Si te gustan los videos militares y hablas español, suscríbete a mi nuevo canal. Próximamente contará con vídeos doblados al español: www.youtube.com/@OrdenDeBatallaES Outro music is ‘Lip Gloss and Lasers’ by Charli Morgan: th-cam.com/video/_GIotvR6aEw/w-d-xo.html
This is just to pre-empt anyone who'd suggest waiting until I'm not sick to record, because like a week later I sound just as bad and can't push video releases that far back
@@Bruno-ec8ft armored/attack trains were used in 1950s Greek civil war (2 Trains with german mgs and a Flak 38) 1945-49 Chinese civil war (ex soviet) 1950s cuban revolution (lighty armed train used in a siege outside of havana) 1960s arab wars in the magreb (some had AA cannons used to hold off israeli attacks) 1960 pakistan-indian conflict (artilhery mortars and mgs) 1970s african revolts and asiatic revolts (all sides) 1990s Yugoslavia Wars (Krajina express is the most famous example but they had more than 3) 1990s Kongo Civil War (Used to control the only railway from the capital to the center) 1990s Kosovo war (same as the yugo wars) 2000s Macedonian Revolt in south Serbia (above, the same) So on, ofc they not just ended in 1945, it's just a joke, no need to overthink
Road-control units were also a thing in mountainous Greece during and after WW2, although those were often attached to larger units because there was the expectation that they'd face an actual army and not just insurgents/guerrillas.
Virgin countries Highway Safety Program: Speed limits, repaving the road, visibility Chad Colombia Highway Safety Program: Highway motorized military units
Dude you wish this does not need to be used in your country. You will pray it stops when it is in your country. Coming from someone who's country need's this.
My man is explaining the TO&E of Mad Max armies and I'm here for it. On a serious note, these minor armies videos are far more entertaining than their main powers counterparts, I hope we get more of them.
Colombia is a lot like Afghanistan. Over there, mountains have always kept any central government from fully exercising authority. Even if an area is connected via road, there might be weather or landslides that disconects it for periods of time. So you do get a set up for only lose central control, growing opium, war lording. Colombia has similar problems but with the combo mountains and jungle. You end up with parts of the country that exist outside of central authority. Colombia was the second country in the world to develop a commercial airline. It did not have the wealth and industrial capacity you'd associate with that achievement but it had the need. It was easier to link areas of the country via air than roads.
Avianca (formerly SCADA, is just months older than KLM, the dutch airline which is the oldest active in the world), SCADA started operations using the rivers of Colombia as a good number of them have wide and long parts that allows them to be use as airports.
Mistakes were made like abandoning trains and replacing them with trucks, that on top of limited inversion on roads achieve this piss poor land communication between the center of the country and the coasts.
@@VivaCatatumbo973pasa porque quiero saber más, he visto mucho sobre la historia de la guerra desde el lado civil y desde la política pero el lado de operaciones y logística militar es bien interesante.
@@ernstschmidt4725 The government can't make roads due to corruption, that's it otherwise with the political will and engineering the problem would have been solved decades ago.
@@MikeHunt-fo3ow, I don't know about oil, but each time roman legion stopped for a night they had build a camp with walls, moats and towers. Roman army is army of engineers and builders
@@ernstschmidt4725 Jungle mountains sounds like India's North-Eastern states. Maybe the Assam Rifles should look into this. And the Indian Army as well, although they got much bigger fish to fry.
I remember them in the 2000s. Travelling around the country was pretty terrifying in the 90s, but these units would control the main motorways and they started off by pushing convoys past guerilla controlled territory and then focused on just holding checkpoints. Seeing these units regularly throughout your journey gave you peace of mind and reopened Colombia. Nowadays people forget this or never experienced the utter terror of the 80s/90s which is how we ended up with a terrorist like petro in control and guerrillas slowly building up their power
I remember first coming across an armored REO when I was traveling from Cucuta to Bogota, the army would make us all disembark the bus and check our IDs, since I was a minor they left me alone so I could oogle the truck while waiting to resume our trip. Oh and fun fact: It’s rumored the Meteoro name comes from the Spanish version of Speed Racer, the old 80’s anime which was highly popular in the country.
With undercover scout cars and civilian disguised armored trucks, I expect military intelligence is very important. Does the new Cavalry organization have an organic intel section of any type?
Yes. That's what the Barinas are for. The air force would also fly recon sorties and relay that info to army units since most of the rebels don't really have air defense other than 50 cals
Yes, they do have at least one, in the Medium Combined Arms Task Force (FUTAM) located in La Guajira there are several SIGINT vehicles, along with several optronic vones
If they drive around in civilian looking cars, won´t that make their opponents more suspicious of civilians, and potentially put civilians at an increased risk?
All sides have targeted civilians due to the irregular nature of the conflict, sometimes more, sometimes less (see the fals positives scandal, the guerrilla kidnappings or the paramilitary massacres). Fortunately it's much safer nowadays in most of the country, but there are a few regions where the conflict persists
The comando 60mm mortar is made by indumil, they make 3 versions of it, a comando type, a standard base plated one, and a long tube long range one with several HE grenade types, the bad part is that they do make 81 and 120mm grenades but not the mortar tubes/launchers
That's one hell of a "highway patrol" setup the Colombians have there. I see I'm not the only one who was getting Mad Max vibes here. I'm liking these videos on armored/cavalry units from foreign armies. I'd like to see one about the Rhodesian Armored Corps or maybe the Recon Squadrons of the Force Publique.
I find road as statebuilding tool and how one fight their way through to make them work very fascinating. On a side note, similar thing happened to Thailand in late 60s and early 70s, where the government (finally) realized they need proper road infrastructure to effectively govern the mountainous rural areas after the communist party declared their own revolutionary government in those regions That's why, somewhat in a reverse of normal maneuver and mobility role, infantry and tanks shot their way up through insurgent strongholds with M113s, M41s, and armored bulldozers supported (in a classic Vietnam war fashion) by UH-1 gunships and F-5s, for the engineers to build roads behind them. Whether they succeeded? Well, those are all scenic roads for tourists nowadays
@@Pavlos_Charalambous I'd imagine that depends on the threat environment if you've been focusing on doing other things for the last 100 or so years, it might take time to 'rediscover' those knowledge in the late 19th and early 20th century, cities are where modern political-economic activities mostly occur, even rebels and revolutionaries of any significant scale are formed in cities - hence the focus on putting them under the grasp of national authorities via *railways and telegraphs* - not paving random roads to the jungles in the middle of nowhere
So much effort my country did to obtain peace, but only to realize that with out a right person with the right heart, everything you do will melt away. One day we will know peace Colombia 🇨🇴
I love the South American content its so great, its such a forgotten contient when it comes to weapons, armies and etc. While my favourite armed forces are Peruvians, their PACIPAT, UNIPAT camos are great looking, they have Amx-13 with turrets removed with 3 Kornets-E instead also they had VT-1/MBT2000 Chinese tanks on parades while not eveing buying them nor fielding them again its a great and a interesting nation with interesting arms industry with their Infantry having panzerfaust 3 or FAD experimental rifles looking like a space rifle that isn't fielded anymore
What if I tell you that the Greek police in the 80s actually had jet black pursuit specials? The notorious " Σ - units" ( yes sigma) The officers was even wearing black leather biker jackets Their job was to mostly deal with bank robbers, biker gangs, and street racing And talking about biker gangs The" Σ " was often working in coordination with the" Z " ( Zita) police's own very very very notorious bikers many of them being ex biker gangs members or as used to brag" if you are not in a list you are not suited for the job "😉
I really liked the military information about the Meteoro group of light cavalry, I am a veteran of the Colombian Army, I would like to add that in Colombia Titan type vehicles are manufactured (armored and artillery buses), the Marine Corps also has a platoon of road safety 🚌💂🐎
Such a shame that Colombians made such awesome and functional Mad Max style units out of necessity. Hope it will help them bring peace and chance for stable life sooner or later.
Well done Battle Order, well done. I frankly find your videos about the minor armies very interesting. I really loved especially how well-timed your humor was especially the "most truck-looking truck" and i find this doctrine very interesting. Fun fact, the usage of these trucks for military operations gives me Mad Max vibes.
As a Brazilian it's quite ironic seeing our neighbors suffering from lack of government reach/authority cause here the problem is the complete opposite: the state knows EVERYTHING, nothing can run or hide from the state, the criminals that exist and are powerful are allied with the government in a certain way, the state is onipresent in our lives. It's impressive how even though we brazilians are culturally similar to our neighbors our politics are diametrically different, maybe that's the reason Brazil remained a whole state from the amazon rainforest to the southern steppes in the first place.
I am from Colombia and I am 16 years old, I live in a city where the A.G.C is located, I have experienced some curfews because the guerrilla has hit my city and region Even though this has only happened two or three times in my life, it has still been a pain for me and for everyone who lives here. Greetings.
Hi there, i find this very interesting since i'm colombian. I'm not old enough but everyone like my parents older cousins and so on sometimes memorize about the famed "convoys" which were essentially military escort for civilian convoys to move safely, great video
As a Colombian I’ll say this again. The problem of our country lies within corruption not a weak military. As long as profit from drugs and illicit activities is accessible to corrupt government officials these criminal organizations will continue to exists.
Living in a major city like Medellin makes you think that you live in a safe country, but there’s always a video like this that reminds you there are warriors fighting in the jungle to keep us protected against the terrorists every single day. God bless all the soldiers in our country, most experienced and battle hardened warriors in latin America.
I moved from the States to Colombia a couple of years ago. My wife who grew up in Bogotá said that before Uribe was president, they never drove anywhere out of the metro Bogotá area when she was a teenager. If you wanted to go to another city, you flew, no exceptions. That’s why Uribe is almost a god to some people in this country. There definitely wouldn’t be tourism here now if he hadn’t cleared the roads.
I was told a story from my cousin on his trip from Barranquilla to Santander that he saw the tractor trailer because of his friends served in the 8th brigade the literally called it out 😂 but good news is that the Ejercito are getting new whips
Driving through Colombia with friend, he would always give a thumbs up to any military or police inspection point. He said it was a way of saying "No terrorists back there!"
You should make a vídeo about brazil's army modernization that's been on going for a few year, especially the acquisition of new gear and vehicles, and how they would be implemented.
I was totally expecting to see a Mad Max-style, up-armored, tractor trailer-born, highway battlewagon. I really like that background music you're using.
You are correct. The M715 was actually a very good vehicle when the motor worked. The Koreans replaced the Kaiser 230 Tornado straight six with a Mitsubishi diesel. It also has a looking rear diff and will probably climb a tree. And for full military vehicle pedantry, those aren't M35A2 2-1/2 ton trucks, they are KM-250s. The S. Koreans know how to build a good truck.
Colombian here, our conflict is... All the mdrfcking cold war conflicts in one country 😂 I'm grateful that Battle order gave us a look. And yeah this is and will be Mad Max 💀👌🏼
Might just be nitpicky but that M715 looks like a K311 which is basically a (relatively) newer version of the kaiser jeep so it's not as bad as you'd think.
Been looking for the outro song in TH-cam for several minutes and remembered it was used in one of your recent special videos. For some reason I thought a gaming or animation channel featured it.
Traveling by road in Colombia is a weighty endeavor. One often have to ascend and descend through various temperature zones, zig-zag for miles between step mountainsides, and go by seemingly bottomless ravines. Roads are so sinuous that a distance of 400 km on a straight line, for example between Cúcuta and Bogotá, will turn into around 600 km and can take up to 11 hours to travel, compared to 50 minutes by airplane. Or a more common one, traveling from Bogotá to Cartagena can take up to 18 hours over a distance of around 1.000 km, compared to 1h 30min by airplane. Traversing the country from Riohacha on the north to Pasto in the southwest would take around 30 hours. If you want to make a parallel with the USA, the fastest Cannoball Run from New York to Los Angeles took only 26 hours.
Bro, I am Colombian and I have lived here all my life and believe me, I have never heard of armored trucks in the mad max way, it must be part of the special operations in Cauca or Caquetá, which are areas with high conflict and a lot of confidentiality is handled there.
As a Colombian i can tell you, this video is excellent, very well explained. Unfortunately with our low military resources and a big ass country with a nightmare geography, we have to get creative. I have seen some videos with actual combat in remote roads, our soldiers fight like hell. That's why the guerrillas nowadays just paint cars with grafitti and tell some "revolutionary" BS to the civilians and quicky go away, sometimes when things get hot they managed to burn down some trucks, but is not like the 90's or early 2000's, those were terrible times...
Bro low military resources the defense budget is 10 billion USD, the second largest in LATAM, the geography is an excuse to the poor procurement of equipment due to corruption.
@@viceralman8450 still is low for a Country with 56 million people with huge mountains and jungles. Colombia is not an easy country to keep together, we are a country of countries, the USA already knows that jungle warfare is the worst one and we didn't have a strong and advanced military industry, all high tech weapons and equipment must be imported and that's not cheap either....
I'm loving the Latin American army content you've been giving out lately. I would love to hear about the Peruvian and Ecuadorian militaries, since they fought the last state on state war in south America.
Reminds me of the Railway Protecting Corps deployed by the Irish Army during the 1922-23 Civil War. The privately owned railway network was an easy target for anti-government forces as sabotage comprised everything from unarmed groups splitting rails in darkness to blowing up critical Railway viaducts. The Colombian project is a modern version of dedicated infrastructure protection forces many states have had to deploy. Great video, too many focus on 'sexy' new tech without discussing 'nuts and bolts' of security👍
This was one of the early spearheads of Seguridad Democratica, the major security state doctrine that was launched in the early 00s to reclaim what up to that point was a situation approaching late 2010s Afghanistan. The guerrillas had almost besieged major urban centers in the mountains such as Medellin and Bogota by operating freely in the mountain roads - in a country where mountain roads were the lifeline of cities. With kidnappings of civilians, burning of cargo trucks and passanger buses and shootings against commuters, Colombians were practically stuck and surrounded in their cities. One of the first actions of Uribe's government involved caravans of civilian cars protected by armored squadrons such as these. Alongside with focused patrolling in "red" roads. The guerrilla checkpoints were pushed back into the mountains, and then were pushed back by the major military campaigns that pushed the guerrillas out of Cundinamarca and into the southern rainforest.
Si te gustan los videos militares y hablas español, suscríbete a mi nuevo canal. Próximamente contará con vídeos doblados al español: www.youtube.com/@OrdenDeBatallaES
Outro music is ‘Lip Gloss and Lasers’ by Charli Morgan: th-cam.com/video/_GIotvR6aEw/w-d-xo.html
Wow 😳
Poor Battleorder , being a rent slave .
Have you considered revolution?
This is just to pre-empt anyone who'd suggest waiting until I'm not sick to record, because like a week later I sound just as bad and can't push video releases that far back
@@BattleOrder OOF!
So glad someone else got to hear that awesome song from Charli Morgan, it's great
Died in 1945
Born in 2024
Welcome back Armored Trains
Armoured trains were still used in French Indochina well into the 1950's.
@@Bruno-ec8ft armored/attack trains were used in 1950s Greek civil war (2 Trains with german mgs and a Flak 38)
1945-49 Chinese civil war (ex soviet)
1950s cuban revolution (lighty armed train used in a siege outside of havana)
1960s arab wars in the magreb (some had AA cannons used to hold off israeli attacks)
1960 pakistan-indian conflict (artilhery mortars and mgs)
1970s african revolts and asiatic revolts (all sides)
1990s Yugoslavia Wars (Krajina express is the most famous example but they had more than 3)
1990s Kongo Civil War (Used to control the only railway from the capital to the center)
1990s Kosovo war (same as the yugo wars)
2000s Macedonian Revolt in south Serbia (above, the same)
So on, ofc they not just ended in 1945, it's just a joke, no need to overthink
Armored trains are currently being used in Ukraine lol
@@MrBlueBurd0451 cavalry is being used by ukraine too and they are very effective to raid armored units in the outskirts of cities
@@esequieltrindade9244 There was one runnin in and around Chechnya as well
So you are saying that Colombia made a special army formation designed to bring the fight to the enemy all along the Fury Road.
"You shall ride eternal, shiny and chrome"
Road-control units were also a thing in mountainous Greece during and after WW2, although those were often attached to larger units because there was the expectation that they'd face an actual army and not just insurgents/guerrillas.
*"WITNESS ME!"* - average Colombian army enlistee
They are awaited.
"Kamakarzy Warboys!"
Virgin countries Highway Safety Program: Speed limits, repaving the road, visibility
Chad Colombia Highway Safety Program: Highway motorized military units
- Breaking the speed limit huh? Lets see if you can break the sound speed punk!
Speed limit enforced by gun truck.
So Texas
Dude you wish this does not need to be used in your country. You will pray it stops when it is in your country. Coming from someone who's country need's this.
Viva colombia 🇨🇴🫡
Mad Max: Colombian Road.
ColOmbian
I remembered: Optimus prime in military clothing.
@@birolaPássaro234optiBus
There is a 20.848 square kilometer desert in the north of the country, so basically, Mad Max is canon.
😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆😆
My man is explaining the TO&E of Mad Max armies and I'm here for it.
On a serious note, these minor armies videos are far more entertaining than their main powers counterparts, I hope we get more of them.
Tractor trailer? I believe you mean WAR RIG!
hell yeah
WITNESS!
I am awaited... I AM AWAITED IN VALHALLA
Shine and chrome
They shall ride eternal, shiny and chrome...
A moment of respect for the sacrificial Opel Corsa.
F
YOU
GET OUT OF MY MIND
@@kyleaveryx3477 Ah, my apprentice
@@gjoelsephvichyswaz4714 Sup dawg
Truly one of the cavalry corps of all time
Their armored cavalry is much cooler, depending on your definition of cool
@@BattleOrderwhat does it include ? It’d be great to see more of South America, or countries with less known structures !
@@BattleOrdercan you do a video of technicals?(pickup trucks 🛻) used as inexpensive military vehicles. ❤
@@BattleOrder Sounds like a cool topic for a video. We will be waiting for it
The most Truck looking truck to ever truck
Truck-ass truck
I love that quote
Look at that truck! It is so TRUCKY!
as soon as it was said i bolted to the comments xDD
Truck Norris 🗣️🗣️🗣️
Colombia is a lot like Afghanistan. Over there, mountains have always kept any central government from fully exercising authority. Even if an area is connected via road, there might be weather or landslides that disconects it for periods of time. So you do get a set up for only lose central control, growing opium, war lording. Colombia has similar problems but with the combo mountains and jungle. You end up with parts of the country that exist outside of central authority.
Colombia was the second country in the world to develop a commercial airline. It did not have the wealth and industrial capacity you'd associate with that achievement but it had the need. It was easier to link areas of the country via air than roads.
Avianca (formerly SCADA, is just months older than KLM, the dutch airline which is the oldest active in the world), SCADA started operations using the rivers of Colombia as a good number of them have wide and long parts that allows them to be use as airports.
@@wizz1358 I think you mean months younger
Mistakes were made like abandoning trains and replacing them with trucks, that on top of limited inversion on roads achieve this piss poor land communication between the center of the country and the coasts.
@@viceralman8450wait there are no railroads in colombia ?
@@lukejohnston4666 They are rail roads, but they are few and nothing compared with the railroad system we had in the 50's.
Fantastic work, I'm Colombian and no local or even Spanish speaking channel has made content this thorough
You must not watch very many of them. Soy Colombiano de Barrancabermeja de Norte Santander.
@@VivaCatatumbo973who watches Caracol or RCN these days?
@@NeoJhon69 Nobody. But there are many youtube channels that do good documentaries not only of Colombia but America Latina and Caribbean too
@@VivaCatatumbo973si y todos esos canales saben que los narco guerrilleros que vos apoyas son el cancer del pais.
@@VivaCatatumbo973pasa porque quiero saber más, he visto mucho sobre la historia de la guerra desde el lado civil y desde la política pero el lado de operaciones y logística militar es bien interesante.
This series on south-american/ latin-american militaries could have a lot of potential, taking into account the tasks that they have to deal with.
You do remember that roman roads were build by roman legions? You win battles with spears, you win wars with showels.
garrisons are expensive and colombia geography is jungle mountains, it is as rough as it gets without being the arctic or the moon
did they have moats with crocs and a drawbridge? a moat filled with oil might be fun
@@ernstschmidt4725 The government can't make roads due to corruption, that's it otherwise with the political will and engineering the problem would have been solved decades ago.
@@MikeHunt-fo3ow, I don't know about oil, but each time roman legion stopped for a night they had build a camp with walls, moats and towers. Roman army is army of engineers and builders
@@ernstschmidt4725 Jungle mountains sounds like India's North-Eastern states. Maybe the Assam Rifles should look into this. And the Indian Army as well, although they got much bigger fish to fry.
Colombian here. Had no idea about our Mad Max Units. Amazing! 😱
Thanks gov'nor for the info. Carry on. 😁
🇨🇴🇨🇴🇨🇴🇨🇴
I remember them in the 2000s. Travelling around the country was pretty terrifying in the 90s, but these units would control the main motorways and they started off by pushing convoys past guerilla controlled territory and then focused on just holding checkpoints.
Seeing these units regularly throughout your journey gave you peace of mind and reopened Colombia.
Nowadays people forget this or never experienced the utter terror of the 80s/90s which is how we ended up with a terrorist like petro in control and guerrillas slowly building up their power
Greetings from Colombia. We need more of these analysis for the other LATAM nations as well. As always excellent quality ❤❤❤❤.
I remember first coming across an armored REO when I was traveling from Cucuta to Bogota, the army would make us all disembark the bus and check our IDs, since I was a minor they left me alone so I could oogle the truck while waiting to resume our trip.
Oh and fun fact: It’s rumored the Meteoro name comes from the Spanish version of Speed Racer, the old 80’s anime which was highly popular in the country.
With undercover scout cars and civilian disguised armored trucks, I expect military intelligence is very important. Does the new Cavalry organization have an organic intel section of any type?
Yes. That's what the Barinas are for.
The air force would also fly recon sorties and relay that info to army units since most of the rebels don't really have air defense other than 50 cals
Yes, they do have at least one, in the Medium Combined Arms Task Force (FUTAM) located in La Guajira there are several SIGINT vehicles, along with several optronic vones
If they drive around in civilian looking cars, won´t that make their opponents more suspicious of civilians, and potentially put civilians at an increased risk?
@@JohanDanielsson8802 Civs are already being shot at and kidnapped, this tactic changes little in how the populace will be treated.
All sides have targeted civilians due to the irregular nature of the conflict, sometimes more, sometimes less (see the fals positives scandal, the guerrilla kidnappings or the paramilitary massacres).
Fortunately it's much safer nowadays in most of the country, but there are a few regions where the conflict persists
As a Colombian, I gotta say this analysis is spot-on. Thanks for covering this. Please add Spanish subtitles for the Colombian audience
The comando 60mm mortar is made by indumil, they make 3 versions of it, a comando type, a standard base plated one, and a long tube long range one with several HE grenade types, the bad part is that they do make 81 and 120mm grenades but not the mortar tubes/launchers
We are this close to "Organisation and employment of Dementus Warband"
The Great Dementus, cannot afford to have an undefined TO&E!
“My wife would rather walk then get in one of these”
So said every person when they see a death trap
I've never seen one irl but she has so gotta take her word for it
@@BattleOrderNever question the wife.
Also the Puerto Rico pronunciation and brief flag were both pretty good
Opel Corsa (2022) scored a 5 star ANCAP safety rating...
@@thomasnorb4077 It's just a joke but Euro NCAP gave the 1997 Opel Corsa, which is the generation being talked about, a 2 star safety rating
man, feels very funny to drive one of those old things 🪦
That's one hell of a "highway patrol" setup the Colombians have there. I see I'm not the only one who was getting Mad Max vibes here. I'm liking these videos on armored/cavalry units from foreign armies. I'd like to see one about the Rhodesian Armored Corps or maybe the Recon Squadrons of the Force Publique.
I find road as statebuilding tool and how one fight their way through to make them work very fascinating.
On a side note, similar thing happened to Thailand in late 60s and early 70s, where the government (finally) realized they need proper road infrastructure to effectively govern the mountainous rural areas after the communist party declared their own revolutionary government in those regions
That's why, somewhat in a reverse of normal maneuver and mobility role, infantry and tanks shot their way up through insurgent strongholds with M113s, M41s, and armored bulldozers supported (in a classic Vietnam war fashion) by UH-1 gunships and F-5s, for the engineers to build roads behind them.
Whether they succeeded? Well, those are all scenic roads for tourists nowadays
The Romans learned the same strategy over 2000 years ago. Wherever the Roman Empire went, roads and forts followed them and dotted the landscape.
@@VT-mw2zb All roads lead to Rome.
That's very good to hear, I hope the things here get calm like Thailand, greetings from Colombia.
I find it strange that modern nations often don't realize what ancient empires considered as state building 101
@@Pavlos_Charalambous I'd imagine that depends on the threat environment
if you've been focusing on doing other things for the last 100 or so years, it might take time to 'rediscover' those knowledge
in the late 19th and early 20th century, cities are where modern political-economic activities mostly occur, even rebels and revolutionaries of any significant scale are formed in cities - hence the focus on putting them under the grasp of national authorities via *railways and telegraphs* - not paving random roads to the jungles in the middle of nowhere
We shall ride forever chrome and shiny !
WITNESSED!
FOR IMORTTAN JOE!!!
9:27 The fact that everyone is behind level 5 armor - except the one civilian driver 😅
Tbf, if the trailer is under enemy fire - something has gone horribly wrong
Yeah, the Colombian government doesn’t have the best track record regarding protecting individual civilian lives
I’ve seen these guys patrolling before by my home. Cheers from Colombia
So much effort my country did to obtain peace, but only to realize that with out a right person with the right heart, everything you do will melt away. One day we will know peace Colombia 🇨🇴
Truly the madmax cavalry.
Also I reference your website all the time.
I love the South American content its so great, its such a forgotten contient when it comes to weapons, armies and etc. While my favourite armed forces are Peruvians, their PACIPAT, UNIPAT camos are great looking, they have Amx-13 with turrets removed with 3 Kornets-E instead also they had VT-1/MBT2000 Chinese tanks on parades while not eveing buying them nor fielding them again its a great and a interesting nation with interesting arms industry with their Infantry having panzerfaust 3 or FAD experimental rifles looking like a space rifle that isn't fielded anymore
this is some mad max level stuff
The quality of the video grows incredibly with each new release. You're great, keep it up.
The most trucked truck looking truck. Couldn't say it better
0:42 Battle order Doge in a Richmond jersey doin a burnout was not what i was expecting to see from this video 😂
I'm told I have to go for the Tigers
@@BattleOrderyou were told wrong
@@BattleOrder who ever told you that must hate you 😭
@@maasy05 i lived in Richmond so they might’ve killed me
@@BattleOrder fair enough i spose could be worse could always support essondon 😂
I am very grateful for your ending song selection.
Thanks to it, I found a new musician to follow.
🥰
Colombia is just mad max at this point
was... I haven´t seen those trucks in years
Fun fact
Meteoro is how the anime "speed racer" is known in latin america
🏎🏁☄️
S. & Central American militaries are fuggin wild, please keep covering this
What they really need are Pursuit Special V8 Interceptors
What if I tell you that the Greek police in the 80s actually had jet black pursuit specials?
The notorious " Σ - units" ( yes sigma)
The officers was even wearing black leather biker jackets
Their job was to mostly deal with bank robbers, biker gangs, and street racing
And talking about biker gangs
The" Σ " was often working in coordination with the" Z " ( Zita) police's own very very very notorious bikers many of them being ex biker gangs members or as used to brag" if you are not in a list you are not suited for the job "😉
I really liked the military information about the Meteoro group of light cavalry, I am a veteran of the Colombian Army, I would like to add that in Colombia Titan type vehicles are manufactured (armored and artillery buses), the Marine Corps also has a platoon of road safety 🚌💂🐎
The level of excellence of ur videos are much appreciated. Thank u!
Road Fighter, Mach Rider and Road Rash preparing many kids for the future.
Mad Max is now being the teacher.
Such a shame that Colombians made such awesome and functional Mad Max style units out of necessity.
Hope it will help them bring peace and chance for stable life sooner or later.
That's from the 90's, they were successful.
Also this must be where the next mad max is set.
Love that you are doing more South America stuff! Keep up the good work!
British had Q-ships, Colombia has Q-trucks.
8:04 Oh yeah, now we’re talking!
This guys know more about my country than the media and most Colombians talking about our Military forces. Congratulations. Amazing video.
Eso no es muy bueno.
We are so back ACR bros 😭
Well done Battle Order, well done. I frankly find your videos about the minor armies very interesting. I really loved especially how well-timed your humor was especially the "most truck-looking truck" and i find this doctrine very interesting. Fun fact, the usage of these trucks for military operations gives me Mad Max vibes.
After all Max originally served in a police force trying to keep the roads clear 😉
As a Brazilian it's quite ironic seeing our neighbors suffering from lack of government reach/authority cause here the problem is the complete opposite: the state knows EVERYTHING, nothing can run or hide from the state, the criminals that exist and are powerful are allied with the government in a certain way, the state is onipresent in our lives. It's impressive how even though we brazilians are culturally similar to our neighbors our politics are diametrically different, maybe that's the reason Brazil remained a whole state from the amazon rainforest to the southern steppes in the first place.
Estás hablando de corrupción como un principio de estado lol
Half of Brazil is filled with cartels and un contacted tribes what are you talking about
En brasil hay bandas en cada fabela
@@sebastiancar625 agora vendo você falar desse jeito, dá para entender o porquê do governo brasileiro agir e funcionar desse jeito.😮
I am from Colombia and I am 16 years old, I live in a city where the A.G.C is located, I have experienced some curfews because the guerrilla has hit my city and region Even though this has only happened two or three times in my life, it has still been a pain for me and for everyone who lives here. Greetings.
This truck in the thumbnail made me think about the War Rig in "Furiosa".
WITNESS HIM!!!
Violence is caused due to lack of burn outs at 3pm noted
You think "treeline warfare" is bad? Wait until you see HIGHWAY WARFARE
Subtropical mountain jungle highway warfare*** That's why our conflict is over 50yrs old...
Hi there, i find this very interesting since i'm colombian. I'm not old enough but everyone like my parents older cousins and so on sometimes memorize about the famed "convoys" which were essentially military escort for civilian convoys to move safely, great video
I'm glad to see my country made to the Battle Order ' collection 🇨🇴
As a Colombian I appreciate the attention to detail and work you put into your research, also loved the jokes. insta sub.
Love the outro music! I just recently discovered Charli Morgan myself.
This video was my introduction to your channel, an easy subscribe.
As a Colombian I’ll say this again. The problem of our country lies within corruption not a weak military. As long as profit from drugs and illicit activities is accessible to corrupt government officials these criminal organizations will continue to exists.
THE COLOMBIAN ARMY HAS BEEN REINFORCED WITH A DREADNOUGHT 🗣🔥🗣
Most truck looking truck that ever trucked... Sounds like hell of a truck 👌
Type of truck you’d buy on warstock cache and carry
Wow Colombian here surprised we are on here very cool 😎 🇨🇴
This was very intresting, they have a MadMax kinda thing going on! Keep up yhe great work! N I hope you get to feeling better!
Living in a major city like Medellin makes you think that you live in a safe country, but there’s always a video like this that reminds you there are warriors fighting in the jungle to keep us protected against the terrorists every single day. God bless all the soldiers in our country, most experienced and battle hardened warriors in latin America.
This is incredible work ❤ gracias 🙏🏽
Incredibly well researched. Amazing job.
I moved from the States to Colombia a couple of years ago. My wife who grew up in Bogotá said that before Uribe was president, they never drove anywhere out of the metro Bogotá area when she was a teenager. If you wanted to go to another city, you flew, no exceptions. That’s why Uribe is almost a god to some people in this country. There definitely wouldn’t be tourism here now if he hadn’t cleared the roads.
guy cleaned the country at a high price, but still, he did it.
He's a criminal and a fraud, and the very same reason those armed groups still exist
Columbia out here fighting in the fury road
WITNESSED
ColOmbia*
PLEASE, more videos about Colombian army
Colombian armored cavalry is on the to-do list
I was told a story from my cousin on his trip from Barranquilla to Santander that he saw the tractor trailer because of his friends served in the 8th brigade the literally called it out 😂 but good news is that the Ejercito are getting new whips
That was actually a really good Australian accent mate 👍 well done
Another interesting video. Thanks Sir
Driving through Colombia with friend, he would always give a thumbs up to any military or police inspection point. He said it was a way of saying "No terrorists back there!"
Bro this shit needs to be in the next mad max. Its honestly sick!
Thanks!
Thanks for the support!
You should make a vídeo about brazil's army modernization that's been on going for a few year, especially the acquisition of new gear and vehicles, and how they would be implemented.
I was totally expecting to see a Mad Max-style, up-armored, tractor trailer-born, highway battlewagon. I really like that background music you're using.
I believe those M715s are actually Korean K311/KM450s. Its a slightly more modern license built copy of the M715 still in production.
Its unbelievable how many KM450s are out there. I swear if its not in Europe, its most likely a Korean KM450 than an American M715.
You are correct. The M715 was actually a very good vehicle when the motor worked. The Koreans replaced the Kaiser 230 Tornado straight six with a Mitsubishi diesel. It also has a looking rear diff and will probably climb a tree.
And for full military vehicle pedantry, those aren't M35A2 2-1/2 ton trucks, they are KM-250s. The S. Koreans know how to build a good truck.
Colombian here. first time seen one of your videos and i like it, has quality also very interesting
Colombian here, our conflict is... All the mdrfcking cold war conflicts in one country 😂
I'm grateful that Battle order gave us a look.
And yeah this is and will be Mad Max 💀👌🏼
Might just be nitpicky but that M715 looks like a K311 which is basically a (relatively) newer version of the kaiser jeep so it's not as bad as you'd think.
2:26 that's the bus I take to go to work every day! Jajajajajajaja
Actually that specific one belongs to a friend
Been looking for the outro song in TH-cam for several minutes and remembered it was used in one of your recent special videos. For some reason I thought a gaming or animation channel featured it.
awesome video!
Que chimba de video, increíble que un gringuito sepa más que el 80% de los colombianos acerca de este tema
No vengan a abus ar de nuestras niñas btw
It's great to see South American analisis!
*Sad facts about the reality concerning the instability of Colombia.*
Traveling by road in Colombia is a weighty endeavor. One often have to ascend and descend through various temperature zones, zig-zag for miles between step mountainsides, and go by seemingly bottomless ravines. Roads are so sinuous that a distance of 400 km on a straight line, for example between Cúcuta and Bogotá, will turn into around 600 km and can take up to 11 hours to travel, compared to 50 minutes by airplane. Or a more common one, traveling from Bogotá to Cartagena can take up to 18 hours over a distance of around 1.000 km, compared to 1h 30min by airplane. Traversing the country from Riohacha on the north to Pasto in the southwest would take around 30 hours. If you want to make a parallel with the USA, the fastest Cannoball Run from New York to Los Angeles took only 26 hours.
Colombian here, Excellent video 👍
Yeah, it's like living in a Madmax movie but located in a jungle in the middle of a mountain range.
Colombiana Mad Max style roads hello from cali Colombia. Great video!
Bro, I am Colombian and I have lived here all my life and believe me, I have never heard of armored trucks in the mad max way, it must be part of the special operations in Cauca or Caquetá, which are areas with high conflict and a lot of confidentiality is handled there.
As a Colombian i can tell you, this video is excellent, very well explained. Unfortunately with our low military resources and a big ass country with a nightmare geography, we have to get creative. I have seen some videos with actual combat in remote roads, our soldiers fight like hell. That's why the guerrillas nowadays just paint cars with grafitti and tell some "revolutionary" BS to the civilians and quicky go away, sometimes when things get hot they managed to burn down some trucks, but is not like the 90's or early 2000's, those were terrible times...
Bro low military resources the defense budget is 10 billion USD, the second largest in LATAM, the geography is an excuse to the poor procurement of equipment due to corruption.
@@viceralman8450 still is low for a Country with 56 million people with huge mountains and jungles. Colombia is not an easy country to keep together, we are a country of countries, the USA already knows that jungle warfare is the worst one and we didn't have a strong and advanced military industry, all high tech weapons and equipment must be imported and that's not cheap either....
@@colombianguy8194 Its the fourth largest budget in the Americas after the USA, Brazil and Canada.
I'm loving the Latin American army content you've been giving out lately. I would love to hear about the Peruvian and Ecuadorian militaries, since they fought the last state on state war in south America.
The Kodiak is a pretty darn truck lookin' truck for what it's worth. I also love that thing so I'm a little biased
Wow that really is the most looking truck that has ever trucked!
Reminds me of the Railway Protecting Corps deployed by the Irish Army during the 1922-23 Civil War. The privately owned railway network was an easy target for anti-government forces as sabotage comprised everything from unarmed groups splitting rails in darkness to blowing up critical Railway viaducts. The Colombian project is a modern version of dedicated infrastructure protection forces many states have had to deploy. Great video, too many focus on 'sexy' new tech without discussing 'nuts and bolts' of security👍
This was one of the early spearheads of Seguridad Democratica, the major security state doctrine that was launched in the early 00s to reclaim what up to that point was a situation approaching late 2010s Afghanistan. The guerrillas had almost besieged major urban centers in the mountains such as Medellin and Bogota by operating freely in the mountain roads - in a country where mountain roads were the lifeline of cities. With kidnappings of civilians, burning of cargo trucks and passanger buses and shootings against commuters, Colombians were practically stuck and surrounded in their cities.
One of the first actions of Uribe's government involved caravans of civilian cars protected by armored squadrons such as these. Alongside with focused patrolling in "red" roads. The guerrilla checkpoints were pushed back into the mountains, and then were pushed back by the major military campaigns that pushed the guerrillas out of Cundinamarca and into the southern rainforest.