Desert Storm - The Air War, Day 1 - Animated

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  • Опубліковано 9 тра 2024
  • 17th January 1991 - Operation Desert Storm begins. The largest military alliance in 50 years moves to liberate Kuwait, beginning with a massive "Shock and Awe" air assault on Iraq on Day 1. 2775 sorties are conducted against strategic Iraqi targets in the first 24 hours of the Air War.
    / theoperationsroom
    / the_ops_room
    Special thanks to my Patreons: Alex Pickworth, imfromthe808, John Smaha, omega21, Casual Observer, Damien Dec, Escipio Sumski, Henry W, John Hesketh, Orde, Riley Matthews, Robby Gottesman, Ryan Sandercock, The Man They Call Asher, Zac W, Dave, Chris Roybal, Kelson Ball
    Music: www.purple-planet.com

КОМЕНТАРІ • 14 тис.

  • @TheOperationsRoom
    @TheOperationsRoom  3 роки тому +12238

    This was a VERY big effort. I hope you all enjoy it as much as I enjoyed producing this for you. It would be awesome if you'd all Like and leave a comment, it would really help get this video out there!

    • @zackyjenkinson6902
      @zackyjenkinson6902 3 роки тому +94

      After you finish up with Desert Storm, could you do some videos on some of the most famous WWII bombings, like the Bombing of Darwin, Operation Gomorrah, Operation Tigerfish, and Operation Meetinghouse?

    • @mechietech5176
      @mechietech5176 3 роки тому +52

      Pls make a video on 1971 Indo Pak war

    • @christopherplantijn3798
      @christopherplantijn3798 3 роки тому +162

      This was a fantastic video! I know a lot of people will ask you to cover other operations. I just want to let you know that I enjoyed the video shown right here. You did a great job. I'm not even thinking about what you'll do next because I'm still marveling at the outstanding quality of this one. Thank you for putting the effort into making this.

    • @aliasales
      @aliasales 3 роки тому +42

      I right away know that for this video is needed ALOT of reaserch, so I apriciate that 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏

    • @Rosk03
      @Rosk03 3 роки тому +30

      Very BIG effort !!! Wow.... Omg, this is amazing

  • @RadioactiveSherbet
    @RadioactiveSherbet 3 роки тому +7773

    Sending B52s from the continental US is like the ultimate flex.

    • @Wond3rland___
      @Wond3rland___ 3 роки тому +697

      *snorts a line of coke followed by banging head on table* says in a good ole boy accent, “let’s fuckin send bombers from the swamp over to Iraq”

    • @DeliciousManX
      @DeliciousManX 3 роки тому +949

      As soon as he said "Barksdale" I said, "Holy shit, that's just down the street from my house! They flew all the way to Iraq from there?!?!?!"

    • @jarenthomas9091
      @jarenthomas9091 3 роки тому +97

      @@DeliciousManX Dude my family lives in Doyline and Minden area

    • @Wond3rland___
      @Wond3rland___ 3 роки тому +1243

      @@angelogandolfo4174 if that’s a British flag as your pfp, and you’re British, you’re talking as the BIGGEST hypocrite I’ve ever come across

    • @mcallahan9060
      @mcallahan9060 3 роки тому +345

      @@angelogandolfo4174 The Bahgdad air defense was designed and built by the Russian's, as was the entire Iraqi air defense system in general, and in fact was manned by Russian "advisors" and still got stomped. I understand why your so triggered though. Go have a nice cry for yourself. Maybe treat yourself to that gender reaasignment surgery you've been putting off.

  • @mpkp2011
    @mpkp2011 3 роки тому +6974

    see this is the reason that regular TV is losing customers. This is purely amazing content

    • @jeffd6527
      @jeffd6527 3 роки тому +240

      What, you don't like watching American Pickers or Ancient Aliens on the History channel? I miss the days when they showed legit history.

    • @dirtythetroll9460
      @dirtythetroll9460 3 роки тому +15

      American pickers are nor bad tho

    • @jackandlaneysdad
      @jackandlaneysdad 3 роки тому +31

      Shit this war was televised

    • @aandc2005
      @aandc2005 3 роки тому +4

      I agree 100%

    • @TRUMP_WAS_RIGHT_ABOUT_EVRYTHNG
      @TRUMP_WAS_RIGHT_ABOUT_EVRYTHNG 3 роки тому +53

      I hardly watch regular tv anymore! It’s all doo: and gloom or crappy dramas or stupid scripted comedy. You tube has all my favorite genres with no commercials 🤟🏻. Now if you tube could just stop censoring and demonetizing people that’d be great .

  • @smileyface6583
    @smileyface6583 Рік тому +3163

    Desert Storm wasn’t a military operation, it was art. it was an absolute masterpiece of strategy, logistics and coordination.

    • @Techno_Idioto
      @Techno_Idioto Рік тому +124

      It was a piece of fucking art, par none.

    • @martinrps13
      @martinrps13 Рік тому

      It was just another war that the USA lost

    • @TypausZuendorf
      @TypausZuendorf Рік тому +248

      And basically everything Russia is not capable of doing ^^

    • @Techno_Idioto
      @Techno_Idioto Рік тому

      @@muba000 If you're asking me, it was an act of terror. Doesn't excuse the illegal actions the U.S undertook in the wake of it.

    • @goldbullet50
      @goldbullet50 Рік тому

      Americans have always mastered the art of destruction. I'll give them that. Maybe one day we will help their enemies the same way we have helped Ukraine.

  • @nicksiegfried4906
    @nicksiegfried4906 Рік тому +319

    The whole fact that they were watching the news in the war room so they could tell when the F-117s hit their targets is insane to me

    • @tomfinlay7373
      @tomfinlay7373 2 місяці тому

      I remember watching CNN live as they went off the air. It was surreal. The TAC was monitoring all of thew news stations but according to other accounts that I have read, the news stations were not being used for BDA (bomb damage assessment), more for seeing if any actionable intelligence could be gleaned and to monitor what was being said. Their primary BDA was coming from on ground intel in Baghdad including paid sources in the Iraqi military, plus satellite live feeds, plus tapped comms cables. Tom Clancy co-wrote a non-fiction book with Chuck Horner called Every Man a Tiger, I highly recommend it.

    • @RazorsharpLT
      @RazorsharpLT 29 днів тому +5

      Newscasters were a perfect scout in the day. There's no way Saddam's forces would target them, and they have free access live feed 24/7 to the capital.

  • @drksideofthewal
    @drksideofthewal 2 роки тому +6383

    I think Russia’s logistics foulup in Ukraine underscores how impressive this operation was, from a strategic standpoint.

    • @drksideofthewal
      @drksideofthewal 2 роки тому +1627

      @@YY-mk4ti
      1. The fact that the US can rally a force of 1 million to attack a country halfway around the world, whereas Russia struggles to muster 200k to attack a country it *borders* only proves my point.
      2. Iraq at this time had a much more impressive air defense network than Ukraine, which more than compensates for Ukraine’s somewhat larger size. Also, again, some of the US forces were attacking from halfway around the world, so that’s hardly an excuse.

    • @drksideofthewal
      @drksideofthewal 2 роки тому +989

      @@YY-mk4ti
      1. Allies are a part of warfare, the fact that the US can rally 35 countries to its cause but Russia can't is a major geopolitical weakness on the part of Russia. Furthermore, 700,000 of the coalition troops were from the US alone, and the US did the lionshare of the work during the initial air campaign.
      2. Your original point, was that Ukraine was harder to airstrike due to its geography. I countered by saying that the geographical advantage was balanced by the fact that Iraq had far superior air defense. In other words, geography doesn't work as an excuse for Russia.
      3. If you think that moving hundreds of thousands of tons of war material across an ocean, even in the "modern age" is a trivial matter then you have *much* to learn about logistics. What's more, this point directly contradicts your original point that Ukraine's larger size relative to Iraq made it harder to invade. If, as you say, attacking a country from across the world is "pretty easy" in the modern day, that just makes running out of gas 100 miles away from your own country all the more embarassing of a logistical failure.

    • @daxpro9074
      @daxpro9074 2 роки тому +310

      @@YY-mk4ti Oh man, the Iraqi forces that entered Kuwait are from the elite of the Republican Guard, made up of 7 legions, each corps is 80,000 soldiers, in addition to 3 armored divisions and 5 tank battalions. A state and it lasted for 8 months so that they were able to liberate Kuwait, so the war of Kuwait and Ukraine is not comparable

    • @bobtank6318
      @bobtank6318 2 роки тому +87

      Russia honestly should've just copied the Desert Storm day 1 playbook. The invasion would be going a lot better.

    • @bcf1237
      @bcf1237 2 роки тому +378

      @@bobtank6318 that's assuming that Russia even had half the amount and quality of the assets the US used in Iraq

  • @bplup6419
    @bplup6419 3 роки тому +1206

    Imagine sipping your coffee, setting it down, grabbing your binoculars and looking out the window to see four apaches just hovering in the distance pointed at you.

  • @rickybojangles162
    @rickybojangles162 Рік тому +1310

    Desert storm is a perfect example of 2 things, 1, technological superiority. 2, intense planning. These 2 factors allowed what was basically a complete clusterfuck to absolutely decimate Iraq in a matter of hours and days. Immensely impressive warfare.

    • @Kaiserboo1871
      @Kaiserboo1871 Рік тому +119

      This wasn’t impressive.
      It was a damn masterpiece.
      This was more then an operation, this was art. And I’ve come to appreciate it even more now that I’ve seen how a major operation like this can fail by seeing the result of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

    • @SurplusTrader
      @SurplusTrader Рік тому +25

      meanwhile russia

    • @justing42
      @justing42 Рік тому +6

      We referred to it as a weekend exercise

    • @thethirdman225
      @thethirdman225 Рік тому +4

      3. Overmatch.

    • @thethirdman225
      @thethirdman225 Рік тому +15

      @@patchouliknowledge4455 Calm down with the hubris and the hyperbole.
      Iraq was a second-tier force, equipped with second-tier weapons. The coalition was a force designed to take on the entire Soviet Union and WarPac force and was precisely configured to do so. It also happened just as that combat model was about to be replaced and it was used against a military force which was configured along the lines of the 1970s Soviet model.
      In damn well should have worked.
      Furthermore, it’s a military axiom that we learn more from our defeats than we do from our victories and we are seeing the problems of some of the practices used in the 1991 war still getting in the way today. This level of tactical laziness has not gone unnoticed in the Pentagon and strategic advisors, some of whom cut their teeth in this exact campaign, are fighting to correct some of these bad habits to this day.
      It may end up being a case of winning the battle but losing the war.

  • @dangilliland3627
    @dangilliland3627 7 місяців тому +166

    As a vet who spent 7 months floating in the Persian gulf and red sea, I can tell you that we trained,trained and trained some more. Every day was crazy with man overboard drills and general quarters,as well as doing your job 16 to 20 hours a day. We trained with all countries and everyone on sea or shore worked long and hard. Thanks to everyone who helped make it a total success

  • @MasterClassComments
    @MasterClassComments 3 роки тому +2221

    I had absolutely NO idea the air-side of desert storm was this immense. And each little aircraft in the video respresented the ACTUAL amount of aircraft flying, right?? Good god man.

    • @MrSirwolf2001
      @MrSirwolf2001 2 роки тому +221

      And he still left out the OV-1D/RV-1D Mohawks that gathered intel before and during the air war, and the following ground war. It was one of the sources that allowed us to collect and identify ground based missile systems, radar emplacements, photographic data, and individual troop movements in real time.

    • @fireboltaz
      @fireboltaz 2 роки тому +32

      I was in WW Desert Storm II

    • @mmatthews61687
      @mmatthews61687 2 роки тому +96

      @@fireboltaz those darn Iraqi Nazis!

    • @brandonmcandrew4859
      @brandonmcandrew4859 2 роки тому +16

      It was the airforce that beat them and the army sweeped the rest up

    • @thericepotato5847
      @thericepotato5847 2 роки тому +46

      Really shows the US air power, even on our own I can't name another country that can LITERALLY darken the skies with how many aircraft we can deploy st once

  • @aquatone327
    @aquatone327 2 роки тому +2923

    The logistics and timing of all of this are incredibly impressive.

    • @looinrims
      @looinrims 2 роки тому +167

      Something people forget is the U.S. military isnt the most powerful *just* because it has powerful stoof and lots of it, but because it can support all of it anywhere on the planet with the space to put it
      The Royal Navy is similar, being the only other nation that isn’t america that can be anywhere, because of its massive logistics

    • @Bill31400
      @Bill31400 2 роки тому +58

      @@looinrims
      > The Royal Navy is similar, being the only other nation that isn’t america that can be anywhere, because of its massive logistics
      It isn't the 90's anymore. In the last 20 years, only France (Mali) have done truly solo military deployment far from it's border. The UK army biggest spending is on maintenance of outdated equipement past their lifetime and retired soldiers pay, not actual military capacities.

    • @looinrims
      @looinrims 2 роки тому +11

      @@Bill31400 it’s not ‘deployment far away’ it’s ‘can you deploy your entire navy far away?’
      The sealift fleets of the US and RN are unmatched, hence their ability to do all that

    • @Bill31400
      @Bill31400 2 роки тому +42

      @@looinrims Once again, you are still living in the 90's. There is a VERY worrying downscaling of the UK military power over the past two decades. Current UK military would LOSE the falkland war.
      I'm saying this as a UK resident.

    • @looinrims
      @looinrims 2 роки тому +31

      @@Bill31400 being a resident doesn’t do anything to support your argument, all it does for me is telegraph that you’re insecure about your argument and need an appeal to authority to make it sound better
      Even if you mean the Uk today Vs the Argentina of back then, the Argies would still lose, regardless of the ‘downscaling’ (which I find interesting without supporting information considering the expansion of the carrier fleet)

  • @jcasma
    @jcasma Рік тому +3161

    The US defeated the 4th largest army thousands of miles from home and Russia is losing against Ukraine right in their border. And people still compare the US to Russia LMAO

    • @misirlou5179
      @misirlou5179 Рік тому

      russia is gonna need never before seen amounts of copium after this

    • @christianv7997
      @christianv7997 Рік тому +269

      Yea I just watched a video on part of 101st being deployed to Europe and all the comments were talking about how the USA would get destroyed against the battle hardened Russians

    • @jacksonredman1110
      @jacksonredman1110 Рік тому +405

      Ukraine has the backing of nato and Iraq was fighting against it. Wrong to compare the two

    • @HFordMCAZ
      @HFordMCAZ Рік тому

      @@jacksonredman1110 RuSsIA iS FiGhTiNg aLl oF NATO!!!!!

    • @ahrhebbx2239
      @ahrhebbx2239 Рік тому +76

      Severely underestimating the Russians. Morale among the troops low and morale is everything in war.

  • @boredomstudios5464
    @boredomstudios5464 8 місяців тому +50

    The whole air raid of desert storm is a work of fucking art

    • @Ruder6163
      @Ruder6163 8 місяців тому

      Right! I love the theocratic Islamic dictatorship of Kuwait ❤️ and I’d be willing to lay my life on the line for them anytime! Clearly most Americans feel the same way given you were all willing to die to preserve their rule. What is it exactly about the Sabah family that made you guys so passionate about them? Was it their system of governance? Their commitment to Islam? Or was it your hatred for the secularism coming from the Baathist in Iraq?

    • @ELGG1894
      @ELGG1894 7 місяців тому +16

      ​@@Ruder6163Is this some strange form of coping for the fact Iraq lost?

    • @Ruder6163
      @Ruder6163 7 місяців тому

      @@ELGG1894 No, I’m asking why Americans were motivated to defend the authoritarian Islamic theocracy? This has nothing to do with Iraq. I like to watch the cognitive dissonance take place in the Caucasian American mind.

    • @Crustaceannationrepresentative
      @Crustaceannationrepresentative 7 місяців тому +11

      ​@@Ruder6163Because it threatened to upend the entire world economy due to Iraq threatening Saudi Arabia after annexing Kuwait, which would've no doubt led to Iraq keeping all the oil in those countries for itself, or selling it at extremely unmarked prices, plus Kuwait is a US ally so they were obligated to defend them

    • @tomfinlay7373
      @tomfinlay7373 2 місяці тому

      @@Ruder6163 I think multiple motivations were at play, but central was the fear of Sadaam disrupting our oil supply, particularly in Saudi Arabia. Would he have attacked Saudi Arabia if the US led coalition never existed? We'll never know. The power in charge don't poll the public on those decisions, they do what they want and then try to sell the public on why it is justified or prudent. This video really doesn't address the political rationale of the US in depth, it focuses on the tactical military actions. There are other videos that address the political aspect. This video does a great job, and in general I think US citizens can take pride in the skill with which our forces fought. Whether they should have fought in the first place is a debate for another place I think.

  • @Slenderman12342
    @Slenderman12342 2 роки тому +4426

    An absolute masterpiece of a military operation. Gaining air superiority not in days but in hours is seriously impressive. Fantastic video

    • @thememers_dude
      @thememers_dude 2 роки тому +61

      Air superiority was a confirmed deal from the start most of the iraqi fighter are old and absolutely dated

    • @lookoutforchris
      @lookoutforchris 2 роки тому +107

      @@crackhead3511 this was a 20th century war. You don't know history. January 16th 1991. You're ignorant on this subject.

    • @junkers3824
      @junkers3824 2 роки тому +155

      @@thememers_dude didn’t the Iraqis have mig-29’s which were fairly advanced at the time?

    • @australianpatriot
      @australianpatriot Рік тому +17

      @@Myanmartiger921 wrong

    • @danielwoods3896
      @danielwoods3896 Рік тому +59

      @@Myanmartiger921 We fought China before, in Korea. Quantity does not destroy quality.

  • @oiytd5wugho
    @oiytd5wugho 3 роки тому +728

    "arrive 30 seconds early"
    this whole video made me realize just how precise the timing is, jeeez

    • @jinzokan3499
      @jinzokan3499 3 роки тому +49

      Yeah at first i was thinking why not just start raining death and destruction but that might alert other areas of the battlefield before everyone else is in position.

    • @anthonymiozza526
      @anthonymiozza526 2 роки тому +19

      Yeah massively, plus organization and movement of logistics etc etc its all insane.

    • @redjive_industries3760
      @redjive_industries3760 2 роки тому +31

      Hitting every target all at once is something that goes back as far as WW2, where American artillery used a tactic called a ‘Time On Target’ bombardment, calculating projectile arcs and shell flight times so that several volleys from multiple batteries would all impact a relatively small area at once. It was incredibly demoralizing. This is the modern version (and now you can do the same thing much more easily with computers)

    • @stevesmith866
      @stevesmith866 2 роки тому +5

      While waiting some figures ran out of the buildings,,,, that was the smart Iraqis.

    • @sparkyunofficial1119
      @sparkyunofficial1119 2 роки тому +6

      Imagine how much more of a scale it would be today by 2021 tech level improvements and optimizations in advance warfare

  • @deriznohappehquite
    @deriznohappehquite Рік тому +564

    One thing I find interesting are the disparate Chinese and Russian reactions to Desert Storm.
    China considered that their military was not fundamentally different from the Soviet model that Iraq also based their military on. Thus, China completely rethought their national defense strategy and began a multi-decade modernization program.
    Russia just claimed that the Iraqis were racially inferior, uncivilized bedouins, and naturally Couldn’t fight European forces. They did, however, rename their new T-72 model to “T-90”.

    • @user-ep1sw6od3u
      @user-ep1sw6od3u Рік тому +26

      i mean russians do have a point, look at the current ongoing war you can't tell me if this was some arab country fighting against ukraine with western support it would've held its grounds that long

    • @sebastianwallin3726
      @sebastianwallin3726 11 місяців тому +14

      In the Iran-Iraq war 1980-1988 you saw how the soviet vs America armament was playing out. Where Iran used US armament left over from the Shah and Iraq using both previous and current soviet armament as well as NATO weapons.

    • @pickleman40
      @pickleman40 10 місяців тому +14

      Both are true, the Iraqis engaging all of their radars and not preserving these systems is pure stupidity. Thr same thing did not happen in Kosovo for instance

    • @OptimusDelta
      @OptimusDelta 10 місяців тому

      @@user-ep1sw6od3uukraine has had a well trained army the entire time..they are receiving a mountain of support from the western allies..as for being racially inferior the mesopotamian people built the first civilisation on earth..didn’t the uncivilised bedouins conquer from iberia to pakistan?its plain irrationality on display..

    • @TheJoazzz
      @TheJoazzz 10 місяців тому +81

      @@user-ep1sw6od3u The Russians actually have no point because they are the exact same as Saddam - a rabble without the training or equipment to face the unchained killing power of a modernized military force, let alone a whole alliance of such. Yeah, they can shoot, and they can kill, and they can roughly do all the things an army is supposed to do, and they have numbers. The critical part is how it all compares to their adversaries. Iraq got bodied because, despite their own success against Iran and Kuwait, their new enemy, - the coalition force, particularly the US - was militarily superior in every way. Russia would fare just as badly, if Western support for Ukraine wasn't so sickeningly half-hearted and if actual Western military forces got involved. And unlike what some limp-dick racists might try to spin, the reason is not in an idiotic fantasy of imagined ethnic superiority, no. It's a reason of policy and economics.
      Russia and Saddam's Iraq are the same in the sense that they're circus armies that flex to the world with their bullying of lesser neighbors, staged "training" and parade displays, because they hold no real substance in a modern peer conflict beyond WMDs. Why? Because their rulers are pragmatic cowards. The army of a dictatorship must be kept weak and inept or it will have the power to overthrow its own government. You can use them for some "peace keeping", or propaganda, or internal security, or for invading weaker neighbors (Ukraine, Georgia, Kuwait). You can't use them for fighting the major powers of the world, because you'll be crushed. Russia is a particularly fun case because their government is nothing but a pack of criminals, scammers and liars who only know how to steal and murder, without concern for efficient governance. And so all the money that could go to building a good military goes somewhere else.
      There was a piece written on this in the 90s called something like "Why do Arab kingdoms lose wars", and the reason remains the same: A capable military would topple its own dictatorship, and autocrats can't have that. Money laundering, embezzling, base level distrust, stupid fucking honor codes, outdated hierarchies, it all remains the same. And then the Russians decided to spice it up with prison rape and mafia politics! The only reason they've gotten as far as they have, and are still holding on, is because they inherited the USSR's massive stockpiles of ammunition and hardware, and because Ukraine is still fighting the war alone, despite foreign volunteers and relatively pitiful material support.

  • @yungcaco1443
    @yungcaco1443 Рік тому +628

    Never realised how many coalition air craft were actually lost and I’m surprised at how many they lost through accidents.

    • @vyros.3234
      @vyros.3234 Рік тому

      Luke half of America's casualties during the war in Iraq and Afghanistan were due to friendly fire and accidents.

    • @bronzebackbassing18
      @bronzebackbassing18 Рік тому +181

      Historically speaking more aircraft are lost in accidents then in combat against the enemy. When you are constantly putting a complicated fighter jet and it’s pilot/crew though constant usage, something is eventually going to give

    • @theknightikins9397
      @theknightikins9397 Рік тому +52

      I actually think it makes sense. The US had covered every option. I can imagine that Iraqi strategists and control rooms were absolute pandemonium.

    • @joeroyward6457
      @joeroyward6457 Рік тому +6

      Especially an air operations if you don’t practice then you don’t survive

    • @hamsterfromabove8905
      @hamsterfromabove8905 Рік тому +40

      As was mentioned once during this video, there were at minimum hundreds of coalition aircraft in the sky at any given time. They don't have perfect knowledge of where their allies were. There were many radar contacts at any given time. They had to as quickly and accurately determine which radar contacts were friendly aircraft vs which were enemies.
      There were so many ally aircraft in every direction it was often difficult to quickly determine where the enemy was exactly. That's one of the drawbacks of outnumbering your enemy so badly in the air.

  • @cameroncall5163
    @cameroncall5163 3 роки тому +2397

    General: "Was the strike successful?"
    Aide: *turns on CNN*
    CNN: *live feed gets cut*
    General: "Splendid."

    • @lmadwn-4583
      @lmadwn-4583 3 роки тому +42

      Love that

    • @bbarker5766
      @bbarker5766 3 роки тому +188

      Wish we could cut CNN permanently!!

    • @zy2359
      @zy2359 3 роки тому +25

      Thanks to that Tomahawk missile

    • @lmadwn-4583
      @lmadwn-4583 3 роки тому +8

      @@zy2359 yup

    • @Interdictiondeltawing
      @Interdictiondeltawing 3 роки тому +17

      U.S Air Force: so anyways I bomb Baghdad unharmed

  • @greygoose3936
    @greygoose3936 3 роки тому +897

    Using the drones to fool the AA into turning on their radar was my favorite part.

  • @CatsAgainstCommunism
    @CatsAgainstCommunism Рік тому +77

    As a GWOT veteran, the Desert Storm/Shield boys don't get enough love

    • @fakecubed
      @fakecubed Рік тому +6

      That's because it was over so quickly, everyone pretty much forgot it happened.

    • @user-jn7jf3kv6k
      @user-jn7jf3kv6k 9 місяців тому

      Islam will conquer you one way or the other...

    • @Firebolt193
      @Firebolt193 9 місяців тому

      @@user-jn7jf3kv6k Islam can lick my balls, get out of here with your death cult

    • @AlbinoMutant
      @AlbinoMutant 3 місяці тому +1

      A crusty old NCO in 1AD told me his proudest moment during Desert Storm was when the division commander came by after the first major tank battle and saw an RPG all bent around his mine plow. The general made a beeline for it, leaned in to examine it and then examined the front of the tank. He turned around with a huge smile on his face and asks "He got a shot off?" The NCO nodded "Yes sir". "Did he hit you?" The NCO nodded again, "Yes sir, and then I ran him over". General looks like he's about to giggle with glee, he looked at the LT and the LT nodded. Division commander gave the him a medal right there for pitchforking the slowest infantryman in Iraq with his plow. That was when the Army was the Army.

  • @adoringanemone043
    @adoringanemone043 Рік тому +106

    My dad served on USS Constellation during this conflict, he saw A-6s and F-14s take off the flight deck and fly off to strike targets, and it changed his views of war once he saw them come back on deck without their bombs and missiles.

  • @spacemanjoe7074
    @spacemanjoe7074 3 роки тому +802

    “I’m Saddam Hussein, and this is jackass.”

    • @ltk_xv72
      @ltk_xv72 3 роки тому +15

      Beehive Tetherball = Going to war against American air power

    • @marvs8760
      @marvs8760 3 роки тому +5

      Dude 😂

    • @Fearless1247
      @Fearless1247 3 роки тому +3

      Im kenny rogers

    • @theprideofafrica1186
      @theprideofafrica1186 3 роки тому +4

      "I'm George W, and i order the de-bathification of the Iraqi military and government.. and this is jackass."

    • @-Markus-
      @-Markus- 3 роки тому

      HAAAA!!!!

  • @dennissvitak148
    @dennissvitak148 3 роки тому +1878

    I was an aviation meteorologist, assigned to Lt. General Hoerner's battle staff. My team and I provided operational weather support for strike missions. Modern sensors need much more than simple cloud base/visibility forecasts. We had to get involved, directly, with the flight planners to determine what weapon systems were best suited for each mission. I had a computer program, an Mark IV Tactical Decision Aid (TDA), which incorporated target area data. SOME of this data was latitude, longitude, elevation, type of target, bridge, tank, building etc., sun angle, moon angle, percent illumination, and target area background...32 different types, dirt, sand, trees, etc. After the target characteristics were uploaded, THEN I applied the weather. Temp, dewpoint, winds, pressure, precipitation, visibility, clouds, all kinds of stuff. The third piece of the puzzle was one of the 25 different sensor types coalition forces had. Some were better than others. The end result was two numbers, TAL, and TLR. TAL is "Target acquisition range", which was just that. When can the sensor detect the target. TLR was "Target lock-on range." So...a massive bridge over water, during the day, with no clouds, can be detected and locked onto 20 miles away. You can use a standoff weapon. A tank, in camo, at night, with the engines off, in trees, can't be locked onto until you are VERY close. Different targets needed different approaches. Desert Storm was the FIRST war where the weather guy became part of the decision making process. I loved my job..and was pretty good at it.

    • @kevmehl
      @kevmehl 3 роки тому +67

      Dennis Svitak what a story, thanks.

    • @wtywatoad
      @wtywatoad 3 роки тому +131

      Tonight's Forecast: Mostly dark, then lighting up with a 100% chance of severe explosions.

    • @commanderbastard1993
      @commanderbastard1993 3 роки тому +44

      You did an excellent job. Congrats to you and your team.

    • @wtywatoad
      @wtywatoad 3 роки тому +54

      I was perplexed as to why The Weather Channel spent weeks showing a map of where the theater of operations was, just to tell the American public that the forecast for that region was classified.

    • @johnd2058
      @johnd2058 3 роки тому +13

      Thanks -- I was in first grade at the time, and this is the first world event I remember. "Desert Storm was the FIRST war where the weather guy became part of the decision making process." -- The specific target-engagement tactics, right? I thought there was a meteorologist in the operational loop on Normandy. Was the target-engagement sensor factor a lesson learned the hard way from the '70s? I seem to recall someone using laser-guidance, maybe the bridges between Việt Nam and Red China.

  • @darktoadone5068
    @darktoadone5068 Рік тому +98

    I was in the 7th Fleet in the USS Midway CV-41 as an AO when this happened. We had so much ordnance ready on weapons support equipment that the division who maintains them , G-1 AWSEP ran out of them and things got crazy. The commander of the 7th fleet had to make a decision. We worked easily 100 hour weeks but I felt it was nothing compared to what the guys on the ground were going to go through.

  • @user-yl1ur7rq4w
    @user-yl1ur7rq4w 8 місяців тому +11

    This operation was an absolute masterpiece.. This war was so fast that many forget how immense it was..

  • @spethmanjones2997
    @spethmanjones2997 3 роки тому +2429

    Being bombed by something that took off in _Louisiana_ of all places just adds insult to injury

    • @white-dragon4424
      @white-dragon4424 3 роки тому +172

      They could've launched the strike from the UK, but they must've launched from the US for propaganda purposes.

    • @white-dragon4424
      @white-dragon4424 3 роки тому +223

      @Edd Fsd It's not supposed to be an insult, but rather to send a message to everyone what range the US has and what its abilities are, just in case anyone else ever thinks about trying it on. And no, I'm not American, but rather I'm saying what their intent is.

    • @white-dragon4424
      @white-dragon4424 3 роки тому +174

      @Edd Fsd I think you're confusing this with the Iraq Invasion of 2003, which ended up creating terrorists like ISIS. And it was Al-Qaeda who caused 9/11, not the Taliban. Also, like I said before, I'm NOT American, nor a supporter of the 2003 invasion. I'm just saying why those B-52s flew all the way from the US instead of a base in the UK during Desert Storm.

    • @keithgainey7853
      @keithgainey7853 3 роки тому +47

      @@white-dragon4424 Well said White Dragon. I am an American and clearly understood you the first time. I agree with the 2003 Invasion. I did not support it.

    • @sababugs1125
      @sababugs1125 3 роки тому +74

      @Edd Fsd huh 700? There 193 countries in the world

  • @Gonczor6
    @Gonczor6 2 роки тому +3232

    I'm watching this in 2022 just a few weeks after Russia invaded Ukraine. The difference in the quality of planning and the dominance gained from the first minutes is amazing.

    • @breathofyahmosthigheliyohi1268
      @breathofyahmosthigheliyohi1268 2 роки тому

      Ik right, brown lifes dont matter so you bomb everything.

    • @Gonczor6
      @Gonczor6 2 роки тому +10

      @@breathofyahmosthigheliyohi1268 What?

    • @lookoutforchris
      @lookoutforchris 2 роки тому +44

      Cultural difference 😂

    • @chrish3850
      @chrish3850 2 роки тому +288

      @@lookoutforchris yeah Russia doesn’t rly care about soldiers lives that much

    • @lacey1714
      @lacey1714 2 роки тому +3

      Yup!!!

  • @forsaturn4629
    @forsaturn4629 Рік тому +58

    I still couldn’t fathom how this operation happened 30+ years ago, such masterpiece.

  • @c4sualcycl0ps48
    @c4sualcycl0ps48 11 місяців тому +30

    The amount of different fighter, bomber, and support aircraft is insane. I count at least 4 generations of the top US Navy fighters in a single operation (F-4 being the oldest, then the A-6 and F-14, followed by the F-18). Add in the use of other true specialized aircraft like those EF-111’s that could keep up with fast strike aircraft and this was one hell of an operation with the most variety of aircraft I’ve ever seen.

    • @SpaalKodaav
      @SpaalKodaav 6 місяців тому

      A-6 Was the old bird of the navy bunch, designed in the darned 50s and still kicking ass till the day she retired

  • @humanoidalistic
    @humanoidalistic 3 роки тому +1025

    I don't think any documentary series has offered a better perspective on the true scale of modern war. Can't wait for further episodes.

    • @jackbrady9738
      @jackbrady9738 3 роки тому +7

      Agree. Goat video

    • @vidsforfun5155
      @vidsforfun5155 3 роки тому +1

      BazBattles also offer a great documentary however its world history such as ww2 😊

    • @voidcomm14
      @voidcomm14 3 роки тому

      Agreed

    • @erebus7205
      @erebus7205 3 роки тому

      You guys haven’t seen this yet then.
      From the big man himself, Storming Norman:
      ua-cam.com/video/8ReU2QlwX2o/v-deo.html

    • @f1reisaloser
      @f1reisaloser 3 роки тому

      I fully agree.

  • @notarmchairhistorian7779
    @notarmchairhistorian7779 3 роки тому +2157

    "How many planes will you use?"
    *AMERICA: "Yes."*

    • @KaiserStormTracking
      @KaiserStormTracking 3 роки тому +75

      america has one heck of an Air force

    • @shadowtrooper1
      @shadowtrooper1 2 роки тому +119

      We have to 2 largest airforces... the US Airforce, and US Naval Aviation.

    • @AliBaba-vw7mo
      @AliBaba-vw7mo 2 роки тому +35

      More like
      “Oil?”
      America: “YES”

    • @wellifailed392
      @wellifailed392 2 роки тому +3

      @@shadowtrooper1 no. The second strongest would HAVE to be Naval Aviation and Marine Corps Aviation combined otherwise Russia would be stronger

    • @shadowtrooper1
      @shadowtrooper1 2 роки тому +21

      @@wellifailed392 I said Largest, not Strongest. Also I tend to loop Marine Corps Aviation with Naval Aviation as the USMC is a department of the Navy.

  • @adamkostowicz7289
    @adamkostowicz7289 Рік тому +28

    I’ve watched this 7 times and will continue to rewatch it randomly because I’m a proud OIF vet and I just love military plans especially ones with fixed winged aircraft

  • @JeffSharonLive
    @JeffSharonLive Рік тому +40

    Incredible work on all of your videos. A few suggestions for future topics:
    - The 2003 Iraq War
    - Operation Just Cause
    - Anything having to do with the Korean War (my grandfather fought in Korea, so I always wanted to know more about it)

    • @admranger
      @admranger 9 місяців тому

      Korean war videos would be very good to see.

  • @paultrigger3798
    @paultrigger3798 2 роки тому +349

    This war was so fast that many forget how immense it was.

    • @justinbiggs1005
      @justinbiggs1005 2 роки тому +32

      Good old powell doctrine for ya. Military force as a last resort. But when it's used. It's utterly overwhelming force. Ultimately this minimized casualties on both the coalition, and Iraqi forces. Like mentioned in the video. Mass surrenders were everywhere

    • @Li0nshare
      @Li0nshare Рік тому +5

      @@justinbiggs1005 powell with the UN resolution lie on Iraq II was sad though.

    • @user-yq3fz9ch5q
      @user-yq3fz9ch5q 9 місяців тому +2

      ​@@justinbiggs1005Powell was not part of the planning phase of ODS, that honor falls on both Schwarzkopf and Horner. Powell tried to push the bear to attack in 1990, the bear knew he needed all his assets in theater before committing his Corps and their divisions. Powell is a good yes man, the bear wasn't.

  • @fkerpants
    @fkerpants 3 роки тому +1404

    This should be on the History Channel. This is the most comprehensive outline of any historical event I've ever seen. Outstanding work.

    • @phased-arraych.9150
      @phased-arraych.9150 3 роки тому +65

      It’s too good to be on the History Channel.

    • @canis582
      @canis582 3 роки тому +11

      Push Back history channel promotes falsehoods

    • @distinctdecorpro6810
      @distinctdecorpro6810 3 роки тому +3

      I was there too but as a nurse manager for Aramco. It was frightening! But when the troops arrived we had them in our homes. They called their families, washed their clothes, and were well fed. We tried to take care of them. Some people took caravans out to the troops on the weekend. ( Thursday and Friday) Katherine Connell Fielder

    • @coll5342
      @coll5342 3 роки тому +18

      See that’s the problem, this is actual history, and not aliens or pawn stars

    • @jant.carlsson5061
      @jant.carlsson5061 3 роки тому +10

      How could it be on History Channel when there are no UFO's or alien lizards from planet Brz present? The tinfoil hat editorials disagree surely with your suggestion.

  • @samhooch7
    @samhooch7 Рік тому +1

    This is incredible! Thank you for putting so much effort in to both the animation and commentary. Your research is phenomenal!

  • @Logan-dk8of
    @Logan-dk8of Рік тому +88

    this just goes to show that the US military really has mastered warfare, the logistics behind this is insane and must have taken a roomful of people weeks to months to plan out every day of this air operation

    • @tomnewham1269
      @tomnewham1269 Рік тому +5

      This operation would take at least a year to plan. Even D Day was 12 months in the planning.

    • @pickleman40
      @pickleman40 Рік тому

      And yet they totally botched Libya which is now a slave state, is that mastery? Maybe they knew it in the 90s, but i am tired of seeing people citing this 30 year old conflict when there are more modern ones that show the only thing american military intervention results in is endless war and a happy mil industrial complex
      USA was playing games in Syria, financing terrorists befpre russia gpt involved, and now the FSA is no more and turk alligned. All the smart people who made DS work are gone and replaced with divirsity hires, financially interwsted parties, and ideological allies, and other useful idiots for the financial powers that be, there are no more war fighters

    • @simohayha2756
      @simohayha2756 11 місяців тому +3

      Well, in my opinion since the second world war they were, not everyone correctly supplies their troops thousands of km from their borders

  • @aviation.satire
    @aviation.satire 3 роки тому +777

    I love how the animated planes are actually accurate

    • @recording_closet9100
      @recording_closet9100 2 роки тому +4

      @Brandon BP well yeah, they're animated. They are intended to represent their position at the time

    • @hoghogwild
      @hoghogwild 2 роки тому +30

      @@recording_closet9100 He wasn't referring to position, he's referring to the fact that when EF-111's were being discussed, the 3 planes moving on the map actually looked like EF-111 Ravens. the F-117s look like an F-117, same for teh B-52s.

    • @RAAFLightning1
      @RAAFLightning1 2 роки тому

      except for the mirages

    • @Viper555
      @Viper555 2 роки тому +1

      @@RAAFLightning1 12:05 looks like a mirage F1 to me, those were the only types of mirages fielded by either side. The French flew mirage F1s and so did the Iraqis.

  • @jseemanmusic
    @jseemanmusic 3 роки тому +2043

    It is immediately apparent that this is an exceptionally good presentation: 1) a calm, precise voice replaces the common and unnecessary over-dramatizations; 2) new battle information is presented so watchers of this kind of content are learning new things; 3) an excellent combination of technical details and historic events is presented; 4) somebody put a WHOLE LOT of work into an excellent dynamic graphic of the air sorties. Even all of the aircraft icons are accurate. One-word response: MORE

    • @TheOperationsRoom
      @TheOperationsRoom  3 роки тому +165

      Thank you!

    • @dr.robertjohnson6953
      @dr.robertjohnson6953 3 роки тому +53

      Indeed. More. But don't leave out those that often get missed, simply because they didn't specialize like the Wild Weasles (which I worked from 1981-1989).
      Here is an interesting story about anti runway bombs. When I was stationed at RAF Lake Lakenheath, we trained on a French made munition called the Durandall. It was one of those weapons, even in training you just despised. But its what you get when you buy French made weapons I guess. This weapon was a nightmare to load. Its a complicated weapon. Not only does it have a Fuze for exploding slightly after impact, it also has a drag chute, to slow the weapon down to get it into a proper angle as it drops so it can fire its rocket motor. AND it has a special safety device to seperate the rocket motor from the bomb body, in case of fire, so it doesn't shoot of in some random direction, thank you Mr French weapon maker. So we could carry a HUGE number of those on the F-111. I have loaded 24 of them on one aircraft, once.
      Even while in theater we had to continue our weapons load training.
      The interesting thing about load training, "load training will not be performed with live munitions". This is in the safety tech data for the Durandall. The reason for this is because its very easy to accidentally arm a Durandall bomb while loading it. Which is problematic because if you are loading it, and it arms, and you stop the Jammer too fast, it could fire its rocket motor! Thanks again frenchy! 🤨
      Now, during the first phase of the actual war, we were tasked with taking out runways. [I think someone just wanted to finally use the d I Durandall in real word use. We never did. I was one of the first load crews to load train with them. WFT? YOU CANT LOAD TRAIN WITH THESE LIVE ONES!!! I refused. I was told we only had live ones and that made it OK. I responded, "No." I said get an officer to give me that order, and I will then consider it. My acting first seargent showed up though, and said, "SSGT Johnson, whats all this about. I regurgitated the safety reg. He laughed and walked away. No officer gave me an order. Later that day, we were told that there had been incidents everytime they attempted to load train with the Durandall's, they kept arming during loading. LUCKILY non of them fired off. So we never got to use them at all, and finally just dropped them from out loading inventory.
      But will did complete our mission for runways. Its impressive what a MK-84, 2,000 pound bomb will do to a runway, with a .25 sec Fuze delay and explode many feet under the runway. A much better a d safer job than a Durandall! F-off frenchy, we got this.

    • @multitoolish
      @multitoolish 3 роки тому +7

      @@dr.robertjohnson6953 Wow, great story!! I think the F-111 is one of the most beautiful planes ever made. Be awesome if you made some videos and tell more stories! Your great at it

    • @mikegrant5435
      @mikegrant5435 3 роки тому +2

      @@dr.robertjohnson6953 I worked on F-4C Wild Weasels from 78-79. Kadena AB Okinawa.

    • @mkvv5687
      @mkvv5687 3 роки тому

      @BRAVOZULU DWEST boathouse Annoying, some truth there. Fwiw, I'll never forget the poor Brit pilot displayed on Iraqi (and world) TV. He was from the downed Tornado that was mentioned in the vid.
      Oh hell, did I just prove your point?

  • @ripliner3964
    @ripliner3964 Рік тому +25

    Fun fact, if you liked the engagement at 12:00 , it was actually featured in Dogfights with the actual pilots of the ef111 recounting the engagement

  • @sammurphy3343
    @sammurphy3343 Рік тому +2

    First of your videos ive seen. Omg you're constant visual placement and movements on the map are 10/10 quality.

  • @mikolajschulz5847
    @mikolajschulz5847 3 роки тому +1365

    This was like a training exercise for 35 or so Militaries.

    • @InfantrySider
      @InfantrySider 3 роки тому +176

      Yep a live fire exercise with moving targets

    • @spankythedog56
      @spankythedog56 3 роки тому +6

      What the fuck are they training for then?

    • @InfantrySider
      @InfantrySider 3 роки тому +158

      @@spankythedog56 they weren't actually training, it was a joke for how easy they were to beat

    • @KillerSpoon575
      @KillerSpoon575 3 роки тому +75

      @@AK-nm1jh just becuase they are outnumbered doesn't mean it would be easy. I mean they had a huge AA defense system that was so potent that only f-117s could go to baghdad

    • @ttwr4gty7ihz49
      @ttwr4gty7ihz49 3 роки тому +13

      @@KillerSpoon575 80% of AAA are no function because the lack of spare parts
      And the same thing for the aircraft and tanks

  • @WeirdHistory
    @WeirdHistory 3 роки тому +6880

    This is fantastic. Well done.

    • @alienwithinternetconnection
      @alienwithinternetconnection 3 роки тому +21

      Woah weird history your here.

    • @stiffstud8511
      @stiffstud8511 3 роки тому +8

      O snap

    • @peytoncross7026
      @peytoncross7026 3 роки тому +3

      Yea the vid was but george bush sent men to die to save kuwait

    • @sherwanburhan8942
      @sherwanburhan8942 3 роки тому +5

      @@peytoncross7026 no my boy to save precious oil
      You know why iraq invaded kuwait in the first place??
      Because kuwait wanted to break iraqs economy by dumping huge mount of oil into market at very cheap and low price
      Sadam guys went to there leaders and you selling cheap OK but don't sell so much amount of it and that's how it all started
      And kuwait did that in the first place by command of USA

    • @mariolisa2832
      @mariolisa2832 2 роки тому

      Oversimplified is better

  • @BravoCharlie
    @BravoCharlie Рік тому +11

    What an incredible video. Thank you for putting this together. Staggering logistics.

  • @aonbrogan8266
    @aonbrogan8266 Рік тому +35

    Hey Russia? This.
    This is how an actual Superpower does war.

    • @Sombody123
      @Sombody123 Рік тому +9

      Even better: superpower with allies that aren't just 2nd/3rd world dictatorships.

    • @FrangkyMind
      @FrangkyMind 3 місяці тому +2

      One more thing
      They actually can form a coallition while them "2nd best army in the world" can't

  • @mrABOZI
    @mrABOZI 3 роки тому +818

    Coalition: "How many aircraft do we need to use?"
    USA: "Yes"

    • @riojasvictor
      @riojasvictor 3 роки тому +1

      Haha

    • @gooble69
      @gooble69 3 роки тому +1

      Geez that joke is getting tired...

    • @zedwpd
      @zedwpd 3 роки тому +5

      I'm an Air Battle Manager. That's always the answer. Yes.

    • @RedRider1600
      @RedRider1600 3 роки тому +4

      "How many aircraft do we need to use?"
      10%

    • @robspecht9550
      @robspecht9550 3 роки тому +1

      “All of Them”

  • @CP1871
    @CP1871 3 роки тому +1699

    This was barely an air battle. It's more like a systematic dismantling of Iraq's military infrastructure.

    • @saadsajidul9001
      @saadsajidul9001 3 роки тому +22

      Agree mate

    • @justbreakingballs
      @justbreakingballs 3 роки тому +124

      Don’t be arrogant. It’s was always a battle. The pilots who were killed and had batteries clamped to their balls will also agree with me.

    • @kobek4159
      @kobek4159 3 роки тому +54

      You barely understand that an Air Battle can be overwhelming. It's not a damn game where both sides are evenly matched.

    • @ananthropomorphictalkinggo6641
      @ananthropomorphictalkinggo6641 3 роки тому +90

      We gained air superiority in a single day, I wouldn't call that an even battle.

    • @dannyboii4949
      @dannyboii4949 3 роки тому +50

      Air Massacre would be more appropriate

  • @douglassauvageau7262
    @douglassauvageau7262 10 місяців тому +6

    The planning / coordination was impressive. "SHOCK and AWE"

  • @WilliamCraigmile
    @WilliamCraigmile 9 місяців тому +1

    This is one of my favorite videos on youtube. I will come back to watch it every once in a while, and it never dissapoints.

  • @JerBuster77
    @JerBuster77 3 роки тому +879

    This is what happens when you spam air units in Command and Conquer and send them all in at once.

    • @TheOperationsRoom
      @TheOperationsRoom  3 роки тому +168

      Also an underrated comment 😆

    • @Mathwayb
      @Mathwayb 3 роки тому +6

      Yes!

    • @Aviationlord7742
      @Aviationlord7742 3 роки тому +25

      *Kirov reporting*

    • @rovat6285
      @rovat6285 3 роки тому +14

      Yeah I do that in Zero Hour Reborn AF general.

    • @phinix250
      @phinix250 3 роки тому +20

      @@rovat6285 Watch the skies general, we're going to put on an air show.

  • @KillerOrca
    @KillerOrca 3 роки тому +1955

    WWII era battleship launching cruise missiles. I don't know why but that is oddly satisfying...

    • @wruenvadam
      @wruenvadam 3 роки тому +129

      I was thinking the same thing. I have the pleasure of living near the Wisconsin, so it really gives me a new perspective on the old girl. The fact that she got some combat use so recently makes me happy somewhat. Its just a shame that the guns like the ones she has don't really have much use anymore. She is very beautiful however. You look at her and think about the fact that she's a battleship, then you also realize that she is sleek, and is genuinely a fast ship and is one of the last ships with the amount of armor she has that is still in active service technically speaking. While I certainly don't want to imagine her sinking, it would still warm me up to hear about her doing her duty once again, and is why this video warmed me up as well. I had no idea she took part in Desert Storm until now and I am very satisfied to have learned that today.

    • @roflomaozedong
      @roflomaozedong 3 роки тому +5

      @@wruenvadam hey mate! You are talking about which boat? wich one ? sorry for my bad english

    • @gnranger
      @gnranger 3 роки тому +22

      @@roflomaozedong the USS Wisconsin (BB-64)

    • @pcguysoffgridcabin
      @pcguysoffgridcabin 3 роки тому +31

      @@gnranger Iraqis were seen surrendering to the Wisconsin drone. They didn't want any of them 16 inch shells

    • @KillerOrca
      @KillerOrca 3 роки тому +9

      @@wruenvadam Here's hoping they turn her into a museum like they did the Intrepid, IMO.

  • @dozerroman4325
    @dozerroman4325 Рік тому

    The quality of this series is beyond anything I've ever seen. Brilliant work. Cheers mate! 🍻

  • @DJCFO9
    @DJCFO9 Рік тому +3

    This video gives me goosebumps. Endless respect for the amount of detail and information.

  • @ChairmanMeow1
    @ChairmanMeow1 3 роки тому +996

    The logistics... THE LOGISTICS!!

    • @notleviathan855
      @notleviathan855 3 роки тому +107

      You know the logistics guys are like shaking hands, and jerking themselves off. I mean HOLY SHIT the time and effort gathering info, planning, sending shit up to high command, adjusting for possible outcomes, taking in new information, giving new information. Gotta pat the communications teams on the back as well, we never think about the guys behind the front lines planning every move.

    • @acolyteoffire4077
      @acolyteoffire4077 3 роки тому +56

      it gives me a headache to even imagine a 10th of this operations possible paper work and time spent.

    • @ChairmanMeow1
      @ChairmanMeow1 3 роки тому +7

      @@notleviathan855 I would be!!

    • @LoisoPondohva
      @LoisoPondohva 3 роки тому +44

      Gathering from all across the world a million combatants, twice as much support personnel, dozens of ships, thousands of tanks, hundreds of planes, countless artillery pieces, evac vehicles, helicopters, logistics vehicles, all manner of special equipment and food, apparel, ammunition, fuel.
      And managing to get all of that in the right places and the right time.
      On top of that, organising all of that to seamlessly integrate into a unified force.
      And some people say we don't have the technology to build the Great Pyramids so it must be aliens.
      Logistics specialists: quietly doing the impossible since possible was invented.

    • @jjhpor
      @jjhpor 3 роки тому +17

      @@LoisoPondohva And yet it is tiny compared to June 6th 1944. I heard on the radio yesterday that during WW2 the Japanese army was able to deliver 5 pounds of material to each man in the field per day. The US was able to deliver two TONS and at an average distance over 6,000 miles. One Liberty ship built every 4.5 days.

  • @LtCmdrTyler
    @LtCmdrTyler 3 роки тому +211

    A Desert Storm vid by Operations Room? A perfect way to start Saturday mornin boys.

    • @TheOperationsRoom
      @TheOperationsRoom  3 роки тому +31

      I hope so! After the effort that went into this I am now going to the pub to finish my Saturday 😁

    • @zackyjenkinson6902
      @zackyjenkinson6902 3 роки тому +15

      @@TheOperationsRoom When it comes to air battles and air campaigns, you are definitely the best of all the UA-camrs who make battle animation videos.

    • @TheOperationsRoom
      @TheOperationsRoom  3 роки тому +18

      @@zackyjenkinson6902 that's very kind, thankyou!

    • @thehighhegemon2199
      @thehighhegemon2199 3 роки тому +3

      The Operations Room Well deserved. Great video

  • @rubiesrred7042
    @rubiesrred7042 Рік тому +2

    Fantastic recap and summary of the air campaign. Looking forward to listening to your recap of the ground campaign. Fabulous!

  • @samnieves8158
    @samnieves8158 Рік тому +5

    Impressive, great job. I always love these logistics videos, because the "boring" part is actually so complex.

  • @matthew1882
    @matthew1882 3 роки тому +655

    History channel needs to step up their game or hire this man.

    • @SinnerD2010
      @SinnerD2010 3 роки тому +45

      They're too busy uncovering evidence oh ancient aliens...LOL

    • @JeremyDWilliamsOfficial
      @JeremyDWilliamsOfficial 3 роки тому +18

      Too many commercials killed the History Channel. This video is better than most you’d see there anyway.

    • @omcorc
      @omcorc 3 роки тому +8

      The History Channel has been dead for years. They’re irredeemably garbage TV.

    • @r.d.9399
      @r.d.9399 3 роки тому +2

      I agree. This was superb

    • @JeremyDWilliamsOfficial
      @JeremyDWilliamsOfficial 3 роки тому

      @wesley Johnson 😂

  • @joemama8
    @joemama8 3 роки тому +623

    Can’t even imagine how long this must have took to make, incredible work 👏🏻

    • @TheOperationsRoom
      @TheOperationsRoom  3 роки тому +73

      Thanks!

    • @joemama8
      @joemama8 3 роки тому +37

      The Operations Room Just my 2 cents but i feel like different thumbnails could massively increase your view count, if you look your second most viewed video has a thumbnail showing what’s actually in the video similar to eastory who gets millions of views a video. These kind of videos are incredible to watch and should be getting 10x the views they’re currently getting. Collaborations would be massive too to expose yourself to the niche military community

    • @TheAurikom
      @TheAurikom 3 роки тому

      I more can't believe this heroic story, where only a handful of the great american aircrafts was shoting down. 😂

    • @leonardwei3914
      @leonardwei3914 3 роки тому +2

      @@joemama8 You can't judge a book by it's covers, but sexiness does sell.

    • @listenherefat3340
      @listenherefat3340 3 роки тому

      Imagine...

  • @DSS-jj2cw
    @DSS-jj2cw 7 місяців тому +3

    Our camp was at King Khaled airbase in Saudi Arabia and I remember watching the jets flying over our base when the operation switched from Desert Shield to Storm.

  • @just82much51
    @just82much51 Рік тому +1

    That break down was so very well executed!!! Very informative and very educational. Thanks much for producing and sharing it!!!!!

  • @tebo2770
    @tebo2770 3 роки тому +460

    I remember sleeping in a UH-1 at the border of Iraq and Saudi when the air war began. We were all standing outside looking up. I have never and will never again see that many planes in the sky at one time. It was crazy. I won't forget that night.

    • @jimmysavile69
      @jimmysavile69 3 роки тому +54

      @Fred Barendse he was just saying that he has never and will never see that many planes again..

    • @Its_shiki_time4876
      @Its_shiki_time4876 3 роки тому +63

      @Fred Barendse that comment was so irrelevant its not even funny

    • @seanlambert-knight4735
      @seanlambert-knight4735 3 роки тому +6

      Fred Barendse ur not in ur 70s checked ur sub list dipshit lol

    • @tonymorris4335
      @tonymorris4335 3 роки тому +6

      @Jeff R. While true, we GAVE them the chemical weapons they killed the Kurds with and then we fucked the Kurds in the same way.
      I'm a vet as well, but almost everything in the middle east including desert storm came as a result of things we were already putting our fingers into and helping to cause.

    • @rykiske8052
      @rykiske8052 3 роки тому +2

      @@tonymorris4335 the mere fact that over 30 nations joined the war says how much they were afraid to lose their money and to keep that region under their control to suck off oil

  • @PROJECTD-op9zw
    @PROJECTD-op9zw 3 роки тому +216

    Everyone is talking about CNN is going off, but no one talking about the reporter who just saw a tomahawk "cruising" on eyes levels in a hotel window...

    • @brendanmalone-ewing6535
      @brendanmalone-ewing6535 3 роки тому +8

      If you hunt around UA-cam you’ll find some footage of them flying at rooftop level. Incredible stuff

    • @abandonedaccount123
      @abandonedaccount123 3 роки тому

      @@brendanmalone-ewing6535 can you please send me a link to one of the videos? i haven't found one

  • @reesestevenson5492
    @reesestevenson5492 Рік тому +3

    16:49
    About ten years ago I found out about this story in more detail, and my dad told my that our cousin was Speichers rack mate on the carrier and flew along side him in this mission. Very interesting story, about Speicher and his KIA/MIA situation back then.
    Amazingly done video.

  • @DrewMarold
    @DrewMarold Рік тому +1

    Really nicely done, I don't think I had ever really grasped just how many aircraft were all in the air at the same time at the start of this.

  • @JudgeLazar
    @JudgeLazar 3 роки тому +1436

    Not that my opinion matters much, but this is the most impressive and interesting military history video I have EVER seen. The visualizations do an excellent job of portraying the massive amount of firepower used. I've read and heard all about it before, but you really can't grasp it like you do in the video and visualizations. Bravo, I hope to see more like this, excellent work.

    • @JETJOOBOY
      @JETJOOBOY 3 роки тому +12

      Totally!
      It also highlights the massive complexity of the entire job and how a single Human Being could be totally pivotal to its success or disaster.. (like the weather guy that commented above).
      Each of these people's stories contain a lifetime of excellence and hard work..and each of those people could tell amazing stories about just ONE single aspect for DAYS!

    • @MrLandslide84
      @MrLandslide84 3 роки тому +3

      AGREED 100% I was a kid, but I vividly remember all of this, this is like visiting the past! Thank you!

    • @dewayneblue1834
      @dewayneblue1834 3 роки тому +6

      And this video was only Day 1, over the next 41 days over 100,000 combat sorties were flown. Even more complex was ensuing ground war, which involved (among other things) thousands of tanks. Remember, when Desert Storm began Saddam had the world's 4th largest military force. A few weeks later, he didn't even have the largest military force in Iraq.

    • @xOperator
      @xOperator 3 роки тому +1

      I was thinking the same thing. The best visuals i've seen

    • @louremington6975
      @louremington6975 3 роки тому +1

      I agree. I'm trying to find the same thing with the tank battle

  • @monsa6558
    @monsa6558 3 роки тому +345

    An excellent video of the Big Picture view. I was a Boom Operator on a KC-10 crew that flew an eight -hour sortie that night and appreciate your work here to allow me to see all that was going on and how it all was planned to go. The day before, all us Tanker aircrews were gathered together to be briefed by an Air Force One-Star. He told us that the expected losses that first few nights was one AWACS, one KC-10, and two KC-135s, due to the expectation of the Iraqis to apply standard Soviet air tactics. Which included launching everything you have in a counter attack. We were told that the F-15s would not be able to stop all of the Iraq aircraft from shooting us down, "Some of them will get through". But, the main concern was the shear number of aircraft in the airspace. The greatest risk was us, all Coalition aircraft, flying into each other. I noticed, at the moment we were told that, all us tanker aircrews were looking at the other aircrews, wondering, which of us would not return. It was a solemn moment that laid over us, like a cloud, for the entire time, until we landed from that first flight and found out how well the Air War was going.
    Thank you for putting this together. It is much appreciated.

    • @jetrickgordo4026
      @jetrickgordo4026 2 роки тому +14

      Man I can't just imagine the pressure and adrenaline of joining such large formations being defenseless as you are. Radar screens must be all over the roof. Nice story about the people supporting the fight behind.

    • @mrrexychomp9829
      @mrrexychomp9829 2 роки тому +8

      I think if the Iraqis had done a soviet style all out attack that would have worked out better for them. Its a good thing they didn't

    • @sendingit2601
      @sendingit2601 2 роки тому +1

      Seeing those big boy kc-135s in person is something else.

    • @janmeshgavte6578
      @janmeshgavte6578 2 роки тому +3

      Oh God what kind of air traffic it would had been and also tension, stress, adrenaline and all kind of feeling you get hit by in that moment. I almost got head-ache while watching this animation can't even imagine what your POV would had been

    • @tommorningstar6373
      @tommorningstar6373 2 роки тому +4

      Thank you from the bottom of my rotten old American heart. Braving the pucker factor for your country and countrymen is the greatest act of courage and sacrifice possible.

  • @user-ep1gi2jg5d
    @user-ep1gi2jg5d 8 місяців тому +13

    This war was so fast that many forget how immense it was.. The logistics and timing of all of this are incredibly impressive..

  • @rw.racing
    @rw.racing Рік тому +4

    I absolutely loved this! This highly increased my knowledge of operation desert storm, keep up the good work!

  • @wr3tched
    @wr3tched 3 роки тому +3588

    This is incredible

    • @cobra3738
      @cobra3738 3 роки тому +11

      Tf are you doing here?? lmaoo

    • @wr3tched
      @wr3tched 3 роки тому +22

      Cobra LMAO trying to learn some things

    • @dewayneblue1834
      @dewayneblue1834 3 роки тому +13

      And this video was only Day 1, over the next 41 days over 100,000 combat sorties were flown. Even more complex was ensuing ground war, which involved (among other things) thousands of tanks. Remember, when Desert Storm began Saddam had the world's 4th largest military force. A few weeks later, he didn't even have the largest military force in Iraq.

    • @jackbui2944
      @jackbui2944 3 роки тому +1

      @akjohnny got the big touch.

    • @hypedup205
      @hypedup205 3 роки тому +2

      Holy shit. Used to watch you all the time during AW era wr3tched, I even played w you a few times. Then I randomly see you commented on a video about the gulf war? LMFAOOO

  • @spanionneo
    @spanionneo 3 роки тому +1367

    I was a seven year old Iraqi boy living near Talil Air Base. I remember that night vividly. The ground was shaking and windows were shattering. It was one of the most terrifying thing I lived through. Within a few days all of our bridges, power stations, trains and factories were destroyed. It was the fist time I heard about America. Little did i know that this war was going to take me on a long journey and eventually become an American citizen . I suppose they broke mine now we share theirs.. lol

    • @justjoshingya504
      @justjoshingya504 3 роки тому +129

      Well now that awesome military might is there for you :)

    • @efabiano82
      @efabiano82 3 роки тому +53

      Wow, that's an amazing story!

    • @GuyFromTheSouth
      @GuyFromTheSouth 3 роки тому +140

      Thats a hell of a story man. I hope you've enjoyed being an American!

    • @mjb0183
      @mjb0183 3 роки тому +179

      Yes, we really messed up your country. Sorry about that...we have no control over our crazy ass Pentagon ghouls who love the military / industrial complex PERSONAL profits. Too bad Israel tells America how high to jump, when we do their dirty work.

    • @remeyrune6009
      @remeyrune6009 3 роки тому +233

      @@mjb0183 Iraq's also had no control over what their military, or government, did. I have Kuwaiti friends who are very happy about the liberation efforts.

  • @MrFrikkenfrakken
    @MrFrikkenfrakken Рік тому +4

    Fantastic work on a very complicated night of operations.

  • @KaoretheHalfDemon
    @KaoretheHalfDemon Рік тому +8

    The planning, coordination, and execution of this was art! Each piece moved brilliantly and did their job perfectly!

  • @r8dj
    @r8dj 2 роки тому +1333

    Now you know why it was called "Desert Storm". As a veteran of this war, I salute your comprehensive analysis.

    • @Shawn-ho6de
      @Shawn-ho6de 2 роки тому +37

      Thank you for your service

    • @drdanglez
      @drdanglez 2 роки тому +26

      Thank you for your service.

    • @getn_shot2282
      @getn_shot2282 2 роки тому +25

      Thank you for your service

    • @ddennis6398
      @ddennis6398 2 роки тому +12

      I’m 33 now and I understand now that you were either a patriot who fought for freedom or you had no better option after graduating high school and join the military. Not all veteran deserve respect.

    • @getn_shot2282
      @getn_shot2282 2 роки тому +88

      @@ddennis6398 regardless of who they are they put their life on the line. They deserve respect for what they did not who they are

  • @xxmrrickxx
    @xxmrrickxx 2 роки тому +820

    Awesome overview. I did not know about the drone decoys. As I researched this I realized how brilliant this strategy was. They used BQM-74C drones that were developed for target practice. This particular variant was the first with a programmable autopilot to allow the drone to circle over the SAM sites. Mounting the drones on a pylon and using them beyond their intended function seems to have been total ingenuity.

    • @hoghogwild
      @hoghogwild 2 роки тому +34

      And the Navy launched over 100 ADM-141 Tactical Air Launched Decoy , 6 of them can be launched from a single Hornet. The use of the BQM-74C drones was AirForce and the 40 man crew was put together quickly 2 teams were responsible for the 37 successful drone launches.

    • @billyjoe8185
      @billyjoe8185 2 роки тому +20

      @@hoghogwild that’s incredible, very smart usage of those drones and decoys

    • @hoghogwild
      @hoghogwild 2 роки тому +35

      @@billyjoe8185 I thought so too. Why risk all of your human/aircraft assets to, when you can saturate defenses with assets of considerably lower value? Since this was an example of warfighting 30 years ago, just imagine what's in the pipeline right now?

    • @user-wj7bu9zv7i
      @user-wj7bu9zv7i 2 роки тому +8

      Israel has actually used the same tactic in 1982 to wipe out Syrian air defense

    • @rtv8066
      @rtv8066 2 роки тому +16

      @@hoghogwild considering that 6th gen fighters are anticipated to be working as a command and control center for squads of drones. my quess would be that they design the Radar Cross Section on the drones to mimic the fighter jet so enemy missile systems wont be able to tell the fighter from the drones... that would definitely be hell for anti air missiles.

  • @anthonytofts9371
    @anthonytofts9371 Рік тому +3

    This is a brilliant exposition. I enjoyed this learning experience. Well done.

  • @pauli311
    @pauli311 Рік тому +3

    I friggin love your videos. This should be shown in history classes everywhere.

  • @PriorityLethal
    @PriorityLethal 3 роки тому +861

    The US: I paid for the whole airforce, so you bet I'ma use the whole airforce

    • @jasonfischetti7960
      @jasonfischetti7960 3 роки тому +109

      The crazy part is that it’s not the whole air force

    • @abdullahkhuraibet483
      @abdullahkhuraibet483 3 роки тому +4

      I guess Billions of dollars were paid by Kuwait

    • @dannileigh6426
      @dannileigh6426 3 роки тому +4

      B-1b or bone was not used

    • @JonathanPoto
      @JonathanPoto 3 роки тому +7

      Coalition force? Oh yeah you guys come in after we’re done.

    • @themarksmn4181
      @themarksmn4181 3 роки тому +2

      @@dannileigh6426 the BONe wouldve been awesome in this role.

  • @davidputland5506
    @davidputland5506 2 роки тому +1175

    This operation was an absolute masterpiece.

    • @anfrale4657
      @anfrale4657 2 роки тому +90

      @uNnHkP8mza imagine trying to air traffic control all that.

    • @tylerclayton6081
      @tylerclayton6081 2 роки тому +42

      @uNnHkP8mza I’ve heard recordings of an A-10 Pilot puking in his cockpit out of guilt and horror after finding out he strafed British Armored vehicles by accident. Apparently this was because there was a certain British armored vehicle that looked similar to most Iraqi armored vehicles

    • @st3gosaurus
      @st3gosaurus 2 роки тому +12

      @@tylerclayton6081 yeah you would feel so bad after that. especially if you killed your fellow soldiers.

    • @anfrale4657
      @anfrale4657 2 роки тому

      @@st3gosaurus do you drink seamen?

    • @user-kx4xs2xd3k
      @user-kx4xs2xd3k 2 роки тому +3

      But Masterpiece have worst cheap copy

  • @martinjrgensen8234
    @martinjrgensen8234 8 місяців тому +3

    The Air war is a work of art. A masterpiece in how you plan a campaign

  • @XAirForce
    @XAirForce Місяць тому +3

    I was stationed at Incirlick AB, TU, when Saddam invaded Kuwait. I transferred to RAF Mildenhall a month later and was working night shift when the war started. I was in a at the bottom of the control tower, maintaining the radio systems and consoles. We handled a huge number of NATO aircraft.

  • @reedhedin2777
    @reedhedin2777 3 роки тому +1050

    I can’t believe these news reporters were like “oh, there’s a US backed coalition included thousands of aircraft and more than a million servicemen that’s about to go to war with Iraq? Okay, who wants to go to Baghdad and report on it?”

    • @ananthropomorphictalkinggo6641
      @ananthropomorphictalkinggo6641 3 роки тому +320

      That was back when reporters were respectable, instead of just doing op ed pieces masquerading as news to slander whatever party their bosses don't like.

    • @reedhedin2777
      @reedhedin2777 3 роки тому +107

      @@ananthropomorphictalkinggo6641 I get that but shit you gotta be crazy to go to a country that is at war with the country you’re a citizen of. Especially a fascist dictatorship like country like Iraq was at that time

    • @ananthropomorphictalkinggo6641
      @ananthropomorphictalkinggo6641 3 роки тому +208

      @@reedhedin2777 Not only did they go to the country, some of them were actually embedded in active combat units. They literally got shot at as they reported. They had cameras instead of rifles. Like I said, being a reporter used to be viewed as a constitutional duty that this country used to hold as sacred. They didn't want to go, they felt that it was their duty as citizens to go. That's why the mainstream media is such a disgrace nowadays.

    • @1piyoti
      @1piyoti 3 роки тому +22

      @@ananthropomorphictalkinggo6641 No slander just facts..
      but ya, i liked cnn back then... that was before they were just another new service reading stuff off of the AP wire.
      I have a copy of the press core video from that war they Bagdad
      missiles

    • @viaaustralia5388
      @viaaustralia5388 3 роки тому +11

      Most of the "News coverage" from CNN was faked- I really find it hard to believe that people were not made more aware of this. Here is a link ua-cam.com/video/rWtwjDhgN3Q/v-deo.html If you watch that and think it is real- I can't help you. Hahahaha. There were many other examples of fake news coming out of that conflict but they have been wiped off UA-cam.

  • @generalvoncluck7104
    @generalvoncluck7104 7 місяців тому +6

    shock and aw went crazy

  • @twalk6164
    @twalk6164 Рік тому

    outstanding review and summary of the action. thank you for the hard work behind this vid

  • @stephenmogle2335
    @stephenmogle2335 3 роки тому +432

    As a former Army ground pounder... my official petition to do the land battle phase has been submitted.

    • @sechanchannel2764
      @sechanchannel2764 3 роки тому

      ua-cam.com/video/p7ecxzJ3PAk/v-deo.html
      Azerbaijan and Armenia accuse each other of breaking ceasefire

    • @sechanchannel2764
      @sechanchannel2764 3 роки тому

      ua-cam.com/video/p7ecxzJ3PAk/v-deo.html
      Azerbaijan and Armenia accuse each other of breaking ceasefire

    • @youraveragescotsman7119
      @youraveragescotsman7119 3 роки тому

      @Jay R
      The absolute *fear* that comes after such an intense show of air power.
      "It can't get worse, right?"
      I am sorry, my friend. But it's about to get much, much worse.

    • @ericnortan9012
      @ericnortan9012 3 роки тому

      As a former Marine Amtracker I agree!

  • @TKOG-uk5yl
    @TKOG-uk5yl 3 роки тому +1615

    Ok but why is everyone not talking about how the freakin USS Missouri, a battleship that played an important role in WW2, was not only taking part in this op but also firing tomahawks? Just me? Ok.

    • @kybercat7
      @kybercat7 2 роки тому +173

      Fun fact there was a idea to refit the Iowa class , strip out some of the rear turrets and put in a hangar/ launch pad for Harrier jets.

    • @Player-257
      @Player-257 2 роки тому +102

      @@kybercat7 Battle-Carrier plan, a hybrid that is so cool, the navy are considering it if I'm not mistaken

    • @tylerturnpaugh7021
      @tylerturnpaugh7021 2 роки тому +49

      46 years after the surrender ceremony 😳😳 wow

    • @daktarioskarvannederhosen2568
      @daktarioskarvannederhosen2568 2 роки тому +20

      that pos ship shot down an iranian passenger plane in the time of the gulf war.

    • @RK-cj4oc
      @RK-cj4oc 2 роки тому +102

      @@daktarioskarvannederhosen2568 Considering you have a Dutch name i would just like to say, Fuck off. True Dutch people like me support the US operations here. Iraq has caused 2 wars before this and they are liberating a country which had done nothing wrong.The Iranian plane is a sad fact but that is war. That does not make it a POS ship.

  • @JosephBaji
    @JosephBaji Рік тому +10

    I’m so proud to see pilots from my former Navy squadron (VFA-81) mentioned. Lieutenant Commander Fox and Lieutenant Mongillo shot down 2 Migs that day, and Lieutenant Commander (Captain Posthumously) Speicher who was unfortunately shot down and listed MIA for over a decade until he was eventually found.
    Side note: The picture at 4:00 of the F-18Cs refueling is also of VFA-81 during Desert Storm

  • @BreakdownFactz
    @BreakdownFactz Рік тому +6

    Thank you for all your hard work. These animations help to give a good visual aide of events. Do you have anymore visually animated docs?

  • @davegrant2167
    @davegrant2167 3 роки тому +343

    Got to be said, bloody clever idea using the drones as bait

    • @miguelmontenegro3520
      @miguelmontenegro3520 3 роки тому +23

      In a war, deception is the most powerful weapon just after dumb enemies.

    • @hmmjedi
      @hmmjedi 3 роки тому +5

      The Israelie's used them over the Bekka Valley in 1982 to decoy the Syrian Sam sites based there allowing the IAF to then destroy the sites...

    • @edmundoberensztajn2395
      @edmundoberensztajn2395 3 роки тому +3

      Do you have the opportunity to read Tom Clacy`s Red Storm Rising, maybe 30/35 years ago? The atack of the aircarrier in the Iceland Ops by Soviet bombers showed this same tactic :o)

    • @moshunit96
      @moshunit96 3 роки тому +6

      Im embarrassed to say that this is the first time I've heard about the drones being used.

    • @xOperator
      @xOperator 3 роки тому +1

      @@moshunit96 The US been using Drones going back to Vietnam. There were drones made during WW2 as well

  • @AugustGreen_
    @AugustGreen_ 3 роки тому +420

    This entire operation sounds like something straight out of Ace Combat. A large variety of aircraft (many in different camouflages) in some astounding numbers all going on a massive attack.

    • @theepicjs5541
      @theepicjs5541 3 роки тому +46

      Trigger ain’t fucking around

    • @zeus28frenzy
      @zeus28frenzy 2 роки тому +29

      "Cipher. That prides gonna get you killed"

    • @80krauser
      @80krauser 2 роки тому +26

      Obligatory Belka Did Nothing Wrong

    • @myparceltape1169
      @myparceltape1169 2 роки тому +4

      The sand was very hard on the aircraft engines at takeoff and touchdown, especially.
      This put back the installation of equipment requiring precision grinding of stainless steel.

    • @illucidate3749
      @illucidate3749 2 роки тому +12

      All we needed was a giant mchuge Drone carrier

  • @memyself3895
    @memyself3895 Рік тому

    Your videos are both entertaining and informative. Looking forward to watching them all.

  • @LightningWing11
    @LightningWing11 Рік тому +14

    I can’t even begin to describe how badass this is

  • @ObzTicle
    @ObzTicle 3 роки тому +226

    I didn't realize the scale of Desert Storm. The planning and execution is mental.

    • @janatlmb2770
      @janatlmb2770 3 роки тому

      Right

    • @DreDay1993
      @DreDay1993 3 роки тому +3

      I'm sure most of us didn't this was all out war.

    • @Somm_RJ
      @Somm_RJ 3 роки тому +2

      The Iraqi Military were so crippled by the Air Strikes that it only took the ground troops (launched later) 100 hours to settle the battle.

    • @catluva74
      @catluva74 3 роки тому +1

      It set the record for the largest tank battle in history. President Bush decided to go all in from the start. The fear was if the war dragged on the American public would withdraw support fearing it would turn into another Vietnam. If you want to see more on how intense the war was look up the highway of death massacre.

    • @catluva74
      @catluva74 3 роки тому

      @@DreDay1993 I remember watching the news reports while it was happening. There was a real fear that chemical and nuclear weapons would be used.

  • @krisfrederick5001
    @krisfrederick5001 3 роки тому +2157

    The most advanced military in history: "Did the strikes succeed?"
    General: "Turn on CNN."

    • @LRRPFco52
      @LRRPFco52 3 роки тому +308

      Air Force General #2: "We just turned off CNN...high five!"

    • @JohnDoe-tq3ye
      @JohnDoe-tq3ye 3 роки тому +183

      There's no more fake news. Mission accomplished

    • @TheNerdForAllSeasons
      @TheNerdForAllSeasons 3 роки тому +159

      @@JohnDoe-tq3ye Back then, CNN really was probably the most trusted name in news. For good reason.

    • @dennissvitak148
      @dennissvitak148 3 роки тому +16

      All those videos you guys got to watch? I watched them first, in theater, so I could verify the accuracy of my weather forecasts...or at least, that's what I convinced the command staff why I needed to be there!

    • @krisfrederick5001
      @krisfrederick5001 3 роки тому +6

      @@LRRPFco52 Absolutely hilarious. Hey, check this out.....Lights out!

  • @TazR6
    @TazR6 3 місяці тому

    I am in awe at the production skills needed to make this video. It must have been an immense task. Kudos.

  • @Tokax
    @Tokax 7 місяців тому +4

    The people who come up with these strategies are incredibly smart

  • @hellojello9070
    @hellojello9070 3 роки тому +147

    Holy shit... at 9:50, Imagine seeing a massive chunk of metal casually pass by you at a very high speed at eye level, and not dying because you weren't a target.

  • @pkz420
    @pkz420 3 роки тому +1766

    It blows my mind that those bomber pilots took off, and landed, at home in the US.
    A guy woke up, in his own bed, kissed the wife goodbye and sent his kids to school. Drove to work, got in a plane, joined a war for some hours, then returned home.
    Had dinner with the family a few hours after landing.
    And now he's a modern combat vet. It's a new kind of warfare. Soon, with drones, maybe we can soldier from home. A soldier wouldn't even have to put pants on, let alone travel anywhere.
    I'm kinda glad I'm too old to live long enough to see this tech mature.
    EDIT: To anyone who wants to say that the flight was longer than 24 hours, I suggest your read a bit slower. Nowhere does this comment imply that the flight was less than 35 hours. The point, that your missing, is that they took off from, and landed in the US, after one flight.

    • @macktheinterloper
      @macktheinterloper 3 роки тому +199

      Remote warfare is something I'm definitely not looking forward to, as the civilians will surely be the only ones to suffer the fallout.

    • @6ixsupaneat674
      @6ixsupaneat674 3 роки тому +69

      @@macktheinterloper Who cares man, as long as Uncle Sam and Zion get what they want. Just dont report on it and noone will know or care!

    • @JamieBainbridge
      @JamieBainbridge 3 роки тому +103

      Staff in the USA flying remote drones is already reality. There are plenty of articles about the PTSD suffered by such remote pilots during Afghanistan.

    • @916619jg
      @916619jg 3 роки тому +26

      How long do you think a transcontinental flight from the US to Kuwait is? 😂

    • @916619jg
      @916619jg 3 роки тому +10

      As of the time of my commenting 43 dumbasses can't do basic math either

  • @tim2788
    @tim2788 Рік тому

    Amazing video the visuals are kept simple which makes it very easy to understand. Great job!

  • @lucaszago4727
    @lucaszago4727 9 днів тому

    Thank you for the effort, man! Helps us a lot to understand the battle.