DIRTY SECRETS of VIETNAM: The Aces of Southeast Asia

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  • čas přidán 7. 10. 2015
  • Aircraft ground support operations are explained showing jet pilots coordinating to eliminate important ground targets such as bridges, bunkers and vehicles.

Komentáře • 3K

  • @edconway5684
    @edconway5684 Před 2 lety +343

    I was there in '65. Anyone who actually looks into this will tell you we should not have been there. The French had 13 years and got nothing except dead and wounded back for their efforts. War, when YOU are in it is just bad. It's not the movies, people die or get injured. Our good guy policy cost us lives. Weapons, oh yes, love those weapons, but someone is behind those or flying those planes. And to give credit, the Viets were good and got better. Yes, we tried harder, but at what cost. Bless those who served, but the only happy stories you will hear is from those who made it out alive or were not wounded. Watching this here is the easy part, being in the field with live rounds coming at you or bombs being dropped near your position is not pleasant to keep this mild. Like the weapons, but War is Hell and being there is second. You have to maintain a proper perspective watching this, or go to the memorial in Washington DC to visit those who don't have a story to tell.

    • @thethaovatoquoc312
      @thethaovatoquoc312 Před 2 lety +17

      Thank you for your service. War is influenced by more than just military might. US essentially fought both world Commie giants Soviet and China at once while being restricted by its own self-imposed rule of engagement in the frontline and impacted by anti-war movement by liberals (the likes of libtards like Jane Fonda who later apologized) at home. It wasn't a fair fight, but US's goodwill was in action to prevent Commie's taking over Asia. US saved South Korea and Japan in Asia, and Western Europe in Europe (and later Eastern Europe, too, when Soviet bloc collapsed. People from those countries are still grateful for American sacrifices until these days. Vietnam was a more complicated combat theater mostly due to its porous border in the western part. A geographically long country (S shaped) with a porous border along its side is recipe for disaster for any expeditionary forces due to infiltration. It's like you were already being surrounded even before the war started. Korea didn't have this problem, as the peninsula is only bordered by Commie China in the North, and the rest is surrounded by water. North Vietnamese Commie terrorists knew this and exploited the advantage with their Ho Chi Minh trail, without which, South Vietnam could still exist like South Korea today, largely due to American intervention. The US soldiers did it for good cause, and that's all that matters. It's an unfortunate consequence happened when US cut aids to the Republic of South Vietnam while both Commie giants Chinese and Soviet increased aids to their North Vietnamese terrorist minions, it wouldn't take a genius to predict the outcome. Many ARVN generals and officers fought the North Vietnamese Commie terrorists to their last bullets. Dozens of them then refused to surrender to the enemy and committed suicide, staying true to their warrior creed, but their legacy lives on.

    • @fugguhber4699
      @fugguhber4699 Před 2 lety +55

      The extremely sad, and gruesome truth is, that this should never have happened.
      The U.S. entered and fought in another country, a country that wanted peace, and unity.
      Ho Chi Minh was a NATIONALIST........ and all he wanted, with the majority of all the population of Vietnam was a united country. Not one that was colonized, and turned into a work-house for the capitalist countries of France and the U.S.
      The U.S. should have never went there militarily. Never. Especially after Dien Bien Phu.
      It was CLEAR ....... that the Vietnamese wanted their freedom, and wanted their country united like it had been........ and fighting and killing millions of Vietnamese did nothing to change this.
      Vietnam the country has forgiven the U.S. They don't hate Americans.
      I have been to Ho Chi Minh City ( Saigon) and Hanoi......and as an OLDER American, I stand out... and I was never treated different than any other tourist there.
      The U.S. government was wrong; not the U.S. boys and men who were drafted and forced to go.
      You can't win a war with conscripts, and draftees against a people who are fighting a righteous cause: That is for their freedom and liberty (not to be controlled by another country and treated like a plantation for the profit of the rich capitalists).

    • @badbotchdown9845
      @badbotchdown9845 Před 2 lety +8

      @@fugguhber4699 you're right and wrong in the same time saying uncle Ho wasn't communist is wrong he was since before the ww2.

    • @luisdeleon9819
      @luisdeleon9819 Před 2 lety +7

      Thank you Ed for your comment. With all the self praise on the superiority of American war machines, the Vietnamese won.

    • @williammoore7523
      @williammoore7523 Před 2 lety +29

      you can blame Lyndon Johnston and those who killed Kennedy. War is big money for alot of companies who wanted the money and did not care about the loss of life. The USA always has to have n enemy just the threat of a possible war is enough to keep the tax dollars flowing into defence even tho it has been years of peace time.

  • @Chris-cf2kp
    @Chris-cf2kp Před rokem +82

    My uncle flew an F-4 in Vietnam. He was shot down and was a POW for many years until the conflict ended. He survived, but his partner did not. He's still alive today and flies often as an instructor and flight tester and is an incredibly kind and humble man.

    • @harrisonc985
      @harrisonc985 Před rokem +3

      The radar intercept officer is more valuable to the enemy because they have detailed knowlege on the plane’s capabilities of tracking enemy fighters and sams

    • @Chris-cf2kp
      @Chris-cf2kp Před rokem +5

      @@harrisonc985 His partner died on impact.

    • @haroldcampbell8271
      @haroldcampbell8271 Před rokem +1

      We had 2 Phantom squadrons on the carrier USS Saratoga in 72. I was attached to VA-75 A-6 intruders. When was your uncle there?

    • @Chris-cf2kp
      @Chris-cf2kp Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@haroldcampbell8271 I don't recall the exact dates, but I believe he was there as a pow for several years. There are some photos of him in Time magazine from when he was released. My grandmother, his sister still has the original publication, I'll have to ask her about the specifics again.

    • @user-bi3cl4qf3c
      @user-bi3cl4qf3c Před 11 měsíci

      F-4 shitty piece of metal

  • @webbzgunnuts
    @webbzgunnuts Před 2 lety +85

    In 2015, I visited Vietnam. Da Nang air port is now an International Airport. Very modern and beautiful small city. People there were very nice to me.

    • @senasakura345
      @senasakura345 Před 2 lety +1

      北方領土は政治家が音頭とって損切してくれればそれで良い。
      北方領土以外の紛争領土を考察すると竹島や尖閣など島の土地としての価値など何もない。鉱物資源もなければ農業ができるわけでもない。これらの島の価値とは島に付随する広大な「海域」こそ重要なのですよ。
      北方領土は諸島の4つの島にすぎない。周囲をロシアの島々に囲まれているので広大な海域が付随するわけではない。では島の土地の価値を考えた場合、インフラもコンビニも無い自然環境過酷な北の辺境です。超過疎地になることが返還前から確定してますな。

    • @melbourne-heat.69-71
      @melbourne-heat.69-71 Před 2 lety +1

      After the Paris peace treaties we gave Vietnam $33 billion dollars to rebuild another $90 billion dollars to clean up any un explosive bombs in Cambodia and Laos.. when we left Vietnam we left behind billions and billions of equipment.We through billions of dollars worth of helicopters into the ocean to bring back the people to the United States where they are still living everybody in Vietnam was driving around in a brand new military Jeep taking their kids to school.. plus we are talkin jet fighters helicopters M60 basically we dropped everything and walked away from it all.. now they're making millions of dollars off that museum with all our equipment behind glass and pictures all over the walls with helicopters outside and F4 Phantom sitting out front..I get shot two times all my friends are dying of Agent Orange and so am I.. the only reason we were over there had to do with money and power had nothing to do with Communism..Sounds like they made out better than we did it should look beautiful over there...🏯🏰🏭🏬🏫🏪🏩💒🌆🌇🌃🌉🏣🏡🏘🏙🏦🏨

    • @timesupgr.8471
      @timesupgr.8471 Před 2 lety

      Nicest city in VN IMO. Did you see some of the old American cars there?

    • @davedillon1372
      @davedillon1372 Před 2 lety

      I'm glad you had a great experience. The moment I got off the plane, it's as if I stepped back in time to '74-76(±). Strange- almost everything was from the WAR. 'The American War': not the French, Japanese, French before the big show (WW2). The audacity to return after leaving them to the Japanese & returning as if 'Hey! Remember us? We're ba-ack. So, let's get back to you being children and we're the adults, as if nothing happened...
      I felt the guilt.A proud people, shattered and poisoned by A Orange, Napalm, 🔥💥💥💥🔥 MORE THAN IN ALL OF WW2 EUROPEAN THEATERS (TO/FROM).
      I'd gone to teach English so they could communicate with the tourist market, do business, et al.
      I'm embarrassed of the policies post JFK; The 'Nixon Doctrine'-‽ Gimme a break. Bomb, kill everyone, evacuate all villes, Cities. Blow up everything. 0oison will be leaking from the water tables for a century, maybe more. Lush, wet tropical zones turned into deserts.
      Nixon almost nuked them. His handwritten 'IOU' of 3.1(±) million dollars? "Well, he's gone so..TFB. We got almost all of them POWS, MIAS out.
      ★ PLEASE LOOK UP "EXPENDABLE" RE BOBBY GARWOOD- HE DIDN'T GET OUT UNTIL 79-80!! McCain & Kerry- 2 lowlife level vets. McCain & Kerry ACCUSED Garwood of collaborating with the enemy! McCain did one of those tapes- "I'd like to thank the NVnamese. Excellent med care, good food & treatment... " But a guy, a POW- tortured for days at a time, fake firing squads, sitting in a yellow porch in the 80s-90s calmly talking about the Hell he had to go through just to be alive. Amazing. He took them to court and won his rank I believe & received some level of 'pay' - 10 days from his service end date, he was captured.
      Our country likes to breed killers.
      We just left Afghan tribesmen with the biggest war material, supplies since VNam. See 'Expendable:___'

    • @Thunderchild-gz4gc
      @Thunderchild-gz4gc Před 2 lety +2

      They want your tourist dollars.

  • @alanmccooker7829
    @alanmccooker7829 Před rokem +17

    My brother was stationed at DaNang and served with the Marine Air wing fighter group. He reloaded and refuled many of jets. He use to tell us how he sometimes had to wash out the blood in the Huey's after they brought back the injured. He had to handle agent orange to and blamed it on his cancer. He died on Christmas Eve 2011.

    • @celticpipes53
      @celticpipes53 Před 11 měsíci

      Sorry to hear that my brother. Semper Fi.

    • @klc4023
      @klc4023 Před 11 měsíci

      🫂

    • @kevindorland738
      @kevindorland738 Před 3 měsíci +1

      God Bless your brother and his loved ones.....

  • @angmhalp
    @angmhalp Před 8 lety +84

    25:47 Lt Karl W. Richter, 24. Officially credited with 198 missions over Vietnam. Air Force Cross, Silver Star, 4 DFCs, Bronze Star and 22 Air Medals. At 23 he was the youngest pilot to shoot down a MiG over Vietnam. Killed in action on his 199th mission over Vietnam. Some men talk the talk but very few walk the walk.

    • @holdemjim
      @holdemjim Před 7 lety

      angmhalp us Gaye thinj

    • @denniswinn9412
      @denniswinn9412 Před 7 lety +6

      I guess Trump wouldn't like him.He likes pilots who don't get shot down.

    • @pepperann5766
      @pepperann5766 Před 6 lety +5

      angmhalp Very well said. Thank you for sharing this information on this very Brave and very missed, young Man.💕

    • @AndrewTubbiolo
      @AndrewTubbiolo Před 6 lety +2

      I looked him up too. A great American airman.

    • @AndrewTubbiolo
      @AndrewTubbiolo Před 6 lety

      Yeah and look at what the world missed out on because of those other 'psychopaths' like Richter who prevented the entire Korean peninsula turning out like North Korea. Wanna know what would have happened in Vietnam if the US was able to hold the line? Look at South Korea vs North Korea. At least North Vietnam turned out to be far more sane than the NORKS.

  • @johns1625
    @johns1625 Před 2 lety +55

    Between 1964 and 1973, Laos became, per capita, the most heavily bombed country in the world, with over two million tons of bombs dropped during the Vietnam War, one ton for each person living in Laos at the time in fact. It was bombed more than England, more than Germany, more than Japan, even more than Iraq and Afghanistan combined. There still remains thousands of unexploded bombs and other ordinance in it's jungles.

    • @destroyerarmor2846
      @destroyerarmor2846 Před rokem +15

      Freedom bombs

    • @tombutcher5776
      @tombutcher5776 Před rokem +6

      I was stationed on the border of Laos (far north easter corner of Thailand. We sat at the edge of the Mekong River which separates Laos & Thailand and watch fire fights over Laos. One day an unmarked airplane hovered over us and you could hear his engines rev up and he took off for Laos. As soon as he was over it he dropped a huge bomb!! He bombed a landing strip that the communists were using in a little town by the name of Thakhek. Many years I met a Laotian who was from Thakhek so we had stories to tell over beer.

    • @TheMIEProject
      @TheMIEProject Před rokem

      We got to remove 2 of them last year on an expedition. The rest was mines. Almost lost a leg too. Joined by some old jarheads guilt tripping themselves here too.

    • @farodyne
      @farodyne Před rokem

      Which makes it even more amazing that these murderers haven't been brought to an international court for their crimes against humanity. Agent Orange still affects thousands and more thousands of newborn children today.

    • @migram4190
      @migram4190 Před 11 měsíci

      Americans should remove all of them

  • @MrFluffytheTurtle
    @MrFluffytheTurtle Před měsícem +2

    Watching this feels like being a kid again watching all the old films the military channel would play later into evening/night. This bouta be a great nightlight to have on thank you. I'll probably actually be done watching it after a week of nights falling asleep picking up where i last remember being.

  • @waynecobra1534
    @waynecobra1534 Před 2 lety +36

    Vietnam vet here, In 1967 the F-4C were fun to watch. Left seat door gunner flying low level skimming the tree tops. when napalm was delivered the fireball was deadly. I flew with the 155AHC most often with a UH-1C gunship.

    • @ashokiimc
      @ashokiimc Před 2 lety +1

      What do you remember most bout the war?

    • @trainnerd3029
      @trainnerd3029 Před rokem +1

      Thank you for your service sir! I am the father of an Afghanistan combat veteran

    • @robrak3569
      @robrak3569 Před rokem

      How many innocent lives did you take away? Must be too many to remember or too routine to care!

    • @monkeyking-self-proclaimed7050
      @monkeyking-self-proclaimed7050 Před rokem +2

      @@ashokiimc The innocents killed and destruction he left behind.

    • @schoolssection
      @schoolssection Před 11 měsíci +1

      Left seat door gunner? In an F-4C???

  • @Willoz269
    @Willoz269 Před 5 lety +38

    Vietnamese Air Force has 127 aircraft at it most powerful time in the late 60s, most were obsolete Mig 17s....some of the major US offensives packaged more than 200 aircraft, against which the Vietnamese would send 4 or 5 flights of 4 aircraft.....knowing they were outnumbered, outrained, and against much better technology, they still went up....hats off to them

    • @thethaovatoquoc312
      @thethaovatoquoc312 Před 2 lety +1

      North Vietnamese Commies routinely sent their terrorists to South Vietnam to mine buses, bombard schools, throw grenades into markets full of people, massacring countless civilians. Tet Offensive 1968 they buried alive 10k civilians in Hue City. Ho Chi Minh terrorist leader killed 1 million North Vietnamese during his land reform alone (1953-1956), ranked as top 10 prolific butchers of 20th century, along with fellow Commie butchers Mao, Lenin, and Pol-Pot.

    • @JL-tm3rc
      @JL-tm3rc Před rokem +7

      interesting though there are more north vietnamese aces than american aces

    • @vivek27789
      @vivek27789 Před 11 měsíci +1

      True... Very True

    • @leandrol2752
      @leandrol2752 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Sadly no one talks about them, but they were impressive at that time. True fighters...

    • @randybobandy9828
      @randybobandy9828 Před 3 měsíci +1

      ​@@JL-tm3rcno there aren't. Most US pilots were flying air to ground missions. The only aces are the SAMs the NV used.

  • @neildavy2601
    @neildavy2601 Před 3 lety +57

    I went to school with Steve Allen, we were both USAF,
    but he got at least 2 Migs as an F-4 jock. Great pilot, real decent man!

    • @duynv89
      @duynv89 Před 2 lety +5

      mig 17 with f4. but nourt viet nam win, and viet nam never lost

    • @ChironZore
      @ChironZore Před 2 lety +6

      @@duynv89 They lost every military engagement. We left, they walked into Saigon.

    • @hieuhoang807
      @hieuhoang807 Před 2 lety +1

      @反共抗俄 một đứa trẻ không hiểu về lịch sử

    • @ishhyyyy
      @ishhyyyy Před 2 lety +4

      @@ChironZore "They lost every military engagement." Battle of An Lão, Battle of Ban Houei Sane, Operation Barrel Roll, Battle of FSB Mary Ann, Battle Of Xuân Lộc, the list goes on and on for the battles and operations the US has lost in Vietnam.

    • @cauminh4017
      @cauminh4017 Před rokem

      @@ChironZore LoL :)), going another country with a ton of weapon and allies, start bombing cities, burning villages, killing peoples, then get punched back in the mouth, they said: "ok, we cant win, we should left this country before they kill all of us" :)). God bless American and their "walk away army"

  • @tuduong3623
    @tuduong3623 Před 3 lety +17

    Quê hương Việt Nam anh hùng của tôi ❤️. Thà hy sinh tất cả chứ không chịu khuất phục làm nô lệ. 💪

    • @thicucnguyen8150
      @thicucnguyen8150 Před rokem

      Giám tao mới lạ, thực tế bây giờ nè 😂

    • @Chilly_Billy
      @Chilly_Billy Před 8 měsíci

      Communism is the worst form of slavery. Your countrymen died in droves making you a slave.

    • @dwightchaos9449
      @dwightchaos9449 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Nobody was trying to enslave you.. but the communists.

    • @AnhNguyen-gi1tg
      @AnhNguyen-gi1tg Před měsícem

      ​@@thicucnguyen8150bị b52 nó ép đến thủ đô mà có đầu hàng đâu:)) chứng minh cách đây 50 năm r đấy th đần

    • @toanla9192
      @toanla9192 Před 4 dny

      Đừng lấy lòng Cali mà đo lòng Việt Nam ​@@thicucnguyen8150

  • @sovietalien9976
    @sovietalien9976 Před rokem +8

    "Old people start war, young people dies"

  • @TheLeadSled
    @TheLeadSled Před 5 lety +103

    As a vet myself I have the utmost respect for the men that fought in this war and the women that helped put them back together. So if there is any Vietnam Vets that read this I want to personally say thank you and God bless each and everyone of you!

    • @davidhoang4828
      @davidhoang4828 Před 2 lety +6

      Cảm ơn đồng chí

    • @ashokiimc
      @ashokiimc Před 2 lety

      What do you remember most bout the war?

    • @brucelee5576
      @brucelee5576 Před rokem +2

      Ok let me pass on your message to William Cali and his buddies.

    • @888slowspeed
      @888slowspeed Před rokem

      Go halfway around the world to mass murder families and childrens...proud??

    • @chesk8in
      @chesk8in Před rokem +1

      That war has been one of the biggest shits of USA imperialism. Blame on it and on all "veterans" whio killed poor innocent Vietnamese

  • @mikerussick4444
    @mikerussick4444 Před 4 lety +59

    This is the only documentary I've seen where the air Force phantoms were referred to as the F-110! This was definitely made before the standardization of the names and numbers of all US military aircraft. Very cool thanks for sharing.

    • @eddiehelton4090
      @eddiehelton4090 Před 3 lety

      Lo Lo Lo Lo Lo k

    • @thientranvan7992
      @thientranvan7992 Před 2 lety +1

      Nhật pháp và mỹ đã xâm chiếm Việt Nam đưa Việt Nam dag về thời kỳ đồ đồng nhưng hoà bình lập lại chúng tôi lại xây dựng lại đất nước to hơn đẹp hơn lêu lêu

    • @CAL1MBO
      @CAL1MBO Před 10 měsíci +1

      True. I've never heard it referred to as the F-110 aside from whitepapers.

  • @clerict19
    @clerict19 Před 3 lety +11

    Хотелось бы выразить свое глубочайшее уважение доблестному вьетнамскому народу за их "гостеприимство" в отношении этой оголтелой банды мародеров, насильников и убийц.

    • @Wuddi100
      @Wuddi100 Před 3 lety +2

      What's about Afghanistan? The russian invasion? What's about Stalin who murdered millions of people? Your glorious russia isn't better than any other nation in the world.

    • @user-iu6dx5pu3i
      @user-iu6dx5pu3i Před rokem

      @@Wuddi100 ЗАВАЛИ ХАЙЛО ХУЙЛО

    • @user-iu6dx5pu3i
      @user-iu6dx5pu3i Před rokem +2

      @@Wuddi100
      ИНАЧЕ ПРИПОМНИМ ТЕБЕ НЕ ТОЛЬКО АФГАНИСТАН, ИРАК, ИРАН... И МНОГОЕ ДРУГОЕ

    • @luvsilly60
      @luvsilly60 Před rokem

      Same for those being raped in Ukraine.

    • @randybobandy9828
      @randybobandy9828 Před 3 měsíci

      You're a 🤡

  • @El.Primero76
    @El.Primero76 Před 3 lety +8

    “ALL GAVE SOME, SOME GAVE ALL.”
    Col Neil J . Graham, 22 Nov 1967.
    388th Tactical Fighter Wing Commander.

  • @donbrashsux
    @donbrashsux Před 5 lety +64

    I love Vietnam..what an amazing beautiful country it is today..love the Vietnamese people..

    • @donbrashsux
      @donbrashsux Před 5 lety +3

      Yes but it’s very progressive..I’ve been travelling here for 6 months from the top to the bottom and it’s great to see where it has come from and its people are soo resiliant and kind.. a fantastic place to visit imo

    • @AnhTuan-pp3iq
      @AnhTuan-pp3iq Před 5 lety +11

      Old man Goat ; free people???!!! Like free american ? free to attack other countries that are not obey them( american)?? Free to develope weapons to threaten the weak? Free to bring thousands of troops into my country and killl my people?? Free to drop thousands of tons of bombs in my country and don’t care if they are communist or ordinary people? So what is that kind of freedom for???!!!
      Don’t be free to vomit out something that you just hear. Come to travel in VN like the one commented above.

    • @DanKann86
      @DanKann86 Před 5 lety +9

      @Old man Goat It takes time for a country to develop itself to be a successful and stable democracy. MANY of the so-called democratic countries are actually failed democracies and faux democracies. Even in the US, the politicians are actually answerable to the special interest groups that paid them, and the voters (the few that vote) vote for the same bought and paid for politicians term after term. The US is stable because it is wealthy and the vast majority are satisfied. Developing countries are poor and hence inherently unstable. As for democracy, it should be a goal for developing countries to work toward to, but not necessarily ready for. Even with U.S. support, South Korea did not become a democracy until 1987 with the first direct election of its president; and this is after decades of political turmoil, including the assassination of a president. Similarly, Taiwan only became a democracy in 1996 with the first direct election of its president. Both governments have ruled with a brutal iron fist against dissent before democracy came about. Unfortunately, the government of South Vietnam was unstable, brutal, and corrupt. So bad that the U.S. tacitly approved for the assassination of its president, Ngo Dinh Diem. It takes a strong and stable central government to institute major economic and social changes which take many years to achieve. Vietnam today is not under communism, but more accurately described as a single party dictatorship and very pro-capitalism. It is a single-party ruled dictatorship like S. Korean and Taiwan (KMT Party) were. It is forward looking and constantly changing to meet economic and social challenges of the future. It has its problems and challenges as with any developing countries.
      www.forbes.com/sites/salvatorebabones/2018/01/15/vietnam-is-following-the-asian-tiger-currency-formula-for-rapid-economic-growth/#518d77a4bed0
      The economic path above cannot be achieved for a developing country under so called "democracy" due to political interference from the various elites.
      english.vietnamnet.vn/fms/business/195916/does-vietnam-s-future-depend-on-middle-class-development-.html
      When Vietnam has reached the economic level of what S. Korea was back in the 90's and strenghtened its institutions, then maybe it will be ready for major political change. Vietnam is not quite ready yet.

    • @AnhTuan-pp3iq
      @AnhTuan-pp3iq Před 5 lety

      Dan Kann ; you’re right with the responsible comments.

    • @shepherdlavellen3301
      @shepherdlavellen3301 Před 5 lety

      @@AnhTuan-pp3iq most important thing in a diplomacy is whether you have strength to take initiative, either in military strength or in global economy, which is pretty unfortunate for you guys since you have neither.

  • @jackjohnson7396
    @jackjohnson7396 Před 5 lety +12

    Brave U.S. pilots and military there. Some are suffering out in the streets homeless, to this day. They did not ask for it, just wanted to be a good American. Doing the right thing, to serve their country. Much respect for them...

  • @robertaccornero7172
    @robertaccornero7172 Před 3 lety +7

    I served a year at PHU CAT AFB in 1969, in Nam , we had 30 F4's . we were the next base south of DANANG. a year I will never forget.

    • @DG-ie5ip
      @DG-ie5ip Před 9 měsíci +1

      My supervisor was there as a Weapons Loader on F-4. 12hr shifts all the time. I joined in 1980 and met him in Lakenheath, England USAF 1983 48 EMS Armament shop.. He did not want to go back to the states-the way the vets were being treated. I did 20yrs AF. Loved it !

  • @frankierzucekjr
    @frankierzucekjr Před 3 lety +18

    This has really been fascinating. Thank you everyone for your service, and welcome home. God bless you all.

    • @robertlipszic3315
      @robertlipszic3315 Před 3 lety +3

      what do u call a service? going abroad and kill kids and women? in the name of what?!

    • @nguyenhung-uu7vx
      @nguyenhung-uu7vx Před 3 lety +3

      "THANKS FOR INVADING ???" fck off

    • @dieslike
      @dieslike Před měsícem

      Убийцы мирных жителей попадут в ад

  • @victor-emmanuel7485
    @victor-emmanuel7485 Před 4 lety +10

    Very interesting footage I had not seen before 👍

  • @wrightflyer7855
    @wrightflyer7855 Před 5 lety +16

    The Thuds were gone by the time I arrived at Takhli in 1971, except for one that had been dragged off the runway and was sitting in the grass near the MARS station. So I decided to salvage some parts from it--the nose wheel was a great ashtray for our radio station and I pulled the VHF receiver from the cockpit and brought it back to the States. Ended up giving it to my brother, which I regret now. Maybe I could get it back.......

    • @DG-ie5ip
      @DG-ie5ip Před 22 dny

      What was your job and what branch of service.

    • @wrightflyer7855
      @wrightflyer7855 Před 21 dnem

      @@DG-ie5ip I was Air Force (1968-1972). For the first 3 years I was a Ground Radio Operator and for the last year Air Police.

  • @jasonsweet1868
    @jasonsweet1868 Před 2 lety +2

    “I don’t really need this picture frame”
    What a great way to finish this excellent documentary don’t you want to buy them all a pint when you see the camaraderie shown even down to the dog it was amazing
    I still have to say the Vietnamese how resourceful were they when you consider what the planes could carry

  • @mikejohnson5900
    @mikejohnson5900 Před 3 lety +93

    The Skyraiders were really valuable in Vietnam. They could loiter like crazy and get in close to their targets! In the Jet age they proved that prop aircraft could still do the job.

    • @johnr8820
      @johnr8820 Před 3 lety +16

      My grandfather flew them low and slow among the Ho Chi Minh Trail. He said the hardest thing was killing the elephants that were carrying supplies.

    • @hatecrewsix2
      @hatecrewsix2 Před 2 lety +5

      Prop airplanes still works for war. Low cost maintenance and perfect for the jungle warfare as CAS

    • @yardkartretreads
      @yardkartretreads Před 2 lety +2

      I’m sure the guys on the ground loved them like the guys on the ground today love the A-10.

    • @thientranvan7992
      @thientranvan7992 Před 2 lety +2

      @@johnr8820 Nhật pháp và mỹ đã xâm chiếm Việt Nam đưa Việt Nam dag về thời kỳ đồ đồng nhưng hoà bình lập lại chúng tôi lại xây dựng lại đất nước to hơn đẹp hơn lêu lêu

    • @johnr8820
      @johnr8820 Před 2 lety

      @@thientranvan7992 translation?

  • @RFKFANTS67
    @RFKFANTS67 Před 6 lety +109

    Lots of cool aircraft back then.. A1's, F100's, F105's, F4's, Great footage. Thanks for posting this.

    • @albertandrews130
      @albertandrews130 Před 5 lety +11

      Don't forget the Navy A-4, A-6, A-7., F-8

    • @generaldilvry69
      @generaldilvry69 Před 3 lety +2

      Nice ratio of over one-in-ten dislikes on esoteric film

    • @donnapierce2906
      @donnapierce2906 Před 3 lety

      @@albertandrews130 TV

    • @generaldilvry69
      @generaldilvry69 Před 3 lety +1

      @Timothy Chung Cheech here - bombs and war is anti=human...EVIL

    • @anthaiauto1823
      @anthaiauto1823 Před 3 lety +3

      my country viet nam have mic-17, mic-18,mic-19 and mic-21
      one pilot of vn with one mic-21 destroy one b52

  • @moneytttt1140
    @moneytttt1140 Před 4 lety +249

    Every body is gangster til the trees start speaking Vietnamese

  • @robertglennon657
    @robertglennon657 Před 2 lety +5

    Oh how times have changed. It's a beautiful country and now the people are so warm and friendly. God bless them

  • @BernhardRottweiler
    @BernhardRottweiler Před rokem +4

    From Min. 22:09
    That's Ed Rasimus.
    Flew a tour in 66 (I think) in the "Thud" and later a tour in the F-4.
    You can read about the missions, Karl Richter and last but not least old Roscoe in his books.
    "When Thunder Rolled" and "Palace Cobra".

  • @qafmbr
    @qafmbr Před 4 lety +14

    The F-4 PHantom was just so badass. With badass pilots!

    • @badguy1481
      @badguy1481 Před 4 lety +5

      Fighters make movies. Bombers make history. The F-4 did not end the War for America. B-52 bombers did..fighting the North Vietnamese Army attempting to invade the South in 1972...Then bombing the North's capital in December of that same year.

    • @TuanAnhNguyen-dl3jc
      @TuanAnhNguyen-dl3jc Před 3 lety +2

      Vietnamese victory !!!!

    • @arshadmalik6390
      @arshadmalik6390 Před 3 lety

      Thats why America lose 450 f4 phantoms

  • @jehugo66
    @jehugo66 Před 7 lety +78

    When I joined the USAF in 1986 we had many excellent pilots and ground crew who were Vietnam, some even Korea Veterans in the unit I ended up at in Air Guard, 103D TAC Fighter Group. They had flown the 105 and rotated through Vietnam. It was the static display plane on the base. This is like seeing those guys 15 years younger.

    • @mwkop39
      @mwkop39 Před 7 lety +1

      KnoxTN Yankee bb

    • @ashokiimc
      @ashokiimc Před 2 lety

      What do you think they remembered most bout the war?

    • @langlaisjean-claude9418
      @langlaisjean-claude9418 Před rokem

      les amerloques assassins sont quand même partis la""queue entre les jambes""après leurs saloperies ""

    • @Haddley333
      @Haddley333 Před rokem

      @@ashokiimc that's a loaded question. I like watching honest interviews and most seem to say it's the ones that didn't make it back

    • @rabidfarmer9765
      @rabidfarmer9765 Před 11 měsíci

      1986 - I was neck-deep in snow in South Korea...during Team Spirit. LOL>

  • @armandoblackhill1355
    @armandoblackhill1355 Před 3 lety +8

    My prayers and respect to every one who lived and died in the Vietnam war.
    I'm sorry

    • @khasnurihusain5607
      @khasnurihusain5607 Před 3 lety +1

      Armando,have you seen the children of Agent Orange?You still have a chance to make a better world.

  • @edwardgormley2657
    @edwardgormley2657 Před 3 lety +13

    I still think the a-10 warthog is the most intimidating sounding aircraft ever made and it looks cool too. I love it when they fly low just above the tree line and circle I could see the pilot's face in the warthog I saluted him and he saluted back as he circled around me and headed back for Plattsburgh when they were opened that was a cool experience those engine sounded incredible.

    • @rogerramjet7567
      @rogerramjet7567 Před rokem

      I was stationed there twice in 67-68.. Aircraft maintenance. Lots of rockets and small arms fire.

  • @571951rhoehn1
    @571951rhoehn1 Před 7 lety +20

    It's great to watch these documentaries, to see what we did. It was hard to know working those 25 hr days!

    • @nyusa78
      @nyusa78 Před 5 lety +5

      You did what Nazi did in Europe

    • @martywalker1803
      @martywalker1803 Před 3 lety +4

      Robert I know this is an old video and you might not see this but a big thank you for your service from Tennessee.

    • @Centrodemasa
      @Centrodemasa Před 3 lety +3

      Yes.....we know very well what they did.....They killed a lot of children.

  • @donaldjones7678
    @donaldjones7678 Před 4 lety +21

    Was a grunt in 1971. We loved the F4. We had their support a few times when we needed their fire power.

    • @xekoan507
      @xekoan507 Před 3 lety

      @Black Pill respect your elders

    • @LongBinh70
      @LongBinh70 Před 3 lety

      Fas' Movers! (RVN '70 - '71)

    • @SapuTaro-nr5bl
      @SapuTaro-nr5bl Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@djhaloeight Godbless Vietnam🇻🇳

  • @johnr8820
    @johnr8820 Před 3 lety +5

    My grandfather said out of about 100 missions he only flew in Vietnam a handful of times in his Douglas A-1E.

  • @kenw.1112
    @kenw.1112 Před 3 lety +3

    This is the real deal. Wow amazing what you learn from these brave heroes!

  • @meinname3222
    @meinname3222 Před 7 lety +5

    Thanks for very intressing viedeos !!!👍👍👍

  • @fanfest750
    @fanfest750 Před 5 lety +32

    Vietnam ❤ india ❤
    Love from India

  • @bearing44
    @bearing44 Před 3 lety +8

    I really enjoyed this one. Thanks for sharing.

  • @user-mi5nj8gj5p
    @user-mi5nj8gj5p Před 2 měsíci +1

    During pilot training class of 1966 the entire class started to call themselves The flying Cossacks and had a talisman of having a Ukrainian Trident . The only American Ukrainian pilot was Steve Olek his class performed 10000 sorties with no losses , Steve Olek racked up 590 sorties during Vietnam. He's now an advisor to the Ukrainian armed forces having travelled there . There's newspapers information about the above legend and having that Trident was a lucky charm .

  • @stephenlong3907
    @stephenlong3907 Před 4 lety +47

    Those screaming F4s though!!

  • @TheLeadSled
    @TheLeadSled Před 6 lety +11

    Have this on dvd, love seeing the Vigalante flying off the deck, that was one big Bird.

  • @johnbemiss2555
    @johnbemiss2555 Před 3 lety +10

    Spent my tour in 1970 loading munitions on the F4 load napalm, 500 lb, bombs ,CBUs, missiles loved to watch the F4 take off at night with afterburners awesome sight. Great fighter

    • @drewmillz1
      @drewmillz1 Před 3 lety +1

      He was paid for his job. So to call it service is disingenuous.

    • @captainsimbadog8347
      @captainsimbadog8347 Před 3 lety +4

      @@drewmillz1 he was still doing a very dangerous job that he may not have even wanted to do I feel as if he should be thanked for that because when he got back home he sure as hell wasn’t

    • @badbotchdown9845
      @badbotchdown9845 Před 2 lety

      Yeah sure knowing they ll go to bomb civilians with their napalm what a joy to see did have you wet underwear?

    • @DG-ie5ip
      @DG-ie5ip Před 9 měsíci

      @@drewmillz1 Your full of BS ! I did 20 yrs AF (weapons loader) and never payed over time...Because I did the job as a Patriot and love of country.

  • @marktroiani5401
    @marktroiani5401 Před 3 lety +2

    The swagger of pros. Great video.

  • @meomaputv7750
    @meomaputv7750 Před 5 lety +25

    Lịch sử Việt Nam thật khốc liệt!! Cảm ơn on cha ông ta đã anh dũng hi sinh để bảo vệ đất nước Việt Nam! Tự hào quá Việt Nam ơi

  • @lancelot1953
    @lancelot1953 Před 5 lety +17

    To all my instructors and flyers who educated me on what to do and how to do it. You were our heroes and our mentors - thank you for your dedication and support that help me become a better pilot and officer, my heart is with you all (many of you have died already defending our country).
    May God bless all of you because you gave me a reason to live or to fight. Peace be with you all, Ciao, L (118 combat missions).

    • @mikejohnson5900
      @mikejohnson5900 Před 3 lety +1

      118 missions! Wow. I bet you've some fascinating stories to tell Sir.

    • @lancelot1953
      @lancelot1953 Před 3 lety +1

      @@mikejohnson5900 Hi Mike, thank you for the nice words. I was very lucky. What I went through is nothing compared to our elders (soldiers, sailors, airmen, and Marines) who fought in the previous wars. All wars are bad, but I would say that Vietnam was worse because of the rejection and the betrayal that many of our Veteran suffered upon their return/repatriation/release... Let's not forget what all those Veterans fought for, stood for, and made the ultimate sacrifice for... May God bless America, Peace be with you Mike, Ciao, L

    • @captainsimbadog8347
      @captainsimbadog8347 Před 3 lety

      @@lancelot1953 I agree
      I believe it’s pathetic how lots of our country treated these hero’s who just went through hell and back for America
      I want to join the marines or army when I’m old enough I have great respect for our brave men and women 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸

    • @lancelot1953
      @lancelot1953 Před 3 lety +1

      @@captainsimbadog8347 Hi CaptainSimbaDog, I encourage you to join the military - In my days (I am a Baby Boomer), it was a fact of life that we, teenagers, were all going to serve the country a couple of years as part of "growing up". The training that I got was incredible and gave me utmost respect for our country and what it stands for. It meant so much to me that I made a career out of it. As for you, since you are young, I would recommend that you attend college and request a commission in the military as an officer. If you have a chance, apply to the service academies (West Point, Naval Academy, Air Force...). As far as Army vs. Marines, I would say that the Marines have a harder life (in my days at least) but the connection that Marines share across the ranks is unique/second to none; once a Marine, always a Marine (Semper Fi!). Good luck to you and Peace be with you, Ciao, L

    • @captainsimbadog8347
      @captainsimbadog8347 Před 3 lety

      @@lancelot1953 thanks for the advice
      Have a good day sir

  • @flyingdog1498
    @flyingdog1498 Před 4 lety +14

    I have been access that bridge at 1:56. 12:05 that is Lima Co 3rd Battalion 1st Marine Regiment 1st Marine Division my unit.

    • @robertbeck8670
      @robertbeck8670 Před 3 lety +2

      I have a good friend who served in 1/1 67-68. He worked intelligence. He was khe Shan, hue and other exciting places

  • @buzzard1013
    @buzzard1013 Před 3 lety +8

    Lt Richter that was interviewed went on and flew another 98 missions after his 1st 100 missions (he could have gone home after 100). He was killed on that 198th mission.

    • @user-jv4ic8rh4d
      @user-jv4ic8rh4d Před 3 lety +5

      Lt Richter "if we don't stop communism here, we wait until it hit Australia"... The man would be sick if he saw his country today.

    • @WhuDhat
      @WhuDhat Před 3 lety +2

      Damn, R.I.P.

    • @user-jv4ic8rh4d
      @user-jv4ic8rh4d Před 3 lety +2

      @Bernard de Fontaines Lt Richter wasn't Australian either... Why i said he would be sick if he saw HIS country today.

  • @thundercrosssplitattack2064

    2:45
    "give the enemy no chance to rest"
    Rolling Thunder wants to know your location

    • @user-vt4oz5nh3n
      @user-vt4oz5nh3n Před 4 lety

      Fly Anything Pilot they r on them land.!! Over

    • @enlightenedwarrior7119
      @enlightenedwarrior7119 Před 4 lety +2

      Rolling thunder was a waste of air power

    • @thundercrosssplitattack2064
      @thundercrosssplitattack2064 Před 4 lety +7

      @@enlightenedwarrior7119 It's hindered by politics, you dont do politics during a war... you do that after winning it...

    • @KernowekTim
      @KernowekTim Před 3 lety +1

      @@enlightenedwarrior7119 That is because politicians had their way, as usual. In fact, Rolling Thunder, if allowed to continue, would have forced Hanoi to sue for peace. Ho Chi Minh himself said as much post-war. Presidential U.S election criteria fucked it up.... Luckily, for us all, Germany's politicians caused their forces to suffer massive defeats culminating in complete collapse of all German forces in WW2. The more the involvement of inept politicians, the greater the chance of defeat for their respective countries.

    • @KernowekTim
      @KernowekTim Před 3 lety +1

      @@thundercrosssplitattack2064 Perfectly worded. You nailed it.

  • @SuperVexxy
    @SuperVexxy Před 5 lety +3

    FANTASTIC !

  • @andybishop8437
    @andybishop8437 Před 3 lety +46

    Incredible footage I’ve never seen before. Lost my uncle in Vietnam, he was shot down in his F105 and not recovered until the 90s.

    • @fjhisd
      @fjhisd Před 3 lety +4

      Grateful for his sacrifice, and so is our country

    • @dennisriblett4622
      @dennisriblett4622 Před 3 lety +1

      Glad You got Him "back"....

    • @jessiemydog7446
      @jessiemydog7446 Před 3 lety +1

      it's an honour to have read bout him n known of his sacrifice. cheers lad

    • @lenholloway4390
      @lenholloway4390 Před 3 lety +4

      Woooo Hoooo another dead yank that murdered many women and children

    • @cyclone8974
      @cyclone8974 Před 3 lety +5

      @@lenholloway4390 No were near the number women and children the VC and NVA murdered. Like the 5000 people they massacred in Hue before the Tet offensive.

  • @user-ok7ol8cz8v
    @user-ok7ol8cz8v Před 9 měsíci +1

    My Dad too flew an E4.221 missions out of Karat AFB Thailand.When He Came Home He never spoke of the missions he Did.I remember only pics of his tail number 13He only said bad luck for them.

  • @countrysamurai
    @countrysamurai Před 6 lety +6

    We had no business being in SEA BUT THESE MEN ARE TRULY PROFESSIONALS.
    They are a rare breed.

    • @zoran1898
      @zoran1898 Před 5 lety +5

      Profesionals for killing
      innocent people around the world. Fu.k american imperia....

  • @elzorro7of9
    @elzorro7of9 Před 2 lety +35

    The United States, along with their allies (The Republic of Vietnam, South Korean, Australian, Thailand, New Zealand), lost about 12,500 aircraft, helicopters and UAVs.
    North Vietnam lost 150 - 170 aircraft and helicopters.

    • @josephsmith6777
      @josephsmith6777 Před 2 lety +10

      To be fair the north didnt g
      Have a ton of aircraft most allied air assets fell to ground to air missles

    • @jagdpanther2224
      @jagdpanther2224 Před 2 lety +3

      For the Vietnam Communists, 150 aircrafts were a huge of military assets !At most they have 300 aircrafts donated by Soviet Union & China

    • @elzorro7of9
      @elzorro7of9 Před 2 lety +20

      @@jagdpanther2224 I think that is fairly obvious. And your point is? They still won overall. Beat the French, beat the US.

    • @sillygoose2508
      @sillygoose2508 Před 2 lety +8

      @@elzorro7of9 but the losses of the vietcong was mind boggling sure they were a determined and very disaplende group of people with a will that couldn't easily be broken with all the air support and death from above they choose to go under ground and not let their spirit be broken most society's couldn't take that constant bombing on a daily basis

    • @peskylogicchillinsky6007Futube
      @peskylogicchillinsky6007Futube Před 2 lety +5

      @@elzorro7of9 is usa not in control of the world still? Hows vietnam doing today? Yeah Vietnam sure did win... lol

  • @Ragegaming-nc4pt
    @Ragegaming-nc4pt Před měsícem +5

    Vietnamese people are so brave 🎉

  • @jeffrostunna6785
    @jeffrostunna6785 Před 2 lety +1

    Every time i was alone on Daytona. I had the chair force peckin away at me baby. Here for yall

  • @bgd73
    @bgd73 Před 5 lety +10

    my first appearance on a flightline as a crew chief to be was 1991. I knew the peace era people (fats slobs and cracked jokes), from the yuppies and the war grunts my first day. I ended up a grunt crew chief... you won't see me again. the viet nam era has my respect, it was primary war education to gulf 1. In fact the tanker we were taught on was poisoned with agent orange.I remember when our flightline officer spoke up and said we did 1500 sorties since my enlistment .I remained the youngest for 6.5 years... our flightline was VERY unwelcome place to be. I stay easy going realizing viet nam missions. Given todays tech etc... none of us will be seen again

  • @MWard-hl6gg
    @MWard-hl6gg Před 4 lety +4

    The F-4 is an absolute beast. The sound of them training close to where I grew up still brings back fond memories.

    • @TSi99999
      @TSi99999 Před rokem +1

      That black smoke also!

  • @johnwaynegovernmentcontrac3219

    Thank our Vets for EVERYTHING.

    • @mitchsterling3266
      @mitchsterling3266 Před 2 měsíci

      thank ypu for agent orange in my hdmi cord and starbucks lid

  • @darkknight1340
    @darkknight1340 Před 3 lety +25

    Hardly a secret,let alone a"dirty"one.

  • @albertoperez9648
    @albertoperez9648 Před 6 lety +35

    Humble professionals who were doing what they were ordered to do. Some were family men, others were not. Some believed in what they were doing, some did not. These men all shared two things in common however, the love of flying and a devotion to duty. Thank you to my dad who flew a total of 154 missions and to these brave men.

    • @senasakura345
      @senasakura345 Před 2 lety +1

      czcams.com/video/WpNOH6eCij8/video.html

    • @88scarletvideos88
      @88scarletvideos88 Před 2 lety

      ur dad loves killing viet cong

    • @TSi99999
      @TSi99999 Před rokem

      Salute to your Dad!

    • @chaien696
      @chaien696 Před 9 měsíci

      154 nhiệm vụ trong chiến tranh Việt Nam? Anh ấy là kẻ giết người hàng loạt

  • @conroypawgmail
    @conroypawgmail Před 2 lety +13

    I kind of hate it when people say "we didn't belong there" or "we had no business fighting in Vietnam" etc.
    As an ethnic Thai, and an amateur historian, the "Domino Effect" was very real. Laos, Cambodia (Kampuchea), Burma (Myanmar) all became communists after the fall of South Vietnam. Millions would die in the "Killing Fields" / political purges of Cambodia, and countless thousands would become refugees. I was really young at the time, but it seemed that even though Americans didn't appreciate the warfighters that served in Vietnam, my parents showed me why Thai people should be grateful. Just because all of the dominoes didn't fall, doesn't mean the threat wasn't real. History moves on, and people's memories are short. I don't know if current Thai folks even know the sacrifice that Americans made to fight communist aggression. I'm certain, going through the American school system, that it isn't taught at all in grade school, or even college.
    Why we were there? I guess that's up to how you want to interpret the Truman Doctrine. We had our fill in Korea, We didn't use it in Europe, when the Soviet Union stomped all over the Hungarians or the Czechs. We decided that Cuba was going to be a special case. But we decided to get involved in South Vietnam, then proceeded to fight it in a backwards manner.
    My respect goes to those who served, fought, were wounded, captured, and those who died in service to their country, the United States of America. May God Bless you all. I have little respect for the politicians and leaders who seemingly wasted their efforts and lives, and other valuable resources in a war they hampered the warfighter from winning. The lesson that many generals learned and would later employ during the First Gulf War is that if you are going to fight a war, fight to win, or don't fight it at all.

    • @CuongNguyen-zn6jy
      @CuongNguyen-zn6jy Před rokem

      Shut up ladyboy! You people from thailand are all sellouts known in Asia known for being bitches for the western powers and sell their 🐱 you know we have f..ked you and the cambod in the past thats why yall so salty.. weak ass people🇻🇳

  • @thescarletandgrey2505
    @thescarletandgrey2505 Před 3 lety +24

    I keep expecting the narrator to say, “Next week, on: Mannix....”

  • @paulsuprono7225
    @paulsuprono7225 Před 3 lety +14

    Attended I of Colorado, was a cadet on AFROTC whereupon CO - Colonel Robert J Mock, was a fighter pilot in Vietnam. Boy, the stories he could tell . . . . . 🇺🇸

    • @user-ph9sb8tu7j
      @user-ph9sb8tu7j Před 3 lety

      And how the MiGs mowed down you freaks, don't tell me?

    • @dunnjob
      @dunnjob Před 3 lety +2

      @@user-ph9sb8tu7j , might want to brush up on your history a bit. Kill ratio in Vietnam was around 4 to 1 in favor of the Americans in air-to-air engagements.

    • @igintell7295
      @igintell7295 Před 3 lety

      @@user-ph9sb8tu7j rematch?

    • @kelvin5005
      @kelvin5005 Před 2 lety

      @@user-ph9sb8tu7j cute little mig 15s and 21's u didnt stand jack shit chance against the f5s and the f4s or the a4's even pathethic

    • @kelvin5005
      @kelvin5005 Před 2 lety

      @@dunnjob we had mislles hoorah

  • @sirich7751
    @sirich7751 Před 4 lety +17

    F4 was still doing "wild Weasel" missions into 1996.

    • @trespire
      @trespire Před 4 lety +1

      Kurnass, the last of the Spooks.

    • @adamsimpson3807
      @adamsimpson3807 Před 4 lety

      Why I thought we won that war until we pulled out

    • @robertbeck8670
      @robertbeck8670 Před 3 lety

      @@adamsimpson3807 general Giap agrees with you. He was calling his field operations back north when Walter Cronkite said “this war is lost on live tv.
      Giap heard this and decided to fight the war using our own media.
      It’s in his writings and books

    • @michaelmckinnon1591
      @michaelmckinnon1591 Před 3 lety

      @@trespire F-4F Ice was the last Phantom II used not the Kurnass 2000 last I knew

    • @thomasjoyce7910
      @thomasjoyce7910 Před 3 lety

      That's surprising, though, I suppose the North Vietnamese didn't follow the peace agreement either.

  • @TeguhSantosot_so
    @TeguhSantosot_so Před 4 lety +26

    This made even Rambo became girly

  • @Rayburn58
    @Rayburn58 Před 2 lety +5

    I look at all that amazing military technology and all the brave dedicated and highly skilled military personell, and all I can think is what a terrible waste that war was. In the end it accomplished nothing.

  • @intoxicatedangle1162
    @intoxicatedangle1162 Před 2 lety

    looks fantastic. Thx for Uploading

  • @johnshields6852
    @johnshields6852 Před rokem +4

    My uncle Jack flew the F4 phantom in Vietnam, I was about 10 yrs old and in awe, when he got leave he'd be at my grandparents house on holidays, I always wanted to ask questions but he didn't talk about it, thank God for our military and the men and women who sacrifice so much for our country. 🇺🇸🙏

    • @InnovateIQ1987
      @InnovateIQ1987 Před rokem +2

      What did your uncle fight in Vietnam for?

    • @anhchinhmoto1040
      @anhchinhmoto1040 Před 11 měsíci

      ​@@InnovateIQ1987đến giết người Việt Nam trong khi Việt Nam không có nhu cầu chiến tranh đã phá nát đất nước và cướp đi rất nhiều Sinh mạng vô tội .hoa kỳ quá ác độc . mà vẫn tự hào được . mệt mỏi

  • @bobtis
    @bobtis Před 7 lety +13

    Being so outnumbered by the VC & NVA Only air support kept the US in the war.

  • @MisteriosGloriosos922
    @MisteriosGloriosos922 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for posting this vid!!!

  • @LanceRomanceF4E
    @LanceRomanceF4E Před 9 měsíci +3

    I flew the F-4E 1983-87 in the 3TFS at Clark AB, Philippines. We had old heads with good ‘Nam stories. Learned more about tactical flying at the bar than in the class room. The Rhino was a cool jet, but it was hard to be an expert in all dedicated tasks. Interdiction, CAS, Offensive counter air, Nukes, and precision guided munitions (Pave Tack and GBU-15). Our Squadron was a jack all trades-master of none. But man, it was fun to be young and flying jets back in the day.

  • @nievesmares3179
    @nievesmares3179 Před 6 lety +8

    Jet fighter footage is amazing

  • @drelipe340
    @drelipe340 Před 2 lety +32

    I'm brazilian , and last year i read the history of one of vietnam's fighter ace : Robin Olds . Atfer reading his entire life history , we figure out that he could not have been anything other than a fighter pilot. From the P-38 to the F4....very lucky and competent fellow .

    • @rebelwithoutaclue8164
      @rebelwithoutaclue8164 Před 2 lety +3

      Read Ed Rasimus books about flying F 105s out of Thailand in 1966. 100 missions. Went back in 1972 flew another 100 missions in F 4s phantom phlyer.

    • @akenji47
      @akenji47 Před 2 lety +1

      Sempre tem um Br lambe bota de americano kkkkk

    • @drelipe340
      @drelipe340 Před 2 lety

      Vai se informar o burrão 1)))

    • @45CaliberCure
      @45CaliberCure Před 2 lety

      Hell of a story, and an impressive man. It's a shame that he fell for an actress and had to live with that mistake. Obrigada. Se cuida.

    • @akenji47
      @akenji47 Před 2 lety

      @@drelipe340 vai vc mano, essa guerra foi uma covardia e todos os americanos que lutaram nela são covardes criminosos de guerra. Se ligue, daqui a pouco a casa bombardeada pode ser a nossa.

  • @bmcbg
    @bmcbg Před rokem +2

    God Bless our Vietnam Vets and thank you for your service

  • @abelardogonzales8283
    @abelardogonzales8283 Před 2 lety +5

    I love this documentary, it's very intriguing! Just finish watching it Friday 10-15-2021 at 8:50 pm. But, only the only bad thing about this war American shouldn't be involved in this kind of war. It's not their war, a lot innocent people died and also a huge amount Americans died in this catostrophic Vietnam war! Have A Blessed Weekends Everybody!

  • @CZECHMATE650
    @CZECHMATE650 Před 6 lety +9

    Did anyone else see the oil splatter ed skyraiders? Got love CAS that can linger half the day! Thanks Sandy from Jolly

    • @onthego9825
      @onthego9825 Před 2 lety +1

      AD sky raiders were bad ass, Oil pump arm in cockpit cuz they burned as much oil as gas!

    • @tomt373
      @tomt373 Před 2 lety

      @@onthego9825 That helped keep their engines, adapted from the B-29, from overheating and catching on fire.

    • @onthego9825
      @onthego9825 Před 2 lety

      @@tomt373 Guy that was a partner and taught me to fly in the Citabria was a Sky raider pilot off the Kitty hawk in Nam, great pilot and super spiritual after being shot down and rescued 45 min later by a Jolly green in a small arms target shoot!

  • @thebonesaw..4634
    @thebonesaw..4634 Před 4 lety +11

    24:49 -- *Lt Karl W. Richter* (the pilot who wanted to stay for another 100 missions) *was killed in combat on July 28, 1967.* I'm not sure if they covered this fact in the documentary (I stopped it at 26:04, and wrote this comment while it was still on my mind because I just happened to know that he died in Vietnam after volunteering for a second tour). en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karl_W._Richter

    • @fredkeele6578
      @fredkeele6578 Před 3 lety +1

      Thank you. I wondered if he made it home.
      Sad to hear he didn't make it.

    • @donnapierce2906
      @donnapierce2906 Před 3 lety +4

      I knew lieutenant Carl r i c h t e r when he was home on his last leave and when he signed up when he told me he signed up for another 100 missions I didn't understand too much about the war I did follow it as much as we could get on TV but to have seen all these videos of the f10500 Chiefs I understand so well Hawaii chose to do another 100 missions he loved what he did I wish you would have came back home for another leave I know I would have loved to see him again I did see him when his body came home to his house in his glass covered top part casket I I felt so bad I think we could have had a relationship I know we could have if he would have just came home again for even a short while bye KARL

    • @rconcord9
      @rconcord9 Před 2 lety +3

      A true American hero ! We should never forget these heroes !

    • @TSi99999
      @TSi99999 Před rokem +1

      Godspeed to him!

  • @user-ir7vq3zc6s
    @user-ir7vq3zc6s Před 2 měsíci

    Thhank you folks for your time .

  • @jamesweigelt1573
    @jamesweigelt1573 Před 2 lety +1

    Just loved those AE Skyraiders, called them Spads.

  • @bachhuynh9982
    @bachhuynh9982 Před 5 lety +19

    I am Vietnamese, I am disgusted by the actions that an empire does with a small country. They often take the name and righteousness to justify their stupid actions, which are the actions of those The bearer is like a fascist, those actions have affected my nation since the war until today, making my country deserted and rebuilding from the beginning, not yet, after the time In the period of peace war, American directors came to Vietnam, created war films, and in that war Vietnamese people were destroyers, bringing war to everyone.
    I think the United States needs to re-educate its young generation on the Vietnam War, to be truthful, it is the United States that is the country that brought fear to small countries, as it did with Vietnam.

    • @jeffhubbard4688
      @jeffhubbard4688 Před 5 lety +1

      @@kaitlynkile2810 FFS, go read some real fucking history, shit for brains. Stop sucking at the teat of Fox or whatever comic it is you get your information from!

    • @snowflakemelter1172
      @snowflakemelter1172 Před 5 lety +3

      You forgot that the communists backed by China , a brutal totalitarian regime, invaded south Vietnam , of course you forgot that little fact.

    • @_16_bit_40
      @_16_bit_40 Před 5 lety

      It is good that there are Russians, and their cheap but effective equipment.

    • @quangtruongle7823
      @quangtruongle7823 Před 5 lety +1

      @@kaitlynkile2810 well, Ngo Dinh Diem and his soldiers were traitors

    • @quangtruongle7823
      @quangtruongle7823 Před 5 lety +1

      @@kaitlynkile2810 the US indirectly, but DID start the war

  • @r.t.b6905
    @r.t.b6905 Před 3 lety +7

    I like the Vietnam era armaments and planes,those items could be found on duty in philippines,Vietnam era plane on services in Philippines

    • @cosmicegg1283
      @cosmicegg1283 Před 3 lety

      Not to mention small firearms such as the m14, m21, and m16 rifles.
      Support firearms such as the m79 break-action grenade launcher and M60 machine gun.
      Armored equipment such as the M113 amphibious APCs is also still very prominent in active duty across various Mindanao incursions.
      The M35 multipurpose troop carrier as well as the M105 howitzer is the backbone of the Philippine military.
      The OV 10 bronco was the main attack aircraft used during the Marawi siege.

  • @Alexei55555
    @Alexei55555 Před 3 lety

    Beautiful film !

  • @NegativeCelcius
    @NegativeCelcius Před 3 lety +15

    Even when these aircraft blew my country out of the water. I still respect them as marvel of engineering. F-4 never dies.

    • @ngaicon3868
      @ngaicon3868 Před 2 lety +5

      Until MiG 21s from VietNam take them down.

    • @ngaicon3868
      @ngaicon3868 Před 2 lety +1

      @@thomaslamb8337 well, they are old and need to be replaced, it is natural.

    • @TSi99999
      @TSi99999 Před rokem

      Mig 21 is so nimble. F4 is designed with no cannon. It surprised me when l learned that. The air to air missiles had issues many times so the F4 finally got a gunpod added to one of the fuel drop tank locations IIRC.

  • @jameskelman9856
    @jameskelman9856 Před 7 lety +311

    Billions and billions of dollars and all the technology couldn't defeat the will of ordinary people in the defense of their ancestorial lands

    • @tonys623
      @tonys623 Před 6 lety +19

      Except for the fact China and Russia were supplying the enemy with weapons and supplies.

    • @replysoon3216
      @replysoon3216 Před 6 lety +6

      Meh,
      so marxist now means someone who wants to save money instead of give it away? ...o...k...

    • @DanielESmith-iz7lx
      @DanielESmith-iz7lx Před 6 lety +2

      James Kelman
      They had been saying "would ya'll just leave us alone?" The Japanese didnt help. I like the plantation scene from "Apocalypse Now".

    • @scottriley1913
      @scottriley1913 Před 6 lety +7

      James Kelman
      Something for liberals in the United States to think about when attempting t o exercise their will in the American heartland n 2018 & beyond.

    • @nickmitsialis
      @nickmitsialis Před 6 lety +5

      You know that huge swatches of Southern Vietnam were 'carved' out of Cambodia? "South" Vietnam didn't exist for very long but there was a kingdom in Central Vietnam, who's capital city was Hue--and it's border with the Northern Vietnamese kingdoms had a old wall that's just about where the modern "DMZ" is. OH and...What say do the North Vietnamese have in the life in the 'Southern Kingdom? And why did the North Viets 'annex' huge swatches of Laos & Cambodia and kept hundreds of thousands of their troops in said countries?

  • @markbrisec3972
    @markbrisec3972 Před 2 lety +26

    Vietnam War was the last conflict in which our pilots actually flew missions where there was a significant chance of them being shot down, get hurt, end up as POWs or even die. In the last 30 years, since the Operation Desert Storm, USAF's ans US Navy's pilots greatest fear was landing on an aircraft carrier during a storm or the malfunction of a jet engine. I doubt that there are any US pilots today who suffer from the PTSD.
    But the next war will be different. Hopefully the technological advantage of our aircraft coupled with the best trained pilots in the world, will result in low casualties and high morale.

    • @ericastier1646
      @ericastier1646 Před rokem +8

      I learned that PTSD is a word for those who killed innocents, civilians, children or enemy soldier and suffer from guilt. I find it disgusting that these people are being told they did the right thing because they know it was wrong. they know it deeply. They are murderers and nothing can sugarcoat that.

    • @mjleger4555
      @mjleger4555 Před rokem +1

      @@ericastier1646 I believe there is a LOT of difference between what they called "shell shock" in WWII and what they call PTSD today for everyone who can't put whatever trauma it was, behind them. WAR IS HELL, like General Sherman said, and a lot of humans are going to die, you just hope you and your buddies aren't among them! Maybe today's soldiers are just different, for many reasons, some comprehensible, some not. Still, it doesn't matter because they, who go to war, no matter how, land, sea or sky, they are fighting for their lives as well as fighting for us here at home to keep our freedom, and that's what is important and for that, we salute and honor them all!

    • @TSi99999
      @TSi99999 Před rokem +1

      We had F18, F14 and F111s shot down and P.O.Ws in the Desert Storm Coalition. Also an F117 shot down over Kosovo. It is never a safe job.

    • @vegass04
      @vegass04 Před rokem

      @@TSi99999 Sure, sure. But I agree with Mark here that Vietnam was the last war where pilots actually climbed their jets with the fear of never coming back. I think that fear was present at the start of the Desert Storm but dissapated very soon.
      And let's be honest here, bombing of Serbia was a joke, a walk in the park.. But even if I grant you both the Desert Storm and Serbia campaign, our pilots flew completely carefree for 20 years. Maybe some A-10 pilot had a close call with a bullet from Dushka, F-15/16/18 and B-1/2/52 pilots were whistling Dixie during sorties.

    • @mjleger4555
      @mjleger4555 Před rokem

      @@TSi99999 No, combat flying is never safe. We learned some hard lessons in the VN war! Glad you made it home okay; thank you for serving our Country!

  • @Balafoutre
    @Balafoutre Před 3 lety +2

    Amazing!!!

  • @jtape1760
    @jtape1760 Před rokem

    My dad was stationed at Danang with the 366th TFW aka The Gunfighters. They were the first unit to add gun pods to the F4 Phantom...

  • @BeerBaron-hx4ev
    @BeerBaron-hx4ev Před 3 lety +5

    Now a days. It's hard to find a Man who knows how to change a tire on their car.

    • @florinporumb3931
      @florinporumb3931 Před 3 lety

      and that's a good thing,no more killing people in the name of democracvyu

  • @somitpal5906
    @somitpal5906 Před 7 lety +39

    there is no glory in war, humanity should understand this.

    • @cbm2156
      @cbm2156 Před 5 lety +11

      And there is no glory in not defending yourself against aggressors. Liberals should understand that.

    • @nicolasvillamil7523
      @nicolasvillamil7523 Před 4 lety +7

      @@cbm2156 Nobody was aggressive towards us until we invaded Vietnam lmao. We jumped the gun because we were brainwashed into believing the domino effect. There is no glory in playing world police.

    • @cblancin7244
      @cblancin7244 Před 4 lety

      I agree with you on that point, but I think it's important to remember that the world was perceiving communist aggression from many different viewpoints and there were some that supported the action while others against it. CBM 215 has a point and so do you. And there was some truth to the domino effect if you examine what did take place in Eastern Europe and the Korean Peninsula. I would say that without UN/US interventions on some level we would've seen more soviet back states spring up throughout the cold war. Just my 2 cents though

    • @nicolasvillamil7523
      @nicolasvillamil7523 Před 4 lety +2

      @@cblancin7244 Good point, I recant my assertion that the domino effect had no merit. When looking through the eyes of the USA at that time I can understand their worries.

    • @cblancin7244
      @cblancin7244 Před 4 lety +2

      @@nicolasvillamil7523 As a side note most people agree that if the south vietnamese government had been less corrupt and less infighting they may have had more success winning the support of the people it was like supporting your lesser of your enemy and that never works out

  • @cold_fussion6317
    @cold_fussion6317 Před 2 lety +2

    Americans have tried hard to control Asia but failed from Vietnam to Afghanistan

  • @sparticale1954
    @sparticale1954 Před 3 lety

    Was it the Phanton that in the sales push was represented with a silhouette of the plane with the word `peacemaker ` underneath?

  • @markbrisec3972
    @markbrisec3972 Před 2 lety +49

    It's incredible how much the technology has advanced which resulted in a completely different aerial warfare tactics and procedures. During the Vietnam War, if you wanted to take out a specific strategic target, a bridge or a fuel warehouse, war planers had to send a whole strike package to execute the mission. This included the Wild weasels to suppress air defense. Than you had to have a few of the air fighters defending the strike package from an enemy's aircraft. And last but nit the least you had to send multiple tactical bombers with dozens upon dozens of 500-1000 pound bombs to saturate the target. And after all that you could miss the target but you've sent dozens of aircraft and put dozens of pilots in mortal danger...
    Today you send a single stealth bomber and destroy 20 different targets with pin point precision in a single mission...

    • @senasakura345
      @senasakura345 Před 2 lety

      エルサルバドルが所得税等ゼロの未来都市「ビットコインシティー」建設へ
      ビットコイン裏付デジタル国債発行で1100億円調達
      エルサルバドル共和国のナジブ・ブケレ大統領が、世界で初となる「ビットコインシティー
      (ビットコイン都市)」の建設をすすめると発表した。2022年にビットコインに裏付けられた
      10億ドル分(約1140億円)の10年債を発行して建設費等をまかなう。同国で開催された
      ビットコインウィークという大型イベントで大統領が発表した。
      また所得税、キャピタルゲイン税、不動産税、給与税、地方税をゼロとし、海外のテクノロジー
      企業を誘致する。10%の消費税以外は無税となる見通しで、大胆な優遇税制で
      「中南米のシンガポール」を目指す。
      また同国に資金を投ずる投資家には永住権や帰化も容易にする。

    • @vegass04
      @vegass04 Před 2 lety

      @@senasakura345 WTF?. Do you really think I can read Japanese.

    • @sonha9741
      @sonha9741 Před 2 lety +2

      Đấy là những thước phim từ một phía còn thực tế ở chỗ tôi may bay này đã bị bắn hạ bởi súng trường k44 cũ kĩ

    • @Mk18_40mm
      @Mk18_40mm Před 2 lety +1

      @@sonha9741 🤡

    • @keyboardwarrior1946
      @keyboardwarrior1946 Před rokem +1

      @@sonha9741 lol. Shooting fighter jets flying twice the speed of sound with bolt action rifle.

  • @glendooer6211
    @glendooer6211 Před 4 lety +7

    Never bail out over an area you have justed bombed.

  • @chrisgriffin7357
    @chrisgriffin7357 Před 3 lety +2

    Say what you will but it takes some hella big balls to stand your ground and fight against that kind of firepower.

  • @larrylebowski8386
    @larrylebowski8386 Před 2 měsíci

    My uncle Dewayne was a pilot during the Vietnam War in 1966. He told me once that when he was over a population area they all had a stink bomb they could drop and the smell was so awful that the civilians would run for it. I don’t know if that’s true or not.

  • @user-bm1tn5li4o
    @user-bm1tn5li4o Před 7 lety +58

    Vietnam showed that the human will to fight is stronger than intimidation and war-mongering.

    • @michaelbelt8768
      @michaelbelt8768 Před 7 lety +12

      Like any war, Vietnam was testament to the fact that military operations can be defeated; but an ideology cannot

    • @thaifelix
      @thaifelix Před 5 lety

      yes so correct,

    • @thaifelix
      @thaifelix Před 5 lety +2

      @Edohiguma The USA were defeated because they didnt achieve their objective...that is crystal clear fact and pure logic that has no room for debate. If that is too hard to rationalise then try looking at the pictures only ie film footage of the last days where the US can be seen running away to their helicopters and ships.
      Why is it so hard for Americans to admit defeat??

    • @nyusa78
      @nyusa78 Před 5 lety

      @@michaelbelt8768 Rather it was motivated by Christian theology of racists

    • @19Koty96
      @19Koty96 Před 4 lety +1

      @El Bearsidente
      that... is literally the definition of losing a war... not like Americans could understand how wars are won.

  • @johngeorge8581
    @johngeorge8581 Před 5 lety +6

    My mans really said 25 hour day

  • @Geojr815
    @Geojr815 Před rokem +3

    It’s embarrassing and honestly unbelievable that US failed so terribly in this war

  • @mariosacripante5271
    @mariosacripante5271 Před 2 lety +11

    God Bless America! Although We didn't belong there (in hindsight), it was a helluva ride. I was at Kadena AB in '79 and heard stories from my elder Security Police buddies who had been at Tan Son Nhut Air Base. We had the F-4s at Kadena AB (later F-15s added) and it was interesting watching them do touch and goes at night with their after burners on (and SR-71s Habu, too) and land with their drag chutes on...I've been to Vietnam as a tourist but watched the first TV war as a kid and saw some early casualties at Saint Albans Naval Hospital (Queens NY) as my sister was born there in 1965. All memories now...