The Strange Way China Got its Nukes...

534,670
0
2023-12-09に共有
Dive into the captivating saga of China's nuclear journey! From Soviet collaboration to independent innovation, witness the rise of a nuclear powerhouse. Explore technology, policies, and the future landscape.

Got a beard? Good. I've got something for you: beardblaze.com/

Simon's Social Media:
Twitter: twitter.com/SimonWhistler
Instagram: www.instagram.com/simonwhistler/

Love content? Check out Simon's other YouTube Channels:

Biographics:    / @biographics  
Geographics:    / @geographicstravel  
Warographics:    / @warographics643  
SideProjects:    / @sideprojects  
Into The Shadows: youtube.com/c/IntotheShadows
TopTenz: youtube.com/user/toptenznet
Today I Found Out: youtube.com/user/TodayIFoundOut
Highlight History:    / @highlighthistory  
Business Blaze:    / @brainblaze6526  
Casual Criminalist: youtube.com/c/TheCasualCriminalist
Decoding the Unknown:    / @decodingtheunknown2373  

コメント (21)
  • @havocgr1976
    Your why question was oversimplified, after WW2 China wanted to take back Taiwan and it was stopped because the USA threatened to nuke em.That made it pretty clear that they d need nukes of their own.
  • Someday they'll do an episode of Megaprojects about Simon's arsenal of YouTube channels. So very dangerous... accidentally mix any...Megablaze.
  • @dergon4796
    I’m incredibly happy that the audio normalization between videos has been fixed but the radio/tv segments really don’t work, especially for those of us that throw videos on in the background/primarily listen.
  • @HyBr1dRaNg3r
    If the nuclear age was a gigantic appendage measuring contest, the use of “dong” in china’s devices is hilarious to me😂
  • @oorzuis1419
    Simon's last words are memorable 'No one stupid enough, as we watch over how the world's politics change.
  • “Diplomacy without arms is like music without instruments.” - Frederick the Great. This has been a fact for thousands of years. Hyskos' invasion of Eqypt in 1630 BCE is only one example.
  • I really love all of your channels/videos, I'm pretty sure I've seen them all at this point. My one complaint is this recent thing that's been added where sections of the videos switch to the wall of TVs and the audio gets really loud and harsh. It's hard to understand what's being said and it makes it VERY difficult to watch late at night while trying to relax in bed because of the spike in volume and harshness of the audio. Big fan of everything else though, thank you for all the amazing content.
  • 1:00 - Chapter 1 - Early years & soviet influence 3:15 - Chapter 2 - Project 596 4:50 - Chapter 3 - Evolution & expansion 7:55 - Chapter 4 - Policy & doctrine 9:20 - Chapter 5 - Technological advancements 12:25 - Chapter 6 - Agreements & diplomacy
  • @_c_y_p_3
    Love you and your team’s work. No better way to finish off a Saturday night! Thanks!
  • @jaskaasi
    ukraine and kazakstan didn't have launch codes or any tech to maintain them, they were paperweight and most likely not viable to fix
  • simon thank you. this video is clear concise and well presented. See you can do proper informative videos
  • @Nathan-vt1jz
    I have a different perspective on major world powers all having nukes. I think it prevents broader wars between the major powers. Instead we get proxy wars, not a good thing but definitely better than large wars between superpowers. So far it has been worth it, but that’s the kicker - if war does ever break out between nuclear powers it will be really really bad.
  • That horrendous TV voice edit is horrendously high pitched and waaay louder than the rest of the video - mai gawd.
  • @rjb10101
    their missiles aren't pointy enough
  • @DaveNarn
    Someone once said.. "On the issue of peace, I am long past innocence and fast approaching apathy. It's all a game -- a paper fantasy of names and borders."
  • 2 weeks after China's first nuke test in 1964, there was a snowfall in the USA. People were saying, "Don't eat the snow! It has fallout in it!" The actual level of radioactivity was too low to be measured.
  • I'm not sure it fits into the exact specifications of what you meant by nuclear disarmament but Canada had hundreds of nuclear warheads as well during the cold War era (Though as far as I know we didn't build any, they were from the states) but we by all definitions a nuclear capable and armed nation. We were largely involved in the process and even built one of the first nuclear capable jet planes (Avro Arrow) and then later disarmed.