It is amazing how the Russian soldiers look like American soldiers of the Vietnam period. Both groups were in unpopular wars, abandoned by the politicians, misunderstood by the people back home and lost in a land they knew nothing about. Discipline breaks down and they become lost. God bless the grunts of the world.
@@saml3301 The soviets thought they were helping prop up a friendly communist government while helping themselves by having neighbors who were on their side. Then it sorta turned into the at-the-time Afghan government asking the Soviets for men and weapons to keep hold of power while the people were generally pissed off because their government was basically repressing the shit out of them. Then the war escalated until the Soviets withdrew and the insurgency overwhelmed the government forces and claimed power. Very, very similar to the Vietnam war but from a communist prospective pretty much. *EDIT* I meant to clarify, the Soviets thought they were helping and that they were a needed presence to the stability and peace of Afghanistan but when they got there, they found out the normal people generally hated their guts because they were being ignored by the government and the Soviets wanted a communist government, so they were actively aiding them stay in power. Similar to how the GIs arrived in Vietnam thinking they were a bastion of freedom until people started shooting at them, then realizing they weren't needed and wanting to go home but not being allowed to. The Soviets generally thought they were helping communism flourish in willing countries through mostly peaceful means until the Afghan veterans started coming back with horror stories and talking about how they were pretty much hated by the local Afghanistanis and how they shouldn't be fighting in Afghanistan.
The soviet soldiers were nothing like the american counterparts in no way. They had different backgrounds, different states of mind and different perception of the wars. And also they imposed different influence on the local environment-the soviets built schools and factories which the local people in very palpable way benefited from.
@@MECHANISMUS That still sounds very similar to the people in Vietnam, they fortified villages distributed propaganda/food and attempted very halfassedly to win the minds of the people (although if I remember correctly they were generally popular in big cities, but absolutely hated by the country side). I would say they imposed very similar influence, considering the Soviet tactic of burning down/bombing villages near ambush sites and the reports of MiG Hind assault squads touching down in villages to kidnap and rape women. It sounds very similar to the American tactic of napalming villages suspected of helping the Viet Cong and the many war crimes that were committed. Even the goal of invading Afghanistan was the was the same as the goal of invading Vietnam. They entered to maintain a government that was generally oppressive to the people in the hope that they would remain friendly to the "helping" superpower, with the other superpower covertly providing weapons and tactics to the opposition's side of the war. The was has even been referred to as "The Soviet Union's Vietnam", although I think that is oversimplifying a little bit. I do agree the soldiers themselves were very very different culturally from the Americans though. I just think the Soviets as a whole ended up following a very similar route, with the bombings of innocent civilians causing those same civilians to join the Mujahideen/Viet Cong being a noteable point, in addition to the soldiers and invading government thinking they were helping. The disillusionment experienced by the Afghanistan war vets after their service seems to be very similar to their American counterparts as well.
As an American, I have nothing but respect and admiration for Russian veterans. They've gone through some serious shit and don't get the recognition for it like our vets do over here. We're all human beings and honestly, neither side wants to be fighting in some shitty war. God bless em'.
Thank you author for this video. It shows english speaking countries exactly Afgan war's face. Faces of 18-20 years old boys. Like ones i heard it from one russian guy "They died for a country, which vanished after 3 years".
It's like that with all the wars. It's always young men dying in droves. Rest in peace all the heroes and all the victims of senseless violence and political ambitions.
@@alexander.yaprintsev also heroin production increased 300% once we USA entered afganistan. Wars are for greed just like everything else. The poor fight n die for profit. Soviets Americans both are guilty
I would disagree. Kind of makes being in the military look like a waste of time and potential. Reminds me of the sadness of the German grunts at the end of WW1 in All Quiet on the Western Front and the Vietnam War. Its just sad.
There's just something tragic about this video. Soldiers rolling further and further into a long forgotten war. The music really makes it, especially that tunnel scene
Sign of approval from BTR driver - those fragments in inner space of vehicle give me some twisted feeling. And yeah - nice montage, well directed climax. Thanks for your work!
watching this over and over again today. The resonance between what happened with the Soviet Union in Afghanistan, at that stage in their history, and the United States today...
@@neutralevil1917 No. Comrade Americans successfully supplied weapons against the Afghan government and the limited Soviet military contingent. Now they are getting what they got.
SpectreVert "Comrade American" Striaght from a Soviet officer's mouth. Imagine how many times that had been said by a Soviet soldier on this planet after 1946 and before 1991 Definitively double digits at most
in the original footage he also says in russian about how there rockets are from american rocket launchers, but it's not reflected in the subtitles for some reason
@@tochka832 due to Western censorship, so that the West would not know from the film that the USA was arming the Taliban. Before that, they were called freedom fighters, and 10 years later, they were called terrorists. There was censorship in the West as well, not only in the East under the communists.
@@sensei_monke798 Probably something bough at socialistick block countries, then illegally reselled to him on blackmarket, as usual then. Maybe even american glasses.
The parts where it is just showing the APC crew speaks volumes about how they felt. They look so lost, confused, and sad. I couldn't blame them though, they're witnessing the collapse of their country as they knew it, and all the while they're sent out to fight in a war that they don't believe in. They're just a ragtag group of grunts in an APC, trying to get by. In America, we're generally only taught the bad parts of the Soviet Union, so when you see these men showing real emotion, its so eye opening. They're just grunts like our soldiers were in Vietnam, doing as they're told, trying to find their way. For this, I respect the hell out of Russian veterans. They were just like any soldier: They didn't want to be out fighting, and would much rather be at home with their family. God bless them.
It's really weird to think of the Soviet Union. It existed, it was a force upon the geopolitical and social landscape of the world for decades, and then, one night in December of 1991 when I was just over 1 year old... it VANISHED, for good or ill it's still tough to say. Regardless, it's kind of hard to wrap my head around. "I've seen things you people wouldn't believe. Tiger tanks bogged down in the mud near Prokhorovka. I watched the red banner flutter in the sunlight above the Brandenburg Gate. All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain. Time to die."
@@ГлебСердюков-г4ц That's true, but from an outsider's prospective it was pretty abrupt. The Soviets weren't exactly willing to show their socioeconomic weaknesses to the outside world; the first most people in the West knew of the problems inside the Soviet bloc was the fall of the Berlin wall. And just 2 years later, of course, everything came crashing down.
exactly, it was a bloody (very bloody) miracle that it even survived past the 1930-s. Killing off the most talented and rewarding moronic obedience is usually not a good long term plan for an empire. And the the predecessing russian empire was actually more dominant in its haydays relative to global powers of their time than soviet union. The stupid thing is that anything can be romanticised, the current young generation thinks the kommunism was great, maybe only having minor flaws.
@@varikasut Stalin was a paranoid sociopath, and the people who came after him all came out of his cult of personality, one way or the other. Whether communism could have ultimately succeeded as an ideology without his corrupting influence we will never know, but it's interesting to ponder. Also, if WWII hadn't happened, galvanizing the Stalin regime in the process, it's very possible that the USSR may have come apart at the seams in the 1940s and '50s. That too is an interesting thing to ponder.
@@autofox1744 it's impossible for communism to succeed since it creates many opportunities for dictatorship and corruption after realizing only this fact people should have abandon the idea of building socialistic society. Though I am not denying possibility of implementing distinct elements of socialism into capitalistic society.
Sergei Gayduk, the allyest BTR commander to ever live, would go on to further feats at the Beslan school siege. Even here as a young officer, he just oozes cool.
Decades later I hope they're all enjoying retirement in a dacha somewhere outside Moscow. Putting their feet up, having a smoke, growling at their grandkids. Whatever you do, don't die in some stupid war
Afghanistan: where empires go to die. America... 19 years in ...National Guard units guarding poppy fields. Casualties at an all time high, Green on Blue killing, record high veteran suicides. "This is fine" -Military Industrial Complex
0:12 - Favorite song came on 0:22 - All that is man 0:27 - T1000 posing as human 0:32 - Needs more enemy ears for necklace 0:36 - Understands IED impact is imminent, pops flack collar to maximum
По дорогам крутым, сквозь холодный туман, Грозно тянут зилы надрывая кардан Автоматы в руках передернут затвор Не остаться в горах так молись на мотор. Афганистан, Афганистан письма редко отсюда приходят домой письма редко отсюда приходят домой Афганистан, Афганистан Не одна ещё мама утрётся слезой Не одна ещё мама утрётся слезой Афганистан. А шофёр держит руль только сердце стучит Впереди перевал, а на нём басмачи Не отстать от своих, пока день и светло Ночью пули свистят в лобовое стекло.
Source is "AFGAN: The Soviet Experience" from 1989 and not The Trap from 2010. The Trap might have borrowed this clip. In fact Im watching it now. This clip begins at 23:15 in "AFGAN: The Soviet Experience"
the tunnel scene is surreal
KLAUDOkrompirAtomSKY the story with that tunnel is crazy though
@@MichaelDelvalle-nt4gp whats the story
@@lukebruce5234 yes it is )))
Luke Bruce i forget the specifics but google the salang tunnel fire. Thousands died
It actually looks really good.
I strive to be the guy with the reflective sunglasses at 0:21
Juicy_Shitposts proletarian feelings
ru.wikipedia.org/wiki/%D0%91%D0%BE%D1%87%D0%B0%D1%80%D0%BE%D0%B2,_%D0%92%D1%8F%D1%87%D0%B5%D1%81%D0%BB%D0%B0%D0%B2_%D0%90%D0%BB%D0%B5%D0%BA%D1%81%D0%B5%D0%B5%D0%B2%D0%B8%D1%87
Dude knows what's up
@@Terry-1973 Sort of political snowflake or person justifying the owner?
@@ivankarizaldy is worse than vetnam amerikans cant win either
and thy produce heronin so ship it back to the stats to kill ther own people
Soviet Drive with Ryanov Goslingovich
Roma Guslayakov
were are you from comrade?)
Roman Goslingov
@@Alejandro_Carpa from Mother Russia, comrade!
Снова мемы про русских
It is amazing how the Russian soldiers look like American soldiers of the Vietnam period. Both groups were in unpopular wars, abandoned by the politicians, misunderstood by the people back home and lost in a land they knew nothing about. Discipline breaks down and they become lost. God bless the grunts of the world.
Could you elaborate on the Russian side as far as an unpopular war, misunderstanding etc? That is very interesting !
@@saml3301 The soviets thought they were helping prop up a friendly communist government while helping themselves by having neighbors who were on their side. Then it sorta turned into the at-the-time Afghan government asking the Soviets for men and weapons to keep hold of power while the people were generally pissed off because their government was basically repressing the shit out of them. Then the war escalated until the Soviets withdrew and the insurgency overwhelmed the government forces and claimed power.
Very, very similar to the Vietnam war but from a communist prospective pretty much.
*EDIT*
I meant to clarify, the Soviets thought they were helping and that they were a needed presence to the stability and peace of Afghanistan but when they got there, they found out the normal people generally hated their guts because they were being ignored by the government and the Soviets wanted a communist government, so they were actively aiding them stay in power.
Similar to how the GIs arrived in Vietnam thinking they were a bastion of freedom until people started shooting at them, then realizing they weren't needed and wanting to go home but not being allowed to. The Soviets generally thought they were helping communism flourish in willing countries through mostly peaceful means until the Afghan veterans started coming back with horror stories and talking about how they were pretty much hated by the local Afghanistanis and how they shouldn't be fighting in Afghanistan.
The soviet soldiers were nothing like the american counterparts in no way. They had different backgrounds, different states of mind and different perception of the wars.
And also they imposed different influence on the local environment-the soviets built schools and factories which the local people in very palpable way benefited from.
@@MECHANISMUS That still sounds very similar to the people in Vietnam, they fortified villages distributed propaganda/food and attempted very halfassedly to win the minds of the people (although if I remember correctly they were generally popular in big cities, but absolutely hated by the country side). I would say they imposed very similar influence, considering the Soviet tactic of burning down/bombing villages near ambush sites and the reports of MiG Hind assault squads touching down in villages to kidnap and rape women.
It sounds very similar to the American tactic of napalming villages suspected of helping the Viet Cong and the many war crimes that were committed. Even the goal of invading Afghanistan was the was the same as the goal of invading Vietnam. They entered to maintain a government that was generally oppressive to the people in the hope that they would remain friendly to the "helping" superpower, with the other superpower covertly providing weapons and tactics to the opposition's side of the war. The was has even been referred to as "The Soviet Union's Vietnam", although I think that is oversimplifying a little bit.
I do agree the soldiers themselves were very very different culturally from the Americans though. I just think the Soviets as a whole ended up following a very similar route, with the bombings of innocent civilians causing those same civilians to join the Mujahideen/Viet Cong being a noteable point, in addition to the soldiers and invading government thinking they were helping. The disillusionment experienced by the Afghanistan war vets after their service seems to be very similar to their American counterparts as well.
As an American, I have nothing but respect and admiration for Russian veterans. They've gone through some serious shit and don't get the recognition for it like our vets do over here. We're all human beings and honestly, neither side wants to be fighting in some shitty war. God bless em'.
Internet is beautiful, comrade.
Я знаю приятель😍
Ikr
Indeed it is
Solid T hey someone else knows about trigun....
Thank you author for this video.
It shows english speaking countries exactly Afgan war's face. Faces of 18-20 years old boys. Like ones i heard it from one russian guy "They died for a country, which vanished after 3 years".
It's like that with all the wars. It's always young men dying in droves. Rest in peace all the heroes and all the victims of senseless violence and political ambitions.
More people die from Afghan heroin every year in Russia than USSR lost in 7 years of the war.
Yes
@@alexander.yaprintsev also heroin production increased 300% once we USA entered afganistan. Wars are for greed just like everything else. The poor fight n die for profit. Soviets Americans both are guilty
This deserves oscar
🏆
This is how ads for joining army should look like
Well it's kinda sad so
This will be life but you will be with brothers and sisters. You will make a difference.
@@ThePoshPrince exactly
I would disagree. Kind of makes being in the military look like a waste of time and potential. Reminds me of the sadness of the German grunts at the end of WW1 in All Quiet on the Western Front and the Vietnam War. Its just sad.
dude the edit with the song together is a fucking masterpiece, thanks for that!
Земля пухом павшим ребята и крепко здоровья живым!
✊🏻🚩🇷🇺
yeah this didn't age well tbh
Thank you incredibly random youtube recommendations for bringing me here, this is the best thing on the internet
yeah me too bro
There's just something tragic about this video. Soldiers rolling further and further into a long forgotten war. The music really makes it, especially that tunnel scene
Yeah. Really makes me think about what happened to these young men and if they came out okay.
1:36 man he fits so perfect!!!
Could literally be an album cover or a movie frame
1:15 Best moment
That shot is Kino
Fucking this. Going through the tunnel and getting that light from the side hitting the BTR and the chorus hitting.... purely orgasmic
Da
absolutely stunning shot with timing ".. There's something inside you, It's hard to explain .."
Cinematography is on point
Sign of approval from BTR driver - those fragments in inner space of vehicle give me some twisted feeling.
And yeah - nice montage, well directed climax. Thanks for your work!
Кристобаль Хозяевич I used to drive the m2a3 Bradley. Inspired by the BMP. It seems to be very similar. Our Stryker is inspired by the BTR80.
Ah, nice. All those machines have that spirit, you know - it's not a tank, but you stll feel yourself like iron cavalry.
Heard this song 100 times before, and was kind of sick of it. But this video made me fall in love with it again.
Same here
Congratulations comrade Americans, you were born lucky
Woah, its like a different meaning now
Ebin Ecks Dee "Comrade Americans" from an actual Soviet Trooper
Worst day was 120 degrees outside 140 in a bradley with a 4 inch fan for circulation i still cant wash the smell off me
Thanks to the fall of the ussr famine was a common thing in my home country
@thetimekillerx Whats the name of it
watching this over and over again today. The resonance between what happened with the Soviet Union in Afghanistan, at that stage in their history, and the United States today...
Yup. Fate of empires
@@neutralevil1917 No. Comrade Americans successfully supplied weapons against the Afghan government and the limited Soviet military contingent. Now they are getting what they got.
@@cxtabs I see no contradiction between you and me
@@neutralevil1917 USSR in Afghanistan NOT US in Vietnam. Сomparison is incorrect. And that it.
@@cxtabs Vietnam? Dude, I said NOTHING about Vietnam. You're talking to the voices in your head, not to me
Damn, the statement at 2:39 is truly incredible, in so many ways
SpectreVert "Comrade American" Striaght from a Soviet officer's mouth. Imagine how many times that had been said by a Soviet soldier on this planet after 1946 and before 1991 Definitively double digits at most
@@rubenlopez3364 come on, be more realistic. With probably millions passing through ranks in this time period
Thanks to these guys, this masterpiece survived for us to see it 30 years later x)
in the original footage he also says in russian about how there rockets are from american rocket launchers, but it's not reflected in the subtitles for some reason
@@tochka832 due to Western censorship, so that the West would not know from the film that the USA was arming the Taliban. Before that, they were called freedom fighters, and 10 years later, they were called terrorists. There was censorship in the West as well, not only in the East under the communists.
this is actually better than I thought it was going to be
2:01 i coulda sworn this song was specifically made for that man. What a badass 😎
I want to know what kind of glasses is he wearing
@@sensei_monke798 Probably something bough at socialistick block countries, then illegally reselled to him on blackmarket, as usual then. Maybe even american glasses.
That's Dale Earnhardt
Bruce Lee poster and an Adidas sticker,. Couldn't be more Slav
Exactly what i thought aswell! :)
Long live shashlik king!
Some say when a slav squats, his marksmanship skills increase tenfold.
Пива бы ещё
Most of them are from central Asia but recently they've been putting more and more Russians in
@@kangobango2115 *they have no connections with the locals which makes it easy for them to pull the trigger*
1:10 looks like the opening to an 80's Ridley Scott movie
I drove on the same road in 2015. Man I didn't except it... It feels like I'm back there. Masar to Kunduz...
The 10 seconds between 1:36 - 1:46 would make an excellent loop, like a loading screen.
Это гениально! Спасибо автору за этот метамодерновый шедевр!
The parts where it is just showing the APC crew speaks volumes about how they felt. They look so lost, confused, and sad. I couldn't blame them though, they're witnessing the collapse of their country as they knew it, and all the while they're sent out to fight in a war that they don't believe in. They're just a ragtag group of grunts in an APC, trying to get by. In America, we're generally only taught the bad parts of the Soviet Union, so when you see these men showing real emotion, its so eye opening. They're just grunts like our soldiers were in Vietnam, doing as they're told, trying to find their way. For this, I respect the hell out of Russian veterans. They were just like any soldier: They didn't want to be out fighting, and would much rather be at home with their family. God bless them.
Nah, it's just boredom
Yeah they're just bored. Americans LOVE to project their Vietnam Syndrome onto everybody. Stay in your lane, bucko.
@@rogerdinhelm4671 There is no time to be bored in the war
Real niggas, настоящий пацаны. RIP those who didn't come home, my dad lost friends in that war
Поистину шедевр...Монтаж,оператор,люди,песня...Нет слов,одни эмоции...
perfection
Amazing. Nostalgic. Sad. Tragic.
life is art is play
0:12
5 minutes into Afghanistan and Chill and he gives you this look
Lmfao 🤣
it's crazy how well the vid and music match.
Наши ребята!
ANCAK KORKAKLAR KAÇAR.😁🤗😆🌙🌙🐓🍀👇👎
@@ahmetyasardemirag5791в этом ты прав, трусы убегают и к ним на шасси цепляется мирняк. А Наши Парни всего уходят героями и с высоко поднятой голой😉
It's really weird to think of the Soviet Union. It existed, it was a force upon the geopolitical and social landscape of the world for decades, and then, one night in December of 1991 when I was just over 1 year old... it VANISHED, for good or ill it's still tough to say. Regardless, it's kind of hard to wrap my head around.
"I've seen things you people wouldn't believe. Tiger tanks bogged down in the mud near Prokhorovka. I watched the red banner flutter in the sunlight above the Brandenburg Gate. All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain. Time to die."
Well USSR didn't die immidiatly at one moment, the process took decades before 1991
@@ГлебСердюков-г4ц That's true, but from an outsider's prospective it was pretty abrupt. The Soviets weren't exactly willing to show their socioeconomic weaknesses to the outside world; the first most people in the West knew of the problems inside the Soviet bloc was the fall of the Berlin wall. And just 2 years later, of course, everything came crashing down.
exactly, it was a bloody (very bloody) miracle that it even survived past the 1930-s. Killing off the most talented and rewarding moronic obedience is usually not a good long term plan for an empire. And the the predecessing russian empire was actually more dominant in its haydays relative to global powers of their time than soviet union. The stupid thing is that anything can be romanticised, the current young generation thinks the kommunism was great, maybe only having minor flaws.
@@varikasut Stalin was a paranoid sociopath, and the people who came after him all came out of his cult of personality, one way or the other. Whether communism could have ultimately succeeded as an ideology without his corrupting influence we will never know, but it's interesting to ponder. Also, if WWII hadn't happened, galvanizing the Stalin regime in the process, it's very possible that the USSR may have come apart at the seams in the 1940s and '50s. That too is an interesting thing to ponder.
@@autofox1744 it's impossible for communism to succeed since it creates many opportunities for dictatorship and corruption after realizing only this fact people should have abandon the idea of building socialistic society. Though I am not denying possibility of implementing distinct elements of socialism into capitalistic society.
Как-то грустно стало. И курить захотелось
7 утра, я не спал всю ночь. Уже в кровати. Пойду на балкон... пару сигарет еще осталось
Это потому, что ты из России
По комментарию понятно, что ты думмер.
@@thehammerbreake9885 а по нику.....
@@thehammerbreake9885 кринж чел.. хуюмер епта
This video is a hymn for the life, death and everythings between.
thank you for sharing this, good workout inspiration. Героям вечная слава!
Now this song makes sense.
0:19 bruce lee poster
yep, real Slav detected.
The music and the video fit so well together!
Sergei Gayduk, the allyest BTR commander to ever live, would go on to further feats at the Beslan school siege. Even here as a young officer, he just oozes cool.
3:42 best moment
God. This is pure gold.
Очень синхронизировано , луч от солнца в туннеле
Decades later I hope they're all enjoying retirement in a dacha somewhere outside Moscow. Putting their feet up, having a smoke, growling at their grandkids. Whatever you do, don't die in some stupid war
You are 100% rigth, peace to your house.
Russians are trash - their history is one of aggression and violence against their neighbors.
может ты и прав . и мне их не жаль. но вас мы всёр авно победим.
Yes
I am so stuck on this song and video. Feels like their ghosts stuck driving around in the warzone and they don't even know their dead
Amazing observation, you're spot on
It's goddamn heartbreaking. So many of those boys died. So many of the boys we never see, never will see, died too. You're still the same.
15.000 in 10 years, yea. Now, here in Russia, 8.000 die of overdose (heroin usually) each fucking year. And try to guess where this heroin is make.
Слава Советским Воинам! Вечная память погибшим в Афганистане!
Slava CCCP ✊🏻🚩
The last true warriors of this great country...
I’m not crying, you’re crying
2:08 I think that spot is in Northern Afghanistan. I remember passing through it when I was deployed there with NATO.
k
Chaim Rothberg NATO fucked by Afghan Taliban
Just like russian in fact. NATO get fucked in the 2000' by the trap they build 20 years earlier against the soviet
@@bigben6707 check yo history the Soviets experienced the same
@@mustafakamalsaikia1359 you to
Afghanistan: where empires go to die.
America... 19 years in
...National Guard units guarding poppy fields. Casualties at an all time high, Green on Blue killing, record high veteran suicides.
"This is fine" -Military Industrial Complex
Lmfao yup
And big media is complicit in under-reporting.
0:12 - Favorite song came on
0:22 - All that is man
0:27 - T1000 posing as human
0:32 - Needs more enemy ears for necklace
0:36 - Understands IED impact is imminent, pops flack collar to maximum
that's exactly how the soldiers usa are behaving there now.
Nie mogę przestać słuchać i oglądać
Damn, the editing on this is phenomenal.
Wow... this was a great video.
ikr
По дорогам крутым, сквозь холодный туман,
Грозно тянут зилы надрывая кардан
Автоматы в руках передернут затвор
Не остаться в горах так молись на мотор.
Афганистан, Афганистан
письма редко отсюда приходят домой
письма редко отсюда приходят домой
Афганистан, Афганистан
Не одна ещё мама утрётся слезой
Не одна ещё мама утрётся слезой
Афганистан.
А шофёр держит руль только сердце стучит
Впереди перевал, а на нём басмачи
Не отстать от своих, пока день и светло
Ночью пули свистят в лобовое стекло.
Beautiful camerawork and editing
This video was better than I thought it was
My father was in Afghanistan in 1979, when war was not declared.
Same my dad is Afghan
Авган это паметь вам ребята, братья мы будим жить где мы бы не были, спасибо вам за ролик
Ι am now in love with this video
Source is "AFGAN: The Soviet Experience" from 1989 and not The Trap from 2010. The Trap might have borrowed this clip. In fact Im watching it now. This clip begins at 23:15 in "AFGAN: The Soviet Experience"
you have a link please ?
Belenor I can only see the trailer for that film, do you have a link for the whole thing please?
1:36 Fits well with the song.
I worked in Moscow for two months and I love Russian people. such wars are so sad.. from turkey
This hits a little too close to home. I just want to weep.
Through the Dark and then @1:15 - Perfect 👍🏽🌈😎
JMcmstr08 that moment shows light is meaningless if there is no dark, they complete each other
1:05 through 1:55 is, as someone else said in the comments, surreal... Fantastic video.
One of my favorite songs in a very interesting music video... Thank you
0:22 this guy is my spirit animal
great editing!
Brilliant and mesmerizing.
ладно,ютуб спасибо за годноту спустя 7 лет
Still watching in 2019
Edit : Ty for 40 likes : ) , hold on . 2020 will be come !!
Какой то душевный видос получился
seeing giorgio moroder on a russian apc while kavinsky nightcall is played. it's epic
Absolutely Beautiful
Glory to The Soviet internationalist Soldiers!
Peace be with you, Afghanistan!
❤️
❤❤❤All my love...
Shit I broke my replay button
soviet solders are just like us god bless them all
Ill give this song my life
Beautifully done..
In 0:11 Father of Ryan Gosling
I drive
Perfect.
came for the memes, stayed for the aesthetics
yo amazing video, ima put this one on when i wana listen to nightcall with the hommies, you get the +1 subscription from me dawg
These are the men I killed in Metal Gear Solid 5 :(
You're gonna extract him?
It this the truly trailer for MGS V
You never killed men. And stop call bunch of useless pixels as a men.
Oof
J Strix do you call movie/book characters fictitious men? Man you sound fun in parties.
awesome montage !
.
0:22 The Legend says he's still looking F edgy and riding that BMP.
It's a BTR bro
@@huseyinonatturkglu I know bro : still a Legendary crew.
@@Armawulf Indeed they are!
Great mashup!
Actually fits surprisingly well
Отличное видео!
true 80s vibe
The pure power of this video...
This is addictive!
Posting to say this audio/video combo is epic.
ЭТО
ПРОСТО
ОХУЕННО
!!!
Still watching 2020 xd