5 Things You Don’t Know: Douglas MacArthur

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  • Опубліковано 4 лис 2024

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  • @fordprefect80
    @fordprefect80 3 роки тому +23

    My grandfather saw MacArthur in the pacific during WW2. On one of the islands the Americans were having trouble dislodging the Japanese. MacArthur showed up, grandad saw him at a distance wearing his hat and corn cob pipe. He assessed the situation and gave a few orders then left. Within a week 500 Japanese had been killed and most of the island had been taken.

    • @roscomeon3965
      @roscomeon3965 Рік тому

      And how many Americans died carrying out his madcap orders ??

  • @terminusxx7360
    @terminusxx7360 5 років тому +129

    One of his badass quotes
    "We are not retreating we are just advancing in another direction".

    • @theroldan8675
      @theroldan8675 4 роки тому +2

      lol..

    • @billboth4814
      @billboth4814 3 роки тому

      I think that is Patton.

    • @jaimelaureano6649
      @jaimelaureano6649 3 роки тому +6

      @@billboth4814 ... Nope, it was Gen. Oliver P. Smith - in Korea referring to the break out from the Chosin Reservoir.

    • @patrickgrippo
      @patrickgrippo 6 місяців тому

      Called a strategic retrograde movement . The Chinese had mostly animal transport & could only go 25 mii,T most under hvt artillery shelling and air superiority .

  • @lanieoguri7337
    @lanieoguri7337 5 років тому +109

    He will stay forever in the heart of all filipinos past and present, his irreplaceable as much as philippine history is concerned! General Mc Arthur Is simply the best with a heart, THANK YOU 🙏 SIR! RIP!

    • @theroldan8675
      @theroldan8675 4 роки тому +4

      his biggest achievements.. stay in the hearth of philiphinos.. and also push for a nuclear war that would have exterminated all human kind..

    • @beverlystump5083
      @beverlystump5083 4 роки тому +7

      I remember Him and what a great Soldier he was. Truman fired him and that was a big mistake.

    • @thomasbleming7539
      @thomasbleming7539 3 роки тому +4

      "I shall return."
      General Douglas MacArthur

    • @espaciofantazma901
      @espaciofantazma901 3 роки тому +1

      He left your people and his men to starve and die by Japanese. All because he was simply the face of USA's propaganda machine. You do realize how badly USA treated your people when they first invaded your country right? One filipino man killed a US soldier, in return they murdered an entire village of at least 1000 Filipino... But if you want to glorify fascists that's up to you.

    • @poikoi1530
      @poikoi1530 3 роки тому +2

      @@espaciofantazma901 bruh, you do know that they pretty much raised the Philippines? Commonwealth, Army, and Industry? Forgive but not Forget. Better support america than actual nazis, so yeah, no

  • @candacebreeze6764
    @candacebreeze6764 6 років тому +37

    General Douglas MacArthur will always remain a deepest felt hero among Korean people.

    • @DesertRat332
      @DesertRat332 Рік тому +1

      I'm glad he saved South Korea. Today South Korea makes great appliances (LG) and great electric guitars (Sire).

  • @baboyako9192
    @baboyako9192 5 років тому +28

    He is the favourite among others here in the Philippines to the point we named a highway around the country

  • @lodemerisback
    @lodemerisback 4 роки тому +26

    He is a hero for Filipino. Thank you General Douglas MacArthur.

  • @maayongaga729
    @maayongaga729 5 років тому +42

    "I SHALL RETURN"
    Filipinos will NEVER forget this 5 star General... His Name is all over our islands. Highways, towns, buildings.
    Don't Mess up with Our Hero.
    He saved our Behinds from becoming Japanese.

    • @eddierievley107
      @eddierievley107 5 років тому

      Maayong Aga wastytyb the reason

    • @nanjiang1953
      @nanjiang1953 Рік тому

      Japan is a developed prosperous country I think you guys regret now.

    • @michaelhayden725
      @michaelhayden725 Рік тому

      those films of him walking ashore with his support staff is actually the second time that they performed this action. There was no camera crew available the first time, but MacArthur ever the self promoter insisted on the re-enactment.

  • @heyman5911
    @heyman5911 5 років тому +25

    Much respect to all non- combatants and all soldiers who fought & died for liberty during WW2. Thank you all for your galantry service... 😇

  • @toybuck1483
    @toybuck1483 5 років тому +92

    He is the only non filipino that has a rank in the philippine armed forces

    • @mushy18100
      @mushy18100 4 роки тому +3

      Darren Walsh okay go and finish all the Muslim rebels in Southern Philippines and also Chinese naval fleets off of West PH sea

    • @kiko9382
      @kiko9382 4 роки тому

      The First 5Star Rank

    • @andypaulmanguiat5115
      @andypaulmanguiat5115 3 роки тому

      @@kiko9382 ne he wasnt

  • @micha6887
    @micha6887 4 роки тому +26

    “There is no security in this earth, there is only opportunities”
    General Douglas MacArthur

    • @jimthompson471
      @jimthompson471 4 роки тому +3

      I served as a cryptographer for the general 19 54 - 57 His staff was excellent & loyal 😃😇

    • @micha6887
      @micha6887 4 роки тому +2

      jim thompson Thank you sir!The greatest generation!

  • @BadNewsLexis
    @BadNewsLexis 6 років тому +22

    Fun Fact. In the clip where Mac is being awarded his ww1 medals by Gen Pershing. The guy next to Mac is William Wild Bill Donovan. The future 1st commanding officer of the O.S.S. also known as the father of American Intelligence.

    • @billsanders5067
      @billsanders5067 6 місяців тому

      MacArthur hated William Donnavan's guts.

  • @phtevlin
    @phtevlin 7 років тому +168

    MacArthur handled the surrender and occupation of Japan brilliantly. His signature on the surrender document saved the lives of millions of people--including American soldiers, my dad being one of them. He is beloved by the Philippines--primarily for his insistance of coming to their rescue in 1944-45, deeply respected in Japan for his level headed handling of the post-war chaos, but utterly detested by the men who served under him. A very interesing mosaic.

    • @markwheeler202
      @markwheeler202 6 років тому +21

      Ask the Australians, who hate him to this day for needlessly sacrificing their soldiers in Borneo. Ask the thousands of families who lost their sons on Pelileu when no one else in the Pacific command thought it needed to be taken (only to satisfy MacArthur's ego). Ask the UN forces in Korea lost when MacArthur ignored orders not to approach the Yalu River after the Chinese warned against it.
      They only reason this guy was different from Custer was that Custer had the balls to actually step foot on the battlefield.

    • @howardwhite1507
      @howardwhite1507 6 років тому +15

      McArthur was a good politician, but a piss poor General bent on glory...

    • @craigbeatty8565
      @craigbeatty8565 5 років тому +6

      Yeah further to the last comment, he hated Australians. They refused to treat him like a god and were glad when he left Australia. There are no statues or commemorations marking his time in Australia. Australians tolerated him for 6 months before all hell broke loose in Nov 1942 in The Battle of Brisbane because of his lack of respect for our battle hardened combat proven soldiers back from North Africa and he was forced to pull his head in. Sadly at the end of WWII the Australian Govt only had two words for US forces remaking, “GET OUT.” That’s how much he was hated.

    • @megalodon4228
      @megalodon4228 5 років тому +5

      phtevlin he lied to FDR about the Philippines he lied to Truman about the Chinese in Korea and he was sorry that they dropped the bomb on Japan Eisenhower was right about him

    • @megalodon4228
      @megalodon4228 5 років тому +1

      Mark Wheeler peleliu island was Nimitz as much as I would like to blame Douglas Mac Arthur ADM halsey advised Nimitz not to do that.however he fucked UP at BATAAN

  • @JAF2991
    @JAF2991 8 років тому +426

    He is actually a very prominent figure here in the Philippines.

    • @kramnoscal_11
      @kramnoscal_11 8 років тому +9

      True

    • @billythekid1638
      @billythekid1638 8 років тому +11

      i shall return ^^

    • @brandonfredrickaldwych4179
      @brandonfredrickaldwych4179 7 років тому +63

      He is revered in the Philippines because he came back. When the Japanese attacked Philippines, the order came from the president for him to evacuate Philippines, he wanted to to resign his post so he doesn't have to evacuate but nobody was as qualified as him to take over command. In reply, he wrote back that he can't just abandon his troops, it would destroy their morale. The president wanted him to leave as soon as possible, because he used to serve as Chief of Staff, and he got captured, the Japanese would parade him in Tokyo as trophy, extract information from him and very likely behead him in a public execution which would destroy American morale. He was a high valued target as far as the president was concerned. McArthur kept requesting supplies and reinforcement for months at the Battle of Bataan but he kept getting empty promises. He was told numerous times, supplies were sent and nothing came. Finally, the president told him to go to Australia because a whole army unit was dispatched there with supplies for the purpose of retaking Philippines. When he arrived in Australia, he was enraged to find there was nothing waiting for him, then he gave his famous " I shall return" speech". He enraged when he gave that speech at the president, for tricking him into abandoning his men.
      It took him roughly 3 years. He contemplated running for presidency, but didn't go through with it, then after fighting his way through congress and a lot of politicking around them, he finally got to sit down with the president where he reminded the president that the elections were coming up and voters will not forgive the fact that the president left behind millions of American soldiers and subjects to suffer under the Japanese. It was essentially blackmail in a soft way that MacArthur was saying he would destroy the president's election campaign if the president didn't let him return to Philippines. So the president gave him his fleet, and successfully returned to Philippines, and retook philippines while the president took all the credit for his election.
      For the Filipinos, who suffered a lot under the japanese, it was a relief when he returned and drove out the Japanese. He has overseen Philippines for years, and he kept his word to return. For the Filipinos, they saw it as him, valuing the Philippines and saving the philippines from suffering. The president hated his guts with a vengeance and could wish nothing more than to relieve him. A lot of politicians did. He also played a huge part in rebuilding Philippines afterwards. Before the war, he lived in Philippines that Filipinos got to trust him. He is also respected in Japan and I think in South Korea but Filipinos saw him as a saviour from Japanese cruelty during the war.

    • @brandonfredrickaldwych4179
      @brandonfredrickaldwych4179 7 років тому +10

      I don't understand you. If he had stayed, he would be disobeying orders from the President, but if he obeyed he would be coward for abandoning his men?

    • @brandonfredrickaldwych4179
      @brandonfredrickaldwych4179 7 років тому +6

      He respected and trusted Roosevelt as far as I know, but he hated Truman. He saw truman as inept, too political. They both served in France during WW1 so it must have something to do with that but i'm too sure. They never got along even before WW2.
      But the order to evacuate came from the President. MacArthur didn't want to leave, he left under the promise that there was an army waiting for him to retake Philippine in Australia. He disobeyed the orders to evacuate first before finally leaving. The president then changed his orders from evacuate to Australia to report to command post in Australia or something like that. There was an American unit in Australia but for the defence of Australia, and not for him to command. Hence why he gave his famous "I shall return" speech because he was disappointed and enraged.
      So he ordered his friend to fight to the death, while he went to Australia hoping there was a relief force waiting for him, don't you think if the president hadn't lied to him about it, he would have continued to disobey, and stayed and fought until death in Bataan the way he ordered his friend to do so?

  • @maryannmarcelino8101
    @maryannmarcelino8101 Рік тому +1

    We Filipinos love Douglas McArthur❤

  • @toknenengburjegol6430
    @toknenengburjegol6430 5 років тому +19

    Actually seen the General himself when he went by a visit in our city of Iloilo, 1963 (64?). Was 4 or 5 y/o that time and my mother proudly pointed him to me while he delivered his speech at Iloilo Freedom Grandstand. What a memory.

    • @franktorres3081
      @franktorres3081 5 років тому +1

      That would have been awesome

    • @juantagayoutube3542
      @juantagayoutube3542 5 років тому +1

      WOW! You're very lucky!

    • @nogoodnameleft
      @nogoodnameleft 3 роки тому +3

      I think 1961. That was his farewell tour and in just Manila alone TWO MILLION FILIPINOS followed his car and cheered for him! I bet the whole country of the Philippines came out and saw him and showed him their love and appreciation in that farewell tour.

  • @douglasmacarthur2571
    @douglasmacarthur2571 8 років тому +33

    Great video! Have been waiting for something like that for ages!

    • @MarkussGonzaga214
      @MarkussGonzaga214 3 роки тому

      Hey General MacArthur Sir! "Americans Never Quit!" - Douglas MacArthur Thank you for your Service! All the best for you

  • @gemmaneeld8164
    @gemmaneeld8164 5 років тому +23

    Old soldiers never die they just fade on -Douglas McArthur

  • @AlejandroRamos-x4h
    @AlejandroRamos-x4h Рік тому +1

    Another thing that very few people know about Gen. MacArthur is that he is an engineer and was inducted into the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers { as all lst 3rd of all graduating class are}. Upon his appointment as Field Marshal Of the Philippine Army, his first priority was to recruit civil engineers to strengthen defense and gun emplacement in Corrigidor and Leyte. Fortunately for my father, he was one of only 2 civil engineers in the Philippine Army at that time and was commissioned into the U.S. Army by Gen. MacArthur himself with the same rank of lst. Lt.. and was one of the survivors of the Bataan death march. His name was lst. Lt. Alejandro S. Ramos Sr and was buried in Seattle. Wa. and was honored wit a 21 dun salute.

  • @vladislovkyzinski3430
    @vladislovkyzinski3430 7 років тому +12

    "Old soldiers never die. They just fade away."

    • @jimclark6256
      @jimclark6256 5 років тому +2

      He didn't fade away fast enough.

  • @The__General
    @The__General 5 років тому +36

    In war there is no substitute for victory.

  • @dlawodnr93
    @dlawodnr93 8 років тому +13

    Respect from Canada but i am from Korea. he is true hero ! Korea makes movie about him and release this year !!

    • @carlotacarlota9608
      @carlotacarlota9608 6 років тому +2

      Johnlim Male but the movie of general macarthur. Philippine army not involved. Why?? Bcoz many of them didnt accpt philippine army is best. I respect this general and all pilipino loves him. Im pilipino

  • @davidblaskie8987
    @davidblaskie8987 3 роки тому +9

    MacArthur didn't receive the Medal of Honor for his 1944 '45 liberation of the Philippines but was awarded it in March 1942 upon his arrival in Australia from the Philippines. Many in the military at the time felt he wasn't deserving of it as they felt he hadn't done anything heroic in the few months he was in those islands during the Japanese offensive.

    • @nogoodnameleft
      @nogoodnameleft 3 роки тому +1

      You mean leftist low-ranking WWII Bataan soldiers and REMFs like Eisenhower and Marshall thought that he wasn't heroic. Ask all the Corregidor POWs what they thought of MacArthur. They fucking loved him. He was out with the privates and sergeants at artillery batteries and on Topside everyday risking getting bombed by Japanese airplanes and Japanese artillery. The Bataan boys sadly never received that information and stupidly got anti-Mac propaganda from leftists in DC that called him "Dugout Doug". On 12/29/1941 MacArthur almost died. A bomb from a Japanese airplane landed 10 feet from him and almost killed him on Corregidor. THAT was why he didn't go to Bataan. His staff were scared about what happened with that near miss.
      Him almost getting killed for 2.5 months while at Corregidor and his daring escape via PT boat while leading a good delaying defensive campaign against the Japanese were worthy of a Medal of Honor. What other 5-star general or admiral from WWII risked themselves to daily combat and death by artillery or bombs like MacArthur did? ZERO!
      Read about his WW1 service too. The French and U.S. grunts and officers thought he was the bravest and craziest brigadier general in the war. He kept leading his soldiers in the first wave at the very front during offensives into no man's land while not wearing a helmet and he did numerous dangerous night trench raids to kill or capture German soldiers. "Dugout Doug" my ass.

    • @robertbriggs7100
      @robertbriggs7100 Рік тому +1

      That is true

    • @aislinnkeilah7361
      @aislinnkeilah7361 Рік тому +2

      He really should have received the Medal of Honor in both Vera Cruz and WWI.

    • @goldgeologist5320
      @goldgeologist5320 Рік тому +1

      Darn right he did not deserve it!

    • @bluerock4456
      @bluerock4456 Рік тому

      MacArthur ignored the pleadings of his air arm to attack the Japanese air force on the ground in Formosa & elsewhere. Aka a pre-emptive strike. The $1,000,000 bribe that he took ensured that he stayed in his dugout for FOUR crucial days! The Dugout Doug moniker, btw, was bestowed upon him by his own men.

  • @nyahbarney6334
    @nyahbarney6334 4 роки тому +27

    Fun fact: I’m actually related to him by blood, (somewhere down the line, he was related to my great (or great x many more idk) grandfather) I just learned this today through my father lol

  • @kevrgsnslolz3072
    @kevrgsnslolz3072 6 років тому +9

    He is a legend here at my country Philippines as helped us win the WWII and our General Luna

    • @nogoodnameleft
      @nogoodnameleft 3 роки тому

      He was the last American heroic figure. Just look at the politicians and generals after MacArthur's era. Bunch of losers who are too cowardly to win wars.

  • @iringkabang2368
    @iringkabang2368 4 роки тому +7

    My grand father's hero and our family's hero forever!

    • @Hahah629
      @Hahah629 3 роки тому

      Gen douglas MacArthur Is your Grandpa?

  • @carlbowles1808
    @carlbowles1808 2 роки тому +3

    My father served in the pacific under General McArthur and deeply admired him. McArthur gave big respect to black soldiers, McArthur awarded a unit citation to my father's regiment. My father was a black man. We need more general's like Douglas McArthur not the woke types prevalent today.

    • @Will-ql5db
      @Will-ql5db 2 місяці тому

      "We need more general's like Douglas McArthur not the woke types prevalent today."
      That's a false choice. DM & "wokes" are not your only two options.

  • @guruofficial2
    @guruofficial2 4 роки тому +9

    General Douglas MacArthur :"Old Soldiers Never Die, they just fade away".

  • @joshsipe5216
    @joshsipe5216 5 років тому +5

    My grandpa used to tell me a story about how at the end of WWII he was stationed in U.S. controlled Japan and once accidentally fender bended MacArthur’s Jeep and when the general yelled out my grandfathers name he basically wet him self this is the most amazing thing I know

  • @deanchristos3256
    @deanchristos3256 5 років тому +12

    Hardly ever mentioned, when still a Major in WW 1, used to personally lead small quiet patrols at night to bring back captured enemy or two for information.

    • @nogoodnameleft
      @nogoodnameleft 3 роки тому

      His WW1 service should put all doubts to the idiots who call him "Dugout Doug". "Dugout Doug" was a leftist politician game done by all the people angry about Mac stopping the Bonus Army rioters with very minimal bloodshed and for him not exactly being politically the same as FDR or Truman even though FDR still loved Mac. Truman OTOH is a worthless sack of shit who thought he was the greatest military genius of all time.

    • @aislinnkeilah7361
      @aislinnkeilah7361 Рік тому

      Actually he was a brigadier general when he led troops over the top.

  • @bluemarshall6180
    @bluemarshall6180 8 років тому +30

    PILIPINO Soldiers who Fought During the Korean War are Called the Forgotten Heroes.

    • @rizaljose8531
      @rizaljose8531 5 років тому

      @Norbero Fontanez lol

    • @theroldan8675
      @theroldan8675 4 роки тому

      forgotten assholes you mean lol

    • @thevlogofjades4172
      @thevlogofjades4172 4 роки тому +3

      @@theroldan8675 and how do you know?

    • @helloimskip
      @helloimskip 4 роки тому +2

      @@theroldan8675 You sound like the type of person to pronounce Nuclear "Nucular" and Library as "Libary"

    • @theroldan8675
      @theroldan8675 4 роки тому

      @@helloimskip you mean... someone like your mamma? lol

  • @manilajohn0182
    @manilajohn0182 5 років тому +4

    MacArthur's most valuable contribution to the United States took place when he addressed a joint session of Congress at his retirement from active service. During his speech, he stated that "If man is to survive, war must go".

    • @DesertRat332
      @DesertRat332 Рік тому +2

      I agree but unfortunately, "Only the dead have seen the end of war." (Plato)

    • @manilajohn0182
      @manilajohn0182 Рік тому +2

      @@DesertRat332 Spot on comment. At the rate we're going and the direction that we're headed, that will be the epitaph of the human race.

  • @mayvilacha9952
    @mayvilacha9952 7 років тому +3

    My dad's hero. He collected all about him, books, pictures, magazines.

    • @nogoodnameleft
      @nogoodnameleft 3 роки тому +1

      @James Estelle It did though. He was the most ingenius and luckiest (lucky is great, btw) soldier ever. Funny how the grunts and officers who loved MacArthur and served under him in WW1, WW2, and Korea were never asked for their opinions, huh? We always get spam from generals who never worked with him during combat operations or butthurt marines and sailors who hate Mac for being Army.

  • @sjyoon0603
    @sjyoon0603 5 років тому +8

    General Douglas MacArthur is a hero to Korean people. For he saved Koreans from communist invasion in 1950. We will always remember him as a guardian of freedom and liberty here in Korean soil.

  • @MilitaryDotCom
    @MilitaryDotCom  8 років тому +111

    Answer to Question: George Marshall, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Hap Arnold and Omar Bradley

    • @MrMaximfox
      @MrMaximfox 8 років тому +7

      +Military.com Don't forget George Washington. He was promoted posthumously twice.

    • @gilbertnadeau7181
      @gilbertnadeau7181 8 років тому +6

      +MrMaximfox negative, the five star rank was created during world war two. You may be thinking of the rank /general of the Army that was held by G Washington and Grant. Those were four star ranks. There is a book that talks about the five star rank created during world war two for the Navy called "The Admirals".

    • @MrMaximfox
      @MrMaximfox 8 років тому +8

      +Gilbert Nadeau, Nope. The reason that the U.S. Army only had 3 star generals for 100+ years was that they did not want to promote anyone higher then George Washington. To rectify this and promote a 4 star and later a 5 star general, they promoted Washington way after he died.

    • @MrMaximfox
      @MrMaximfox 8 років тому +1

      +Gilbert Nadeau, here is a link you may want to see: en.m.wikisource.org/wiki/Public_Law_94-479

    • @billythekid1638
      @billythekid1638 8 років тому

      patton is not included?

  • @NoctisStar
    @NoctisStar 5 років тому +4

    Here is a little unknown fact, Douglas MacArthur was considered for the extremely rare Six Star general rank ( also called "General of the Armies"), But the honor was given to George Washington for the bicentennial of the formation of the united states by President Gerald Ford, the rank was also given to General Jhon J. Pershing but it is disputed.

    • @nogoodnameleft
      @nogoodnameleft 3 роки тому +2

      They say Pershing was "higher ranked" officially than 5-Star generals but he was officially a 4-Star general. So it is very muddy on what that exactly means.

  • @SgTQuadratEnte
    @SgTQuadratEnte 8 років тому +47

    George C. Marshall, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Henry H. Arnold and Omar N. Bradley were with Douglas MacArthur the only ones to ever recieve the 5 star general rank.

    • @huntersuo5130
      @huntersuo5130 8 років тому

      Google?

    • @SgTQuadratEnte
      @SgTQuadratEnte 8 років тому

      Hunter Suo Yes to an extent. I remembered 3/5.

    • @huntersuo5130
      @huntersuo5130 8 років тому +1

      +SgTQuadratEnte Alright, I only remembered 3 as well, lmao.

    • @SgTQuadratEnte
      @SgTQuadratEnte 8 років тому

      Hunter Suo Marshall, Eisenhower were pretty obious or better said easy to guess then MacArthur of course, boom you have 3. The other ones are a bit less known.

    • @huntersuo5130
      @huntersuo5130 8 років тому +1

      +SgTQuadratEnte Yeah, I don't even know what era the other 2 are from.

  • @gameronshinozuke790
    @gameronshinozuke790 5 років тому +5

    I've always admired Douglas MacArthur
    I like his quote "Give me 20,000 filipinos and i shall rule the world" idk if i got it right but it was truly great that he trusts us filipinos a lot

    • @cooper2871
      @cooper2871 Рік тому

      You guys are beautiful and kind people in the world. I was next to you ( BNO Hongkonger).

  • @armorer94
    @armorer94 3 роки тому +1

    They named a park after him.
    But then it melted in the rain.
    With that sweet green icing flowing down...

  • @theallseeingmaster
    @theallseeingmaster 8 років тому +31

    MacArthur was terrified of his mother. He was afraid that she would find out that he kept a mistress.

    • @juantagayoutube3542
      @juantagayoutube3542 5 років тому

      @James Estelle Did it really happen? LOL

    • @Thepourdeuxchanson
      @Thepourdeuxchanson 4 роки тому +1

      @@juantagayoutube3542 William Manchester's book American Caesar describes it, It's a fantastic biography.

    • @cooper2871
      @cooper2871 Рік тому +1

      He had a great mother!

  • @1JamesMayToGoPlease
    @1JamesMayToGoPlease 2 місяці тому

    I actually did know these things about the inimitable MacArthur, having read Wm. Manchester's 'American Caesar' a long time ago. He was a genuine hero of WWII. Just, phenomenal! But in spite of my great admiration for him, I don't deny that he truly was an arrogant bastard lol. Thank you so much for sharing this! :)

  • @Franky46Boy
    @Franky46Boy 6 років тому +12

    He also organized and led the writing of the constitution of post-war democratic Japan...

    • @jimclark6256
      @jimclark6256 5 років тому +1

      He didn't write it, just took credit for the doc.

    • @Thepourdeuxchanson
      @Thepourdeuxchanson 4 роки тому +1

      @@jimclark6256 No, he wrote it, He was good at taking credit for other peoples' efforts, but the greatest part of the work was his own.

    • @nogoodnameleft
      @nogoodnameleft 3 роки тому +1

      @@jimclark6256 Nope he wrote it. He was not a lawyer so he didn't draft it but that constitution did not pass until he read it and said he liked it. He read every single article and personally ordered what he wanted written in the constitution.

    • @nogoodnameleft
      @nogoodnameleft 3 роки тому +1

      @@Thepourdeuxchanson Not his responsibility to promote other people since those people always backstabbed him and refused to give him credit. Mac did come up with Operation Cartwheel and Hollandia/Aitape and the leapfrogging strategy in contrast with Nimitz' bloody and stupid island hopping that led to massive casualties by directly invading well defended islands. It's funny because the Navy created Mac's leapfrogging strategy on paper in the 1920s as war theory but Nimitz, the Navy guy, refused to follow that strategy while Mac was the only one who practiced it in real life, HAHAHA.

  • @enricoluischavez9940
    @enricoluischavez9940 3 роки тому +2

    "Upon the fields of friendly stripes are sown the seeds, that in some other days, in some other fields, will bear the fruits of victory". . .Gen Mac

  • @paulmarks8979
    @paulmarks8979 3 роки тому +4

    Salute to the late gen. D. McArthur n all those u.s. servicemen WW2 Pacific theater

    • @cooper2871
      @cooper2871 Рік тому

      Yep. I am proud to be American 🇺🇸! God bless thise who love democracy, freedom and rules of law.

  • @kellykitkat40
    @kellykitkat40 8 років тому +7

    I think MacArthur was very cognizant of the New Media, how "M TV" it was, which is the reason he wore the sunglasses and the corncob pipe, to project an aura of confidence, and so the newspaper journalists and those under his command might not say that he looked kinda like Bela Lugosi.

    • @helenlobosco6553
      @helenlobosco6553 3 роки тому

      Excellent comment!

    • @nogoodnameleft
      @nogoodnameleft 3 роки тому

      Absolutely genius move by him. Don't forget his against regulations "Philippine Army Field Marshal Hat" that he always wore. Remember that Mac was SIXTY-ONE YEARS OLD at the beginning of WWII and he was retired. He was never meant to serve in WWII and the Korean War but FDR and then Truman knew he really was the only man for the job in the Asia-Pacific region.

    • @johnnysalter7072
      @johnnysalter7072 3 роки тому

      He had his on publicity department.

  • @davidjaeckel6395
    @davidjaeckel6395 5 років тому +7

    Hap Arnold, Omar Bradly, George Marshall, Dwight Eisenhower. Lets not forget the navy, Nimitz, Halsey, King, and Leahy

    • @jrdickersonish
      @jrdickersonish 5 років тому

      @@chriswebb1148 Your understanding is terribly wrong. Read a history book once in a while.

    • @Harldin
      @Harldin 5 років тому

      How the Hell did Halsey get it? Spruance deserves it more. If the Japanese at Leyte Gulf had been able to tell the difference between Fleet Carriers and Escort Carriers then the Japanese Battleships would have wiped out the US Landing force while Halsey was chasing down Empty Japanese Aircraft Carriers hundreds of miles north. Halsey should still have been sacked after that fiasco and probably would have been if the Japanese hadn’t Chickened out.
      The USN knows who their truly great Admirals are. Nimitz, Spruance, Fletcher, Burke, Leahy, Perry, Zumwalt have all been immortalised by having major Ship classes named after them. Halsey finally had a BURKE class Destroyer named after him in 1997.

  • @vitalissewe5889
    @vitalissewe5889 3 роки тому +1

    I'm touched, old soldier never die but simply fade away

  • @KAIROA
    @KAIROA 7 років тому +13

    Douglas MacArthur is & was my favorite General.

  • @ogiecruz8063
    @ogiecruz8063 6 років тому +1

    An executive suite in Manila Hotel in the Philippines was named for General Douglas McArthur. The only executive suite of the hotel

  • @oatmealisgood4u531
    @oatmealisgood4u531 6 років тому +4

    Many people have a different opinion on him even here in my country (ph) and they may be true, but i think the greatest thing he did for my country was to be a symbol of hope. Under heavy losses he did his best to still boost morale and give people hope for victory. It may be based on lies and media manipulation but i believe he had to do it for the sake of morale. What do you want him to say "sorry guys, your on your own, i shall NOT return". That would have crushed the people who were still fighting.

  • @howellwong11
    @howellwong11 Рік тому

    He passed me by just a couple f feet. I was part of the honor guard (ROTC) when MacArthur gave a speech at the University of Hawaii on his way to Washington after his dismissal.

  • @Buffaloc
    @Buffaloc 5 років тому +15

    Who doesn't know he received a hero's welcome when he came home from Korea. Give me a break.

    • @nogoodnameleft
      @nogoodnameleft 3 роки тому +1

      His homecoming tour was absolutely insane. All throughout 1951 he went to like 30 large U.S. cities and like 90% of each city turned out and gave him ticker tape parades. The NYC parade took SEVEN HOURS for him to finish because the people kept rushing to his car and hugging him and shaking his hand, haha!!! THAT is why Truman/Eisenhower/Marshall/FDR historians and their fans HATE MacArthur. He was really loved by the people and they really weren't. They like to blame it on Mac's "PR machine" but all those generals and politicians had "PR machines" too but they failed because Mac resonated with the American people due to his charisma and personality. The others were a bunch of rear-echelon MFers.

    • @johnnysalter7072
      @johnnysalter7072 3 роки тому

      @@nogoodnameleft, People in Germany loved Hitler, due to his charisma and personality. And I am not aware of any of the other Generals that had there on Propaganda dept. People that knew MacArthur despised him because they knew him for the fraud he was. He was the root cause of the fiasco in the Philippines, The American Empire's Disastrous Defeat in 1942
      ua-cam.com/video/cG1yLs__mec/v-deo.html

    • @billsanders5067
      @billsanders5067 6 місяців тому

      He wanted to run for president in 1952.

    • @1JamesMayToGoPlease
      @1JamesMayToGoPlease 2 місяці тому

      @@nogoodnameleft I'm a huge admirer of the immortal FDR and I *adore* MacArthur :)

  • @yahkobnewyear3384
    @yahkobnewyear3384 3 роки тому +2

    Gen. McArthur was born a hero, a legend here in the Philippines

  • @spacemarinechaplain9367
    @spacemarinechaplain9367 6 років тому +4

    I’m looking through the comments and it’s literally the same three people commenting shit about MacArthur. He took a boat to Australia, so what? I mean like what would he have done if he stayed in the Philippines? Die, be taken prisoner, both? It was a losing battle from literally the beginning, the Japanese Navy cut them off from supply, the Japanese Air Force destroyed his Air Force on the ground. I seriously don’t get these people, are they so blinded by “honor” that they don’t see the big picture? And let’s not forget he came back like he said he would.

    • @chrismontreuil2206
      @chrismontreuil2206 6 років тому +1

      Space Marine Chaplain I basically agree with you but Douglas ordered a counter attack that depleted resources and men. Even if not for that, according to history, no reinforcement was possible. All the men should have escaped into the jungle to become guerilla fighters not just a small band of men. At least they would have a chance. But I would guess that the politicians at the time made them surrender.

  • @CoronaVirus-gb5qi
    @CoronaVirus-gb5qi 4 роки тому +5

    Honorable Mc Arthur has experienced 3x wars.

  • @010bobby
    @010bobby 5 років тому +14

    He was the last Shogun of Japan..

  • @ageselram60
    @ageselram60 2 роки тому +1

    General Douglas Mc Arthur is indeed a part of our Phil. History.

  • @christopherhall4182
    @christopherhall4182 6 років тому +3

    Dwight D. Eisenhower, Omar Bradley, George Marshall and Henry Arnold. I thought Pershing was one too? My cousin graduated with Ike and Bradley from West Point 1915. My cousin retired a Colonel in 1950 and lived in Chevy Chase, MD right outside of DC. When Eisenhower was President he would call my cousin up at home and invite him to White House for lunch or dinner. Ike would also host, at the White House, class reunion dinners at the White House for his West Point class. My cousin died in 1995 at 104 years old. The first time I met my cousin was 1981 and then in 1993, he was 91 and 103 respectfully. Just bought I would that bit of trivia.

    • @hyfy-tr2jy
      @hyfy-tr2jy 3 роки тому +1

      Pershing held the equivalent rank of five stars....General of the Armies....but wore four stars to meet dress code of the era

  • @kellykitkat40
    @kellykitkat40 8 років тому +2

    I did a report on him for a school project. Wish I had kept it. I miss that typewriter. Also, took forever drawing that eagle seal and stars, for the cover. Typewriter font looks personal, whereas word processor font can drive you crazy - soo many choices. Umm, strawberry? The typewriter made the report look more historical. I think I got a 90 on it.
    Never throw away stuff from your youth. Memories cannot be bought - though one may try.

  • @terrybecker9744
    @terrybecker9744 5 років тому +3

    The 4 other 5 stars were Dwight Eisenhower, George Marshall, Omar Bradley, and Hap Arnold.

  • @robertlewis1965
    @robertlewis1965 Рік тому +1

    " I see the old flagpole still stands , have your troops hoist the colors to it's peak , and let no enemy ever haul them down ! "
    Gen. Douglas MacArthur , restoring the flag on Corregidor Feb 1945

  • @kellykitkat40
    @kellykitkat40 8 років тому +3

    At West Point, MacArthur wrote an essay on Einstein's Theory of Relativity, which in itself was impressive because Einstein was not that well known in the public's mass media consciousness yet, for the A-bomb had not yet been invented, but his essay impressed his teacher much, and he asked MacArthur if he really understood Einstein's theory. Whereupon he replied, No. And his teacher replied back, Neither do I.

    • @cooper2871
      @cooper2871 Рік тому

      😂😂😂

    • @cooper2871
      @cooper2871 Рік тому

      No worry! I am not Dimples Cooper. Though I would like to read their story.

  • @CT--gs1wj
    @CT--gs1wj 7 років тому +2

    You forgot one thing, MacArthur invented thug life and swag

  • @maxwellworldwidehistorical3801
    @maxwellworldwidehistorical3801 5 років тому +3

    Five Star Recipients 1944 -ff. General Arnold, General Eisenhower General Mac Arthur,General Marshall, General Bradley, Admiral Nimitz

    • @이정환-x7p
      @이정환-x7p 5 років тому

      You forgot Fleet Admiral Leahy.
      The senoir ranking officer of all.
      The first 5star recipient.

  • @hansstrik4704
    @hansstrik4704 3 роки тому +1

    Very pitty that times have changed, plse honor your liberators of W.O. 2 !!

  • @TheCourier006
    @TheCourier006 6 років тому +7

    He respects the Philippines his said "I came to Bataan I shall return!"

    • @stevenwayne9231
      @stevenwayne9231 5 років тому +1

      He did say I shall return as he was deserting the Philippines and his American troops to certain torture,starvation and death at the hands of the approaching Japanese army. He was a deserting coward

    • @akshaysingh4712
      @akshaysingh4712 4 роки тому +2

      @@stevenwayne9231 He was ordered 3 times to evacuate which he protested. He was a high ranking general with years of experience working for the White House. I think he held the 4th highest office from the President before he was deployed in Philippines. If he was captured, he would be paraded in Tokyo as war trophy in humiliation of the US and they would get valuable state secrets from him.
      He actually evacuated on the promise by the President that there would be a new army unit in Australia waiting for him to command and retake Bataan and drive out the Japanese. His "I shall return" speech was a speech made in anger to the President after he was told there were no new units whatsoever. The President ignored him for 3 years. He finally gave him his units after threatening to run for President himself and blackmailing Roosevelt that he will not let the American public forget the President abandoned millions of Americans in Philippines in the upcoming election.

    • @taxicab1365
      @taxicab1365 4 роки тому

      The sad thing is while taking a high level Military Course we learned that prior to the War the US Military believed that if we went to War with Japan! The British would loose Singapore 🇸🇬 and the US would loose the Philippines 🇵🇭. I could not understand how McArthur got trapped there. My best guess is he loved the Country and was determined to prevent it from falling into the hands of Japan 🇯🇵. There are people who believe that the reason he was relieved in Korea was his plan was to Nuke China 🇨🇳. He had done it to Japan so maybe there is some truth in that Theory.
      As Memorial Day ApproachesI I say God Bless our Military.
      As I say in Church Soldiers Pray for Peace.
      God Bless

  • @dberry1052
    @dberry1052 5 років тому +1

    George Marshall, Hap Arnold, Chester Nimitz, Bull Halsey, Dwight Eisenhower

    • @jiveassturkey8849
      @jiveassturkey8849 5 років тому

      David Berry Chester Nimitz was an 5 star Admiral in the Navy. George Washington was posthumously promoted to 6 star general in 1976 as part of the Bicentennial celebrations. Also George Patton was a 5 star, I believe. I could be wrong about that, but he was definitely a 4 star.

    • @jiveassturkey8849
      @jiveassturkey8849 5 років тому

      I knew I forgot another one: Omar Bradley was a 5 star

    • @dberry1052
      @dberry1052 5 років тому

      @@jiveassturkey8849 yes of course Chester Nimitz was a Fleet admiral...cant let the Army get all the glory...Omar Bradley, Ike, George Marshal and Hap Arnold were the Army generals besides Doug McArthur who were promoted to five stars generals, Navy wise Chester Nimitz, Bull Halsey and Ernest King and William Leahy were all five star "fleet Admirals"

    • @jiveassturkey8849
      @jiveassturkey8849 5 років тому

      David Berry I thought Blackjack Pershing was a 5-star? This was WWI, they didn’t really have a 5 star rank, but he was named “General of the Armies”... in fact, it seems like I read somewhere that Pershing is the second highest ranking Army officer of all time, behind George Washington

    • @dberry1052
      @dberry1052 5 років тому +1

      @@jiveassturkey8849 Pershing is the only American to be promoted in his own lifetime to General of the Armies rank, the highest possible rank in the United States Army.[Notes 1] Allowed to select his own insignia, Pershing chose to use four gold stars to distinguish himself from those officers who held the rank of General, which was signified with four silver stars.[3] After the creation of the five-star General of the Army rank during World War II, his rank of General of the Armies could unofficially be considered that of a six-star general, but he died before the proposed insignia could be considered and acted on by Congress. (wikipedia)

  • @KeybladeMaster9913
    @KeybladeMaster9913 8 років тому +10

    How about a Five Things You Don't Know on General George "Blood n' Guts' S. Patton and General James 'Mad Dog' Mattis

  • @FuadMalik
    @FuadMalik Рік тому

    Dwight Eisenhower, George Marshall, Omar Bradley, Douglas MacArthur and Hap Arnold held 5 stars each.

  • @franksimon6617
    @franksimon6617 8 років тому +9

    The five star rank went beyond the army. Does Chester Nimitz ring a bell? And others.

    • @markwheeler202
      @markwheeler202 6 років тому

      Adm. Ernest J King, for example.

    • @gregorybrown9954
      @gregorybrown9954 5 років тому +3

      He said Generals, and as anyone knowledgeable would tell you Admirals and Generals while equals, are not the same. Furthermore, if we follow your trail it too is incomplete. You did not mention, Admirals Leahey, King, and Halsey.

  • @boomerang1125
    @boomerang1125 4 місяці тому

    Omar Bradley, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Chester Nimitz, General Marshall and of course Douglas MacArthur.

  • @nathanielbaritua4198
    @nathanielbaritua4198 7 років тому +3

    " I shall return " by MacArthur

  • @truthbknown4957
    @truthbknown4957 2 роки тому

    Great Book to read or listen to. American Caesar, Douglas MacArthur 1880 -1964 . He could have been our greatest president but we will never know.

  • @kurtarnold4050
    @kurtarnold4050 5 років тому +6

    Left out gave the order to open fire on the bonus army, Patton carried out the order .

    • @DebbiesSanctuary49
      @DebbiesSanctuary49 4 роки тому

      I love history and I watched footage of how they attacked the bonus Army. It was a disgrace to treat veterans in that way, especially during the Great Depression. President didn't offer help to anyone then either. I am a womean, but my father and uncles all fought and back down the line. If you can give info and where to look it look to correct my view I would appreciate it.

    • @nogoodnameleft
      @nogoodnameleft 3 роки тому

      @@DebbiesSanctuary49 Communists infiltrated the Bonus Army, though. Wasn't a 'nutjob theory' also. The Bonus Army for some reason attacked the DC police first who were so kind to the Bonus Army for the previous 3 months and the DC police defended themselves and shot back. Also Mac was ordered by Hoover to pacify the rioters and their human shields with the army, which they did with minimal bloodshed and one death (who died while inside the shantytown when the fire started). Hoover later ordered Mac twice to not cross that bridge but Mac's deputy chief of staff (who peddled that complete lie that Mac received the orders but ignored them) refused to give the two orders to Mac for unknown reasons. Eisenhower and the ground forces brigadier general confirmed that Mac never received the orders to not cross the bridge.

    • @DebbiesSanctuary49
      @DebbiesSanctuary49 3 роки тому

      @@nogoodnameleft Thank you for the info!!

  • @PfcFloyd
    @PfcFloyd Рік тому

    Macarthur reminds me of a Hollywood actor playing the part of a military man. He was mostly concerned about his image as far as I can tell.

  • @Sasquatchvideos38
    @Sasquatchvideos38 6 років тому +7

    Because of these 5 star generals.... George Washington was promoted to 6 star.

    • @jasonjames5347
      @jasonjames5347 4 роки тому

      SasquatchVideos that’s not quite correct; there is no 6 star rank. Washington was promoted to General of the Armies (plural), a rank only previously given to John Pershing. 6 stars has only ever been proposed, not made official.

  • @Harldin
    @Harldin 5 років тому +2

    For all those who criticize him for losing in the Phillipines, there was no way the Phillipines could have been defended in early 1942. The Japanese had complete Air and Naval superiority right through South East Asia, any attempt by the US Navy to supply or reinforce the Phillipines would have resulted in the complete destruction of that force. It was only after the crippling of the Japanese Carrier forces at Coral Sea and Midway long after the fall of the Phillipines that finally allowed the US Navy to go into SE Asian Waters.

    • @mnsena
      @mnsena 5 років тому

      Because he lost his airplanes. He lost his planes because he left them as sitting ducks hours after he was informed of the attack on Pearl Harbor.

    • @Harldin
      @Harldin 5 років тому

      Mario Sena It still would not have made any difference, you can have all the Planes you like but without the Fuel, Bombs and Ammo they need they are nothing but Paper Weights. The US Forces in the Phillipines were effectively cut off from any logistics it was only a matter of time.

  • @ajibang9416
    @ajibang9416 6 років тому +15

    His name is always in Philippine history books.

  • @Neil-pf8tb
    @Neil-pf8tb 6 років тому +1

    I don't exactly know how, but he seems like the stereotype of a general. Especially here in the Philippines

  • @soniadio9977
    @soniadio9977 5 років тому +11

    He is A Genius Man. We call Him "Uncle Doug" and He loves the Philippines. 98 percent out if 💯 GPA. Let's just round it to GPA 4.0! 🐵🐵🐵🐵🐵🐵🐵🐵🐵🐵🐵🐵

    • @kentrobison588
      @kentrobison588 5 років тому

      You look like a little hornbag but WTF are you talking about?.

  • @bbjd9328
    @bbjd9328 6 років тому +1

    His mother was very involved in his life and she lived close by when he was at West Point, often pressing his shirts and ensuring her son had time to study. Also he was a key player in crushing the Bonus Army protest in 1932. William Manchester in his book American Caesar said MacArthur's hates were as huge as his ego: hating all of Europe, hating the United States Navy and hating China save General Chang Kai-Shek who thought was "the model of a proper Chinese Gentleman". One of his jobs before and after WWI was as basically publicity man for the U.S Army. In total summary, it was the U.S. Navy and Marines who were the chief combat forces in the Pacific--the SW Pacific while important was secondary to victory. Even Mountbatten and Stillwell thought MacArthur's role was puffed up a bit by him and his staff.

    • @maayongaga729
      @maayongaga729 5 років тому +1

      I will do the same if I have the same son. How much money you spend to send your kids to school and be a General to save a country?

    • @cooper2871
      @cooper2871 Рік тому

      If MacArther helped Chang to fight back communist then China won’t be red. Poor country- No luck!

  • @ehufana1
    @ehufana1 4 роки тому +5

    MACARTHUR WAS A HERO,He is the brilliant tactician.

  • @jumongespiel4636
    @jumongespiel4636 Рік тому

    I love and I'm salute for general macarthur you are one of the heroes in the Philippines

  • @seankim9143
    @seankim9143 5 років тому +18

    General MacArthur is South Korea's hero. Do not insult him

  • @adoreslaurel
    @adoreslaurel 6 років тому +1

    They had their little vanities, Patton with his ivory handles pistols and MacArthur with his officers cap embroidered with a US army badge, no common old metal emblem for him.

  • @mikeabbe2126
    @mikeabbe2126 5 років тому +6

    A friend Lonnie Davis, Stephenville, Tx. (RIP) served under him and said he was not particularly well thought of by many rank and file soldiers.

    • @geoffrohde2886
      @geoffrohde2886 5 років тому +2

      I don't doubt that - his ego was even larger that the whole nation of China, of which he viewed himself as being the next Emperor, of all presumed destinies! The famous shot of him coming ashore in the Philippines, took something like 27 takes, with him requiring a brand new uniform each time. He was certainly one of the single most arrogant human beings that has ever lived, and it was on that basis, that Dwight D. Eisenhower gave a literal ultimatum to FDR to keep him the hell out of Europe altogether - indeed, a most prudent decision! As it was, in the Pacific, get this - his plan was to take all of the Islands under the Nimitz plan, and then take all of Malaysia, Indochina, Formosa (Taiwan), and China, and then mount an invasion of Japan from China. Generals S. B. Buckner and Curtis LeMay, would have both gained an additional star if this plan had actually been accepted, and they, among others, both balked, and went with the Nimitz plan. "Doug-out-Doug", indeed, had no shortage of ambition, and mostly on the blood of however many others. It's time we recognized that fact. Geoff Rohde

    • @b58hustler86
      @b58hustler86 5 років тому +1

      My Father and two of my uncles was in the Pacific theater under General MacArthur where they worked harder than any other soldier. They were lead by southern white officers that refused to issue them weapons when they went on guard duty. They had defend them self's with what ever they could get their hand on, he may have been a good General to many but he had serious social issues that was prevalent at the time.

    • @geoffrohde2886
      @geoffrohde2886 5 років тому +2

      I am not surprised to hear that. The biggest irony there, of course, is that in that day in age, white or black, a whole lot larger portion of the population back at home was armed, than is the case at present. As far as the issue of weapons is concerned, in WWII, owing to the political maneuverings of the NAACP following WWI, when the famed "Buffalo Soldiers" were incorporated into the newly formed, US Army (with there being state units until then, with the first actual US units being formed by Abraham Lincoln in the Civil War), all black soldiers were incorporated into segregated, non-combat units.
      The entire military emphatically objected to this arrangement from the very first instant of it, but it was not up to them to change it either - that was the purview of Congress. MacArthur very probably took his spite for the whole situation out on the black soldiers themselves - they have their consolation in the fact that they were certainly not alone in this respect - he did that with plenty of others, most notably the entire US Marine Corps, especially in Korea.
      As far as I know, with their being in non-combat units notwithstanding, black soldiers in WWII were certainly supposed to be issued weapons. The entire 94th motor transport regiment, in Europe, was about 75% black, and with note to the fact that there were absolutely no racial differences within the ranks. General Eisenhower frankly made sure of that. MacArthur was a lousy general, because he was first and foremost, a lousy human being.
      Geoff Rohde

  • @garycharland3018
    @garycharland3018 6 місяців тому

    George Marshal, Ernest King, Chester Nimitz, Dwight Eisenhower, Omar Bradley.

  • @cherish6972
    @cherish6972 5 років тому +4

    So brave and brilliant... maraming salamat po.

  • @evinchester7820
    @evinchester7820 Рік тому

    If he wanted to keep his "star" he took the Commandant position. That is a BG position back then.
    But he did do a lot of good things there.

  • @johnroberts6695
    @johnroberts6695 6 років тому +5

    I loved MacArthur and despised Truman. When Marshall was asked under oath whether MacArthur was insubordinate, he said simply, "No." And he didn't. Everything he did was above board. A military commander isn't just answerable to the executive, he's answerable to Congress, and at the time he was fighting a war with his hand tied and he was being blamed for the horrible casualty rate in Korea. Every time he beat back the enemy, Truman would cut off his momentum by holding peace talks. Once the enemy had fortified itself and reestablished supply lines, the talks were off until they began losing again. They eventually had to replace MacArthur to bring about losing the war. And in my view Ridgeway was a coward for not standing up and pointing out to the American people that their kids had died for a lousy stalemate. And China never would have intervened had Truman not told British enjoys Burgess and McLean that he wasn't going to let MacArthur use atomic weapons. Once Burgess and McLean passed on that info to their Soviet masters, it soon got to the Chinese. So next time someone says MacArthur was for war in that part of the world, tell them we were already at war!

  • @direkramseychikboy9102
    @direkramseychikboy9102 6 років тому +1

    he will also be remembered in Bataan as DUGOUT DOUG!

    • @donaldnovotny5981
      @donaldnovotny5981 5 років тому

      MY UNCLE AND COUSIN WERE IN THE NAVY, THEY BOTH CALLED HIM "BUGOUT"

  • @Pigg
    @Pigg 8 років тому +22

    He was relieved of duty in Korea as he wanted to use nuclear force against the Chinese. Due to Cold War tension, Truman relieved him of his command to avoid further escalations.

    • @donupton5246
      @donupton5246 8 років тому +5

      Well not exactly. Yes, MacArthur did want to escalate to a nuclear war, but mostly he was politic'ing for a presidential slot to run against Truman in the next election.

    • @BigDaddyCruz
      @BigDaddyCruz 8 років тому +1

      He was also getting his ass kicked AGAIN.

    • @Wintersoap123
      @Wintersoap123 7 років тому +1

      The Vostro Gamer he could have beat them back if he was not relieved

    • @jimkaipanen6577
      @jimkaipanen6577 6 років тому +1

      You are right on going north to China, never Rembering) nuking him saying that Truman did not start a third world War. Think back ,less than 10 yrs. Back was the end of W.W.2 .

    • @Yitzhakhazak
      @Yitzhakhazak 5 років тому +1

      That´s why you´ve got the actual situation with North Korea now.

  • @danhclark
    @danhclark 8 років тому +1

    •Fleet Admiral William D. Leahy15 December 1944•General of the Army Dwight D. Eisenhower20 December 1944•General of the Army & Air Force Henry H. Arnold21 December 1944 & 7 May 1949•Fleet Admiral William Halsey, Jr.11 December 1945•General of the Army Omar Bradley20 September 19505

  • @richardocampo8498
    @richardocampo8498 8 років тому +33

    next you should put 5 things you don't know about George S.Patton

    • @alecskelton5518
      @alecskelton5518 8 років тому

      Yep

    • @mrmadmoody
      @mrmadmoody 8 років тому

      Yes

    • @ericmcquisten
      @ericmcquisten 8 років тому +2

      5 Things You (probably) Don't Know about Patton:
      1) Patton foresaw the future conflict (ie: cold war) with Russia, as a result of its dictator (Stalin), and its Communist ideals, where a centralized government had total control of everything, and wanted to push beyond Germany and overthrow Russia's government, and replace their government with a democratic one.
      2) Patton believed in reincarnation, and that he had been a great warrior and military leader in all his previous lives.
      3) Patton was physically and verbally abusive to his wife and family.
      4) Patton was a bit of a primadonna, considered to be difficult to work with, picky, and overly aggressive (but this is also part of what made him such a great military leader).
      5) Patton was a decorated war hero and former Olympian, just like General Macarther.

    • @mrmadmoody
      @mrmadmoody 8 років тому +1

      +Eric McQuisten Cool

    • @mrmadmoody
      @mrmadmoody 8 років тому +1

      +Eric McQuisten Cool

  • @gregpineda8660
    @gregpineda8660 3 роки тому

    The All---GOD---fearing,All---Wealthy and the All---Courageous and late 5---Star American Military General Douglas MacArthur also said," In war,There is no substitute to victory." Duty --- Honor --- Country

  • @col.cottonhill6655
    @col.cottonhill6655 7 років тому +3

    5 things you didn't know about col. cotton hill

  • @juanmonge8
    @juanmonge8 6 років тому +1

    MacArthur had a son who was a jazz drummer. I believe his name was also Arthur. I heard that he lived in Greenwich village .NYC. No one seems to have any information about him.

    • @corongjrdeleon6897
      @corongjrdeleon6897 4 роки тому

      I know he was just a kid when they escape to Australia,why didn't he follow the footsteps of his dad and grandpa.my dad fought in ww2 with his dad, unlike senator McCain family,they follow the family tradition.

    • @patrickgrippo
      @patrickgrippo 6 місяців тому

      N changed his name.

  • @wisdomcalls2475
    @wisdomcalls2475 8 років тому +13

    There is no security on this earth, there is only opportunities, General Douglas MacArthur,
    Oh how we need that spirit today, !

  • @thepandeslar8062
    @thepandeslar8062 5 років тому +1

    My uncle fought as an army private for two years, and was wounded, in the Philippines. He said that all the men he was with during that time called him 'Doogle-ass MacArthur'.

  • @naardri
    @naardri 8 років тому +13

    How about Elizabeth Cooper his Filipina mistress? He dumped her and it wasn't about a scandal it was because of his fear that his mother would find out.

    • @georgepantazis141
      @georgepantazis141 3 роки тому

      Did it in Australia too.

    • @nogoodnameleft
      @nogoodnameleft 3 роки тому

      @@georgepantazis141 ike had that army girlfriend too. they all had problems like that. so what?

  • @wolfgangholtzclaw2637
    @wolfgangholtzclaw2637 4 роки тому

    they are Omar Bradley, Dwight Eisenhower, George C. Marshal, Chester Nimitz, Admiral Ernest King... the other five star recipients...