How Ukraine Won the First Phase of the War - Modern Warfare DOCUMENTARY

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Kings and Generals

Kings and Generals

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер
@KingsandGenerals
@KingsandGenerals 2 жыл бұрын
they/them army > was/were army. You can support the humanitarian effort to help Ukrainians here: donation.babynyar.org/en/
@jeffm3283
@jeffm3283 2 жыл бұрын
It was with this that I realized that I'm actually the smartest youtube commenter you have
@doubleoduck3405
@doubleoduck3405 2 жыл бұрын
@@jeffm3283 no
@Natedawg1998
@Natedawg1998 2 жыл бұрын
I love this humor so much
@TheStink7276
@TheStink7276 2 жыл бұрын
Cringe
@George_Wong
@George_Wong 2 жыл бұрын
This is quite a niche meme that I didn't expect to see here.
@RinRin32957
@RinRin32957 2 жыл бұрын
I'm so used to historical documentaries on this channel that watching a documentary about a war that is still ongoing feels surreal. This is history in the making.
@elektrotehnik94
@elektrotehnik94 2 жыл бұрын
By & large, the video is accurate in all high-level stuff that matter long-term. Except army sizes are very wrong, of especially Russia -> waaaaaay smaller professional, attack-capable army; I’d say 300k-350k max, 200-250k deployed to Ukraine up until this day + 20-30k “Donbas” separatist army. Expect likely somewhat more tanks in the attack with Russia than the stated number, but likely way less planes operable & somewhat fewer helicopters as well. Expect ~50k troops already killed/ wounded/ captured & 30k deserted. Also somewhat misrepresented army of Ukraine (I’d say around 200k additional semi-trained mobilized reserve units actively fighting atm + substantially more being mobilized, equipped & trained, which is not true for Russia atm. Additionally, 1/4 to 1/3 fewer Ukrainian in-service tanks than stated here, by the start of the 2022 war; but now tank numbers are bolstered by NATO deliveries & captured Russian tanks. There is plenty missed in the video that is solidly provable by no-doubt video/photo evidence & a lot that is provable with context & “soft evidence” (testimonies, high-level Russian spy-informants), but for a 30-40 min condensed video, the highly important stuff is 95% covered. My sources are all OSINT & vague, so I hope people worry not
@Heroinexoxo
@Heroinexoxo 2 жыл бұрын
@@gerogemichaels7580 You should take your meds, m8.
@hexcss9153
@hexcss9153 2 жыл бұрын
@@Heroinexoxo Technically speaking, he's right, since Germany losing World War 2 led to the events that may or may not eventually lead to World War 3. This is like the case of people saying that the bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki led to the creation of Anime. Technically correct, the end of World War 2 in Japan also ended the heavily militarised culture that eventually led to anime creation.
@ramdallytimothee2242
@ramdallytimothee2242 2 жыл бұрын
I feel the same the accuracy that kings and generals have is really astonishing
@godchanelq5712
@godchanelq5712 2 жыл бұрын
@@val13384 Russia run from the north, because they couldn't supply their army in that region, Russia didn't control city's of Chernyhiv, Sumy, Ohtyrka, Nizin, Priluki, Mena e.t.c and it's important supply hubs. Russia suffer heavy losses and retreat
@markagelos1
@markagelos1 2 жыл бұрын
It is quite terrifying that we see war in progress videos among historic battles. We have no clue if the end is near but thanks for all the great work.
@ricardosmythe2548
@ricardosmythe2548 2 жыл бұрын
The war is ingoing but the initial stage of it has been and gone and was a spectacular failure for Russia
@jtgd
@jtgd 2 жыл бұрын
Was the first time I’ve seen pending battles on Wikipedia pages on a large scale war
@juliusgreen9179
@juliusgreen9179 2 жыл бұрын
Yes, when looking at historic wars the outcomes sometimes seem logical, but that is only in hindsight. When things are actually going on, it's much more opaque. Who knows what's going to happen
@nathanstrik5904
@nathanstrik5904 2 жыл бұрын
You guys honestly thought war was over?
@-ahmed121
@-ahmed121 2 жыл бұрын
I imagined them making this lol
@alexanderatur2984
@alexanderatur2984 2 жыл бұрын
This guy can narrate a video about the future and still make it sound historical
@kylielinae
@kylielinae 2 жыл бұрын
True that.
@carlosserrano1065
@carlosserrano1065 2 жыл бұрын
🤣🤣
@DoomshopMF312
@DoomshopMF312 2 жыл бұрын
You mean, the present? Aha.
@pinhead3427
@pinhead3427 2 жыл бұрын
He does, he has a youtube channel called OfficiallyDevin where he does narrative gameplay
@muhammadshemede5874
@muhammadshemede5874 2 жыл бұрын
Maybe he is😳😂
@discopanzer4169
@discopanzer4169 2 жыл бұрын
It feels so surreal... I have been watching historical videos on this channel for years. But now I'm watching a documentary about the full-scale war that is happening in my country, right outside the window of the house.
@ROI-ologist
@ROI-ologist 2 жыл бұрын
I want to help. I'm originally from Sweden, and now I live in the US. Sweden is joining Nato after 250 years of neutrality. I am a media communications specialist; perhaps we can collaborate on a social media campaign to recruit volunteers from the US and other NATO allies.
@nazardemchenko1148
@nazardemchenko1148 2 жыл бұрын
@@ROI-ologist that could be really nice, but for now we are in need for warm military clothes, and sleeping bags for already existing soldiers, not a new recruits)
@CalTM54
@CalTM54 2 жыл бұрын
@@nazardemchenko1148 Is there a particular place you'd recommend for donations?
@CyberDevilSec
@CyberDevilSec 2 жыл бұрын
I hope you're doing good man! Don't give up please!
@CyberDevilSec
@CyberDevilSec 2 жыл бұрын
You got my respect!
@rantymcrant-pants9536
@rantymcrant-pants9536 2 жыл бұрын
A little weird, seeing this presentation on something I was around for. Used to a comfortable gap of about half a century! :D
@elektrotehnik94
@elektrotehnik94 2 жыл бұрын
By & large, the video is accurate in all high-level stuff that matter long-term. Except army sizes are very wrong, of especially Russia -> waaaaaay smaller professional, attack-capable army; I’d say 300k-350k max, 200-250k deployed to Ukraine up until this day + 20-30k “Donbas” separatist army. Expect likely somewhat more tanks in the attack with Russia than the stated number, but likely way less planes operable & somewhat fewer helicopters as well. Expect ~50k troops already killed/ wounded/ captured & 30k deserted. Also somewhat misrepresented army of Ukraine (I’d say around 200k additional semi-trained mobilized reserve units actively fighting atm + substantially more being mobilized, equipped & trained, which is not true for Russia atm. Additionally, 1/4 to 1/3 fewer Ukrainian in-service tanks than stated here, by the start of the 2022 war; but now tank numbers are bolstered by NATO deliveries & captured Russian tanks. There is plenty missed in the video that is solidly provable by no-doubt video/photo evidence & a lot that is provable with context & “soft evidence” (testimonies, high-level Russian spy-informants), but for a 30-40 min condensed video, the highly important stuff is 95% covered. My sources are all OSINT & vague, so I hope people worry not
@theawesomeman9821
@theawesomeman9821 2 жыл бұрын
I wonder if the Russians are watching this and taking notes, like a football coach rewatching a taped match.
@_aweshit
@_aweshit 2 жыл бұрын
@@azoniarnl3362 yesterday was history. So, what are they doing wrong then?
@kombosto88
@kombosto88 2 жыл бұрын
Bro it’s happening now
@hule1152
@hule1152 2 жыл бұрын
Great summary. Yesterday we all probably watched your channel being convinced all the autrocities (word of the year😥)and disregard of human life is in the past and here we are. However the conquerors you covered (and I watched) were all well prepared. It is hard to digest to see someone starting an invasion with no knowledge about warfare, lacking intelligence and complete ignorance of the recent changes of the world they live in.
@stevenrodriguez1394
@stevenrodriguez1394 2 жыл бұрын
It’s both strange and fascinating to see King & Generals present a still ongoing conflict. I’m used to watching battles/wars 50-1500 years old. Very interesting.
@MichaelDavis-mk4me
@MichaelDavis-mk4me 2 жыл бұрын
It makes me feel like all that learning of old wars truly makes me understand the general strategies of war. Not saying it makes us strategists of course, just saying we can understand the various maneuvers and tactics on the battlefield.
@tonyduncan9852
@tonyduncan9852 2 жыл бұрын
Unique, in fact.
@abyssstrider2547
@abyssstrider2547 2 жыл бұрын
@Alexios I Komnenos Well no but coordiations and many strategies stay relatively the same.
@nickbrothers9155
@nickbrothers9155 2 жыл бұрын
it is kinda crazy
@Μικρασιάτης-ξ6ψ
@Μικρασιάτης-ξ6ψ 2 жыл бұрын
If the "sponsor" says to do it, why not?
@jakehoward2493
@jakehoward2493 2 жыл бұрын
war is a strange thing. as someone privileged in a country without war, this almost comes at me like a new episode of a great epic story where the writers are trying new, modern things, I love watching it.but it's actually happening right now and people are suffering
@lordloss3398
@lordloss3398 2 жыл бұрын
@@ChocorocKyes we should all not think about it until the war is over and then pretend to be outraged by the outcome. This is happening, you need to look at it and take a side. No closing your eyes pretending it ain't there
@MrThhg
@MrThhg 2 жыл бұрын
@@ChocorocK no.. you find out your enemies weaknesses, strengths, and habits, etc as early as possible...
@mpalfadel2008
@mpalfadel2008 2 жыл бұрын
@@ChocorocK when genocide is occurring daily, your either fighting it, or by absence of action taken against it, you support it There’s no middle ground during a genocide
@jonny-b4954
@jonny-b4954 2 жыл бұрын
True. Thing is, people are suffering everyday just about everywhere. Someone probably just died in your city from a tragedy. We don't really pay much mind to those things though. There's been wars and borderline genocide going on in Africa and heck, even China for years, no one really cares about that. It's just funny (well, not funny but) to me how skewed our perspective is as westerners. No one cares about the price we pay to mine cobalt and diamonds in Africa or the price South America pays to satiate our drug addiction as a country. Just saying, something to keep in mind when focusing on it all.
@UnNuclear
@UnNuclear 2 жыл бұрын
It's so surreal. Because of social media and having such unprecedented access to information than in the past, wars can seen in real-time. There hasn't really been a war like this in history.
@areagh13
@areagh13 2 жыл бұрын
"The fight is here. I need ammunition, not a ride." I will never forget those words
@dmitryyakimenko1779
@dmitryyakimenko1779 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks to these words, we stand. If our president fled, then most likely the management of the army would collapse. I'm from Poltava, I assumed it. Everyone in the city assumed that we never had a politician stand up for ordinary people, and then the president himself says I WILL FIGHT!!! I was impressed. But at the same time, in the early days, everyone in the city was in the mood to fight, all the inhabitants of the city helped build block posts / fortifications because they thought that they would come soon. Thanks to the efforts of our army, they could not reach my city. BUT he dug in and dug in so it seems to be the front line of the First World War. And there are hundreds of such lines in the depths of the territory of Ukraine, far from the front. I am a Freight Forwarder by profession and often travel across the territory of Poltava and neighboring regions and everywhere I see trenches and defense lines with barbed wire and pillboxes along the roads. As in the years of the First or Second World War. If the Russians want to take us, then they ran into the wrong people. And the first person whose merit in this is our president. Yes, we have many questions about his activities as the leader of the country, but in a difficult hour for us, he did not run away (as those who were before him did), but began to fight with us, for which we respect him. We have not yet had such a leader whose name would proudly stand next to Petro Sahaydachny, Ivan Bohun, Bogdan Khmelnitsky, Symon Petlyura, Petro Bolbochan (general of the UPR captured Crimea in 1918) ..... And now two more names Vladimir Zelensky and Valery Zaluzhny will appear in this historical list.
@dmitryyakimenko1779
@dmitryyakimenko1779 2 жыл бұрын
Many of us thought that the defense would collapse in a few days. (remembering 2014 and the then state of the army). But what I saw on February 25-26 in my city I have not seen in my entire life. The whole city (Poltava 250-300,000 people) seemed to rush to the defense. Half on the first day, sweeping everything off the supermarket shelves, ran away from the city. And the other hastily rushed to his defense, All who could carry sandbags to the checkpoints / fortifications, others prepared Molotov cocktails (a bottle of fire mixture). The morale of the inhabitants was such that "we will fight, but we will not give up." And for the first time I felt like among strangers, I never thought that my people were capable of such a thing. The Ukrainian people have been exposed for centuries!! And in my Poltava there are many Russian speakers and even Russians themselves. BUT there are also many migrants from the Donbas region who were the most evil. One of them, whom I met exactly on February 24, when sandbags were being loaded, answered me briefly. "I saw these motherfuckers (Russians) in 2014, it was enough up to my throat. Here in the new house (Poltava) I don't want to see them. So that they die creatures." This is all you need to know about Russians from the Russians themselves, if you can call the inhabitants of eastern Ukraine that way. Which the Russians came to "defend".
@GrimYak
@GrimYak 2 жыл бұрын
@@dmitryyakimenko1779 thank you for your comment. Everyone in your country has a role to play, Zelensky's role was to increase morale and lead people to fight and gather support from international leaders. He accomplished this role very well and is probably the reason why Ukraine is still standing as country. Not just defending but also winning in the battlefield. Goodluck to you and your country. SLAVA UKRAINE!
@dmitryyakimenko1779
@dmitryyakimenko1779 2 жыл бұрын
@@GrimYak Thank you, I don’t know where you are from, but without the help of the whole world we cannot survive. Our soldiers are brave and there are many of us but few weapons (tanks and armored vehicles) Thanks for the help and support and Heroes Slava (so they say in response to SLAVA UKRAINE "SLAVA UKRAINE - HEROES SLAVA")
@theguythatlikeslegos7708
@theguythatlikeslegos7708 2 жыл бұрын
@@dmitryyakimenko1779 I am half Ukrainian and half Israeli, love how Ukraine is fighting the good fight, and Israel just destroying a Iranian drone factory that was meant to supply those motherfuckers
@UricDawson
@UricDawson 2 жыл бұрын
Although the US pulled air support in Afghanistan, I would think that the fact that their president bolting from the country also played a part in the collapse of the afghan military. I would think that zelensky choosing to stay early on played a part in maintaining some level of confidence in the Ukrainian military.
@JORDIIMusic
@JORDIIMusic 2 жыл бұрын
100% it gave his men the morale to fight on. If your leader remains, it shows he has faith that you will succeed.
@blackhawk-qy2rh
@blackhawk-qy2rh 2 жыл бұрын
morale or lack thereof is the single biggest reason the afghan army folded. the officers were corrupt as hell. the soldier left to fend for themselves didn't help with the morale. all of this is business as usual when it was just an insurgency to bleed the government. but when it became a proper invasion to capture ground, the lack morale came into play.
@florinadrian5174
@florinadrian5174 2 жыл бұрын
The comparison has to be made but not limited to the actions of the Presidents. The Afghan president was a corrupt leader of a small oligarchy milking a divided country and fighting a powerful insurgency that the support of US Army barely kept at bay. When that support was removed, of course it all fell down like a card castle. While in Ukraine you have an entire people beautifully democratic and united in a war against an insidious aggressor since 2014. Zelenski's big brass balls sure did help but rather than tilt a precarious balance, the brazen Russian attack activated Ukraine resolve and defensive assets, like poking an already angry hornets nest. With a paper tiger.
@DanBergmanSE
@DanBergmanSE 2 жыл бұрын
That and that the Ukrainians are generally better educated/trained and most of them identify more with being Europeans. They embraced the support that they have received since 2014.. The Afgan's didn't want our help..
@ahmedshaharyarejaz9886
@ahmedshaharyarejaz9886 2 жыл бұрын
The US pulling air support is what destroyed Afghan morale as they lost a distinct and unassailable advantage in offense, surveillance and logistics over the Taliban. Suddenly Outposts that were guaranteed supply by Air platforms were reliant on questionable ground infrastructure through Taliban held territory.
@HistoryDose
@HistoryDose 2 жыл бұрын
I think we all feel a pervading sense that the events of today will echo loudly through the pages of future history books. Seeing the conflict broken down by Kings and Generals just cemented that. Great work.
@stephen9841
@stephen9841 2 жыл бұрын
And not a single one of us will be remembered.
@BigSmokeLV
@BigSmokeLV 2 жыл бұрын
Maybe in Ukraine lol but not anywhere else nobody throwing that in there text books like oh yeah our fellow neighbors fought off Russian invasions you sound stupid. America definitely not putting this in their history see where I’m going. Neither is South America or Africa. This will not echo like the other wars we have had. Nobody will look back on this and talk about besides Russia and Ukraine. I was never taught a single lick about another countries wars unless we were involved some how.
@jp-sn6si
@jp-sn6si 2 жыл бұрын
really? i'm in my late 30s and this is like the 10th major war in my lifetime. i'm only counting wars where white people are involved too, can't even count all the "tiny" ones in africa and such.
@corneliusquincydavenportic1913
@corneliusquincydavenportic1913 2 жыл бұрын
@@stephen9841 which I feel is fine. Idc if im on some future social studies history textbook anyway
@tangobayus
@tangobayus 2 жыл бұрын
What did we learn from Stalingrad? Urban warfare is extremely difficult and expensive in both lives and materiel. What did we learn from Leningrad? That cutting off lines of supply can do huge damage to a city.
@snickims9717
@snickims9717 2 жыл бұрын
But also that a city can still hold, leningrad did hold out and survive the siege.
@artemvalkyrie7451
@artemvalkyrie7451 2 жыл бұрын
@@snickims9717 But what price did leningrad pay for it? soviet union blocked their own civilians from evacuating from the city to have civilian meat shields and it resulted in quicker starvation and canibalism because majoity of the food was reserved for defending military.
@tangobayus
@tangobayus 2 жыл бұрын
@@snickims9717 How many people died?
@tangobayus
@tangobayus 2 жыл бұрын
@MelonMan True. But in this video they talk as if not taking the cities was a defeat. Threatening some cities may have been a strategic gambit.
@snickims9717
@snickims9717 2 жыл бұрын
@@artemvalkyrie7451 true, but the city still held, axis forces failed to secure the city, limiting their supply situation and when the war turned the city was a valuable hub for transport
@diegodiaz3341
@diegodiaz3341 2 жыл бұрын
My grandpa who was a kid during WW2 showed up and told me this format reminded him of his father listening to WW2 updates on the radio, and I'm lovin' it.
@BigMeechEJ25
@BigMeechEJ25 Жыл бұрын
My parents told me how their parents did the same during WW2 and I feel like we need to continue that and pay attention to this conflict.
@jimmyc974
@jimmyc974 Жыл бұрын
Did they also tell you the reason of ww2 to rid yhe world of nzi yet here we are the collective west not only supporting but funding and arming the very same. I take it you will all be wrapped up in Ukrainian flag on remembrance day eh Cretins!
@projectedone
@projectedone 11 ай бұрын
Most of what we are told here in the west is actually propaganda. Ghost of Kiev style
@shawnfinlay4952
@shawnfinlay4952 2 жыл бұрын
Finally, a video longer than two minutes in duration explaining, in an easy to understand and follow narrative, what has been happening over there. I thank everyone there at Kings and Generals for making this available. The most informative I've seen yet. 👍 👍
@permadsen1479
@permadsen1479 2 жыл бұрын
@@pinochetrevivalist7374 We'll find out how things really fares for the Russians in 5 days.
@BoroMirraCz
@BoroMirraCz 2 жыл бұрын
@@pinochetrevivalist7374 Just because you don't like the fact that Ruzzians failed to achieve almost anything and are no more gaining ground, it doesn't mean it's a lie. If Ruzzia is lucky, later in May they will still be dug up in current positions. If they are not lucky, it will be Ruzzians who start crumbling.
@immortal2u
@immortal2u 2 жыл бұрын
If you think this is good, check out Perun on KZbin.
@jorenvanderark3567
@jorenvanderark3567 2 жыл бұрын
@@permadsen1479 Moving the goalpost again? First it was "we will see after two weeks" the it was "the americans took 43 days to invade Iraq give the Russians at least that time" now it is "we will find out at the victory parade on the 9th of may" to when exactly are you going to move it when the Russians fail again?
@permadsen1479
@permadsen1479 2 жыл бұрын
​@@jorenvanderark3567 I really don't get why you think I'm moving some kind of goalpost with my statement. I just stated that the 9th will show us how things really fares for the Russians, nothing more nothing less. With the information currently available the war can go either way but as I said the 9th will tell us a lot more about how things really are. As I see it one of two things will happen. Either the Russians will declare a victory and try to retain the current gains, or they'll declare war on Ukraine trying to get enough manpower to go for a total conquest of eastern and southern Ukraine and essentially split Ukraine in two.
@salamyaya162
@salamyaya162 2 жыл бұрын
Since you cover Israel-Egypt and Syria wars, it would be interesting to cover other Middle East wars such the Iran-Iraq war, an 8 years-long war from 1980 to 1988.
@moisuomi
@moisuomi 2 жыл бұрын
He never covered the Finnish civil war in depth which I think would be interesting
@salamyaya162
@salamyaya162 2 жыл бұрын
@@moisuomi I agree.
@moisuomi
@moisuomi 2 жыл бұрын
“Ukraine Again 🤮” literally edit* (Sorry I misunderstood) your ignorant words.
@morisco56
@morisco56 2 жыл бұрын
Also the lebanon war including air combat between syria and israel.
@salamyaya162
@salamyaya162 2 жыл бұрын
@@moisuomi Lol, and why are you mad? I said this because the coverage of war in Ukraine became so annoying, I don't support Russia
@janorna9602
@janorna9602 2 жыл бұрын
Díky!
@vitaliisymon
@vitaliisymon 2 жыл бұрын
Tiny correction, just for the record. Okhtyrka was never encircled, mostly because of Vorskla river location, as a result, the highway to Poltava was always free to drive. I was visiting Okhtyrka on the March 6th
@toygarakbulut4615
@toygarakbulut4615 2 жыл бұрын
Covering "modern" history has never become so modern.
@elektrotehnik94
@elektrotehnik94 2 жыл бұрын
By & large, the video is accurate in all high-level stuff that matter long-term. Except army sizes are very wrong, of especially Russia -> waaaaaay smaller professional, attack-capable army; I’d say 300k-350k max, 200-250k deployed to Ukraine up until this day + 20-30k “Donbas” separatist army. Expect likely somewhat more tanks in the attack with Russia than the stated number, but likely way less planes operable & somewhat fewer helicopters as well. Expect ~50k troops already killed/ wounded/ captured & 30k deserted. Also somewhat misrepresented army of Ukraine (I’d say around 200k additional semi-trained mobilized reserve units actively fighting atm + substantially more being mobilized, equipped & trained, which is not true for Russia atm. Additionally, 1/4 to 1/3 fewer Ukrainian in-service tanks than stated here, by the start of the 2022 war; but now tank numbers are bolstered by NATO deliveries & captured Russian tanks. There is plenty missed in the video that is solidly provable by no-doubt video/photo evidence & a lot that is provable with context & “soft evidence” (testimonies, high-level Russian spy-informants), but for a 30-40 min condensed video, the highly important stuff is 95% covered. My sources are all OSINT & vague, so I hope people worry not
@MichaelDavis-mk4me
@MichaelDavis-mk4me 2 жыл бұрын
@@elektrotehnik94 Well, Ukraine numbers are also mostly conscripts/volunteers, though their moral is way higher. But yes, the professional Russian army has always been very small, using conscripts to make their numbers look good on paper and say they have a bigger army than the US. As we can see, huge armies of under-supplied and under-trained conscripts means nothing than a resource sink that consumes your already limited supply.
@will2brown50
@will2brown50 2 жыл бұрын
@@fahmifahmi2262 why would an Indonesian support Russia or even care what's going on
@NottoriousGG
@NottoriousGG 2 жыл бұрын
The fact that History can be documented at such a fast pace in such a well constructed video. Proves rather simply that current educational models are beyond outdated. A Magnanimous exposition of historical events.
@pedroivantaveraferreira3037
@pedroivantaveraferreira3037 2 жыл бұрын
What is the word for the studies of the science of teaching? Pedagogy, like the pedagogus in Ancient Rome. Our current model of teaching is a industrialization of a two thousand years old model. To make it worse the hegemonic model for the future is Piaget, an old model of 1930s that thinks kids mature like fruits, you just gotta wait them get less green so they can learn more. The best duo to combat this dumbness of an otherwise relatively better model is Vigotsky ... But Russian concepts will get ostracized by Western Cultures for a few decades now
@mrnogot4251
@mrnogot4251 2 жыл бұрын
Not quite. A lot of documents become declassified as time goes on and private information becomes available when people die. But I see your point.
@deeplorable8988
@deeplorable8988 2 жыл бұрын
This channel isn't history, it's fiction propaganda.
@pedroivantaveraferreira3037
@pedroivantaveraferreira3037 2 жыл бұрын
@@carta8399 good to know at least somewhere in the world a little bit of progress has been made. I'm Brazilian, here it is still same old traditional method of one teacher speaking and thirty kids ignoring. Few attempts on change are made and all considering just Piaget
@malterbeton1501
@malterbeton1501 2 жыл бұрын
@@pedroivantaveraferreira3037 I remember when the teacher asked me to improvise a speach in "rhetorics" class, in Serbia, and i spoke about exactly this problem. Then, while i was speaking, i realised that in that moment, i was the same as any teacher, talking to 30 kids who dont give a shit about the school system, or just didnt know how to be a part of the change. Not only that, but also that i was speaking to some old people who just want to get paid and go home because they are tired of us teenagers. I guess the change must come from the top, or not at all. Finland is a great example.
@tiortedrootsky
@tiortedrootsky 2 жыл бұрын
*Suggestion* Consider when moving the map up close, drawing a minimap of the whole country in a corner with borders of currently zoomed in portion of the map. So it would be easier to keep track of where it is.
@TheNihiliant
@TheNihiliant 2 жыл бұрын
real-time strategy 101 -)
@LucasCunhaRocha
@LucasCunhaRocha 2 жыл бұрын
I was about to suggest this as well, it get less confusing when the camera gets shifted around
@mrforce301
@mrforce301 2 жыл бұрын
That would such a rich addition!
@jasonlast7091
@jasonlast7091 2 жыл бұрын
Brilliant idea
@NLTops
@NLTops 2 жыл бұрын
Or just have an attention span of longer than 30 seconds? :P
@maykel94
@maykel94 2 жыл бұрын
I live in northern Poland. I remember first days of war. For the first week I couldn't concentrate and waited for any news. It was mostly mix of true news and Ukrainian propaganda. In all places you could hear about help that was organized by regular people. No one questioned that Ukrainians fought not only for their own freedom but also for ours. News of fierce resistance in all fronts not only by army but also civilians and rumors about thousands Ukrainian man working in Poland who immediately dropped their jobs to join the fight was absolutely jaw dropping and mobilizing. For me it changed the view of nation, from immigrants who simply work here and try do do their thing and have problems as everyone to a an oustanding example of resilence. It reminded me the old spirit of Cossacks against we fought and fought alongside with in the past. On the other hand in the every moment we expected that something may happen around Kaliningrad or Belarus forces will join the Russian attack and we could be in the face of choice or being forced to join the war. But it didn't happen and help for Ukraine started to flow. At the same time masks of Germany and France has dropped - we realized that nations that never truly felt the oppression of Russia will try to stop the war by any means to make business, even after Bucha and other places. This was the moment when we realized that war in Ukraine is a clash not only of interests but of civilisations. Immense support from US, and UK and other countries from region gives hope that Russia will grind herself down. We have over 400 years of enemnity. It strange to live in time of such a turmoil in close proximity of events. I have no doubts that today's events in Ukraine will change many things, not only in Europe but also other places. It already did.
@chabbab6698
@chabbab6698 2 жыл бұрын
"At the same time masks of Germany and France has dropped - we realized that nations that never truly felt the oppression of Russia" You know that half germany was occupied and under control of russian forces and government?
@МихаилТирон-ъ3д
@МихаилТирон-ъ3д 2 жыл бұрын
Nice words my Polish friend, you know, my nation will be appreciate to your for a long time, definitely.
@Caesar88888
@Caesar88888 2 жыл бұрын
hopefully france and germany will start helping Ukraine too.
@michimatsch5862
@michimatsch5862 2 жыл бұрын
Did you watch the video? It was clearly stated in the video that Germany started sending military aid as well. Of course they had almost nothing since they only have a shadow of a military but the video clearly stated this historical reversal.
@МихаилТирон-ъ3д
@МихаилТирон-ъ3д 2 жыл бұрын
@@michimatsch5862 they had almost nothing??? Germany??? Are u kidding?
@anonymousanonymous7250
@anonymousanonymous7250 2 жыл бұрын
Ooh, a war that is currently happening! Will you do a video on the 2020 Armenia-Azerbaijan War?
@thomaschinyere-ezeh6676
@thomaschinyere-ezeh6676 2 жыл бұрын
Yes would love to see this
@kwaesilaguer547
@kwaesilaguer547 2 жыл бұрын
This
@cultural-and-historical
@cultural-and-historical 2 жыл бұрын
Yes please do that
@BuurmanDirk69
@BuurmanDirk69 2 жыл бұрын
Meh
@orkhanate6286
@orkhanate6286 2 жыл бұрын
@@jayo3074 well 180 people liked this comment so you're alone
@napoleonibonaparte7198
@napoleonibonaparte7198 2 жыл бұрын
One of the earliest warning signs that the invasion would happen was the Kantemirovskaya Division (stationed in the Far East), redeployed to the border of Ukraine.
@niepowaznyczlowiek
@niepowaznyczlowiek 2 жыл бұрын
Or all of the troops gathering there a year earlier
@brainflash1
@brainflash1 2 жыл бұрын
One of the earliest warning signs was Russia's annexation of Crimea.
@supermario5849
@supermario5849 2 жыл бұрын
For me it was when smoke starting coming out of the Russian Embassy from burning documents before the building was evacuated
@badluck5647
@badluck5647 2 жыл бұрын
Except Putin has bluffed with build ups before, so it is really only obvious in hindsight.
@kipl8444
@kipl8444 2 жыл бұрын
I really thought Putin would not take the risk of invasion. When I heard about a cyberattack I feared it, when it happened I thought well. He has done it, thousands, hundreds of thousands, millions of lives destroyed, including Russians
@Т1000-м1и
@Т1000-м1и 2 жыл бұрын
They have a HUGE opportunity to make this an "as things happened" thing. This way, walking through the information and theories that came up in chronological order along with some careful neutral word use will make it timeless just like any other documentary on this channel. Edit: since this got seen, some clarification. What I meant by this comment, is that it would be possible to make it an "as things happened" documentary series. This way, a summary of recent events would still be timeless, rather then more like an update video. I honestly don't remember why did I phrase it the way I did. Some got confused because of it, and I'm sorry.
@aarizaaban6082
@aarizaaban6082 2 жыл бұрын
@UCMIl1td3mzadKQpjyfN9oCw yeah bunch of russians coping.
@AtticusAmericanus
@AtticusAmericanus 2 жыл бұрын
Yeah, no, fuck neutrality and fuck Russia.
@thecactusman17
@thecactusman17 2 жыл бұрын
The problem with this is that one side is giving accurate information which can be verified from independent OSINT sources (geolocated photos and videos of destroyed vehicles, occupied towns, active combat etc) while the other is reliant almost entirely on Russian state propaganda. In WW2 for example it took at least days and often weeks, months or years to verify or disprove individual incident reports. Many people to this day don't realize that the famous Okinawa flag photograph wasn't taken until the American forces had taken the hill for the 4th time, and then had to be staged multiple separate times for the cameraman once combat had finished. It took years for that to become public knowledge and it wasn't even a secret. Today that information would likely be known within 24 hours.
@Rune-Thorne
@Rune-Thorne 2 жыл бұрын
@@thecactusman17 as would all the lies and half-truths and conspiracy theories that could be thought up about it and spread.
@grapeshott
@grapeshott 2 жыл бұрын
Kings and General have done an excellent job in staying neutral in all their videos
@djenergy2418
@djenergy2418 2 жыл бұрын
I live in Kyiv, I'm 18. When I watched Putin's announcement about the beginning of the "special operation", I did not attach much importance to this, since until the last I hoped that the war was impossible. I had a bad sleep pattern that day and played PC until morning. Then I really thought about something and did not even suspect that in 5 minutes (5:05), they would start firing rockets. Then the explosions were very loud and I was very scared. I was shaking with fear and there was nothing I could do about it, but at first I thought that it was saboteurs working. But after the second explosion, I again ran out onto the balcony and heard a rocket flying right over my house. Then I was convinced that the war had begun. I was just trembling for another 3-4 hours, my stomach ached, and, talking with my sister who is in Odessa, I began to collect things in a "rescue backpack" just in case. To my surprise, my parents slept soundly until 7 am. Then my father woke up and I told him everything, and after 2 hours my mother too. In the best traditions of wartime, the mother was excited, and the father went to drink when he found out that he did not need to work today. Then I sat all day reading the news in Telegram and became a little calmer when I found out that this was happening in all of Ukraine, and not just in my city. I was able to go to bed only at 10 pm, when I realized that I had not slept for 32 hours. Almost all of my subsequent days until April, I just read the news. A week later, I became much calmer, because the Russians could not take Kyiv in 3 days, which they shouted so vehemently at their propaganda shows. Approximately two weeks later, fighting began in Brovory (20 kilometers from my house). Then I very well heard the work of the Ukrainian 203-mm artillery 2s7 Pion, which the mayor of Kyiv spoke about. Then my walls were even a little cowardly. These fights did not last long. By the way, I almost burst into tears when I found out that the largest aircraft in the world, Mriya, was burned as a result of a Russian air raid in Gostomel. Yes, for some it's just a pile of metal... A couple of days before the withdrawal of Russian troops, our military recaptured the city of Irpin and were horrified by how badly it was bombed, but a few days later the world saw Bucha... Then the entire Ukrainian people was just pissed off at what happened. I remember that my friends then said that they wanted to join the Troop to "tear the Russians apart." To be honest, I also had such a desire then, but then it passed. Ehh, you would know how glad I was when I woke up and found out that our helicopters attacked the Russian Belgorod ... Then such cries from the Russian media went. It is a pity that 65-70% of Russians are ordinary Zombie propaganda, and another 25% are either afraid or simply do not want to do anything useful in order to somehow help our military or slow down the advance of their troops. The Belarusians are doing a lot, because the majority there is against their current government. Thanks to google translator for doing a good job. Well, I will continue to sit in Kyiv with my close friends, because all the rest have left either for other countries or for other cities away from the war. Peace for everyone
@skinfan2806
@skinfan2806 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the first hand accounts. Stay safe. Long live Ukraine 🇺🇦 🙌
@D0RiMivs
@D0RiMivs 2 жыл бұрын
@Based Zoomer mr. Putin hello!
@senseofthecommonman
@senseofthecommonman 2 жыл бұрын
That was very interesting, thank you for sharing and I hope you can enjoy peace again, from the UK
@senseofthecommonman
@senseofthecommonman 2 жыл бұрын
That was very interesting, thank you for sharing and I hope you can enjoy peace again, from the UK
@saikikoronbot199
@saikikoronbot199 2 жыл бұрын
@Based Zoomer lol tell that to Putin, Mr. Z
@F4Wildcat
@F4Wildcat 2 жыл бұрын
To those who say "this war makes it obvious the tank is obsolete", By that logic the infantry soldier is obsolete because he can be killed by a bullet. The reason why ukraine has held on IS because of tanks. Tanks and infantry, working together, take and hold ground. For further information, watch "the chieftain- No the tank is not dead".
@pootmcgoot5458
@pootmcgoot5458 2 жыл бұрын
must be in terms of crude calculations of cost
@Т1000-м1и
@Т1000-м1и 2 жыл бұрын
Really speaking facts. We all have a weird understanding of even the vague capabilities and roles of various elements. Just like that kid coming out into the world after growing up on cartoon parodies of parodies and then went through the same day over and over again in school for 15 years. We just have no idea how little of an idea we have. That's really a sad thing.
@warotm.590
@warotm.590 2 жыл бұрын
The​ russian​ army​ is​ obsolete.​ Not​ tanks.
@cfl_finn4831
@cfl_finn4831 2 жыл бұрын
I think the reason I and many other people believed and some still believe that tanks are absolete is because countering them has become alot easier than in early WW2 There is not the shocking effect of an unknown or barely known new overpowering weapon! Germans were shocked by British tanks in WW1 and alot of countries were shocked when machineguns or horearchers were first invented and used in war! Tanks play their part but they are no longer the overpowering spearhead that they were under German army in WW2
@xentherida
@xentherida 2 жыл бұрын
@@pootmcgoot5458 A bullet is 50 cents. Raising a soldier is about 20 years and hundreds of thousands of dollars. Does this mean the infantry soldier is obsolete? It's not about how easily it can be destroyed, it's about what the equipment can do for you. For example, battleships are obsolete because carriers can deliver equivalent strikes over far, far greater ranges. Carriers are not obsolete because they cost a lot - rather, the battlefield has shaped around defending them, hence screens with CIWS, missile defence, etc. Also definitely can recommend the Chieftain's video, and the Perun video that it was made as a response to. Both are excellent watches.
@prime4851
@prime4851 2 жыл бұрын
There’s a reason why this channel is so enjoyable. He makes ongoing conflicts sound so historical…
@patrickmendoza3210
@patrickmendoza3210 2 жыл бұрын
Doesn't need to sound historical because it is historical. Pretty simple. But I get what you mean, it's the way he presents it and his voice.
@prime4851
@prime4851 2 жыл бұрын
@@patrickmendoza3210 that’s what I mean lol
@paulthenotsogreat8118
@paulthenotsogreat8118 2 жыл бұрын
Well... it is history in the making right now. Kids 30-50 years from now are gonna read references of this in their textbooks and are gonna see documentaries of this. Just like 9/11 was merely 2 decades ago but we see a lot of documentaries about it and how it affected the world
@Culverin8
@Culverin8 2 жыл бұрын
Minor correction: The April 1 Belgorod attack was the first *airstrike* on Russian territory but not the first Ukrainian attack on RF territory. On Feb. 25, the Millerovo Airbase was attacked with Tochka-U missiles and the Taganrog Airbase was hit a few day later.
@KingsandGenerals
@KingsandGenerals 2 жыл бұрын
We tried finding conclusive info on those, but it seems that most of the analysts are iffy
@Culverin8
@Culverin8 2 жыл бұрын
@@KingsandGenerals I mean, attacks did occur. They weren't claimed by Ukraine though. There's video evidence for both. I think a Su-30 was lost in Millerovo and a Ilyushin was lost/damaged in Taganrog.
@Culverin8
@Culverin8 2 жыл бұрын
In any case, I really enjoyed the video.
@GrimMeowning
@GrimMeowning 2 жыл бұрын
We still does not know if it was Ukrainian attack or own Russian guerilla fighting, like in Belarus and Kursk, where Russians and Belarusians are sabotaging railways and some fuel storages.
@Culverin8
@Culverin8 2 жыл бұрын
@@GrimMeowning There were pictures of Tochka-U remains in Millerovo, IIRC. Regardless, that early in the war, it was likely not any resistance style movement, of which there is no concrete evidence so far other than in Belarus where, as you mentioned, rail workers sabotaged rail lines in order to prevent/delay weapon/supply shipments.
@youtubeaccount5153
@youtubeaccount5153 2 жыл бұрын
Slavs Ukraina. Literally tears in my eyes at Ukraines valiant defense of my wife’s country. So proud of them.
@Jack_Redview
@Jack_Redview 2 жыл бұрын
I’ve watched so many different versions of this wars documentaries and I am honestly amazed at the great work this page has put into it. Honestly truly a masterpiece. Thank you so much for informing the uninformed in such a spectacular way
@Jack_Redview
@Jack_Redview 2 жыл бұрын
@@eviv8010 most of the things mentioned by him are easily found on the internet to fact check for your self, I did thus why I complimented this page If you have anything that maybe I’ve missed, I’d be happy to hear you out. But please, be specific and also give me a link supporting your facts as to why he is wrong Thanks!
@jout738
@jout738 2 жыл бұрын
@@Jack_Redview He’s maybe Russian troll and does not like how this video show that Russians have not been so succesful in their attack to Ukarine.
@Jack_Redview
@Jack_Redview 2 жыл бұрын
@@SSLaziale tell me you’re a Russian troll, with out telling me you’re a Russian troll lol 😆
@Jack_Redview
@Jack_Redview 2 жыл бұрын
@@SSLaziale sure, Feb 24 boarders returned to Ukrainians, and costs of rebuilding civilianan infrastructure. Cede the separists part from 2014 as well as agree to a independent investigation of war crimes in Bucha. In return Ukraine pays for the travel expenses for any Russian speaking Ukrainian that wishes to be a part of Russia or not live in Ukraine anymore as well as any land or flats they owned would be paid to them at Fair market price post war. Just some ideas
@danielvilliers612
@danielvilliers612 2 жыл бұрын
I find it just a little bit too soft on the Russian side. If you listen to him, you think Russia more or less chose to retreat by themselves from the northern front. While in reality it was a cruising defeat with thousands of deaths, enormous amount of loss of equipment and logistical nightmare. He just brushed on these, while the Ukrainian inflicted immense loss to the Russian due to their courage, tactics and help with arms shipment from abroad.
@morgwai667
@morgwai667 2 жыл бұрын
absolutely great! few things I'd add: - more details on naval war; how and when each side lost its naval ships - more details on when and what kind of weapons were supplied by the West
@Mandemon1990
@Mandemon1990 2 жыл бұрын
I mean, for the first phase Russia didn't lose any ships, and Ukrainian navy scuttled anything bigger than patrol boat. Not much to discuss about naval warfare when there was none.
@harrythej9683
@harrythej9683 2 жыл бұрын
Also, details on weapon systems are not relevant for this format. There are enough other videos about them.
@ronmaximilian6953
@ronmaximilian6953 2 жыл бұрын
While there is some open source information about equipment of certain units, there is quite a bit missing of the fog of war. Let's remember that this is a real-time conflict and operational security is a real thing.
@ag7898
@ag7898 2 жыл бұрын
If you are looking of explanations on weapon systems, I highly recommend checking out channels like Military Aviation Visualized, Military History Visualized (and his other channel "Not Visualized") as well as Animarchy. All three do a really good job of getting into the nitty-gritty of tactics and weapon systems used in this conflict. As well as ones in prior conflicts. Especially WW2.
@duanchamp1988
@duanchamp1988 2 жыл бұрын
@@harrythej9683 i think he meant time when systems arrive and did it play a part in time of dates repelling. thats just how I took it...I could be wrong.
@nurlanmustafayev1901
@nurlanmustafayev1901 2 жыл бұрын
Are you planning to cover the Armenia-Azerbaijan wars in 1991-1994 and 2020?
@mobiggcro
@mobiggcro 2 жыл бұрын
The main leaders of the channel are azebaijanies so no they won’t consider it I think
@elektrotehnik94
@elektrotehnik94 2 жыл бұрын
@@mobiggcro Really? Can somebody confirm?
@elektrotehnik94
@elektrotehnik94 2 жыл бұрын
@@laisphinto6372 Same empty not-logically-&-evidence- supported accusations, new day…
@mobiggcro
@mobiggcro 2 жыл бұрын
@@elektrotehnik94 just become a paid member and you can Get to know all the creators of this channel
@KingsandGenerals
@KingsandGenerals 2 жыл бұрын
Every video has a list of people who worked on it - who we are is not a secret. Right now, we are not planning to do anything on the war on Karabakh and hope that the peace will be achieved soon.
@SergeyGudz
@SergeyGudz 2 жыл бұрын
my parents and brother survived the occupation in Bucha. Father said that only on our street near the house there were about 30 dead bodies. Alot of houses were robbed.
@Concord003
@Concord003 2 жыл бұрын
Радий чути, що вони живі. Можу лише здогадлуватись як це. Тримайтеся. Слава Україні!
@SergeyGudz
@SergeyGudz 2 жыл бұрын
@@Concord003 Дякую, героям слава!
@voila5239
@voila5239 2 жыл бұрын
Probably your dad was drunk
@chr0nicstupidity
@chr0nicstupidity 2 жыл бұрын
@@voila5239 ??????????
@JustMe-gn6yf
@JustMe-gn6yf 2 жыл бұрын
Starting a land invasion late in the winter season in that region has proven time and again to be the biggest obstacle for a invading army and perfect for defensive army
@331coolguy
@331coolguy 2 жыл бұрын
Apparently the Russians didn't learn from the winter war
@connorgolden4
@connorgolden4 2 жыл бұрын
@@alexanderivkin7086 No really winter? There was freezing temperature and snow.
@JustMe-gn6yf
@JustMe-gn6yf 2 жыл бұрын
@@connorgolden4 as the Russian build up on the border began in early winter I was expecting a invasion to start any day and as the weeks went by I was beginning to think Putin was just posturing because his window for a successful invasion was closing as the fields thaw, I'm by no means a military history expert but I've studied history and I know what mud does to equipment
@jankonecny9903
@jankonecny9903 2 жыл бұрын
That was correct in the past, but now you need to have solid (frozen) land for the armored vehicles. The soil in the east of Ukraine is swampy and as you can see from the photos and videos from the conflict, there are many Russian vehicles founded stucked in the mud and than abandoned undamaged. This situation very often forced Russians to use the roads to move and than funnel them at one area which make them quite easy target for the Ukrainian artillery or drones.
@denisfutac9676
@denisfutac9676 2 жыл бұрын
This was a repeat of the third battle of Kharkov. And I can't believe the moronic Russian general staff actually repeated the exact same mistakes as in the battle from 80 years ago... history repeats itself , especially for ones that refuse to learn...
@connorgolden4
@connorgolden4 2 жыл бұрын
It’s crazy that for the first time this is something I witnessed. This isn’t you guys covering a battle that happened millennia ago during the days or Marcus Aurelius of Cyrus the great. Or during my parents or grandparents time like WW2 or The Suez crisis or the gulf war. Or even when I was a kid with Iraq and Afghanistan. I’ve watched this war on the daily since it started. Watching it on Reddit and telegram and Twitter. Watched many of these events unfold from the beginning. Crazy times.
@zjeee
@zjeee 2 жыл бұрын
@@Memoiana This is a lot bigger than any US war the last 20 years though, this has the potential to turn into WW3 or include nukes. The US wars have been against terrorist organizations and states in the middle east, against adversaries that pretty much 75% of the world agrees are baddies. Russia on the other hand has what, 5 or 6 countries voting with them in the UN? How many friends in the UN did the Taliban have?
@bordedup546
@bordedup546 2 жыл бұрын
@@zjeee im vehemently against russia's invasion but this is bs in my opinion. firstly, the us led war in iraq in 2003 was just as large of an operation as this one. secondly, 75% of the world definitely did not support the war. france, china and russia are perminent members of the un security council that disapproved and there were a few non-preminent members that also didn't back it. the UN never never sanctioned the invasion so it was actually a war crime to declare this war of aggression.
@connorgolden4
@connorgolden4 2 жыл бұрын
@@Memoiana Just another imperial war? Comparing this to our wars? This is nowhere near this. As this has massively increased tensions between world powers and threatens to go hot. The US hasn’t always been just in its wars. But none of them were anything like this. Such a blatant bs reason to cover for an actual imperialist invasion and land grab.
@connorgolden4
@connorgolden4 2 жыл бұрын
@@bordedup546 The war in Iraq was wrong but not nearly on the level of the Russian invasion. While we didn’t have 75% support for it we certainly had a fuck ton more supoer for it than Russia has. Nor was our war a war crime. The barbarity Russia has inflicted upon ukraine is far far worse than anything we ever did. Nor did we go there to rip some poor innocent nation to pieces and annex it. Iraq was not like ukraine. It wasn’t a just war but nothing like this one.
@TheHed94
@TheHed94 2 жыл бұрын
@@Memoiana This time not caused by US but just by a madman sitting in Kremlin.
@Conorp77
@Conorp77 2 жыл бұрын
Surreal to think we're watching K & G of an ongoing conflict.
@devilukedez1423
@devilukedez1423 2 жыл бұрын
@@sinoroman yeah lol. Now he seems bad to me now
@Conorp77
@Conorp77 2 жыл бұрын
@@sinoroman the politics of today are the history of tomorrow.
@FirstOfficerDelta
@FirstOfficerDelta 2 жыл бұрын
We have come a long way from the days of covering Roman history to the week by week coverage of the Pacific theatre to now the possible beginnings of their foray into the 21st Century...not to mention Wizards and Warriors.
@sam8404
@sam8404 Жыл бұрын
If we have documentaries this good, practically in real time, I can't imagine what kind of stuff we'll have after the war is over and more information starts getting out and people get to tell all their stories.
@-xirx-
@-xirx- Жыл бұрын
How many more massacres of Ukrainian citizens like Bucha are yet to be revealed to the World? 🇺🇦
@Darkseidsolosfiction
@Darkseidsolosfiction Жыл бұрын
I hope it will end soon and Russia will be destroyed by Ukraine
@frostydelusions3066
@frostydelusions3066 2 жыл бұрын
Belarusian Rail Workers sabotaged rails and significantly disrupted Russian supply lines north Kyiv, this is one of the reasons the Russians had to rely on big convoys.
@adinlucena7047
@adinlucena7047 2 жыл бұрын
I wish all this could be over and have no need for future episodes of this conflict.
@chedabu
@chedabu 2 жыл бұрын
@@personperson143 hey a Russian bot!
@wai828
@wai828 2 жыл бұрын
@@personperson143 Hypocrisy and coping at its finest.
@hafor2846
@hafor2846 2 жыл бұрын
There are still Moskals to kill, it shouldn't stop yet.
@wai828
@wai828 2 жыл бұрын
@@personperson143 Dude, your fascist Daddy Putin failed constantly since the start of the war and is full on damage control as he's losing thousands of men and gears. The Russian army is now a world wide joke and the Ukrainian army virtually has unlimited money from the west until the war is over. I'm not sure if you're a troll, a bot or a desperate tankie, but any way you're a clown. Good luck. You need it more than anyone else here. :)
@SWESB5
@SWESB5 Жыл бұрын
To any Ukrainians who are watching this video, I wish you luck to take back Crimea and any other occupied territories of Ukraine. Although, I am not Russian nor Ukrainian, I still understand and hope that you will win this war. Keep fighting and as Wison Churchill once said “We shall fight on the beaches, we shall fight on the landing zones, we shall fight them in fields and streets, we shall fight them in the hills; we shall never give up”
@NorthernNorthdude91749
@NorthernNorthdude91749 Жыл бұрын
@@uafc1 Wrong. Ethnicity means nothing. Crimea is Ukrainian land, and Crimeans are Ukrainian. Ukraine will reclaim Crimea.
@metal4lifewp
@metal4lifewp Жыл бұрын
​@stridingwombat9780 I really hope they do.
@crusadingtemplar
@crusadingtemplar Жыл бұрын
We shall never surrender.... You messed that bit up dude.
@jimmyc974
@jimmyc974 Жыл бұрын
​@@NorthernNorthdude91749So much for your "democracy " then eh bellend!
@darth_nihilus_
@darth_nihilus_ Жыл бұрын
@@jimmyc974 The vote 2015 was not even recognized by the Russian human rights council.
@bangscutter
@bangscutter 2 жыл бұрын
Wow, I did not expect this detailed video to come out so early after just 2 months of war! You know you're witnessing history unfolding when a history channel covers a current war.
@hb-ol9oc
@hb-ol9oc 2 жыл бұрын
And this is the way it will be seen in history, not the individual sacrifice of soldiers and small platoons that suffer the real fight. Who will remember the famous ukrainian pilot that died in the first week of war ?
@elektrotehnik94
@elektrotehnik94 2 жыл бұрын
By & large, the video is accurate in all high-level stuff that matter long-term. Except army sizes are very wrong, of especially Russia -> waaaaaay smaller professional, attack-capable army; I’d say 300k-350k max, 200-250k deployed to Ukraine up until this day + 20-30k “Donbas” separatist army. Expect likely somewhat more tanks in the attack with Russia than the stated number, but likely way less planes operable & somewhat fewer helicopters as well. Expect ~50k troops already killed/ wounded/ captured & 30k deserted. Also somewhat misrepresented army of Ukraine (I’d say around 200k additional semi-trained mobilized reserve units actively fighting atm + substantially more being mobilized, equipped & trained, which is not true for Russia atm. Additionally, 1/4 to 1/3 fewer Ukrainian in-service tanks than stated here, by the start of the 2022 war; but now tank numbers are bolstered by NATO deliveries & captured Russian tanks. There is plenty missed in the video that is solidly provable by no-doubt video/photo evidence & a lot that is provable with context & “soft evidence” (testimonies, high-level Russian spy-informants), but for a 30-40 min condensed video, the highly important stuff is 95% covered. My sources are all OSINT & vague, so I hope people worry not
@tommasopisapia7464
@tommasopisapia7464 2 жыл бұрын
@@hb-ol9oc sadly no one, but it is the way of battles and wars
@Juhrmee
@Juhrmee 2 жыл бұрын
The biggest shift that I've seen in warfare is that occupational wars against hostile populations don't work anymore. Insurgency tactics and weapons have progressed beyond conventional weapons.
@thatindiandude4602
@thatindiandude4602 2 жыл бұрын
Especially with the advent of drones.
@Edax_Royeaux
@Edax_Royeaux 2 жыл бұрын
It kind of worked for Russia in the past. They just completely annihilated the city of Grozny in the First Chechen War. The Russian tactic of promising safe passage to their enemies, then betraying their word and throwing all their firepower at the safe passage effectively decapitated the leadership of the militants in the Second Chechen War, followed by the ruthless demolition of the city after the Russians captured city, prompting the the United Nations in 2003 to call Grozny the most destroyed city on earth. But such ruthless tactics on NATO's borders are only going to galvanize NATO, especially since Russia seems hell bent on putting their borders alongside NATO.
@napoleon7107
@napoleon7107 2 жыл бұрын
@@Edax_Royeaux sounds like Mongol tactics
@Edax_Royeaux
@Edax_Royeaux 2 жыл бұрын
@@Aleksa208 You don't know that yet. They waited until they captured Grozny before they began the slow demolition process of all it's buildings. In the meantime, they need the cities standing as supply hubs for their offensives.
@Markus451
@Markus451 2 жыл бұрын
If only that were true. But if the invaders are prepared to ruthlessly butcher all who resist, put everyone through ruthless "filtration camps" where they're tortured & brutalized (and those who don't crack are quietly murdered), then occupational war works fine. Look at Grozny now.. where is a Chechen puppet doing Putler's bidding.
@BlueSideUp77
@BlueSideUp77 2 жыл бұрын
It occurs to me watching today, that this offensive may prove that Napolean's lighting tactics may no longer serve up victory, thanks to today's military advancements.
@MuhammadRafy
@MuhammadRafy 2 жыл бұрын
it's just poor supply lines and coordination on russia's part
@onylra6265
@onylra6265 2 жыл бұрын
Weird you're comparing one of history's greatest military political geniuses to this inept mob - Russia's fighting like it's 1914 and we're watching the results.
@MrThhg
@MrThhg 2 жыл бұрын
@@MuhammadRafy making their own internet broadcasting thingy. BIG BIO North Korea 2.0
@simonedagostino9358
@simonedagostino9358 2 жыл бұрын
@@MuhammadRafy Exactly. It's just a poor execution
@Kopyrda
@Kopyrda 2 жыл бұрын
If Putler didn't screw around with this "special military operation" bullshit and didn't attack second biggest country in the Europe with an army actually SMALLER then defending force, he may have already won by that point. His sheer fucking hubris and ignorance were his biggest problems.
@deamonomic
@deamonomic 2 жыл бұрын
Can't wait to see the ukrainian counter offensive video from you guys! We all know it's coming!
@tikarimiekka8048
@tikarimiekka8048 2 жыл бұрын
First is coming the video of August... It should be called "tha calm before the Storm" or something on that line...
@Vin.1904
@Vin.1904 2 жыл бұрын
Yup
@jimmyc974
@jimmyc974 Жыл бұрын
HOWS THAT GREAT COUNTER OFFENSIVE GOING KIDS . 4 VILLAGES TAKEN ONLY 4 REGIONS TO GO EH!
@DmytroZuiev
@DmytroZuiev 2 жыл бұрын
3:26 I think would be better to specify that the so-call “Donetsk and Luhansk people’s republics” were created by russia at the beginning of the war in 2014. Otherwise, someone may think, that they are real republics.
@DmytroZuiev
@DmytroZuiev Жыл бұрын
@@johnmaccley424 that’s the problem because they’re not. At maximum, it’s a failed state created and supported by russia. The thing is the pseudo-referendum was falsified and most of the people who live or used to live there didn’t choose anything and don’t want to live separately. So-call “militia D/LPR” was led by russian officers, included russian soldiers, and was equipped by russia. It’s unfair to call this hybrid occupation like a “republic”. russian propaganda put in a lot of effort to create a picture and reassure the world that they are a republic, but if you’re a witness of the process it’s clear to you that it’s not “people’s” and not a “republic”.
@JFHeroux
@JFHeroux 2 жыл бұрын
6:40 I think it's also essential to note one other very important Ukrainian weapon: It's military's transformation into a modern army, with a modern doctrine matching NATO's starting in 2014. We know that NATO has perfected their defensive tactics. We saw at the start of the war how much the Russians were caught off guard by the ability of the Ukrainians to anticipate their movements, and how prepared they were to mount an extremely good defensive operation on all fronts. We sent a lot of our specialists in Ukraine in the 8 years prior to the start of the invasion, and the Ukrainians took every advantage of that help. I would suggest that the Ukrainian military went from a poor-man's Red Army into an extremely up-to-date fighting force inside of only 8 years. They overtook the Russians and left them in the dust. It doesn't appear like Putin was either aware or wanted to accept that fact. And the Russians paid dearly for that mistake...
@JFHeroux
@JFHeroux 2 жыл бұрын
@otto Lincoln I don't think that's how you should interpret how things went so far. Ukraine lost WAY LESS manpower in the first phase of the war than anyone anticipated. Now, against a more coordinated and concentrated push, they are loosing what would be expected (1 man for every 3 Russians so far). But yes, we need to do more. We need to actually tell Putin we are assembling an international coalition force and on a set date we're going into Ukraine. He can either fall back into Russia or get his troops blown-out. That's what we need to do. This war could be over inside of a week if all went in. Between all of the allied countries, we have about a 20:1 advantage over Russia. We would gain air superiority in less than 24 hours. Then Russian troops would ne pounded into the ground from the air in a manner of days. I predict about a week before they are out of the country... or what's left of them.
@JFHeroux
@JFHeroux 2 жыл бұрын
@@ak47zaq I can't care enough about Putin. He is visibly dying a slow death anyway. I just hope it's also a very painful one. It won't make up for all the suffering he has caused in the world, but at least if he can know how it feels to have no hope of living... like those people he's bombing in Ukraine right now and did in Aleppo and many other places.
@icetea351
@icetea351 2 жыл бұрын
@@JFHeroux 1 : 3 I hope it's joke. Why no 1 : 10?)
@JFHeroux
@JFHeroux 2 жыл бұрын
@@icetea351 Well, the Ukrainians do not publish verifiable figures, so it's best to be cautious with that. But 3:1 is an extremely favorable ratio in any case. I'd say this will go up to 5:1 in the coming 4 weeks since the best weapons have yet to reach the frontlines. It's all about firepower and range at this point of the war.
@p_serdiuk
@p_serdiuk 2 жыл бұрын
@@icetea351 It varies. Modern doctrines say it's foolish to attack enemy defenses with a fewer than 1:3 advantage because losses will be that high, and enemy cities need a 1:5 to 1:10 advantage (see Kyiv). A lot of the Donbass region was heavily fortified over the 8 years of war and breaking through it will take closer to 1:5 casualties. On the other hand, in the open fields with both sides manoeuvring and counter-attacking like it is in the South it's 1:1. Also take into account the fact that Russian logistics and casualty care are subpar, so more of their wounded are dying. Ukrainian IFAKs are substantially better than Russian med kits. So across the conflict it's on average 1:3 for Ukraine.
@schumzy
@schumzy 2 жыл бұрын
This war has so many firsts, most recorded war in history and for many reasons the most important war since WW2. I think we all know the importance this war has on war science, geo politics, social impact and everything. It's so strange that we are living through such a momentus time, and what's really strange is for the first time ever (another first) we are aware of the magnitude of the time and events. Who know maybe in 50 years time, when all goes "right" everyone will look back at this time and be "like, wow, crazy times"
@GandalftheWise
@GandalftheWise 2 жыл бұрын
Interesting to see this. I see now that all the news I've been watching has been nothing but propaganda. They were making it seem like ukrainians won every single battle
@Eastsidet03
@Eastsidet03 2 жыл бұрын
Uhhh the most important war I don’t think so, there’s been a lot of wars ongoing throughout the age of technology. The reason why you don’t see what’s going on in other parts of the world is because the media isn’t covering it, but in Europe yes this is the biggest war since World War 2, but this isn’t the most “important war” that happened since World War 2 worldwide.
@BenState
@BenState 2 жыл бұрын
@@Eastsidet03 stupid comment.
@zannrebel1217
@zannrebel1217 2 жыл бұрын
@@duartepereira9400 yes
@FNA27601
@FNA27601 2 жыл бұрын
It’s definitely not the most important war since ww2 I’d argue that’s Iraq since it completely destabilized the Middle East creating a power vacuum and led to the proxy wars between Iran and KSA which is pretty much the modern Cold War or even the Suez Canal crosier which signaled the end of France and the UK as superpowers and colonialism. This is the most important war since WW2 in Europe sure but it’s not as significant as you make it out to be.
@TheRichieC78
@TheRichieC78 2 жыл бұрын
Looks like the BBC finally have some competition for high quality programming. This is brilliant.
@masterimbecile
@masterimbecile 2 жыл бұрын
The difference between reporters and historians is just time.
@madoldmanyelling6420
@madoldmanyelling6420 2 жыл бұрын
Reporters cut pieces of jigsaws, then historians put the jigsaw toghether.
@Anonymous-qw
@Anonymous-qw 2 жыл бұрын
Reporters write the first draft of history was the old saying.
@napoleonibonaparte7198
@napoleonibonaparte7198 2 жыл бұрын
I was extremely concerned for a month that it may happen. I was particularly concerned with the 23rd of February because that was when the Maidan ended. Fell asleep, then the invasion happened…
@niepowaznyczlowiek
@niepowaznyczlowiek 2 жыл бұрын
For the first month I thought Ukraine would lose, then for the second month I thought Russia would take eastern Ukraine, now I think they will lose the war completely
@RCorvinus
@RCorvinus 2 жыл бұрын
Once the military exercises in Belarus ended but the troops stayed put, I knew shit was going down.
@pesking9975
@pesking9975 2 жыл бұрын
@@niepowaznyczlowiek do you think Russia using full power Ukraine will never beat Russia
@MrThhg
@MrThhg 2 жыл бұрын
@@pesking9975well they cant use the full force of Russia anyways so yeah I do. be like Afghanistan all over again
@owinjohnlenovo3647
@owinjohnlenovo3647 2 жыл бұрын
Russia beaten ukraine why did they retreat eastward Full force how bout other borders and now mostly several power plants and depots caught fire u think its coincedence,there r silent protest in russia how can th3y mobilze all out war in that situation,can they arm there soldiers in days it takes months to years to mobilize an army
@PasserMontanus
@PasserMontanus 2 жыл бұрын
"iT wAs jUsT a FeiNt, bro! two More WeEkS!"
@cavramau
@cavramau 2 жыл бұрын
Paranoid much?
@PyroFTB
@PyroFTB 2 жыл бұрын
"Day 64 of our 3 day operation in Ukraine"
@5ithofnov159
@5ithofnov159 Жыл бұрын
Dam this aged badly
@stevenchoza6391
@stevenchoza6391 Жыл бұрын
@@5ithofnov159 Pretty sure this was a joke.
@insightful3452-mq7bl
@insightful3452-mq7bl Жыл бұрын
LoL.
@RyomaG
@RyomaG 2 жыл бұрын
The feeling of watching a war documentary of a war that is still raing on right now on a history channel is unreal.
@spjxx913
@spjxx913 2 жыл бұрын
This is the only guy that can make you look at a country's map for over half an hour and still enjoy it.
@Markfr0mCanada
@Markfr0mCanada 2 жыл бұрын
I'm impressed by how much information you managed to pack into half an hour, very well done. The only criticism I can come up with is that during the scenes when there were cuts around the county some might lose track of where they are looking at. I've been following this conflict, so I had no trouble, but others might. I would suggest in such scenes to use something like a mini-map to help the audience maintain their sense of location.
@Temilian
@Temilian 2 жыл бұрын
Finally a modern warfare documentary after watching the past now the present have arrive
@jout738
@jout738 2 жыл бұрын
Yes Kings and Generals is always excelent in showing how the war went and now I see clearly how far Russia in their war progress have went and lets see in the future how much further will the Russian army still go. Would be epic to see some battel shown from the battelfield by Kings and Generals in Russian Ukraine war. Would be a lot more diffrent, than the typical one with modern war enquiment.
@Debre.
@Debre. 2 жыл бұрын
@@jout738 It’s tough to do that now due to the fog of war, but I bet we’ll have some crazy battle animations once this is all over.
@elektrotehnik94
@elektrotehnik94 2 жыл бұрын
By & large, the video is accurate in all high-level stuff that matter long-term. Except army sizes are very wrong, of especially Russia -> waaaaaay smaller professional, attack-capable army; I’d say 300k-350k max, 200-250k deployed to Ukraine up until this day + 20-30k “Donbas” separatist army. Expect likely somewhat more tanks in the attack with Russia than the stated number, but likely way less planes operable & somewhat fewer helicopters as well. Expect ~50k troops already killed/ wounded/ captured & 30k deserted. Also somewhat misrepresented army of Ukraine (I’d say around 200k additional semi-trained mobilized reserve units actively fighting atm + substantially more being mobilized, equipped & trained, which is not true for Russia atm. Additionally, 1/4 to 1/3 fewer Ukrainian in-service tanks than stated here, by the start of the 2022 war; but now tank numbers are bolstered by NATO deliveries & captured Russian tanks. There is plenty missed in the video that is solidly provable by no-doubt video/photo evidence & a lot that is provable with context & “soft evidence” (testimonies, high-level Russian spy-informants), but for a 30-40 min condensed video, the highly important stuff is 95% covered. My sources are all OSINT & vague, so I hope people worry not
@PJBenderX
@PJBenderX Жыл бұрын
Thanks for good work on such an important topic! From Czech Republic.
@MrEJect007
@MrEJect007 2 жыл бұрын
Only in my hometown Sumy (The Easter offensive, right above Kharkiv), during 3 days, at the beggining of war, 7000 people volunteered and took guns to withstand russian nazis, plus 600 of the territorial defense battalion,... only in ONE 270k city. When I took my riffle I tought that we could win only couple weeks, but seeing everyday how much people are by my side and how others helps us with clothing, molotov cocktails and some millitary equipment, even hunting guns...your motivation driven up to clouds. We were surronded but fought and never gave up, making impudent sorties in nights mining outskirts and striking russian soldiers. City left intact, except bombings of couse. There are many stories like mine all over Ukraine, my friends in Kyiv, Chernihiv, Kharkiv, Kherson, took guns without hesitation and did their best. We needed 700k army, but before mobilization there were already half a million volunteers. This says it all.
@paincast2347
@paincast2347 2 жыл бұрын
@@invalid671games Ждем в Чернигове со второй волной "частичной" мобилизации в рашке, только об трупы не споткнись, а то 400 тысяч хороших русских до тебя почему-то не справилось
@paincast2347
@paincast2347 2 жыл бұрын
@@invalid671games Единственный фантазёр тут это ты, пизд*й-ка в свой фентезийный мир с бункерным дедом и орками, а на деле всё было так, как он и говорит, получал оружие 25 февраля в Чернигове, вокруг меня были тысячи таких же добровольцев, кто-то делал коктейли молотова в промышленных масштабах, чтоб жечь русню, кто-то строил блокпосты не считая топлива на своих грузовых машинах, люди, которые уезжали, оставляли машины и квартиры тем, кто оставался защищать город. Ты можешь вы*бываться сколько угодно в комментариях под видео, но я искренне надеюсь, что война тронет и твою семью и вы*бываться уже будет твоя наташка на гробовые, которые получит с тебя, не долго правда, до полного пизд*ца экономики рашки
@מיכאלסרברניקוב
@מיכאלסרברניקוב 2 жыл бұрын
Слава Украине! Смерть российским нацистам!
@VDneprovskiy
@VDneprovskiy Жыл бұрын
@@invalid671games серьезно? Я бы улыбнулся с такой уверенности в начале войны, но сейчас, потеряв всю профессиональную армию и современную технику, уверенно так рассказывать свои бредни? Что касается ядерного оружия, оно есть не только у вас. Вы ещё не видели войны в России, поэтому так любите бахвалиться, но если примените, то она придет и в ваш дом. Нам ваши угрозы не страшны. Мы каждый день под смертью ходим. И если честно, не вижу особой разницы между смертью от ядерной бомбы и смертью от артиллерийского снаряда. Так что, могу предложить не бахвалиться впустую, а идти и приближать свою победу, если есть чем, раз уж ты такой агрессивный патриот. Мы уже насмотрелись на таких хвастунов. "Киев за три дня" такие как ты писали, может лично ты и писал. Да что-то не складываются ваши розовые мечты. Разве что в ваших имперских варварских снах. А может дело в другом? Ты так боишься, что после поражения тебя будут судить, что уже сейчас пытаешься притвориться психом и пишешь всякую пургу ради этого?
@paincast2347
@paincast2347 Жыл бұрын
@@invalid671games Кстати, тебе какой танк больше нравится, Леопард или Челленджер? У нас скоро будут и те и те, чтоб давить бравых русских воинов, которые защищают отече… ой, они же в чужой стране воюют, точно, прости
@siprus
@siprus 2 жыл бұрын
Important thing to remember about Russian military equipment is that they keep EVERYTHING. Every possible military equpiment that has been built and not destroyed is stored in oil until the day it might be needed. This means that when looking at Russian military equipiment it's greatly inflated by greatly outdated equipment that serves no function in modern battle field.
@MostIntelligentMan
@MostIntelligentMan 2 жыл бұрын
unfortunetly that also means that they have pretty much infinite ammunitions
@proxyhohol
@proxyhohol 2 жыл бұрын
@@MostIntelligentMan Sure, but the maintenance of the ammunition is even worse than the mechanised, so it’s not that great. Also we need to count in bad logistics and good Ukrainian counterattacks on supply lines, which makes it difficult to ship it quickly. Numerous reports stated that dpr/lnr are sometimes suffering from ammunition attrition, which is insane to even think about
@plumage.mp4
@plumage.mp4 2 жыл бұрын
@@archer125 This could be relevant in a defensive war where the russian military could use guerilla tactics and count on some local civilian support. Not in a offensive war, were you're more likely to lose more troops than the defensive part, especially without the means that the US military has (fuckloads of drones, and a will to bomb a territory back into feudal ages, i.e. what they did in Irak)
@スフィアマスター
@スフィアマスター 2 жыл бұрын
@@plumage.mp4 Russian surely don’t lack the will what they lack is ironically Number. They barely have enough flight hour let along large scale air campaign coordination so they can’t really deploy all their asset in coordination effectively.
@zjeee
@zjeee 2 жыл бұрын
@@mimmim13aiv The Russian army is a domestic peacekeeping force they lack proper experience and know-how to pull of basic manoeuvres and set pieces like the Americans. It matters little if you have 200k soldiers if you only send them in 1000 at a time into a meatgrinder.
@yankee3875
@yankee3875 2 жыл бұрын
Wasn’t expecting such detailed and well made videos about this war for at least a few years. Impartial, objective and informative, great work as usual
@BelloBudo007
@BelloBudo007 2 жыл бұрын
Great job in presenting this. Thank you. I imagine the defence of Ukraine will be studied at military colleges all over the world.
@BigSmokeLV
@BigSmokeLV 2 жыл бұрын
Not really Russia has fooled all of you into thinking they’re a superpower and should instantly crush anyone lol that’s just not the case no war has ever been that easy. Easy victories at times but no easy war is here today gone tomorrow shit takes time.
@HH-pm6mj
@HH-pm6mj 2 жыл бұрын
I must say… The Ukrainian 1st Tank Brigade might have really saved Kiyv when they held Chernihiv.
@MichaelDavis-mk4me
@MichaelDavis-mk4me 2 жыл бұрын
I honestly think Russia could simply never take Kyiv, even if they walked in, it would have become a Stalingrad battle.
@JRGProjects
@JRGProjects 2 жыл бұрын
If the Ukrainian civilians didn't step up like they did and their President back them in return. This war would have been over in March. The Ukrainian fighting spirit is something I don't think modern Americans would be prepared for. (We should be) If Putin gets what he wants in Eastern Europe, he''ll be coming after the West next.
@bratac7673
@bratac7673 2 жыл бұрын
@@MichaelDavis-mk4me yes but it would be much more damaged and a lot more people would die or be forced to flee
@alejandrolacomba8833
@alejandrolacomba8833 2 жыл бұрын
@@MichaelDavis-mk4me Totally. It's like Mariupol Azovstal, metro stations are the deepest in the world, and Ukrainians prepared unlimited means of defense.
@parkyamato9450
@parkyamato9450 2 жыл бұрын
@@bratac7673 that's why he said.. Like a Stalingrad battle?? Lol.
@raymondhernandez1486
@raymondhernandez1486 2 жыл бұрын
Oh boy this comment section is going to be golden
@ALaughingWolf2188
@ALaughingWolf2188 2 жыл бұрын
_“Sure it matters who has the biggest stick, but it matters a helluva lot more who’s swinging it.”_ -General Shepherd, Modern Warfare 2. This quote just sums up the Russo-Ukrainian War perfectly.
@victorcode2075
@victorcode2075 2 жыл бұрын
Isn't it sad that a small KZbin team has provided us with more info than all the mainstream media combined. Kudos to you K&G.
@intboom
@intboom 2 жыл бұрын
This feels a bit risky, given that info is incredibly patchy
@davishall2003
@davishall2003 2 жыл бұрын
@@kaznika6584 both sides will understate their losses and overstate the losses of the enemy. This has been the case with war since war existed.
@hirdbarding3399
@hirdbarding3399 2 жыл бұрын
@@kaznika6584 thats why K & G gave a source. If you do not trust it, well, it is just opinion of that source, not an undisputable info.
@intboom
@intboom 2 жыл бұрын
@@hirdbarding3399 that's fair but I don't think I can reasonably trust any sources on an ongoing hot war that hasn't even been resolved yet. I see that they're trying to snapshot how the wat looks to the west at this particular moment as a historical record though.
@Russ2049
@Russ2049 2 жыл бұрын
It's so strange to see how quickly people's tragedy and suffering become yet another, ordinary page in human history. A page that other people will see, but hardly learn from it.
@giacomomassaccesi5856
@giacomomassaccesi5856 2 жыл бұрын
indeed
@what-oy8il
@what-oy8il 2 жыл бұрын
Its human nature. Its eternal.
@BoroMirraCz
@BoroMirraCz 2 жыл бұрын
War never changes. It is especially true for nations like Ruzzia who cannot accept the ever shifting nature of geopolitics and cling to long-gone glories of the past.
@PapaOscarNovember
@PapaOscarNovember 2 жыл бұрын
When Russian army started building up on the border, and then Putin expressed his anger at Ukrainian posturing and questioned Ukrainian legitimacy, I thought ‘this is what Hearts of Iron style war goal justification looks like in real life.’
@SaintKines
@SaintKines 2 жыл бұрын
Which is why in the US the entire right wing and even some of the left wing MSM saying Biden was blowing things out of proportion was embarrassing. You could literally see what was coming, it was obvious. I remember when Biden said that US intelligence predicted an invasion by the coming Friday and they all mocked him when it didn't come. Until a few days later.
@ivanpilman551
@ivanpilman551 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for this really good video with mapping visualisation Unfortunately for me as a ukrainian civilian, we know that armed territorial defence suffered big amount of losses due to lack of trainings and practice
@Romkosss
@Romkosss 2 жыл бұрын
Glory to all the fallen soldiers of Territorial Defence in Sumy, Kharkiv, Chernihiv, Okhtyrka etc !
@carlabroderick5508
@carlabroderick5508 2 жыл бұрын
This is incredible. Modern gaming results in this map-animated illustration of a modern conflict before its completion. I’m a 68 yo woman, totally amazed.
@javelinanti-airandanti-tan6276
@javelinanti-airandanti-tan6276 2 жыл бұрын
Funny how being in a tank is not where you want to be in modern warfare.
@legiran9564
@legiran9564 2 жыл бұрын
In ANY era warfare. Being in a tank during WW1 was far worse since you can punch a hole in one with a high powered rifle. Plus those tanks had NO suspension, NO proper ventilation and the engine was inside the same compartment with the crew. During WW2 the Americans and Soviets had the fear to face off against the German Tiger and Tiger 2 tanks. On the other side the Germans inside their Tiger and Tiger 2 tanks feared being overwhelmed by a sea of T34s and Shermans.
@mirrorslash028
@mirrorslash028 2 жыл бұрын
Being in a tank was never a pleasant experience
@sponandspon92
@sponandspon92 2 жыл бұрын
@@legiran9564 That is, the Shermans rarely even encountered Tigers if I recall.
@legiran9564
@legiran9564 2 жыл бұрын
@@mr.patriotjol Nope. Manning a weather station or better yet Army Intelligence and Codebreaking.
@mitchell1489
@mitchell1489 2 жыл бұрын
​@@mr.patriotjol *looks at the "Moskow" Cruiser* Maybe it isn`t
@mattslatt3
@mattslatt3 2 жыл бұрын
Probably a stupid question but where do we get all this info on these battles?
@UnironicallyMonarchistic
@UnironicallyMonarchistic 2 жыл бұрын
Us intel
@cavramau
@cavramau 2 жыл бұрын
RT. Ajazera.
@mattslatt3
@mattslatt3 2 жыл бұрын
@@UnironicallyMonarchistic From where though? Is there just a website with us intel on the war?
@etry5272
@etry5272 2 жыл бұрын
@@cavramau these sources are full of bullshit
@TomSmith-li5se
@TomSmith-li5se 2 жыл бұрын
The based department.
@dallasc.5860
@dallasc.5860 2 жыл бұрын
Clearly remember every hour of that days.I was wake up early in morning and first message in my phone it was "its a war bro it begins".And i say to my self "i dont know what to do but i dont whana run like a rat".When i phone all my friends i hear the same eweryvhere.Then I went to the point of my territorial defence and i saw there so many mans more then i even expect and the guard told me "there were no more vacancies,we have more peoples that we need".I spend there like 30 minutes signing up as a volunteer and peoples come every time more and more. Its was incredible feelings,peoples who even without skill and experience in war (like me) come to fight for freedom and dont fkcing flee as thet bastards expect.
@Arvorbxl
@Arvorbxl 2 жыл бұрын
The part about the Belgorod attack being the 1st spillover to Russia might imo not be right, i think there was an earlier missile strike on a Russian air force base destroying a 1 or 2 jet fighters on the ground and perhaps another similar attack elsewhere .
@juniorjames7076
@juniorjames7076 2 жыл бұрын
@Dave van der Meulen Disinformation and misinformation is rampant now in every form of media so its good to view all information with a grain of salt.
@АлексейСахаров-е3ъ
@АлексейСахаров-е3ъ 2 жыл бұрын
You are right. Ukraine forces shelled Millerovo airport in Rostov oblast in February 25.
@TheFobiano
@TheFobiano 2 жыл бұрын
"I need ammunition, not a ride", straight outta CoD
@daniloessu
@daniloessu 2 жыл бұрын
I dont know why you mentioned Germany Who turned to Ukrainian defence forces was the Baltics States + Poland + Czechia + Slovakia And the United States of course The Polish President and Kaja Kallas from Estonia made a fundamental engagement Britain sent weapon and logistics via Poland Well, it was a very good video, I hope Ukraine go for Crimea
@hugi117
@hugi117 2 жыл бұрын
While I hope so too, I doubt Ukraine would do anything to antagonize Russia (which if they were pushed back to Crimea would be extremely desperate.)
@ownpetard8379
@ownpetard8379 2 жыл бұрын
Germany, in spite of press releases, has done very little. Much of what it did do, was old outdated equipment. The exception are some anti-tank weapons. I forget the details, but one item they tried to give Ukraine was an item its environmental authorities said it would not handle its disposal. It gave the Oerlikon gun vehicles ("Cheetahs") without ammunition! These were outdated as well. I think Ukraine got some ammunition from the Brasilians, and some other NATO countries.
@elektrotehnik94
@elektrotehnik94 2 жыл бұрын
@@ownpetard8379 Can confirm all this man said. Germany wanted to buy additional ammo from the Swiss, but they rejected the sale (seems the Swiss are only half-committed, so far ^^). Didn't even know that some items were the kind that environmental authorities would not handle the disposal of. Do you know what equipment that was?
@LordChesalot
@LordChesalot 2 жыл бұрын
I think it was meantoined at it was a significant change in German foreign policy alongside the EU, even if there is little to show for that right know
@sailingsinbad7899
@sailingsinbad7899 2 жыл бұрын
@@elektrotehnik94 that's not what happened. Switzerland has a say on whether the ammo they sell to foreign countries can be transfered to other countries further down the line. This is a common line in military contracts, almost every weapon sale by any country is going to have that disclaimer. In addition, international neutrality law as definied in the conventions of the Hague prevent neutral countries from giving arms to countries at war. Thus, following the rules of international law, Switzerland could not agree to Germany giving Swiss amo to Ukraine. And really, Germany knew it in advance. They didn't want to fully support Ukraine, and Switzerland offers a convenient scapegoat
@edwardlangton5302
@edwardlangton5302 2 жыл бұрын
Outstanding Review as always …. Slava Ukraine. Glory to the heroes.
@firatsanliturk
@firatsanliturk 2 жыл бұрын
I deeply admire and appreciate the impartiality and non-bias in your productions. Give me the facts, not bs propaganda. Thank you for the beautiful analysis! I will certainly consider supporting your channel.
@brunovieira2314
@brunovieira2314 2 жыл бұрын
bro "academic" youtube is no joke lmao. We really are very fortunate to live in such times, access to accurate, objective and high quality information in an easy, entretaning and affordabe manner. Someone 60 years ago could only dream of theses things.
@hasan_z
@hasan_z 2 жыл бұрын
there is no way to do it without bias, information comes from somewhere, unless they actually went to the battlefield and collected it themselves. most info is repeated without verification
@pedroivantaveraferreira3037
@pedroivantaveraferreira3037 2 жыл бұрын
@@hasan_z well at least here the facts are presented at least in less emotional language and the statements are more easily verifiable ("this happened then", okay lemme check. Less room for propaganda)
@knigthfigth
@knigthfigth 2 жыл бұрын
lol
@fh120
@fh120 2 жыл бұрын
@@hasan_z The key word is when the narrator says “They claimed” “they admitted” etc etc. Of course there’s no eye witness accounts...because it’s war. This channels doing an amazing job at maintaining a neutral point of view though.
@vadymvv
@vadymvv 2 жыл бұрын
Just for the note's - Ukraine did buy Bayraktar tb2 drones in 2018 for cash, it wasn't "military help" or donation.
@wjzav1971
@wjzav1971 2 жыл бұрын
Do you think it is wise to analyse a war that is still ongoing, which outcome is still undetermined and where factors which play into it are still largely unknown?
@KingsandGenerals
@KingsandGenerals 2 жыл бұрын
We use the same historical approach. The more info we get, the more additions and revisions we will be able to make. Our understanding of history is always evolving and the same is going to happen with this conflict.
@wymmyw8744
@wymmyw8744 2 жыл бұрын
@@KingsandGenerals lol.. bucha.. beyond any reasonable doubt.. i'm sorry.. but there are no satelite images from before russian withdrawal (and BTW.. russian withdrawal is due to implementing the negotiated deal that russian troops withdraw from kiev and well all the oblast that you mentioned, fyi, the negotiator were killed by the nazis later on when he was back to ukraine).. and somehow.. russia is just so stupid.. that they massacre civilians on the street and don't clean up after.. as if 4000 sanctions and decade long of demonization and crippling sanctions aren't enough.. they still being so stupid.. yeah right.. if they are so stupid.. you think that they will be able to withstand obama's sanctions that were slapped against them..? go look it up.. and it's all neatly arranged in the streets.. for the whole world to see.. and some of them wearing white armbands too.. with visible russian rations nearby.. beyond any reasonable doubt.. lol.. well.. i unsubbed though.. not that it matters for you..
@threemeters1425
@threemeters1425 2 жыл бұрын
@@KingsandGenerals What are your sources? Don’t you think it’s much more important to list these when talking about an ongoing conflict, especially with so much contradictory information floating around + a great opportunity to display the historical process precisely because history is being made right now?
@earlkentsucalit3301
@earlkentsucalit3301 2 жыл бұрын
@@KingsandGenerals where can I find the best news sources? Been using reuters but I want more so I can cross reference verify each news
@erinmcdonald7781
@erinmcdonald7781 2 жыл бұрын
@@earlkentsucalit3301 Idk if this was one of the sources used, but I've seen Oryx referenced (I believe that's the name). The group/site reviews & verified info using satellite data. So, while they may not be complete either, their info is based on facts/data.
@nhawks
@nhawks Жыл бұрын
great analysis for all the military aspects of the first part of this conflict. Extremly clear and detailled. A must have ! Thanks
@nhawks
@nhawks Жыл бұрын
how many time did you spend to perform this kind of video ? cheers Christophe
@jojodio9851
@jojodio9851 2 жыл бұрын
It would be great if one day you could bring us more videos about battles of history of South America, like War of Paraguay or La Vuelta de Obligado.
@eduardodpino
@eduardodpino 2 жыл бұрын
Eles já fizeram sobre a batalha de Tuiuti.
@Andreygnm
@Andreygnm 2 жыл бұрын
Yes, It'd be nice a video about the Riachuelo naval battle or a series about the whole war.
@alonglostmemory1908
@alonglostmemory1908 2 жыл бұрын
We watch the most interesting video ever and you come with the most irrelevant wars. Dude!
@Andreygnm
@Andreygnm 2 жыл бұрын
@@alonglostmemory1908 irrelevant for who? Don't be egocentric man, If you don't like it just ignore it.
@MrTigracho
@MrTigracho 2 жыл бұрын
Ah, the war of Paraguay, will he cover the genocides too?
@ZillaCrew
@ZillaCrew 2 жыл бұрын
Wow! I appreciate the time and work it took to put this together and especially your decision to slow it down for this series in a non sensationalized fashion. Excellent!!!
@tobytoxd
@tobytoxd 2 жыл бұрын
Did not expect that at all... This was an utterly brilliant presentation, a great map, detailed visual and audible information and narration! Awesome work! Thank you very much 🙏
@voliynyk1
@voliynyk1 2 жыл бұрын
Please stop referring to Arestovich, he has nothing to do with politics. He is comedy actor and pretending to be an expert. Something that only locals understand. This undermines the quality of your work which is great in my view! Thank you for your efforts!
@JackSndAceS
@JackSndAceS 2 жыл бұрын
Don't mind me... i'm just here for the comments after reading the title 🍿👀
@goliathsteinbeisser3547
@goliathsteinbeisser3547 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for providing an overview over the course of this war so far. I was actually hoping you would make something like this. Thank you.
@enzy6434
@enzy6434 2 жыл бұрын
Amazing video. So much effort and research put in along with the editing. Absolutely top tier content.
@henryarchy5424
@henryarchy5424 2 жыл бұрын
此战重点完全在Mariupol,乌克兰粮道被断,全国被围,还top tier content... ...好搞笑。哈哈哈哈哈~ 完全不懂战争,德国果真就以为乌克兰挡的了而跳进去?哈哈哈哈哈哈哈~ 真的吗? 德国若如此被围也认为会赢?哈哈哈哈哈~ 老夫不才,失陪。
@spartacusreview
@spartacusreview 2 жыл бұрын
He is a Pentagon Propagandist.
@yungcris5211
@yungcris5211 2 жыл бұрын
This is crazy, I’ve been waiting for an in-depth breakdown on the war. I want to know the battles and staging grounds. The cities and the routes that Russia has taken
@sarwankabir2425
@sarwankabir2425 2 жыл бұрын
Never thought I will see a present day conflict that I am witnessing now at Kings and Generals. That's why I always say: 'We are history in the making.'
@Mandemon1990
@Mandemon1990 2 жыл бұрын
Can we skip the "interesting years" that get millions of books written about them and go back to the "not much happening" years? You know, those decades when nothing happens instead of current "welcome to your fourth world changing event in four years!"
@viktortrubaiev
@viktortrubaiev 2 жыл бұрын
I've come across this channel accidentally. Interesting video. I disagree only with some minor details, as I'm from Sumy. First of all, there were no Ukrainian Military Forces in the vicinity of Sumy. They defended Konotop cause the main railway center in Sumy region. Sumy and its neck of the woods were defended by the territory defense only. Oleksii Arestovych claimed the same in one of his speeches. The counterattack was probably made with the help of Ukrainian Army units. Second, Sumy wasn't bombed too heavily comparing to other nothern cities and towns. Waiting for the second part. Peace
@ffrost8353
@ffrost8353 2 жыл бұрын
I'm not even going to watch this video as the idea that someone could be winning a war while simultaneously losing 20% of their country seems rather perplexing. But, as you are on the ground there in Ukraine, perhaps you can explain this.
@bens4801
@bens4801 2 жыл бұрын
@@ffrost8353 Happens more frequently than you can imagine. During Winter War, Finland technically 'lost' the war on paper since they lost a portion of their territory to Russia but in practice they succesfully defended their nation, only having 70 thousand casualties compared to Russia which had 300,000+ and they prevented total annexation atleast. That looks like a win for Finland to me.
@bens4801
@bens4801 2 жыл бұрын
@@QualityPen Resisting annexation is totally a win. The entire Finaland was supposed to be be forcefully integrated to the USSR but they mostly failed on that objective and only acquired a portion of Finland. Independent Chechnya also repelled alot of Russians during the Chechen wars and yet they still got annexed by the end becoming integrated into Russia. A small territory cannot be compared to an entire country.
@Profffesor
@Profffesor 2 жыл бұрын
@Ben1. Manstein line, lol! You meant Mannerheim line? 2. Luhansk is occupied since 2014.
@bens4801
@bens4801 2 жыл бұрын
@@cuzimmoody6470 Finland was invaded because Stalin believed the Finnish socialists would welcome him with open arms and would cooperate with him to 'liberate' the country and side with the puppet communist government (sounds very familiar to the current "special military operation" isn't it?). Funny thing is, even Finnish socialists united with anti-socialist groups and abandoned their ideological differences out of pure hatred against the invading USSR. Look up "The spirit of the Winter War"
@frantictoast3741
@frantictoast3741 2 жыл бұрын
It's surreal watching you do a video on a conflict that's still on going. Like, I remember seeing all these highlights you're going over in videos all over the internet. Keep it up!
@volodymyravramenko6685
@volodymyravramenko6685 Жыл бұрын
In the first two weeks of the war, there was panic in Kharkiv. There was no food, medicine, or cash. Almost nothing worked. I will never forget this horror and the night bombing of the city.
@volodymyravramenko6685
@volodymyravramenko6685 Жыл бұрын
Perhaps he was helped by friends or relatives. Very few shops were open. Products in stores ended in half a day.
@volodymyravramenko6685
@volodymyravramenko6685 Жыл бұрын
@Tigran-Khan Abazyan The end is not yet in sight
@G.A.C_Preserve
@G.A.C_Preserve Жыл бұрын
@tigran-khanabazyan Victory for the Republic States and its allies
@FakeSchrodingersCat
@FakeSchrodingersCat 2 жыл бұрын
You probably underestimated the numbers of tanks Russia deployed because not all units follow the structure of the motorized infantry BTG. The 4th tank guard and other armor heavy units have been spotted in the conflict as well.
@Normacly
@Normacly 2 жыл бұрын
@@superspies32 Nope, the Russians has sent and hast lost many T-90s.
@MrThhg
@MrThhg 2 жыл бұрын
@@superspies32 confirmed 19, T-90 tanks destroyed. they wouldn't use Armata, to new too many flaws still with the tank and not many out probably less then 100.
@MrThhg
@MrThhg 2 жыл бұрын
@@superspies32 true true. a great source for equipment loss on both sides is " Attack on Europe". they only account on video or photo proof
@jeremywerner9489
@jeremywerner9489 2 жыл бұрын
@@superspies32 Check out the blog they mentioned. Uses visual confirmation of destroyed vehicles and aircraft and geotags the location to avoid duplicate reports. Just search for Oryx or Oryx blog. As for the T-72s. . .well, considering roughly 60% of Russia's active tank fleet is comprised of T-72s, it makes sense that T-72s comprise the bulk of losses. That being said, there have been at least 100-110 T-80's lost, as well as at least 19 T-90's destroyed or captured. Remember, Russia only had about 350 T-90 tanks active, with a total number of about 550 including reserves. It's not unusual to see a relatively small number of T-90 tanks lost.
@dominiksoukal
@dominiksoukal 2 жыл бұрын
@@jeremywerner9489 wasn´t there at least one t-90m destoyed?
@seantomlinson3320
@seantomlinson3320 2 жыл бұрын
Terrific video and wonderful timing - I was attempting to explain this asinine conflict to my 7 year old yesterday. He was completely entranced and then needed to look up what all the unit symbols mean. Thank you guys.
@cavramau
@cavramau 2 жыл бұрын
Remind him, war doesn't determine who is right, just who is left.
@blackhawk-qy2rh
@blackhawk-qy2rh 2 жыл бұрын
when he finds out what the unit symbols mean, tell us too. most of us also have no clue
@chawk6201
@chawk6201 2 жыл бұрын
@@chrispbacon4701 The fuck are you talking about, of course it's about Russia and Ukraine. That's quite literally what this war is about. Its important to learn current events that could directly impact your life, unfortunately more important than learning about Napoleon. And this is coming from someone with a degree in history. It's not indoctrination to learn invading a country and committing massacres against civilians is bad. Christ, dude.
@maxwelljarman7785
@maxwelljarman7785 2 жыл бұрын
@@chawk6201 it’s not that black and white is what he is trying to say.
@chawk6201
@chawk6201 2 жыл бұрын
@@maxwelljarman7785 I mean, if you just read what he replied to me with, you'd know he seems to intend on personally insulting my education and intelligence rather than having a conversation.
@markroyhetgarcia5748
@markroyhetgarcia5748 2 жыл бұрын
To think that wars still occur in this century is truly depressing, i hope future generations will learn from this
@seaman5705
@seaman5705 2 жыл бұрын
To think that Russia is still allowed to wege war, to invade territories , to threaten everybody with nuclear bombs and also be an un-removable part of UNO and Security Council is unthinkable . To give Russia circumstances , to advocate their " right" to establish buffer zones by deciding other's nations/countries destiny , is criminal .
@EzioAuditore
@EzioAuditore 2 жыл бұрын
Zalinski’s refusal to leave really was the turning point
@Me_Ne_FREGO
@Me_Ne_FREGO Жыл бұрын
NO "Z" ONLY THELENSKIY (just a joke) but the right spelling is Zelenskiy not a Zalinskiy. Okay?)
@Darkseidsolosfiction
@Darkseidsolosfiction Жыл бұрын
​@@Me_Ne_FREGO what?
@Me_Ne_FREGO
@Me_Ne_FREGO Жыл бұрын
@@Darkseidsolosfiction it's one of ukrainian memes. As russians using "z" on their army, we have a huge amount of memes like "cancelling Z" and then was born meme with our president's surname. Not Z only Thelenskiy (because "the" has same pronunciation)
@Darkseidsolosfiction
@Darkseidsolosfiction Жыл бұрын
@@Me_Ne_FREGO oh I understand 😂 us Georgians call Russian armies (porks) ღრუსები-porkrussians or piggyrussians something like that
@keyboarddancers7751
@keyboarddancers7751 2 жыл бұрын
Gil Scott Heron wrote these potent words back in the early '90s. *"If everyone believed in Peace the way they say they do, we’d have Peace.* *The only thing wrong with Peace is that you can’t make no money from it"*
@bulldogsbob
@bulldogsbob 2 жыл бұрын
Putin invaded Ukriane To recreate the Soviet Union not for money.
@bens4801
@bens4801 2 жыл бұрын
The way to achieve peace is to be armed to the teeth that no one will ever touch you. Procupine strategy implemented by Switzerland, Singapore, Finland, and Israel.
@SirAntoniousBlock
@SirAntoniousBlock 2 жыл бұрын
@@bens4801 Yeah but Switzerland Singapore and Israel aren't next to a brutal aggressive superpower and Finland is not armed to the teeth, preferring till now to stay out of NATO for fear of antagonising them.
@bens4801
@bens4801 2 жыл бұрын
@@SirAntoniousBlock How do you think small nations/microstates survive bordering larger and much powerful nations? It is through heavy militarization. -Israel is surrounded by Arab countries which hates Jews and don't even recognize its existence diplomatically -Singapore ceded from Malaysia, it would be unwise to not be armed while being neighbors to Indonesia and Malaysia expecting to be untouched -Switzerland was the only independent non-axis nation left in Mainland Western Europe at the peak of the Nazi's power - All Finnish citizens have military training, and the entire population can be easily mobilized, not to mention they regularly train with NATO and has defense pacts with Nordic countries (Sweden, Norway, Iceland, Denmark) All of them are heavily armed to detter potential invasion
@moritamikamikara3879
@moritamikamikara3879 2 жыл бұрын
@@SirAntoniousBlock You clearly don't know anything about Finland or Israel. True, Egypt Syria and Jordan aren't superpowers but they are explicitly aligned against Israel and demand its destruction. Finland is armed to fuck.
@tf2255
@tf2255 2 жыл бұрын
Just a heads up that there is a map error at 2:41. Serbia has Dark blue as its color on the map. When the Pre/Post 1997 NATO map is used Nato and Serbia use the same color. If Serbia was part of NATO that would not be a problem but since Serbia is not part of NATO it creates a problem.
@elektrotehnik94
@elektrotehnik94 2 жыл бұрын
And given Serbia's geo-political stance, their chances of going into EU or NATO are getting slimmer by the day ^^ It takes a special society to openly promote Z in this time, and they do. Selling shirts, graffiti, protests, you name it.
@brosef6580
@brosef6580 2 жыл бұрын
@@elektrotehnik94 It would take an even more special society to support NATO and try to join them to become another foreign policy tool for the USA considering the fact that NATO, the purely defensive organization, indiscriminately bombed a sovereign nation Yugoslavia and targeted hospitals, schools and embassies committing war crimes against the Serbian civilians. Don't forget how they targeted a bunch of refugees trying to escape their bombing killing 60. Overall over 2000 missiles fired and 14000 bombs dropped over a 78 day campaign.
@nian60
@nian60 2 жыл бұрын
@@brosef6580 @Brosef NATO is currently the only defence against insane dictatorships and fascism. There is no other choice right now. Which is why more countries are joining NATO, even though ideally they would prefer not to.
@3pKo
@3pKo 2 жыл бұрын
@@nian60 Keep beliving that lie. NATO is corrupt to the core.
@3pKo
@3pKo 2 жыл бұрын
@@elektrotehnik94 Ne seri druze ;)
@IndySkyGuy1
@IndySkyGuy1 2 жыл бұрын
Love this channel! Thank you for such great content. With the oversaturation of media covering the invasion of Ukraine, it's appreciated that you're taking your time gathering as close to accurate information as possible then putting it together into a concise, summarized format with amazing visuals.
@MrSilverad0
@MrSilverad0 2 жыл бұрын
I don't know why you mentioned Germany, when it's still one of the countries, that helped the least
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