear and concise. Thank you
@Blindriverside5 ай бұрын
It was a brief mention but it’s always great when someone points out that Saddam was a pan-Arab nationalist and not a religious extremist.
@trapster14835 ай бұрын
ikr idk y this guy is tryna make it sound like a religious war lmao
@ammanite5 ай бұрын
He wasn’t even really a pan-Arab nationalist either. He just used it as a way to legitimize his power. He never actually worked on trying to create a pan-Arab state.
@TelgdshhjАй бұрын
@@trapster1483 because Iran's revolution was islamic
@freepalestine7687Ай бұрын
@@Telgdshhjnothing about Iranians is Islamic 😂😂
@saeedmolavi70494 ай бұрын
This was a very precise and truthful documentary, summarizing the brutal and devastating Iraq-Iran war involving chemical weapons resulting the loss of a million lives, leaving trauma on many more millions, including me. I lost my childhood living in the city of Ahvaz during the eight years of war
@Achilleude5 ай бұрын
these documentary's are so well crafted i can't find any better
@shafsteryellow5 ай бұрын
Architects of the Iraq war by Keith Woods is MUCH better
@grapefruitsimmons5 ай бұрын
GDF does great things on these subjects
@quissbird-105 ай бұрын
@@grapefruitsimmons GDF is extemely biased in his videos
@johnnyharris5 ай бұрын
Wow thank you
@muhammedjaseemshajeef67815 ай бұрын
You should make a video about the kosovo war and the nato bombings of Yugoslavia@@johnnyharris
@shulminsama38205 ай бұрын
there was a comment here by a guy called wiking something i think that called out the sponsor and that the sponsor are well... kind of a scam. and then i actively saw that comment be banned. Johnny and team, if you value us so much as you have said in previous videos and often thank us for correcting you and calling out when you do something wrong, then dont silence us when we're trying. i understand that you need the money from the sponsor to keep making these videos. But this is pretty underhanded
@Mr--_--M5 ай бұрын
I saw it too. It's still showing on one of my devices but not on another. I'm waiting for one of these KZbin channels to finally call them out on it
@Wikingpedia5 ай бұрын
My comment has been removed again. Great transparency
@neilnelson76035 ай бұрын
Lets be honest here. There are people on KZbin that are after Johnny Harris in the name of "calling him out." If you don't like the sponsor don't visiting them. Maybe its working for others. Nobody is forcing anybody from going to the sponsors. You've free will boys.
@Wikingpedia5 ай бұрын
@@neilnelson7603 We should be able to criticize a sponsor that they choose to advertise. It hurts their bottom line and they know this, hence why they have outright removed any comments from even being able to mention the sponsor's name. If that isn't being anything but non-transparent, I don't know what else it would be called.
@johnnyharris5 ай бұрын
hey there thanks for calling this out. ill look into it! -Johnny
@MrBoogn5 ай бұрын
Seems like the US hasnt learned from “turning a blind eye”…
@gooldii15 ай бұрын
There are 54 muslim States, 1,8 Billion Muslims live in them. Guess, in HOW many of them: there is: Democracy, freedom of Speech, Sexuality, Press? Woman rights, a good Economy, Science, and no War, Torture, Dictatorship, Inflation xxxl, Corruption xxxl? EXACTLY! ZERO! What does this tell us, about this Religion?
@GingerMole5 ай бұрын
All part of the plan 👀
@gooldii15 ай бұрын
What Plan?@@GingerMole
@GingerMole5 ай бұрын
@@gooldii1 I’ve tried to reply to your comment with their plan but it gets deleted instantly
@gooldii15 ай бұрын
I dont believe you at all! Conspiracy Theorie! Hahaha! But, there are 54 Muslim States on Earth, In NONE of them, there is: Freedom of Speech, Sexuality, Woman rights, Press. No good Economy, nor Science, but Corruption, Inflation xxxl and War, Torture. Can you explain why? Come on! @@GingerMole
@amirgorji58103 ай бұрын
What an accurate analysis. I’m from Iran and I should say this video is great.
@Rut.Perez77Ай бұрын
Eres persa???
@amirgorji5810Ай бұрын
Yes
@h.b.71045 ай бұрын
My family is Christian from Basra and lived there throughout the Iran-Iraq war. It was a very difficult time. My uncles were drafted in the Iraqi army and fought for years. One was injured and saw many of his friends die. He is scarred for life and to this day never talks about it. Basra bore the brunt of the war--the city was targeted heavily by Iranian forces. My aunt was a professor at the University of Basra which was right on the border with Iran and said the Iranians would just shell and bomb them regularly. My family fled Iraq after the US war on Iraq in 1991. After that second war, Basra was impossible to live in because of the destroyed infrastructure of the city.
@sus5275 ай бұрын
Damn Christian in Basra? I head people of Basra welcomed dawlah during 2014 rise
@h.b.71045 ай бұрын
@@sus527 There used to be a substantial community of Chaldean Christians, Assyrian Christians, and Armenian Christians in Basra. They started leaving en masse after the 1991 US war on Iraq and subsequent US embargo. There used to be a neighborhood called "Hayy Armen" (the Armenian quarter). All the Christians churches are still there, but mostly empty now.
@sus5275 ай бұрын
@@h.b.7104 interesting cause Basra had hardcore Sunni salafist population that's why they welcomed dawlah during their war now Basra is going throw shiafication after Shia militias war, maybe Saddam had collaborated with them
@h.b.71045 ай бұрын
@@sus527 I don't know. I know Basra definitely controlled now by Shia militias. But I know my family never complained of any kind of discrimination against Christians. Especially in the 1970s to 1990s, they lived securely as Christians. The Iran-Iraq war was a hard time for everyone in the city, and after the 1991 war, when the Shia rebelled against Saddam, he sent his army to Basra to put down the rebellion. His army went door to door in Basra arresting people they found suspicious. When they came to our house, I was a child, but I remember the minute they realized we were Christian, they told us "we know you have nothing to do with this."
@jump_kid4 ай бұрын
@@sus527 Buddy, he from basra in the southern part of Iraq not Mosul, most residents of the city are shia arab, its very far from what Isis control in 2014-2017.
@shadsherzad63295 ай бұрын
As a kurd, i can say that 99% of this is true and very professionally told. Thank you for being honest and unbiased while explaining the events.
@smsum11945 ай бұрын
as a history loving Iranian who follows your videos for years, I thought you had abandoned the videos about middle-east. glad you're at it again. great video.
@farzaadkhaan3 ай бұрын
Two points are neglected: hostage taking by Iranians in the US embassy. Second the bold role of Germany (both west and east) in supplying Iraq with chemical weapons.
@tony41975 ай бұрын
Hi, Johnny, I'm an Iranian and I grew up during that war, let me tell you, it was scary, food and gasoline were rationed and I lost my friends in that war, I just wanted to thank you for educating your audience about this war, I appreciate the research you put into this.
@wafamohammed9849Ай бұрын
U name is tony how u iranian😅
@ASD-xl3tg5 ай бұрын
I was part of a group of Iranian military aid workers when we entered the city of Halabja the day after the chemical attack by the Iraqi army. I witnessed tragic scenes that I am not interested in recounting. My colleagues and I had the duty to collect and bury the bodies of the dead and transfer the survivors and the injured to Iran. At the time, I was sixteen years old, and unfortunately, I suffered severe psychological damage, but at that time, I did not realize the depth of the damage to my soul and body. Exactly thirty-two years later, when I was forty-eight years old. The symptoms of acute depression along with nightmares started in me. Every night, I used to walk among the corpses in Halabcheh and see poor children and women who died brutaly . My condition became so bad that I was admitted to a hospital in Holland for a while. The psychiatrist's diagnosis is acute depression and PTSD, and I am still undergoing medication and therapy. I suffer from various diseases, I don't know exactly if these pains and diseases are the effects of being in the vicinity of chemical weapons... I will never forget those killing scenes. Never
@H00H-H00H5 ай бұрын
As an iraqi I feel sorry for you and for the innocent kurds who died because of the chemical attacks and yes as you said I have watched multiple videos of the aftermath of the attck and its absolutely horrific to watch many people died sleeping and many died on the streets and the people who fled from there they have breathed some of the chemicals and until this day they greatly suffer from it
@JellyCrux5 ай бұрын
This sums it up perfectly and shows the root cause of the deep-seated animosity. The Iranians were actually fighting against a force with full backing from major powers, including money and weapons. This also answers many questions about why many neighboring Arab countries later paid (and are still paying) a huge price for this and why Iraq is in ruins. Iranians have a strong cultural memory and historical consciousness; it is part of their identity.
@YOUNGC10105 ай бұрын
Real journalism🦾💯
@johngeren10535 ай бұрын
The arms supplied to Iran by the US, both directly and through Israel and other third countries, was absolutely crucial to Iran's wat effort. Its huge fleet of warplanes and helicopters was completely American made. Its tanks and other armored vehicles were largely British. Iraq's military was mostly of Eastern bloc provenance. Without Western support of Iran the war would have ended in 1982 or 3.
@uncoiledfish25615 ай бұрын
Iran aren't the good guys in this. No one is.
@موسى_75 ай бұрын
@@johngeren1053 The West supplied both sides.
@Storming3605 ай бұрын
@johngeren1053 Iran bought those weapons prior to revolution. Those parts helped very little during the war. It just kept some planes in the skies for a few more missions. Iranian blood saved Iran, nothing more.
@deepintotravels4 ай бұрын
Well done, man. Embracing your interests in geography and politics perfectly matches a curious mind like mine.
@Wikingpedia5 ай бұрын
For a second time, you have removed my comment criticizing your choice of sponsor. Where is your integrity? Are you afraid of thousands of your fans seeing the truth about the sponsor you accept? Hopefully more people see this comment again: the sponsor has questionable qualifications of their therapists, sold information about their customers and charged unexpected bills on customers due to trapping people with hard-to-cancel subscriptions. You can't even mention the name of the brand sponsoring the video, so YOU KNOW that it is a problematic subject, and yet you agreed to take them on?
@protrainingtips5 ай бұрын
I mean, you could be proactive and make a video about scam sponsors and all the YT channels who they pay. I’d watch it, and I’m sure many others would too.
@Wikingpedia5 ай бұрын
@@protrainingtips Upper Echelon has a great video on the subject. There are others out there as well who have talked about the sponsor and the problems of them.
@XionEternum5 ай бұрын
@@nolaboyy3279 Maybe not assume they are taking ad-money? Upper Echelon doesn't do ad-rolls or sponsorships that he himself hasn't vetted. Often denying most of them for their scams or grey-zone scummy practices. He otherwise relies almost entirely on Patreon support to remain neutral and other neutral or well-meaning sponsors. UE also provides all sources in direct video and in citations. So... follow your own advice and do your research on someone before you label them?
@XionEternum5 ай бұрын
The above aside, direct reply to OP: I have my suspision heavily confirmed by bigger channels on KZbin that the chat system is largely overloaded and broken. Almost every comment is getting shadowbanned in some shape or form if it doesn't immediately pass YT's internal validation scans. longer comments with wording that may be controversial (having known common phrases and words) get ghosted until a deeper scan or select number of test users who do get to see it show favorable interaction. Mostly speculation, but I assure you it is likely on YT's side of things causing it.
@Charlie-phlezk5 ай бұрын
Are you sure you just can't find your own comment? Lots of comments here.
@jump_kid5 ай бұрын
alot of my relaives were a part of this war, as my grandpa who fought in northern border of this war for more than 8yrs and even after as mountain infantry officer (still alive but he lost his left eye). what a brutal war.. chemical weapons, teenager soldiers, dropping bombs on civilians and more, but for what? no one won, we all lost and more than 1.5M soldiers died and the stupid borderline never change. at least let us wish the peace to be upon all martyrs💐🕊️🇮🇶🇮🇷
@Storming3605 ай бұрын
Iran won big time. Who rules Iraq now? Iran.
@alia78715 ай бұрын
Saddam invaded iran , lost , and now Iraq belong to iran
@bobvance80175 ай бұрын
What side did he fight for?
@jump_kid5 ай бұрын
@@bobvance8017 The iraqi one
@aaarrre77405 ай бұрын
Iran won. No Saddam posters in Iran. Plenty of Khomenini posters in Iraq.
@awesomehpt89385 ай бұрын
Looks like Iran was caught between Iraq and a hard place.
@hamslicemcdooogle80805 ай бұрын
That joke was bad and you should feel bad for it. Nice one
@SarveshMunde-qx9vb5 ай бұрын
👹👹
@Storming3605 ай бұрын
Get out
@mason965755 ай бұрын
Lmao 😜
@excentrik57255 ай бұрын
First USA removes Iranian democratically elected leader, and replaces him with a dictator, then sends money and weapons to Saddam, and now people wonder why does Iran hate USA?! Damn, thats a real head scratcher aint, it?
@TDSGamingManАй бұрын
4:20 Greatest sponsor ever, many people watching these are stressed fighting for their opinion or just understanding politics, along with any of their real life personal problems. It’s not a sponsor, it’s a place for people to be happy through out the chaos of this world.
@lancelot13-135 ай бұрын
this video style with only maps and narration is much better than the ones with lots of "making of" shots
@Charlie-phlezk5 ай бұрын
There's no "better", it's just different styles.
@Base-q1g5 ай бұрын
i really like the style as well. makes it easy to visualize exactly who is doing what and where
@khaledraafat46625 ай бұрын
just to correct you, saddam hussein didnt give up full control of this waterway in 1975 bcs he wasnt even in power that time, he only ruled from 1979 to 2004
@Amar905 ай бұрын
He was the negotiator for that awful treaty with Iran, look it up brother
@odekalebamidele46685 ай бұрын
@@Amar90so he negotiated the treaty that gave Iran access and then wasn’t happy about it when he got into power? He’s a big time psychopath if that was what happened
@BruteStrength995 ай бұрын
@odekalebamidele4668 that treaty was negotiated with the evil Shah. When Khomeni liberated Iran, of was nervous. Buyer's remorse.
@aarush36035 ай бұрын
*2003
@Amar905 ай бұрын
@@odekalebamidele4668 he literally is the biggest maniac in history.
@KafshakTashtak5 ай бұрын
After the war, Iran and Iraq slowly traded their captive soldiers, and all of them were released. The relations got better overtime, until Iraq opened the border for Iranians to go to Karbala, Najaf, Samara, and Kazemein for religious pilgrimage. That path is still open to this day. This was a considered as a major victory in Iran.
@kin2horizn2985 ай бұрын
not win the najaf karbala like holy place for thim
@carkawalakhatulistiwa5 ай бұрын
And now US use Ukraina for Star war with Russia. Just like US Irak to start war with iran
@hadikhan635 ай бұрын
Not until Saddam was removed from power by the war waged by the U.S. and U.K.
@dragonmaster32074 ай бұрын
It’s not just an Iranian W but an Iraqi one too.
@Duolingo13212 ай бұрын
I’m Kurdish I remember my grandpa telling me about his stories in the war about how we was in the mountains for months at a time he said it was one of the most brutal things he has had (he became a mayor after the war and ruled 12k men into war)
@GdLn-t4s2 ай бұрын
Long live Kurd long live Kurdistan
@VE99115 ай бұрын
An Assyrian Christian born in Iran. I vividly recall the air defense sirens, home basement shelters, school under ground shelters and streaks of bombs flying through the air at night. This war lasted almost a decade. Ten years of my earliest childhood. Countless lives lost. Wars are horrible.
@Nagvanshieus5 ай бұрын
So whenever a civil defense siren starts off other people will start panicking and you will be feeling nostalgia?
@J0seph135 ай бұрын
@@Nagvanshieus wow, you can't differentiate between trauma and nostalgia
@lockercoin36935 ай бұрын
i went to johny harris's page an hour ago. So happy that when i went back to youtube i was recommended his new video!
@johnnyharris5 ай бұрын
😊
@kabdul92085 ай бұрын
As a long-time subscriber of Johnny, I would greatly appreciate it if you could produce a video detailing the Afghan civil war of the 1990s. This conflict stands as one of the most devastating wars in history. ❤
@abu_staif2 ай бұрын
I am iraqi. Thanks for reminding me of one of the many reasons i must despise Saddam.
@robertbones3262 ай бұрын
SADDAM WAS F'ING COOL!!!!
@SaroDogTraining5 ай бұрын
I hesitated to watch this episode as I am a child of the war between Iran and Iraq and I knew it would bring back lots of bad memories. It ruined my childhood and my life. Not only the war but the revolution as well. My father sold all he had to save me and send me out of the country. Separated my family, and made me and many others like me live a life that was not meant to be.
@polcooler5 ай бұрын
i've read bits and pieces of the iran-iraq war but i've never seen it presented this nicely
@MrJamesWhitford5 ай бұрын
This next level production and coherence. Thanks for your work!
@الحنين-ح9ه11 күн бұрын
Thank you for the nice video 🇮🇶
@MarksmanSpecialist5 ай бұрын
i have taken note, when it comes to fighting there is no permanent allies, just friend with benefits, when it goes sour then comes the gas lighting to switching sides
@shodankai275 ай бұрын
As a Brit who wants to learn about geopolitics so I can understand truly what is going on, these videos could not be more helpful. Thank you so much for all of these Johnny. Amazing content that explains it all so simply 💙 I wish my best to those involved in all the horrific conflicts across the globe 💙
@karamal-khanaty49895 ай бұрын
As an Iraqi thank you for this reconstructing of Iraq-Iran war. This was what kicked everything off that is still ongoing today in middle east. Also, it is the reason why millions on both sides have migrated to other countries to progress in one's life away from wars (my family moved to NZ)
@Ali-lt3qt2 ай бұрын
It is Saddam who destroyed Iraq and the sanction after kuwaiti War made Iraq one of the poorest country!!! People could not even buy a simple bread. Now The Shias will never ever in 1 million years accept a sunni Rule!!! He basically destroyed Iraq for sunnis
@mortezamir33994 ай бұрын
Hi. First off thank you for covering the war and the great video and putting things on the map. Secondly, there are some inaccuracies and context that I feel I should bring to your attention. I'll go chronologically: 1- There were multiple calls for ceasefire and in the beginning, Iran did not accept the initial overtures for ceasefire because it had territory under Iraqi control. The Israeli-Arab wars had shown that after a ceasefire a country could and, as precedent had shown, would keep conquered territory. Although Saddam said he would leave the Iranians wouldn’t believe him. There was a point in 1982 where Iran had recaptured most of its key territory, but as you point out they called for Saddam’s removal. It is a point of debate and counterfactual history today, with critics saying had Iran accepted a ceasefire at that point many lives could have been saved. 2- The chemical weapons and materials for manufacturing them were supplied by Germany, France, UK, Netherlands, and other western European nations not the US. Put this together with US’s intelligence support, USSR weapon supplies and Kuwait and Saudi financial support and you will understand the rhetoric in Iran that it was defending against an unjust war by the world. It has fuelled it’s longstanding distrust of the West and international institutions. 3- Lastly in 1988 the US, apart from shooting an airliner, also attacked Iranian oil installation and infrastructure in the Persian Gulf. And these events directly contributed to Iran’s accept a ceasefire, as they feared direct escalation of US involvement. Given that the US had shot down an airliner they feared there would be no holds barred. Other factors included depleted moral and military resources on both sides and Iran holding all its key previously captured territory. 4- Also, at the risk of nit picking your otherwise well-made video I should add that Iran did not have F-16s. The USS Vincennes claimed it mistook the airliner for an F-4 Phantom. How likely is it that a top of the line US cruiser would mistake a slow 180ft Airbus A300, flying on a known commercial course, for an agile 60ft fighter-bomber? I don’t know, but mistakes happen in war and the ship’s captain got a Legion of Merit for it.
@selenalu4445 ай бұрын
I can't believe I got here in less than a min after it was released
@mauliksatasiya66645 ай бұрын
Now that's what I want from Jhonny. A crispy map video with narration. Not some studio clips of spilling coffee.
@Charlie-phlezk5 ай бұрын
lol feel free to scroll
@CamilaGrotti5 ай бұрын
Oh man let Johnny be creative with his videos. Nonetheless the content is always incredible, so he should feel free to create his content as he pleases. I’m just grateful to be able to watch his videos. Prime content 👌
@jdeyre5 ай бұрын
@Johnny Harris 17:34 - they believed it was an F14 (not an F16) as they were the only other export customer for the F14.
@johnnyharris5 ай бұрын
Thank you will look into this and make the correction
@DeliveryMcGee5 ай бұрын
@@johnnyharrisFun fact: Iran ordered 80 F-14s, but the last one was still being built when the revolution happened. Since the US Government wouldn't give it to the new regime, it was given to the US Navy. Iran also ordered 150 F-16s, but none were delivered.
@lmoore66125 ай бұрын
I'd also like to point out the framing of that event. If Iran is using fighter jets to attack civilian ships in the area, they bear the full responsibility of an aircraft originating from their airspace being shot down. This is literally the human shield tactic we see so often in which they purposefully flew civilian aircrafts through that area to camouflage their Fighter Jets in order to strike civilian targets.
@M.JWitteveen5 ай бұрын
@@lmoore6612 That is some twisted logic. Iran bears the responsibility for an American ship shooting down a civilian aircraft, during a war started by an American ally. Cool beans you're crazy.
@thedude11655 ай бұрын
If you're so good at the tactics Iranian used in war and know for a fact that it was a meat shield why don't you join the American intelligence services?@@lmoore6612 Here is the truth swallow it: america attacked a civilian target, didn't take responsibility for it and gave the man who committed the act a medal of honor, maybe, just maybe it was an intentional target? But of course you know best that Iran uses a meat shield, civilian life only matters to the USA, no one else Get your raw, unfiltered data from different sources and cross examine them cause the ones you are using are biased based on the type of comment you have on such sensitive matters I'm telling this to you as a friend Peace man
@fellowhuman46563 ай бұрын
So beautifully done video man! 10/10👍👍
@musabsarjo5 ай бұрын
I am from Jordan. I remember that my father participated in this war. He was a tank driver, but he survived and returned to Jordan. He died of cancer 8 months ago.
@USB7405 ай бұрын
May Allah bless ur father and grant him Jannat al Firdaws, thanks for his service and protecting our countries. I was a tank operator also. Arab brothers ❤🌹
@MrKobeFuentes5 ай бұрын
My God forgive him and grant him paradise, respect to my arabs from a kurd whose father and uncle served iraq 🫡
@USB7405 ай бұрын
@@MrKobeFuentes We had many loyal Kurdish brothers, Iraq was also their land. ❤🌹
@mohammadzaker5755 ай бұрын
Mey he goes to hell
@SHOULI5 ай бұрын
Hahahahaha 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@AlokePaul-cu2hf5 ай бұрын
Waiting for this video for a long time..thank you for it..👍🏻👍🏻
@garangbullen47125 ай бұрын
From South Sudan here. Always a member of the channel
@KINGSLAYER39126 күн бұрын
Such a great, explanatory video. Subscribed for more
@NicolasTRANG5 ай бұрын
Great content. You make very complex geopolitical issues so easy to understand. You get my Subscribe...
@kevalya_kaun5 ай бұрын
one of my favorites, thankyou johhny for an early weekend gift!!!
@rgp1991085 ай бұрын
These are war crims not by suddam, but also buy his supporters (US, FRANCE)
@Natsudragneel_285 ай бұрын
You think sadam is friends with America? ☠️☠️☠️
@lokomono895 ай бұрын
@@Natsudragneel_28not friends, supporters. US supported Iraq in this war.
@Robbiehans5 ай бұрын
And Soviet Union
@Raderade1-pt3om5 ай бұрын
Everyone , war is a crime all sides end up guilty
@kassemm8234 ай бұрын
Us supported him yes i think theyr involved@@Natsudragneel_28
@PlutoNash-jv8ir3 ай бұрын
I love the War Mapping Series you doing 🔥.
@coco_mero_documentaries5 ай бұрын
I think it would inspire creators like us ❤️ This is a clever way to edit that type of video: it is more focused and brings more attention to the history, reasons and strategies of wars.
@john_dave_kondy5 ай бұрын
It is more focused on the facts, but photos and slice of videos make the content pretty much more entertainable
@farhadd29335 ай бұрын
Even after 36 years of the end of this war in Iran, you can feel the scars of it everywhere. Most streets, avenues, and alleys are named after martyrs. Every middle-aged person has some memories of war; some of them are terrifying, maybe epic, or even funny. The effect of a shortage of everything is still in people's behavior. Most Iranians still buy basic goods in bulk to be ready for a shortage again. A lot of people buy cottages, villas, or land in the countryside to have somewhere to go if a war happens again.
@TheMoe23105 ай бұрын
Very sad!!! I pray for calm and peace in Iran watching this video has increased my love for Iran they have gone through a lot this brothers of mine may Allah grant them peace!(I know it's peaceful but what I mean peace in their hearts and calmness from this world!)
@moe-moon5 ай бұрын
HI Johnny, I'm glad you finally covered this. It's a complex issue of a bygone time. I was born in Iranian just after the war, while by brothers lived as kids during it. A few points to add: - The US Supported the coup that brought in Khomeini. Khomeini was in Iraq and the time. Fundementalism was supported as these dudes weren't going to support communism. - The US provided Iraq with Chemical Weapons that were used on both Iran and the the kurds. The conflict was nonsense generated largely by US meddling. Even with the majority of the worlds support, Saddam didn't get what he wanted. It was a lot of ceaseless and meaningless death for nothing.
@ardeshirbozorgmehr99064 ай бұрын
Thanks! It was the first time I managed to connect some dots after watching your video.
@Pet-zJurgenThomson-Schubert5 ай бұрын
Iv been following you for 7 years now !! Your one of my biggest inspirations please reach out if you read this. Kaiora from New Zealand I would love to work with you
@robknight94065 ай бұрын
Funny how your username doesn’t appear to have Kaiora in it…
@robknight94065 ай бұрын
Your = the thing that belongs to you You’re = you are
@Unknown-ud8ni5 ай бұрын
@@robknight9406 my guy, you are talking to a bot
@robknight94065 ай бұрын
@@Unknown-ud8ni and yet it’s a favourite comment by Johnny Harris 🤣
@Unknown-ud8ni5 ай бұрын
@@robknight9406 yeah some folks don't pay attention to usernames and shit that doesn't add up
@aravinthan19955 ай бұрын
The last two videos are amazing dude!
@foday_105 ай бұрын
Another fantastic insightful video. Thank you from the Gambia 🇬🇲
@parisap92322 ай бұрын
My father was in civilwar in iran kurdistan when he was only a high-school boy. He says when he wake up at the morning all of his friends(soldiers) are headless and their head is on their chest... God im 4 years older than he was and i just cant even imagine that...
@Brokenenglishspeaker2 ай бұрын
Who did that?
@razabadass5 ай бұрын
The journalism of team Jonny has consistently felt like something else so to speak! Raza :)
@y.s.11805 ай бұрын
Let us not forget the involvement of the United States in the arms sales to Saddam before that war. They indirectly "pushed" him to get into that war, they ignored his usage of chemical weapons as long as it is used against Iran.
@fredkhatir20165 ай бұрын
The US, Ronald Reagan provided Saddam Hussain with the political cover.
@behzadgof3 ай бұрын
US was in contact with Khomeini. Us representative had met Khomeini in Paris in 1979 and had dialogue with Kennedy in 1963 based on the recently released classified document by CIA. General Hauser told the military to stand down so the revolution can succeed. So this crap that you're feeding people that US was in shock is absolutely incorrect. You can read the documents from Guadalupe which sheds light on the agreement between US, UK, Germany and France that they wanted shah to be removed
@Bigpawpa2 ай бұрын
Right ! Why would air France flight him to Iran. It was all a set up. They wanted him to take control of iran
@snipershot46765 ай бұрын
Love the new editing style focusing on the maps more!!
@lboston46605 ай бұрын
This was the first war I ever saw on the news. I was a little kid. I remember thinking "why are they fighting if their names are so similar?" xD
@zlinos1395 ай бұрын
Same exactly for me ! The war I grew up in the 80s, seems so weird that so many people in the comments didn't know about it...
@KafshakTashtak5 ай бұрын
They're written and pronounced differently in the middle east. (ایران و عراق).
@hamidrezaraei84045 ай бұрын
I am guessing I could think the same between sweden and switzerland
@JohnathanJoyce-l6c5 ай бұрын
@@KafshakTashtak wow, I can usually pick up on something unknown like this and decipher small pieces of it. I ingest other languages daily. And that looks like a chicken scribbled in the dirt, and yall were like, yeah, we will use that as our Alphabet. I mean no disrespect BTW just thought it looks funny.
@KafshakTashtak5 ай бұрын
@@JohnathanJoyce-l6c As long as the two scribbles look different to you, means we write and pronounce them differently.
@K553655 ай бұрын
17:33 F-16? Iran has the F-14 Tomcat.
@joaopaullo65035 ай бұрын
I was starting to get scary, when i don't see nobody comment about this
@TinaTr8415 күн бұрын
I’m an Iranian who is the last person to defend the Islamic regime. However, one cannot deny that Sadam Hussein, a pan Arabist ideologue, was always the aggressor with the least amount of respect for human life. Just a cursory glance at the number of civilian deaths on both sides shows the unimaginable brutality of the Iraqi army. Thousands upon thousands of Iranians were killed in their homes during nightly bombardments, hundreds of thousands were displaced. (There is a great film about a displaced orphan boy called Bashu, the Little Stranger, which I highly recommend.) The Iranian army showed great restraint in dealing with Iraqi civilians and military hostages. The same cannot be said for the other side, who raped and mutilated civilians in the border cities they captured. You could go to Khorramshahr today, and hear horror stories that would make you weep and howl. The pan-Arab ideology of Sadam also caused a literal genocide! The chemical weapons which he got from the West were deployed against Kurds in Iraq and Iran, leaving behind lasting, intergenerational effects, in terms of both mental and physical health, not to mention the healthcare costs that Iran still pays to this day. The Islamic regime also used this war as an excuse to brutally oppress and kill its own dissidents, it showed greater restraints against Iraqi civilians than Iranian ones. Did you know that more than 60 thousand dissidents were summarily executed during the summer of ‘86?. The IR has always seen Arab life as more valuable than Iranian life, because they too are a part of Pan-(Shia) Arab ideology, and in fact, many of Iran’s top leaders are of Iraqi, Syrian, and Lebanese descent.
@pedramarman6295 ай бұрын
When Saddam Hussain’s Army invaded Iran I was just a little kid and just started second class in elementary school, at the beginning of the waging war no one thought it would be the longest and bloodiest war in our recent history, as the war grew the more soldiers killed or injured or captured by brutal and barbaric Iraqi army and their notorious intelligent service so called ESTEKHBARAT which tortured and abused thousands of Iranian soldiers or volunteers in battlefield, a lot of them very young teenagers, ( in contrast Iranian people and authorities never ever tortured or had any kind of bad behaviour to Iraqi captures, they all had good food nice shelter and even sports facilities) we as children were witnessed a lot of horrible things behind battlefield lines in cities and villages, such as night time bombardments, hearing or seeing missiles and fighter airplanes , all the time war news in national TV special operations…., day time watching the body of war victims in coffins which mentally had a very negative impact on us all made us badly depressed and so on ! When finally war ended in 1988 I became a young man , told you when started I was just a little child ! These bitter memories never go away from our generation till the end of our lives 😢😢
@كنوزالقران-ف9ك4 ай бұрын
😂🇮🇷🩴
@RyH-yx4ys3 ай бұрын
don't need to read further to figure out you're spewing bs, so you're saying that Iran never committed war crimes nor torture of Iraqi POWs? My uncle's friend who was captured in 1984 was tortured so much that when he got back after the prisoners exchange he had 0 sanity left, he died 3 years after getting back to Iraq. After the Battle of busaytin in 1981, which took place in Ahvaz province, and the Iranian forces suffered significant losses, which resulted in the removal of the Iranian armor weapon from the battle, the Iranian forces shot hundreds of Iraqi soldiers who fell into captivity after they ran out of ammunition, contrary to international conventions and conventions, in addition to violations that reached the point of shooting prisoners in captivity cages and in front of the International Red Cross missions that documented these violations .. Among the cases of violations documented by humanitarian organizations was the famous shot of the process of handcuffing a prisoner by his wrists and tying them to two cars driving in the opposite direction until they cut off his limbs, before preparing to shoot him, in an incident that has never happened before in the history of wars. This is just 1 incident in the early years if the war, there are thousands that were well documented throughout the 8 years war, you can lie to yourself with your nonsense but you can't fool anyone else with your lies.
@Ze_pope3 ай бұрын
this is a complete lie, Saddam Hussein quite literally put iranian kids into schools who were sent to fight on the frontlines, Iranian children were literally taken from the frontlines, and put into iraqi schools to prepare them for when they go back to Iran,
@kasrataghikhani71555 ай бұрын
Thank you Johnny! Keep shedding light on the forgotten history....
@placerjr.mejica64115 ай бұрын
Love this type of content. Very informative
@larry771173 ай бұрын
this is One of Your Best videos Johnny! i thank our Lord for returning my USA Army Son back alive and mostly whole from Iraq. i recall cautioning my Warrior Son about killing too many humans and the grief it would cost Him later in life. Thankfully, He listened and understood. After He hung up the phone.... He went back to killing. He was the Lead Gunner on convoy runs. Explaining that it was mostly a 40mph drive by counter-attack against unseen shooters. 20 to 30 USA military vehicles moving fast after Curfew. i felt bad for my Son that He had to go into another sovereign country to harm. At the direction of terrible decisions by our political leaders. We would never allow other countries to invade the USA. Trully, we are only protected by our kindness to all neighbors. We need them. i need You!❤😊
@tavakio5 ай бұрын
small mistake , they claim they mistook the passenger jet as F-14s as Iran doesn't have any F-16s
@Dimesoicy5 ай бұрын
Finally a new video lol, I was about to go on strike if you didn’t upload one today.😭🤣
@DonAyiti5 ай бұрын
Same lol
@henlohenlo6895 ай бұрын
very good videos.
@Dimesoicy5 ай бұрын
@@henlohenlo689 Facts📠
@Faisaleoar5 ай бұрын
right?
@Flaretree5 ай бұрын
Finally you made a video about this
@odishaodisha34962 ай бұрын
Such a informative upload
@2shlimeyy5795 ай бұрын
My uncles fought in the Iran-Iraq war and the Gulf War, one of them was in the commando front lines he was in the Iraqi Republican Guard Army, the Iraqi Republican Guard was a Iraqi Military Branch. My other uncle was also in the Iraqi Republican guard army and he was a commander. My dad only fought in the Gulf War 1991 and thanks God that my dad and uncles are alive also not to mention my uncle that I was talking about that was in the front lines has met Saddam.
@mariusfourie-lq6sv4 ай бұрын
Yes the Republican Guard, if i remember right, they ran away when the Americans approach Bagdad 😎😎
@2shlimeyy5794 ай бұрын
@@mariusfourie-lq6sv they were horrible only in 2003 and that’s because all their weapons and equipment were like 15-30 years outdated. Their ammunition were so old and we barley had any ammunition and because of that we were using trainer ammunitions. The size of the Iraqi Republican Guard Forces in 2003 was only 12,000 also our aircraft’s were really old and 100-235 of them were lost in the deserts. But the Fedayeen Saddam Forces did way better than the Iraqi Republican Guard Forces, The Fedayeen Saddam Forces and other Iraqi Insurgent Militia Groups are the reason why many Americans died in the Iraq War. You can even search it up if you don’t believe me and the reason why our stuff were really outdated because we we’re sanctioned brutally by United States.