 Are you Aiken? Yep, yep. For some bacon. Yep, yep. He is a big pig. Yep, yep. You can be a big pig too. Hey, huh, Depolis! Bacon. Oh, no! I'll take my bedazzledo. Our stupid rags have defeated some Corvines. I'm Reng. Insta-Proud Twitter! It's so interesting. Bring the mail to me, bottom of the notifications, go all. Look what I'm doing to the juicy cunt. BAM! Follow us on personal YouTube channels, link in the description below. Woo! Here are active videos called All the Wars Fought by India. That, not one of them may start it, folks. But this is from their inception as India. They don't pick a fight, but they'll finish them. So like from 1947 to the present. Obviously, India as a whole has been in more wars than that. And we know, obviously, India has not instigated any wars. Correct. We are aware. So this is a little informational video. It's just about the ones from 1947. So I'm guessing India, Pakistan multiple times. Yeah. And there's been many. One in China, right? And I think it depends on what you go through here, because there are military incursions that have taken place that weren't declared wars. It's a specific war. Yeah. So there's, you know, there's. Also, once again, always with these informational videos. If the information is incorrect, it is not our fault. We did not make it. We were just sent this and we're hoping the information is accurate. And if kindly correct, correct us. If the information is wrong. Yes. So I just want to, I always stress the way that, because we always get yelled at. It's true. Here we go. It's with her neighboring countries. Oh, wow. That's a voicemail. Today in this video, we are going to discuss all the wars in India in these dark. Okay. Number six, Indo-Pakistan War of 1947 to 1948. When were they? 4747. That was right. The Indo-Pakistan War was formed between India and Pakistan over the princely state of Jammu and Kashmir. Because of the. Divide? 1948. The result of the war was inconclusive. However, most neutral assessments agree that India was the victor of the war, as it was able to successfully defend about two thirds of the Kashmir, including Kashmir Valley, Jammu and Ladakh. The inconclusive result of the war still affects the geopolitics of both countries. Territorial changes. UNC's Fire Line of 1949, later becomes Line of Control after the Simla Agreement of 1972. Pakistan controls roughly a third of Kashmir, whereas India controls the rest. Kashmir Valley, Jammu and Ladakh. Casualties and losses. India, 1,100-plus soldiers killed. Pakistan, 6,000-plus soldiers killed. Number five, Indochina War of 1962. Indochina War was a war between China and India that occurred in 1962. A disputed Himalayan border was the main pretext for war, but other issues play a role. A series of violent border incidents occurred after the 1959 event uprising, when India had granted asylum to the Dalai Lama. The war ended when China declared a ceasefire on 20 November 1962, and simultaneously announced its withdrawal to its claimed Line of Actual Control. The Indochina War was also noted for the non-deployment of the navy or air force by either the Chinese or Indian side. Why would the navy be deployed? The result of the war, China's victory. Territorial changes. China captures Aksai Chin. Casualties and losses. India, 3,000-plus soldiers killed. China, 700-plus soldiers killed. Number four, Indo-Pakistani War of 1965. Pakistan War. The 17-day war caused thousands of casualties on both sides and witnessed the largest engagement of armored vehicles and the largest tank battle since World War II. Really? India lost around 540 square kilometers of land, primarily in Ranavkutj, while Pakistan lost around 1,800 square kilometers. Hostilities between the two countries ended after a United Nations-mandated ceasefire was declared. Hmm. Result? Inconclusive, both sides claimed victory. United Nations and the ceasefire. Is that every war between them? No permanent boundary change. Casualties and losses. Neutral claims. India, 3,000-plus soldiers killed. 150-plus tank slots. 60-plus aircraft slots. Pakistan, 3,800-plus soldiers killed. I didn't realize it's no idea the biggest tank battle since the Great Wars. Nope, didn't know that. I'm sure there's movies about it. Number three, India-China military conflict of 1967. It's just me, India-China and India-Pakistani. Well, it was not a war but a conflict. Right. Conflict location. Nathula and Chola on the border between China and Sikkim. Result, Indian victory. China was pushed back from Sikkim. Casualties and losses. India, 88 soldiers killed. China, 340 soldiers killed. It'd be a long video if this was America. Number two, Indo-Pakistani war of 1971. It just keeps going back and forth. Mm-hmm. During the war, Indian and Pakistani militaries simultaneously clashed on the eastern and western fronts. Pakistan. That was what it was called. That was the command of the Pakistan military to sign the instrument of surrender on 16 December 1971 in Dhaka. Marking the formation of East Pakistan as the new nation of Bangladesh. Results, decisive Indian victory. Territorial changes. Eastern front. Independence of East Pakistan as Bangladesh. How do you explain this? Western front. Indian forces captured around 5,795 square miles of land in the west, but returned it in the 1972 Simla agreement as a gesture of goodwill. Casualties and losses. India, 3,000-plus soldiers killed. One naval ship lost. 45 aircraft lost. Pakistan, 9,000-plus soldiers killed. 90,000-plus soldiers captured. 7 naval ships lost. 75 aircraft lost. Wow. Had no idea. Number 1, Kargil War. The Kargil War, also known as the Kargil Conflict, was an armed conflict between India and Pakistan that took place between May and July 1999 in the Kargil District of Kashmir and elsewhere along the line of control. The cause of the war was the infiltration of Pakistani soldiers disguised as Kashmiri militants into positions on the Indian side of the Yellow City. Results, decisive Indian victory. Casualties and losses. India, 520-plus soldiers killed. Pakistan, 1,000-plus soldiers killed. So it was really a back and forth. It was just... Obviously we've been in this for two years. We know it's happened a bunch of times in Pakistan. And obviously more than it lets on, because I think it was just going off of strict battles. Obviously not like the thing Uri was based on. Correct. Or other just incursions, I suppose. Because we know there's been a lot of those. But is that true? Has it only been really India and China? I mean Pakistan and China? Well, I guess since the... Since partition. Yeah. I guess that makes sense. Yeah, because for the most part, that's just the neighboring... That's who you usually fight with. Unless you're trying to take over the world. Like Hitler, Stalin, or somebody like that. Just keep taking over countries. But yeah, I mean, when partition happened, what they did was the Muslims were pushed out. So you had... I didn't know what's called East Pakistan. I don't know how they expected to keep a piece of land across India to get to. Yeah, they don't make any sense. Yeah, it wasn't so much a geopolitical move as much as it was obviously a cultural and religious one. Yeah. Because it was just put the Muslims over there. That's what the British decided when they left. Yeah, they left. Yeah. Divided by religion because that always works. That always helps. Yeah. Yeah. So... Oh, the British. Yeah, which is... I had no idea about the biggest... I would like to learn more because that's... something that's the biggest tank battle since World War II. Yeah, I don't know if we ever came across that because I don't recall ever hearing about the amount of lives lost and the amount of actual military equipment, that many tanks, that many airships. Yes, yeah. That's a lot. That is a lot. And they say all those numbers. I'm sitting here reading those numbers and I'm thinking, you know, for the military mind who does do those statistics and consider this to be the victory and that not, who got the ground and who didn't. I'm thinking about all of those human beings. Yeah. Who, most of them boys or young, you know, like all wars and battles, just the countless thousands upon thousands that ended their lives in these conflicts. Yeah. Whether right or wrong. Obviously, these people that died on either side, they're families. They have families. They have families. Yeah. And you can obviously critique governments all you want. Yeah. I've always thought that if there was life on other planets and they came by, the reason that we have sightings and don't have contact is because then when they get here, they're like, hey, what's up? Nope. No, that's okay. They'll kill themselves and give it a thousand years. We'll come back when they're all dead. Yeah. And humans. It is a thing to be proud of that you can say, my nation has never started a war. Oh, yeah. Because the United States cannot say that. We cannot. When it started the legal wars. That is correct. It's actually always. Now, our proudest moment is sincerely for sure, is the positions we had to stop both World War I and especially World War II. Those were, and we also waited to the very last moment. We sure did join. We should have, we should have. Oh, we should have gotten in a whole lot earlier than we did. But hey, what did we care? It wasn't affecting us. That's true. We are landlocked. Yeah. It's actually always funny to me whenever, because it happened in, in, in Delhi crimes. I don't know if you've seen some of the comments. People when we are critiquing how their police work is done. And they say, oh yeah, your police is so, like, I'm not saying that our police is perfect. In fact, I'm very critical of our police here, but doesn't mean I can't critique one and also still be critiquing the other. Right. Yeah, just because we point out something over here, doesn't mean we think we get everything right over here. We're just pointing out, oh, I've never seen that. That doesn't make sense. In fact, I think a lot of the United States, the stuff the United States does is wrong. But it did, it does throw me that you don't cuff somebody when you first catch them. Yeah. And it's there. Yeah. It's just interesting to me. Yeah. But just because we're saying this about India, I mean, we think the United States is perfect. In fact, it is not by any stretch of the imagination. You know, it's amazing about that. I don't know if you've seen this before, but you know, Americans will consistently say we're the land of the free, which we have freedoms that are astonishing. I wouldn't want to live anywhere else in the world. I love my country. But when you look at the freedom index and the real freedoms of the... I think we're like not even in the top 10. We're not even in the top 10. Yeah. I think we're 13th. Yeah. It's all how you brainwash them. They brainwash them early. Yeah. Brainwash them early. It's legit. That's what happens. It's why we stand up and say the pledge to the flag every morning. Did you know that? At school. At school? You have to stand up and say... You have to stand up, put your right hand over your heart and say I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America and to the Republic for which it stands, one nation under God, indivisible with liberty and justice for all, every day of your life in school. Yep. Until you go to college and they don't do it anymore. Yep. Hey, freedom. Wear a cult. Yeah.