Fun Fact: japan isn't allowed weapons meant for war due to the pact with usa after ww2. They do have an army but it's mostly a vestigial army and the usa does most of the fighting. the usa has some of the most unique weapons in the world. one of which is the F-22 which is NOT allowed to be sold to anybody ever as it would FUCK the world. a good YTshort creator is Habitual Linecrosser he's in the army. to quote him "The F-22 is the scariest fucking thing since the cretaceous"
that's right when i say the F-22 is NOT TO BE SOLD that includes allies, it doesn't matter who its usa only. and its only ONE of the most deadly things you'll see in our armed forces.
@@Nightout88 Saw the F-22 Demo flight team a month ago. Physics are apparently optional when it applies to these fucking things. And dear god are they goddamn loud at subsonic speeds.
0:27 most of Japanese military tech is based on US military tech or uses the frame of them like the JS atago it's frame is based on the Arleigh Burke frame
1:20 that a very small battleship then, a big one can carry around 100 and 200( but I think you are only talking about the top of the ship but if you didn’t know inside the ship their are garage for the planes
fun fact: this is Nato and part of the starting scenes is the Russian aircraft carrier "Admiral Kutznyetsov" or how ever its pronounced but the aircraft videoing it was an Mi-8 and the aircraft taking off looked like a mig 29 fullback
Super carrier is an type of a ship that hold’s 120 jets (8 v-22’s) (7-helicopters with machine guns) (3 cargo planes) (5 cargo helicopters) while normal carrier holds only 70 jets (4 v-22) (3 helicopters with machine guns) (2 cargo planes) (4 cargo helicopters). Ships have also air inside of them that keeps the ship floating (usa has also the smallest navy but biggest Air Force in the world while russia has smallest Air Force but more navy and India has more ground force but smallest Air Force and the navy I watch navy stuff and the war I’m interested about ww2 and ww1
@Facility Guard thats not how aircraft are counted. The US airforce is the largest airforce, the US navy is the second Largest, with the army following a pretty close third.
just a kick note it would not take month for people that use sailboat to reach japan from the us but at least a years or even more and im only talking about one ship but in modern time it would only take a few day to more an entier army for the us
Man 10,500 km lol I would buy a cheap ticket for that distance just say an entire ocean cuz everyone knows how long a ocean is and ofc its around 50million km
A lot of good resources could be on accounts for history museums or websites I highly recommend doing research beforehand before making an entire video on it. You may also consider using edited features to make reactions more expressive instead of the ones used in the video.
As far as I know, the US has been in atleast 7 wars. If you split the Korean War and the Vietnam War, it would be 9 wars. 1. The American Revolution. The 13 states against the British started in 1765 2. The War of 1812. The attempt to invade Canada by the US in 1812 3. The Civil War. The war between the Union and the Confederacy started in 1861 4. WWI. The US joined the war after the German Empire tried to persuade Mexico to attack the US in 1917 5. WWII. The US joined the war after the Attack on Pearl Harbor by the Japanese Empire in 1941 6. The Cold War. The war between the US and the USSR through several Proxy Wars and the Arms Race and Space Race started in 1947 7. War on Terrorism/Global War on Terrorism. The US "invaded" Iraq with the reasoning of "fighting terrorism" in 2001 prior to the 9/11 attack (IF BOTH KOREAN WAR AND VIETNAM WAR IS INCLUDED ON ITS OWN (BOTH WARS ARE APART OF THE COLD WAR) 8. The Korean War. The US reported the North Korean's aggression and invasion of South Korea and started a campaign to free South Korea (21 nations helped) started in 1950 9. The Vietnam War. The US intervened in the Vietnamese Civil War between the pro-Soviet/communist north and the pro-American/non-communist south started in 1968 (AND SO ON. DURING THE COLD WAR, THERE WERE MANY PROXY WARS SUCH AS THE WAR IN CUBA, AFGHANISTAN, AND ETC)
The US has been involved in a war for 90% of its history, some examples include First and Second Barbary Wars (1801-1805 and 1815) (Victory) First and Second Seminole Wars (1817-1818 and 1835-1842) (Victory) Mexican American War (1846-1848) (Victory) Apache Wars (1849-1924) (Victory) Navajo Wars (1849-1846) (Victory) Red Cloud's War (1866-1868) (Defeat) Korean Expedition (1871) (Inconclusive) Cheyenne War (1878-1879) (Victory) Spanish American War (1898) (Victory) Philippine American War (1898-1902) (Victory) Boxer Rebellion (1899-1901) (Victory) Mexican Border War (1910-1919) (Victory) Russian Civil War (1918-1920) (Inconclusive) Laotian Civil War (1959-1975) (Defeat) Dominican Civil War (1965-1966) (Victory) Invasion Of Grenade (1983) (Victory) Invasion of Panama (1989-1990) (Victory) Gulf War (1991) (Victory) Somali Civil War (1992-1995) (Defeat) I mean, the list goes on and i skipped a bunch of other conflicts, the Indian Wars lasted for over 100 years, also during the Global War On Terror the US didnt invade iraq until 2003 and the reasoning was "Weapons Of Mass Destruction" not terrorism, the US invaded Afghanistan in 2001 after 9/11 for the terrorism reason.
it is rather T72B3. The T90 has a "Shtora" optical-electronic suppression complex installed on the forehead of the tower. (Sorry for the grammar, I wrote through Google translator)
@@ronanchristiana.belleza9270A lot of tactics in the US Civil war weren't really impressive to most European nations. But a major tactic that did catch their (mostly the Prussians') attention was the use of mass transportation of soldiers via trains. The reason I said mostly the Prussians is because they saw the Americans using trains to carry men, and when the Franko-Prussian war came along, the prussians used trains as well to out maneuver the French armies in speed.