Dirty Secrets of the Vietnam War You Didn't Know About

preview_player
Показать описание
The Vietnam War was a dark time in history, with millions of casualties on both sides, but there is a dark side of the Vietnam War you never knew about, until now! Don't miss today's insane new video that exposes all the dirty secrets of this catestrophic war.

🔖 MY SOCIAL PAGES

💭 SUGGEST A TOPIC

All videos are based on publicly available information unless otherwise noted.
Рекомендации по теме
Комментарии
Автор

The Vietnamese fought bravely against China for hundred years, dynasty after dynasty. Then they fought the french during colonial era, then fought the Japanese during ww2, then fought the french and british again, then fought the US then fought China, then fought Khmer rouge.

May all the wars will ended. Only peace for you, brave patriotic vietnamese. You defended your land from all threats. The true freedom fighters. 👏🕊☮

mozambique
Автор

When you are just so tired of winning so you destroy your own chances of victory? Genius

chosenofkhorne
Автор

The US were afraid of escalating the war by marching ground troops into Cambodia and Laos. Seems fair enough until you consider the fact that the US dropped more bombs on Cambodia and Laos than the entirety of of bombs dropped in WW2, which still go off to this day.

BellTolls
Автор

“Vietnam: it was your grandpa’s Afghanistan”

Me, with a grandpa that served in WW2 (who is definitely dead): I feel old

davidbouchard
Автор

“Blah blah blahblahblahblah” I love it always in the background

HalfCycle
Автор

A lot of people are sorry for the people that fight in Vietnam, but we should be sorry for the Vietnamese people too.

lisanguyen
Автор

Missed talking about the US spraying with Agent Orange, which affected tens of thousands of US troops and millions of Vietnamese, causing even the great grandchildren of those affected to be born with defects to this day.
Many people stateside have heard about AO, but few are aware of how widespread and long lasting its effects have been.
A Vietnam War era version of "Gulf War Syndrome"

curtisthomas
Автор

The most unknown fact is that it was a pointless war with wasted lives and resources :/

halolime
Автор

"Friendly fire because of using AKs"
US force : Ay yo wtf, bro
SV:Ay yo wtf, bro

jabaited
Автор

0:58 Man, I've been hiding in the trees all year, and not once have I seen US Forces using German Gewehr 43's, against us.

Bruhidk
Автор

“Yeah, those American press always say they could do this and that to win the war but never think about the fact that they only recognised that when war is already over for long. And the worst thing is they did not remember what they just say and make the same mistake all over again.” My friend’s grandfather who was a NVA tanker.

Minh-Tran-
Автор

My grandpa's? No this was my dads Afghanistan.

Vulture
Автор

I didn’t know “quagmire” was an actual word until just now, i thought it was just a character in family guy lol

swiggityswagunion
Автор

Vietnam is a prime example that America doesnt need to be sticking its nose where it doesnt belong.

InuMiroLover
Автор

Dr. STRANGELOVE - Jack D. Ripper:
Mandrake, do you recall what Clemenceau once said? He said "War is too important to be left to the generals." When he said that, fifty years ago, he may have been right. But now war is too important to be left to the politicians. They have neither the time nor inclination for strategic thought.

donm
Автор

Ak47s are almost always more accurate than the person shooting them. Them being inaccurate is mostly a myth.

JohnClark-slps
Автор

Man I feel bad for the people that fought in Vietnam





Happy late Veterans Day :(

dogewithgun
Автор

When this video shows americans using gewer 43 in Vietnam

Me: *Something is wrong, I can feel it*

aveteranplayer
Автор

The library of Babel would be a great topic I’d love to see it.

RichardAM
Автор

“I think we have all underestimated the seriousness of this situation. Like giving cobalt treatment to a terminal cancer case. I think a long protracted war will disclose our weakness, not our strength.”—Deputy Secretary of State George W. Ball answering President Lyndon Johnson’s question at a White House meeting on July 21, 1965 about whether the United States could win a war in the “jungle rice-paddies” of Vietnam.

ives