I think that David Reynolds is doing the narration. A great historian, whose voice and delivery make learning history a joy!
@waynesworld7804 Жыл бұрын
A great doc, particularly the early stuff explaining the lead-in to the war.
@duckbizniz663 Жыл бұрын
I am sorry but there are a lot of holes in this documentary. It ignores a lot of events and makes a lot of impossible claims. I love documentaries but it has to make some sense. I have a lot of problems with nonsense.
@waynesworld7804 Жыл бұрын
@@duckbizniz663 that’s ok, I still thought it was good
@ExpatChef71 Жыл бұрын
And just think, almost all of those Japanese pilots at Pearl Harbour would be dead in six months at Midway.
@brianjones7660 Жыл бұрын
And what a shame the IJN never offloaded the voluminous amount of gun camera footage from Dec. 7th aircraft, from a historical standpoint…..😮
@BroderickAndrews-e8j Жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing. Was part of Philippines and Netherland indie hollandaise.
@Forest3214 Жыл бұрын
These series are amazing. We have to never forget what happened. Thank you !
@philiprufus4427 Жыл бұрын
So ! We Have Greg F- - - - - Sekur and His B - - - - - - s.
@philiprufus4427 Жыл бұрын
Greg F - - - - - - - - Secker strikes every two minutes to FLOG you some stuff !
@AronOlivier3 ай бұрын
Tu peux oublier sans problème car de 1 ça n'arrête pas de poster des docs sur ces sombres années et de 2 On te le rappellera sans faute 😅
@donalgoan5083 Жыл бұрын
My father and mother were at pearl during the attack. My father was on bull halsey's staff. My mother was sent back to san diego on a convoy. This is why I have no regrets about hiroshima.
@d00vinator Жыл бұрын
I served in Pearl in the 70s. The Arizona memorial is somber but amazing, still leaking oil yet today. Hiroshima was a necessity.
@billotto602 Жыл бұрын
Oh to have a father like you. How incredible that must have been. My dad was a soldier in the ETO. He had PTSD badly. He drank. To excess.
@phil20_20 Жыл бұрын
The A-Bomb was a mercy in the over-all scope of things. It's a shame it made Truman so squeamish about using it to stop the Communists. It also didn't help to have traitors in the Manhattan Project. My dad worked on it as an engineer, and it was so secret, he hardly even talked about it even decades later. To think it was so easy for some Americans to betray us is as sickening then as it is today.
@brachio1000 Жыл бұрын
@@billotto602: I'd say he gave everything he could.
@donalgoan508311 ай бұрын
@@d00vinator my mother told me that she played the card game bridge with a sailor from the Arizona the night before and he was killed the next day . She said she never played again and died at age 98 in 2015.
@kevinquist Жыл бұрын
got your timing off a little with the pearl harbor attack and Stalingrad.
@melissabyrne8749 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing
@mogh2603 Жыл бұрын
05:07 Rhineland was NOT seized from Germany, it was under German sovereignty but was demilitarized, no German troops were allowed to be stationed in it.
@ronalddunne3413 Жыл бұрын
France did indeed "seize" Saarland, only to return it under pressure in 1935, after Hitler came to power in 1933.🤠
@Decybello Жыл бұрын
bullshit, it was... you're saying what happened after Versaille Treaty was signed, but couple of years later France in response to Germany not keeping up with paying off their war reparations sent their troops to the area to secure its coal reserves...
@mogh2603 Жыл бұрын
@@Decybello there was a mistake, I was commenting on the video's mentioning of Rhineland, by mistake I typed Saarland
@mogh2603 Жыл бұрын
@@Decybello but the French intervention you've mentioned was against the Ruhr for its factories, neither against Rhineland nor against Saarland
@Decybello Жыл бұрын
@@mogh2603 nope, your wrong - demilitarised zone was Rheinland, the Ruhr is just one of it's parts... But Entante nations occupied the rest of the Rheinland until 30th of June 1930
@srothbardt Жыл бұрын
Pearl Harbor-- carriers weren’t there, and most of the ships sunk were re- floated and repaired and several were in big battles against Japanese fleet. Midway /Japanese lost 4 carriers to our loss of one. Those were carriers they used in Pearl attack.
@gordonbennet1094 Жыл бұрын
Correct. The Jap Pear Harbour attack had ZERO military impact on American military power. The only effect it had was American reaction - similar to smacking a wasp's nest with a stick.
@kylemccullough349511 ай бұрын
My Grandfather in law was one of the men who raised the WV from the harbor. It can be seen in the background in some of the photos of the Japanese surrender in Tokyo bay. That must have been a gut puncher for them to see.
@jeanlangonne47242 ай бұрын
En français
@johnemerson1363 Жыл бұрын
Yamamoto did not give the order to not launch a third strike. That was totally Nagumo's order. Yamamoto was a gambler, Nagumo was not.
@vlad78th Жыл бұрын
Nobody order to launch a third strike. It was never part of the plan. The idea of a third strike is a lie spread by Mitsuo Fushida the leading officer of the first wave who in hindsight wanted to deny the IJN responsability in the defeat. What happened is that the Japanese never focused on striking US logistic. A third strike was never is the cards.
@sigmanfloyd7179 Жыл бұрын
~ After hearing about the attack on Pearl Harbor, Canada actually declared war on Japan before the U.S.A. did. Food for thought. 🇨🇦
@donkeyslayer9879 Жыл бұрын
Not at all.
@harrybrown3657 Жыл бұрын
I didn't know that.. What I did know, was that the Canadians were brilliant in the Allied invasion of Europe. On D Day through to the hard (with many losses) Beveland peninsula battle which helped open the crucial port of Antwerp.
@genekelly8467 Жыл бұрын
Haiti also declared war on Germany...not because their 20,000 man army was keen to fight, but so the corrupt government could seize German owned assets.
@flyback_driver Жыл бұрын
They did declare war on Japan 7 December 1941 but I think they wanted to make it official. What I mean is the declared war on Germany 10 September 1939 and since Japan was already a member of the axis since 1937. There were Japanese submarines near Canadian coasts and did not want to be accused of aggression if they sank a submarine. At least that's what I've been able to read but yes they did declare war the same day or arguably two year prior when they declared war on Germany.
@ninjawizard3865 Жыл бұрын
KANADA was also the name of a place in Auschwitz, I think Kanadians should pay reparations for this.
@byronharano2391 Жыл бұрын
Mahalo for mentioning USS Utah BB 31. A Florida Class Dreadnought sunk with 79 crewmen off of a rarely visited part of Ford Island, NSY Pearl Harbor. Her memorial and her capsized hull visible from Ford Island near the current Navy Lodge.
@Melchersson Жыл бұрын
The role-model spy Popov for Ian Flemmings James Bond personally warned FDR that the Japanese were to attack Pearl Harbor and that is why they let USS Lexington and Saratoga leave Pearl Harbor. Popov was so furious over how his warnings were largely ignored that he decided to go to Hawaii in person to warn the Naval commander but didn't make it in time. There was an idiotic decision to move the whole Pacific fleet to Pearl Harbor with a 360-degree angle for enemy attacks instead of having the a large part of the fleet staying in San Diego.
@JohnnySmithWhite-wd4ey Жыл бұрын
Most people can't visit the Utah. You have to have permission to go across the bridge to get there.
@Carbiniz3r11 ай бұрын
First nuke was for surrender, 2nd one was for pearl harbor.
@DennisEllerby-z5u Жыл бұрын
On December 11 1941 Germany and Italy declared war on the US. The following day the New York Times front Page read 'Germany Italy declare war on US' Pearl Harbor did not bring the US into the war in Europe. That is a completely different scenario.
@asullivan4047 Жыл бұрын
Exactly the disillusioned WW-1 Corporal Hitler 😈 making that fateful decision. Ended his short lived ideology syndrome of world 🌎 domination.
@paulmcknight4137 Жыл бұрын
Do you suppose the two thought America will now be in a two front war, and now is the time to declare war?
@southerncross4956 Жыл бұрын
An outstanding presentation. Thank you for your hard and detailed work.
@bennewnham4497 Жыл бұрын
The USA is an industrial colossus. The sheer scale of the military and industrial response to Germany and Italy is simply staggering. It is still amazing to me that these countries would commit suicide like this. The USA just poured ships, planes, artillery, guns and troops into the war in overwhelming numbers. It's an amazing story.
@451greenwood Жыл бұрын
Not so really if ALL the ships had been in Is pearl harbor that would have been normally been there then America wouldn't have been able to fight like they did,it would have put usa out of ANY fight for years Consequently Japan would have grown even stronger, by the time usa rejoined the fight,and the uk would have been finished by then too, the world could have very easily been a different place, whilst what happened to Pearl was crazy you have to admit the rest of the fleet not been there couldn't have been anymore lucky for the usa, this one incident saved the usa and probably the world
@skelejp9982 Жыл бұрын
@@451greenwood MacArthur leaving The Philippines, on 11 March 1942, showed how powerful Japan was.
@Groovy_Bruce Жыл бұрын
@@451greenwoodwrong. The Japanese would have had more control of the pacific for longer. But the same result was simply inevitable. Maximum Japanese output was a drop in the water, they were never going to come close to keeping up with American production.
@bennewnham4497 Жыл бұрын
@@451greenwood What bull. The Japanese could of sunk every ship including the aircraft carriers and still lost the war. Allied victory was assured. The industrial capacity of the US moved into high gear ensuring the Japanese would be crushed. From Dec 1941 to Oct 1942, the US navy commissioned 9 escort carriers. Nov 1942 to Sept 1942, US commissioned 17 fleet carriers, 9 light carriers, 26 fast carriers and 67 escort carriers. This is an absurd amount of firepower - 10 times anything the Japanese could match. Japan lost the moment they started the war.
@MrNiceGuyHistory Жыл бұрын
@@Groovy_Bruce The big bomb would have ended the war inevitability.
@eulacorinalimabento3458 Жыл бұрын
O ser humano é intrínsecamente belicoso !
@krakrtreacysr9072 ай бұрын
I like how the narrator quoted admiral Yamamoto and what he didn't say
@mikeaguilar576411 ай бұрын
The Japanese torpedoes had been modified not developed for the shallow waters of Pearl Harbor.
@geoffhunter7704 Жыл бұрын
Pearl Harbour Third Strike cancellation was Nagumo's decision as Yamamoto had made a rod for his own back by NOT concentrating his fleet in isolated groups far from the Carrier Force and despite Nagumo's Subordinates clamouring for a third strike V/Adm Nagumo feared for huge losses to his precious aircrews the third strike was therefore cancelled much to his mens displeasure.
@vlad78th Жыл бұрын
There was no third strike planned. Nagumo did not cancel a prepared third strike. All of it were lies spread by Fushida, the lead torpedo squadron officer who wanted to mitigate the responsability of the IJN in the defeat. The Japanese almost never focused on striking logistic. Their idea was to create the conditions of a decisive battle, no more, no less. The Kido Butai planes were heavily damages after the first two waves, less than 50% of the planes were immediatly useable and still needed to be rearmed for another strike which would have been recovered late in the afternoon exposing the carriers to enemy attacks especially since the US carriers positions were unknown. As far as Nagumo was concerned he had managed to cripple the US battleships and prevented US planes to attack the carriers. Bombing pearl harbour dry docks and fuel facilities was never part of the japanese plan of attack or secondary targets only. Only in hindsight some 20 years later did Mutsuo Fushida tell the story of a third attack cancelled by Nagumo which could have change the course of the war and prevented japanese defeat at Coral Sea and especially Midway.
@geoffhunter7704 Жыл бұрын
@@vlad78th Cmdr Fuschida has a huge advantage over you and i Vlad he was present and in Nagumo's prescence when the decision was made No Third Strike though the majority of senior officers present were clamouring for a Third Strike Nagumo refused to commit and the outcome is now history as you do not quote your sources,Fushida once he overcame his huge resentment to Japan's Unconditional Surrender became quite talkative re the Pacific War he was alway's a Hawk in his outlook and criticised his country'a war plans after the Gaudacanal Campaign as pie in the sky feckless planning poorly carried out and as for Coral Sea it was NOT a Japanese defeat as both sides lost a Carrier the US a Fleet Vessel, it was a Strategic Withdrawal which did lead to two defeats,Milne Bay and Kokoda on NG/Papua as the Japs were suffering from "Victory Disease" and as was proved at Gaudacanal from 8/1942-2.1943 both sides made stupid blunders but as the US held Henderson Field they really could not lose.
@stischer4710 ай бұрын
@@vlad78th Plus since the Japanese had no intelligence where the US carriers were and he was not going to chance losing his carriers.
@johnfranklin831911 ай бұрын
This video shows Japan attacking China and the Tripartite Pact being signed and then the US moving to the selective service act being implemented in Oct. 1940. What really shook Wash DC to the core, and got them moving towards a war footing wasn’t so much Japan’s actions, it was the fall of France in just 6 weeks in June of 1940.
@h2nnibal Жыл бұрын
Could you add Polish dubbing to your videos? I need to listen to your videos and I can't always read text. Thank you for everything🤛
@Groovy_Bruce Жыл бұрын
Dubbing, not subtitling.
@danielcunningham9312Ай бұрын
Seen a nice bit of totty on the video very good indeed
@306champion Жыл бұрын
Australia doesn't rate a mention! The attack on Darwin was bigger and more intense than Pearl Harbour.
@colinthomasson394811 ай бұрын
He did not rise to a p[osition of unassailable power, he murdered his way there
@MariadeLourdesAlvarenga-wn1fd9 ай бұрын
15:57 interesting story of the bravery of Japanese warriors 🇯🇵
@derin111 Жыл бұрын
What I find so remarkable is not the fallacy that “America won the war” and that Germany would have won without its interventions but that America’s undoubted contribution made to bringing about its end SO quickly…and in two theatres. America’s industrial and military mobilisation in such a short time is truly astounding! If one considers that Pearl Harbour occurred on the eve of 1943, yet only a year and a half later the D-Day landings were able to take place whilst America was fighting a major war simultaneously in the Pacific as the major player! That it was able to produce all the matériels for such campaigns is surely its greatest feat and where its biggest credit should go.?
@elrojo2302 Жыл бұрын
Excelente
@phil20_20 Жыл бұрын
Yes, a very comprehensive essay on the Japanese decision to go to war with the U.S. but having absolutely nothing to do with Germany or Hitler, other than the incidental effect.
@david9783 Жыл бұрын
I'm sure he and his general staff discussed it at length, and did not like it at all. But you are right; it is mostly about Japan.
@Sr.S.S Жыл бұрын
Obrigado Pelo Idioma Em Português
@Kitty-CatDaddy Жыл бұрын
19:30 Correction, Pearl Harbor is NOT on the biggest island of Hawaii.
@luigivincenz3843 Жыл бұрын
Many documents revealed that Hitler did NOT want America into the war as they were close to choking off Europe and the UK. Imagine his frustration when Japan attacked Pearl Harbor, and the treaty stipulated that if one Axis country goes to war, the others (including Italy) MUST follow.
@jameswoodbury2806 Жыл бұрын
Once Pearl Harbor happened, Hitler was insanely estatatic. Although for years he had been cautious about provoking the USA. According to the 'Psychopathic God'.
@bobmcrae5939 Жыл бұрын
Treaty or no treaty, Hitler was a fool to declare war on the USA.
@MrNiceGuyHistory Жыл бұрын
Hitler didn't care about any other treaties. He thought that Japan would attack the Soviet Union if he declared war on the US and that the US was too weak to be able to pose a serious threat to Europe (at the time it was).
@Jacob-df5hr Жыл бұрын
The tripartite pact only came into force if they were attacked, not the ones doing the attacking. Hitler was not compelled to declare war on the US. Why he did so still isn't perfectly clear, but they were already fighting an informal war in the Atlantic and the US was already overstepping the lines of neutrality in their aid to the UK. He seems to have thought it prudent to formalize it.
@Navigator001 Жыл бұрын
It was incredibly stupid, I watched another video that said that the Japanese actually told Hitler their plan to make sure Hitler would declare war on the US when it happened. Hitler already made a colossal mistake in attacking Russia, but then made a bigger mistake in declaring war on the US. What a moron. What the hell was he thinking? He should have told the Japanese that if they attack America, they are on their own.
@codyhilton1750 Жыл бұрын
Your title was again misleading as very little of your video was devoted to Hitler's worries about Pearl Harbor.
@dawnwennberg9884 Жыл бұрын
Totally agree. I was taken in by a bad title. Very good doc but not what was promised. Change the title!
@kotkotlecik7310 Жыл бұрын
I'm so puzzled by the men whose first names were Husband and Doris. That's so weird.
@georgielancaster1356 Жыл бұрын
The Americans always seemed to come up with a percentage of mad names. John Wayne's real first name was Marion. If you go back hundreds of years, Britain also had eccentric names. If you go back to 500/1000 years in the UK, in court cases, you get hilarious names popping up. And street names could be utterly shocking, to modern day ears. Often the streets where 'Ladies' worked had names that we consider shocking. Gropec**t Lane is marked on ancient town maps, in several different towns. Sometimes they survive today, as Grape Lane, etc. But sometimes names were given to remember important history. After Hitler ordered the Czech town of Lidice to be wiped off all maps, to no longer exist, (even the cemetery was flattened, the bones dumped elsewhere), the men murdered, the women murdered or sent to death camps, a few blonde very young children sent to Germany, to be adopted by German families, people named daughters Lidice, to let the name live. And a town of miners in England donated one day's pay a week, to a fund to rebuild the town, post war, not knowing if England would even win the war. Names and the stories behind them, are a fascinating part of social history. Even now, in America, there is a strong trend for Afro- Americans to name children after expensive cars, etc - and in Russia, children could be named after tractors and the October Revolution...
@frankknudsen842 Жыл бұрын
Or Waitstill Sharpe. 😂. If you know or have done the math on that guy, it doesn't matter what his name was, still I guess it was the times. He was a Unitarian minister.
@robertohoraciovines5416 Жыл бұрын
@@georgielancaster1356 I suggest u could add to your recolection of "unusual" names this one rather complicated sample from southern lattitudes: "Crisis Catorce Dieciocho". Sic..!! I cross my heart this was true. It came to me from my mother, born in 1921, she had a neighbour, a girl from a family immigrated from the war and troubbles in Spain, where the child had been baptized as such, meaning literally: "Crisis in between 1914 - 1918". That european emergency was the greatest horror the world had suffered in a century, since the Napoleonic Wars....!! Cheers..!!
@ericscottstevens Жыл бұрын
3:20 Hitler felt the best Germans had immigrated for America in the 1700 - 1800s. By 1790 as many as 100,000 Germans had immigrated to America, comprising an estimated 8.6 percent of the population of the 18 states. He felt he had to work with the remainder what was left in Germany, an amalgamation of a populous of perpetual weakness that could never really fully be resurrected to glory from the past, but he was still going to try to instill a new order. Poignant that German settlers designed and pioneered Conestoga wagons, which was used in the opening of the American Frontier.
@williamwingo4740 Жыл бұрын
I'm three-quarters descended from Germans who emigrated to Texas in 1849, in the aftermath of the political unrest and "revolutions" of 1848. My grandfather had a theory that the Germans in that period who valued freedom left and came to America, and those who were OK with tyranny and oppression stayed in Germany. He believed that this was responsible for both World Wars--but perhaps that's an oversimplification.... 🤠
@MondoBeno Жыл бұрын
Japan failed for the same reason the Confederacy failed: lack of people, lack of industry, lack of food, lack of iron, and they couldn't get enough foreign support.
@michelmendoza1769 Жыл бұрын
Nagumo’s decision set the stage for Japan’s eventual defeat. A decision Nagumo made about five months later led the Japanese to crushing defeat at Midway!
@ShadowOfTheDay999 ай бұрын
Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so many to so few." - Winston S. Churchill August 20, 1940
@elsonwagner238011 ай бұрын
Adoro esses seus documentos e incríveis da até de imagina o sofrimento dos povos que passaram por a segunda guerra mundial
@haeuptlingaberja4927 Жыл бұрын
Bizarre title. There was literally nothing on "Pearl Harbor's impact on Hitler's worries." Not a word.
@huaweihuawei9901 Жыл бұрын
Ha, ha, ha. You've been fooled.
@ericsonhazeltine5064 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the warning. I won’t bother
@lynnflynn5591 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for your comment. I won't waist my time on this "click bait."
@phil20_20 Жыл бұрын
KZbin Clickbait.
@sess5206 Жыл бұрын
@@huaweihuawei9901How about you?
@67nairb Жыл бұрын
21:34 that's not Ambassador Nomura that's Saburo Kurusu, Japanese special envoy to Washington and former ambassador to Germany.
@PauloCezar-ty8on10 ай бұрын
Peace In World!!!! Brazil
@tuandao32997 күн бұрын
really enjoyed this video, the colorization brings a whole new perspective to history! however, I can’t help but wonder if focusing so much on Hitler's worries takes away from the broader impact of Pearl Harbor on the entire war. it seems like a narrow view, considering how many lives and countries were affected. what do you all think?
@kryts27 Жыл бұрын
Really intersted to know if the Japanese artillery batteries were horse-drawn like the Wehrmacht? Horse drawn artilllery (useful in WW1), was by WW2 a hinderance to mobile warfare on land.
@Nacionalistas2006 Жыл бұрын
Gostei muito da narração
@SaRa-rh9nl10 ай бұрын
38:54
@MrTekyman Жыл бұрын
I still can't understand why Japanese empire wouldn't take pearl harbor after the attack, doesn't make any sense. After that they knew darkness will come over them either they take it or not
@HariyukiSnowАй бұрын
Uma pergunta, essas imagens dos ataques, as imagens da guerra, são reais mesmo, ou são imagens criadas.?
@castelhano149219 күн бұрын
São reais. Originalmente eram em preto e branco, mas a inteligência artificial consegue deixar em cores.
@kimeldiin1930 Жыл бұрын
The Japanese had bayonet exercise on randomly picked Philippinos picked off the street...co -prosperity ................thought prosperity demanded one survived.......
@georgielancaster1356 Жыл бұрын
They did the same with Indian military as POWs. Would use them as target practise for snipers, as POWs. They also ate parts of Allied soldiers. Sometimes from recently killed, sometimes killed to eat. I believe the favoured cut was the big muscles at the back of the thigh. The war crime cases dealt with some of this, but of course, if nobody survived the massacres, there was nobody to give evidence. I know 3 American airmen, not identified, so as not to horrify their families, were killed on purpose for one particularly savage military officer to eat. NOT from hunger, but out of a sadistic, sick power trip. But the Japanese got off on a technicality. Everyone knew, and the poor chaps who had been told they had to be defence counsel, because nobody would volunteer, did such a professional job, they broke the case on technical grounds and all the senior officers were furious.
@ademirbonfim878110 ай бұрын
Muito bom esse vídeo
@drostropod9794 Жыл бұрын
Much of the Pearl Harbor attack footage in this video consists of shots of U.S. Navy SBD Dauntless aircraft peeling out of formation to dive. Where? Not Pearl Harbor.
@kcstafford2784 Жыл бұрын
Good documentary but I fail to see the need for the background music
@joseadavila744510 ай бұрын
it always get me confuse whe FDR says a state of war has now existed with japan . intead of saying war starts now after this attack . sometimes i wonder if that was left open like 911 so we could declare war . some times that happens . i am veteran . is like when they tell you dont shoot unless they shoot at you becouse of politics you know your are screw . i live near our border we are also being left open with one hand behind our back and it goes to your area from here i seeit everyday .
@jayswanginfit8634 Жыл бұрын
Good documentary but the title is misleading
@glendagaskin151 Жыл бұрын
Looks like this is going to be correct. 1:55
@MphozaRock19 күн бұрын
Can I please have the song id that play at background
@MrTekyman Жыл бұрын
There are also a lot more situations in the whole war that in my opinion are rare explained as why if the u boots were so destructive for the allies why they didn't built a massive fleet of submarines
@michelmendoza1769 Жыл бұрын
Didn’t two pilots get up into the air and shoot down some planes? Or was that just a story line for a movie
@davidahlstrom75339 ай бұрын
This title about Hitler's worries has almost nothing to do with the video. The video was essentially a very slow rehash of the build up to the Pearl Harbor / Oahu attack. Hitler doesn't show up hardly until about 3/4 of the way through the video, and only a few seconds are devoted to his decision making / worries. And also some of the video choices are bizarre, such as showing Hess supposedly watching Hitler's Reichstag speech {really at the nearby Kroll Opera House} of December 11, 1941 speech. Hess was already imprisoned in Britain from May of 1941 and could not have been present. These KZbin documentaries need to be more carefully made -- they increasingly remind me of my students' sloppiness in their pspers and dissertations.
@aresee8208 Жыл бұрын
Oahu is definitely NOT "the largest island in the archipelago." That would be Hawaii, which is why it is called the Big Island. And what is it with the British always mispronouncing the name Roosevelt? He was rather important even in British history. You'd think they could get his name right.
@georgielancaster1356 Жыл бұрын
As I recall, the family of Roosevelts had 2 distinct lines that pronounced their name differently. If they did it, there is no reason for English speakers to worry about it. If you reflect on how many ENGLISH words are mispronounced by Americans, I am surprised you are willing to die on that hill.
@IMAGESOFWAR Жыл бұрын
@@georgielancaster1356 Your comment made me smile.. All the best.. Liam Dale (Producer and presenter).
@aresee8208 Жыл бұрын
@@georgielancaster1356A person's name is different from an English word. If I put out a documentary or video on a subject, I'd want to get it right. Yet lots of British documentaries get the name wrong. (And we all know the typical British reaction when a non-Brit pronounces a British proper name wrong.) BTW, Roosevelt is of Dutch origin. (Oh, and Americans speak fine American English, which is standard in the US. Imagine that.)
@suzanneyoung6273 Жыл бұрын
@@aresee8208 😀😊🤣😏
@fernandogirard9702 Жыл бұрын
Well, somebody knew about it. The US carriers didn't leave PH to go fishing, did they?
@bluemoon3264 Жыл бұрын
Pearl Harbor is not located on the biggest island of the Hawaiian islands ... Most populated yes ... The Big Island with the official name of Hawaii is larger than all of the other Hawaiian islands combined . (true) .
@MrNiceGuyHistory Жыл бұрын
Our senile president doesn't know the names of the Hawaiian Islands either...
@hilson9333 Жыл бұрын
Nunca subestime o inimigo.
@badmonkey2222 Жыл бұрын
Never wake a sleeping giant. 🇺🇲
@barry5643 Жыл бұрын
Not saying it isnt a good documentry. It's fine but the title is fairly misleading. The first 39 of 54 minutes doesn't touch on Pearl Harbor's impact on Hitler's worries. I don't know what's in the last third of the film but it can't be 54 minutes.
@MrNiceGuyHistory Жыл бұрын
Welcome to documentaries on youtube..
@steveokula5762 Жыл бұрын
Departing the Kurils Islands, the Pearl Harbor fleet was keeping radio silence (22:20). Then, approaching Hawaii just before the attack, radio transmissions to Tokyo ceased (27:52 )? I'm confused.
@euclides.eassilva2888 Жыл бұрын
Muito bom.
@junkettarp8942 Жыл бұрын
Mass insanity.....How very very sad....for everyone.
@stevebohlin7245 Жыл бұрын
I think you left out the hostilities beween Japan and the USSR.
@Groovy_Bruce Жыл бұрын
Nagumo was, thankfully, a fuck up when it came to modern war at the time. He was a disaster preventing the third wave, and a disaster at midway. Hilarious.
@TomFynn10 ай бұрын
There never was a plan for a third wave, That is all in Fujitas memory, now widely discredited. Even even if, several US planes got shot down by the now up and angry US AA. A third wave would have achieved nothing, if the damage to the returning planes from the second wave would not have made it impossible from the get-go. Also, he knew that US carriers where not in harbor. If not, the question was...Where were they? He could hang around, with the US carriers out there, while his planes were on a pointless mission, with his carriers and destroyers at the end of their fuel, or cut his losses and prepare for the inevitable next battle, preserving crucial and priceless assets of the IJN. As for Midway, Nagumo was given insufficient forces for both invasion and air cover and had to make the best of a chaotic situation.
@michelmendoza1769 Жыл бұрын
Germany declared war on December 10th ! Great timing, eh?
@michelmendoza1769 Жыл бұрын
The US did NOT declare war on Germany after P.H.the only time the US declared war on Germany was April 2nd 1917’
@UncagedSavage Жыл бұрын
To me, each of them..Italy.. Germany.. and Japan were each three countries wrapped up in one in many aspects ..it's mucb like a war against nine countries instead of three because each of the three had two others in alliance all together
@UncagedSavage Жыл бұрын
Everytime a German was defeated, a Japanese and an Italian were defeated as well. Every time a Japanese was defeated, a German and an Italian was defeated as well..and of course.. Everytime a Italian was defeated..a Japanese and a German was defeated as well.. all the same
@IloveEaster Жыл бұрын
I challenge the History Channel to explain where in the Jay Treaty America declared its neutrality
@Eric-zo8wo Жыл бұрын
0:14: 💥 The video provides an overview of the events leading up to the late entry of the USA into World War II and how their military and economic power gave hope for a victorious end. 7:27: ⚔ The escalating conflict between Japan and the USA leading up to World War II. 14:11: ⚔ The tensions between Japan and the US escalated, leading to the attack on Pearl Harbor. 20:54: ⚔ The events leading up to the attack on Pearl Harbor. 28:53: 🔥 The surprise attack on Pearl Harbor by the Japanese resulted in significant damage to the American fleet and numerous casualties. 36:07: 🌍 The attack on Pearl Harbor by Japan led to the United States entering World War II, with Germany and Italy also declaring war on the US. 43:07: 🌍 The entry of America into the war provided hope for the Allies to defeat the Axis powers and rebuild Europe, but also brought a new enemy, Japan, threatening British territories in the Pacific. 49:00: 🌍 The attack on Pearl Harbor marked the beginning of a global conflict in which the Allies had a chance to stop Hitler and the Axis powers. Recap by Tammy AI
@AmericaVoice Жыл бұрын
Thank you very much for putting this together for us! I truly appreciate it! Happy holidays! 🇺🇸
@billotto602 Жыл бұрын
I wish I had been about 20 back then.
@jameshotz1350 Жыл бұрын
The U.S. should have known the Japanes would attack.
@TomFynn10 ай бұрын
They did. They just did not know where and precisely when. Singapore? Dutch Indonesia? Philippines?
@Elver0520 Жыл бұрын
Muy educativo
@numeric.alphabet Жыл бұрын
When they said "tora2x", we have to twiced it.
@GregoryHawkins-k4b Жыл бұрын
It wasn't popular to be a cute, little, charming, girly girl anywhere in American America at that time. That's when you were better off being a European girlish girl.
@67nairb Жыл бұрын
40:33-40:36 December 11, 1940? You mean December 11, 1941.
@nashdest Жыл бұрын
Turn on close captioning. WTF?
@Desertcorps41 Жыл бұрын
Can someone tell me the name of the music playing in the intro?
@IMAGESOFWAR Жыл бұрын
All music is either composed by Liam Dale or from the KBO Media archive. Cheers..
@Desertcorps41 Жыл бұрын
@@IMAGESOFWAR Thanks for your reply. But I couldn't find the music I was looking for. I only looked for the music at the beginning of the video.
@IMAGESOFWAR Жыл бұрын
@@Desertcorps41 My music is not commercially available.. glad you like it though. All the best.. Liam Dale (Director and presenter of this series).
@garyfasso6223 Жыл бұрын
Good job, but lose the distracting, ill-carpentered captions.
@d00vinator Жыл бұрын
Turn off closed captioning.
@garyfasso6223 Жыл бұрын
@d00vinator no, this was baked into vid.
@garyrunnalls7714 Жыл бұрын
Picture was not Nagumo
@suzannakoizumi8605 Жыл бұрын
Germany never paid reparations.
@amadoutamboura4745 Жыл бұрын
Le commentataire me plaît beaucoup sa voix
@violakrone8429 Жыл бұрын
Is that musik from the witcher 3 ?
@alexanderh.5814 Жыл бұрын
This video has multiple personalities
@67nairb Жыл бұрын
Doris Miller? A man with a woman's name? Courageous man though?
@iomarsilvalima969 Жыл бұрын
documentarios são bons demais junior...❤❤
@numeric.alphabet Жыл бұрын
Tora,nihongo~tiger,eng Tora Daigaku Todai
@numeric.alphabet Жыл бұрын
Used to cut in two of Netherland indie hollandaise
@cctvporium1893 Жыл бұрын
Why have title in English while the documentary is in French??
@ricardomagalhaesalves1102 Жыл бұрын
Tô learn some french
@danrooc Жыл бұрын
Curioso, yo lo escuché enteramente en inglés y con subtítulos en español.
@IMAGESOFWAR Жыл бұрын
Change the language setting.. :-)
@mikeaguilar576411 ай бұрын
Actually the main objective of the attackers were the carriers but they weren't there.
@paulmcknight4137 Жыл бұрын
Well done visuals. Political actors parallel to those running the war in Ukr@ine. Japan freaked out and the US dropped two atomic bombs on them. Have they learned anything?
@numeric.alphabet Жыл бұрын
Was part of Philippines and Netherland indie hollandaise
@67nairb Жыл бұрын
35:14 Japanese midget submarine.
@CommackMark Жыл бұрын
Of course the Sovietscwerent exactly fighting for freedom.... but thats another story.
@followerofjulian1652 Жыл бұрын
God bless Dr. Oppenheimer for the atomic bombs that fell on Hiroshima and Nagasaki!
@reludavid8039 Жыл бұрын
FDR un mare politician.
@johnemerson1363 Жыл бұрын
Sorry, but Pearl Harbor is not on the largest island of the Hawaiian chain. Oahu is one of the smaller islands. Hawaii is the largest.