Stalin Feared General Zhukov See U in History #SeeUinHistory #History
Пікірлер: 965
@C0pperChpper3 ай бұрын
Zhukov looks like a North Korean General with these medals, but in comparison, he EARNED THEM ALL.
@dingus63173 ай бұрын
North Koreans inherit their families medals apparently
@noitawl3 ай бұрын
Who cares? They where both criminals, and they should both have been tried for war crimes!
@mattkennedy61152 ай бұрын
@@joaquinribeiro2941yea because they fight in so many wars 😂
@doktertjiftjaf51862 ай бұрын
Not all of them. He had many jubilee medals, you don't really have to earn them.
@flowrepins66632 ай бұрын
@@mattkennedy6115if they are old enough they may have fought the korean war at least. Even though most would prefer to loose that war
@oldsmobileman14033 ай бұрын
He spent his later years fishing. Eisenhower heard of this and sent him tackle to which he greatly appreciated.
@diocletian6073 ай бұрын
I think Zhukov also sent Ike a fishing rod or somethin
@jiyuhong58533 ай бұрын
Wait really?
@oldsmobileman14033 ай бұрын
@@jiyuhong5853 Yes. Dwight wanted to visit him in Russia later in life, but was either rejected to travel there or something. This bummed Dwight out. He heard Zhukov enjoyed fishing, so he sent him a real nice set of tackle to which Zhukov cherished. I'm sure it still exists amongst his relatives.
@Flashman361753 ай бұрын
and soda
@jefffinkbonner95513 ай бұрын
@@oldsmobileman1403Such a visit really could’ve helped ease Cold War tensions
@johnburns96343 ай бұрын
Zhukov was shuffled out after Stalin died. Zhukov never forgave Khrushchev for that.
@thereall71492 ай бұрын
Especially after they worked together to remove Beria
@evancoker1942 ай бұрын
@@thereall7149 Right.
@ya-drug2 ай бұрын
@thereall7149 yeah especially when he came into the politburo room with AKs!!
@BushnShrubsАй бұрын
@@ya-drug “Right, what's a war hero got to do to get some lubrication around here?”
@VyacheslavvvvАй бұрын
Zhukov was exhiled to a Siberian outpost under Stalin, likely for disagreeing with Stalin on multiple occasions. He was the only person to do so who actually lived
@AGMundy3 ай бұрын
Zhukov would normally died in "tragic circumstances" but he was so popular, not even Stalin's stooges would have been taken in.
@HeichE9443 ай бұрын
@@joaquinribeiro2941Truth.
@muzickabibliotekagrebic36203 ай бұрын
@@joaquinribeiro2941Whatever “truth” comes from the West, consider the opposite of it. Whoever they portray as a bad guy, truly, it might be not such a bad guy.
@Bielanski-bandzior3 ай бұрын
Not true. He would have rather been charged and then sentenced to death in a public trial
@rfvtgbzhn2 ай бұрын
@@Bielanski-bandziorno, Stalin didn't put extremely popular people on trial. He had Kirov killed, but framed the "old Bolsheviks" for it and then used this framing to start his purges.
@aproxy72632 ай бұрын
This is simply not true. There are many ways in which Stalin could've gotten rid of Zhukov. Stalins successor certainly had no trouble getting rid of Zhukov.
@rustic_russian25 күн бұрын
Weak men fear strong men.
@Euler27123 күн бұрын
Sigma
@aidanhelfrich488719 күн бұрын
@@Euler271 why are you saying one of the Greek alphabet letters?
@SkippertheBart19 күн бұрын
Strong men fear looking weak.
@HaxxorElite17 күн бұрын
@@SkippertheBartstrong men don't care what others perceive them as
@calebdixon78417 күн бұрын
@@SkippertheBartstrong men never care what others thinks that’s insecurity
@global.citizens23 күн бұрын
Imagine being terriffied of your best valuable people
@Euler27123 күн бұрын
Politics & power
@lordmemnoch51821 күн бұрын
when you are a paranoid power hungry narcissist a lot of things are quite possible!
@hevnervals18 күн бұрын
@@lordmemnoch518I don’t think narcissism has anything to do with it.
@ivandragokrizanac942916 күн бұрын
really? @@hevnervals
@oching415 күн бұрын
oy vey
@shaikmohiddin439728 күн бұрын
He escaped general Pattons tragedy
@josephsmith68820 күн бұрын
His soviet car was too slow^^
@E88twenty215 күн бұрын
Patton is way overrated.
@Tod35711 күн бұрын
comparing Patton to Zhukov is like comparing a highschool athlete with an NFL one. Nowhere near the same level.
@Ragnarok5762 ай бұрын
“Terrified” is an overstatement, its true Stalin hated Zhukov but he knew there was nothing that could be done about him because Zhukov was a legitimate war hero who was loved by the Soviet people and the army.
@micahh93512 ай бұрын
Let us not forget he got to die peacefully with his family of old age. In the SOVIET UNION. Dude had it good.
@Setsuzation2 ай бұрын
that is rare indeed especially in the USSR
@gonozal8_96223 күн бұрын
life expectancy almost doubled under Stalin compared to pre-revolutionary russia, but ok
@Setsuzation22 күн бұрын
@@gonozal8_962 He meant that in the USSR, most high-ranking people met their end by an "accident"
@Stephen-uz8dm22 күн бұрын
I find that difficult to believe. Is it according to soveit sources? @@gonozal8_962
@aRandomPerson...17 күн бұрын
@@Stephen-uz8dm Tsarist Russia was worse than the Russian SSR.
@Bergen982 ай бұрын
Stalin killed and purged millions but was so afraid of Zhukov's power and popularity, that he didn't dare to even try to accuse him of anything
@herroherrarlee67692 ай бұрын
He did at first when the Germans totally destroyed Russian army earlier in the war, he was demoted
@sibsnake2 ай бұрын
copium
@harisnuman3538Ай бұрын
@@sibsnakeI wonder how would you cope by September 1941 without food at all if USA didn't send you food?
@sibsnakeАй бұрын
@@harisnuman3538 bro believes that USA gave USSR more than 1% of food or equipment Union produced. Common wеstoid mind
@Stormyy631025 күн бұрын
@@harisnuman3538 propaganda is so strong in the West it can make you believe that despite the USSR suffering 20+million losses (both civilian and military) and facing the majority of the German force throughout the whole war the West was responsible for the victory of the USSR in WW2, yeah no wonder Western countries are fcked when such obvious propaganda works on them
@hadenmontgomery58884 ай бұрын
Stalin then died and the Marshal became a king maker
@maxhouse11253 ай бұрын
Zhukov must have decided that Khruschev was a lesser evil than Beria.
@MichaelKennedy-tr1xc2 ай бұрын
He arrested Beria...no one else had the authority within the military.
@PhoenixT7024 күн бұрын
Sadly, he made the wrong king. Had Zhukov taken the reigns himself, the Cold War might have ended right there. He didn’t want power, which is the best argument there is for his deserving it.
@rafaelbolanho510423 күн бұрын
@@maxhouse1125 not only a lesser evil, by soviet standards Kruschev was a pretty good leader, specially comparing it with Stalin's
@Rune-Thief23 күн бұрын
@@PhoenixT70 I doubt that, Cold War wouldn't stop just like that.
@balancedactguy24 күн бұрын
I doubt Stalin was Terrified of Zhukov, but he certainly saw him as a threat.
@kauffrau67643 ай бұрын
Plus Zhukov was very handsome. There’s footage of him entering Berlin when they took the city. He had so much energy.
@user-un6gd6oh4b23 күн бұрын
Doesn't look handsome here
@thegodofthegods108420 күн бұрын
@@user-un6gd6oh4b Cause he's old.
@memirandawong19 күн бұрын
Not compared to Rossokoskivy.
@kauffrau676419 күн бұрын
@@memirandawong Yes. He is handsome too. A bit more sensuous than Zhukov, whom I prefer.
@abdulsalamibrahim858114 күн бұрын
But how did USA manipulate this war and said it wins the war
@marckcarbonelloifveteran4103 ай бұрын
He learned to become an officer at Sossen German Officer school during the mid 1930s.
@thebuddhaofknowledgemichae24863 ай бұрын
German trained
@ignacio38903 ай бұрын
@@thebuddhaofknowledgemichae2486 And guderian was trained in the ussr in kazan
@madeinddr55793 ай бұрын
Zossen
@marckcarbonelloifveteran4103 ай бұрын
@@ignacio3890 study History!
@marckcarbonelloifveteran4103 ай бұрын
@@thebuddhaofknowledgemichae2486 Yes during the early 1930s, Zhukov trained at Zossen when the USSR and Germany were not at war.
@Alex-ne1xj27 күн бұрын
That’s how weak Stalin was. Got rid of one of his best men out of jealousy.
@bradandrews77722 күн бұрын
A tradition in Russia and then the USSR for centuries.
@ericsierra-franco780221 күн бұрын
That's how paranoid Stalin was.
@DragoM12826 күн бұрын
The guy has an entire ebay section on his chest 😂
@aleczelensky592521 күн бұрын
No...entire ebay section he put in his train when he left Germany
@fritangaman2 ай бұрын
Zhukov also defeated japanese in Khalkin gol at 1939, before the IIWW when japanese tried to invade URSS by the east.
@alexnord575619 күн бұрын
WW2 USSR
@amunra53303 ай бұрын
Field Marshal Zhukov
@BusinessHacks-zo6mk3 ай бұрын
I love how Brits teach me my country's history.
@tilmar1203 ай бұрын
American AI voice
@castleanthrax18333 ай бұрын
Only Americans pronounce Moscow that way. Mos🐄
@evancoker1942 ай бұрын
Since the days of the N.K.V.D., Stalin and Beria, we trust little from the Eastern viewpoint. Too many bodies buried. Or never found.
@stephenbarnes26262 ай бұрын
@@castleanthrax1833honestly if Americans says it’s pronounced a certain way, it’s pronounced that way. You can choose the things when you’re back to back world war champs.
@castleanthrax18332 ай бұрын
@stephenbarnes2626 If you knew anything about world history, you'd know that America didn't win either world war. An alliance of countries won WWII, which included America, and you did barely anything in WWI. Learn about WORLD history, not the propaganda you are taught in school.
@HughBond-kx7ly3 ай бұрын
Everyone at the top of power has to be afraid of someone.
@leonblittle2263 ай бұрын
Stalin was a coward, he knew the General was not
@jomama34653 ай бұрын
@mezjean5966 is that why Stalin boarded his personal train to retreat when he heard the news the Germans are coming?
@andrealettich3 ай бұрын
@mezjean5966no not a little cowardly
@thisislaflaretv52503 ай бұрын
@mezjean5966 very much a coward.
@RestlessBogatyr3 ай бұрын
@@thisislaflaretv5250The guy was a bank robber and a frontline Commander during the Russian Civil War and Polish-Soviet war
@Koshelev850403 ай бұрын
Zhukow was coward as well. The firs 3 days of Kursk battle noone knwe where he dissapeared. He actually run to the West front to hos friend Sokolovsky, where was relatively calm at that moment.
@AYANAMlREl2 ай бұрын
zhukov gave credit to stalin for winning ww2
@TB-zf7we2 ай бұрын
He was shrewdly smart enough in survival politics to give undeserved credit to Stalin. He had been through the purges and was trying to save his neck for retirement.
@stevem23232 ай бұрын
What credit was that?
@TheMuzz74326 күн бұрын
@@stevem2323 Saying, Stalin won....
@stevem232326 күн бұрын
@@TheMuzz743 Nope, they won in spite of Stalin and his idiocy.
@Stormyy631025 күн бұрын
@@stevem2323 actually no, Stalin was genuinely far from being an idiot, he was actually extremely smart but he was also undoubtedly crazy as well (paranoia), what isn't true is saying they won "despite Stalin" when actually Stalin was a very capable military commander and by the end of the war had compltely understood how to beat Germany, he understood how to make due with what he had at the time of the start of Barabarossa as well, best example is the deportation of the factories and their workers to the Ural mountains, sure it was cruel but it was undoubtedly the way to win the war and very few people besides Stalin would've done that and especially not as quickly as he did. On the other hand he was also responsible for millions of death during the purges amongst which were most of the competent soviet generals and admirals the USSR had if that's what you were thinking but on the other other hand how can you know that if he hadn't done that the situation would be the same ? How can you be sure that there wouldn't have been chaos the moment the Germans invaded ? That's the neat part : you can't, which is why bringing up the purges won't work in your favor here
@lucas473621 күн бұрын
He was even closer with and admired by Eisenhower
@FERNANDOGONZALEZ-pb6re23 күн бұрын
I too I'm FLABBERGASTED by the shear fact that the general didn't suffer from any unfortunate "accident"or mishap.Good to see even in communist countries that certain individuals were spared harsh sudden deaths by the Politburo.
@RoadToFuture00722 күн бұрын
You shouldnt blindly believe the western fairytales about Russia and in particular about Stalin. He is one of the most misinterpreted figure in human history. I tell you one fact: there was another Soviet general Budjonny. Once he called Stalin and told him on the phone that some people came for him to arrest him and that he is defending himself on his property with a machine gun. Stalin answered: hold on there, I will send you some reinforcements. And so Budjonny was saved. This means that those hundred thousand arrested (and not millions) were actually not arrested on the personal directive of Stalin himself. Stalin simply didn't have time for doing that. Rather this was some social proces in Soviet Russia where different groups were fighting each other. And Stalin himself had a chance to become a victim of the so called Stalin purges during those elite fights. Those fight are not only typical for Russia. Remember Kennedy, Roosevelt and other killed presidents?
@maquisasmr360721 күн бұрын
the disgust of envy and animosity is imbedded in alot of people, sadly.
@AStogne25 күн бұрын
every soviet military commander looks like my grandpa and we’re not even from the soviet union
@alexnord575619 күн бұрын
What are you from?
@platano_mamahuevo3 ай бұрын
now do Rokossovsky the most Heroic General in the USSR
@cedricgist761424 күн бұрын
Thank you. I recognized Marshal Rokossovsky standing in the background of one of the photos shown here - and I remember learning how loyal he was to his country and its leadership despite being unfairly imprisoned. The Soviets and/or the Russians have been cast as enemies of the West - but Rokossovsky's story reminds me that most of us love and are loyal to our countries - and that we as humans have more in common than we often like to admit. Edit: I had to correct my misspelling of the marshal's name after going to his profile on Wikipedia. I didn't know he was Polish, had been in the cavalry, and had been both the superior and subordinate of Marshal Zhukov. Rokossovsky is a fascinating individual and I'm going to learn more....Thank you!
@eddychong94773 ай бұрын
Trotsky: And I took that personally
@davetheman26153 ай бұрын
I Implore if interested, to see the video when Zhukov was giving a speech, the normally disciplined Stalin, could not hide the disdain on his face when looking at Zhukov, it is frightening to see, knowing how utterly ruthless the man was
@loslobos78620 күн бұрын
Zhukov was the Soviet Unions best General he came from peasant stock aswell and was ironically hopelessly devoted to Stalin. The Man Literally had no political ambitions he was however still a threat politically as he was the second most popular Man in the Soviet Union, which is all that saved him from being purged. He sealed his fate in the Victory parade in Moscow when he rode a White Stallion at the head of the Army as it marched passed Stalin in review. The image circulated amongst the Russian People conjuring up in the zeitgeist of Russia that Zhukov as some savior, some White Night riding to their rescue. Stalin couldn't handle this as he saw himself in this way and reportedly flew into a rage whenever Zhukov was mentioned thereafter. He was soon exiled to a unimportant corner of Ural Mountains I believe on the edge of the Kazakhstan until his death. It's a tragic end to the one Man arguably most responsible for defeating the Nazis but really it's probably the only way a Man like that escapes alive from a regime that killed almost three times the number of People that the Nazis did.
@282XVL22 күн бұрын
The true measure of Zhukov's status is that even Stalin was too afraid to purge him.
@ericsierra-franco780221 күн бұрын
Zhukov was one of very, very few people who could even contradict Stalin....and that is really saying something.
@onlyateenager49604 ай бұрын
I like the format of the video
@nizameusope673020 күн бұрын
Without Zhukov, WWII would have been vastly different
@kaptan_davuk18 күн бұрын
Imagine having balls so heavy, even stalin cant remove them.
@sakazukiakainu13232 ай бұрын
No it was Nikita Khrushchev who lowered his position from chief of staff But it's Stalin was afraid of him but he didn't do anything against him
@user-lr5th4fy2hАй бұрын
And if the internet has taught me anything, he also had a strong Yorkshire accent
@danieldeschenes57252 ай бұрын
Zhukov was in my opinion the greatest military leader in world war 2 . His Red Army soldiers under his command won all the major battles against the German army . His military defense planning genius saved Moscow . The battle of Stalingrad is often referred to as the turning point in world war 2 , the battle where the tide turned in favor of the allied side against the axis .
@Death_Korps_Officer24 күн бұрын
I think he had so many medals that he would often have several men around him, wearing his medals and badges, because there was no more space in his uniform to put them all at the same time.
@jonardcayton13953 ай бұрын
General zhukov is just a pure military man doing his job without self interests like general rommel , general yamashita and others
@3baxcb2 ай бұрын
Rommel was quite overrated and had some poor habits that Montgomery was able to capitalize on.
@richardkalmwater59963 ай бұрын
Victory has many fathers and defeat is an orphan. Zhukov got things done but...he wasted a lot of Russian lives. He was NOT the USSR's best general...
@patl7093 ай бұрын
Who was the USSR best General if it’s not Zhukov?
@richardkalmwater59963 ай бұрын
@@patl709 Rossokovsky Rosso was under Zhukov in the 1941 Battle of Moscow. At Moscow, Zhukov refused Rosso's request to retreat. Finally Zhukov relented. Rosso was also at most the big battles. Rosso was their best.
@saidblanco76963 ай бұрын
@@richardkalmwater5996 Marshal Konstantin *Rokossovsky* , not Rossokovsky
@702thrillz3 ай бұрын
Dude, he won them the war. The German Army was putting a real beating on the Russians. If it wasn't for him, they would have lost. The Russians did loose millions of people. But this was not because of him. Stalin ordered no retreat. He was a Soldier who not only followed his orders but a Patriot. Give the man and his team there flowers.
@juri87233 ай бұрын
@@702thrillzyes it was because of him. Read „walking over corpses“ by viktor suvorov
@spike-421928 күн бұрын
Not just well known, but well loved by his people.
@SimulacronX20 күн бұрын
We have liberated Europe from fascism, but they will never forgive us for it." - General Zhukov
@702thrillz3 ай бұрын
He got lucky he wasn't taken out back.
@Setton_Exile22 күн бұрын
Zhukov’s Tactics we’re “Human Wave”
@aleczelensky592521 күн бұрын
meat wave you mean...or humans in the wave if we speaking of crossing Dnieper
@love.society20 күн бұрын
That is a common misconception (or lie) that has kept being pushed since the Cold War started.
@Krebssssssss19 күн бұрын
That requires nuance. The Soviets weren’t in a position to fight like the Americans or Germans. Relatively speaking, Soviet technology was behind both of those countries, and while their industrial capacity was good, they couldn’t match what the U.S. could output on a monthly basis, so they had to fight with the strength they had, which was raw manpower. But to say they just threw waves of people at the Germans undermines the brilliant strategy that the Soviets deployed in battles like the Battles of Moscow and Kursk. In contrast, “throwing waves of people” is actually what the Russians did in WWI and it ended catastrophically for them in battle after battle.
@alexpol89382 ай бұрын
Wow, history rewriting
@greatkhan727826 күн бұрын
You forgot to mention he was played to perfection by Jason Isaacs in the film The Death Of Stalin
@alexnord575619 күн бұрын
It's strange that he wasn't played by a black guy
@greatkhan727818 күн бұрын
@@alexnord5756 🤣 🤣
@NamNguyen-zc5cj4 ай бұрын
The legendary foursome 😂😂😂❤❤❤
@stealmysunshine8 күн бұрын
Well he was popular and competent and if you said to him "you and who's army?" then all he had to do was point at the army outside the window
@Nerthos21 күн бұрын
Zhukov also had the loyalty of Mongolia. Stalin was rightfully afraid, as he knew a fight between them would see most of the military side with Zhukov. Zhukov was also indifferent to Lenin's brainrot, and was only concerned about Russia. He couldn't care less whether there was a communist dictator or a Tsar as long as the country was safe and he commanded the armies.
@37BopCity2 ай бұрын
I don't believe Stalin "feared" anyone under his incredibly ruthless dictatorship. He could have people shot in an instant, no matter how powerful they were. All Stalin had to do was order someone to be killed, and it was done. He was hugely respectful of Zhukov, and "fear" should be replaced with "watchful" and "observant" of Zhukov's powers.
@graceygrumble2 ай бұрын
He feared everyone. He was paranoid.
@HallingtonA27 күн бұрын
Zhukov was actually very careful with Stalin. To prevent any “paranoia” with Stalin he gave credit to Stalin for winning the war. Zhukov was usually a very quiet man and didn’t act until observing the situation. he didn’t have intentions on being a leader of the nation anyway
@ronanchristiana.belleza927025 күн бұрын
@@HallingtonAstill even then its quite a feat that he was able to avoid Stalin radar
@HallingtonA25 күн бұрын
@@ronanchristiana.belleza9270 yes
@coolsceegaming617824 күн бұрын
@@HallingtonAso he basically just made it clear he really wasn't doing anything at all, and made it clear he thinks Stalin was the guy who won the fight and that his fame was just a side bonus?
@-RONNIE4 ай бұрын
I didn't know that but thank you for the information
@lugo_996914 күн бұрын
Stalin was a coward when it came to his personal safety. Zhukov was a brave hero.
@VolkovVelikan27 күн бұрын
Not only Stalin, but the entire high party officials and ministers. They thought he could become some sort of Napoleonic figure dissolving the whole revolution and communist party itself.
@ericsierra-franco780221 күн бұрын
Excellent point! In fact, Stalin accused Zhukov of "Bonapartism".
@Asturian-vm3skАй бұрын
Zhukov looks like the type of a guy you can kick back and have a beer with.
@heyokasamurai453Ай бұрын
Zhukov was 100% a chill capitalist when he went to the US to specify ask for disguised Coca Cola
@InternetStuff22 ай бұрын
"Don't outshine the master" quoted from: 48 Laws of Power by Robert Greene
@noName-kn1lx3 ай бұрын
Statin feared anyone who threatened his power. Zhukov is lucky he wasn’t a wet spot in a prison somewhere
@owl807424 күн бұрын
Unlike the north korean guys with them medals, he earned it like how a minecraft player goes around collecting achievement
@mikecain313410 күн бұрын
Gen Zhukov's battle maps of Stlangrad proved the Soviets had in reserve an army bigger then all the other allied armies combined. Stalin wanted a second front in France in 1943 so he could unleash this reserve army. Stalin's mistake was to make the allies believe without a second front the Soviet Union would surrender. Just like Russia did in WW1. Churchill pushed for holding off untill the allies could invade and not be pushed back out of France.
@Not_Sandor3 ай бұрын
"Did you know that Stalin,the merciless leader" After these words you can skip this video
@thereall71492 ай бұрын
Why?
@PMCGOSLING2 ай бұрын
Cope
@Germany1524Ай бұрын
Not So Fun Fact: Did You Know That During The Soviet Regime from 1922-1990 They Killed Over 125M People? Stalin Himself has over 20M Kills Most From The Famine And Stuffs He Caused So It's Very Accurate to Represent Him as a Merciless Dictator
@marckcarbonelloifveteran4103 ай бұрын
Chuikov was at Stalingrad, not Zhukov
@haythemsandel83033 ай бұрын
Do some research, Zhukov was the commander of the counteroffensive that encircled the Germans in Stalingrad
@maliceharding46683 ай бұрын
That was Konstantin Rokossovsky he was the one who saved Stalingrad
@THX-11113 ай бұрын
Chuikov was the commander in charge of defending the city itself.
@maxhouse11253 ай бұрын
@@maliceharding4668 After the 6th Army was encircled, Rokossovsky led a mopping up operation from the west towards Stalingrad itself. He is more noted for his detailed planning of Operation Bagration.
@marckcarbonelloifveteran4102 ай бұрын
Zhukov fue el que dio punto final a la operación Soviética en Stalingrado. El tenía ventaja de 10-1 sobre los Alemanes. Chuikov fue el que peleo dentro de Stalingrado. Los Soviéticos ganaban sus batallas basadas en superioridad numérica no es si en estrategia.
@VLFBERHTwolf24 күн бұрын
General Zhukov name and deeds remind me of Prince Zuko from Avatar: The Last Airbender. Coincidence?
@Ralius-sv7nz19 күн бұрын
the fact that he did not just have him killed says a lot about how much he was in fear of him and his power.
@friedrichnietzsche780519 күн бұрын
Dude had that Thanos look😂
@turtledog505028 күн бұрын
This is definitely a good reason why authoritarianism is terrible in the long run. It’s all about serving the leader and not about being the most competent person. Since they don’t promote exclusively off merit, that stagnates progress
@CallsignYukiMizuki25 күн бұрын
And he admitted that Lend Lease was crucial to the Soviet's survival. "Today some say the Allies didn't really help us ... But listen, one cannot deny that the Americans shipped over to us material without which we could not have equipped our armies held in reserve or been able to continue the war"
@user-re8tv7hg4n25 күн бұрын
Thank you for the information.
@alecsanlerthemoldovan2 ай бұрын
Not a single word about Rokosovsky
@SuperRip723 күн бұрын
The video clip is only one minute.
@ericsierra-franco780221 күн бұрын
The clip is about Zhukov.
@Roman0ff_493 ай бұрын
On the west thay called this fear, in Russia we call this respect.
@ericsierra-franco780221 күн бұрын
Sure it is! Stalin accused Zhukov of "Bonapartism" and demoted him after the war. Undoubtedly Stalin respected Zhukov but he also was wary of him. Although, I don't think he was "terrified" of Zhukov.
@baabaabaa-yp2jh7 күн бұрын
Was he a ninja too!?! All those shurikens on his jacket... dead giveaway!!
@markturner624020 күн бұрын
So terrified he threatened to cut his " Big head off?"
@somerandomchillpotato19913 ай бұрын
Source
@haythemsandel83033 ай бұрын
Yo mama
@somerandomchillpotato19913 ай бұрын
@@haythemsandel8303 sounds about right
@51su2 ай бұрын
Heroic... did he even fire a gun during his battles? Yeah i feel very heroic winning wars on hoi4 safe behind a desk. Smh
@fatha._2 ай бұрын
that is what field marshall do
@51su2 ай бұрын
@@fatha._ i know i know. But how are you then heroic
@terroristtuxedo41322 ай бұрын
@@51su Zhukov fought for the red army for many years thats one reason, also he was cruical for defenses of moscow lenin and stalingrad againts the germans who were blitzint throufh russia. He was a brillitiant strategiest and that is also a reason hes considered a hero because it takes more then just clicking a few units in real life to win a war.
@krle79702 ай бұрын
@@51suare you stuck in the Napoleonic era? Generals don’t lead from the front or actively participate in the battle, they are much too important than a basic soldier.
@schmumu2 ай бұрын
He fought in World War I and in Mongolia against Imperial Japanese troops.
@shamapujana-lg3dd7 сағат бұрын
Marshal with zero battle loss ratio
@user-jr8fg5zi3f18 күн бұрын
كلّهم ذهبوا إلى أمّهم الهاوية ، وما أدراك ماهي ، نار حامية
@Marcusianery3 ай бұрын
Still a monster.
@the_neo_crusader2 ай бұрын
How?
@rfvtgbzhn2 ай бұрын
@@the_neo_crusaderbecause some people blame him for every atrocity that the Red Army committed in WW2, but ignore things like that he actually tried to curb things like raping. In a great war, there are always a lot of atrocities happening on all sides, but the Germans were definitely worse, because their leaders encouraged atrocities, while the Soviet leaders tried to minimize unnecessary violence against civilians (but used scorched earth when retreating, which at that time was generally not considered a war crime, but a legit military strategy, although it definitely also hurts civilians).
@powerup50754 ай бұрын
Stalin was not afraid of anyone boy
@IdoSha4 ай бұрын
Only Tito
@DutchmanAmsterdam4 ай бұрын
Stalin was a scaredy pants. 😂
@MyRedXephos3 ай бұрын
stalin was afraid of everyone and everything hence all the political assassinations and gulags
@johnburns96343 ай бұрын
He was afraid of his inner circle after Barbarossa.
@hanipasha88593 ай бұрын
He was scared of the Austrian painter
@JimNorkas-qx4nt3 ай бұрын
Zhokov, hero of the Soviet Union three times, had MANY loyal troops that would have put "Uncle Joe" in the ground.😅
@VandalAudi2 ай бұрын
What's a war hero got to do to get a little lubrication in here - Zhukov -
@frankcaurso1314Ай бұрын
Jason Isaacs was awesome in " Death of Stalin "
@frankcaurso1314Ай бұрын
" what do you have to wash your hair " to the bald Guy 😂😂😂
@larryconnerjr18352 ай бұрын
Zhukov is the greatest Allied general of WW2 not Patton not Monty which is the proganda that has been given to Americans like me and also British people who follow and are interested in WW2
@SatchelChannel2 ай бұрын
Stalin was good, zhukov was good too. After Stalin revisionism destroyed the USSR
@thevvitch75852 ай бұрын
Use object that blocks airflow on your windpipe
@AYANAMlREl2 ай бұрын
@@thevvitch7585 he is correct
@victorperfecto74722 ай бұрын
Stalin is a usurper
@vanrex76822 ай бұрын
@@thevvitch7585I swear people who idolize psychotic mass murders are on the increase these days.
@ruinhem2 ай бұрын
@@vanrex7682 Olfactory vector leaders are the smartest people on the planet. "Psychotic" is a non-word which holds no value when you use it due to a lack of understanding of its meaning. And "mass murderer" is just a bold lie. It's common sense when you're learning of someone not to trust their enemy. Every single lie the uneducated and misinformed tell about this historical figure was either made up by the Khrushchev or Cold War era politicians. The former was an idiot with no personal significance, utilizing slander in order to gain popularity, and the latter had to employ misinformation due to the nature of their job. To believe either is unwise. And continuing the slander (intentionally or otherwise) is a major mistake. The light in which the "western" narrative paints the entirety of society and its history is intentionally naive and is only effective against the gullible. It's a dead end, naturally. You can only lie for so long before you lose everybody's trust. Besides, we're all pretty tired of bloodshed by now, starting conflicts is getting increasingly harder. When people will finally stop supporting neo-nazis all of the lies that piled up will predictably crumble.
@Astartes-696921 күн бұрын
Jason Isaacs played him really well. If you guys haven't seen 'Death Of Stalin' go watch it.
@renat178620 күн бұрын
+1, was looking for this comment, moreover 'The Death of Stalin' is banned in russia lol
@alexnord575619 күн бұрын
It's strange that he wasn't played by a black guy
@fingal11322 күн бұрын
i love how they portrayed him in "the death of Stalin"
@johnweerasinghe41394 ай бұрын
That's all false . Displays your ignorance if the role the party played in Soviet politics. The party did not want another Napoleon. The concern was not unique to Stalin all the Soviet leaders were very conscious of the history of Framce and Napoleon s power. Stalin was not a dictator. The party could have dismissed Stalin if they had deemed necessary.
@patl7093 ай бұрын
Maybe in theory. However, in reality everyone was too afraid to take him on. Partly because they were afraid how Stalin would respond, and secondly because the leadership genuinely believed in him, and were concerned that whoever replaced him might then replace them. As happened when Khrushchev took over.
@ericsierra-franco780221 күн бұрын
By WWII Stalin was an all powerful Dictator.
@jevgeniardassov21 күн бұрын
I did know that. I also know Lenin told everyone before his death “don’t trust Stalin and don’t let him become the new leader”. That thought failed miserably… 💩
@NgJackal1990Ай бұрын
“Stalin had little need for heroes.” Viktor Reznov.
@courtpaul933410 күн бұрын
Stalin was so terrified that General Zhukov would have become more popular & powerful than he was & he didn't want Zhukov do to him what he did to his people
@whitefeather838721 күн бұрын
He is a True GENERAL😊
@CraigerAce25 күн бұрын
Please let me add clarity to this short video about Georgy Konstantinovich Zhukov. Zhukov's highest official rank in the Red Army was "Marshal," not "Field Marshal." Why? Because the Soviet armed forces, including the Red Army, didn't have the rank of "Field marshal" as did other nations, such as Britain. The equivalent French rank is "Marshal of France."
@megastack9521 күн бұрын
That photo of Zhukov and Montgomery is pretty dope
@cardenas899521 күн бұрын
Zhukov was removed from power by Kruschev, not by Stalin.
@Alec72HD20 күн бұрын
Because Khruschev was a Ukrainian nationalist.
@jackcat374513 күн бұрын
Stalin knew the general had no interest in politics.
@kjellhl1975Ай бұрын
The guy who had so many medals that he had to refuse new medals as there was simply no room for another one 😅
@thebagelsproductionsАй бұрын
Stalin wasn't terrified of him. He was willing to stand up to Stalin during the war, though
@Itsjebv1416 күн бұрын
bro makes stalin's timbers shivering
@SwordOfS23 күн бұрын
He was a Marshal, not a General.
@Mark-yy2pyАй бұрын
He was one of the most outstanding field marshals of the war.
@kleodaereuz36984 ай бұрын
Can you make infantry weapons of Japan in ww2
@MrDamon88819 күн бұрын
Zhukov was a monster himself.
@user-en3pd3qg7r18 күн бұрын
Zhukov wasn't removed from power until after 1953 after the death of Stalin