Real Time History

Real Time History

Official account for Real Time History, production company behind The Great War, 16 Days in Berlin, Rhineland 45 and more. Covering military history across the ages.

Imprint:
RTH - Real Time History GmbH
Richard von Weizsäcker Platz 1-2
10827 Berlin

Пікірлер

  • @gogrape9716
    @gogrape971627 минут бұрын

    Alpha Male Domination and Control is the existential reason for aggression, as usual...

  • @Marinealver
    @Marinealver2 сағат бұрын

    they lost, that's why

  • @user-zc3do8vk4q
    @user-zc3do8vk4q3 сағат бұрын

    Their war,sorry

  • @user-zc3do8vk4q
    @user-zc3do8vk4q3 сағат бұрын

    It all goes back to Kennedy.....It is there war,it is up to them to win it or lose it

  • @thelkorny
    @thelkorny4 сағат бұрын

    The question should not be how was he defeated but how was he ever succesfull in africa. Answer: the Germans found the code to decipher Allied communication in an Allied embasy in ittally. Rommel knew what the Allied were going to do the whole time.

  • @markodominko4541
    @markodominko45414 сағат бұрын

    Becouse of Tsung Tzu hahahhaah bible of war

  • @Jameywells777
    @Jameywells7774 сағат бұрын

    Charlie is all up in the Trees Man !!

  • @Philip271828
    @Philip2718285 сағат бұрын

    This always looks like a learning experience. These things are never as simple as they look and you need to find out where your weaknesses are, such as Patton and Montgomery being incompatible. Imagine the carnage if they had gone into Normandy without practice.

  • @wnose
    @wnose6 сағат бұрын

    I always wonder why the free French weren't the first ones to hit the beaches in Normandy. Anybody know why?

  • @gregcooks-qr9wk
    @gregcooks-qr9wk6 сағат бұрын

    It was the French that created Vietnam to become communist

  • @30smsuperstrat
    @30smsuperstrat7 сағат бұрын

    My grandfather was in an Army mobile medical unit on Okinawa. He had previously been on Leyte. He was 27 with three kids. I'm grateful he served and made it home. Many Years later I met my best friend. His obachan was Okinawan. She was not living on Okinawa during the war, but what a circle of life. She was a courageous woman, and I'm blessed to have known her.

  • @SL4PSH0CK
    @SL4PSH0CK7 сағат бұрын

    home advantage gad dangit

  • @devilthao5458
    @devilthao54587 сағат бұрын

    American can never win a war

  • @user-lv7ts1oh9g
    @user-lv7ts1oh9g8 сағат бұрын

    because us knows that nuclear war has no winner

  • @user-te2se9zo1l
    @user-te2se9zo1l8 сағат бұрын

    Сколько Франция продержалась 40дней , кажется?

  • @1USACitizen192
    @1USACitizen19210 сағат бұрын

    LBJ and the cia wanted this war to enrich the oligarchy.

  • @T_Mo271
    @T_Mo27111 сағат бұрын

    "What was the first modern war" is an artificial question that doesn't really need an answer. It's a lead-in for a discussion topic. As such, this video was a comprehensive overview. The title is a little bit of a misleading hook, though.

  • @briansinger5258
    @briansinger525811 сағат бұрын

    Churchill was a man that was evil to the core.

  • @capablemachine
    @capablemachine12 сағат бұрын

    I don't know why you say the 1968 election was closely contested. Even with Wallace spoiling Nixon had many more electoral votes.

  • @capablemachine
    @capablemachine12 сағат бұрын

    The same thing has happened in every foreign conflict the US has been involved in but they keep doing it.

  • @TheMrherbgreen
    @TheMrherbgreen12 сағат бұрын

    ...."the least bad option"...... ain't that the truth.

  • @rogerwright1168
    @rogerwright116812 сағат бұрын

    Kissinger was the biggest war criminal ever. He was the "American Hitler "

  • @rogerwright1168
    @rogerwright116813 сағат бұрын

    Nixon was a big supporter of covert surveillance. Remember Watergate?😂

  • @hanaluong2672
    @hanaluong267213 сағат бұрын

    First, I was a little kid in the North when Nixon bombed in 1972. I still remember how grown-ups whispered about B52, with fear. Many many years later while living in the US, I had a lot of worries and anxieties. I went to see a dowser. He "diagnosed" me having some fear when I was a young kid. I told him that I had grown up in a safe family environment during those young years. We traced my life back in time and found VN war. I told him that I had never seen the war casualty. My cousin of the same age and myself, we used to play under a pomelo tree and run into a bomb shelter if there had been some siren. Our grandparents made it so fun that we did not really know that a war was going on. Anyway, I mentioned to him about hearing grownups whisper. The dowser helped me to release the fear that I did not I had.

  • @jesse75
    @jesse7514 сағат бұрын

    Because the United States was done experimenting with weapons.

  • @Phanngochanh73
    @Phanngochanh7314 сағат бұрын

    Thương cho dân tộc tôi 2000 năm chiến đấu để được tự do . Việt Nam Muôn Năm !!!!!

  • @halfsourlizard9319
    @halfsourlizard931914 сағат бұрын

    It's almost like wars against ideas can't be won🤔🤦‍♀️

  • @EricGiebel-hs7uv
    @EricGiebel-hs7uv14 сағат бұрын

    I was born in 71

  • @EricGiebel-hs7uv
    @EricGiebel-hs7uv15 сағат бұрын

    And our uh-1s and ah-1s have graduated to what they are today

  • @MichaelSSmith-hs5pw
    @MichaelSSmith-hs5pw15 сағат бұрын

    I was a Vietnam Veteran before it became popular. Iron Triangle 1969. 🪖🇺🇸

  • @MichaelSSmith-hs5pw
    @MichaelSSmith-hs5pw15 сағат бұрын

    I was a Vietnam Veteran before it became popular. Iron Triangle 1969.

  • @MichaelSSmith-hs5pw
    @MichaelSSmith-hs5pw15 сағат бұрын

    I was a Vietnam Veteran before it became popular! Iron Triangle 1969

  • @johnnguyen2376
    @johnnguyen237616 сағат бұрын

    Lied and lack of proved documents!

  • @DK-ss1vu
    @DK-ss1vu17 сағат бұрын

    This war was such a disaster.

  • @maulrat588
    @maulrat58817 сағат бұрын

    I've watched a lot of content on the Vietnam War and this is very condensed and well presented, Also, it contains photos I've never seen before and that's always interesting.

  • @danculea7865
    @danculea786518 сағат бұрын

    This sounds a lot like what happened in Afghanistan.

  • @upperkeeldrum
    @upperkeeldrum20 сағат бұрын

    Last I remember we were thrown out and rightfully so.

  • @UQRXD
    @UQRXD20 сағат бұрын

    All wars are banker wars.

  • @marvelv212
    @marvelv21221 сағат бұрын

    US lost

  • @spencada
    @spencada21 сағат бұрын

    The U S has killed as many as twelve million people worldwide since the Second World War .

  • @gregmock4417
    @gregmock441721 сағат бұрын

    French generals could not hold back the invasion and could not organize resistance

  • @artlover1477
    @artlover147722 сағат бұрын

    It's really pretty simple. For the most part guerrilla wars are tough to win. Most people forget that the US had a miserable affair in the Phillipines (early 1900s) that rarely gets discussed. Precursor to Vietnam.

  • @biker1373
    @biker137322 сағат бұрын

    Because they lost !

  • @romin7255
    @romin725522 сағат бұрын

    Probably the greatest military disaster we ever had. As bad as the Beresina was, it did not bring neither military occupation ( except for a very brief period in 1815) nor eternal dishonor and last longing military humiliation. Merci d'avoir rappelé que beaucoup de français se sont quand même battu avec courage ! 😁👍

  • @ilistis
    @ilistis23 сағат бұрын

    Keep this episode, to the day USA will abandon Ukraine. BTW USA was and is the biggest war criminal in history of mankind.

  • @hoangnguyenminh9594
    @hoangnguyenminh9594Күн бұрын

    The American could have been a great ally along as the Soviet Union. It is so ironic to see the American have to fight against the army they once trained before 1945. The American attacked us just because of their ally's urge, French army, who lost drastically in Dien Bien Phu. And they escalated the conflict which shouldn't have occured, because they know President Ho Chi Minh will won and reunify the country, if everyone followed '54 Geneve Agreement and what should have happened happened. But everything came into place after the failed attack to NVA in North Vietnam in 1972, which killed thousands of people. The American forced to go home, and once "bravery" South Vietnam Army lost dramatically in just 3 years.

  • @charlieraisch3628
    @charlieraisch3628Күн бұрын

    It's crazy how people actually think we couldn't beat North Vietnam in a war. The United States could've annihilated North Vietnam. The United States never declared war on them. Instead it was called a "Police Action". So don't sit here and say it wasn't winnable. They could've ended that conflict in one day.

  • @hoangnguyenminh9594
    @hoangnguyenminh9594Күн бұрын

    Just emphasizing how wasted South Vietnam Army was: The captured equipments have been repurposed to fight against the Pol Pot regime even Red Khmer was just nothing but the ashes in 1985. And those captured equipments were about to last "in few month" under South Vietnam's estimation.

  • @joni3503
    @joni3503Күн бұрын

    There was massive sympathy growing for buddhism, socialism, "poor worker" sentiments, and media and hippy movement contributed to that. It was music festivals, drugs, sexual revolution, abandoning church. They painted the war as a slaughtering of poor peasants, by capitalists with big guns. Television was still relatively new, and daily images of the war were quite confronting. Soldiers burning huts, crying mothers with babies, young boys bound by their hands, body bags. And Washington got the blame for all of it. That was what the U.S. negotiators must have felt at that time, when they made these poor deals, effectively handing over the country to the communists. President Thieu was right. Had they forgotten, that this was an international Communist war against the Church and against Western influence in Vietnam, and in all the colonies? That this was an attack against the traditional christian Order, launched already at he close of World war II.

  • @icewaterslim7260
    @icewaterslim7260Күн бұрын

    D. M. Giangreco did comprehensive postwar research of all military records both US and Japanese that will pretty much end the debate as to whether the bombs factored in shortening the war or not. He has much to offer about the Soviet invasion in which we invested heavily. There's no speculation or theory in his work. Just the facts which add up to debunking revisionism on this.