WW2 From the Swiss Perspective | Animated History

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  • Опубликовано: 31 мар 2023
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    Sources:
    Davies, Norman. No Simple Victory. London: Pan Books, 2007.
    Halbrook, Stephen P. Target Switzerland: Swiss Armed Neutrality in World War II. Cambridge, MA: Da Capo, 2004.
    ‌Lukacs, John. The Last European War: September 1939-December 1941. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1977.
    Roberts, Andrew. The Storm of War : A New History of the Second World War. New York: Harper Perennial, 2012.
    Schelbert, Leo. Switzerland under Siege 1939 - 1945; a Neutral Nation's Struggle for Survival. Rockport, Me: Picton Press, 2000.
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Комментарии • 2,1 тыс.

  • @TheArmchairHistorian
    @TheArmchairHistorian  Год назад +372

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  • @HeisenbergFam
    @HeisenbergFam Год назад +5249

    It blows my mind Switzerland has +374k bunkers, they went full defensive mode, no wonder they weren't invaded in WW2

    • @miliba
      @miliba Год назад +385

      Every apartment complex has a "bunker" for a basement

    • @ethanwasme4307
      @ethanwasme4307 Год назад +70

      imagine if they had gone the other way 😂😂

    • @Student0Toucher
      @Student0Toucher Год назад

      It blows my mind that leftists in America hate on countries that are neutral…They get mad if conservatives are neutral in cases of Russian aggression against a non Nato member but also defend China lol

    • @v_isforvictory9366
      @v_isforvictory9366 Год назад +437

      Yes they do that because I think they realised one important thing, being neutral means having no enemies, but above all, it means you have no friends. You're on your own

    • @Vang2009
      @Vang2009 Год назад +88

      Albania 1967-1986:

  • @blindoutlaw
    @blindoutlaw Год назад +4139

    Allied pilot: “hey which way is Germany?”
    Swiss AA gunner: “it’s back the way you came, boy!”

    • @shivanshna7618
      @shivanshna7618 Год назад +98

      Brrrrrrr boom boom peeewewe dhammmm!!!!! Rip

    • @stoneeagle7360
      @stoneeagle7360 Год назад +111

      Kinda reminds me of the Kermit the Frog swamp cutaway from Family Guy.

    • @ElectronFieldPulse
      @ElectronFieldPulse Год назад +31

      @@stoneeagle7360 - Where do you think the guy came up with the idea? I am betting 10k it was from watching family guy, lol

    • @michaelsmyth3935
      @michaelsmyth3935 Год назад

      Unless you want to deposit stolen money from murdered folk, then come on in.

    • @mitchellbarton7915
      @mitchellbarton7915 Год назад +66

      German pilot: yo, could you point me to France?
      Same Swiss AA Gunner: Same thing to you, back the way you came Jimbo!

  • @maxmiller784
    @maxmiller784 Год назад +2117

    Fun fact: Konstanz is one of the few German cities not to be bombed by the Allies, because of a clever trick. While Germany had enforced a nocturnal lights-out policy, Switzerland hadn't. Konstanz, being so close in proximity to Switzerland, kept their lights on, making it seem like they were a Swiss city, thus eluding bombing.

    • @hubertgodlewski1398
      @hubertgodlewski1398 Год назад +159

      Thats smart

    • @pancakebandit2011
      @pancakebandit2011 Год назад +156

      Big brain maneuver

    • @Cheesburger1009
      @Cheesburger1009 11 месяцев назад +33

      ​@@pancakebandit2011
      *FIRE AND MANUEVER REFRENCE!!!!!??!!?!!1?1!!1!?!1?

    • @boltobsessedmaniac
      @boltobsessedmaniac 11 месяцев назад +16

      this is incredible

    • @schnyps13chag
      @schnyps13chag 10 месяцев назад +109

      and the US bombed Schaffhausen by error... geography has never been their strength 😂

  • @svenix2650
    @svenix2650 Год назад +911

    As a swiss my self i still remember what they told us in the Army; Its not about winning, its about inflicting as much damage and taking as many of the invaders with you as possible before dying. We cannot win a War. But we will make the Enemy bleed for every meter they take.

    • @snifey7694
      @snifey7694 10 месяцев назад +53

      So they told you to make Europe, your own Carthage.

    • @evangreenberg1666
      @evangreenberg1666 10 месяцев назад

      You’ll never be attacked by a western country. Not when you have the BIS still up and running

    • @e.g.1651
      @e.g.1651 8 месяцев назад +37

      Yes indeed. "Sécurité et Liberté"
      HOP SUISSE

    • @SkybrothersYT
      @SkybrothersYT 7 месяцев назад +13

      Just because of those words I would be scared to invade Switzerland as a world leader, such as Germany for example.

    • @mautadolo1281
      @mautadolo1281 4 месяца назад +6

      Can you tell me more about you’re time in the swizz military? I’ll try to move to your beautiful country when I finished college.

  • @Artur_M.
    @Artur_M. Год назад +4431

    A little known fact is that in 1940, over 13 thousand Polish troops fighting in France (the 2nd Rifle Division, to be precise) got interned in Switzerland. They were put to doing various construction work, and there was a quiet agreement between the Polish Government in Exile and the Swiss that the Polish soldiers would be rearmed and take part in the defense of Switzerland, in the event of German invasion.

    • @cantthinkofabettername7016
      @cantthinkofabettername7016 Год назад +482

      Many of them were also allowed to study and complete their higher education in Switzerland. Last year marked the 80th anniversary of the polish divisions crossing the border.

    • @fonduelover7420
      @fonduelover7420 Год назад +142

      Yes we had lots of internees from various nations. Soviets and Maroccans included. Moste of them had it nice. However if they Escaped and were caught, they were sent to Punishmentcamps...

    • @arcihungbycraneonfire
      @arcihungbycraneonfire Год назад +78

      Poles were every-damn-where...

    • @dont5363
      @dont5363 Год назад +2

      Like 13 k soldiers woud have made any difference to the german warmachine LOL

    • @szymongurgacz2551
      @szymongurgacz2551 Год назад +127

      ​​@@dont5363 in Switzerland? It might have had actually. Besides, I'd say Swiss just didn't want their own citizens to die, so it was a fair deal.

  • @PrussianPoe
    @PrussianPoe Год назад +6374

    I really like how Switzerland took advantage of its geography and made a their entire country into a fortress.

    • @scottanno8861
      @scottanno8861 Год назад +261

      4:02 is why we civilians should always fiercely defend the right to bear arms.

    • @2ndcomingofFritz
      @2ndcomingofFritz Год назад +28

      Oh hi, fancy seeing you here

    • @michaelflores2509
      @michaelflores2509 Год назад +162

      ​@@scottanno8861 americans should learn from you guys. Especially from the safety of your schools

    • @thekettlehead
      @thekettlehead Год назад

      Personally I like how they acted as a backdoor for the Nazis to access the financial market. They got rich off gold stripped from victims of the nazi concentration camps. 80% of Nazi gold was purchased by Switzerland, enabling the regime to continue the war far longer than it should.
      Similar to Sweden, Switzerland has nothing to be proud of during WW2.

    • @deadhardy
      @deadhardy Год назад +217

      ​@@michaelflores2509 Not only are you supposed to be criminal record-free in order to get a gun in Switzerland, but you also must be deemed unlikely to cause harm to other Swiss. Local police who have doubts about a prospective gun owner’s well-being (or even those who are assured of the same but worry nonetheless) may and sometimes do ask local psychiatrists or friends about an applicant’s mental state or alcohol and drug use.
      Also, that gun license, even when approved, is only valid for a maximum of nine months, and applicants are allowed only one weapon. Period.

  • @notroll1279
    @notroll1279 Год назад +1328

    You could have mentioned that the appointment of Henri Guisan in 1939 was quite significant.
    In Switzerland, "general" is a military rank only awarded to the army commander in wartime. So, appointing a general was an important signal to the world that Switzerland, while being at peace itself, was very aware that there was a war going on and that Switzerland was ready to fight when attacked.

    • @GeudMurderface
      @GeudMurderface Год назад +82

      I think the fact that he was from the French speaking minority was also a big deal at the time.

    • @yesyesyesyes1600
      @yesyesyesyes1600 Год назад +5

      So ... like a 5 star general in the US? Or THE Aluf in the IDF?

    • @notroll1279
      @notroll1279 Год назад +59

      @@yesyesyesyes1600
      I'm not sure if those ranks are also restricted to commanders in wartime only - if so, then yes.
      But please bear in mind that in 1939, the last external war involving Switzerland had been in Napoleonic times and the last violent secession attempt in the mid 19th century - so to Switzerland, acknowledging the necessity of a wartime defence was pretty drastic.

    • @yesyesyesyes1600
      @yesyesyesyes1600 Год назад +3

      @@notroll1279 Thanks for answering 🙂

    • @TrashMetal1995
      @TrashMetal1995 Год назад +14

      @@GeudMurderface That, and the fact that they purposely overlooked Ulrich Wille jr. (whose father had been general during WWI), who was openly pro-Germany. Guisan's nomination was undoubtedly a signal of distrust towards the axis.

  • @TrashMetal1995
    @TrashMetal1995 Год назад +267

    An interesting anecdote from the aerial fight on Switzerland's northern border:
    During a bombing run in Southern Germany, a British B-17 was critically hit and eventually managed to land in a field next to my hometown near Basel. Before the Swiss military police arrived to intern the crew, several people from the village had already investigated the downed plane and even started dismantling some of the weapons system. The Swiss army eventually took possession of the aircraft (if I am not mistaken, it is now in a museum in Dübendorf), but one of the stationary machine guns was nowhere to be found.
    Fast forward to the 70s (when my Dad grew up there) and upon the death of one of the people who had been there that night, the machine gun was finally recovered from his attic and put into a local museum.

  • @marcello7781
    @marcello7781 Год назад +1163

    Considering how respectful of the concept of neutrality was Germany when it came to Belgium and the Netherlands, no wonder why the already defensive Swiss went into full fortress mode.

    • @Rohald20
      @Rohald20 Год назад +76

      To think that being neutral is an assurance from enemy aggression is very naive. No countries care about someone's neutrality if it benefits them to attack them. And saying only the germans breached others's countries neutrality means you re ignorant about history. You mention Denmark and Norway attack by Germany, yet it was triggered exactly because Britain didn't respect norwegian neutrality (altmark incident). Even today just look how Ukraine and his allies treated swiss neutrality shows you it's a concept that nobody respects if it doesn't benefit them.

    • @madcio
      @madcio Год назад

      @@Rohald20 It is hard to respect something that does not exist. Swiss' "neutrality" is sham and PR move. "Neutral" country selling arms to other countries is even bigger joke.

    • @shycracker
      @shycracker Год назад +26

      ​@@Rohald20what? Ukraine doesn't even bother swiss for being neutral as far as i remember cause it's a given nowadays

    • @kgn0k
      @kgn0k Год назад +36

      @@Rohald20 Do you really think that both cases are the same?
      During WWII, Switzerland had to take these precautions, as it was surrounded by unfriendly Axis powers.
      And today, the current aggressor of the continent is many countries away. There is no reason for them to just 'be neutral' while it is clear that there's a humanitarian crisis going on.

    • @Rohald20
      @Rohald20 Год назад

      You probably aren't familiar with swiss politics because in the last year Ukraine and its allies regularly trashed swiss neutrality and demanded that Switzerland breach its neutrality to send weapons in Ukraine and sanctions Russia and russian individuals.

  • @HermanosLuDi
    @HermanosLuDi Год назад +1776

    This topic isn't something talked in deep about Switzerland and it's neutrality during the largest conflict. The animation helps us to understand better with the narration. Overall, feels great that people like you covers history from a perspective that most of us can understand.

    • @Student0Toucher
      @Student0Toucher Год назад

      In USA hardcore leftists hate on Switzerland because they think if you don’t fight “evil” you’re also bad

    • @spark5558
      @spark5558 Год назад +2

      It depends on where you live in Switzerland you in the German region?

    • @HermanosLuDi
      @HermanosLuDi Год назад +2

      @@spark5558 Well, like I live in latin america. It has been discussed a bit of that, but never fully extensive. I have seen videos of this topic but not that deep unlike this one.

    • @yesyesyesyes1600
      @yesyesyesyes1600 Год назад +4

      @@HermanosLuDi There are some videos here on youtube about Operation Fir Tree (Unternehmen Tannenbaum). I think it was Marc Felton who made a video on allied bombers and crews getting interned.

    • @HermanosLuDi
      @HermanosLuDi Год назад

      @@yesyesyesyes1600 Well yea, I already seen in videos and been told of that and the possible invasion plans of Germany. But, never really that deep.

  • @peterrudenko4496
    @peterrudenko4496 Год назад +458

    I love how Swiss army tried to immediatly eliminate anything not swiss in their air territory.

    • @OWnIshiiTrolling
      @OWnIshiiTrolling 11 месяцев назад +47

      The alternative was, demonstrably, to be bombed.

    • @mostdefinitelynotadurian1043
      @mostdefinitelynotadurian1043 10 месяцев назад +44

      the image of the swiss AA defense vaporizing birds that aren't native to switzerland. Is now on my mind xd

    • @shadownoobnoobslayer5424
      @shadownoobnoobslayer5424 9 месяцев назад +2

      they do not have illegal emigrant problems

    • @brunol-p_g8800
      @brunol-p_g8800 7 месяцев назад +10

      @@shadownoobnoobslayer5424 oh yes we do.

    • @nerrler5574
      @nerrler5574 7 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@shadownoobnoobslayer5424what illegal immigrants?

  • @duchessnoor
    @duchessnoor Год назад +313

    “I’m going to be late for work!” As someone living in Switzerland I can confirm that sentiment.

    • @Sh4d891
      @Sh4d891 Год назад +7

      I au

    • @Aralakh919
      @Aralakh919 Год назад +7

      I au!

    • @Sh4d891
      @Sh4d891 Год назад +4

      @@Aralakh919 less goo

    • @LL-gx3yj
      @LL-gx3yj Год назад +3

      Giele nume sexy blibe gäu

    • @SisuTheShattered
      @SisuTheShattered Год назад

      Can you explain? I'm in the US and I don't have the most complete grasp of work ethnic in other countries/cultures

  • @sirianyvanovich8576
    @sirianyvanovich8576 Год назад +600

    Even now 10 years ago when my grandparents retired and built a home they still made sure to install an air raid shelter in their cellar (basement). Growing up outside of Switzerland, it still amazes me that it is so normalized in my country something like this in your home. If someone in the US or anywhere else installed a bunker/airraid shelter in their basement you would think they're crazy.

    • @ModernWhoFan5B
      @ModernWhoFan5B Год назад +55

      There are places in the US where it's actually pretty normalized. Oak Ridge, with the National Labs and Y-12, has a good number of shelters installed in homes and public buildings. Most homes in the midwest and plains region have sturdy shelters (though these are more for tornadoes than air-strikes), and I think nuclear bunkers are pretty common in the plains and Rockies.

    • @yesyesyesyes1600
      @yesyesyesyes1600 Год назад +19

      Till I think the 90s it was normal and obligational to have a shelter here in Austria as well. I still have one :D but it was never operational. Most Austrians used it just to storage Wine and food but some had an airfilter, blast proof doors and beds and were fully equipped for world war 3.

    • @user-qj8gn5nl4e
      @user-qj8gn5nl4e Год назад +14

      Interesting side note, it's well known that in the US a lot of backyard shelters were built incase of nuclear war. This being the cold war after all and the government encouraged it. What's less known is the idea that the government encouraged this knowing in the advent of an actual nuclear detonation it wouldn't help much except that you'd have ready made tombs with the dead already buried.

    • @omrilapidot6770
      @omrilapidot6770 Год назад +18

      In Israel your house will not be connected to the electricity grid if you *don't* have a shelter... It's officially not allowed to live in a house without one.

    • @user-qj8gn5nl4e
      @user-qj8gn5nl4e Год назад +1

      @@omrilapidot6770 interesting, I suppose Israel being where it is it makes sense. Funny thing though is with the world being where it is currently what about off grid, solar for example? Where I live they are now incentvising rooftop solar.

  • @pingu9694
    @pingu9694 Год назад +189

    During WW2, my grandfather had to defend the swiss/Italian border just above his home in the alps. They had a long trade history between them since far before the war so everybody knew each other. During the war, they traded some food and goods and also party together. When the high command knew about this, they were send at the other side of the country. My grandfather was always laughing about how stupid the situation was. Thanks for the video ! Amazing work !

    • @v.sandrone4268
      @v.sandrone4268 Год назад +3

      just curious, how does the Swiss army deal with an Italian speaker being moved to another language speaking part of the country?
      I have no baseline to understand a multilingual decentralised country as I live in Australia where English is the common language. Even Italy where my family originated and a northerner may not understand a southerner in daily speech in dialects everyone speaks standard Italian and even dialect usage is fading and soon the only significant Italian dialect will be Swiss Italian.

    • @OWnIshiiTrolling
      @OWnIshiiTrolling 11 месяцев назад +13

      @@v.sandrone4268 I don't know how things were in the 1940s, but currently, you study your native language and at least one other national language in school. It's also really easy to learn military commands in foreign languages. Sometimes you get orders repeated in another language, but sometimes it's just "pour les Romands, c'est la même chose", meaning "for the French speakers, it's the same." in French... very helpful :D

    • @TheHawk1202
      @TheHawk1202 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@OWnIshiiTrolling Let's be honest. I was taught German for 14 years and I can barely speak it. Though it's funny how in the army we have sort of mixed language that is only spoken in the Swiss army. When I was in recrut school I learned many things by their German words and it's only later that I actually learned the actual French denomination.

  • @ericplace367
    @ericplace367 10 месяцев назад +34

    As a Swiss myself, I’d like to add a few historical facts: the Swiss border police handed over Jewish refugees not only to Vichy but also German authorities, despite the Swiss government’s knowledge of the holocaust; the Swiss armament industry sold to Germany vast amounts of weapons and ammunition (the grandmother of a friend of mine who worked in a factory in Winterthur told us how all Swiss workers were told to greet a visiting German delegation with the Hitler salute); when Switzerland introduced the blackout in November 1940 it was upon German requests as hither-too illuminated Swiss towns had helped British bombers navigate the dark continent, especially Geneva on the way to Northern Italy.

  • @LeviSmith-bp4yv
    @LeviSmith-bp4yv Год назад +82

    The swiss looked at everyone around them and said "I'm surrounded by idiots and I will not stand for it."

  • @EndOfSmallSanctuary97
    @EndOfSmallSanctuary97 Год назад +265

    The Swiss still charging the Axis powers for train transit despite being surrounded and in extreme danger is an absolute sigma move, goddamn

    • @skycaptain3344
      @skycaptain3344 Год назад +9

      I still don’t understand why they were actively shooting at aircraft but allowing combatant trains through.

    • @Cacowninja
      @Cacowninja Год назад +25

      @@skycaptain3344 It was money!

    • @xxx_phantom_xxxw_t_a9479
      @xxx_phantom_xxxw_t_a9479 Год назад +47

      Money was certainly not the most important reason (if there was one at all with regard to single-rail transport). Even if Switzerland tried to provide for itself, there was no coal or other raw materials in Switzerland, so surrounded we were dependent on imports and on them getting to us, in return for the transport of other goods by the Axis powers ( Excl. weapons, officially, whether there were weapons among the coal loads, who knows...).

    • @PinkFZeppelin
      @PinkFZeppelin Год назад +15

      @@skycaptain3344 There was probably historical precedent or economic treaties regarding rail usage, if broken it would be picking a side.
      To put it short, the Swiss are ruthlessly pragmatic.

    • @videomediamtl997
      @videomediamtl997 Год назад +7

      Russian pipelines are still sending gas towards Ukraine…

  • @cthomaspeasant3059
    @cthomaspeasant3059 Год назад +487

    This goes a long way to explain why Switzerland doesn't really show up to the wars

    • @MrGMeredith1
      @MrGMeredith1 Год назад +76

      When Switzerland was given Independence from the Holy Roman Empire, Neutrality was a condition insisted upon by the Emperor. The Swiss where known to be fierce warriors and the Emperor was worried that Switzerland would allie with the French.

    • @user-qj8gn5nl4e
      @user-qj8gn5nl4e Год назад +27

      ​@@MrGMeredith1 You know your history. Yes they were and that explains to some degree why Swiss mercenaries were so sought after, they were very professional. Also you make a good point in that the Emporer's fears might have been justified if you look at how well these mercenaries were featured in the French armies. History is like a brick wall, the the top brick resting on the one beneath. So not to mention then the Pontif Gaurd.

    • @LightBluly
      @LightBluly Год назад +7

      ​@Glenn Noname god damn i have no idea it was that long. They gained independence when Roman Empire (or at least the remnants) still exist?

    • @clouds-rb9xt
      @clouds-rb9xt Год назад

      @@LightBluly They mean the Holy Roman Empire, ie, what is modern day Germany and a few other countries. ruclips.net/video/cZcQrIFtuGw/видео.html

    • @Jensekoi
      @Jensekoi Год назад +11

      ​@@LightBluly not exactly, the Holy Roman Empire was a spiritual successor of sorts, from the tenth to the nineteenth century in the middle of Europe. Still, that makes Switzerland neutral since the sixteenth century. So a very long tradition that took grit to protect amidst countless European wars.

  • @leonebiceps5618
    @leonebiceps5618 Год назад +39

    the attention to detail like the newspaper as a swiss citizen i must say, is fascinating.

  • @GanoGaming
    @GanoGaming Год назад +32

    A giant factor as to why germany could not invade switzerland, especially since britain and the soviets have not surrendered, was it was too big of a distraction. And the swiss knew it.
    They mobilized their 435'000 within a few days and at its highest peak 850'000 swiss were mobilized (thats 18% of the total population at the time). They knew germany wouldnt attack switzerland because of their natural resources, we dont have any, but because of their infrastructure. If germany, like Griffin mentioned, needed at least 5 to 1 ratio to invade switzerland, that would be the entire force which invaded the soviets.
    850'000 Swiss -> x5 -> 4'250'000 Germans
    And even then a quick victory would not be certain and if the swiss, like they planned, would have entrenched themselves in the mountains, the germans could still not use what they came for, the tunnels and mountain passes.
    That being said, if germany would have won at the other fronts, there would have been no way for the swiss to win that fight. The swiss strategy only worked because others also held up against the germans.

  • @sussyyoutuber7668
    @sussyyoutuber7668 Год назад +675

    Ya know switzerland isnt realy looked at in ww2 but some stuff actually happend there and its pretty good so its nice to see a video about it

    • @michaelpielorz9283
      @michaelpielorz9283 Год назад +5

      and everybody " forget" mentioning the swiss banks (;-)

    • @gwine9087
      @gwine9087 11 месяцев назад +4

      @@michaelpielorz9283 That held all of that plundered treasure from the Nazis.

    • @gxlorp
      @gxlorp 11 месяцев назад +1

      What are you talking about? Ita definitely "looked into"

  • @pablopeter3564
    @pablopeter3564 Год назад +131

    Being neutral and surrounded by axis powers was such an near impossible task Switzerland had to manage during WW II. Great job Mr. Johnson, thanks for your video.

    • @gwine9087
      @gwine9087 11 месяцев назад +3

      Neutral? International law says that, if someone gets caught sneaking into your country, you send them back to from where they came. In many cases, the Swiss sent them to Germany.

    • @EnclaveOfficer1776
      @EnclaveOfficer1776 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@gwine9087awesome strudel beer and Hugo boss.

    • @user-xd1yq4bq9q
      @user-xd1yq4bq9q 3 месяца назад +2

      Swiss neutrality was possible because of the GEOGRAPHY, MONEY (Swiss money+ money in Swiss banks from both sides of the war and both sides wanted to protect) and the will of the majority of the SWISS PEOPLE(probably Guisan was very influential and trusted general). Many nations wanted to stay out of the war, but in their equation, the 3 elements were not in balance...the absence of one element (or two made the situation worse) pushed/forced these nations to make a choice

  • @guifdcanalli
    @guifdcanalli Год назад +274

    Each strategy
    France and UK: Lets appease
    Belgium and Poland: Germany would never invade us... again
    Denmark and Norway: We can certainly defend ourselves
    Switzerland: 𝗜𝗳 𝗶 𝗳𝗮𝗹𝗹 𝘆𝗼𝘂𝗿𝗲 𝗴𝗼𝗶𝗻𝗴 𝗱𝗼𝘄𝗻 𝘄𝗶𝘁𝗵 𝗺𝗲

    • @flyingkite2972
      @flyingkite2972 Год назад +12

      This comment is like.. entirely wrong

    • @CapCody
      @CapCody Год назад +1

      @@flyingkite2972 why?

    • @flyingkite2972
      @flyingkite2972 Год назад +17

      @CapCody 5731 Danish government didn't think it could ever defend itself against Germany, belgian and polish governments both knew that war was on the horizon after the remillization of Rhineland and invasion of czechosloviakia. The British government didn't try to appease Germans out of goodness of their heart, but waited for Hitler to make a mistake to raise public war support.

    • @fatalshore5068
      @fatalshore5068 Год назад

      ​@@flyingkite2972you've said why the British appeased not that they didn't do it. Chamberlain is infamous for his policy of appeasement.

    • @olekcholewa8171
      @olekcholewa8171 Год назад +4

      @@flyingkite2972 Polish goverment heavily underestimated German military and they thought that it's so weak after the Treaty of Versailles that it won't be able to do much. Im saying this as a Pole btw.

  • @chloethegardevoir2319
    @chloethegardevoir2319 10 месяцев назад +50

    Switzerland really took "Never seek war but always be prepared for it" to the next level

    • @monkeech
      @monkeech Месяц назад +1

      "Never seek war but always profit from it" - There fixed it - a swiss.

    • @chloethegardevoir2319
      @chloethegardevoir2319 Месяц назад

      @@monkeech lmao

  • @jake7151
    @jake7151 Год назад +248

    A country that is rarely overviewed within the European theater. It’s a breath of fresh air that someone finally covered the Swiss. I would like the sweeds covered next.

    • @lordpembridge303
      @lordpembridge303 Год назад +4

      Oh yes the cowardly Swedish

    • @jake7151
      @jake7151 Год назад +10

      @@lordpembridge303 if your country was surrounded by the most powerful militaristic state of the time you would let them have access to your countries natural resources as well.

    • @thedon1570
      @thedon1570 Год назад

      @@jake7151 WRONG

    • @NeiasaurusCreations
      @NeiasaurusCreations Год назад +3

      ​@@jake7151 The swiss also built weapons for the germans too. They were collaberators. And in my opinion should've been heavily bombed starting in 1942. The entire point of bombing germany was not really just to kill civilains. It was to cripple and destroy germany's industry. Which the swiss were apart of now. So leaving them unbombed just helped the germans.
      So the bombings of swiss usually was aimed at their industry and mistakenly thinking its germany's factories. Ironically, they were germany's factories...Just built in switzerland and manned by swiss people. But still being put to germany's cause. Thus, valid targets. Accident or not.

    • @jake7151
      @jake7151 Год назад +1

      @@NeiasaurusCreations I did not know that. Now that this info has been brought to my attention, I do agree that they should have been bombed but only the factories that have been known to produce German and German only weapons in WW2. Minimizing Swiss casualties in the process, the Allie’s could have used (at the time) high precision bombs in order to take out the arms factories.

  • @ptrgreeny
    @ptrgreeny Год назад +121

    GREAT animation of the K31 rifle!
    I have one of those rifles and they are amazingly accurate and with the straight pull bolt...not a rifle you'd want to face in the hands of defenders on a mountain above you.

    • @borismuller86
      @borismuller86 Год назад +5

      It says a lot that they’re still in use for target practice today.

    • @tantaroba1337
      @tantaroba1337 Год назад +11

      Little fun fact: every adult swiss citizen can own one of those, even without a weapon license

    • @PAYTONLB999
      @PAYTONLB999 Год назад +9

      @@tantaroba1337 as they should

    • @havocgr1976
      @havocgr1976 Год назад +2

      Yeah having to fight a ton of snipers on montains was also a great deterrent to the nazis.

    • @legion6211
      @legion6211 Год назад

      Makes sense when your in Switzerland. In America it would just be death

  • @boh8017
    @boh8017 Год назад +41

    Love how in depth and entertaining your videos are in general, but I’ve been especially appreciative of this current series. Please continued to make perspective videos of countries during WWII, I’m really curious about Brazil, Egypt, New Zealand, and Korea; so I hope those countries get their own videos too

  • @onEmEmbErstudios
    @onEmEmbErstudios Год назад +21

    This episode is FREAKING AMAZING!!!!!
    Your animation has kept getting better and I can never get enough of your voice

  • @dupes6248
    @dupes6248 Год назад +186

    Thank you so much for this video! There is very little content out there even looking at the Swiss and their neutrality, let alone go into what the war was like from their perspective.

    • @TheAradir
      @TheAradir Год назад +1

      Yup its great he made this video. I was looking so long for a video like this. I got also 1 Book with the history of switzerland in ww2. I just want to see what my country did during ww2. So if you have a question, I would like to answer it.

  • @m3tactical393
    @m3tactical393 Год назад +60

    “Switzerland has no army Switzerland is the army”

    • @Yusa_Beach
      @Yusa_Beach Год назад +1

      Man I miss Prussia, it didn't have an army It had a state.

    • @samreid6010
      @samreid6010 4 месяца назад +2

      “While most states have an army, the Prussian Army has a state” and the Swiss state is itself an army

  • @patrickhaeusler
    @patrickhaeusler Год назад +36

    I really like those videos covering historical events from lesser discussed perspectives. Would also be pretty interesting to get a look at WWII from the Chinese perspective since the country actually played quite a big role in the conflict (some historians even view the Japanese Invasion of the country as the actual start of the WWII) but is usually sidelined by the more prominent war theaters in Europe, North Africa and the Pacific...

  • @m4a3e8shermantank8
    @m4a3e8shermantank8 Год назад +19

    By far one of the coolest intros I've seen for a history video. Good job!

  • @ethantennant1543
    @ethantennant1543 Год назад +139

    Thank you for making a video about the Swiss in WW2, I feel like their side of the story is largely forgotton/not mentioned

    • @theotherohlourdespadua1131
      @theotherohlourdespadua1131 Год назад

      For good reason. The fact a good chunk of them firmly believed in the Nazi cause while the whole government justvwent along with them UNTIL 1944 speaks vokume of that shame. There is a reason the "Nazi gold in Swiss bank accounts" rumors never died because they are still alive, hidden behind closed vault doors and Swiss banking laws...

    • @stc3145
      @stc3145 Год назад +1

      Especially the part about taking stolen Jewish gold from the Germans into their banks

    • @heinzentertainments4661
      @heinzentertainments4661 Год назад +14

      I think this is because they didn't really take part in the war, yet some things happened there ( economically and financially - typical swiss relationships) but still, there wasn't enough going on to be really important for the war at all

  • @drukovski-0120
    @drukovski-0120 Год назад +447

    Petition for griffin to do WW2 from the Romanian perspective!

  • @starwarsisgreat9130
    @starwarsisgreat9130 Год назад +5

    it has been a lot of fun to watch you production go up over the years. that beginning panoramic shot to you in the chair was really good!

  • @parkependleton6453
    @parkependleton6453 Год назад +19

    Great video! Something I would like to add is the fact that Switzerland is historically a multi-ethnic country. Independent since the Peace of Westphalia in 1648, it consists of German, French, Italian, and Romansh speakers, all of whom have always placed their loyalty to country over ethnicity.

    • @brunol-p_g8800
      @brunol-p_g8800 7 месяцев назад +2

      We’re not really multi ethnic, we’re all from a Celtic background.

    • @nerrler5574
      @nerrler5574 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@brunol-p_g8800Germans, french, Italians and romansch are one ethnicity?

  • @The_Enclave_Deep_State
    @The_Enclave_Deep_State Год назад +817

    The axis and allies:*get in Swiss airspace*
    The swiss army and airforce:you know The rules and so do i
    Edit:THANKS FOR THE 771 LIKES GUY I REALLY LOVED THIS

  • @user-uy3wo2jm2p
    @user-uy3wo2jm2p Год назад +34

    The video I didn't know I wanted, but but always needed

  • @rylandplassmann9095
    @rylandplassmann9095 Год назад +8

    One cool side effect the Swiss did at that time was in order to lessen their dependence on coal they experimented with converting their coal powered steam trains with electric powered steam trains. Literally attaching a pantograph on top and use an electric heater in the fire box. I learned this from the channel Train of Thought.

  • @ajc-ff5cm
    @ajc-ff5cm Год назад +32

    Switzerland not only had a well armed and prepared populace, a willingness to defend their ground, they also had geography on their side. Something many countries in Eastern europe simply do not have.

    • @tainted3922
      @tainted3922 Год назад +3

      The mountains as a geographical blockade only work north to south. The so called plateau is flat land north of the alps harboring 2/3rd of the population. Entering from France or Germany you could take over most major cities without going over any mountains.

    • @ramonsuter7435
      @ramonsuter7435 8 месяцев назад

      Yes there it may helped us but it in every other places switzerlands geography is a big disadvantage: No natural ressources, no sea, expensive infrastructure (lots of tunnels and bridges have to be built), less space for agriculture, less place for cities.... So one could say that it was the wars that helped switzerland to get rich.

    • @beyondEV
      @beyondEV 4 месяца назад

      @@tainted3922 You still have small mountains / hills. Lakes and Rivers. Together, they form a quite formidable obstacle. This is why the axis estimated the needed a 5 to 1 superiority. Even though the swiss were severely lacking in tanks, anti-tank and critical stuff like fuel for the airplanes. 5 to 1 meant something like 2.5-5 mio soldiers (active only swiss 500k - 1 mio incl. all reserves). Germany had only 3 mio available for the push against france.

  • @PakBallandSami
    @PakBallandSami Год назад +8

    Fun fact: germnay violated Swiss airspace at least 197 times but several air incidents, the Swiss shot down 11 Luftwaffe aircraft between 10 May and 17 June 1940 and they only loss like three aircraft of there own and Germany protested diplomatically on 5 June and with a second note on 19 June which contained explicit threats
    on 20 June, the Swiss air force was ordered to stop intercepting planes violating Swiss airspace. and both german and swiss trops has small Skirmishes throught out the war

  • @polygonalfortress
    @polygonalfortress Год назад +62

    outstanding work as usual armchair historian team!

  • @hisalexness8478
    @hisalexness8478 Год назад +8

    This video is excellent! I’ve been interested for a while in what happened to Switzerland during the war, so this is fascinating!

  • @dcthepro1339
    @dcthepro1339 Месяц назад +1

    I had the luck to serve in the swiss military at the foot of the gotthard which was at the time the only passage through the alps. We slept in an Old fort. The whole mountain is basically hollowed out like a swiss cheese with bunkers and every meter covered by guns, simply marvelous what my country built in such a short period of time

  • @KonaKonism
    @KonaKonism Год назад +372

    I actually hope this channel takes sponsors more. They aren't that big of a deal and I really want thease amazing videos to be funded by one way or another.

    • @madeanaccounttospillthebor9568
      @madeanaccounttospillthebor9568 Год назад +27

      As long as they aren't scams

    • @lincolnmemorial0
      @lincolnmemorial0 Год назад

      ​@@madeanaccounttospillthebor9568 NordVPN is a scam, good VPNs don't have to force advertising onto everyone who will take it.

    • @Wesleeezy
      @Wesleeezy Год назад +6

      Agreed, just please nothing remotely financial lol

  • @mactavishmods
    @mactavishmods Год назад +1

    Thanks for the wonderful info man!
    So well put

  • @fabianschobinger2765
    @fabianschobinger2765 Год назад +1

    Great video! I instantly subscribed. All the little details like things written in their original languages just look so beautiful.

  • @darthsoldier6939
    @darthsoldier6939 Год назад +36

    As someone who loves studying 1930-40s Swiss history I am happy to see a video on the topic from you

  • @fabianbello3268
    @fabianbello3268 Год назад +87

    This is an interesting story for me since I'm related to a Swiss air force high command member at the time, Oberstdivisonär Emil Sonderegger. During the war my great grandfather Hans Sonderegger was granted permission to emigrate and he went to Mexico, where my family currently live

    • @conornorton1183
      @conornorton1183 Год назад +9

      This may sound very random, but do you play Hearts of Iron 4? There’s a popular alternate history mod for that game called Red Flood where Emil Sonderegger is the leader of Switzerland

    • @fabianbello3268
      @fabianbello3268 Год назад +5

      @@conornorton1183 No, I'm more of a total war or age of empires guy, I didn't know he appeared in the game, could you elaborate please, for what I have seen in books and family albums Emil Sonderegger was in part responsible for the adoption of the BF-109 in the SAF and also in the stoppage of a communist attempt so seize control of some Swiss cantons in the 30'd

    • @FortuneZer0
      @FortuneZer0 Год назад

      Oberstdivisionär Emil Sonderegger, the hero that prevented the communist subverters from a takeover in 1918 died in 1934. He never had anything to do with the airforce.

    • @pericleslegendario7022
      @pericleslegendario7022 Год назад +3

      @@fabianbello3268 hey mate, i live in Mexico (chihuahua, to be specific) and I have family in Texas, I will be looking here in the Air Force archives (although don’t expect too much, either because it’s a Mexican system that is very old or because they maybe didn’t register that here ) and will ask my family near the air bases if they can find anything as well, if you want you can go to a embassy ( as I understand there ARE polish and Swiss embassy’s in Mexico) and ask for a family origin/line research, they are obligued to help you to the very least feel connected to the country (you can also ask for sweets and things you only get there, not so known fact about embassy’s) so they could surely look it up, in any way, I will try to help, and I hope you have luck in your search wey.

    • @introspection827
      @introspection827 2 месяца назад +1

      Wow. I read a lot about Swiss WW1 to WW2 officers and Emil Sonderegger is... well... interesting to say the least lol. He is probably the boogeyman of the Swiss leftist historians because of his role in maintaining the order in Zürich during the General Strike of 1918 under the command of his mentor and General at the time, Ulrich Wille. It didn't help his image that he was involved in the fascistic "Fronts" during the 30s. There's a documentary about the General Strike that blatantly portrays Sonderegger as this cartoonish villain and unapologetic Mussolini fan and while the latter may be true to some extent, he was in no way a key actor in putting down the strikes, that was General Ulrich Wille which he sort of had to in order to prevent the situation from devolving into an October Revolution 2.0 in Switzerland

  • @dimamatat5548
    @dimamatat5548 2 месяца назад +2

    Switzerland: avoids being invaded by building a lot of bunkers.
    Albania under Enver Hoxha: Write that down, write that down.

  • @benfowler9182
    @benfowler9182 Год назад +1

    One of the best videos you’ve made. Art is soooooo good!

  • @RedPandaJack
    @RedPandaJack Год назад +26

    Awesome video as usual! Really interesting to see a more in-depth explanation of the Swiss foreign relations during the war.

  • @patricgaming5437
    @patricgaming5437 Год назад +43

    Could you do the WWII from Romanian perspective?

  • @Stormgamer-xb7gv
    @Stormgamer-xb7gv Год назад +5

    Thanks Armchair Historian :)
    I am Swiss and this Video is really good 🇨🇭

  • @5-but-3-idiots67
    @5-but-3-idiots67 Год назад

    The intro gave me chills. You have a great production team

  • @furkankebinc716
    @furkankebinc716 Год назад +89

    It's good video. People generally think that neutral countries didn't have any struggle during the war. I want to see WW2 from Turkish Perspective. It includes a lot of diplomatic games, border struggles etc.

    • @havocgr1976
      @havocgr1976 Год назад +1

      If i recall they did take a side near the end, bt yeah it d be nice to see the diplomacy game till that.

    • @stephen4121
      @stephen4121 Год назад +1

      @@havocgr1976 because the Turks were told by the allies to declare war on the Axis or be invaded

    • @rakatumu
      @rakatumu Год назад

      videos of that have been made, search youtube and you'll find them

    • @pyro_teamfartress2
      @pyro_teamfartress2 Год назад

      ​@@stephen4121 No. Almost the whole world declared war on Japan and Germany in March-April 1945 to join United Nations.

    • @OK-yy6qz
      @OK-yy6qz Год назад +2

      Yeah the Turkish were pretty interesting in their Neutrality. On the one hand on late 1941 or so they signed a pact of friendship with Nazi Germany. On the other they threatened Bulgaria to not invade Greece or they would get attacked during the Italian Invasion of 1940

  • @LXRY
    @LXRY Год назад +14

    Armchair historian vids are always a treat

  • @kingsal4367
    @kingsal4367 Год назад

    The animation is the best I've ever seen of this channel by far

  • @coreyshields1864
    @coreyshields1864 Год назад +24

    Beautiful Intro! I love seeing this perspective! 🙏🏾

  • @evandowdey1966
    @evandowdey1966 Год назад +14

    beautiful animation, as always!

  • @emanuelisvalatka2270
    @emanuelisvalatka2270 Год назад

    Well that was an amazingly interesting video, please more of those longer vids!

  • @legostopmotion888
    @legostopmotion888 Год назад +35

    Wow this is really well done the animation quality is amazing and I never knew any of this Swiss involvement in the war is definitely very overlooked

  • @v_isforvictory9366
    @v_isforvictory9366 Год назад +3

    I have no idea how you push a new video every week, I love it

  • @grandmoff.alligator
    @grandmoff.alligator Год назад +1

    Hey man really cool to see a video made about Switzerland for once

  • @i_smoke_ghosts
    @i_smoke_ghosts Год назад +1

    these uploads are amazing excellent work A H team.

  • @conserva-chan2735
    @conserva-chan2735 Год назад +19

    A Soviet-Afghan War video would be phenomenal

  • @Ireanxay
    @Ireanxay Год назад +5

    I love to see these perspective videos

  • @conradnelson5283
    @conradnelson5283 4 месяца назад

    Good video. Really love the comments and stories.

  • @danielwatcherofthelord1823
    @danielwatcherofthelord1823 Год назад +1

    Its amazing how Griffin is able to transcend his cartoon world and reach out to us in the real world. Its a demonstration that we could learn from - that no matter how far apart our worlds are we can always bridge the differences and come back together.

  • @heh9392
    @heh9392 Год назад +10

    I think it was quite much easier for the Swiss to shoot down the planes, as they didn't have to worry about which plane was friendly and which not, as they all were considered hostile.

    • @mistasomen
      @mistasomen Год назад

      No, they had planes up in the air, too, even dogfights.

    • @Flugs0
      @Flugs0 6 месяцев назад

      if you're talking about anti-air, then yes. in planefights they had their own planes that they couldn't shoot down

  • @SilverSpike_Gaming
    @SilverSpike_Gaming 8 месяцев назад +5

    “The Swiss will never part with his gun.” This statement can also be used to describe Americans.

  • @aidanpysher2764
    @aidanpysher2764 10 месяцев назад

    3:59 - those K31s are some of the finest bolt-action rifles ever made. Your attention to detail on the parts of its straight-pull is phenomenal. I have its grandfather, a Schmidt-Rubin 1896/11, and it's by far the smoothest shooting and most accurate infantry rifle of its time.

  • @jacksondowdle5217
    @jacksondowdle5217 Месяц назад

    These animations are absolutely incredible! Hats off to the people who worked on this 🎩

  • @That-Belgian-Guy
    @That-Belgian-Guy Год назад +3

    Awesome, love the intro bro, I can't be the only one!

  • @Hectopath2006
    @Hectopath2006 Год назад +16

    The swiss fighters genuinely look awesome

    • @hidsgi-games5369
      @hidsgi-games5369 4 месяца назад +1

      They were mostly using Messerschmitt 109 at the time. Essentially, the Germans fought against their own fighters over Switzerland.

  • @petebaumann7731
    @petebaumann7731 Год назад +2

    Great video! Greetings from St. Gallen 🇨🇭

  • @craigkdillon
    @craigkdillon Год назад +14

    The Swiss story is amazing. I wish you would go deeper into it, and tell more stories.
    I bet the espionage stories would be great.

  • @underthecoveragent1653
    @underthecoveragent1653 Год назад +5

    Switzerland: How many times do i have to tell you? I AM NEUTRAL!
    (Starts shooting down allied and axis planes in swiss airspace)

  • @CodyChepa88
    @CodyChepa88 Год назад

    Another great video Griffin 👍🙌

  • @prakashghumaliya2002
    @prakashghumaliya2002 Год назад

    Thank you for video sir

  • @DiracComb.7585
    @DiracComb.7585 Год назад +6

    8:37 do include more small jokes like this! Facial comedy, like commanders having extreme reactions, only go so far. These smaller jokes really flesh out the video.

  • @lecolonnedellavanti2955
    @lecolonnedellavanti2955 Год назад +25

    "Brave heroes of Switzerland, let's cheerish our Fatherland with our national anthem! Ein, zwei, drei..."
    "RICOLAAAAAAAA!"

    • @suisseanonyme1033
      @suisseanonyme1033 Месяц назад

      I think than only Swiss can understand this one.

  • @0blong000
    @0blong000 Год назад

    what a nice touch to have the music louder than your voice especially at 1:33

  • @sho-sasteiner590
    @sho-sasteiner590 Год назад +2

    Thank you. I‘m so glad that you made a video about us in the second world war. A big Danke from Switzerland.

  • @OK-yy6qz
    @OK-yy6qz Год назад +15

    Honestly Switzerland is one of the more respectable countries for me in the World wars. They did what's best for their citizens, which did include neutrality and putting pride aside to avoid a brutal war and possibly occupation.
    But they also built a formidable defense in order to maintain that Neutrality. And managed to achieve self sufficiency to not be bullied by Sanctions to join either side

  • @longarmboiiiiiiiiiii6823
    @longarmboiiiiiiiiiii6823 Год назад +5

    Beautiful opening

  • @mikaelclement
    @mikaelclement Год назад +1

    Great video! Liked it a lot. Would love to see more content on Switzerland. Great country to live in :)

  • @CelabroSpace
    @CelabroSpace Год назад +1

    Nice video!

  • @zavie3513
    @zavie3513 Год назад +3

    Wow, this is quite unexpected but cool

  • @NineM_YorHa
    @NineM_YorHa Год назад +45

    I'm still pretty shure some of these bombings, especially towards the end of the war, were not entirely accidental.
    Maybe it was a hint tell us Swiss to stop trading with Germany.
    I would really recommend the video of Mark Felton about this theory.

    • @MiguelPerez-zx2wg
      @MiguelPerez-zx2wg Год назад +7

      And yeah, risk getting invaded by Germans over financial dispute. This is a reminder that Swiss trading also helps many allies nations under Germany rule, and after the war.

    • @theshadowreborn4778
      @theshadowreborn4778 Год назад +7

      They were just in a really bad spot. But the Swiss government had to do what was best for their people. Same as any other government is supposed to do.

    • @gabriel.b9036
      @gabriel.b9036 Год назад +11

      No one wanted to intentionally bomb Switzerland, the country wasn't important enough for that. Lots of neutral places were accidentally bombed during the war, like Ireland, Vatican City, and San Marino. Bombers were already innaccurate and the maps they were given probably didn't help.

    • @eelchiong6709
      @eelchiong6709 Год назад

      @@gabriel.b9036
      Bombing Ireland is intentional! It's an island not connected to Britain. No axis bomber can be that dumb.

    • @Sh4d891
      @Sh4d891 Год назад

      Well allies bombed the train viaduct in Zürich

  • @workingpadawan1952
    @workingpadawan1952 Год назад +1

    I love that someone is talking about this 👍

  • @omenarosvo
    @omenarosvo Год назад

    wow this is interesting! thank you for this video

  • @m.meiburger1970
    @m.meiburger1970 Год назад +5

    Great work as always , its so interesting in many aspects . So much stuff which seems today more or less unimportant * happend in the times of this war , unexplained mostly world wide . Im glad you are changing that . Little side note : Its Schweiz in german language .

  • @CK-il8wy
    @CK-il8wy Год назад +4

    WW2 from the Irish Perspective next? Would be epic

  • @winstonslone2797
    @winstonslone2797 2 месяца назад

    As a student of history I am familiar with the stories. However your animation and fluid storytelling really bring the conflict to life. I could see this appealing to those that normally wouldn't spend a second on a historical documentary. You just earned a new subscriber.

  • @realitygaming7982
    @realitygaming7982 7 месяцев назад +1

    Amazing video

  • @finomonkey8829
    @finomonkey8829 Год назад +3

    swiss was like a optional boss who just atack if you pass their territory

  • @IQsveen
    @IQsveen Год назад +3

    Great video! Now do one on Sweden please. They were kinda in the same situation

  • @olivermoore7020
    @olivermoore7020 Год назад +2

    Great video as always! I would be very interested in seeing a video about the Swedish perspective at some point.