History's 5 Most Useless Generals

2024 ж. 14 Мам.
403 438 Рет қаралды

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  • Video Sponsored by Ridge Wallet. Check them out here: ridge.com/sideprojects and use the code SIDEPROJECTS to get 10% OFF your order!

    @Sideprojects@Sideprojects6 ай бұрын
    • Can we get a chapter marker to skip Ridge?

      @madmick3794@madmick37946 ай бұрын
    • General-ly everyone who worked at unit 731?, 713? You know that one video they did, absolutely shocking stuff.

      @NooffenceBut_@NooffenceBut_6 ай бұрын
    • ​@madmick3794 wooow! Username checks out, you mad lad. They might hear you 🤫🤭

      @NooffenceBut_@NooffenceBut_6 ай бұрын
    • You forgot haig and foch...

      @robinderoos1166@robinderoos11666 ай бұрын
    • Great video as always! For me the background music seems a little too loud, it's distracting me from Simon's audio

      @kitso_m2327@kitso_m23276 ай бұрын
  • One of my Favorite passages from General Grant on Bragg in his Personal Memoirs: I have heard in the old army an anecdote very characteristic of Bragg. On one occasion, when stationed at a post of several companies commanded by a field officer, he was himself commanding one of the companies and at the same time acting as post quartermaster and commissary. He was first lieutenant at the time, but his captain was detached on other duty. As commander of the company, he made a requisition upon the quartermaster-himself-for something he wanted. As quartermaster he declined to fill the requisition and endorsed on the back of it his reasons for so doing. As company commander he responded to this, urging that his requisition called for nothing but what he was entitled to, and that it was the duty of the quartermaster to fill it. As quartermaster he still persisted that he was right. In this condition of affairs Bragg referred the whole matter to the commanding officer of the post. The latter, when he saw the nature of the matter referred, exclaimed: “My God, Mr. Bragg, you have quarreled with every officer in the army, and now you are quarrelling with yourself!”

    @philt2170@philt21706 ай бұрын
    • Bragg claimed the story was false, but I believe Grant.

      @MegaFortinbras@MegaFortinbras6 ай бұрын
    • I've heard this one before. I can hardly tell the story without breaking into uncontrollable laughter. Thanks for sharing!

      @serpent645@serpent6456 ай бұрын
    • @@MegaFortinbras Sounds exactly like Bragg if you ask me, so I believe it too and Grant was a basically honest and decent man and likely wouldn't make this claim without evidence. Bragg quarreled with just about everybody, dithered in the face of one of the great victories of the South, Chickamauga, and wasted the chance to change the course of the war.

      @unbreakable7633@unbreakable76336 ай бұрын
    • The question is, was that the actions of an intensely rule obsessed man or just the actions of a very bored and frustrated officer trying to kill some time?

      @voiceofraisin3778@voiceofraisin37786 ай бұрын
    • Sounds pretty spot on for Bragg.

      @comettamer@comettamer6 ай бұрын
  • "On the other side of the river was General McClellan and his Army of the Potomac. He had brought his infantry, cavalry and artillery. He had only made one mistake. He had brought himself." Confederate officer.

    @TTTT-oc4eb@TTTT-oc4eb6 ай бұрын
  • What is really truly mind-boggling about Cadorna is not only his incompetence and seemingly complete inability to change tactics in the face of reality but the fact he was allowed to stay in command for so long. The man was the Kathleen Kennedy of WW-I

    @wilsonj4705@wilsonj47056 ай бұрын
    • Except Cadorna, like McClellan, at least implemented a fairly robust logistical network. Not to mention he was responsible for the defenses prepared at Monte Grappa where the Central Powers advance was stopped. I can't think of a single redeemable thing that Kathleen Kennedy has accomplished.

      @jedimasterdraco6950@jedimasterdraco69503 ай бұрын
  • Luigi Cadorna and his numerous battles of Isonzo are sometimes described as a stoppable force meeting a movable object. He shares that place with austrian field marshall Franz Conrad von Hötzendorf, who had similarly disasterous military career.

    @Ruosteinenknight@Ruosteinenknight6 ай бұрын
    • ww1 in general .... Haig

      @JohnSmith-rw8uh@JohnSmith-rw8uh6 ай бұрын
    • @@JohnSmith-rw8uhSamsonov says hold my vodka.

      @ronkolek613@ronkolek6136 ай бұрын
    • Hötzendorf was gloriously incompetent, and Haig hardly covered himself with glory, but Cadorna was criminally negligent. Haig at least tried to attack different locations, and not too often. Cadorna attacked *the same place* with the *same results* not twice, not thrice, but *eleven times*, and then - after all of that - was effortlessly smashed at Caporetto.

      @gurk_the_magnificent9008@gurk_the_magnificent90086 ай бұрын
    • ​@@gurk_the_magnificent9008the definition of insanity

      @viktorsov8729@viktorsov87296 ай бұрын
    • @@JohnSmith-rw8uh Douglas Haigh was popular with his troops, especially the colonials, thats not the sign of a bad leader. His funeral was attended by tens of thousands of veterans. Its onlywhen he was safely dead and unable to complain that David LLoyd George was able to star smashing his reputation.

      @voiceofraisin3778@voiceofraisin37786 ай бұрын
  • 16:00 A small historical note, the commander of a Mountain Battalion that successfully outflanked the Italians at the Battle of Caporetto was a certain German Lieutenant named Erwin Rommel.

    @DavidKutzler@DavidKutzler5 ай бұрын
    • Never heard of him. He must have just gotten lucky.

      @jffry890@jffry8905 ай бұрын
    • He got the poure le merite for that

      @edscmidt5193@edscmidt51935 ай бұрын
    • I was about to say the same thing. Didn't he get extremely lucky though, he had had a problem of over extending himself which made him very vulnerable, he was just quite lucky with it.

      @bethanbaker7066@bethanbaker70664 ай бұрын
    • @@bethanbaker7066 Perhaps one may call it luck that the collapse of the Italian army was so complete that Rommel got away with taking big risks that, otherwise, may have bit him in the ass. The Italians were finally able halt their rout at the Piave river, where it became a static campaign for another year. The Italian victory in the Battle of Vittorio Veneto a year after the disaster at Caporetto knocked the Austro-Hungarian Empire out of the war, which made it impossible for Germany to continue the war. The war ended days later.

      @DavidKutzler@DavidKutzler4 ай бұрын
    • ​@@DavidKutzler That's definitely true. I'm no good strategist with regards to history. I'm more so people and personalities. I'm in my first year of History and Ancient History at Uni. This is more just my own sort of reading though, the book i read about this in was Rommel and Montgomery Parallel Lives but i do have other books I've not read yet including his own Infantry Attacks. I have autism and get hyperfixations, i just went from WW1 airforces to the Afrika Korps a year or two ago.

      @bethanbaker7066@bethanbaker70664 ай бұрын
  • I love the description of the struggle between Peter the Great and King Charles of Sweden. I quote from memory here: "Despite all his early bungling, Peter the Great did not achieve the status of being a bad commander by one standard- he did not get men killed for absolutely no reason. In the end, Charles did."

    @althesmith@althesmith6 ай бұрын
    • That quote is wonderfully pat and totally wrong. Sweden was a tiny power of 1-3 million people trying to hold Russia’s massive manpower back from something it wanted; doable when Russia was a medieval shambles, but a bit of a questionable proposition when Russia was helmed by a modernizer with so much control over his country that he was capable of ordering everything that an invading army could eat to be destroyed, and be obeyed. Charles XII in 1707 may have landed some whacks on the Russians and have achieved favorable results with his other enemies, but he was well aware that Peter’s military situation was improving and that Russia was on the rise, and perceived that he had a narrow window in which to regain an advantage. (Something that many of those who deride his actions as unreasonably stupid also acknowledge, tossing it on the heap of reasons why his action was doomed, without it ever seeming to occur to them that this might have been a major motive. Or indeed that if he had done what many opining from abroad thought he should have and made peace, he would have been criticized later for a lack of geopolitical foresight.) The Swedish military policy towards Russia going back numerous generations was in line with Gustavus Adolphus’s maxim of ‘making the ditch too wide for the bear to jump’ - ie aggression, something which, combined with the messy results of an earlier attempt to recover Ingria and the particular problems that campaign had suffered, influenced the Swedes towards a full on invasion. And I say ‘the Swedes’ rather than Charles XII, because, while Charles was in command, he had the opinion of the Swedish military establishment behind him, even if parts of the civilian government may have believed that the invasion of Russia was unnecessary. I would also add that contrary to what is frequently said on the basis of remarks aimed at psyching out the Russians and psyching up the Swedes, Charles XII was aware of the difficulty and danger of the situation he was entering into, even if he could not, for instance, have foreseen that the winter of 1708-09 would turn out to be the coldest in living memory. He was not free from error in conducting his campaign, but neither did he make his decisions for silly reasons. The campaign itself was undeniably ill-fated, but the assertion that it was an example of his getting his men killed for absolutely no reason is in fact unreasonable. Also, Charles XII is not generally considered to have been a bad commander.

      @EllenACook@EllenACook4 ай бұрын
  • I submit Major-General William Elphinstone’s name to this debate. He organised what turned into one of the greatest defeats of a British army in history. Realising the First Anglo-Afghan War in 1842 wasn’t going the way he thought it should, he tried to organise a retreat of his forces, staff, families and other non combatants with local Afghan warlords. When his representative was killed at the negotiating table, he sent another, with the same list of demands for his retreat. The Afghans agreed, as long as Elphinstone agreed to leave all his guns (artillery and soldier’s personal weapons) at the fort outside of Kabul. Elphinstone did so and marched his column of about 18500 unarmed men, women and children into the waiting trap. Around 16000 were killed or captured.

    @Timbulathespidermonk@Timbulathespidermonk6 ай бұрын
    • Elphinstone's incompetence was far more about getting himself into the desperate position he was in prior to this. The negotiations in reality were about the terms of surrender; he really had no choice but to hope the Afghans would keep their word.

      @kenoliver8913@kenoliver89136 ай бұрын
    • The Afghans didn’t keep their word. Why didn’t this information get to Biden?

      @jimarcher5255@jimarcher52556 ай бұрын
    • @@jimarcher5255 Or Trump. Or Obama. Or Shrub...the guy who started it all.

      @mkvv5687@mkvv56876 ай бұрын
    • @@mkvv5687 All four President's should have known the lessons of history. The world is NOT a safer place after all that sacrifice.

      @Tiglath-PileserXIX@Tiglath-PileserXIX5 ай бұрын
    • @@jimarcher5255 Probably because trump had the files in his shower. You do know that Trump negotiated the withdrawal with the Taliban and excluded the Afghan government? or that Trump's timeline for a complete withdrawal was months earlier than Biden's, or do you get all your facts from Fox opinion, or Newsmin??

      @freddieclark@freddieclark5 ай бұрын
  • One general you missed was the French general Montcalme. He lost Canada to the British by NOT stayng in the impregnible fort of Quebec City. He could have waited the English out because winter would force them to sail back to England. But instead he left the fort and lost to General Wolfe on The Plains Of Abraham. Both generals were killed in the battle, by the way.

    @jocktulloch3499@jocktulloch34996 ай бұрын
    • Very true, but unfortunately this is catered to a US audience.

      @Mike-hu3pp@Mike-hu3pp6 ай бұрын
    • The British did learn from his mistakes when the Americans tried to siege the area in winter.

      @Taospark@Taospark6 ай бұрын
    • Old-school gallantry as opposed to new-school strategy. I'd like to see a re-enactment there. Quebecois would hate it !

      @murrayscott9546@murrayscott95466 ай бұрын
    • General Wolfe practised the assault for months prior to the battle by practicing the assault on a hill in Dorset prior to departure.

      @Trebor74@Trebor746 ай бұрын
    • Before that general Montcalm had some great victories like in battle of Ticonderoga or battle of Fort Henry so he wasn't incompetent, he just made bad decisions in one battle.

      @TheVistula@TheVistula6 ай бұрын
  • I have always assumed that Ft Bragg was named because of how many victories he allowed the Union.

    @pkt1213@pkt12136 ай бұрын
    • God, imagine if Bragg was a Union soldier the entire time, he was just really, REALLY deep undercover and was intentionally sabotaging the Confederates?

      @Kaltagstar96@Kaltagstar966 ай бұрын
    • So funny 😂

      @cgardner85@cgardner856 ай бұрын
    • Ft. Hood was so named for the same reason.

      @johnmiwa6256@johnmiwa62566 ай бұрын
    • @@johnmiwa6256 yep.

      @pkt1213@pkt12136 ай бұрын
    • Ft. liberty now....

      @gomahklawm4446@gomahklawm44466 ай бұрын
  • Bragg's one substantial victory, at Chickamauga, is featured in the book "Fatal Victories." It was mostly due to a mistake by the normally decent Rosecrans who made a whole in his own line, but Bragg's troops were so mauled in the campaign (he actually lost more men than Rosecrans) that they never won another battle. Hence Chattanooga. Prior to the invasion of Kentucky, Kentucky was neutral, which caused severe problems for Union strategy. The invasion forced them into the Union camp which opened up the whole frontier of Tennessee to Union invasion.

    @sydhenderson6753@sydhenderson67536 ай бұрын
    • Attacking forces usually always suffer more losses than defending. Also Bragg intended to starve the army of the Cumberland in Chattanooga. Which was going according to plan until Grant came in. Who with reinforcement reopened the supply lines and attacked Bragg in two major engagements. But the failure of destroying the army of the Cumberland wasn't as much Bragg's fault. As it was general George Thomas's stubborn resistance allowing an orderly retreat.

      @bman6065@bman60656 ай бұрын
    • We have a military fort named after that guy...

      @sunkings5972@sunkings59726 ай бұрын
    • @@sunkings5972 is it so still? Surprised they didn't get to that one yet

      @bman6065@bman60656 ай бұрын
    • @@bman6065 Fort Bragg has been renamed Fort Liberty. I'm kind of meh on the new name but anything is an improvement after it being named after an incompetent traitor. I'm curious if the decisions to name military bases in the South wasn't spiked by Army officers naming some of them after the more incompetent Confederate generals. If so, then that was a nice bit of trolling.

      @Angel9932@Angel99326 ай бұрын
    • Man, the guy had subordinates that took their dislike for him on the job! Being slow to follow orders is just plain insubordination.

      @fbksfrank4@fbksfrank46 ай бұрын
  • OK, when Simon mentioned that Bragg's forces tried to have him assassinated, it got me thinking: How did none of Cardona's own men try and kill him? considering he'd probably have executed you anyway for the smallest thing, you might as well have taken your chances.

    @Kaltagstar96@Kaltagstar966 ай бұрын
    • I expect Cardona never, ever got so close to the front that the people actually doing the fighting had a chance at him.

      @jkausti6737@jkausti67376 ай бұрын
    • @@jkausti6737 the truly awful people at least seem to have an inkling that they are hated ... and ofc their lives are so much more important than all the peasants and must be preserved for the greater goodblabla ... by hiding as far from the front as possible ^^

      @thingamabob3902@thingamabob39026 ай бұрын
    • I've begun to wonder about what I must do if Trump is made the US President again.Wartime I went to Canada before my number came up. When it came up I was safe and could return to the US where milkshakes were superior. Now to go to Canada I'd need big money I do not have. 100 thousand dollars in the bank. And I must consider those of us who will be trapped under the rule of fascists and fools. All that cheating citizens have been accused of are the crimes Trump will employ, (if at all possible). It is past time for Trump to have been jailed. 'Oh sure they say the wheels of justice turn slowly but they are sure." Sure, right

      @TranscendianIntendor@TranscendianIntendor5 ай бұрын
    • Cardona was the Italian Army's Chief of Staff, he was not a field commander. He wouldn't have been that exposed.

      @MrShaneVicious@MrShaneVicious4 ай бұрын
    • ​@@jkausti6737why would the Army Chief of Staff be near that front? There wouldn't be much of a purpose for him to be there. He ran an army with nearly a million men , so he needed to be at a communications hub.

      @MrShaneVicious@MrShaneVicious4 ай бұрын
  • Bragg got kicked upstairs because Jefferson Davis was his boy. Less than year later, he talked Davis into replacing his replacement, Joseph Johnston, with John Bell Hood, who was probably even worse than Bragg. In a little over two months after taking command of the Army of Tennessee, Hood led it into utter destruction in the battles of Franklin and Nashville. On November 24, 1864, Hood moved into Tennessee with somewhere north of 30, 000 troops under his command. When he crossed back into Alabama Christmas day, he led 15,000-20, 000 men. Most of which were suffering from any combination typhus, cholera, malnutrition, frostbite and any number of common mid-19th Century ailments. So even after Bragg was pulled from combat command, his incompetence still managed to get thousands of men, men his side desperately needed, killed in of the most inept and unnecessary military campaigns of all time.

    @harryhanz1690@harryhanz16906 ай бұрын
    • Sounds like Bragg was the kind of general that even the timid McClellan could actually defeat.

      @GeorgieB1965@GeorgieB19656 ай бұрын
    • ⁠@@GeorgieB1965probably not. McClellan just didn’t want to fight. He chose numbers over tactics.

      @rixxroxxk1620@rixxroxxk16206 ай бұрын
    • That's why cronyism is a bad idea in the military.

      @fukkitful@fukkitful6 ай бұрын
    • @@fukkitfulamen!

      @rixxroxxk1620@rixxroxxk16206 ай бұрын
    • @@rixxroxxk1620 In defense of McClellan, while his obvious flaws are true, he was also often going on faulty intelligence reports that overestimated the strength of his enemy. Those reports were provided by Allan Pinkerton who somehow never has had that stain his own reputation.

      @EclecticHillbilly@EclecticHillbilly6 ай бұрын
  • General Grant's memoirs tells the story of Bragg as a quarrelsome young officer, forced to serve as C company commander and regimental supply officer simultaneously. As C company commander he wrote a letter requesting certain supplies, as supply officer he wrote a response refusing the request. As C company commander he wrote another letter asserting it was his duty to provide these supplies, and as supply officer he claimed that he would retain the supplies, in the event they were needed by another unit. He then took the combined correspondence to the regimental commander to make the decision. The regimental commander stated, "Mr. Bragg, you have quarreled with every officer on the post, and now you are quarreling with yourself!" and threw Mr. Bragg from his officer.

    @DonMeaker@DonMeaker6 ай бұрын
  • Never interrupt an enemy General while he is making a mistake! Sage advice from Napoleon Bonaparte.

    @claywest9528@claywest95286 ай бұрын
  • I think truly great commanders need to be as much diplomats as tactically great generals, look at Eisenhower in World War II, he was no "fighting" general and had never led troops in battle but by God he held together an incredibly varied, diverse and often tense and squabbling alliance to bring liberation to Western Europe and a pivotal role in the ultimate defeat of Nazi Germany.

    @keithwalmsley1830@keithwalmsley18306 ай бұрын
    • He would be unacceptably progressive for both modern political parties.

      @andywomack3414@andywomack34146 ай бұрын
    • think of the Austrian General Schwarzenberg in the end of the Napoleonic wars ( Battle of Leipzig) - he was chosen for command because of his diplomatic skills so he might hold the alliance together and not the so-so military ones. He succedded by arriving to move the Austrian, Prussian and Russian Army from different directions onto the field of battle for an actually synchronized attack.

      @aasphaltmueller5178@aasphaltmueller51786 ай бұрын
    • I don't think any President since Ike can match him for the positive effect he has had. LBJ maybe.

      @andywomack3414@andywomack34146 ай бұрын
    • @@andywomack3414 Wasn't Theodore Roosevelt quite well liked? I don't know if that's the same thing, though?

      @Kaltagstar96@Kaltagstar966 ай бұрын
    • Marlborough, even if he had to sneak the march to the Danube past the Dutch.

      @williamcurtin5692@williamcurtin56926 ай бұрын
  • This video needs a little more editing, it took a few tries to start calling Braxton Bragg by the correct name instead of calling him Braxton Brigg.

    @chrismichael7519@chrismichael75196 ай бұрын
    • And then, CadoRna...

      @ramonribascasasayas7877@ramonribascasasayas78776 ай бұрын
  • How did Westmorland not get on this list. If ever there was an example of arrogance and incompetence leading an ever deepening spiral of disaster and corruption, he was it. Arguably, MacArthur could be on this list also

    @roedl08@roedl086 ай бұрын
    • American Exceptionalism, and WW2 and the Vietnam War are too recent and the real stories of these two incompetent Generals contradict present American hagiography.

      @Tiglath-PileserXIX@Tiglath-PileserXIX5 ай бұрын
    • No argument, MacArthur should be on this list.

      @JB-yb4wn@JB-yb4wn4 ай бұрын
    • MacArthur had his moments (WWI, Inchon), but by all rights he should have been sacked after losing the Philippines. Kimmel and Short were relieved after Pearl, Fredendall was fired after the Kasserine Pass debacle, and other general officers were relieved of command throughout the war for less serious lapses.

      @johndetlie7853@johndetlie78534 ай бұрын
    • @@johndetlie7853 Family connections, what can I say? They eventually got him in Korea though.

      @JB-yb4wn@JB-yb4wn4 ай бұрын
  • “ when it comes to incompetent generals, we really are rather spoiled for choices in World War I, A conflict that showcases a grim parade of tactical obstinacy and tragic miscalculations.”

    @StevenBanks123@StevenBanks1236 ай бұрын
    • I think it was a case of the technology of War was beyond the comprehension of the old school generals, on all sides. The Generals were fighting a Napoleonic War with machine guns and quick firing cannons. The description of Lions led by Donkeys is very appropriate, my apologies to Donkeys.

      @Tiglath-PileserXIX@Tiglath-PileserXIX5 ай бұрын
    • @@Tiglath-PileserXIX and fighting the previous war

      @StevenBanks123@StevenBanks1235 ай бұрын
  • I am surprised at the omission of General Fredenhall of the Second World War. He is the one who was markedly fearful of getting anywhere near the combat endured by his troops as he had 200 innovative engineers build him an impregnable cave. Flamethrowers were used inside of this cave to fire the clay within. He was living then inside of a clay pot. Eventually he was relieved of his command and promoted returned to the states to a position training soldiers, which possibly redeemed him since apparently he was good at that job far from danger to him personally.

    @TranscendianIntendor@TranscendianIntendor6 ай бұрын
    • As lousy as he was, he cannot hold a candle against the selected ones. CadoRna was totally out of his mind. And if you read about von Hötzendorf you will be astonished.

      @ramonribascasasayas7877@ramonribascasasayas78776 ай бұрын
    • @@ramonribascasasayas7877 I have to admit while I have read a good deal of military history I have not read widely at all on this particular subject, meaning bad generals. Just read Scramble and learned a good deal about AirPower strategy. And then read about the North African Campaign. FDR comes off as a Great War president: Desperate Venture, Norman Gelb. I use a Kindle Fire. As ebooks and unlimited these books are free to read and inexpensive to purchase. Reading Paul Fussell's "War Time" now. I've read most of FuSSell"s books since "The First World War and Modern Memory". I know of the Civil war mostly from Shelby Foote. Paulette Jiles Books are great centered in Western campaigns and she shares environments with Larry McMurtry. Amazing they named Fort Bragg Fort Bragg. Really thanks. I had never heard of these guys.

      @TranscendianIntendor@TranscendianIntendor6 ай бұрын
    • At least he was sacked by Ike after the disaster at Kasserine, and replaced by Patton, on the contrary Cadorna was sacked only after Caporetto, after 2+ war 's years!

      @alessiodecarolis@alessiodecarolis6 ай бұрын
    • My grandfather had a nephew that might have worked on Fredenhall's bunker. He was a M4 driver that got bored during the delay after landing so started building camp furniture out of the shipping crates since he was a carpenter. He was assisted by other tankers that were tradesmen. Some Army brass noticed their work so figured they would be handy to keep around to repair damaged structures for use as headquarters. His nephew was given a battlefield commission to be a lieutenant so he could command a platoon of tradesmen. He was well in the rear when his M4 was destroyed during its first combat engagement when it took a direct hit from a large artillery shell. Said he spent the war repairing buildings and building crates to the officers war booty that they could have shipped back to the States for free.

      @billwilson-es5yn@billwilson-es5yn5 ай бұрын
    • Good story. An M4 is what? Is it a Tank Destroyer? I was poor and have often been poor. The last thing I knew how to do was carpentry and I built most of my furniture from pallets and scraps. I had some 4 by 4 Birch ply and I painted on it. Seriously. The terrible thing about Army shipping container builds was they were never given the Flyleafs required to moderate interior temperatures. I am impressed that flame throwers were used to fire the clay walls of the Fredenhall headquarters. It seems to me that this ought be done more often & protocols developed. @@billwilson-es5yn

      @TranscendianIntendor@TranscendianIntendor5 ай бұрын
  • It needs to be acknowledged more how often "epic" stories are just about a dumb and mean person being dumb and mean

    @Infodumptruck@Infodumptruck6 ай бұрын
    • Great men theory, no good guys.

      @andywomack3414@andywomack34146 ай бұрын
  • I am surprised, but not angry, that you ranked another general of the U.S. Civil War below Ambrose Burnside. He was so unqualified to be a general that even he admitted it. Ironically, he was quite accomplished in several endeavors as a civilian.

    @JPMadden@JPMadden6 ай бұрын
    • I dunno, I'd say John Bell Hood ranks below Burnside. At least Burnside's mistakes weren't as catastrophic as Hood's.

      @MrGksarathy@MrGksarathy5 ай бұрын
    • @@MrGksarathy Hood lost several battles in the last year of the war trying to defend Atlanta and then during his campaign in Tennessee. But the war was a lost cause by then. I know the Battle of Franklin was a disaster. Burnside lost the Battle of Fredericksburg, performed badly at Antietam, and was blamed, perhaps unfairly, for the debacle of the Battle of the Crater during the Siege of Petersburg. It seems Burnside has the worse historical reputation today.

      @JPMadden@JPMadden5 ай бұрын
    • But those sideburns...

      @pdxcorgidad@pdxcorgidad4 ай бұрын
  • In your segment about Sigismund, where you talk about Emperor Bayazid, you've got a painting that shows Sultan Bayazid and Timur, the Mongol leader, who captured Bayazid in 1403. The painting is by Stanisław Chlebowski.

    @vickibamman8333@vickibamman83336 ай бұрын
    • Beyazid was a Sultan not an Emperor.

      @mussyeg@mussyeg4 ай бұрын
  • 0:30 - Chapter 1 - Quintus servilius caepio 3:20 - Mid roll ads 5:25 - Back to the video 5:40 - Chapter 2 - Sigismund of luxembourg 9:15 - Chapter 3 - Braxton brigg 13:00 - Chapter 4 - Luigi cardona 17:05 - Chapter 5 - Grigory kulik

    @ignitionfrn2223@ignitionfrn22236 ай бұрын
    • Enver Pasher was WORSE than Cardona

      @LJMpictures@LJMpictures6 ай бұрын
    • 17:33 - Chapter 5 (and a bit) - Harry Kane

      @vinceely2906@vinceely29066 ай бұрын
  • Please do the Baltic Fleet's 1905 wild and absurd adventures, which led up to the battle of Tsushima.

    @lajoyalobos2009@lajoyalobos20096 ай бұрын
    • With more sarcasm than Drach?

      @Philip271828@Philip2718286 ай бұрын
    • Do you see torpedo boats?

      @gurk_the_magnificent9008@gurk_the_magnificent90086 ай бұрын
    • @@gurk_the_magnificent9008 yes, Japanese torpedo boats, near the English coast! Open fire! Oh wait, those are fishermen 😂

      @lajoyalobos2009@lajoyalobos20096 ай бұрын
    • @@lajoyalobos2009 evil and dangerous fishermen !

      @thingamabob3902@thingamabob39026 ай бұрын
  • Another American Civil War general that I would include would be the politically appointed Major General Franz Sigel. The NYC German immigrant controlled government appointed this German officer with experience in Europe without investigating his resume’. It turns out of about a dozen battles he won only one, a minor cavalry skirmish. Sigel as appointed to attack the Shenandoah Valley. Prior his proud troops would exclaim “Who fight mit Sigel” which got changed to “Who runs mit Sigel “ afterwards. His opponent was the former US Vice President John C. Breckinridge. This is also the battle where the VMI cadets participated. Breckinridge wanted only the very modern Austrian made artillery battery of VMI was given the whole Cadet Corps. He placed the cadets in the furthest reserves. During the rout phase of the battle two forward advancing units parted padding a house. The cadets filled in the now produced gap, but the battle was essentially over. Breckinridge got off of his horse as his army chased the running Yankees to talk to two of his officers who were VMI graduates and cousins, George Smith and George Patton. Sigel would die of old age and obscurity in a residential hotel in NYC as a sad neglected individual.

    @michaeltelson9798@michaeltelson97986 ай бұрын
  • It's Braxton Bragg, not Braxton Brigg. Before he was promoted, he was quartermaster and filed a request for supplies. He was then promoted and soon received his own request, which he subsequently denied. He was said to argue with himself.

    @russjudge@russjudge6 ай бұрын
  • Yes, Kulik was incompetent, but the Finnish army was also badass, especially in winter conditions.

    @DukeWeIIington@DukeWeIIington6 ай бұрын
    • To be fair, it rarely helps to send an incompetent general against crack well-led enemy forces who have home ground advantage and the weather on their side. o.O

      @simonmagid4205@simonmagid42055 ай бұрын
    • @@simonmagid4205to be fair it doesn’t help as an authoritarian ruler to kill all your best generals and a fits of paranoia at a a time when a crazy man with a silly mustache said that your country must die in the 1920s… and attacking another nation also wasn’t a great idea

      @Dudewithguns-ww7wc@Dudewithguns-ww7wc5 ай бұрын
  • Bragg served as his own quartermaster at one point and even denied his own requests for supplies. N.B. Forrest animosity towards Bragg reached the point of declaring to his face, "if you ever give me another order again, I'll **** you." Forrest then requested a transfer, to which, Bragg wisely approved.

    @marshallrobinson1019@marshallrobinson10195 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for covering Bragg. I grew up at Fort Bragg in Fayetteville and always thought it was dumb such an important base was named after such a bad general.

    @jcbillman@jcbillman5 ай бұрын
  • I think William Westmoreland deserves honorable mention.

    @TSimo113@TSimo1136 ай бұрын
  • Kinda disappointed that General George McClellan didn’t make the list… his unwillingness to act and follow orders may have saved many lives of the soldiers under his direct command but it also is likely the reason the civil war didn’t end much sooner.

    @CurtTheRed@CurtTheRed6 ай бұрын
    • McClellan was a bad field general (Antietam is inexcusable), but he could *build* a good army. He's not in the same league as these losers, some of whom destroyed perfectly good armies... Ambrose Burnside would deserve mention before McClellan.

      @northerner3861@northerner38616 ай бұрын
    • I would say Custer is more suited than either Burnside or McClellan. Burnside knew he was bad and only took the job because they threatened to give it to someone worse.

      @m0nkEz@m0nkEz5 ай бұрын
    • McClellan is an example of great soldier places in wrong position. He would be best used if he got overall command over training and unit build up in the armies of the Union. He was absolutely fucking brilliant at that. As to his abilities as a frontline commander, I would say uninspired competence.

      @michalsoukup1021@michalsoukup10214 ай бұрын
    • @@m0nkEz: "This is the West, sir. When the legend becomes fact, print the legend." (from "The Man Who Shot Liberty Valance".)

      @nadapuesnada7716@nadapuesnada77164 ай бұрын
  • John Bell Hood of the Confederate Army could be right up there with Bragg. He was a great brigade commander,(4th Texas Infantry Brigade) however the higher he went, he ended up being the architect of some of the most ill-advised frontal assaults of the Civil War. Atlanta, where he lost 20,000 troops for no gain, and Franklin where he lost 1/3rd of his remaining forces. (around 7,000) He then moved the tattered remnant to Nashville to lay siege on the place, outnumbered and without adequate winter clothing or supplies where they were decimated by the superior force there.

    @TheMarkemmy@TheMarkemmy6 ай бұрын
  • I would have included Lt General Arthur Percival on this list. He surrendered 85,00 men to just 35,000 Japanese soldiers in what could be called the Bicycle Blitxkreg. Unbelievably he was willing to carry the white flag of surrender himself. Granted he was under equipped. But he also was maintaining a poorly trained and poorly prepared force. Which is the fault of the commander.

    @Bronco46tube@Bronco46tube6 ай бұрын
    • 💯

      @memofromessex@memofromessex6 ай бұрын
    • I suspect the bleak reality was that Singapore would have fallen eventually anyway. The royal navy didn't have the resources to defend and supply it, Prince of Wales and Repulse had been sunk and no aircraft carrier was available. The US pacific fleet was out of action except for a small number of carriers and smaller ships and overstretch was everywhere. It was going to be at least a year before the situation substantially improved.

      @philiphumphrey1548@philiphumphrey15486 ай бұрын
    • All that being true, he still ignores intel about where Japanese staging areas were, there were things he could have done to make the Japanese work for the win. And most unforgivable in my eyes, he refused to allow his troops to dig in because “it was bad for morale”. You k ow what else is bad for morale? Getting overrun because you didn’t dig in.

      @ronkolek613@ronkolek6136 ай бұрын
    • On the other hand, the US Army did make a stand in the Philippines under MacArthur. They fought on bravely until retreating to Corregidor Island. There they held out for months until running out of food and ammo, then having to surrender.

      @Mondo762@Mondo7626 ай бұрын
    • @@Mondo762MacArthur showed up on the Bataan peninsula exactly once during that whole debacle. They didn't call him "Dugout Doug" for nothing. A behavior that continued during the New Guinea campaign. He had exactly no idea of what the Australians were facing on the Kokoda Track. But he had he best public relations department of any general in history.

      @PeterC5263@PeterC52636 ай бұрын
  • For a very astute and amusing commentary on British incompetence, the book "On the Psychology of Military Incompetence" by Norman Dixon, former engineer officer and later professor of psycology, cannot be overrated.

    @tillposer@tillposer6 ай бұрын
    • This is why us Brits used to spend all our defence budget cash on the Royal Navy!

      @stephendavies6949@stephendavies69495 ай бұрын
    • @@stephendavies6949 Ahhh, but the book gives the Royal Navy its fair share...

      @tillposer@tillposer5 ай бұрын
  • I believe Luigi Cardona was the inspiration for the film _Many Wars Ago,_ where an incompetent Italian general led a disastrous campaign against the Austro-Hungarians. In one scene, he sent a company of men clad in armor straight out of Warner bros to clear the wire to the enemy trenches. They were gunned down to the last.

    @cocacola4blood365@cocacola4blood3656 ай бұрын
  • Sigismund’s largest mistake was burning Skalitz, igniting Sir Henry’s quest for revenge.

    @ItzNiekoyo@ItzNiekoyo6 ай бұрын
    • I feel quite hungry.

      @jonathanallard2128@jonathanallard21286 ай бұрын
  • Then there is General Sickles… first man to successfully use the temporary insanity defense in a murder trial, becomes a Union General, almost screws the whole thing up at Gettysburg…

    @stephenbritton9297@stephenbritton92976 ай бұрын
  • They could probably do a Parts 2 & 3 on this subject. The US General in charge of US Troops in North Africa during WW 2 at the onset of Operation Torch. General Mark Clark, I think should have been tried on something for his cock up in Italy.

    @zephyer-gp1ju@zephyer-gp1ju6 ай бұрын
    • or Gen. Lloyd Fredendall - he was spectacularly incompetent in North Africa

      @grandadmiralraeder9608@grandadmiralraeder96086 ай бұрын
    • And I'd nominate Union General Burnside (after whom sideburns were named, possibly his only positive accomplishment) as a flip side to General Bragg. The other Union officers were sometimes known to suggest that the best thing he could do for the Union Army was to defect and command troops for the Confederacy.

      @mikep3226@mikep32266 ай бұрын
    • who the fuck names a kid Mark Clark? My enlgish teacher Mrs Farkas has a son named Marcus. WTF is wrong with people?!?!?!?

      @JakeGordon-cp7eo@JakeGordon-cp7eo6 ай бұрын
    • @@arisnothelesI'm aware

      @grandadmiralraeder9608@grandadmiralraeder96086 ай бұрын
    • @@mikep3226 McClellan was pretty bad too in many ways

      @grandadmiralraeder9608@grandadmiralraeder96086 ай бұрын
  • absolutely disagree about Sigismund, the problem was with french knights who did not follow orders while Sigismund had a good strategy, unfortunately it was ignored by the french

    @WhiteCossack@WhiteCossack6 ай бұрын
    • You were there?

      @jeffdroog@jeffdroog6 ай бұрын
    • @@jeffdroog i was. sigismund and his generals who had been fighting the ottomans for years had a better idea of what to do. the french cavalry thought they were better than everyone and criticized it. they also insisted on engaging the ottomans first so they could claim glory. sigismund told them not to do it cuz they would get their asses kicked. after hearing this warning, the french cavalry proceeded to charge the enemy and got all of their asses kicked.

      @cedriclee7110@cedriclee71106 ай бұрын
    • @@cedriclee7110 Pictures,or it didn't happen lol

      @jeffdroog@jeffdroog6 ай бұрын
    • @@jeffdroog no cameras back then. also, at the battlefield, even the older french knights had advised to wait for the main army to arrive before engaging the ottomans. the younger knights called them cowards and proceeded to charge. they got completely annihilated. sigismund and the germans fought to prevent a total envelopment and were last to leave the field.

      @cedriclee7110@cedriclee71106 ай бұрын
    • @@jeffdroogthe French kept making the same damn mistake. Their impetuousness and desire fore glory caused their own crushing defeats from the 100 Years War to Nicopolis to Varna.

      @ronkolek613@ronkolek6136 ай бұрын
  • If I were talking about an incompetent Roman general, the one I would choose would be Publius Quinctilius Varus, who in 9 CE, commanded three Roman legions at the Battle of the Teutoburgerwald. Varus was a prime example of the general appointed for purely political reasons, an shows why this is almost always a bad idea. Varus was going through what is now Saxony in Germany, failed to send out scouts, and was hit by an ambush. Varus lost three legions and six cohorts of auxiliaries, with casualties of somewhere between 14000 and 22000 men. There were no subsequent Roman attempts to conquer Germany east of the Rhine.

    @MegaFortinbras@MegaFortinbras6 ай бұрын
    • He didn't fail to send out scouts. His scouts, however, were traitors (or not depending on how you see it, as they were Germanics) and willfully brought him and his army into the trap.

      @jonathanallard2128@jonathanallard21286 ай бұрын
    • What about Germanicus counter attack who went all the way to that damn forest and beyond? The only reason he failed was because emperor Tiberius was jealous of his Victorias and recalled him back to Rome

      @Kenshiroit@Kenshiroit6 ай бұрын
  • Something not mentioned here is that the big reason Bragg kept his command as long as he did is because Jefferson Davis personally liked him (while Jefferson had personal feuds with more capable alternatives like Joe Johnston). Eventually, after Chatanooga, even Davis had to wake up to the fact that his buddy was an incompetent.

    @mst3KGf@mst3KGf5 ай бұрын
  • When Caepio doesn't listen to his superior and charges the enemy, it's his fault. When the french Knights do it, it's Sigismunds fault.

    @nicolashugli9661@nicolashugli96616 ай бұрын
  • I would have put John Bell Hood as the worst general of the civil war. Braxton at least managed a couple victories, John just threw away 3/4 of his army in 6 months

    @aokiji9468@aokiji94686 ай бұрын
    • Hood was a very good division commander but was promoted above his abilities

      @DMS-pq8@DMS-pq86 ай бұрын
    • The gallant Hood of Texas played Hell in Tennessee! They even wrote a song about him.

      @claywest9528@claywest95286 ай бұрын
    • Hood had lost an arm and a leg in previous battles. He was taking opiates and whatever else for pain which probably affected his decision making abilities. That said, it would have been better for the CSA troops under his command if Hood had lost his head to a cannonball or minie ball instead.

      @MrEnvirocat@MrEnvirocat6 ай бұрын
  • I thought this video was going to be talking about modern Russian generals.

    @brs690@brs6906 ай бұрын
    • Ba-dum tsh!

      @quasinfinity@quasinfinity6 ай бұрын
    • Me too

      @mmareks9865@mmareks98656 ай бұрын
    • They are nowhere close to the buffons that were Cadorna and Hotzendorff. And just saying (only to be called a Russian Propagandist) don't believe every pro -Ukrainian propaganda at CNN and BBC says..They are as true as they claim how untrue Russian propaganda is , for example in RT

      @franzxaverjosephconradgraf6850@franzxaverjosephconradgraf68506 ай бұрын
    • Nah we're still giving them time to really screw up their resumes.

      @blakekenley1000@blakekenley10006 ай бұрын
    • Educate yourselves friends! What you hear on Facebook and CNN isn't the whole story!

      @wmairsoft5238@wmairsoft52386 ай бұрын
  • What about Lord Elphinstone. Architect of the Retreat from Kabul, "the biggest.military idiot of his age and every other "- George Macdonald Fraser.

    @trevormillar1576@trevormillar15766 ай бұрын
    • I especially like how, had he been even remotely active or decisive in the early stages of the crisis, the retreat might not have even been necessary.

      @northerner3861@northerner38616 ай бұрын
  • I'm not sure about Sigismund whether it's entirely his fault when part of his forces were apparently pompous idiots that he was formally leading, but they didn't care for that.

    @vojtechpribyl7386@vojtechpribyl73866 ай бұрын
    • ''But...muh K/D ratio!'' -some vain French knight

      @jonathanallard2128@jonathanallard21286 ай бұрын
  • Cadorna also had no grasp of reality when planning his grand strategy. His original plans for the war called for a surprise attack, quickly overcoming the enemy defenses in the Alps and then a quick march - through Alps - into Tirol and then, within two weeks reaching Vienna, thus knocking Austro Hungarian empire out in less than a month. He treated harsh mountains as if they simply weren't there, weren't an obstacle and wouldn't slow down the army. Needless to say, his army never even managed to actually break through the Alpine defenses of the KuK forces.

    @KPW2137@KPW21376 ай бұрын
  • Ironically, Braxton Bragg ended up having his name attached to one of the largest military installations in the U.S., the formerly-named Fort Bragg in North Carolina, which has since been renamed Fort Liberty.

    @JimTheFly@JimTheFly6 ай бұрын
    • That's a pretty name change. At least pick another general. Surely there are a few worth of a fort. How about Fort Schwarzkopf?

      @cameraman502@cameraman5026 ай бұрын
    • Yeah that is the only name change that I agree with. They should have looked at the men as a whole and not focused on the fact that they had fought for the Confederacy during the civil war.

      @russelljohnson6267@russelljohnson62676 ай бұрын
    • ​@@russelljohnson6267They were traitors, full stop.

      @jamesfitzpatrick8853@jamesfitzpatrick88536 ай бұрын
    • @@jamesfitzpatrick8853 Oh shut up. They were fighting for their home states. That is how it was back then. Loyalty to your state was foremost.

      @Mondo762@Mondo7626 ай бұрын
    • Fort Bragg, California is a town on the northern coast. It was established by a former Confederate Soldier and named after his commander.

      @Mondo762@Mondo7626 ай бұрын
  • Lord Raglan from the Crimean war would have made honorable mention.

    @bigdaddyrat7854@bigdaddyrat78545 ай бұрын
  • While we're discussing Soviet generals unwilling to adapt to new technology, Budyonny deserves (dis)honorable mention.

    @user-vo9wd6tx6c@user-vo9wd6tx6c6 ай бұрын
    • I thought it would be him, if any Soviet generals were to be included in the video.

      @jonathanallard2128@jonathanallard21286 ай бұрын
  • This video is hysterical! The music and sound effects are top notch. I’ll have to watch it again to catch all the details I missed. Thanks for the giggles. Sigismund had fantastic hair, though. And, the icing on the cake is misspelling Bragg’s last name on the title slide.

    @bluevol1976@bluevol19766 ай бұрын
  • Braxton BRAGG! Simon. As in Ft. Bragg. How did you get this wrong? You spelled Chickamauga wrong also.

    @DSS-jj2cw@DSS-jj2cw6 ай бұрын
  • I miss Franz Conrad von Hötzendorf in this team

    @jansundvall2082@jansundvall20826 ай бұрын
    • As an Austrian, I sadly agree.

      @peterstadlmaier3107@peterstadlmaier31076 ай бұрын
  • Despite being British and coming from her part of the world, I would include Boudicca. She started off well, but if the accounts of Watling Street are correct she fought a pitched battle with the Romans when every lesson from the previous 17 years was that was a very bad idea - Caractacus learned that lesson well. A better strategy might have been to refuse battle, prevent the Roman army from foraging the surrounding countryside and wait for them to march, when they become far more vulnerable.

    @philiphumphrey1548@philiphumphrey15486 ай бұрын
    • 70 to 80 000 killed by the romans in a day

      @davidtomkins2152@davidtomkins21526 ай бұрын
    • If, IG IF.....she ever existed anyway. There isn't consensus for a reason....

      @gomahklawm4446@gomahklawm44466 ай бұрын
    • Boudicca was likely not a trained soldier and only became one as a result of circumstances. Why don't we stick to factual and proven incompetents? Brits have their fair share and some even went to Sandhurst and Eton - the bastions of British Society, and even have pretentious and pompous titles. Let's see ... names like Elphinstone, Percival, Hamilton, Chelmsford, Brudenell, Cornwallis, Gordon, Beresford and the victim of his time, Douglas Haig - all in a span of 200 years. At least Boudicca had the decency to die for her cause. These "gentlemen" (except Elphinstone) subsequently lived a life of luxury and some even had fawning apologia written about them.

      @Tiglath-PileserXIX@Tiglath-PileserXIX5 ай бұрын
  • The following places in the United States are or were named for Bragg: •Bragg, Texas -- ghost town founded in 1902 and disappeared by the 1930s. •Fort Bragg, California -- founded in 1857 and named by Horatio Gates Gibson in honor of Bragg's exploits in the Mexican-American war prior to the Civil War. •Fort Liberty -- a military post founded in 1918 as Camp Bragg (later Fort Bragg), but renamed Fort Liberty in 2023.

    @Jayjay-qe6um@Jayjay-qe6um6 ай бұрын
    • What’s your point?

      @LoneWolfOfHouseStark1989@LoneWolfOfHouseStark19896 ай бұрын
    • Nice bonus facts

      @williamstocker584@williamstocker5846 ай бұрын
  • Great stuff. But you need to make it six to get in Conrad (A-H WWI). A Renaissance man of f-ups. A bad field commander, a bad chief of staff, a bad War Minister, and a bad political influence. He wanted a go at Serbia and somehow didn't care if it also meant a war with Russia. Under Conrad's leadership, the AH army which had plans for all sorts of contingencies had no plan for a simultaneous war with Russia and Serbia in 1914. Conrad sneered at artillery, saying that it "distracted from the spirit of the bayonet".

    @williamcurtin5692@williamcurtin56926 ай бұрын
  • The critique of Bragg is a tad off the mark. Chickamauga was more than a minor victory but it became that after he failed to capitalize on it by marching into Chattanooga, which all his subordinate generals were telling him he should do. He often didn't follow up his successes.

    @EclecticHillbilly@EclecticHillbilly6 ай бұрын
    • There would have not been a battle at Chickamauga Creek were it not for Bragg's army being outflanked repeatedly during the Tullahoma campaign. Of course, Rosecrans made the error of pushing out of Chattanooga (at the insistence of Edward Stanton) and assumed that Bragg was going to act the same at Chickamauga, leading to that loss.

      @pepagacy@pepagacy6 ай бұрын
    • Sounds like Hannibal at Cannae.

      @donaldboyer8182@donaldboyer81825 ай бұрын
    • Should have included Westmoreland. He got distracted at the Battle of Khe San and was completely taken of guard with the subsequent Tet offensive, which lead to America losing support for the war. The rest is history.

      @Tiglath-PileserXIX@Tiglath-PileserXIX5 ай бұрын
  • Sidenote it's braxton Bragg LOL 😆

    @xfall5004@xfall50046 ай бұрын
    • I was wanting to say that myself. His pronunciation improved, but, sadly, the general did not, even after being relieved of his command. His career was salvaged by Jefferson Davis, who provided him a civilian post that he mismanaged for much of the remainder of the war.

      @jayt9608@jayt96086 ай бұрын
  • It was not Bragg that won the battle of Chickamauga, but General Longstreet

    @lenny5312@lenny53125 ай бұрын
  • What!! No British general automatically in the top five? I'm shocked. That makes a remarkable change from what is to be anticipated ordinarily from the average YT channel. Excellent video. A hierarchical list of generals of all ages and nations, commencing from grossly incompetent, through competent, to genius would be intriguing. Do it.

    @johnbruce2868@johnbruce28686 ай бұрын
    • British Generals you say; there are plenty to choose from. Here is a short list: 1. Lieutenant General Arthur Percival - WW2 - Singapore 2. Lieutenant General Sir Ian Hamilton - WW1 - Gallipoli 3. Field Marshal Haig - WW1 - Western Front 4. Major General Chelmsford - Anglo-Zulu War - Isandlwana 5. Major General Charles Gordon - Khartoum 6. Lieutenant General Brudenell, Lord Cardigan - Charge of the Light Brigade 7. Lord Cornwallis, we know what he did 8. General Beresford, Viscount Beresford - Lost the British Invasion of River Plate. There you go, a list that only covers about 200 odd years.

      @Tiglath-PileserXIX@Tiglath-PileserXIX5 ай бұрын
    • Amazed to not have the usual nonsense about Haig repeated here (he was an average and often bad general such as with passchendaele but there are hundreds worse, even in the first world war.

      @Ukraineaissance2014@Ukraineaissance20145 ай бұрын
    • ​​​​@@Tiglath-PileserXIXoh i see i spoke to soon. And charles Gordon? You know nothing. Im guessing you just read about his death and mad period in africa and decided on that rather than his unbelievable victories and war engineering in places like china Lord cardigan wasnt even the commanding officer at balaclava. Cornwallis is basically unknown of in britain. Among military historians hes very highly thought of for his actions in india and ireland against the french. The whole revolutionary war thing isnt even in the top 5 priorities of the period compared to india, ireland, the French, spanish and gibralter

      @Ukraineaissance2014@Ukraineaissance20145 ай бұрын
    • @@Ukraineaissance2014 Charles Gordon may have had "unbelievable victories and war engineering ...: but all it takes is one cock up and he not only lost his command but his life. Lord Cardigan ... confusion all around. The end result - a disaster. Cornwallis - of course he was "unknown" in Brtiain. He should be, he lost a continental colony. Lucky for him he was "unknown in Britain" or he would be the worst of the dreadful bunch.

      @Tiglath-PileserXIX@Tiglath-PileserXIX5 ай бұрын
  • Bragg was one the best Generals the North had, following closely by Hood

    @jwhite146@jwhite1466 ай бұрын
    • And the best general the Confederate army had was McClellan

      @ericbarkman4478@ericbarkman44786 ай бұрын
    • How the West Was Lost: C.S.A. For: Gen. John Bell Hood The Village Elliott: 5/'06 Leading "West Rebs" to Tennessee, Hood Led "All Shot-Up" not like when "All-Good;" Unlike ex, Braxton Bragg, Whom all troops rather frag, "One-Eyed" * let Hood destroy them; John would! Maimed commanders on opiates creak, Don’t think straight, tend to nod, wake then freak, Like all men, despite rank; Blitzkrieg works best on crank! Men at war wage war best while they tweak! Time Bell's rung by "Rock" jn Tennessee, "Uncle Billy's" Blues just reached the Sea, "Cump"s March" led Yank drummers, "Blue Bellies" and bummers; "Georgia's burn" still howls "Hood’s Legacy." * "Massa Jeff" A nickname given by Confederate soldiers to President Jefferson Davis. It was affectionate but had the bitter recognition that soldiers were little better than slaves. This was vividly brought home when they cried "Give us something to eat, Massa Jeff," as he passed by hungry troops of Braxton Bragg's camped on Missionary Ridge at Chattanooga, Tennessee on November, 1863.... The work of "General Thomas" alluded to by Lincoln was the defeat and destruction of the Hood's army the previous week. Gen George Thomas , a native Virginia who stayed loyal to the Union, was "The Rock of Chickamauga" who had saved the army by rallying the retreating Yanks to prevent pursuit by the Rebs, becoming a rout. After Atlanta, Thomas was given the duty to pursue Hood. Hood, taking massive doses os opium for his constant pain, was erratic, missing their main chance, nodding away advantages. To compensate, he crippled the army by recklessly assaulting fortifications at Franklin (11/20/64), then destroyed two weeks later at Nashville. Five weeks after crossing their namesake river into the like named state, the tattered remnants of the once proud Army of the Tennessee crossed back over their namesake. Like Savannah, the Army of the Tennessee was also Lincoln's Christmas present, this one from Thomas. "One-eyed Jeff" a rude nickname for Jefferson Davis, who had a chronic eye infection causing virtual blindness. The following Christmas, one Confederate soldier in General John B. Hood's army, when retreating , after the disastrous battle of Nashville, moaned. "Ain't we in a hell of a fix: a one-eyed President, a one-legged general, and a one-horse Confederacy!"

      @elliottkolker4321@elliottkolker43216 ай бұрын
    • @@arisnotheles What, no love for the Hero of Fredericksburg, Ambrose E. Burnside?

      @northerner3861@northerner38616 ай бұрын
    • Hood was at least brave, and was respected by his peers. Bragg singlehandedly lost the West for the Confederates.

      @EwanCumia@EwanCumia5 ай бұрын
    • @@EwanCumia Hood was brave. I'm not sure how respected he was after Spring Hill and Franklin. Bragg had help losing the Wesr, lest we forget Floyd and Pillow.

      @elliottkolker4321@elliottkolker43215 ай бұрын
  • I wouldn't have hesitated to put General George McClellan on this list. No general in ANY American army I can think of did so LITTLE with so MUCH.

    @Eazy-ERyder@Eazy-ERyder6 ай бұрын
    • He may lose battles, but at least he'd still have an intact army afterward.

      @foxymetroid@foxymetroid6 ай бұрын
    • Indeed. He enjoyed every possible advantage, yet repeatedly managed to snatch defeat from the jaws of victory.

      @aaronfleming9426@aaronfleming94265 ай бұрын
  • Chelmsford who divided his force without know where the Zulu were and what their strength were, something Napoleon and Julius Caesar said you never did.

    @bkohatl@bkohatl5 ай бұрын
  • Douglas MacArthur. Incompetent in the field, abandoned his men, then almost started WW3 when he lost face to the Chinese Army. One of the few things Truman did right was to fire his a$$.

    @Tiglath-PileserXIX@Tiglath-PileserXIX5 ай бұрын
  • Ft. Bragg … what a crazy name for a military base. Was this because no vetting before naming the base and that Bragg was the only general from North Carolina? AND that the KKK was at its zenith about that time?

    @robkunkel8833@robkunkel88336 ай бұрын
  • The pronunciations of the names of the Roman generals in this video is just hilarious. Gnaeus are pronounced as "Naius" (Not Nas) and Caepio are pronounced "Keipio" (Not Sepeo). The C was always pronounced as a K and the G in Gnaeus are silent. :)

    @DizzPants@DizzPants6 ай бұрын
    • Don’t think anyone cares lol. Everyone pronounces Caesar’s name with a c and not k “kaizer”

      @nkohu@nkohu6 ай бұрын
    • @@nkohu But who says "Nas" or "Sepeo"?

      @DizzPants@DizzPants6 ай бұрын
    • English speaking people are not known for their proper pronunciations. They seem to struggle with the C and the U and AE sounds. Or avoid them alltogether (Homer, Ovid)

      @Pinkeltje1988@Pinkeltje19886 ай бұрын
  • I think you might have been too hard on poor old Sigisimund. Keeping control of crusading french knights was something not even Richard the Lionheart had much success with...

    @Fastwinstondoom@Fastwinstondoom5 ай бұрын
  • A few others: Gideon Pillow (CSA) William Elphinstone (UK) Santa Ana (Mexico)

    @ralean3099@ralean30996 ай бұрын
  • Am I the only one who thought C-3PO when they heard the name of the first general?

    @dereks1264@dereks12646 ай бұрын
    • Was looking for this comment! All i can see in front of me is a golden droid leading the forces. Probably same result either who so it checks out

      @Makabert.Abylon@Makabert.Abylon6 ай бұрын
    • Nah, C3P0 is an encyclopedia. He probably knows over 60 000 forms of tactics and strategies. :) @@Makabert.Abylon

      @jonathanallard2128@jonathanallard21286 ай бұрын
  • many Russian generals in the current Ukraine war would fall in this category. Shoigu chief of them.

    @johnwalsh4857@johnwalsh48576 ай бұрын
    • Even though they’ve captured territory that will never be retaken?

      @americandissident9062@americandissident90626 ай бұрын
    • @@americandissident9062Yes

      @lordofnothing3201@lordofnothing32016 ай бұрын
    • @@americandissident9062 really how about Izyum, Kiev, Kherson LOL

      @johnwalsh4857@johnwalsh48576 ай бұрын
    • @@johnwalsh4857 Russians never took Kiev. They also withdrew from Kherson and Ukrainians took their time moving back in. But if you’ll pay attention to the where the trench lines are now, they haven’t budged in months. And now that the Israelis have asserted themselves as much more important than Ukraine, Zelenskyy will be told to make nice with the Russians and accept the loss of territory. I’m what works can a country lose major portions of their territory and call it a victory? The territory Russia holds now, like I stated, will not revert to Ukraine.

      @americandissident9062@americandissident90626 ай бұрын
    • @@americandissident9062 hey pay attention , the Russians took almost surrounded Kiev took large areas in the Kiev and Kharkov areas, ahd yah withdrawng from Kherson means the RUsskies lost it and yah where are the Russians now , just holding 20 percent of Ukraine down from 40 percent last year, this is a good sign that Russia is losing this war when the trolls gang up on me hahahhaha, very amusing. Hey I suggest you tell your boss to pay you in USD or how about Pepe coin, since the Russian ruble will be worth less than even refund coin.

      @johnwalsh4857@johnwalsh48576 ай бұрын
  • Now that you mentioned the battle of Cannae, then Gaius Terentius Varro should also be mentioned, he was also part of the horrible tradition of putting ambitious politicians in charge of armies.

    @Aoderic@Aoderic5 ай бұрын
  • Very surprised that Mcarthur & Gen Percivel are not included.

    @normanfernandez-robert4962@normanfernandez-robert49626 ай бұрын
  • I would think Simon would've included Custer

    @deadponic117@deadponic1174 ай бұрын
  • That dude who led the defense of the Malayan Peninsula should be on this # list too.

    @hanglee5586@hanglee55866 ай бұрын
    • Also the deserter who left his men on the Philippines with the good bye message I shall return

      @DarrenSloan@DarrenSloan6 ай бұрын
  • Imagine all your years of training and education crumbling to the point. Where your only legacy is to land on this video.

    @grimjimreaper@grimjimreaper6 ай бұрын
  • You guys did my boy Beyezid dirty by showing a scene after his defeat against Timur while talking about his victory and skills.

    @tsarbomb_chan2537@tsarbomb_chan25375 ай бұрын
  • Like McClellan on the Union side, Bragg was a capable administrator but a failure as a field commander. Had Davis managed his generals in the west the way Lincoln managed his in the east - replace them until finding someone competent - the Confederate Army of Tennessee might have accomplished more. But strategically the western campaign was almost unwinnable for the Confederates regardless of who led the army, and failure in the west would inevitably lead to defeat.

    @houstonsam6163@houstonsam61636 ай бұрын
  • Braxton WAS an incompetent general but his last name was Bragg, not Brigg.

    @howietune3386@howietune33866 ай бұрын
  • Good that you reconsidered Bragg's last name after the chapter's beginning 😅

    @gordonbrinkmann@gordonbrinkmann6 ай бұрын
  • I always expect Elphinstone to feature in these!

    @garylynch9206@garylynch92066 ай бұрын
  • when Simon covers historic content, he is at his best.

    @ravenhill_the_cryptic_of_1968@ravenhill_the_cryptic_of_19686 ай бұрын
    • I miss him in biographics

      @howtoitall76@howtoitall766 ай бұрын
    • @@howtoitall76 me too.

      @ravenhill_the_cryptic_of_1968@ravenhill_the_cryptic_of_19686 ай бұрын
    • Well he could have gotten Braxton Bragg’s name right.

      @Chiller11@Chiller116 ай бұрын
    • pronunciation blows tho. Seems like brits intentionally Anglicize foreign words, Simon certainly seems to

      @JakeGordon-cp7eo@JakeGordon-cp7eo6 ай бұрын
  • While I agree with the inclusion of Bragg on this list, it has to be said he had good strategic sense in the invasion of Kentucky following the loss of Corinth, also his subordinate Leonidas Polk might warrant consideration in this video, as he easily is in the running for top inept corps commander in the American Civil War. Keep up the good work!

    @derekmills3001@derekmills30016 ай бұрын
    • Polk, Bragg, and Davis were all bafflingly inept leaders. It's a testament to the skill of other Confederate leaders (Lee, Jackson, Johnston, etc.) that the CSA survived as long as it did.

      @user-vo9wd6tx6c@user-vo9wd6tx6c6 ай бұрын
  • Never ask a man his salary, a woman her age and Braxton Bragg who lost Tennessee and Kentucky.

    @PopeSixtusVI@PopeSixtusVI6 ай бұрын
  • Bragg, a West Pointer never understood his his army were mostly conscripts and tried to treat them as regulars.

    @top_gallant@top_gallant6 ай бұрын
  • Love this video. Bragg and Kulik were terrible commanders, from what I've read about them.

    @brianrunyon266@brianrunyon2666 ай бұрын
  • Maybe you could do a whole episode on Douglas MacArthur: horrible “General” and commander to subordinates, adulterous lover of a 16 year-old Philippine girl, receiver of the Medal of Honor for which he somehow was awarded without actually being in the battle. On the plus side, good administrator after the war, though that role was not as a general.

    @jaymacpherson8167@jaymacpherson81676 ай бұрын
    • I couldn't agree more 👍👍He was awful awful awful

      @StabbinJoeScarborough@StabbinJoeScarborough6 ай бұрын
    • MacArthur at the Dai Ichi? Legend, masterstroke, no notes. MacArthur in the Philippines in 1940-1941.... yeeeeeeeeeeeah. Get the bucket. I'm gonna be sick.

      @northerner3861@northerner38616 ай бұрын
    • MacArthur was a glory hound.

      @donaldboyer8182@donaldboyer81825 ай бұрын
    • Douglas MacArthur: Incompetent in the field (Philippines 1941-42), abandoned his men (1942), then almost started WW3 when he lost face to the Chinese Army (Korean War). One of the few things Truman did right was to fire his a$$. Some say he won the Pacific War. That is wrong. By 1944-45 the US Armed Forces was generously well equipped compared to their opponents, and better led. By then America had better generals and admirals, with the exception of MacArthur. If the fight was even, like it was in 1941-42, the outcome may have been different.

      @Tiglath-PileserXIX@Tiglath-PileserXIX5 ай бұрын
    • Didn't he try to nuke North Korea?

      @arx3516@arx35165 ай бұрын
  • A lot of things in the South has had the names of Confederate figures stripped away, but I hope Fort Bragg remains Fort Bragg. Few generals did more to help the Union than Bragg did, however accidentally. He basically failed to act when the Union took Fort Fisher, taking away access to the post at Wilmington. It was all but over then.

    @beaudure01@beaudure015 ай бұрын
  • Lloyd Fredendall would have been a good addition to this. Useless American general from the Second World War. Was responsible for one of the worst defeats for the US in North Africa. An extract from Wikipedia: Fredendall was given to speaking and issuing orders using his own slang, such as calling infantry units "walking boys" and artillery "popguns." Instead of using the standard military map grid-based location designators, he made up confusing codes such as "the place that begins with C."

    @fb9222@fb92225 ай бұрын
  • Cadorna in his writings later down the line made fun of Italian soldiers and how terrible they were... In his mind he was a genius.

    @gpolonia@gpolonia6 ай бұрын
    • The mistake is to think he actually sought a breakthrough. Cadorna was one of the Italian elite (including a prominent newspaper editor called Beniito Mussolini) who believed the only way to properly unite Italy was a long hard war with lots of sacrifice - so heavy casualties were a feature, not a bug. That is evil, not incompetence.

      @kenoliver8913@kenoliver89136 ай бұрын
    • In his younger years, he was actually more progressive and willing to try new things. By the time WWI came along, he had become more "conservative" in that he wanted to rely more on traditional strategies and tactics that date back to before every army had a machine gun.

      @foxymetroid@foxymetroid6 ай бұрын
  • Interesting stuff I liked that less well known generals were chosen I had only really heard of Cadorna, and I like to think I am reasonably knowledgable on military history.

    @johnholt890@johnholt8906 ай бұрын
  • How about General Ripley -the Head quartermaster of the Union Army.He was a Veteran of the War of 1812 .He refused to buy Repeating Rifles .He thought soldiers would waste ammo.Those rifles would have saved soldiers lives because they would have been able to load and fire kneeling or laying down .

    @pauldourlet@pauldourlet6 ай бұрын
  • Sam Watkins' 'Company Aytch" is a great book

    @cy8ercat771@cy8ercat7716 ай бұрын
    • I agree. It's available via Guttenburg.

      @nilo9456@nilo94566 ай бұрын
  • Honorable mention: G.A Custer of the US Cavalry

    @bluesdoggg@bluesdoggg6 ай бұрын
    • Custer was actually a decent officer in the civil war, he earned his rank, and didn't come about it like the rich as*holes mentioned here. Plus he had bad intel. He just got annihilatd, i don't think it was 100% ineptitude, although he obviously dun Faqt up sum SHEEIT

      @JakeGordon-cp7eo@JakeGordon-cp7eo6 ай бұрын
    • Well, he was, at that time, only a regimental CO, just a LtCol, not a general. During the War of Southern Insurrection, is record as a cavalry commander is quite decent...

      @tillposer@tillposer6 ай бұрын
  • I am very surprised that Douglas MacArthur isn't on this list

    @michaelnager6059@michaelnager60596 ай бұрын
  • “A true zenith of egregious military inability.” This is the most intense and perfectly descriptive explanation of the general’s lack of military prowess… But when I say it, it doesn’t sound as impactful as when Simon says it…his British accent makes it sound much more posh and erudite than it does with my American/New Orleans accent…

    @ValkyrieofNOLA@ValkyrieofNOLA6 ай бұрын
  • Bragg was definitely the kind of guy who successfully managed to run away from victory as well as defeat. There supposedly was a confederate joke that Bragg would never get to heaven because when he was invited in by St Peter, he would fall back.

    @joeszymaszek1146@joeszymaszek11465 ай бұрын
  • For sheer scale of the cost in lives due to a general’s incompetence, I don’t think any general could come close to Douglas Haig.

    @jameswright4420@jameswright44206 ай бұрын
    • He actually held the line against the Germans and eventually broke through their line and won the war.

      @Crumphorn@Crumphorn6 ай бұрын
    • I dont agree. Haig was essentially in an impossible position, he had an army whose ability to defend exceeded its ability to attack, and was facing another army with the same capacity, and then he was required to attack, as the Germans were on French soild. If he hadnt, he'd have been replaced and someone else would do it. Over years of war all the armies learnt newer and better ways to overcome this deficit and eventually the Allies, including Haig, overcame the Germans.

      @marifaceawl7192@marifaceawl71926 ай бұрын
    • Saw an excellent vid on Haig, and WWI generals a couple of months ago. He, and the General staff cared deeply for their men. Did their best to protect them. They were always open to new technologies and methods, e.g. tanks. He was well respected by his men. His funeral procession a few years after WWI, many veterans lined up to pay their respects.

      @richardhaselwood9478@richardhaselwood94786 ай бұрын
    • Haig had no good options. If he didn't attack, the war would get longer and he'd lose a lot of men to disease, snipers, enemy artillery, and German offensives. If he did attack, his men would be mowed down. In the end, his best option was to find a way to break through German defenses and turn the war into a mobile one. Cordona was far worse in that he was a bigger threat to his men's morale than the enemy was. Haig understood his situation and knew heavy casualties were inevitable. Cordona believed his men would win easily if they just loved their country enough. He took his army's heavy casualties and lack of victories as a sign that his men were all traitors and cowards. It says a lot that Italy's success in the war greatly improved after he was fired.

      @foxymetroid@foxymetroid6 ай бұрын
    • @@foxymetroid I agree with your assessment of Haig. He was a man of his times and a victim of circumstances. He eventually succeeded due to technological advances and the fact that Germany was on its way to a full blown revolution. The fact that the Americans joined his side was a great benefit - manpower. Once these crucial advantages were secured it took him about a year to win the war. Of course if you are on the losing side of that conflict you can blame "stab in the back" and whatever is convenient.

      @Tiglath-PileserXIX@Tiglath-PileserXIX5 ай бұрын
  • I don't know whether Simon did this on purpose, but it's absolutely brilliant. He has comedy channels (Brain Blaze), funny but not yet comedy channels (Cas Crim), funny but purely educational channels (this one), serious channels (TIFO), and very serious info channels (Into the Shadows). There's something for my every mood.

    @TeamOT@TeamOT5 ай бұрын
  • This one needs a sequel! Or three.

    @TomRedlion@TomRedlion6 ай бұрын
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