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Mike Guardia
United States
Registrace 8. 04. 2012
Best-selling author, military historian, educator, and US Army veteran.
I have written books on various topics ranging from military history to children's literature. I served six years (2008-2014) on active duty as an Armor Officer in the United States Army. Perhaps my best-known work is 𝑯𝒂𝒍 𝑴𝒐𝒐𝒓𝒆: 𝑨 𝑺𝒐𝒍𝒅𝒊𝒆𝒓 𝑶𝒏𝒄𝒆...𝒂𝒏𝒅 𝑨𝒍𝒘𝒂𝒚𝒔, the first-ever biography chronicling the life of LTG Harold G. Moore, whose battlefield leadership was popularized in the Mel Gibson film, 𝑾𝒆 𝑾𝒆𝒓𝒆 𝑺𝒐𝒍𝒅𝒊𝒆𝒓𝒔.
My work has been reviewed in the Washington Times, Military Review, Vietnam Magazine, Armchair General, and DefenceWeb South Africa.
Please subscribe for author and military-related videos posted every month. For business inquiries, please visit my website: mikeguardia.com
I have written books on various topics ranging from military history to children's literature. I served six years (2008-2014) on active duty as an Armor Officer in the United States Army. Perhaps my best-known work is 𝑯𝒂𝒍 𝑴𝒐𝒐𝒓𝒆: 𝑨 𝑺𝒐𝒍𝒅𝒊𝒆𝒓 𝑶𝒏𝒄𝒆...𝒂𝒏𝒅 𝑨𝒍𝒘𝒂𝒚𝒔, the first-ever biography chronicling the life of LTG Harold G. Moore, whose battlefield leadership was popularized in the Mel Gibson film, 𝑾𝒆 𝑾𝒆𝒓𝒆 𝑺𝒐𝒍𝒅𝒊𝒆𝒓𝒔.
My work has been reviewed in the Washington Times, Military Review, Vietnam Magazine, Armchair General, and DefenceWeb South Africa.
Please subscribe for author and military-related videos posted every month. For business inquiries, please visit my website: mikeguardia.com
BRITISH ARMY: Sappers in Support (1989)
UK Royal Engineers demonstrate how Sappers perform in a tactical support role.
zhlédnutí: 4 155
Video
BRITISH ARMY: Sappers in War (1984)
zhlédnutí 35KPřed 14 dny
British Army Training video covering the role of the elite combat engineers ("sappers") as part of the Cold War mission.
BRITISH ARMY: Urban Patrolling (1979)
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BRITISH ARMY: Urban Patrolling (1979)
BRITISH ARMY: Fighting in Villages (1979)
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From the archives of the Imperial War Museum. A 1979 British Army training describing how to fighting in villages and suburban areas.
BRITISH ARMY: Fighting in Woods - Part II (1982)
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BRITISH ARMY: Fighting in Woods - Part II (1982)
BRITISH ARMY: Fighting in Woods (1982)
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BRITISH ARMY: Fighting in Woods (1982)
History of the Royal Air Force (Part III)
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History of the Royal Air Force (Part III)
History of the Royal Air Force (Part II)
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History of the Royal Air Force (Part II)
History of the Royal Air Force (Part I)
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History of the Royal Air Force (Part I)
PBS Frontline: Journey to Russia (1983)
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PBS Frontline: Journey to Russia (1983)
Soviet-Afghan War: Red Star over Khyber (1984)
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Soviet-Afghan War: Red Star over Khyber (1984)
PBS Frontline: Russian Soldier Boy (1986)
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PBS Frontline: Russian Soldier Boy (1986)
F-16 Fighting Falcon Documentary (1985-88)
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F-16 Fighting Falcon Documentary (1985-88)
𝑹𝑬𝑫 𝑨𝑰𝑹 𝑭𝑶𝑹𝑪𝑬: Fighting the Heinkel He 111
zhlédnutí 930Před 5 měsíci
𝑹𝑬𝑫 𝑨𝑰𝑹 𝑭𝑶𝑹𝑪𝑬: Fighting the Heinkel He 111
Evolution of the Attack Helicopter (1970-86)
zhlédnutí 4,6KPřed 6 měsíci
Evolution of the Attack Helicopter (1970-86)
𝑹𝑬𝑫 𝑨𝑰𝑹 𝑭𝑶𝑹𝑪𝑬: Fighting the Focke-Wulf Fw190
zhlédnutí 1KPřed 7 měsíci
𝑹𝑬𝑫 𝑨𝑰𝑹 𝑭𝑶𝑹𝑪𝑬: Fighting the Focke-Wulf Fw190
Naval Aviation: A Personal History (1960)
zhlédnutí 1,1KPřed 7 měsíci
Naval Aviation: A Personal History (1960)
No drones just people living in the moment
Morale boost for british army After fighting an unseen enemy in ulster it was back to a conventional war!
90s this looks like 60s lol
5:24 the infamous Warsaw Pact Invasion of Yugoslavia, who could ever forget it😂
Jesus christ the russian army has always been a pathetic rable. One bloke had trainers on 😂😂😂w
Damn 1984 they just showed bodies on PBS like it was normal that's wild
2 nd ACR, HERE 👣
5000 of them. Had no idea the numbers were that high. It took two of us to replace the F/C/P ICS Box. Why? The square tube containing the internal boarding ladder was right in front of the box. So, a double 90 degree bend in the thick wiring in a very short distance. We'd use a wooden stick to shift the wire bundle around. You could get the box a little above the console rail. The person in the cockpit would stand on the box and push down from the open canopy. The person on the boarding ladder would lock in two dzues fasteners-on a diagonal-to anchor the box. The person inside could then lock in the last two. On top of the backbone (panel 48) was the upper UHF antenna. Fuels couldn't be bothered to disconnect the antenna and stripped it off the connecting cable. This happened so often (not following tech data) the USAF had a stencil by the antenna telling the person to disconnect the antenna before removing the panel. The UHF radio removed from a phase aircraft had to go back in. The guy that installed it couldn't get it to work. So, I went out there and applied power. Yep, no workie. The radio was on an interface mount that plugged into the aircraft. Pulled the whole thing out and felt back there. @$%@#$%#$%#$% Someone covered the female end of the connector in the metal foil from a candy bar. Removed the foil, plugged it all in and it worked fine.
Falklands british forever 🇨🇱🇸🇭
RN anti-aircraft did as well as could be expected with what they had, but the technological capability was found seriously wanting. Seacat and Sea Dart missile systems had problems engaging airborne targets among the rugged and varied Falklands coastline. (Seaslug was a non event). RN anti-aircraft doctrine and capability was based solely on engaging Warsaw Pact aircraft over the open sea. Most RN vessels had very small quantities of guns as dedicated close in weapons, (in fact Seacat had directly replaced gun armament). Dedicated gun armament as part of a layered defence against aircraft may well have proved far more effective in the confines of the Falklands coastline. Hi-tech and low-tech close-in gun armament has now been standard fit on RN warships for years. Perhaps the biggest lesson the Falklands war taught is this. If you think you know who your enemy is, where your enemy is, and how your enemy will fight, you are being complacent. Think on politicians. RIP to all who lost their lives in this conflict.
Special thanks to David Schwimmer for translating.
the winners write the history books
Why is the right lady at the thumbnail so nice to look at?
Why is the right lady at the ehumbnail so nice to look at?
Where is she in this video???
SERVED 1982 TO 1985 *
NEVER HEARD OR SAW A TOW LAUNCHER, ON ANY M 60, VERY BAD IDEA, ITV GUNNER AND COMMANDER, HERE 😮
NO REAL, TANK BATTLES, TIL THE GULF WAR *
THE DUST OF DEPLETED URANIUM, ENJOY *
4:45 frfr
Eles Ágora nao estão tao a vontade na Ucrânia
Добро пожаловать в Ад
The F-22s RCS is not 0.4m2 lmfao. F-22 is somewhere around 0.0001m2 frontal, F-35 around 0.0015m2. The SU-57s RCS is what, around 0.1-1m2? That's literally similar to a Super Hornet flying clean. To make it clear, your supposed 5th gen fighter, that still isn't really in service, has a frontal RCS nearly 1000x larger than the F-35, or 10000 times larger than the F-22. And both jets have sensors literally decades ahead of the 57. Russia can't even field their "5th" gen fighter - meanwhile the US is looking to retire the Raptor for an actual 6th gen replacement. 2024, and russia can't even match aircraft designed in the 90s rofl. Not that it matters, Lockheed builds more F-35s in a month than Sukhoi can do in 15 years lol. Atleast the Su-27 and MiG-29 were cool looking, competent and built in numbers too. Now all you have are jets that can't be built in numbers, and can barely compete vs 4++ gen adversaries - while most of NATO will be flying F-35s within the next 3-4 years lmfao. Gonna be fun to see the VKS get deleted in a week.
ЭПИЧЕСКИЕ КАДРЫ. МОЖНО СКАЗАТЬ, БЫЛИННЫЕ !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
This is what one gets when u replace strong leadership with wokeism.
It was not perfect. It was flawed and had major shortcomings!. But they did not need to dissolve the Union! Now they are 15 weaker and smaller republics. Some of these republics are in an even worse position than they were in 1990! Idiots bought Yeltsin's lies instead of preserving the union and improving it!
чеченцы ликвидировали многих русских оккупантов в тот год. А некоторые оккупанты даже теряли головы)))
West Berlin rocked. 84, 87,88,89,90. Great times!
I was in Berlin Brigade 1979-1981. Best post in the Army.
This video is almost as long as it took to take Iraq’s entire armoured division.
It’s higher tech version of the first bit of 2001:A Space Odyssey.
I need numbers to know how much I should care.
Вермахт армия которая поставила раком полмира.
1917 1991 the darkest period of Russia
I was a naive hawkish 5 year old taking a crap in my family's upstairs bathroom when the news hit. Everything I'd read in magazines had predicted that the U.S. would do nothing against the Iraqis and would fail if they tried. (Except for an interview with Colin Powell (RIP)). My Mom came up to the staircase landing and hollered up that we had just started "bombing the hell out of Iraq!" I just remember goosebumps popping up on my arms.
3:40 pure darkness, just imagine yourself in the middle of that.
....
And this kids is why a centralized economy does not work. No prices, no economy. The impossibility of the economic calculus.
Video starts with the wrong music.
F14 vs f15
the divide between people who live under communism and guys in dresses pretending to be commies always makes me laugh. today's chronically online commie would be thrown into a work camp if they actually lived with these people, then again they'd have to actually go outside first.
i would be laughing at all the stupid comments like yours but they just make me sad.
Is there a russian original? The filmed parts without the translation? Id love to watch it
True communism will be experienced ONLY UPON Jesus' triumphant return. ❤✌️
That's not communism
Communism separates from God
Many of these scenes look better than many homes and markets around the United States today. Where are the fentanyl zombies defecting in the streets of communist cities? They are everywhere you look in capitalist cities.
1:54 list of capitalist corporations that funded this propaganda against anything but capitalism.
Such a thought-provoking video. 1) How China got it "right" but the USSR did not? 2) Amazing that at that time and place people could freely speak negatively about "The Party", but doing so in China today would mean something very bad for the speaker. If anything, things seem to be getting worse rather than better w.r.t. peoples' rights. 3) Perestroika was implemented but not quite. To answer the question of the Soviet people at the time, it seems that not enough Perestroika was enforced. 4) So many decades had passed since the state apropriated the land, and so many people died trying to defend their property. When the state offered to lease it back to the people, they didn't want it. I don't know what to make of this. 5) I wonder how these early-time enterpreneurs faired after the USSR collapsed. They seemed to have quite romanticized views about how things should be working, Socialism failed but in Russia's case it was not quite democracy that followed. 6) I wonder how would Stalin would fare against the challenges of the 80's. I somehow doubt that bloodbathing his country would not be such an easy option at that time and place.
LMAO, we had 8 minutes survival time after hearing the sirens before an atomic warhead would hit our base. We decided not to roll out by enjoy a beer and a cigar instead if it would come to that.
And dummy don will call you,suckers and losers .
Soviet Union collapses and Russia struggles with its new freedom at this time while the rest of Eastern Europe was able to adapt and prosper
czcams.com/video/whXi7kgpL0Y/video.html
this could happen with china...soon