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@reorioOrion
@reorioOrion 14 сағат бұрын
More American myths and fairy tales. "Why was Rokkosovsky so loyal to the terrible Stalin?" Well.. maybe because Stalin in US propaganda and in real life are two different people? "No! Rokkosovsky was just a good slave!" Of course. So, an American Nazi sees it easier to see Russian, Soviet and, in general, any people that are not under US rule. "They just don't want us to free them" 1. Rokkosovsky was not released “suddenly”. Many generals, including Zhukov personally, advocated for his release. 2. Versions about Rokossovsky’s torture have not been confirmed by anything. This is just a version, not a fact. She is voiced by one of the wives of one of the Soviet generals (not Rokosovsky). That is, firstly, it is a broadcast of what one said to another, and secondly, it most likely has an exaggerated version of real events. Perhaps there really was torture. Were they as they were described by a person who did not witness them? I seriously doubt it. Rokkosovsky himself never spoke about this or even mentioned it. 3. “The order to torture Rokosovsky was given personally by Stalin” This is a blatant lie by the author of the video, which he bases on unconfirmed evidence of Rokosovsky’s torture. 4. The head of the NKVD, Leonid Mikhailovich Zakoovsky, was directly involved in the Rokkosovsky case. Guess what happened to him? He was shot in 1938. For what? Because with his active assistance, many people were slandered. Of course, the author of the video will not mention any of this. After all, it’s much easier to make Rokkosovsky a fool who thought that he was slandered by mistake, that Stalin had nothing to do with it. After all, he’s just a “fool and a fanatic,” and the audience will tell you: “he’s also a slave!” What an amazing abomination so characteristic of American Nazis.
@AvondroodPodcast
@AvondroodPodcast 14 сағат бұрын
It has nothing to do with overshadowing, and everything to do with design. Fascism: 28M dead, communism: 172M dead: the overshadowing should have been the other way around.
@AlexanderTch
@AlexanderTch 14 сағат бұрын
Lies. He was deeply respected by Stalin. Rokossvsky never said or wrote in his books any bad words against Stalin even after his death and started official Krushchev's campaign of throwing dirt on him. Rokossovsky was the only Russian general who Stalin called by name and patronymic - Konstantin Konstantinovich. It happened after billiant success of Bagration operation in 1944, which was planned by Rokossovsky. In 30s he was arrested for one action. He served in Eastern Siberian military destrict and during winter time he ordered his corp to do military excersizes on ice of Lake Baikal. Ice was very slippery and many cavalry horses fell down, broke their legs. It was considered by police and court as deliberate harm. Later, new minister of internal affairs, Lavrenty Beria, assigned by Stalin, ordered to re-open old convicting cases inclucing Rokossovsky's one. Rokossovsky was released from jain and restored in Army with the same rank. By the way, Stalin didn't like Zhukov and there were some reasons. After the war Zhukov was sent from Moscow to remote military district in Odessa.
@larrybedouin2921
@larrybedouin2921 15 сағат бұрын
Playing God are we not?
@skiddedo
@skiddedo 16 сағат бұрын
darth vader 1:21 muahahahahahhahhasaaaaaaaaaaa
@brt-jn7kg
@brt-jn7kg 16 сағат бұрын
At Kolyma the temps often got to -90°F. Breakfast for these prisoners was a cup of tea and 10 g of sugar. I had soup for dinner and that was it. It was an extermination camp just like Auschwitz but without the gas chambers.
@angloaust1575
@angloaust1575 17 сағат бұрын
Was general westmoreland technically Responsible for my lai Massacre
@poncho6784
@poncho6784 18 сағат бұрын
Worth every bit. Spain was in no economic or political position to make a meaningful contribution to the Axis at that point in history even if they wanted todo so.
@soap1574
@soap1574 18 сағат бұрын
worst planes of ww2 1. Yak-9 2. p-51 mustang 3. supermarine spitfire 4. bf-109 5. fw-190 6. b-29
@sahasrangshuchanda7214
@sahasrangshuchanda7214 18 сағат бұрын
The robbers i means british were kicked out ...now Indian army is far advanced and better than thieves i mean british coward army
@sahasrangshuchanda7214
@sahasrangshuchanda7214 18 сағат бұрын
To fight the devil we have to be a bigger devil....A parasf commando of 21 regiment stated in a podcast ..
@viraloracle5151
@viraloracle5151 18 сағат бұрын
Greeks were proud to be ruled by a German Royal family even after WW2 so this is bullshit .
@deatshotkille4816
@deatshotkille4816 19 сағат бұрын
For those who say Stalin was a hero he liberated Central and Estern Europe ,wow hero . ,,Libereted,,countries before 😊 ,, Libereted countries after:🤫💀 For those who say comunism was good wow regimes were good 🤡🤡💩⚒️💩
@1snappytom
@1snappytom 19 сағат бұрын
you missed the kiwis
@otfriedschellhas3581
@otfriedschellhas3581 21 сағат бұрын
Monty was not brilliant, but knew his/British limitation vs the Wehrmacht. He knew Germans were more flexible so he never stuck out his neck, which worked at Alamein and Normandy. When he did try to be flamboyant at Arnhem, he promptly got his nose out of joint. How did zzNormandy go? He planned to take Caen in 2 days, and only succeeded after almostc2 months, calling it " according to plan". He never admitted failure, but dud have his share of it.
@nishchalrai4981
@nishchalrai4981 21 сағат бұрын
Germany's sub is one most deadliest in ww2 that's we know
@TheWolfInTheGrass
@TheWolfInTheGrass 23 сағат бұрын
My grandfather fought in the Pacific in WW2. My father in Vietnam. I was a Marine 0311 in Iraq and afghan. One of my best friend was 82nd in Iraq. All of us never had any trouble relating. Just different stories. War is war. The weapons and tactics change a bit. But killing and watch killing is simply put, universal.
@georgekadotso5823
@georgekadotso5823 23 сағат бұрын
@ 02:05 it's JOSHUA NKOMO NOT JOSEPH NKOMO
@vwwilson8625
@vwwilson8625 Күн бұрын
Criminals, dictators, whoever thinks that they above the law in the end answer to the law of the universe where there is nowhere to run or hide.
@marinaloulli3452
@marinaloulli3452 Күн бұрын
I’m a Jew and a Greek and we’re still here
@46bovine
@46bovine Күн бұрын
One of the weaknesses of the Enigma machines was they couldn’t encode a letter as itself.
@alanwiseman3235
@alanwiseman3235 Күн бұрын
What about Yamamoto
@zachbernstein3804
@zachbernstein3804 Күн бұрын
Is this Geetsly’s speaking?
@karingoering2441
@karingoering2441 Күн бұрын
2:09 For real? Tojo became PM in 1941. Before that he was a grey eminence in politics. In 1928 he got promoted to colonel, nowhere near any kind of political influence. This is so common among westerners, to think Tojo somehow was this gigantic figure in pre war Japan.
@larryconnerjr1835
@larryconnerjr1835 Күн бұрын
The truth of the matter is that Manstein from Germany and Zhukov from Russia were much better and accomplished generals than Patton and Monty from the west but British and American propaganda will never acknowledge this
@woodwaker1
@woodwaker1 Күн бұрын
A good point is the error by the operations staff. A good crypto machine replicates a one time pad. When I was in the USAF, (1969-1973&, I respired the KW-26 crypto system designed in the 1950's for encrypting teletype signals. It was unbreakable as the code would take over 25 years to repeat, but had the same weakness if restarted. To try and eliminate that from happening the code selection was done with punched cards which the reader cut in half when the reader was closed.
@Darkthrone-qi1ic
@Darkthrone-qi1ic Күн бұрын
My great Uncle served with the Italian Alpine Julia division in Mussolini’s failed Greek campaign. He was later KIA on the Russian front in December 1942 on the Don river.
@nikaveyard1176
@nikaveyard1176 Күн бұрын
1936 not a great vintage
@Nick_B_Bad
@Nick_B_Bad Күн бұрын
Ole General Yam had a bunch of looted treasures buried all over the Philippine Islands. Of course post war the CIA went looking for and found most of them keeping it all for themselves.
@sy73326
@sy73326 Күн бұрын
It may just be me, but this guy seems to denigrate Americans for their behavior, but making excuses for the Japanese
@luakabsalam1816
@luakabsalam1816 Күн бұрын
Apartheid is dead! ☝️🦾
@user-cf9yw1wu4i
@user-cf9yw1wu4i Күн бұрын
Greece hates germans and german occupation because its was and it is english puppet state. Greece could avoid the participation in that war, but england tried their best for the opposite. Greece should hate britain, not germany.
@igweogba6774
@igweogba6774 Күн бұрын
Basically the Vietnam war all over again. Stronger army packs up and leaves because their opponents just wont quit
@krzysztofmichasieroslawski2682
@krzysztofmichasieroslawski2682 Күн бұрын
One more info. Rokossowski, Communistic Red Army officer and Marshall of CCCP and Poland, btw... He was Polish origin, most probably from family having noble roots and Glaubicz coat (sign) of arms. He had only 50% (also noble), Russian blood in his veins.
@seanchan7167
@seanchan7167 Күн бұрын
As a Singaporean whose Grandma told me stories of water torture her father suffered till he died, I understand the hatred the victims of the Japanese Occupation of Malaya felt. However, it seems that Yamashita was treated as an easier, singular target of blame for it than his subordinates.
@MarkHarrison733
@MarkHarrison733 Күн бұрын
Montgomery had ASD, and abused children.
@jimcobm3
@jimcobm3 Күн бұрын
Adolf Hitler said, “The Greek soldier, above all, fought with the most courage,” and Winston Churchill said, “Hence, we will not say that Greeks fight like heroes, but that heroes fight like Greeks.”
@jimcobm3
@jimcobm3 Күн бұрын
The word heroism I am afraid does not render the least of those acts of self-sacrifice of the Greeks, which were the defining factor in the victorious outcome of the common struggle of the nations, during WWII, for the human freedom and dignity. If it were not for the bravery of the Greeks and their courage, the outcome of WWII would be undetermined.” Winston Churchill
@jimcobm3
@jimcobm3 Күн бұрын
The Greek resistance delayed Hitler's plan for invading to Russia and when that happened the hard winter defeated the German army.
@johnlewis4600
@johnlewis4600 Күн бұрын
You are leaving out the 1 man who insisted on revenge - MacArthur. Yamishita and Homma were less about atrocities and more about his revenge.
@ledfloyd9035
@ledfloyd9035 Күн бұрын
To be fair the United States had didn't just "refuse" to take Japanese prisoners, they sort of just refused to take prisoners in general, on both fronts. That's not to say we never did but on the eastern front specifically the Japanese didn't follow the Geneva convention. The Geneva convention strictly prohibits false surrender, the Japanese pulled that shit all the time. And would have ambush ready or the guy would surrender with a grenade ready to go off.
@voltdon6805
@voltdon6805 Күн бұрын
Poor them. They can't even fight like a vietnamese army on their land, fighting like American make them just like low level American troop. That why their defeat.
@RPG_RicePaddyGod
@RPG_RicePaddyGod Күн бұрын
The key difference between the US and Russia is that Russia never liberated countries. It went from one occupation to another.
@user-yz8ho4ec1v
@user-yz8ho4ec1v Күн бұрын
oh no cringe
@deatshotkille4816
@deatshotkille4816 19 сағат бұрын
Oh no Russia and your life are cringe 🤫
@veliaw..
@veliaw.. Күн бұрын
Rear Admiral Tadashi Maeda, that his name "will be written in the annals of Indonesia with golden letters" -Adam Malik Indonesia Foreign minister-
@Minerage
@Minerage Күн бұрын
Also in Austria-Hungary dont forget the Czechoslovak soldiers which most of them dipped to go either help the allies or go beat up Russian troops in Siberia on their own.
@AveragePakistaniChild
@AveragePakistaniChild Күн бұрын
“Gentlemen you fought like lions, despite being led by donkeys” - Erwin Rommel
@johnnyklash5883
@johnnyklash5883 Күн бұрын
We are still occupied Hellenes. Wake up.
@tylerreiter5726
@tylerreiter5726 Күн бұрын
History generally ignores the awful shit that Japan did to everyone, like the batan death march and dehydrating live people