Okinawa 1945: Planning Operation ICEBERG

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 13 ก.ย. 2024
  • On 1 April 1945, U.S. forces invaded the Japanese home island of Okinawa. It was the largest joint amphibious assault mounted during World War II in the Pacific Theater. The invasion of Okinawa was the culmination of three years of operations in the Pacific against Imperial Japan. The film explores the planning and preparation for Operation ICEBERG from September 1944 to 1 April 1945.
    “Okinawa 1945: Planning Operation ICEBERG” examines the U.S. Army operations process as well as planning by echelon from field army, corps, and division with special emphasis on current Joint doctrine. This film is the first in a two-part series covering Operation ICEBERG and the U.S. Tenth Army’s securing of Okinawa.
    You can watch part two here: • Okinawa 1945: Typhoon ...
    Chapters:
    Introduction - 0:08
    Title Screen - 3:02
    The Strategic Situation - 3:08
    The Ryukyus - 8:27
    U.S. Forces - 17:59
    Operational Plan - 23:30
    Shaping and Sustaining Operation ICEBERG - 31:20
    Plan for Ground Operations - 39:47
    L-Day - 46:17
    Doctrine:
    Operations Process (ADP 5-0) - 6:00
    Six Steps of Assessment (ADP 5-0) - 6:45
    Intelligence Process (ADP 5-0) - 9:20
    Operational Environment (JP 3-0) - 9:40
    Intelligence Preparation of the Battlefield (ATP 2-01.3) - 10:05
    Decisive Point (JP 5-0) - 11:10
    PMESII-PT - 11:32
    ASCOPE - 11:56
    Joint Task Force (JP 3-33) - 24:30
    Joint Area of Operations (JP 3-33) - 25:20
    Operational Control (JP 3-33) - 25:50
    Administrative Control (JP 3-33) - 26:10
    ARFOR (FM 3-94)- 26:19
    Tactical Control (JP 3-33)- 27:33
    JFMCC - 27:56
    Shaping Operations (ADP 3-0) - 32:13
    Sustaining Operations (ADP 3-0) - 36:50
    Airspace Control Authority - 37:35
    Field Army (FM 3-94) - 40:05
    Multi-domain Fires (FM 3-94) - 42:52
    Corps Operations (FM 3-94) - 44:00
    Division (FM 3-94) - 44:26

ความคิดเห็น • 130

  • @ArmyUniversityPress
    @ArmyUniversityPress  10 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    Thank you for watching! Please don't forget to like and subscribe. To view more of our films, check out our full collection at www.armyupress.army.mil/Films/Feature-Film-Catalog/

  • @michaellazzeri2069
    @michaellazzeri2069 ปีที่แล้ว +25

    At 29 y/o when Pearl Harbor happened my Dad volunteered, but as he had no birth certificate, only the USMC took him. The Marines also emptied jails & prisons , a fact seldom explained, but nonetheless, true. Dad was in the very 1st platoon that walked on to Guadalcanal. he stayed there until Dengue Fever & Combat Fatigue due to lack of sleep, finally did him in, & he was evac'd to New Zealand where he spent 22 months , & then another 6 months in Oakland , once he returned to the States. For his time in war, Dad received The Navy Cross , The Purple Heart, & a lifetime pension. he seldom ever talked about his time in Hell, but he was never the same man after his time in war. he was truly, part of THE Greatest Generation. --------------MJL, 76 y/o

    • @johnceglick8714
      @johnceglick8714 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I had a grandpa who was a medic , with capt.s rank in the USAs 82nd A/B Div. In the ETO.
      My grandpa jumped , and fought in Normandy (DDAY 6/6/44). He then glider in Holland (mid-9/44) in a near failure of a plan by Field Marshall General Bernard Montgomery to curtail the WW2 in the ETO . And , he was wounded in the Ardennes 12/16/44 Battle of the Bulge .
      It took.yrs to reveal this information from him., for it brought about a not so nice of a time . PSTD!!

    • @rodgerpiercearchitect
      @rodgerpiercearchitect 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ❤️

    • @1mlannen
      @1mlannen 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I had three uncle brothers fight in WWII. They all came back and never discussed what they experienced in the war. I was born March 21, 1942 and we all were a very close family living in San Diego California. All were very successful in life and lived to be into late 90s in life. I jar two more uncles all from the same family that fought in the kOREAN WAR, AGAIN THEY ALL RETURNED HOME AND HAD NORMAL SUCCESSFUL IIVES. MKL

  • @genegustafson1665
    @genegustafson1665 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    My father was here in 1945, I don't know what he was doing, but I heard that he was a tunnel rat and explosive expert who would blow up the tunnels, he never talked about it at home, but from his close friends and family me and my siblings learned alot of what he was doing there, I have a few pictures of him and his comrades, plus he was driving a dozer in one of the pictures, he passed away in October 1974 at 50 yrs old, had cancer in the brain, plus found out after his death that he had 2 scares on his leg and shoulder of not being able to see them as he made sure nobody knew about his wounds. Rest in Peace Dad/ George Gustafson 🇺🇸❤🙏🍺🍺🦌🎣

  • @aaotcis
    @aaotcis 2 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    Excellent documentary!

  • @ronchristiantenala4056
    @ronchristiantenala4056 2 ปีที่แล้ว +16

    Another Quality documentary. Keep it coming!

  • @JamesOberg
    @JamesOberg 2 ปีที่แล้ว +33

    My Dad was on AKA-1 Arcturus providing landing support. Ships on both sides of him were hit by kamikazes. After unloading he was able to get back to Pearl, reload, and return to Okinawa while bitter fighting was still raging. I was six months old, back in the Bronx. Dad's ship was assigned to Olympic. Thanks to Little Boy and Fat Man, I have a younger brother and sister.

    • @user-ed8wc1yr8s
      @user-ed8wc1yr8s ปีที่แล้ว

      th-cam.com/video/1js16n6IwY4/w-d-xo.html
      リトアニアの日本国総領事館に赴任していた杉原千畝がナチス・ドイツの迫害から逃れてきた多くのユダヤ難民を救出した逸話は、「東洋のシンドラー」として国内外に広く知られるようになった。その一方で、もう一人の「東洋のシンドラー」、樋口季一郎陸軍中将の史実は知られることが少ない。杉原が救ったとされるユダヤ人の数6000人を優に上回る2万人のユダヤ人を樋口中将が救ったことは、ユダヤ人社会で記録に留められているほどだが、今、彼の功績を広く世界に伝えるべく、日本、イスラエル、米国で連携の輪が広がろうとしている。
      The anecdote that Chiune Sugihara, who had been assigned to the Consul General of Japan in Lithuania, rescued many Jewish refugees who had fled the persecution of Nazi Germany, became widely known at home and abroad as the "Oriental Sindler." On the other hand, the historical facts of another "Oriental Sindler", Lieutenant General Kiichiro Higuchi, are rarely known. It is recorded in the Jewish community that General Higuchi saved 20,000 Jews, well over 6,000 Jews allegedly saved by Sugihara, but now his achievements. The circle of cooperation is about to spread in Japan, Israel, and the United States in order to spread the word to the world.
      In the United States,
      Japanese American
      Sent to a concentration camp and robbed of property.
      No different than Nazis!

    • @user-gh7go3nx9i
      @user-gh7go3nx9i ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Enola "Gay" &〝Little Boy" was a good name for the coward.
      They slaughtered women and children

    • @user-gh7go3nx9i
      @user-gh7go3nx9i ปีที่แล้ว

      Americans still feel they are the victims of those wars. America invaded Vietnam, Iraq, Syria, Korea etc. Those countries didn't invade America.

    • @JamesOberg
      @JamesOberg ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@user-gh7go3nx9i -- They dropped leaflets for everyone to get out of the city before its 'total destruction', but Japanese soldiers barricaded all the roads out. Without the shock value of the two bombs, millions of Japanese civilians would have starved as the naval blockade strangled all shipping. You choose.

    • @JamesOberg
      @JamesOberg ปีที่แล้ว

      @@user-gh7go3nx9i == Bullshit. In Vietnam and Korea and elsewhere, America sent soldiers to fight alongside local armies of the internationally-recognized governments of those nations to resist genuine invasions from neighboring countries.

  • @ikemancil3850
    @ikemancil3850 2 ปีที่แล้ว +41

    My father was there as a combat soldier in the 305th regimental combat team of the 77th division. They were in the center of the assualt on the shuri line. Later his company while attached to another division helped take the last three hills of organized resistance on the island. He was wounded that day as his sguad sealed a cave. The 77th had the oldest average age of any combat outfit in the pacific theater. The 1st marines nicknamed his regiment the 305th marines. They also earned the title "the old bastards.". Starting with Guam they saw over 200 days of combat and killed over 30 thousand Japanese troops. They proudly wore the Statue of liberty shoulder patch. Their motto. "Ours to hold high."

    • @madkabal
      @madkabal 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Marines can be so ridiculous sometimes 🤣🤣😂😂🤣

    • @boomer7485
      @boomer7485 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Ike , My Grandfather also was in the 77th. Richard Sinclair from Oklahoma.

    • @user-gh7go3nx9i
      @user-gh7go3nx9i ปีที่แล้ว

      Dear American Soldier. You have my sympathy.
      Your grandson is obsessed with our country's anime...

  • @hanshans8612
    @hanshans8612 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Impressive production. Thank you!

  • @mynamedoesntmatter8652
    @mynamedoesntmatter8652 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Thank you for uploading this. My uncle was in this. He went onto the island on an LST (‘Large Slow Target’ as dubbed by the guys).

    • @user-ed8wc1yr8s
      @user-ed8wc1yr8s ปีที่แล้ว

      Deaths without the use of the atomic bomb-the magic of numbers to justify the dropping of the atomic bomb
      On the other hand, considering the death toll if the atomic bomb was not used, the number of victims was rather small. ”What about another justification for the dropping of the atomic bomb by the United States? The "victim" in this case does not mean the Japanese, but the wear and tear of the U.S. soldiers when the U.S. forces invade the mainland of Japan, but after the war, the U.S. forces landed on the mainland of Japan. In the case of the battle, the American side suffered damages of 1 million or 2 million (so the 300,000 victims in Hiroshima and Nagasaki were reasonably small, so it was good to say that it was good. There is no military basis for this.
      The United States was naturally planning to invade the mainland of Japan if Japan ignored the Potsdam Declaration. One is to land in South Kyushu and build an air base around November 1945, and then completely seize air superiority in mainland Japan. This is called Operation Olympics. After further bombing the mainland of Japan with this operation, a plan to land in Kujukuri, Chiba Prefecture and occupy Tokyo-Operation Coronet was scheduled around the spring of 1946.
      However, it is customary for the US military to carry out thorough bombing and naval gunfire before landing in order to reduce the damage to its own army as much as possible. Especially in the Battle of Iwo Jima from February to March 1945, the Japanese garrison led by Tadamichi Kuribayashi had about 8,000 people far exceeding the expectations of the American side due to skillful position building and strategic endurance policy. Was killed in the war. In the subsequent Battle of Okinawa from April to June 1945, the US side killed about 12,000 people due to the strategic endurance policy of the Japanese garrison. Taking this as a lesson, the US military planned more detailed pre-air raids and naval gunfire when attacking mainland Japan. There are about 100,000 US troops invading Iwo Jima. Okinawa has 200,000 people in front of the landing, and 500,000 people including spares. At the time of the invasion of the Japanese mainland, it was planned to introduce the U.S. and British troops, which are said to be 1 million or 2 million, but no matter how fierce the resistance of the Japanese side, it is thought that there are 1 million killed in action on the U.S. military side. do not have.
      Japan has already cut off communication between the mainland of Japan and Korea, Taiwan, the continent, and the south, and it is not possible to divert troops by sea transportation, and even civilian soldiers with kitchen knives and nata have been incorporated into the army. That is as already mentioned. It is unlikely that the U.S. military, which has learned from Iwo Jima and Okinawa, will be killed by 1 million against the mixed militia forces that do not form the body of such a Japanese organization. According to the US side, it is reasonable that the estimated number of victims on the US military side is more than the Battle of Okinawa and less than 100,000. It is clear from the fire that the Japanese, weakened by air raids, naval gunfire and naval blockade, could not have even been given a "blow" to the US military.
      However, the reason why the United States devised the theory that the number of
      victims was rather small considering the deaths if the atomic bomb was not used after the war was that the damage to the atomic bombs in Hiroshima and Nagasaki was too terrible even on the American side. So, I had to hurry up and make a numerical basis to justify it. And, in fact, the Soviet Union entered the war against Japan on August 9, 1945, and before the US Army's invasion of Japan into the mainland itself was carried out, the premise of "Japan's mainland decisive battle and one-shot peace theory" was broken, and the Gozen Kaigi Since Emperor Showa decided to lose the war, the mainland decisive battle itself could not have happened if we honestly think about it. In this way, "It is almost a sophistry that the number of victims was rather small considering the deaths if the atomic bomb was not used.

  • @comment2009
    @comment2009 2 ปีที่แล้ว +14

    My father was Tech Sgt. with the 7th ID. Things that stuck with him were dealing with a sniper held up in a make shift pill box. A hand grenade took care of the problem but the memory of the shredded body stayed with him. I once asked what he thought hearing of the A-bomb. He mentioned flame throwers were a much worse weapon of war.

    • @larryzigler6812
      @larryzigler6812 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Much worse !!!! He was just teasing you.

    • @juliegaryhearron605
      @juliegaryhearron605 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      My dad said the same thing...he was in the 98th AAA Btry....said you could hear them scream.

  • @thewanderinghistorian
    @thewanderinghistorian 2 ปีที่แล้ว +17

    Great video! Proud to have helped in the early stages.

    • @DaveSCameron
      @DaveSCameron 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      What team do you support? ⚽

    • @thewanderinghistorian
      @thewanderinghistorian 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@DaveSCameron I was part of the "Boots on Ground." Since I was station on Okinawa at the time I helped get the team the resources they needed, connect them with other historians, and help get them around the island while there were there. All the while offer up what knowledge I could.

  • @MisteriosGloriosos922
    @MisteriosGloriosos922 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    *Interesting, Thanks for informative vid!!!*

    • @user-ed8wc1yr8s
      @user-ed8wc1yr8s ปีที่แล้ว

      th-cam.com/video/1js16n6IwY4/w-d-xo.html
      リトアニアの日本国総領事館に赴任していた杉原千畝がナチス・ドイツの迫害から逃れてきた多くのユダヤ難民を救出した逸話は、「東洋のシンドラー」として国内外に広く知られるようになった。その一方で、もう一人の「東洋のシンドラー」、樋口季一郎陸軍中将の史実は知られることが少ない。杉原が救ったとされるユダヤ人の数6000人を優に上回る2万人のユダヤ人を樋口中将が救ったことは、ユダヤ人社会で記録に留められているほどだが、今、彼の功績を広く世界に伝えるべく、日本、イスラエル、米国で連携の輪が広がろうとしている。
      The anecdote that Chiune Sugihara, who had been assigned to the Consul General of Japan in Lithuania, rescued many Jewish refugees who had fled the persecution of Nazi Germany, became widely known at home and abroad as the "Oriental Sindler." On the other hand, the historical facts of another "Oriental Sindler", Lieutenant General Kiichiro Higuchi, are rarely known. It is recorded in the Jewish community that General Higuchi saved 20,000 Jews, well over 6,000 Jews allegedly saved by Sugihara, but now his achievements. The circle of cooperation is about to spread in Japan, Israel, and the United States in order to spread the word to the world.
      In the United States,
      Japanese American
      Sent to a concentration camp and robbed of property.
      No different than Nazis!

  • @genegustafson1665
    @genegustafson1665 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    My father George Gustafson passed away on 10th of October 1974, as I saw the first part of this war plans

    • @user-ed8wc1yr8s
      @user-ed8wc1yr8s ปีที่แล้ว

      th-cam.com/video/1js16n6IwY4/w-d-xo.html
      リトアニアの日本国総領事館に赴任していた杉原千畝がナチス・ドイツの迫害から逃れてきた多くのユダヤ難民を救出した逸話は、「東洋のシンドラー」として国内外に広く知られるようになった。その一方で、もう一人の「東洋のシンドラー」、樋口季一郎陸軍中将の史実は知られることが少ない。杉原が救ったとされるユダヤ人の数6000人を優に上回る2万人のユダヤ人を樋口中将が救ったことは、ユダヤ人社会で記録に留められているほどだが、今、彼の功績を広く世界に伝えるべく、日本、イスラエル、米国で連携の輪が広がろうとしている。
      The anecdote that Chiune Sugihara, who had been assigned to the Consul General of Japan in Lithuania, rescued many Jewish refugees who had fled the persecution of Nazi Germany, became widely known at home and abroad as the "Oriental Sindler." On the other hand, the historical facts of another "Oriental Sindler", Lieutenant General Kiichiro Higuchi, are rarely known. It is recorded in the Jewish community that General Higuchi saved 20,000 Jews, well over 6,000 Jews allegedly saved by Sugihara, but now his achievements. The circle of cooperation is about to spread in Japan, Israel, and the United States in order to spread the word to the world.
      In the United States,
      Japanese American
      Sent to a concentration camp and robbed of property.
      No different than Nazis!

  • @thomascampbell4730
    @thomascampbell4730 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    I just finished "Okinawa, The Last Battle" a volume in the US Army official history series (the "green books"). It had been many years since I'd studied this campaign. I'd forgotten places like Conical Hill, Wana draw, Maeda Escarpment, and Kunishi Ridge. The tenacity and skill of the soldiers and Marines who took the island is breathtaking. American casualties were catastrophic, akin to kind of losses in the Civil War. Battalions were reduced to the size of understrength battalions. In spite of the brilliantly engineered Japanese defenses the relentless attacks reduced them, and their occupants, to blackened rubble. Why the battle was fought the way it was puzzles me. General Ushijima's plan had been to bleed the enemy white and Buckner obliged him, effectively giving the initiative to the Japanese.

    • @K_Kara
      @K_Kara 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      What else could LTG Buckner do?

    • @labrd41
      @labrd41 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I'm not an authority by any means, but Japanese had contained themselves to the lower third of the island. Could have kept Okinawa based planes out of the air and just keep hammering them with Naval artillery on the backside of the ridges and shore based artillery on the frontside. The 1st line of Japanese defense at the outposts was only 4-5 miles long with 100'000 defenders' bottle-necked behind it, with no way to go around. That's a pretty large force to go without replenishments for an extended period of time. Patience might have saved a lot of casualties.
      Edit: My father was there with the 96th, he came home unscathed both physically and mentally. Thank the Lord.

    • @thomascampbell4730
      @thomascampbell4730 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@K_Kara Siege tactics are as old as warfare itself and an economy of force tactic. America had a significant number of coast defense mortars used back in the states. High angle weapons directed at key Japanese positions would have taken their toll. In Europe the British were using mammoth 22,000 lb bombs to destroy German submarine bases. They could likewise have been deployed to reduce Shuri and other key positions. Amphibious landings south on the east coast had been planned. Lastly starvation would have reduced the Japanese garrison in size and power. The Japanese would have seen that their tactic of attrition was a failure and by 1945 that was all they had left.

  • @bobhorner2845
    @bobhorner2845 2 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    My uncle was there, in command of 1 of those gun boats. His ship won a metal for going in close to support the troops.

  • @hangouts428
    @hangouts428 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    My grandfather and his friends died with nuclear weapons
    Absolutely no need for nuclear weapons From a ninja

  • @rodrigomeneses5900
    @rodrigomeneses5900 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    spectacular information

    • @user-ed8wc1yr8s
      @user-ed8wc1yr8s ปีที่แล้ว

      th-cam.com/video/1js16n6IwY4/w-d-xo.html
      リトアニアの日本国総領事館に赴任していた杉原千畝がナチス・ドイツの迫害から逃れてきた多くのユダヤ難民を救出した逸話は、「東洋のシンドラー」として国内外に広く知られるようになった。その一方で、もう一人の「東洋のシンドラー」、樋口季一郎陸軍中将の史実は知られることが少ない。杉原が救ったとされるユダヤ人の数6000人を優に上回る2万人のユダヤ人を樋口中将が救ったことは、ユダヤ人社会で記録に留められているほどだが、今、彼の功績を広く世界に伝えるべく、日本、イスラエル、米国で連携の輪が広がろうとしている。
      The anecdote that Chiune Sugihara, who had been assigned to the Consul General of Japan in Lithuania, rescued many Jewish refugees who had fled the persecution of Nazi Germany, became widely known at home and abroad as the "Oriental Sindler." On the other hand, the historical facts of another "Oriental Sindler", Lieutenant General Kiichiro Higuchi, are rarely known. It is recorded in the Jewish community that General Higuchi saved 20,000 Jews, well over 6,000 Jews allegedly saved by Sugihara, but now his achievements. The circle of cooperation is about to spread in Japan, Israel, and the United States in order to spread the word to the world.
      In the United States,
      Japanese American
      Sent to a concentration camp and robbed of property.
      No different than Nazis!

  • @user-cl6jl3oy6f
    @user-cl6jl3oy6f 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    The precious and realistic war shots, witness the conqueror to win the battle achievement, stabilize the Second World War, the strategic strategic layout of East Asia, thank you, and contribute to peace in the future!

  • @MolonLabe-1776
    @MolonLabe-1776 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Thank you Army University for the wonderful works. I enjoy it. I wish we had the same videos to watch along with the assigned hundred of pages of readings back in Quantico Marine Corps University when I attended USMC Command and Staff College.

    • @user-ed8wc1yr8s
      @user-ed8wc1yr8s ปีที่แล้ว

      th-cam.com/video/1js16n6IwY4/w-d-xo.html
      リトアニアの日本国総領事館に赴任していた杉原千畝がナチス・ドイツの迫害から逃れてきた多くのユダヤ難民を救出した逸話は、「東洋のシンドラー」として国内外に広く知られるようになった。その一方で、もう一人の「東洋のシンドラー」、樋口季一郎陸軍中将の史実は知られることが少ない。杉原が救ったとされるユダヤ人の数6000人を優に上回る2万人のユダヤ人を樋口中将が救ったことは、ユダヤ人社会で記録に留められているほどだが、今、彼の功績を広く世界に伝えるべく、日本、イスラエル、米国で連携の輪が広がろうとしている。
      The anecdote that Chiune Sugihara, who had been assigned to the Consul General of Japan in Lithuania, rescued many Jewish refugees who had fled the persecution of Nazi Germany, became widely known at home and abroad as the "Oriental Sindler." On the other hand, the historical facts of another "Oriental Sindler", Lieutenant General Kiichiro Higuchi, are rarely known. It is recorded in the Jewish community that General Higuchi saved 20,000 Jews, well over 6,000 Jews allegedly saved by Sugihara, but now his achievements. The circle of cooperation is about to spread in Japan, Israel, and the United States in order to spread the word to the world.
      In the United States,
      Japanese American
      Sent to a concentration camp and robbed of property.
      No different than Nazis!

  • @cjmanson5692
    @cjmanson5692 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I just thought of a bit of dialogue from the game _Battlestations: Pacific_ that I feel to be appropriate for the day of the landing (1 April 1945):
    "You know it's Easter today, and instead of hunting eggs, we're hunting Japanese targets. You think they'd paint the eggs too, First Lieutenant?"
    "I doubt it sir."
    "You're right. How could they? It's a good 'ol American tradition."
    "Sir, um..."
    "What is it, First Lieutenant?"
    "It's just... It's actually a *German* tradition."
    "Oh, come on!"

  • @tex346
    @tex346 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    While the 27th division was in the "plan" designated as as a floating reserve unit it was in fact deployed as one of the divisions of the 24th Corps on the right flank of the 7th and 96th divisions. It became the first division to attack the escarpment now better known since the movie as "Hacksaw Ridge" when General Grinder received intelligence that the enemy did not expect the Americans to attack at night he did exactly that on the evening before the other divisions began their attacks.

  • @brianrajala7671
    @brianrajala7671 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    The moderator needs to learn what the correct pronunciation of some of the locations is.

  • @IchimokuCloud
    @IchimokuCloud 2 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    Many of the battle sites have been developed and (thankfully) now used for the benefit of the Okinawa people. However, there are still some places to visit. The underground HQ of the IJN forces has been preserved and can visited, just a short distance from Naha airport. Sugarloaf Hill is now surrounded by condos and luxury goods stores, but on top of the hill there is a small memorial and you can walk around the hill in about 10 minutes. The monument to Ernie Pyle is still standing on Ie shima and the local people are preserving a building that was bombed and strafed. At the Keralas, Zamami has a memorial to the spot where US forces first stepped ashore. There are also large memorials to the Okinawans lost on each of the Kerala islands and nearby islands like Tonaki, Kume, Izena, and Iheya. The memorials have many names listed, the war was a great tragedy for these islands. Iheya has great public archive, with lots of pictures and documents, particularly the occupation after the war.

    • @petecarnes6024
      @petecarnes6024 ปีที่แล้ว

      Excessive description of US forces, planning etc. Needless encoding supposedly for simplifation nevertheless is confusing! Plus it was boring....

    • @hillbilly4christ638
      @hillbilly4christ638 ปีที่แล้ว

      Kerama islands. Tokashiki is where the anchorage was.

  • @bigazza7829
    @bigazza7829 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    No mention of the allies helping with the beach landing ????

    • @angel-pd4nt
      @angel-pd4nt ปีที่แล้ว

      Ngl slide me your plugs number i want what you on

  • @DawgPro
    @DawgPro ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Map at 24:22 is Tokyo...

  • @robbrown4621
    @robbrown4621 2 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    Would love to see you guys do a report on what it would be like to fight the communist Chinese on Taiwan today if the US marines and army have to retake the island after a communist invasion.

    • @John77Doe
      @John77Doe 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      I hope the Taiwanese shopping malls are left intact by both sides. Fighting in Taiwan would be like fighting in Southern Long Island or Central New Jersey. You have a population of 23 million crammed onto an island the size of Connecticut. 😃 😄 😁 😆 😅 😂 🤣

  • @tophyl7558
    @tophyl7558 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    My great uncle Eddie was at Pearl harbor on the USS Detroit when the Japanese attacked and parked next to the Arizona. The Detroit took the Admirals flag after the attack and my great uncle Jim was at Guadalcanal and Philippines he captured a Japanese rifle which became mine but a family member stole it and pawned it!

    • @user-ed8wc1yr8s
      @user-ed8wc1yr8s ปีที่แล้ว

      Deaths without the use of the atomic bomb-the magic of numbers to justify the dropping of the atomic bomb
      On the other hand, considering the death toll if the atomic bomb was not used, the number of victims was rather small. ”What about another justification for the dropping of the atomic bomb by the United States? The "victim" in this case does not mean the Japanese, but the wear and tear of the U.S. soldiers when the U.S. forces invade the mainland of Japan, but after the war, the U.S. forces landed on the mainland of Japan. In the case of the battle, the American side suffered damages of 1 million or 2 million (so the 300,000 victims in Hiroshima and Nagasaki were reasonably small, so it was good to say that it was good. There is no military basis for this.
      The United States was naturally planning to invade the mainland of Japan if Japan ignored the Potsdam Declaration. One is to land in South Kyushu and build an air base around November 1945, and then completely seize air superiority in mainland Japan. This is called Operation Olympics. After further bombing the mainland of Japan with this operation, a plan to land in Kujukuri, Chiba Prefecture and occupy Tokyo-Operation Coronet was scheduled around the spring of 1946.
      However, it is customary for the US military to carry out thorough bombing and naval gunfire before landing in order to reduce the damage to its own army as much as possible. Especially in the Battle of Iwo Jima from February to March 1945, the Japanese garrison led by Tadamichi Kuribayashi had about 8,000 people far exceeding the expectations of the American side due to skillful position building and strategic endurance policy. Was killed in the war. In the subsequent Battle of Okinawa from April to June 1945, the US side killed about 12,000 people due to the strategic endurance policy of the Japanese garrison. Taking this as a lesson, the US military planned more detailed pre-air raids and naval gunfire when attacking mainland Japan. There are about 100,000 US troops invading Iwo Jima. Okinawa has 200,000 people in front of the landing, and 500,000 people including spares. At the time of the invasion of the Japanese mainland, it was planned to introduce the U.S. and British troops, which are said to be 1 million or 2 million, but no matter how fierce the resistance of the Japanese side, it is thought that there are 1 million killed in action on the U.S. military side. do not have.
      Japan has already cut off communication between the mainland of Japan and Korea, Taiwan, the continent, and the south, and it is not possible to divert troops by sea transportation, and even civilian soldiers with kitchen knives and nata have been incorporated into the army. That is as already mentioned. It is unlikely that the U.S. military, which has learned from Iwo Jima and Okinawa, will be killed by 1 million against the mixed militia forces that do not form the body of such a Japanese organization. According to the US side, it is reasonable that the estimated number of victims on the US military side is more than the Battle of Okinawa and less than 100,000. It is clear from the fire that the Japanese, weakened by air raids, naval gunfire and naval blockade, could not have even been given a "blow" to the US military.
      However, the reason why the United States devised the theory that the number of
      victims was rather small considering the deaths if the atomic bomb was not used after the war was that the damage to the atomic bombs in Hiroshima and Nagasaki was too terrible even on the American side. So, I had to hurry up and make a numerical basis to justify it. And, in fact, the Soviet Union entered the war against Japan on August 9, 1945, and before the US Army's invasion of Japan into the mainland itself was carried out, the premise of "Japan's mainland decisive battle and one-shot peace theory" was broken, and the Gozen Kaigi Since Emperor Showa decided to lose the war, the mainland decisive battle itself could not have happened if we honestly think about it. In this way, "It is almost a sophistry that the number of victims was rather small considering the deaths if the atomic bomb was not used.

    • @user-ed8wc1yr8s
      @user-ed8wc1yr8s ปีที่แล้ว

      th-cam.com/video/1js16n6IwY4/w-d-xo.html
      リトアニアの日本国総領事館に赴任していた杉原千畝がナチス・ドイツの迫害から逃れてきた多くのユダヤ難民を救出した逸話は、「東洋のシンドラー」として国内外に広く知られるようになった。その一方で、もう一人の「東洋のシンドラー」、樋口季一郎陸軍中将の史実は知られることが少ない。杉原が救ったとされるユダヤ人の数6000人を優に上回る2万人のユダヤ人を樋口中将が救ったことは、ユダヤ人社会で記録に留められているほどだが、今、彼の功績を広く世界に伝えるべく、日本、イスラエル、米国で連携の輪が広がろうとしている。
      The anecdote that Chiune Sugihara, who had been assigned to the Consul General of Japan in Lithuania, rescued many Jewish refugees who had fled the persecution of Nazi Germany, became widely known at home and abroad as the "Oriental Sindler." On the other hand, the historical facts of another "Oriental Sindler", Lieutenant General Kiichiro Higuchi, are rarely known. It is recorded in the Jewish community that General Higuchi saved 20,000 Jews, well over 6,000 Jews allegedly saved by Sugihara, but now his achievements. The circle of cooperation is about to spread in Japan, Israel, and the United States in order to spread the word to the world.
      In the United States,
      Japanese American
      Sent to a concentration camp and robbed of property.
      No different than Nazis!

  • @user-gh7go3nx9i
    @user-gh7go3nx9i ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Dear American Soldier. You have my sympathy.
    Your grandson is obsessed with our country's anime...

  • @timeb9300
    @timeb9300 2 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    My granddad was here

    • @John77Doe
      @John77Doe 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Were the Okinawan women very friendly after being subjugated by the mighty White warriors of the United States?? 😍😍😍😍

    • @user-ed8wc1yr8s
      @user-ed8wc1yr8s ปีที่แล้ว

      th-cam.com/video/1js16n6IwY4/w-d-xo.html
      リトアニアの日本国総領事館に赴任していた杉原千畝がナチス・ドイツの迫害から逃れてきた多くのユダヤ難民を救出した逸話は、「東洋のシンドラー」として国内外に広く知られるようになった。その一方で、もう一人の「東洋のシンドラー」、樋口季一郎陸軍中将の史実は知られることが少ない。杉原が救ったとされるユダヤ人の数6000人を優に上回る2万人のユダヤ人を樋口中将が救ったことは、ユダヤ人社会で記録に留められているほどだが、今、彼の功績を広く世界に伝えるべく、日本、イスラエル、米国で連携の輪が広がろうとしている。
      The anecdote that Chiune Sugihara, who had been assigned to the Consul General of Japan in Lithuania, rescued many Jewish refugees who had fled the persecution of Nazi Germany, became widely known at home and abroad as the "Oriental Sindler." On the other hand, the historical facts of another "Oriental Sindler", Lieutenant General Kiichiro Higuchi, are rarely known. It is recorded in the Jewish community that General Higuchi saved 20,000 Jews, well over 6,000 Jews allegedly saved by Sugihara, but now his achievements. The circle of cooperation is about to spread in Japan, Israel, and the United States in order to spread the word to the world.
      In the United States,
      Japanese American
      Sent to a concentration camp and robbed of property.
      No different than Nazis!

    • @timeb9300
      @timeb9300 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      He wouldn't know he was busy with grenade shrapnel in his back

  • @brandonkoser7044
    @brandonkoser7044 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    With the overall strategic objective to establish a waypoint that would allow an attack on the main Japanese islands that would force surrender, it made me question the need to occupy the main Okinawa island and destroy the 32nd. Would it have been feasible to continue isolating such a large force with air and sea patrols and perhaps just utilize the outward islands as they were built up as a base to reach the real objective? The emperor's surrender still had national authority so the quickest path to that makes sense to me.
    Bypassing formations and taking Baghdad made sense until we eliminated their army's command structure and it left a power vacuum that ultimately weakened if not eliminated any strategic gain from the Iraq invasion. There was no strategic plan AFTER removing Sadaam or removing the Taliban from power. We stayed for two decades looking for a strategic goal, without which there could be no further decisive action

  • @giancarlogarlaschi4388
    @giancarlogarlaschi4388 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Just to have the B 29's closer , so they could reach Japan.

  • @ricardotello3219
    @ricardotello3219 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Por favor en castellano o subtitulado en castellano. Gracias

  • @story-nw8dv
    @story-nw8dv 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    👍👍ชอบครับ

    • @user-ed8wc1yr8s
      @user-ed8wc1yr8s ปีที่แล้ว

      th-cam.com/video/1js16n6IwY4/w-d-xo.html
      リトアニアの日本国総領事館に赴任していた杉原千畝がナチス・ドイツの迫害から逃れてきた多くのユダヤ難民を救出した逸話は、「東洋のシンドラー」として国内外に広く知られるようになった。その一方で、もう一人の「東洋のシンドラー」、樋口季一郎陸軍中将の史実は知られることが少ない。杉原が救ったとされるユダヤ人の数6000人を優に上回る2万人のユダヤ人を樋口中将が救ったことは、ユダヤ人社会で記録に留められているほどだが、今、彼の功績を広く世界に伝えるべく、日本、イスラエル、米国で連携の輪が広がろうとしている。
      The anecdote that Chiune Sugihara, who had been assigned to the Consul General of Japan in Lithuania, rescued many Jewish refugees who had fled the persecution of Nazi Germany, became widely known at home and abroad as the "Oriental Sindler." On the other hand, the historical facts of another "Oriental Sindler", Lieutenant General Kiichiro Higuchi, are rarely known. It is recorded in the Jewish community that General Higuchi saved 20,000 Jews, well over 6,000 Jews allegedly saved by Sugihara, but now his achievements. The circle of cooperation is about to spread in Japan, Israel, and the United States in order to spread the word to the world.
      In the United States,
      Japanese American
      Sent to a concentration camp and robbed of property.
      No different than Nazis!

  • @elysianfields6350
    @elysianfields6350 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Kamikaze/cruise missiles prove that surface ships will always be vulnerable: another Jutland lesson.

  • @kurtmartin8446
    @kurtmartin8446 2 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    And yet Buckner squandered all his advantages, and sent his men into days and seven weeks of thoughtless, wasteful frontal attacks. Completely dug in, the only way the Japanese could compete is if Buckner did this, and thus he played right into the rigid Japanese plan. His conduct of the Okinawa campaign left the Navy exposed to the kamikaze for a protracted period, with 36 ships sunk, and resulted in enormous slaughter of the civilian population (150,000 dead as compared to less than 15,000 American dead.) Buckner should be held up as a paragon of unimaginative command, right up there with the French of 1940.

    • @shinjaokinawa5122
      @shinjaokinawa5122 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      And Fort Buckner was named after Him anyway.
      I used to lift weights at Buckner Fieldhouse as Well.

    • @steves8236
      @steves8236 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      And you would have done what exactly...? The Shuri line ran from coast to coast and the defenses were in depth. Additionally, there was little opportunity for masking Army & Marine troop concentrations from view, inviting heavy artillery.

    • @user-ed8wc1yr8s
      @user-ed8wc1yr8s ปีที่แล้ว

      th-cam.com/video/1js16n6IwY4/w-d-xo.html
      リトアニアの日本国総領事館に赴任していた杉原千畝がナチス・ドイツの迫害から逃れてきた多くのユダヤ難民を救出した逸話は、「東洋のシンドラー」として国内外に広く知られるようになった。その一方で、もう一人の「東洋のシンドラー」、樋口季一郎陸軍中将の史実は知られることが少ない。杉原が救ったとされるユダヤ人の数6000人を優に上回る2万人のユダヤ人を樋口中将が救ったことは、ユダヤ人社会で記録に留められているほどだが、今、彼の功績を広く世界に伝えるべく、日本、イスラエル、米国で連携の輪が広がろうとしている。
      The anecdote that Chiune Sugihara, who had been assigned to the Consul General of Japan in Lithuania, rescued many Jewish refugees who had fled the persecution of Nazi Germany, became widely known at home and abroad as the "Oriental Sindler." On the other hand, the historical facts of another "Oriental Sindler", Lieutenant General Kiichiro Higuchi, are rarely known. It is recorded in the Jewish community that General Higuchi saved 20,000 Jews, well over 6,000 Jews allegedly saved by Sugihara, but now his achievements. The circle of cooperation is about to spread in Japan, Israel, and the United States in order to spread the word to the world.
      In the United States,
      Japanese American
      Sent to a concentration camp and robbed of property.
      No different than Nazis!

  • @suornphanny4968
    @suornphanny4968 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    ចូចិត❤

  • @melvincalp3418
    @melvincalp3418 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    🇺🇸⚡️🙏

  • @bishop6218
    @bishop6218 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Armchair generaling (or, more accurately, admiraling) here, but i wonder if Nimitz ever considered a good ol' Fabian stategy here : take the south, fortify the isthmus, blockade the north and simply starve the dug down japanese troops ? 🤔

    • @usedcarsokinawa
      @usedcarsokinawa 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      The south had higher ground granting command over the entire area and no good landing area that wouldn’t get slaughtered. The Japanese were well dug in.

    • @bishop6218
      @bishop6218 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@usedcarsokinawa wait, do you mean the south WAS higher ground, or that the north part was covering all of the south with artillery ?
      Because just by looking at the map the south looks pretty flat to me. And didn't the US actually landed on that part of the island ?

    • @stephenwuensche9019
      @stephenwuensche9019 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@bishop6218 The Hagushi beaches (just south of the Ishikawa isthmus, the narrowest point on the Okinawa) on the west coast were selected because 1) engineer reconnaissance determined the coral sand could support the ground pressure of amphibious tractors, duplex drive tanks, DUKWs, and other landing craft, and 2) you could mass all four landing divisions in a single location where they could be mutually supported. It also lets you seize two of the five airfields on Okinawa within the first ten days of the operation and put them to use. Southern landing sites were too dispersed to be useful, but they were selected for demonstration landings to keep the Japanese guessing.

    • @bishop6218
      @bishop6218 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@stephenwuensche9019 thanks for the great analysis, but i wasn't talking about the landings themselves, but the conquest of the rest of the island.
      Given that the allies had pretty much air and naval supremacy at the time, especially after Yamato's sinking, and the horrendous meat grinder that was to try and dislodge entrenched japanese troops in the north's rugged terrain, wouldn't it have been easier to bypass that part of the island like they did with Formosa as a whole ?

    • @nilopintuan2439
      @nilopintuan2439 ปีที่แล้ว

      ..

  • @DaveSCameron
    @DaveSCameron 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    We based our 1984 away trip to Wrexham on these blueprints and other than the unexpected reaction of two Mcdonald employees that afternoon I am sure the same outcome was imminent.
    #TranmereRoversFC

    • @barbararice6650
      @barbararice6650 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      We beat Stevenage this week 😑👍

  • @John77Doe
    @John77Doe 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Why would Formosa be an air threat to operations in Okinawa?? 😁😁😁

    • @neiloflongbeck5705
      @neiloflongbeck5705 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Because the distance is less than 750km. Well within range of many Japanese combat aircraft especially those intended not to come back.

    • @John77Doe
      @John77Doe 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@neiloflongbeck5705 The internet says:Taiwan lies 450 miles from Okinawa Island (沖縄島) and only 70 miles from Okinawa Prefecture's Yonaguni Island (與那國島), which constitutes the westernmost point of Japan.
      The internet says the Zero has a range of 1600 miles.
      Amazing.
      😬😬😬😬😬😬😬

    • @neiloflongbeck5705
      @neiloflongbeck5705 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@John77Doe 1.6 km equals 1 statute mile, 450 miles is 720 km (750 was an approximation).

    • @John77Doe
      @John77Doe 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@neiloflongbeck5705 I don't do Klicks and nautical miles. I do everything in regular miles.
      The internet says:
      It originated from the Roman mille passus, or “thousand paces,” which measured 5,000 Roman feet. ... During the reign of Queen Elizabeth I, the mile gained an additional 280 feet-to 5,280-under a statute of 1593 that confirmed the use of a shorter foot that made the length of the furlong 660 feet.
      😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁😁

    • @neiloflongbeck5705
      @neiloflongbeck5705 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@John77Doe there were many different versions if the mile ungilmut was standardised. Some were as long as 1.3 miles others were as short as 0.95 miles. Euth the passing if the Weights Ns Meadyres Act of 1593 a statute mile was defined as being 8 furlongs long, with a furlong being 40 poles long and a poke being sixteen and a half feet long, or 1 mile equals 1760 yards or 5280 ft.the Welsh like was 900 places of 3 Welsh feet, which were each 9 inches long or 3 statute Mike's and 1470 yards. The Svottish Mike was 197y imperial yards in length. Today 1 mile is defined, and has been since 1959, as 1,609.344m in length. So even the USA vases their distances on the SI units.

  • @baohenrry6223
    @baohenrry6223 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Banzai
    I love japan soldier

  • @unitedwestand5100
    @unitedwestand5100 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    LOL
    What's the long term effects on agriculture, from Napalm burnoff?

  • @luizalmeida9399
    @luizalmeida9399 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    2007 mattel hot wheels '07 chevy tahoe tm gm comentários 112

  • @valjeansimson4831
    @valjeansimson4831 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    P

  • @user-ed8wc1yr8s
    @user-ed8wc1yr8s ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Deaths without the use of the atomic bomb-the magic of numbers to justify the dropping of the atomic bomb
    On the other hand, considering the death toll if the atomic bomb was not used, the number of victims was rather small. ”What about another justification for the dropping of the atomic bomb by the United States? The "victim" in this case does not mean the Japanese, but the wear and tear of the U.S. soldiers when the U.S. forces invade the mainland of Japan, but after the war, the U.S. forces landed on the mainland of Japan. In the case of the battle, the American side suffered damages of 1 million or 2 million (so the 300,000 victims in Hiroshima and Nagasaki were reasonably small, so it was good to say that it was good. There is no military basis for this.
    The United States was naturally planning to invade the mainland of Japan if Japan ignored the Potsdam Declaration. One is to land in South Kyushu and build an air base around November 1945, and then completely seize air superiority in mainland Japan. This is called Operation Olympics. After further bombing the mainland of Japan with this operation, a plan to land in Kujukuri, Chiba Prefecture and occupy Tokyo-Operation Coronet was scheduled around the spring of 1946.
    However, it is customary for the US military to carry out thorough bombing and naval gunfire before landing in order to reduce the damage to its own army as much as possible. Especially in the Battle of Iwo Jima from February to March 1945, the Japanese garrison led by Tadamichi Kuribayashi had about 8,000 people far exceeding the expectations of the American side due to skillful position building and strategic endurance policy. Was killed in the war. In the subsequent Battle of Okinawa from April to June 1945, the US side killed about 12,000 people due to the strategic endurance policy of the Japanese garrison. Taking this as a lesson, the US military planned more detailed pre-air raids and naval gunfire when attacking mainland Japan. There are about 100,000 US troops invading Iwo Jima. Okinawa has 200,000 people in front of the landing, and 500,000 people including spares. At the time of the invasion of the Japanese mainland, it was planned to introduce the U.S. and British troops, which are said to be 1 million or 2 million, but no matter how fierce the resistance of the Japanese side, it is thought that there are 1 million killed in action on the U.S. military side. do not have.
    Japan has already cut off communication between the mainland of Japan and Korea, Taiwan, the continent, and the south, and it is not possible to divert troops by sea transportation, and even civilian soldiers with kitchen knives and nata have been incorporated into the army. That is as already mentioned. It is unlikely that the U.S. military, which has learned from Iwo Jima and Okinawa, will be killed by 1 million against the mixed militia forces that do not form the body of such a Japanese organization. According to the US side, it is reasonable that the estimated number of victims on the US military side is more than the Battle of Okinawa and less than 100,000. It is clear from the fire that the Japanese, weakened by air raids, naval gunfire and naval blockade, could not have even been given a "blow" to the US military.
    However, the reason why the United States devised the theory that the number of
    victims was rather small considering the deaths if the atomic bomb was not used after the war was that the damage to the atomic bombs in Hiroshima and Nagasaki was too terrible even on the American side. So, I had to hurry up and make a numerical basis to justify it. And, in fact, the Soviet Union entered the war against Japan on August 9, 1945, and before the US Army's invasion of Japan into the mainland itself was carried out, the premise of "Japan's mainland decisive battle and one-shot peace theory" was broken, and the Gozen Kaigi Since Emperor Showa decided to lose the war, the mainland decisive battle itself could not have happened if we honestly think about it. In this way, "It is almost a sophistry that the number of victims was rather small considering the deaths if the atomic bomb was not used.

  • @luizalmeida9399
    @luizalmeida9399 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Chiquititas

  • @timothywise9731
    @timothywise9731 3 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Kadena is pronounced ka-deena

  • @ForeverBleedinGreen
    @ForeverBleedinGreen 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    This guy sounds like Kermit lol...

    • @user-ed8wc1yr8s
      @user-ed8wc1yr8s ปีที่แล้ว

      th-cam.com/video/1js16n6IwY4/w-d-xo.html
      リトアニアの日本国総領事館に赴任していた杉原千畝がナチス・ドイツの迫害から逃れてきた多くのユダヤ難民を救出した逸話は、「東洋のシンドラー」として国内外に広く知られるようになった。その一方で、もう一人の「東洋のシンドラー」、樋口季一郎陸軍中将の史実は知られることが少ない。杉原が救ったとされるユダヤ人の数6000人を優に上回る2万人のユダヤ人を樋口中将が救ったことは、ユダヤ人社会で記録に留められているほどだが、今、彼の功績を広く世界に伝えるべく、日本、イスラエル、米国で連携の輪が広がろうとしている。
      The anecdote that Chiune Sugihara, who had been assigned to the Consul General of Japan in Lithuania, rescued many Jewish refugees who had fled the persecution of Nazi Germany, became widely known at home and abroad as the "Oriental Sindler." On the other hand, the historical facts of another "Oriental Sindler", Lieutenant General Kiichiro Higuchi, are rarely known. It is recorded in the Jewish community that General Higuchi saved 20,000 Jews, well over 6,000 Jews allegedly saved by Sugihara, but now his achievements. The circle of cooperation is about to spread in Japan, Israel, and the United States in order to spread the word to the world.
      In the United States,
      Japanese American
      Sent to a concentration camp and robbed of property.
      No different than Nazis!

  • @Blue-ff2qv
    @Blue-ff2qv 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Please get rid of the music and hire a story-telling narrator. So much information presented so tediously.

    • @rpm1796
      @rpm1796 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      This is a military lecture series... meant for 1st year West Point Greys...way out of your league.
      The kid's world of warfare section is next door.

    • @larryzigler6812
      @larryzigler6812 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@rpm1796 Killer kids ? Kool.

    • @Blue-ff2qv
      @Blue-ff2qv 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@rpm1796 If your league is poorly edited and has shitty sound in its videos maybe you should look to a new league. But then again, we have to deal with your bush league ass.

    • @user-ed8wc1yr8s
      @user-ed8wc1yr8s ปีที่แล้ว

      th-cam.com/video/1js16n6IwY4/w-d-xo.html
      リトアニアの日本国総領事館に赴任していた杉原千畝がナチス・ドイツの迫害から逃れてきた多くのユダヤ難民を救出した逸話は、「東洋のシンドラー」として国内外に広く知られるようになった。その一方で、もう一人の「東洋のシンドラー」、樋口季一郎陸軍中将の史実は知られることが少ない。杉原が救ったとされるユダヤ人の数6000人を優に上回る2万人のユダヤ人を樋口中将が救ったことは、ユダヤ人社会で記録に留められているほどだが、今、彼の功績を広く世界に伝えるべく、日本、イスラエル、米国で連携の輪が広がろうとしている。
      The anecdote that Chiune Sugihara, who had been assigned to the Consul General of Japan in Lithuania, rescued many Jewish refugees who had fled the persecution of Nazi Germany, became widely known at home and abroad as the "Oriental Sindler." On the other hand, the historical facts of another "Oriental Sindler", Lieutenant General Kiichiro Higuchi, are rarely known. It is recorded in the Jewish community that General Higuchi saved 20,000 Jews, well over 6,000 Jews allegedly saved by Sugihara, but now his achievements. The circle of cooperation is about to spread in Japan, Israel, and the United States in order to spread the word to the world.
      In the United States,
      Japanese American
      Sent to a concentration camp and robbed of property.
      No different than Nazis!