When Britain Nuked America….Twice! | American Reacts



#Britain #British #America #Nuked #AmericanReacts #Reaction #DreamTeamNeal

Video Request Form:
https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSf6TsR2Tl7_hTJVWjio8B02xrSgeFEPWtlVNGZ5QMUPRgggaw/viewform?usp=sf_link

Original Video Link: https://youtu.be/-Wx6npt421c?si=TVYsQHsgR6JWzOgM

Make sure you go and follow me on social media, engage with ya boy, and keep me posted on new music being released!
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/darion3/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/neal_darion
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/darion.neal.5
Snapchat: dneal3
Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/dreamteamneal
Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/dneal

*Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for “fair use” for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use. No copyright infringement intended. ALL RIGHTS BELONG TO THEIR RESPECTIVE OWNERS*

source

47 thoughts on “When Britain Nuked America….Twice! | American Reacts”

  1. Every country is truly vulnerable I think… but amazing how such small force can be victorious being largely outnumbered. Would be intriguing to find who thought about this though as in" the USA boasting the 99% air defence system and brits saying wanna bet we can nuke you" or brits saying wanna bet we can nuke you and USA no way our defence is 99% effective and will wipe you out the skies before you drop any nukes" or just the normal lets test our defences 😂

    Reply
  2. Very much a David and Goliath story. The US depend on large numbers and muscle, the Brits rely on small numbers and tactics.
    There are situations where both approaches are needed, and when you combine the two together we are an unstoppable force.
    Complacency is the mother of all fuckups and the US gained a much needed kick in the bollocks to wake them up.
    If an enemy tells you you're being a dick you just hurl abuse back at them, but when a friend tells you the same it makes you stand up and take notice.
    You're welcome mate.
    ✌️❤️🇬🇧

    Reply
  3. The Vulcan was an absolute monster of a bomber in its day as dvanced and dangerous as stealth bomber is today it could cruise higher than most fighters could reach at full burn carry a significant payload including nukes had a vast array of advanced electronic jamming eqipment run by a dedicated crewman in the belly all while flying like a fighter. Even after missile technology made high level bombing unsafe they became excelent low level intruders because the airframe was as solid as a rock. During these trianing exercises the vulcans were flying at the altitude of the best soviet bombers which was significantly less than the Vulcan's actual highest operating altitude. Even when a fighter got lucky and found them the pilot had too climb hard to intercept and if he timed his climb wrong he'd be left burning all his fuel just trying to get close enough for a shot as the bomber cruised on by ignoring him.

    Reply
  4. I grew up next Farnborough in the UK which has an international airshow on a regular basis…Vulcans were a regular and I saw and more importantly heard them many,many times.

    Please look up " Vulcan Howl " to get a taste of the incredible primordial beast like howl this beautiful aircraft emitted when it flew.

    The sound is unique and it would vibrate through your bones and organs and you expected some good awful creature from myth to be flying at you .

    Reply
  5. And just to add insult to injury, the 2nd raid, which "Nuked" New York, then landed at its own Airport 10:41 😍🤣😂🤣😂😍

    Ps the Jamming the Vulcans used made them appear on the enemy's RADAR to be elsewhere, to where they actually were, neat. Love from UK

    Reply
  6. As a brit I understand why the USA didn't want this story out there,but also as it was at the height of the cold war(Bay of pigs) etc,obviously the last thing you do is actually let your enemies know your vulnerability. So like he said we still cousins and we have been there for each other. However let's not forget the English saying you can't tell your granny how to suck egg's,
    We have always been a fighting country mainly because for the past 2 millennium we have had the Romans the viking the Norman's from France etc,then all our civil wars before we became a united kingdom,

    Reply
  7. I understand there was a third sky shield exercise, which the Vulcan were not invited to take part.
    You should look at the other V bomber the British created. the Hadley Page Victor and the Vicker Valiant

    Reply
  8. The RAF used the same tactics on both exercises, you would have thought the USAF would have been ready the second time. Anecdote has it that the one that landed near New York wasn't detected until the pilot contacted the tower asking for permission to land. How true it is, I don't know.

    Reply
  9. The vulcan's last operational mission was in 1982, against our own Falklands (Port Stanley) airport after it had been captured by invading Argentinians.
    These bombing missions (Operation Black Buck) were the longest-distance raids in history, over 7,500 miles and 16 hours. You might like to check out a video on that.
    It was about the last time Britain could do anything before our extreme-left traitors started to destroy us.

    Reply
  10. RAF still the best Air Force in the world, I would say that, I was a fighter pilot for 9 years. America has been Nuked by the RAF again in 1999, again the Americans have hidden the fact.

    Reply
  11. The 2nd exercise, they halved the number of “attacking” bombers, and double the number of interceptors, and still failed. So their only tactic was to send up more aircraft…which theoretically could’ve worked. I’m sure the US defence planners went right back to the drawing board and updated their tactics.

    Reply
  12. When I was a teenager living in Lincoln we regularly heard Vulcans flying overhead, because there were RAF bases either side of Lincoln at Scampton and Waddington.

    In the 1970s, I went to an air show at RAF Waddington, and they staged a simulated scramble of four Vulcan bombers taking off together. The noise had to be felt to be believed.

    The Vulcans were used in the longest distance bombing raids ever, the Black Buck raids on Port Stanley airport during the Falklands War.

    The Vulcans were fantastic!

    Reply
  13. I first saw a Vulcan in flight at an airshow when I was 12, in 1993. It stuck with me till the next time it took to the air when I saw it multiple times in multiple airshows in my 30's.

    An experience you can never forget.

    I was also very pleased that during the very last flight of the last flying Vulcan, the last airshow it was supposed to do was suddenly changed at short notice, resulting in it returning to my local airfield in Old Warden. Quite a surprise I must say and I felt quite honoured that this local airfield in the middle of Bedfordshire, famous in it's own right for being home of the Shuttleworth Collection, was suddenly the scene of the last public display of the last flying Vulcan.

    Reply
  14. Never underestimate the British armed forces same tactic employed twice, successful twice I only wonder what they would of done given a third try 🤣 Britain doesn't have nuclear defenses these days……. Or do they 🤔🤣

    Reply
  15. A WW2 RAF joke use to be WOOD FOR WOOD😂, sine during WW2 the Germans would attempt to build fake wooden airfields in order to distract the allies from attacking the real German airfields only for the British to inevitably find out about the whole thing and essentially sent over a few bombers armed with wooden bombs with the words wood for wood inscribed on them 😂

    Reply
  16. Sadly it’s 99% BS …no need to thank us publicly just send money. We kinda like you guys and would rather you didn’t get yourself nuked. So pull your finger out and sort it. Oh and we won’t mention the 1999 result.

    Reply
  17. The vulcans stationed in Scotland were there to launch nuclear bombs on the USSR if they had launched on Britain or America. I watched an interview with a pilot and when asked what he would do after dropping his nukes he said probably go to the Solomon islands because they'd be nothing left to come home to

    Reply
  18. the revolution is taught loosely here because we didn't want to embarrass America by telling British people the truth relating to US independence lol. which is quite funny. did you know.. that the USA did not decisively win the war of independence.;. lol what really happened is you signed a peace deal with Britain which cost you 150 years of control over your economy haha.. you won nothing. haha its all in your bill of rights and American constitution there plane as day to read. go have a look lol. its under the section about banking and titles of nobility

    Reply
  19. Hi bud, a few things to know. Firstly, when the vulcan landed at pattsburg air force base. It taxied to the end of the runway and parked next to a hanger. Atc didn't even see it land and when they saw it, they thought they had been invaded. All documented.. secondly,, lol this is priceless. The following year, they had skysheild 3, the RAF wasn't invited..also documented..

    Reply
  20. The British have done similar things quite often to US forces during exercises. British subs have sunk US carriers a few times. One of the more famous episodes is a destroyer rigged lights all over it. Then preceded to sail the middle of a US carrier battlegroup.

    Reply
  21. Now the biggest thing is ALL AIR TRAFFIC was grounded so it was only the US and RAF flying and they failed to detect them in the 1961…fast forward to 2024 there must be 5000 to 7500 flights into America and domestic flights imagine the sky full of planes and trying to stop a nuke flight now..

    Reply
  22. it was a high altitude bomber but when it was used in the falklands its approach altitude was about 500ft above sea level and then rapidly climbed over the cliffs to 10000ft to drop its bombs, the argentinians didnt know they were there until it was too late

    Reply
  23. I once drove on the road which runs alongside the runway where the Vulcan Bombers were based when one was taking off, it almost blew my car off the road with the thrust from its jet engines. I'll never forget the noise, like all the thunderstorms you have heard, all in one go.

    Reply
  24. Maybe considered embarrassing at the time but you can guarantee harsh lessons were learned during a dangerous period of history. That's why we make good allies, train hard, train real and fight easy. oh, and never under estimate the little guy!

    Reply

Leave a Comment