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Max Hastings Reporting From Vietnam 

William Collins Books
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**This is the full report**
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Ahead of the release of his new book, VIETNAM, Max Hastings introduces some clips of his reporting from the war.
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Vietnam became the Western world’s most divisive modern conflict, precipitating a battlefield humiliation for France in 1954, then a vastly greater one for the United States in 1975. Max Hastings has spent the past three years interviewing scores of participants on both sides, as well as researching a multitude of American and Vietnamese documents and memoirs, to create an epic narrative of an epic struggle. He portrays the set pieces of Dienbienphu, the Tet offensive, the air blitz of North Vietnam, and less familiar battles such as the bloodbath at Daido, where a US Marine battalion was almost wiped out, together with extraordinary recollections of Ho Chi Minh’s warriors. Here are the vivid realities of strife amid jungle and paddies that killed 2 million people.
Many writers treat the war as a US tragedy, yet Hastings sees it as overwhelmingly that of the Vietnamese people, of whom forty died for every American. US blunders and atrocities were matched by those committed by their enemies. While all the world has seen the image of a screaming, naked girl seared by napalm, it forgets countless eviscerations, beheadings and murders carried out by the communists. The people of both former Vietnams paid a bitter price for the Northerners’ victory in privation and oppression. Here is testimony from Vietcong guerrillas, Southern paratroopers, Saigon bargirls and Hanoi students alongside that of infantrymen from South Dakota, Marines from North Carolina, Huey pilots from Arkansas.
No past volume has blended a political and military narrative of the entire conflict with heart-stopping personal experiences, in the fashion that Max Hastings’ readers know so well. The author suggests that neither side deserved to win this struggle with so many lessons for the 21st century about the misuse of military might to confront intractable political and cultural challenges. He marshals testimony from warlords and peasants, statesmen and soldiers, to create an extraordinary record.
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Read more: www.maxhastings.com

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23 июл 2018

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Комментарии : 304   
@Kenjuu
@Kenjuu 25 дней назад
"We are the unwilling, lead by the unqualified, doing the impossible, for the ungrateful." What an excellent quote.
@carpetfarmer
@carpetfarmer 4 года назад
To all the soldiers, correspondents, & people who tried to make a difference in Vietnam, ..Thank you very much for your service.
@rubensolomon5701
@rubensolomon5701 3 года назад
InstaBlaster.
@tracya4087
@tracya4087 2 года назад
hear hear
@sartainja
@sartainja 2 года назад
Amen. Thank you for your service and welcome home. You are all heroes in my book.
@juanshaftpatel7488
@juanshaftpatel7488 Год назад
@@sartainja they lost
@Ozempic-666
@Ozempic-666 25 дней назад
Thanks for the difference, bozos :)))
@ThePierre58
@ThePierre58 Год назад
We had Max Hastings with us, 45 Commando Royal Marines as we yomped across the Falklands 40 years ago. Being a Marine, 1st class, I only saw him, but the NCOs told me he was a decent man.
@juanshaftpatel7488
@juanshaftpatel7488 Год назад
did you win the war? the us cant win anything
@darrengilbert7438
@darrengilbert7438 5 месяцев назад
​@@juanshaftpatel7488 they could if the politicians would let them.
@juanshaftpatel7488
@juanshaftpatel7488 5 месяцев назад
@@darrengilbert7438 youare slaves to your maters, the politicains.. youre basically black
@doug6500
@doug6500 23 дня назад
Max Hastings is a charlatan and a very poor historian.
@paulmcdonough1093
@paulmcdonough1093 20 дней назад
@@juanshaftpatel7488 we won the war the argies surrendered they had a lot more troops to than uk us british came 8000 m no air cover
@koopsjunta
@koopsjunta 27 дней назад
My dad was there with 3RAR in 1971. Thanks for sharing these reports - vital historical journalism.
@austind9675
@austind9675 28 дней назад
The commanding officer and kids in this unit seems like honorable people in a dishonorable situation
@BallisticCoefficient
@BallisticCoefficient 12 дней назад
Agreed
@averyravenseye2651
@averyravenseye2651 3 года назад
You have the balls to report from an active combat zone then I'm not one to nit pick on your voice. Very well done. Excellent questions with great responses. Cheers
@adrianrosenlund-hudson8789
@adrianrosenlund-hudson8789 3 года назад
Max Hastings book about Vietnam is superb. Well worth a read.
@edcarson3113
@edcarson3113 3 года назад
Avro Manhattans book is much better.
@eldragon4076
@eldragon4076 3 года назад
@@edcarson3113 Did you read Hastings book though?
@lw3646
@lw3646 Год назад
I'm looking forward to reading it.
@marcspardello1254
@marcspardello1254 2 года назад
Why is he apologizing for his broadcasting voice, I thought it sounded clear and professional - he did a fantastic job reporting
@ShaneMcBryde
@ShaneMcBryde 2 года назад
The absolute best book I've ever read on Vietnam was Max Hastings' 'Vietnam.'
@Page-Hendryx
@Page-Hendryx Год назад
I see you don't read much.
@ericsierra-franco7802
@ericsierra-franco7802 3 дня назад
​@@Page-HendryxWhat's your recommendation?
@miguelsalami
@miguelsalami 4 года назад
Out of all the wars in the past I find the Vietnam war the most unusual.🇺🇸 My 2 cousins served in nam and they both made it back home alive and in one piece thank God.
@jimmykey5921
@jimmykey5921 4 года назад
I was lucky also. Oorah to.them..
@miguelsalami
@miguelsalami 4 года назад
@@jimmykey5921 Thank You for serving❗🇺🇸
@jimmykey5921
@jimmykey5921 4 года назад
@@miguelsalami Thank you sir.It was an honour..
@Chrisamos412
@Chrisamos412 3 года назад
It’s obvious why these men respected their CO, very good documentary
@dabprod
@dabprod 2 года назад
A good officer, hope he made it home.
@sartainja
@sartainja 2 года назад
He worked his way up through the ranks; he earned it the hard way.
@BurtReynoldstash
@BurtReynoldstash 3 года назад
Thanks for posting this. As a child of the 70s I can remember watching these dispatches on the news. A great insight into the war.
@theashpilez
@theashpilez Год назад
Yea, i remember seeing children on fire in news briefs during cartoons as a child. Very inspiring actually. Scarred me as a child for life. Nothing like watching our capatalizt system at work in full swing. Beware the military for profit industry. Here we go again. Poooof. Bye bye.
@hansg6336
@hansg6336 3 года назад
Max Hastings is the finest war historian I've ever read.
@basilbradford6144
@basilbradford6144 3 года назад
I agree, his WW-II books are masterfully researched and impossible to put down.
@algorithm4390
@algorithm4390 3 года назад
He does seem like a stopped clock though....sometime between june 44 and may 45..!
@lw3646
@lw3646 2 года назад
I highly highly recommend atastrophe: Europe Goes to War 1914
@theculturedthug6609
@theculturedthug6609 5 дней назад
David Irvings books are much better.
@spockspock
@spockspock 3 года назад
Max Hastings performed a wonderful task... documenting chaos that we may be informed.
@caredesigns
@caredesigns 4 года назад
The longer the Vietnam war lasted, the longer the mustaches and hair got.
@Ronnie-Jones
@Ronnie-Jones 3 года назад
The most forbidden documentary in history: archive.org/details/EUROPATheLastBattle
@bnipmnaa
@bnipmnaa 3 года назад
@@Ronnie-Jones Shut it, prick.
@davidstaudohar6268
@davidstaudohar6268 3 года назад
@@Ronnie-Jones Almost , ♦️♦️♦️‼️
@olehippy13
@olehippy13 2 года назад
staches were the thing back then... medic in Nam 1972
@70stunes71
@70stunes71 2 года назад
Which gave birth to the combat beards today lol
@markothwriter
@markothwriter 26 дней назад
Interesting, My good friend's father was in Vietnam as a pilot and his name was Hastings also. Colonel Eric Hastings.
@Huy_Nguyen_USA
@Huy_Nguyen_USA 5 лет назад
I thank God for men like Lt. Burrelson.
@panthercreek60
@panthercreek60 21 день назад
I very much enjoy Hastings books. He is an excellent and insightful historian
@johnrunion7258
@johnrunion7258 4 года назад
I was in and out of LZ West a few times in 68.My Aero Scout unit flew recon missions for the 11th,196th,and198th Inf operations in the Chu Lai AO.One of our scout LOACH pilots,Hugh Thompson was on such mission when he observed Calley's company firing on women and children,landed his ship and informed Lt Calley that he would fire on them if he continued the shootings.Many of these areas were designated free fire zones by Command and that is where the confusion starts.This is an excellent record of how most of the search and destroy mission strategy was on a daily basis.After My Lai was revealed, rules of engagement were stiffened and most units were reluctant to fire unless fired upon first,as some in the film eluded to.I believe this was the same area,only 2yrs later.This account is the real deal and a rarity,thanks for this record.
@Anthony-qk9uu
@Anthony-qk9uu 3 года назад
you is from u.s?
@PaulR387
@PaulR387 25 дней назад
Excellent Max, very clear and concise, glad you made it
@jimlato663
@jimlato663 4 года назад
One of the best vietnam war videos i ever saw..its just like your there in the bush with that patrol..
@stijnvandamme76
@stijnvandamme76 3 года назад
Just finishing up the book, it's defo has the comprehensive coverage of the entire SEA conflict front to back.. essential reading for anybody who ever had an interest in "vietnam"
@UTClassof
@UTClassof 3 года назад
my dad was a Marine Lt. Colonel and died in 1979. he had some of those silk maps. Did you see Lt. Borrelson hold one? My dad said it was so the VC didnt hear you folding up paper. He said the sound carried over the terrain there. You could hear everything. even the VC blowing their whistles. LOL
@garyluck8502
@garyluck8502 День назад
Thanks for your service and everyone that was there Thanks everyone please remember the ones that didn’t make it back home! Thanks
@lw3646
@lw3646 Год назад
The soliders just look exhausted. The terrain looks very tough too.
@remygarrison1451
@remygarrison1451 3 года назад
This is so good. Monotonous days but always on edge cause you never knew what was right around the corner. God bless these guys.
@Radionut
@Radionut 3 года назад
You sir have a voice like liquid honey. I just love the little bit of the accent and I actually came within a few days of actually meeting you in person in Vietnam. I was a radio operator there and that was a voice link between some of those outlying basis and headquarters. Love these clips
@leew1598
@leew1598 2 года назад
Excellent report, the combination of words and images. It gives you an excellent point of view from the US soldier's perspective.
@BOSIBA
@BOSIBA 4 года назад
I am always sad and sorry to see so many young life lost for no reason others than to serve the ego of a few politician. Sad
@pgroove163
@pgroove163 3 года назад
a waste
@birdcheat5351
@birdcheat5351 3 года назад
I am a little over half-way through this book and can definitely highly recommend it. Great read!
@davidstaudohar6268
@davidstaudohar6268 3 года назад
Check out Lost in translation ‼️🦅🇺🇸🦅♦️♦️♦️
@keithlillis7962
@keithlillis7962 5 месяцев назад
Excellent reporting and the piece shows so well the absurdity of the final years of the Vietnam war and the disillusion of the mostly conscript troops, in an unwinnable war. No wonder there was so much PTSD in the aftermath.
@simonruddle6511
@simonruddle6511 5 лет назад
Max's film gives a real taste of the end of days feeling that those soldiers had. A war that was futile coming to an end. And that made it even more important not to be killed or wounded before the end of tour.
@gwencunningham9184
@gwencunningham9184 3 года назад
God we cannot complain
@gwencunningham9184
@gwencunningham9184 3 года назад
Bad
@gwencunningham9184
@gwencunningham9184 3 года назад
This is real
@gwencunningham9184
@gwencunningham9184 3 года назад
SHIT
@henryathurmanjr
@henryathurmanjr 4 года назад
Good documentary!
@gangoffour6690
@gangoffour6690 3 года назад
Great new footage I've never seen. The Lt. knows his shit 👍. Good job Max !
@sartainja
@sartainja 2 года назад
Superb reporting that told the truth about the situation. The U.K. had better be thankful that it did not get involved in the quagmire of Vietnam.
@mikehoncho7252
@mikehoncho7252 20 дней назад
I like seeing the real people... Thank you for your service
@davehendricks7023
@davehendricks7023 4 года назад
This is why you don't use the draft unless it's a war at home.
@ThuMinh-yl7rg
@ThuMinh-yl7rg 3 года назад
.kd .
@robertrishel3685
@robertrishel3685 3 года назад
There should be no wars but for defense of home. Period. Anything else is immoral aggression.
@gangoffour6690
@gangoffour6690 3 года назад
If there is a war at home (revolution ) they won't have to draft patriots. We are all ready and always ready !
@DRC-of2ci
@DRC-of2ci 3 года назад
Without the draft we never would have won world war 2 and you wouldn't have a home to speak of
@MrShaneVicious
@MrShaneVicious 3 года назад
@@DRC-of2ci WW2 was total war and the US was attacked. Vietnam was US colonialism and the public did not support it.
@Dressagevids
@Dressagevids 3 года назад
Max's magnum opus "Vietnam" is a definate work
@lynn-haroldthompson2644
@lynn-haroldthompson2644 11 дней назад
Just look at these young men and what they did for their country. They were never sure about what they were doing. They were brave. They were heroes for the wrong reasons.
@danielreichert2025
@danielreichert2025 9 часов назад
So many lost lives in that proxy war that did nothing but break hearts for the families Of the dead and those who carry it still 🤕
@lostinpa-dadenduro7555
@lostinpa-dadenduro7555 4 года назад
Interesting that the guys made kind of improvised chest rigs with the ammo bandoliers.
@stylz1
@stylz1 3 года назад
That is literally their purpose.
@michelnillesen6659
@michelnillesen6659 10 месяцев назад
He wrote one of the best books about the Vietnam War.
@MarkBravo-l7e
@MarkBravo-l7e Месяц назад
Dad Told me about " Snatch's " In the war . Dad Got A Medal for it at Hue . It turned out to be a Navy Achievement medal with a V for Vallor or VD I think he was still pretty confused at the time.
@asmodeus0454
@asmodeus0454 21 день назад
These are a couple of interesting reports from Max Hastings.
@jeffsmith2022
@jeffsmith2022 Год назад
We were all young, many years ago...
@michaelbaldwin5495
@michaelbaldwin5495 3 года назад
In 1968 President Johnson had negotiated a peace deal and was working out some of the details.Nixon heard about it and sent his people to the South Vietnamese asking them to wait and he would get them a better deal.Our killed in action doubled,POW were held an additional 5 years.The wounded tripled.Google “The Chennault affair.”.🤬
@Mo_Ketchups
@Mo_Ketchups 4 года назад
The first broadcast looks/sounds like that Monty Python sketch of “The World’s Deadliest Joke.” Levity needed. This is brutal. Thanks for your posting these. ✌️
@spm36
@spm36 4 года назад
Very interesting..I'm going to vietnam in March and will visit some of these sites..any vets here served around Hue?
@peuramauriainen604
@peuramauriainen604 4 года назад
Dont step a mine or something else EXPLOSIVE!!.. where is stamp "made in usa"
@user-mp9rd4hg8b
@user-mp9rd4hg8b 4 года назад
@@peuramauriainen604 Or China and Russia?
@joeyjohnson4826
@joeyjohnson4826 Год назад
I grew up was raised by men who fought in Vietnam. the movies and so much of the politics do not reflect how they felt. my uncle did four tours volunteered . my dad did two tours. his brother didn't make it through his first tour as he was wounded. none of them have the attitude as betrayed by movies and by so much of the historical politics. they did what they had to do and they don't regret it. none of them have flashbacks. none of them hate the military none of them hate their country. my uncle on my mom's side who did four tours he regrets that he couldn't help the Vietnamese mountain people more he has pictures of him with the kids. the mountain yard says he was special forces. he knew why he was fighting and he knows what happened to them when we betrayed them and left and it wasn't pretty that's his only regret that he couldn't help them more 😁🇺🇲
@daniellap.stewart6839
@daniellap.stewart6839 Год назад
Your family is a exeption
@pigpen5145
@pigpen5145 Год назад
@@daniellap.stewart6839 I don't think so. During the war, it was normal for people to support the nation and the war effort. It was only after the war, or during the latter part that the people of America started to turn against it. Some people who don't remember or were not around like to say that the news reporters were totally neutral about the war, but they were a large part of why the American people turned against it.
@NikoHL
@NikoHL 3 года назад
Max.. It's as though you thought you were invincible!
@andrewschmidt6370
@andrewschmidt6370 3 года назад
1st LT Borisman seems like a tough dude. I have never seen a 1st LT lead a company, but I was an officer in a different time.
@1144ev
@1144ev 3 года назад
He was a Non-Com who got promoted. This was the end of the tour for him and I believe they promoted him to Captain just before he left the Company. I was there.
@networth8754
@networth8754 3 года назад
I recall walking through the mall in Columbus, GA years ago with an associate and he happened to glance over at a jewelry store at a short and rotund man and he asked me "do you know who that is?"' and I said no. He said that is William "Bill" Calley. I immediately recalled the incident. As Lt. Burrelson said "he was a weak officer."
@trashpanda314
@trashpanda314 2 года назад
Lt Coward retreated back to the Peachtree mall, eh? Guess he stayed in the area after he was on “house arrest” on main post at Benning.
@ALARFC51
@ALARFC51 3 года назад
Around my time but different regiment & brigade, same I Corps AO and Americal Division. Bobby traps & friendly fire were the biggest casualty causes. .
@kooperativekrohn819
@kooperativekrohn819 4 месяца назад
Iv listened to his books/audio books on audible , his cold war ones amazing
@michaelperry7559
@michaelperry7559 3 года назад
LT is a bad ass with discipline.....
@kitharrison8799
@kitharrison8799 25 дней назад
Lt Borrison could have been a movie star.
@williamdillard8330
@williamdillard8330 2 года назад
What year was this?
@hundredcaws
@hundredcaws Год назад
Soldiers who just want to go home. You can not win the war this way.
@joez7678
@joez7678 5 лет назад
Would like to know what year this piece was filmed. I was with alpha company 68 to 69 and remember HeipDuc being very active with many fire fights with NVA troops.
@shen7256
@shen7256 5 лет назад
70 -71 from what I understand.
@brucecamparmament3728
@brucecamparmament3728 4 года назад
So the narrator says My Lai happened 3 years ago. That would date this video around March of 71
@wes11bravo
@wes11bravo 3 года назад
Pittsburgh Steeler Rocky Bleier was a 196th LIB grunt and was wounded around Hiep Duc I think in 1969. Things were definitely more intense at that time than they were at the time this was filmed a few years later.
@jzunno9476
@jzunno9476 3 года назад
@@wes11bravo what company were you with ? Like I posted I was with Alpha Co, 4/31st, 196 th, Sargent Wilder was my platoon Sargent, he was killed in action in July 1969. I left the field on November 10th 1969 to go back to the world.
@carpetfarmer
@carpetfarmer 4 года назад
That was a nice lift off @ 3:14
@SosaSal_
@SosaSal_ 4 года назад
Wow are those sounds real actual sounds in the scenes?
@1144ev
@1144ev 3 года назад
They are real!
@cadengreenberg6115
@cadengreenberg6115 4 года назад
All war is an epic tragedy
@sarawnat6631
@sarawnat6631 3 года назад
It is like a long-range reconnaissance agent.The reconnaissance configuration was full of lax.I never went to battle, but I studied military basics.This is laxity that I have never seen before.Performing daily missions such as bathing in battlefields requires surveillance.
@styles3732
@styles3732 3 года назад
1:07 obviously the sound track to some old war movie.
@dtrain1634
@dtrain1634 15 дней назад
When war reporters reported on war from the front not a news room 250 miles away 😮
@AdnanKhan-ty2sl
@AdnanKhan-ty2sl 3 года назад
I read his book on Vietnam, Hastings is amazing.
@russellj.collerjr.5547
@russellj.collerjr.5547 26 дней назад
It is amazing how many Purple Hearts were 'won' by US Army Generals and USMC Generals 'In Country,' from 1965-1973. The bravery speaks for itself.
@Dogmeat1950
@Dogmeat1950 10 дней назад
U.S left in 1972.. those Generals were WW2 & Korean War vets
@russellj.collerjr.5547
@russellj.collerjr.5547 4 дня назад
​@@Dogmeat1950 ...all Retired as complete failures and morons.
@needlepark212
@needlepark212 13 дней назад
2:20 why is there a sign that says salute? Can anyone explain?
@venicalfebgaming73
@venicalfebgaming73 Месяц назад
The artillery scared my cat :(
@marclayne9261
@marclayne9261 4 года назад
A Noble Cause......Draft Number 71.....
@falconmoose1589
@falconmoose1589 4 года назад
Draft number 261 after I was in for three months. I am glad you lived.
@michaelbrennan1294
@michaelbrennan1294 3 года назад
All of that report ,what year is this report?
@stylz1
@stylz1 3 года назад
Good question, I was wondering the same. From how he talks about the war being over, the attire and grooming standard of the men, and the quality of the video, I would say it's somewhere between 1970-1972.
@Mk18_40mm
@Mk18_40mm 2 года назад
1970 and 1971
@w.rustylane5650
@w.rustylane5650 3 года назад
USMC - 1969 to 1973; Viet Nam - '71 to '72. Ooooh Rahhhh, Semper Fi to all Jarheads. The Americal Division (23rd) was formed overseas in New Caledonia, and the name was taken from the American and Caledonia, thus the Americal Division. It was the only US Army division to have ever been formed overseas (during WWII). Their patch is the constellation, the Southern Cross. Just saying...
@MrMaenambeach
@MrMaenambeach 2 года назад
I don't know if it was a coincidence, but I noticed the blacks and whites were separate.
@gordonlandreth9550
@gordonlandreth9550 2 года назад
A late war situation . The media helped push unrest at home , and it made it's way into the Army .
@DrTWG
@DrTWG 4 года назад
I'm reading the book at the moment but not far in enough to comment . I hope it's up there with 'A Bright Shining Lie' and 'Dispatches' , a book I've reread several times . Side note : To borrow from a certain film - charging Calley with murder is like handing out speeding tickets at the Indy 500 . This being a very damning indictment of US policy rather than extenuation for Medina & Calley et al.
@falconmoose1589
@falconmoose1589 4 года назад
Dispatches is a classic literary masterpiece.
@lance8080
@lance8080 4 года назад
LordAxe ‘ It’s the politician’s Fault for forcing men in these deadly situations, any blame or punishment falls on the politicians not on the soldiers for war crimes. If you don’t like it don’t send them !
@DrTWG
@DrTWG 4 года назад
@@lance8080 Yes indeed . War - and I mean - what war means to a soldier on the line with one foot in his grave , as non-combatants , we will never know . I think that's why many do not speak of their experience - it's ineffable . It's a big subject really . Think about how many civilians were killed because of 'Westy' & his body count/tipping point , not to mention McNamara & his ridiculous faith in his data/stats (and his particularly egregious use of men with learning difficulties ).
@user-mp9rd4hg8b
@user-mp9rd4hg8b 4 года назад
@@lance8080 i.e. kill only when told and apologize afterwards or it's to the brig!
@user-fm9io5ls8x
@user-fm9io5ls8x 4 месяца назад
Max Hastings I believe was the first person into Port Stanley during the Falklands Campaign...the Paras were not happy...and let him now.
@scott-qs6sp
@scott-qs6sp 8 месяцев назад
I wonder what year this fim was made
@adg5456
@adg5456 28 дней назад
Pretty sure he said 1971 in the beginning
@robmiller1964
@robmiller1964 3 года назад
Wow thanks Max, I have read a number of your books and I never knew you were "So close to the real Action!", so to speak! Thanks. In hindsight we (The West) should have backed Ho Chi Ming; it was just because we didn't like the Commies and by all accounts he was a not so bad Commie! Silly really!-----Thanks once again Max, I have enjoyed reading your books! Wow!
@josefadams647
@josefadams647 3 года назад
Dan Carlin’a interview w him on Hardcore History brought me here. This guy is a legend.
@oldfan1963
@oldfan1963 3 года назад
"THEY take one of OUR grenades..."
@70stunes71
@70stunes71 2 года назад
Inspired me to serve also. But at the same time, all those years over in the Middle East, I feel we accomplished the exact same thing as the Vietnam veterans probably felt.. nothing
@hey9433
@hey9433 2 года назад
He literally said: "How much damage?" "Yes."
@gwencunningham9184
@gwencunningham9184 3 года назад
Hard to see but real
@tekkhero9767
@tekkhero9767 3 года назад
Did he say ”recon by fire” ? Is that a standard option?!
@gordonlandreth9550
@gordonlandreth9550 2 года назад
Yeah , they did it all the time to spoil ambushes , hit assembly areas or any place they could be hiding .
@carlmencia2919
@carlmencia2919 4 года назад
This is such good journalism.
@josephgrossi8994
@josephgrossi8994 4 года назад
Bs , this journalist sounds like a anti war activist .
@gordonlandreth9550
@gordonlandreth9550 2 года назад
Excellent example of anti - American , left wing journalism .
@Wolfhound223
@Wolfhound223 3 года назад
LOL YOU were not joking about your Early voice Max :D
@fastpublish
@fastpublish 27 дней назад
Somehow Max looks and sounds older in Vietnam than he does now
@climbtherainbow
@climbtherainbow 3 года назад
5:10 - How many were cringeing as he started to unscrew that booby trap?!!
@spinynorman1562
@spinynorman1562 3 года назад
Me, definitely! And I noticed the guy behind him suddenly decided to check out the view about 30 yards away.
@shen7256
@shen7256 3 года назад
It was a smoke grenade.
@adamanderson6699
@adamanderson6699 3 года назад
Hastings' book details every mistake made in the American War and consequentially makes for a fantastic monitor stand
@MartinLopez-ys5dm
@MartinLopez-ys5dm Год назад
You never send a man where a bullet will go.
@chrisapollo6676
@chrisapollo6676 3 года назад
Top Nutt; “Shit ALWAYS flows downhill, Sargent...” Me; “Request permission to change boots and grab a poncho, Top!”
@thelastjohnwayne
@thelastjohnwayne 4 года назад
War movies should be just 100% True Documentaries instead of fantasy. So that people understand what war is really like. This was a very well done documentary.
@christopherbent2359
@christopherbent2359 4 года назад
No
@alexzabala2154
@alexzabala2154 3 года назад
The reporter looked and sounded like a Monty Python character
@shadowwolf7622
@shadowwolf7622 3 года назад
I was thinking the same !
@dbeaus
@dbeaus 3 года назад
(1). The higher highers did not have a Plan because there wasn't one that would work. (2). there was no such thing as a restricted fire zone. We shot at everything. A Colonel ask me if I knew where my free fire zones were and I pointed at the barbed wire and told him everything on the other side. I meant it. (3). the idea of calling in enemy dead when you found no one was done frequently. If you waited for permission to fire, you were already dead. Fire by recon just meant that you were firing without the vaguest idea of what or who was there. And, as one of my sgts. said to me, "does it matter?" (4). In conclusion, No you do not go home and live the rest of your life as before, you are never the same. Pretty picture of LZ West, but it looks a lot like LZ Center, where I was. We had 3 LZ's but they overran East before I got there and never rebuilt it. I bet that wasn't in the US papers. As always the honor goes to those who did not come back.
@HistoricWrath
@HistoricWrath 3 дня назад
You can criticize the War, but you should support the warrior (Calley is the obvious exception)
@johnwalker4642
@johnwalker4642 27 дней назад
Almost the same language used by the soldiers in these interviews as the plains soldiers of 1878 in america.
@user-ol1qm9ey7g
@user-ol1qm9ey7g 2 года назад
ถูกต้องเลยฉันเหมือนคนวิทยุชี้เป้าทำการโจมตีตำบลกระสุนตกลูกไม่เคยคาดเป้าหมายแม่นทุกนัด
@shen7256
@shen7256 3 года назад
“Where each man”@14.16...I see two boys.
@gordonlandreth9550
@gordonlandreth9550 2 года назад
18 year old men , my dear .
@robmar7190
@robmar7190 24 дня назад
Remember per US state department that isnn
@Snap-Anzahl
@Snap-Anzahl 2 года назад
@11:36 listening to them talk about not being able to fire on the enemy and the ridiculousness of the ROE's reminds me of my time in Iraq. Politicians try to fight a war being politically correct and this gets more troops and civilians killed than by just letting troops do what they are trained to do. It pissed me off when I was in Country and I'm getting pissed again just listening to these guys.
@user-fv5tt8zi2w
@user-fv5tt8zi2w 3 года назад
지금은 일어나려고 무진 애를 써요. 잘 다루면 같이하게 좋아요. 근성이 있어요. 하하. 그러나
@stevenpetranyi2902
@stevenpetranyi2902 18 дней назад
The king of England is saying it's my father Gordon
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