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Aug 22 16 tweets 7 min read Read on X
In 1965, Vietnamese engineers pulled off the biggest feat in engineering history:

They built a 250 km underground city that withstands the US's army, B52 planes, and Mark 77 bombs.

But what they created next nearly destroyed physics forever.

Here's the full story: 🧵 Image
The Cu Chi tunnels weren't just holes in the ground.

They were an underground city: hospitals, kitchens, weapons factories, living quarters.

Some sections went 3 stories deep...
The Viet Cong lived here for YEARS...

*Media: Cross-section diagram of multi-level tunnel system* Image
Image
American B-52s dropped 500-pound bombs. Nothing.

Agent Orange killed the jungle above. The tunnels survived.

Frustrated commanders realized: someone had to go down there.

But who would volunteer for certain death?
Enter the Tunnel Rats.

No special forces training. No glory. Just regular soldiers who raised their hands.

Their loadout? A flashlight, a .45 pistol, and pure courage.

Most were small men. Had to be. The tunnels were 3 feet wide... Image
Image
Why did they volunteer?

"Someone had to do it," said Sgt. Ronald Payne. "If not me, then my buddy would have to."

The army didn't order them. These men CHOSE to crawl into hell.

Here's what waited below... Image
Image
The traps were nightmares:

Bamboo spikes dipped in human feces. Scorpions tied to sticks. Trip wires connected to grenades.

One wrong move = death or infection that killed you slowly.

But the darkness was worse... Image
Imagine: You're crawling. Can't turn around. Can't see 2 inches ahead.

Your flashlight? Makes you a target.

That sound? Could be water drops. Could be an enemy breathing.

You have 0.5 seconds to decide: shoot or die.

*Media: POV shot inside actual tunnel showing cramped conditions*Image
Image
The Viet Cong had home advantage.

They knew every turn, every trap. They could navigate in total darkness.

They'd wait at corners with knives. Let Americans crawl past. Then strike from behind.

The Tunnel Rats had to evolve or die... Image
Innovation born from terror:

They tied rope to their ankles - buddies could pull their bodies out.

Brought attack dogs (until VC used pepper).

Developed a "tunnel pistol" - modified .38 that wouldn't deafen them underground.

Survival required genius. Image
Operation Crimp, January 1966: First major tunnel discovery.

4,000 US troops vs 300 VC in tunnels. The VC escaped.

That's when commanders realized: conventional warfare was useless here.

Enter Operation Cedar Falls... Image
Image
Cedar Falls, 1967: The largest ground operation of the war.

30,000 troops. Tanks. Helicopters. Artillery.

The Tunnel Rats went in first. What they found shocked everyone:

18 miles of tunnels. Underground hospitals performing surgery. Weapons that could arm a battalion. Image
Image
The psychological toll was devastating.

Tunnel Rats developed unique PTSD. Couldn't sleep in dark rooms. Jumped at small sounds.

"You aged 10 years in 10 minutes down there," one veteran said.

Many never spoke about it for decades. Image
By war's end, Tunnel Rats had explored over 100 tunnel systems.

Casualty rate? Horrific. But they gathered intel that saved thousands.

No medals. No movies. Just men who crawled through hell.

Their legacy? Proving courage has no size limit. Image
Image
If this story grabbed you, join my mission:

"Schools hide the best history stories. I dig up the wild, forgotten moments that shaped our world."

Follow @GeniusGTX for the genius moments history class never taught you.

Written by @ToanTruongGTX.
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More from @GeniusGTX

Aug 21
Napoleon discovered how to win wars before they start.

Every military academy still teaches this 200-year-old strategy:

West Point. Sandhurst. Saint-Cyr.

They all study his plabook.

Here's the principle that changed warfare forever: 🧵 Image
Napoleon wasn't born a conqueror.

He was a nobody from Corsica who spoke French with an accent.

But he discovered something other generals missed:

Wars aren't won on battlefields.

They're won before the first shot is fired. Image
Image
His secret?

"Divide your enemies before you fight them."

While other generals prepared for battle, Napoleon was busy turning allies against each other.

Austria, Russia, and Prussia were ready to fight EACH OTHER instead of France.

Genius move. Image
Read 17 tweets
Aug 18
Historians buried this story for centuries.

In 1518, an entire city lost control of their bodies...

The cause? Something far more mysterious than any disease.

Welcome to the Dancing Plague and its 500-year-old mystery: 🧵 Image
It started with one woman: Frau Troffea.

On a hot July day in Strasbourg, she stepped into the street and began to dance.

No music. No celebration. Just frantic, uncontrollable movement.

She danced for six straight days. Image
By the end of the first week, 34 others had joined her involuntary dance.

They couldn't explain why. They just... couldn't stop.

Their feet bled. Their bodies collapsed from exhaustion.

But still, they danced.
Read 17 tweets
Aug 15
In 1980, when 6 Americans were trapped in Iran the CIA had a crazy idea:

Send in a CIA agent posing as a Hollywood producer to create a Star Wars ripoff called "Argo."

I swear this has to be the wildest rescue operation in espionage history: 🧵 Image
Image
November 4, 1979: Iranian revolutionaries storm the U.S. Embassy in Tehran.

66 Americans are taken hostage.

But 6 diplomats slip out a back door during the chaos.

They're now fugitives in a city gone mad with anti-American rage. Image
The six find shelter with Canadian Ambassador Ken Taylor and John Sheardown.

For 79 days, they hide in terror.

Every knock at the door could mean capture and execution.

The CIA tries plan after plan. All too risky.

Time is running out. Image
Image
Read 17 tweets
Aug 14
This is 1983.

Soviet radars detected 5 US nuclear missiles heading to Moscow.

Humanity was SECONDS from extinction.

All Soviet protocols demanded immediate retaliation.

But then Stanislav Petrov noticed something strange: 🧵 Image
Image
September 26, 1983.

Past midnight.

Filling in for a sick colleague at Serpukhov-15 - the USSR's nuclear command bunker.

Lt. Colonel Stanislav Petrov wasn't even supposed to be there.

But then the unthinkable happened... Image
Image
LAUNCH DETECTION:

1 US MISSILE

The computer screen flashed blood red.

Then: 2 missiles... 3... 4... 5.

All targeting major Soviet cities. 25 minutes to impact.

200 million Russians about to die. Protocol demanded one thing... Image
Read 15 tweets
Aug 11
I used to think people were rational.

Then I found FBI files on Hanns Scharff's "weaponized kindness" technique.

He extracted secrets from 480 Allied pilots without breaking a sweat.

Learn his mind-boggling techniques (it's the ultimate lesson in human nature): Image
Image
Picture this: 1943, Nazi Germany.

A captured American fighter pilot expects torture.

Instead, his interrogator offers homemade apple strudel and asks about his hometown.

The pilot relaxes. Fatal mistake.

Meet Hanns Scharff - the man who weaponized kindness. Image
Scharff wasn't supposed to be there.

Born into wealth in 1907, he was groomed to run his family's textile empire.

By 1939, he was living in South Africa with his British wife.

Then WWII broke out while he was vacationing in Germany.

Trapped. Drafted. Destiny calling... Image
Image
Read 17 tweets
Aug 8
He was the unkillable soldier.

Lost an eye, a hand, and threw grenades with his teeth.

He took 11 bullets across 3 wars, and Churchill called him "the bravest man I ever met."

Here's the forgotten real-life Terminator you have never heard of... 🧵
Adrian Carton de Wiart wasn't supposed to be a soldier.

Belgian-born, studying law at Oxford, too young to enlist.

So he lied about his age, used a fake name, and joined the British Army anyway.

What happened next defied all logic...
Image
First deployment: Boer War, 1899.

Shot in the stomach and groin.

Most soldiers would've retired. Not Adrian.

He said: "At that moment, I knew war was in my blood."

This was just the beginning of his immortality... Image
Image
Read 16 tweets

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