There's a lot of messy and complicated borders in the world. But all of them pale in comparison to the world's most controversial border situation: the boundary between Israel and Palestine. In this video, I attempt to explain the whole situation with as little bias as possible.
For 6 weeks in 2020, Armenia and Azerbaijan went to war over the disputed territory of Nagorno-Karabakh. The war saw the use of advanced technology and modern tactics, the intervention of several foreign powers and ended with a decisive victory for Azerbaijan. This is how the war unfolded.
For the past 7 years, the deadliest war in Europe of the 21st century century has been raging in Eastern Ukraine. The war has killed thousands, displaced millions, and brought economic devastation to both Ukraine and Russia. This is the war explained from beginning to end in under 30 minutes.
For the past 14 years, Israel has maintained a complete land, air and sea blockade over the Gaza Strip and the 2 million Palestinians who live inside. This is the Israel-Gaza conflict explained.
The modern war in Afghanistan didn't begin with the American and allied invasion of 2001. Its origins are significantly more complex and date back to the 1970's. This is the War in Afghanistan before the American part of the story.
The conflict between North and South Korea has been raging for more than 7 decades now. The Korean War fought in the 1950's led to the deaths of millions and changed very little geopolitically. The most severe escalations in the conflict since then, have all happened in the 21st century. This is a full overview of the combat operations fought between North and South Korea since the year 2000.
The United States and Iran have one of the most controversial, important and dangerous relationships in the world. The 2 nations have come dangerously close to war in the past on multiple occasions and in order to understand why, you've got to understand the history of American-Iranian relations. This video attempts to condense this enormous subject into a mere 23 minutes.
Saddam Hussein ruled Iraq for nearly a quarter of a century and throughout that time, he initiated 2 enormous wars that resulted in the deaths of millions and brought together the largest international coalition ever formed since the Second World War against him. This is the story of how and why a single man led Iraq directly into the abyss at the end of the 20th century, and created the modern world in the process.
Greece and Turkey have one of the world's most ancient and bitter geopolitical rivalries that stretches back nearly 1,000 years. The modern conflict between the two is familiar, but also quite different than it's been at any time before in the past.
For 4 long years, the largest city in Syria was torn apart in one of the largest and most ferocious battles of the 21st century. This is the story of how and why Aleppo was so fiercely fought over between the regime of Bashar al-Assad and his allies on the one side, and various rebel factions and their allies on the other.
In 2008, the Russian Armed Forces initiated a full-scale land, sea and air invasion into the country of Georgia in what would ultimately become the first European war of the 21st century.
Across the 1990's and early 2000's, the Republic of Chechnya attempted to secede from Russia and achieve independence. What followed was more than a decade of brutal warfare and violence that saw no real winners. This is the tragic story of the two wars fought between Russia and Chechnya.
In March of 2003, the United States and its allies invaded the country of Iraq under the pretext of dismantling Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass destruction and ending his regime's sponsorship of terror. But the US did so with no UN approval, the invasion was widely condemned as an act of aggression abroad, and no weapons of mass destruction were ever discovered. This is the tragic and dark story of America's invasion of Iraq.
Beginning in 2015, the Russian Armed Forces began a large-scale military intervention in the Syrian Civil War on behalf of the regime of Bashar al-Assad. It ended up turning into a triumph of geopolitics for the Kremlin, and here's how.
In 1991, the Soviet Union collapsed into 15 newly independent states. Among these 15 was the Republic of Moldova. However, not everyone within the republic wanted to be independent. 470,000 people in the breakaway republic of Transnistria declared independence from Moldova, desiring to remain a part of the Soviet Union. The first war in Europe fought after the Cold War began as a result.
Since 2017, the People's Republic of China has been carrying out the largest genocide of the 21st century, targeted against the Uyghur people of Xinjiang, or East Turkestan.
The longest war in American history was the one fought for nearly 20 years in Afghanistan between 2001 and 2021. It was so long, it lasted for nearly 8% of all American history from 1776 to the present day. This is the story of that conflict.
On the 24th of February 2022, nearly 200,000 Russian soldiers under direct orders from Moscow invaded Ukraine, sparking the largest war seen in Europe since 1945. During this first phase of the invasion, the Russians seemed intent on capturing the Ukrainian capital Kyiv and toppling the Ukrainian government. But this objective would fail, and their planned blitzkrieg would gradually transform into a brutal war of attrition.
After Russia failed to capture the Ukrainian capital by April, their army began to refocus everything on the eastern front and the battle for the Donbas: the provinces of Luhansk and Donetsk. This episode covers the invasion of Ukraine between April and September of 2022.
Yemen is one of the largest and most important countries in the Middle East. In 2014, the country descended into an initially two-sided civil war between the Shia-adjacent Houthis allegedly supported by Iran, and the largely Sunni government supported by Saudi Arabia. The Saudis eventually intervened in the war alongside an international coalition that is still ongoing today, and which has generated one of the worst humanitarian catastrophes of the 21st-century.
Libya was once among Africa's wealthiest and most prosperous nations. But for the past 12 years, ever since 2011, the country has known almost nothing but warfare, chaos, and instability. There have been two civil wars fought across Libya, and a third is looming going into 2023. This is the story of how Libya shattered during the 2010's.
For the first 6 months of Russia's invasion of Ukraine, the Ukrainians were entirely on the defensive, holding the lines against Russian attacks. But beginning in September of 2022, the Ukrainians shocked the world by going on the offensive themselves. This is the story of the largest counteroffensive seen in Europe since the Second World War, and how the momentum of the war in Ukraine suddenly and decisively shifted in Ukraine's favor.
By loss of life, the worst human conflict that began in the 21st century was the so-called Tigray War in Ethiopia, which lasted between 2020 and 2022. This video attempts to explain this terrible conflict's causes and why it went as badly as it did.
The civil war in Syria has been one of the most tragic, largest and consequential conflicts of the 21st-century. What initially began as protests against the country's long-standing regime steadily morphed into a full-blown civil war that has lasted for more than a decade and become one of the world's most complicated proxy-battlegrounds, as outside powers like the US, Russia, Iran, Turkey, and Saudi Arabia all directly intervened supporting various different factions.
Over the summer of 2014, a previously obscure organization in Iraq suddenly catapulted itself to worldwide attention and infamy through a series of lightning-fast military conquests across Iraq and Syria. That organization would quickly become known around the world as ISIS, and by 2015 they had carved out a de-facto state ruling over as many as 12 million people. But ISIS didn't just come out of nowhere, and this video attempts to explain how circumstances and opportunities aligned in the 2010s to provide them with a rapid rise.
By August of 2014, the group calling itself ISIS had exploded onto the world stage and rapidly conquered about half of Syria and a third of Iraq. But that same month, the United States decided to militarily intervene against the group. It would be the beginning of ISIS’s undoing, as this video covers how the growing coalition of nations and organizations aimed at destroying ISIS grew between 2014 and 2016, ultimately resulting in ISIS losing all of its territory and its leader just a few years later in 2019.
For over a year, the Russian and Ukrainian armies threw just about everything they had into a massive battle for control over the small city of Bakhmut in the east of Ukraine. The fight for the city gradually evolved into the most significant and most catastrophic battle fought in Europe since the Second World War, with tens of thousands of troops and hundreds of tanks committed by both sides.
For nearly 200 years, the Kurdish people have never had a truly independent state of their own. At a population of around 45 million today, that makes the Kurds one of the largest nations that does not have their own country. They are currently divided between the borders of Iran, Iraq, Syria, and Turkey, and about 15 million Kurds live within Turkey. From time to time over the centuries, there have been demands and calls from among the Kurds to establish their own separate country, but that call has perhaps been the loudest from within Turkey, where ever since the 1980's into the present day, the Kurdistan Worker's Party, or PKK, has waged a violent campaign of insurgency and terrorism against the Turkish state for independence that has claimed the lives of tens of thousands since it began. This is the story of Turkey's most horrible, enduring, and tragic modern conflict.
Myanmar is a country located in Southeast Asia that has been locked in some form of civil war or another ever since its independence decades ago back in 1948. For most of the country's history since 1962, its government has been directly ruled by the country's military in one of the world's most heavily authoritarian regimes. This military regime engaged in one of the worst genocides of the 21st-century against Myanmar's Rohingya people from 2016 to the present, and overthrew the once-in-a-generation democratically elected civilian government in a coup d'etat in 2021, which has led to the latest chapter in the country's long-running civil war that has since in fewer than 3 years claimed the lives of tens of thousands. This episode in Modern Conflicts explains how Myanmar became the only failed-state in Southeast Asia.
Israel & Gaza Before 2023
The Lebanese Civil War
Throughout the 1990s, a devastating series of separate but connected wars were waged across the territory of the Western Balkans as the former state of Yugoslavia collapsed. The subsequent wars that were fought in the chaos of Yugoslavia's collapse were waged across Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia & Herzegovina, and Kosovo. More than 140,000 people were killed throughout these wars and millions more were forcibly displaced by the violence, which made them the most violent conflict fought in Europe since World War II at the time. This is the story of how Yugoslavia was created, why Yugoslavia collapsed in the early 1990s, and why the wars that followed were so monstrously catastrophic.
From 2003 through 2005, the first legally defined genocide of the 21st-century took place in the Darfur region of Sudan. Compared in brutality and scale to the Rwandan Genocide a decade earlier, the genocide in Darfur was carried out under the regime of Omar al-Bashir in Sudan and perpetrated against Darfur's non-Arab, African communities. Hundreds of thousands of lives were lost as a consequence, and the echoes of the genocide in Darfur have reverberated through to the present day, and continue to influence events in the country and in Africa at large today.
Recap of all the major geopolitical developments from February 2024. Ukraine’s top general is replaced, Alexei Navalny dies in prison, Avdiivka falls to the Russians, and Israeli forces continue advances into Gaza.
In January of 2013, rebel factions in Mali backed by al-Qaeda had overrun the entire northern half of the country—an area larger than the entire country of France. Working on expanding their area of control, the rebels began marching on the Malian capital itself and seemed poised to overrun the entire country - which would have transformed Mali into a Jihadist-run state directly on Europe's doorstep. Unwilling to let that happen, France decided to militarily intervene with more than 5,000 troops, and this is what happened next.
The recap of major geopolitical developments for March, 2024. Ukrainian missile strikes hit Russian oil refineries. Russia launches its largest bombing campaign of Ukraine of the year. A mass civilian shooting near Moscow perpetrated by ISIS kills more than 140. Ceasefire proposals continue to fail in Gaza. Houthi attacks on Red Sea shipping escalate in lethality and destruction. The government of Haiti collapses, leaving the country's future deeply uncertain.
In the summer of 2023, the Ukrainian Armed Forces launched a major military counteroffensive against occupying Russian forces across the eastern front in Ukraine. It was one of the biggest military operations to have taken place in Europe since the Second World War and involved the participation of hundreds of thousands of troops on both sides. Ukraine's forces were heavily equipped and trained by Western and NATO militaries for the offensive, while the Russians spent months heavily digging in and fortifying their lines with thousands of miles of trenches, minefields, and artillery dugouts. For months the Ukrainian forces battered against the Russian frontline to little avail, and after months worth of extremely heavy fighting, little ground was gained. This video attempts to explore the reasons why.
Across the month of April, 2024, Israel and Iran exchanged missile and drone fire against one another directly, with Iran firing missiles at Israel directly for the first time in history. Iran's consulate in Damascus was destroyed, 7 aid workers in the Gaza Strip were killed by Israeli drone fire, America passed a $92 billion military aid package for Ukraine, Israel, & Taiwan, small Russian advances in Ukraine continued, while Ecuadorian security forces raided the Mexican embassy in Quito, sending relations between the two Latin American countries into a tailspin.
Between May of 2020 and January of 2021, thousands of Indian and Chinese troops engaged each other in aggressive melee fights along their disputed border in the former princely state of Jammu & Kashmir. Due to an agreed-upon restriction on firearms and explosives along the border area, both sides fought the other with more primitive melee weapons instead like spiked clubs, metal bars, rocks, and riot gear - making the clashes between them appear like something more from the medieval era than the 21st-century. This is the story of why these events happened, and what exactly took place.
May of 2024 was unfortunately an eventful month for global conflicts. Israel's long-anticipated offensive on the Gazan city of Rafah began, where more than a million displaced Palestinians have been sheltering. Russian forces opened up a new military offensive of their own in Ukraine by initiating a renewed assault on the Kharkiv province with tens of thousands of troops. Deadly riots erupted in France's overseas Pacific territory of New Caledonia. A coup d'etat attempt was made in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Iran's President and foreign minister were both killed in a helicopter crash. A major assassination attempt was made on the Prime Minister of Slovakia. And the UN issued a warning that genocide is likely taking place in Sudan's Darfur region again.
Over the summer of 2021, the US began pulling out the last of its troops present in Afghanistan after occupying the country for nearly 20 years. The Taliban then launched a renewed assault against the US-backed government in the country that Washington had installed, and against the expectations of virtually everyone, it only took the Taliban a matter of months to completely overrun the entire country again and destroy the US-installed government in the process. This was despite the fact that the Taliban was both significantly outnumbered and significantly less-well equipped. This is how the Taliban shocked America and the World over the summer of 2021.
How al-Qaeda began as an organization in the late 1980's, and how al-Qaeda's early strategy waging war against the US evolved over time leading up the infamous 9/11 attacks.
On September 11, 2001, the organization known as al-Qaeda carried out the deadliest attack on US soil in the country's entire history that killed nearly 3,000 people. In response, the US launched the Global War on Terror, a worldwide conflict aimed at combatting terrorism and especially aimed at combatting al-Qaeda, with the primary goal to kill or capture all of al-Qaeda's leadership. The war included some of the biggest and most extensive manhunts in human history as al-Qaeda's leadership was relentlessly pursued by the US for decades after the attacks, and eventually culminated with the capture of Khalid Sheikh Mohammed in 2003, and the killing of Osama bin-Laden himself during a raid by US special forces in Pakistan in 2011.
On October 7, 2023, the organization that runs the Gaza Strip known as Hamas launched a massive attack on Israel from air, land and sea, killing 1,139 people and taking another 251 hostage back to Gaza, in what would be the most devastating attack of its kind in Israel’s history. Hamas gunmen targeted military bases, as well as dozens of agricultural communities in Israel’s south, as well as an outdoor music festival. Israel’s inadequate response time to the attacks called into question their invincibility, intelligence capabilities, and threw the status quo of the region into chaos. Israel’s retaliatory attack would be the deadliest and most destructive for Gaza, and claim tens of thousands of lives.
In the late 60s, Irish Catholic residents of Northern Ireland began a civil rights campaign in protest of the deeply entrenched discrimination against them and in favor of British Protestants that had defined the region for hundreds of years. After explosive reactions in response from British nationalists and British security, from then until the 1990s, Northern Ireland was the site of a prolonged, bloody conflict between its residents in the name of defining the region’s contentious status: as a part of Ireland, or the United Kingdom. After decades of bombings and shootings between paramilitaries that mostly claimed the lives of civilians, a tentative peace was brought on by the Good Friday Agreement, a groundbreaking step that allowed Northern Ireland’s residents to define themselves as they pleased, along with a soft border with Ireland.
Rwanda was historically home to three ethnic groups: the majority Hutu, the minority Tutsi, and a small population of Twa. Historically, these groups coexisted in a hierarchy, with a ruling Tutsi class, but with mobility between groups. However, under the German and Belgian colonial administrations, these ethnic divisions were politicized and racialized. After Rwanda gained independence, the Hutu became the ruling class and began mass discriminating against the formerly powerful Tutsi. In the years that followed, many Tutsi would flee, or be expelled to surrounding countries, leading to the formation of the RPF, a Tutsi political and military movement with the goal of returning Tutsi to Rwanda and restoring their power. By the early 90s, hostilities had built to a full-out propaganda campaign against Tutsi in the name of Hutu Power, declaring Tutsi as foreign, “cockroaches,” and Hutu as essentially superior. From April to June of 1994, this would deteriorate into one of the most bruta