When Tiger's Fury Met the Soviet Steamroller: The Brutal Battle for Daugavpils, July 1944

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  • Опубликовано: 15 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 244

  • @Bigsky1991
    @Bigsky1991 Месяц назад +39

    I was friends with Otto Carius ( ein Apotheker nach dem Krieg) have 2 signed KC photos as well. While visiting him, one of his 502nd Gunners were there and he have me his 502nd Black Panzer M43 hat for my extensive collection.

  • @infolover_68
    @infolover_68 Месяц назад +88

    The Tiger I was a formidable weapon of war: it could take high caliber impacts and destroy targets between 1 and 2 km away. But it was available in a few numbers; Germany never had enough of them tanks...

    • @FelixstoweFoamForge
      @FelixstoweFoamForge Месяц назад +7

      Do you have any idea what a T34 look like ar 2000m? It's literally a dot. Even if you can spot it, you wont hit it. Because your round will take at least 2 seconds to cover the distance, whilst its moving, and hence changing the range. Paper performance does not equate to real world equivalence.

    • @RichardMackenzie-y4c
      @RichardMackenzie-y4c Месяц назад +2

      They only produced about 1,500….

    • @infolover_68
      @infolover_68 Месяц назад +7

      @@FelixstoweFoamForge The Tiger I has better optics. And to think that a T-34/76 never had to stop..., or going around, yeah, right!!

    • @infolover_68
      @infolover_68 Месяц назад +1

      @@RichardMackenzie-y4cDon't you think they could destroy targets??

    • @FelixstoweFoamForge
      @FelixstoweFoamForge Месяц назад +2

      @@infolover_68 Did you read the comment? And do you understand that at 2000m the Tiger's 88mm projectile describes an arc, going up, then coming down, to land at 2000m. So if the target has moved forwards, the shot will go over the target.
      If the target is stationary, yeah you have a small chance to hit it. But not if it's moving forwards, and hence closing the range. All you've done is given away your position.

  • @ronbishop1068
    @ronbishop1068 Месяц назад +10

    I have just finished building a Tiger as a paper model bought on Ebay it is a truly remarkable tank. I also saw Tiger 131 at Bovington in the UK. Along with a Panther another great tank,they have a T34 as well
    very rough welding just thrown together sheer weight of numbers proved successful for the Soviets.

  • @MichaelOnRockyTop
    @MichaelOnRockyTop Месяц назад +27

    It's mind blowing how Germany was able to stay on the defensive from summer of 43 onwards. Almost 2 years of fighting against all odds.

    • @gobalmighty7463
      @gobalmighty7463 Месяц назад

      It's mind blowing how in awe you are of the Nazis! Scum of the earth that started the whole thing in the first place!

    • @ivantraminiev8470
      @ivantraminiev8470 17 дней назад +1

      fear of retibution for teir war crimes

    • @TorJohan-kj5cr
      @TorJohan-kj5cr 13 дней назад

      @@ivantraminiev8470 or without distorting the truth with russian propaganda; fear of being blamed for soviet war crimes.

  • @kniespel6243
    @kniespel6243 Месяц назад +33

    Tiger was and it is a legend !

  • @davidgoodfellow2384
    @davidgoodfellow2384 Месяц назад +20

    What a bad ass tank those tigers were they looked the business

  • @volvo1354
    @volvo1354 Месяц назад +21

    interestingly enough, Otto Carius ended the war in a Jagdtiger. he developed an admiration for the machine, quickly familiarized its capabilities, and managed to turn its disadvantages into positive attributes

    • @nickmitsialis
      @nickmitsialis Месяц назад +8

      Except Carius was soon pissed nobody wanted to fight too hard this close to 'the end'=the Americans were more than happy to bombard suspected Jagdtiger positions with air and artillery instead of coming at them head on 'like the Russians did'.

    • @volvo1354
      @volvo1354 Месяц назад +3

      @@nickmitsialis and those willing to continue fighting were so poorly trained that they did not last for very long on the battlefield

  • @kennethbarnard7667
    @kennethbarnard7667 Месяц назад +37

    No tanks compares to the panther and tigers

    • @McDago100
      @McDago100 Месяц назад +6

      I like the M-26 Pershing. Unfortunately there were too few, and they came out too late. It almost reminds me of a cross between a Panther and a Tiger 1.

    • @ColdBrewLobster
      @ColdBrewLobster 28 дней назад +1

      You know what's nice about the Sherman? We had a fleet of 50,000 of them.

    • @bruceleewright886
      @bruceleewright886 23 дня назад

      ​@ColdBrewLobster Stop hating they weren't a match for the Tiger.
      Numbers win wars.
      Exactly the same would happen in a US ve China war right?.

    •  19 дней назад

      @@bruceleewright886 look into the gulf war numbers no longer win wars

    • @ivantraminiev8470
      @ivantraminiev8470 17 дней назад +3

      Tiger crews had ordes to avoid one on ones with JSIIs

  • @ramimahka4636
    @ramimahka4636 Месяц назад +42

    The Soviet Union had an endless supply of men and material, latter largely because of the massive US / UK Lend and Lease programme. They just needed to throw stuff at the Germans, wave after wave, until there is no one left to oppose. And this is not to say the SU commanders were skilled and the common ranks heroic. But it always was a numbers game.

    • @braxxian
      @braxxian Месяц назад +14

      Actually the Soviet Union produced more tanks than the U.S during WW2. The U.S produced 75,000 where the USSR produced 100,000. This myth that Russia would have collapsed without western aide is only partly true. As the war progresses the Russians got stronger and stronger.

    • @ВашместныйагентКГБ
      @ВашместныйагентКГБ Месяц назад +2

      The U.S. and British were vital help, however, not at all in manpower, their help was primarily logistical, which was vital. Also it was not always a numbers game, early in the war the soviets were on par with the Axis forces in numbers and from some sources were outnumbered. Mid and late in the war the soviets did not throw waves of men at the Axis forces. At least, it was not as simple as that.

    • @blackhornetf
      @blackhornetf Месяц назад +3

      Hitlers biggest problem was he thought his military was invincible because they had dominated early in the ww2 against smaller military's that didn't have modern mechanised armies like Germany did at the time + the blitzkrieg was a new form of warfare compared to ww1 tactics and weapons.
      The German blitzkrieg was not effective when defending against a huge mobile army who now had modern tanks and artillery . If you were in the Soviet army, you couldn't retreat, or you would be shot.
      Plus, the Soviet soldiers had seen what the German army had done to Soviet citizens and had a score to settle. ( The German army and the SS had murdered and enslaved scores of Soviets and burned their homes to the ground and left dead citizens hanging from ropes, etc, and the Soviets wanted payback.
      Plus Hitler didn't believe in a tactical retreats because he made important military decisions based on anger and not brains and lost several hundred thousand troops due to been one of the worst military leaders of all time once he decided he should run the German military instead of letting his military run the war.
      Hitler was political leader ( who's only military experience was been a runner in ww1 lmao ) He thought he could take over the German military with no experience 🤣 😂 during Ww2...

    • @carlroberson972
      @carlroberson972 Месяц назад

      Most lend lease aid arrived in 1943 and later. We're seeing a recent propaganda push to depict Russia as weak and ineffective so as to generate western support for Ukraine. Nothing our government or our puppet media say can be trusted.

    • @jahmah519
      @jahmah519 Месяц назад

      ​Hitler remained an artist during world war 2, an inspirational blagg artist ​@@blackhornetf

  • @blaze1148
    @blaze1148 Месяц назад +32

    Much footage I have never seen before 😮

    • @FactBytes
      @FactBytes  Месяц назад +4

      Thanks

    • @adriancamano777
      @adriancamano777 Месяц назад

      Panzer dominate

    • @oliverorchard2296
      @oliverorchard2296 Месяц назад +2

      I know incredible, i almost wondered if it was ai at times, of course not, bit some very cinematic and gritty shots i never seen before

    • @CamosAmos
      @CamosAmos Месяц назад

      ​@@FactBytesMasterpieces of war kino

  • @antcaruso3465
    @antcaruso3465 Месяц назад +29

    Just finished reading “Tigers in The Mud.” I see the book text was put into ChatGpt and repurposed for this video. Good job though

    • @rgmm-pz3wi
      @rgmm-pz3wi Месяц назад +1

      i have a link for that, online libary version, only as far as the luftwaffe division

  • @VC-THE-MAN_87
    @VC-THE-MAN_87 Месяц назад +16

    I've read Tigers in the mud, and kill ratios at 1 for 12 is incredible. I mean the germans out fought every opponent, American, British, Canadian, and Russian. Our numbers simply overwhelmed them. But man looking at individual battles its amazing the low amount of Men and material could hold off 7xs that amount . 500 hundred tanks vs 50. Its literally crazy how effective the armored divisions were as well as the infantry divisions. We learned alot about war for them. They wrote the book on building a extraordinary Army! RIP Otto Carius, Walt Witman etc.

    • @db321g
      @db321g Месяц назад +3

      lol, Michael Wittman was the Tiger Ace, Walt Whitman was an American poet

    • @ChanoLeyva-hq2ci
      @ChanoLeyva-hq2ci Месяц назад +2

      @@db321g😂😂

    • @lastguy8613
      @lastguy8613 Месяц назад +3

      ​@@ChanoLeyva-hq2ciI'm sure he meant Slim Whitman, the country and western singer😅

    • @DoN-dl8om
      @DoN-dl8om 29 дней назад

      That didn't work in the Western, African, Italian front, since American, British and Canadian troops were well trained and equipped, but that worked in the Eastern Front where Soviet troops were poorly trained and just threw numbers.
      The K/D ratio in Eastern front was 1 to 8
      In total casualties.
      Average was 1/30.
      1 German Soldier to around 100 soviet troops in the start of war.
      A month later it was
      1 to 75
      Then 3 months later 1 to 50
      Then 6 months later the K/D normalized to 1/20-35.
      Till 1944 the K/D ratio was 1 German Soldier to 20 - 35 soviet troops.
      In 1945 (start) it lowered to 1 to 8.
      In 1945 (middle) 1 to 5.
      In the 1945(end) 1 to 3.
      Overall K/D is around 1 German soldier to 6 - 8 Soviet Troops. Based on casualties:
      2150.000 German Soldiers KIA (Eastern Front)
      12.000.000 - 15.000.000.
      Soviet Troops KIA.
      Now in the western front Germany fought with as good troops as itself had or even better.
      1 American, British, Canadian soldier to
      2 - 3 German soldiers.
      Keep in fact that Germany sent their best of the best troops to the Western Front.

  • @heinwein421
    @heinwein421 Месяц назад +6

    14:14...this is "Unter-Sturmführer" Michael Wittmann from the 101. SS- Schweren Panzerabteilung. He is lost famouse for his engagement by Viller-Bocage where he decimated the english 7. Armored division, called the "Desert Rats"...He was together with Otto Carius and Kurt Knispel, one of the most successful Tank-Commander during WW2

  • @alexfromboston8303
    @alexfromboston8303 Месяц назад +5

    Greatly enjoyed Otto's book Tigers in the Mud.

  • @adriancamano777
    @adriancamano777 Месяц назад +39

    Germany had better optical range

  • @inspirationdynamics
    @inspirationdynamics Месяц назад +19

    Ideology aside, one cannot deny the formidable power and engineering prowess of the Germans during this period of history.

    • @fallschirmjager0000
      @fallschirmjager0000 Месяц назад +3

      well said

    • @123123baztard
      @123123baztard Месяц назад +1

      So why did they lose?

    • @MichaelOnRockyTop
      @MichaelOnRockyTop Месяц назад

      ​@@123123baztardNumbers and oil

    • @trystanswansonart
      @trystanswansonart Месяц назад +3

      @@123123baztard Economy and lack of manpower competing vs the rest of the world

    • @gobalmighty7463
      @gobalmighty7463 Месяц назад +2

      It was so amazing that they all ended up running west to surrender to the Americans afterwards.

  • @81HM
    @81HM Месяц назад +3

    I'd never heard of this battle. Thanks for teh video.

  • @mohammedsaysrashid3587
    @mohammedsaysrashid3587 Месяц назад +3

    Wonderful introduction and explanation of that several battles from complicated, furious, stubborn, defensive situations of German in Lithuania 🇱🇹 How active defensive operations saved Riga harbors from Soviet invasion in landscape sides thank you (Factbytes )channel for sharing....

  • @BlessedFallout
    @BlessedFallout Месяц назад +3

    I appreciate the video, thank you.
    There are some gaps in narration and lots of it doesn’t make sense.

  • @adriancamano777
    @adriancamano777 Месяц назад +10

    And fighting continues today

  • @Arnor2207
    @Arnor2207 Месяц назад +40

    The narva battle is in details in carius's autobiography. Him and another tank held an army korp's fate in their hands for 2 days. 10 dudes in 2 tigers without infantry support at first, against an entire soviet inf div and an heavy tank bat with t34's and kv1's, poised to cut the narva front in half then destroy the pocket. They destroyed a few dozens tanks, repulsed a regimental sized inf assault, around the clock bombardments and arty attacked, then retook the lost positions with only 20 german infantrymen.

    • @TheYeti308
      @TheYeti308 Месяц назад +2

      German Efficiency at Work .

  • @braxxian
    @braxxian Месяц назад +10

    One of the often unstated reasons Barbarossa failed was the sheer distances needed to be covered in Russia. German armour simply wore itself out going from one place to another with many tanks and armoured vehicles simply breaking down due to excessive use and wear and tear.

    • @haroldfiedler6549
      @haroldfiedler6549 Месяц назад

      No you are wrong about that. It was the poor logistic due to the enormous distances involved on the eastern front. That led to troops not having winter clothing or enough food. The winter of 1941 to 42 did more damage to the German Army then anything the Soviets did.

    • @ahhamartin
      @ahhamartin Месяц назад +1

      @@haroldfiedler6549 His point doesn't cancel out your's.

    • @istvansovari4208
      @istvansovari4208 16 дней назад

      Nagyapám mondta-ő szállított Gudeirannak lőszert-"kevés volt a tank,kevés a repülő,kevés az ember." Igaza volt.

  • @Misiulo
    @Misiulo Месяц назад +8

    Now Germans can say they are ready to defend the Baltics again...

  • @SeekerStardust
    @SeekerStardust Месяц назад +3

    wow thats a mad story. sadly reading these things as a kid i used to think they were things from the past.

  • @blank557
    @blank557 Месяц назад +16

    Less than half of the Tigers in the unit were available for combat? The Tigers greatest enemy was not the Soviet opposition, but lack of mechanical reliability and required maintenance. Germany was too resource poor to make enough tanks and also provide spare parts at the same time.

    • @TTTT-oc4eb
      @TTTT-oc4eb Месяц назад +3

      Breaking down en masse during long road marches were the rule, not the exception, for any WW2 tanks.

    • @Atlas-hu9wk
      @Atlas-hu9wk Месяц назад +3

      That's a popular misconception, the lack of numbers was the big factor followed by how expensive they were. Hence enter the Panther a tank that strike a good balance of cost and firepower. They were created in greater numbers than tigers but those did suffer from mechanical issues due to being rush, bombed factories for crucial parts.

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 Месяц назад +5

      Tigers not available doesn't mean they were all out with mechanical failure. There was also the need to repair serious battle damage that didn't destroy the tank, minor battle damage, wear and tear, general maintenance and tinkering etc.
      The Tiger's overall average operational rate in 1944 was over 70%. Very good for a heavy tank. It reached a high of 98% in September 1944.

    • @123123baztard
      @123123baztard Месяц назад +1

      Excellent comment

    • @MichaelOnRockyTop
      @MichaelOnRockyTop Месяц назад +1

      ​@lyndoncmp5751 Interesting stats!

  • @marca.8081
    @marca.8081 11 дней назад

    Watching war footage is easy, but actually fighting in war must be terribly hard and intimidating. I have nothing but respect for men and women who have the courage go into combat, regardless of which side they fight on.

  • @everymanesh2132
    @everymanesh2132 Месяц назад +3

    Tiger Tanks are IMPORTANT!!!

  • @gerarddelautel4354
    @gerarddelautel4354 Месяц назад +3

    Thanks

  • @anunzorigt2125
    @anunzorigt2125 2 дня назад +1

    Super cool I’m researching for a stop motion

  • @haroldfiedler6549
    @haroldfiedler6549 4 дня назад

    I’ve read Tigers In The Mud and am totally convinced of its accuracy. If anyone were to exaggerate it would be the Soviets. If you were a Red Army survivor of one of these attacks, you’d better come back with a good story or you’d better not come back at all.
    Early in the war Stalin was still executing high ranking generals when things didn’t go their way. One general had most of his teeth knocked out in brutal interrogations but was spared death. When he was given his old job back, he wore dentures made of stainless steel so that he could show how brutal Stalin had been to him.
    And finally, this doubt that is being cast on German commanders and individuals is an intentional allied deception to try to hide the inconvenient fact that the Germans, even in losing, were inflicting horrendous casualties on the allies. The Battle for Narva, Monte Casino, the Hurtgen Forest, Dukla Pass were all huge losses for the allies. In the Battle of Narva Alone, the Germans inflicted a staggering 800,000 casualties on the Red Army while the Germans suffered less than 25% of that.

  • @MrNaKillshots
    @MrNaKillshots Месяц назад +10

    A nightmare for all involved.

    • @AnnatarCarvour
      @AnnatarCarvour Месяц назад +3

      Very sad numbers aren't even exact believed alot more died then they actually thought

    • @anthonydoyle7370
      @anthonydoyle7370 Месяц назад +1

      @@AnnatarCarvour The slaughter went on after the surrender too. A book titled, "Other Losses" tells part of that story.

  • @bertvsrob
    @bertvsrob Месяц назад +21

    hitler reprimanded rommel for pushing too far throughout africa, then displayed the same audacity on the eastern front, costing germany the war

    • @AnnatarCarvour
      @AnnatarCarvour Месяц назад

      Yep

    • @AnnatarCarvour
      @AnnatarCarvour Месяц назад +4

      I don't think they could last in a war on 3 fronts though if that was to be the outcome they would have had to deal with Britain first to win

    • @BlaBla-pf8mf
      @BlaBla-pf8mf Месяц назад

      it was his refusal to allow withdrawals that was the worst mistake like we see by the end of this documentary

    • @blitzy3244
      @blitzy3244 Месяц назад

      cope and shit tier take

    • @sthrich635
      @sthrich635 Месяц назад

      Another "Germany Would Have Won if H man did X" myth. The deeper context was Hitler not against advancing itself, but against his generals keep making offensive further than logistics could supply, then expecting their supply lines to keep up. Rommel's Afrika Korps were running on captured British supplies and yet continue to advancing and expecting more logistics support from Germany while the Luftwaffe and Kreigsmarine were already bleeding badly trying to supply Africa. Not to mention Germany was still focusing on Eastern Front offensive logistics. It was like ordering one steak but waiter ended up serving three and charging them anyway, of course Hitler said no.
      Had Hitler let his generals who rarely budget their operations to do what their "winning strategies", they still couldnt do it as Germany lacked the logistics and supply budget, and they would just lost the war faster.

  • @garymacmillan
    @garymacmillan 24 дня назад

    The Tiger was a fearsome tank, but it had a vulnerability. Fuel consumption was sky high and from time to time this factor became an achilles heel, particularly in the later stages of the war.

  • @lyndoncmp5751
    @lyndoncmp5751 Месяц назад +2

    In his book Tigers In The Mud there is confusion regarding Soviet losses. In the chapter titled The Ambush it states 17 Stalins and 5 T-34s but in the actual after action report at the end of the book it states 17 T-43s and 6 Stalins.
    Very odd.
    T-43s were what the Germans called the later T-34/76 with the hexagonal turret.

  • @invisibilitycriterion6782
    @invisibilitycriterion6782 Месяц назад +4

    Wasn’t Otto Carius the gentleman while in full retreat in his Tiger 217, who shot down an Ilyushin Il-2 “shturmovík” using his 88mm main armament?

    • @minot.8931
      @minot.8931 Месяц назад

      One Tiger did.. but I can’t remember that it was Karius. Rings a bell thiu

    • @Angeliter
      @Angeliter Месяц назад +1

      According to the German Wikipedia it was Carius' gunner Kramer who did (i.e. fire the gun in the right fraction of a second) after Carius had fittingly positioned the Tiger.

  • @haroldfiedler6549
    @haroldfiedler6549 Месяц назад +1

    What virtually no one on these posts seem to know is that both the IS-2 Joseph Stalin tanks and the SU-152 tank destroyers had a fatal flaw. You had to totally depress the barrels to load the next shot. Given the poor Soviet optics, you were likely to miss the first shot and would then be at the mercy of the German tanks.

  • @wazza33racer
    @wazza33racer 9 дней назад

    Otto Carius also wrote an excellent book. The Latvians were no friends of the Soviets.......when the Soviets occupied Latvia and the Baltic states in 1939/1940, the Soviet Commissars (mostly WEJ's) stole property,tortured and murdered Latvians. When during the war, 40,000 WEJ civillians were evacuated from Berlin during heavy British bombing........the Latvians refused to let them settle in Latvia with their goods and belongings.........and mass murdered them all. The local SS Algemein officer was recalled to Berlin, and had to personally explain to Himmler, why these liquidations had been allowed to happen.

  • @Jakez408
    @Jakez408 Месяц назад +1

    Soviets always broke though because the Germans only had Panzers 3 and 4,s as their main battle formations. The few Tigers they had were ineffective to stop the Russians and only a myth.

  • @ASQUITHZ9
    @ASQUITHZ9 Месяц назад

    You ask any tank crew what tank would you rather be in and the Tiger wins every time

  • @MrNaKillshots
    @MrNaKillshots Месяц назад +8

    Only 1300 produced.

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 Месяц назад +2

      Knocked out circa 10,000 allied tanks, assault guns and tank destroyers. Less than 1,000 Tigers knocked out by the allies.

    • @MrNaKillshots
      @MrNaKillshots Месяц назад +1

      @@lyndoncmp5751 And the allies weren't in a rush to produce an improved tank, to reduce losses of personnel; a war of numbers.

  • @TheAleksm79
    @TheAleksm79 13 дней назад

    It sounds like the announcer is sympathizing with the Nazis, referring to the Soviet troops as ‘the enemy,’ which is deeply disturbing. During that time, the Americans were allies with the Soviet Union against the Nazis. So, what has changed?

  • @avnrulz
    @avnrulz Месяц назад +2

    The Battle of Courland.

  • @michaelcodelmar9547
    @michaelcodelmar9547 22 дня назад

    Imagine if the Tigers and Panthers came during the start of the war...together with the ME 262, V2 rockets, Diesel runed U boats...

  • @nickparkes8462
    @nickparkes8462 Месяц назад

    Sick,are you listening 2014?

  • @ronmason1710
    @ronmason1710 Месяц назад +3

    Read Tigers in the Mud several years ago. What I perceived from the autobiography of Otto Carius is that he was a regular army tank commander that had a distain for the Waffen SS. As well he was very skilled at his job. But I also felt that in the end, he was an ardent Nazi, and never acknowledged the atrocities committed by Himler. I think to admit that this happened and was caused by Himler would have meant that he was fighting a war under a lie. And that was never accepted by him as it would spoil his valiant efforts. IMO.

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 Месяц назад +1

      Yes he did seem to feel that he was fighting for a correct cause.

  • @dancoman2568
    @dancoman2568 6 дней назад

    Tiger a fost un tanc foarte bun !!!

  • @simonblake5563
    @simonblake5563 Месяц назад +2

    The Russians were saving many American lives. As the Normandy battles were taking place. It was only the dual attacks from east and west that defeated the Nazis.

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 Месяц назад +1

      The British and Canadians around Caen were facing more German armour than the Americans in Normandy and the Soviets in Bagration COMBINED. It was the British and Canadians who were taking on seven panzer divisions in June. This was the densest concentration of German armour ever deployed in WW2.

    • @fallschirmjager0000
      @fallschirmjager0000 Месяц назад +2

      @@lyndoncmp5751 the british rode on the backs of the americans and russians during the war, they were swept aside by Germany. Proof enough they were running out of trained infantry in Normandy even though they were concentrating almost their entire land army in a relatively tiny area. Not to mention they were fighting tired, worn out German units who had no air power, replacements, spare parts etc and the Germans still smashed them. Pretty embarrassing. The tactical and qualitative gulf in class was amazing.

    • @DarkLordGR9
      @DarkLordGR9 Месяц назад +5

      With that logic, weren't the Americans(and Allies) doing the same for the Soviets, in the western front?

    • @simonblake5563
      @simonblake5563 Месяц назад +2

      @@DarkLordGR9 Absolutely. But in the traditional narrative operation bagration is hardly ever mentioned. They helped each other's campaign.

    • @frankvandergoes298
      @frankvandergoes298 Месяц назад

      ​@@lyndoncmp5751It must also have been the biggest concentration of British armour.
      For at all stages the British, Canadians and Polish Armoured units outnumbered their German opponents.
      The Germans may have had 7 Panzer Divisions or 15 tank battalions but the Allies had 42 tank battalions deployed in the same area.

  • @wazza33racer
    @wazza33racer 9 дней назад

    In his book "Tigers in the Mud" Otto Carius said that it was better to send two tigers only, to attack large numbers of Soviets, instead of 4,6 or 8 Tigers. He reasoned that more tanks only created confusion and difficulties in keeping the group organized. With just 2 tigers, he had easy control of the of his 2nd number, without risking too many tigers. This is testament that German training,optics and quality of machine was more than a match for the bulk of Soviet manpower and equipment. This is all about confidence and wise use of resources. The Khazarian Mafia Soviets paid a hellish price for their so called "victory" in WW2, that did indeed taste as bitter as defeat. With 27 to 40 million dead, and many more wounded and traumatized...........Soviet society, was so damaged that it NEVER recovered, and communist ideologs are to this very DAY so bitter and hateful towards the stubborn and heroic resistance of Nazi Germany.

  • @joerosen5464
    @joerosen5464 Месяц назад +1

    A really nicely put together & well told story for this video. Great footage!
    I didn't even mind the relentless overdubbing of exploding sounds that permeate the entire 24 minutes of it all.😐

  • @robertwilkinson2232
    @robertwilkinson2232 Месяц назад

    If kesselring had been in charge he would have made the Russians pay for every yard. Like he made the allies pay in Italy. Just kept retreating to shorter stronger defensive lines.

  • @RBAILEY57
    @RBAILEY57 Месяц назад +1

    They were too heavy for the roads and bridges in Russia, and had mechanical issues.

  • @carrickrichards2457
    @carrickrichards2457 9 дней назад

    JS2, M26 and Centurion were all superior. Centurion being the best of them all. By wars end the doctrine of allied forces had improved and axis forces had degraded. It was perhaps most surprising that the german junior officer cadre retained its cohesion as long as it did.

  • @ryleeculla5570
    @ryleeculla5570 Месяц назад

    HOLDING THEIR LAND AS THEY MADE THEIR STAND A DISREGARD IN DEMAND

    • @nickmitsialis
      @nickmitsialis Месяц назад

      I remember those lyrics! What Sabaton song is it from again?

    • @ryleeculla5570
      @ryleeculla5570 Месяц назад

      @@nickmitsialis I think last stand

  • @antcaruso3465
    @antcaruso3465 Месяц назад +1

    “One thousand hours” lol

  • @speckledjim_
    @speckledjim_ Месяц назад

    When the Tigers broke free

  • @liverpoolscottish6430
    @liverpoolscottish6430 Месяц назад

    Few can fight like Fritz.........

  • @ZachariahJ
    @ZachariahJ Месяц назад +3

    It was only for a split second, and probably propaganda anyway, but at 7:35 there is a clip of an assault by motorbike! Never seen that before.
    I think there were some pedal bike outfits in WW1, but I doubt they were used to attack the enemy front. ;-)

    • @ottovonbismarck2443
      @ottovonbismarck2443 29 дней назад

      Every Panzer Division (and mot. Infantry Division) early in the war had a motorbike battalion as a recon unit and as part of the motorized infantry. Lots of use in Poland and France where you have decent roads. Mostly because they didn't have enough cars/trucks/halftracks to properly equip the battalions. Germany wasn't really a "car-nation" before WW2 because only few people could afford one. Motorbikes were indeed very prominent with common people and the industry could turn them out at a good rate. This footage must be from Poland, France or Russia 1941, because the so-called Kradschützen (motorbike riflemen) disappeared after re-organizing the Panzer Divisions. Motorbikes remained in service until the end, but only in secondary roles for dispatch riders etc. Recon units in Panzer and Panzergrenadier Divisions received Sdkfz 250 halftracks while one battalion of Panzergrenadiers was usually equipped with Sdkfz 251 if available, otherwise trucks.
      You'll see a re-birth of bike-riding tankhunters in late 1944, often with Volkssturm and Volksgrenadier Divisions, although actual fighting was done on foot. 🙂
      Edit: Most WW2 footage was propaganda material anyway, no matter from which side. Some is from actual combat, some is from training.

    • @ZachariahJ
      @ZachariahJ 29 дней назад

      @@ottovonbismarck2443
      Interesting stuff Otto - thanks!
      What I found amusing was the sight of a hundred motorbike-sidecar combos hurtling over the hills, guns ablazing!
      I know cavalry charged machine guns in WW1 (and possibly once or twice in WW2), but I'd never heard of motorbike/sidecar combos doing it.
      As you say, I assumed they were for reconnaissance and regimental communications, not as mass assault weapons. ;-)

    • @ottovonbismarck2443
      @ottovonbismarck2443 29 дней назад

      @@ZachariahJ There is a certain similarity between motorized infantry and dragoons; both are riding to the action and usually dismount to fight as infantry.
      AFAIK there were no cavalry charges on an MG position in WW2. However, the famous Polish Lancers were caught by some German tanks in 1939, but they didn't charge them, they tried to escape. Btw, only moments before that event, same lancers smashed an unexpecting German infantry battalion with LANCES AND SABRES ! German propaganda failed to mention this ...

    • @ZachariahJ
      @ZachariahJ 28 дней назад

      @@ottovonbismarck2443
      All good stuff Otto! I'd heard the Polish cavalry tank charge was not quite what we'd read about as boys in the UK during the 1960s. But it was a great yarn!
      I don't *know* of any other cavalry charges against fortified positions in WW2 - but you never know. ;-)
      I wouldn't put it past the Sikhs, for example, or the Gurkhas - if only they'd had the horses.
      And we all know there was a LOT more horse transport used in Europe during WW2 than is shown in the old movies. I can see some troops mounting up as a last desperate break out or suchlike.
      So it may not be documented, but I wouldn't be amazed to discover it happened somewhere during the conflict.

  • @ranhat2
    @ranhat2 Месяц назад

    Great video but sometimes weak connection with the narrative.

  • @123123baztard
    @123123baztard Месяц назад +1

    Another amazing documentary. It’s magical that the Germans had the best soldiers, best tanks, best tactics. But they massively lost the war and had their asses handed to them on a plate. Who makes these documentaries?
    I thought that Goebbles was dead? 😂

    • @MrWolfgangtube
      @MrWolfgangtube Месяц назад +2

      There is a reason for SU suffering millions of casualties and no amount of russian propaganda can change that

    • @josefkopacz1144
      @josefkopacz1144 Месяц назад +1

      Yeah when there was America , England and empire Soviet union ,not Russia alone Kazakhstan Uzbekistan Mongolia, Armenia , Georgia, Belarus, Ukraine, Azerbaijan, Turkmenistan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan. Etcetcetcetc never ending hoardes of enemies

  • @ljubomirculibrk4097
    @ljubomirculibrk4097 Месяц назад

    Statistics after the war tell the reality in german army:
    -most tank kills where by AT guns and artilery, 88mm flack for most of artilery
    -second are tanks
    -third infantry whit satchel charges and AT launchers (panzerfaust and pazershrecks where marginaly effective)
    -aircraft

  • @stuglenn1112
    @stuglenn1112 18 дней назад

    WTF, It's Otto not Oh-toe

  • @leonidfisher9410
    @leonidfisher9410 5 дней назад

    Eventually Soviets took Berlin !

  • @adriancamano777
    @adriancamano777 Месяц назад +3

    German panzer

  • @lenna6013
    @lenna6013 Месяц назад

    I mean yeah Tiger tank was a formidable weapon at that time and Germans were very proficient in using them , they had best crews and battle awareness and I can see this things play out.
    Than again painting Soviets as just a horde at that time is disingenuous , they were in 1944 unbeatable war machine , learned all the best lessons and have lot of similar stories (roles reversed)..it's circumstantial

  • @shaner9155
    @shaner9155 Месяц назад

    Might want to work on your pronunciation it's Otto not Otoe.

  • @christopherskipp1525
    @christopherskipp1525 Месяц назад

    The Panther had a 88mm cannon, no?

    • @nickmitsialis
      @nickmitsialis Месяц назад +2

      VERY long barrel 75mm.

    • @ronmason1710
      @ronmason1710 Месяц назад +2

      Panther had a 75mm High velocity gun, but the Jagdpanther had the 88mm gun.

    • @nickmitsialis
      @nickmitsialis Месяц назад

      @@ronmason1710 Yes, I was thinking only of the 'regular' Panther. I heard that plans were afoot to create a Panther II that had an 88 mm gun and a turret and mantlet similar to the Tiger II, but I don't know if that' s true or not.

    • @christopherskipp1525
      @christopherskipp1525 Месяц назад

      Ah, so the Panther was not equipped with the AA gun. Good to know.

    • @nickmitsialis
      @nickmitsialis Месяц назад +1

      @@christopherskipp1525 In any case, it's not the AA version of the 88, but a 'PAK' in 88mm size.

  • @scottb6560
    @scottb6560 Месяц назад

    Good video footage and historical information, but narrative is overly verbose. Need to stop the dramatic language and just give a straightforward account of the combat.

  • @colinsharman9888
    @colinsharman9888 Месяц назад +1

    This video depicts the German army as heroes, devastating to those born post war years. There's no mention of all the atrocities they committed on the Russian population.

    • @MrWolfgangtube
      @MrWolfgangtube Месяц назад +2

      There is also no mention of all the soviet crimes

    • @gunthertoll1304
      @gunthertoll1304 Месяц назад +2

      ​@@MrWolfgangtubethere is also no mentioning of Dresden, Hiroshima and so the list of Allied atrocities goes on.......

    • @geraldhagen2989
      @geraldhagen2989 Месяц назад +1

      Seems you thought this video was about the Nurenberg trials.

    • @MrWolfgangtube
      @MrWolfgangtube Месяц назад

      @@gunthertoll1304 Because the video is about a very successful german tank unit

    • @gunthertoll1304
      @gunthertoll1304 Месяц назад

      @@MrWolfgangtube I am sarcastic re. the comments of colinsharman9888

  • @gunnere-5936
    @gunnere-5936 Месяц назад

    One thousand hours? 10 am. I can’t stand listening to people who do military videos but can’t pronounce anything correctly

  • @TeunisD
    @TeunisD Месяц назад +4

    Looking at the data the Germans needed at least a 1.000 fold more of these tank aces and heavy tanks, which they lacked. The same is true for their lacking air power. The badly timed peak of Germany's military production capacity of it's war economy in 1943/44 shows that the war intensified much faster than they had planned for. That amateurism is then explained by the madman, Hitler.

    • @janp5880
      @janp5880 Месяц назад +3

      They had not planned for a 2 front war. The Luftwaffe was practically split in half. Germany lost around 40k aircraft vs the western allies and 45-50k on the eastern front. Without the western Allies the story would have been different in the east

    • @AnnatarCarvour
      @AnnatarCarvour Месяц назад +2

      ​@@janp5880yep hell it was a war on 3 fronts

    • @TerryKnight-hw3pg
      @TerryKnight-hw3pg Месяц назад +2

      ​@@janp5880The second front definitely shortened the war .If no second front was involved the outcome would have been the same the Russians could out produce and field millions of more troops than Germany could ever dream of .The German army's fate was sealed when Hitler attacked Russia.

    • @lyndoncmp5751
      @lyndoncmp5751 Месяц назад +1

      @janp5880
      The majority of German fighters and all the German navy was lost in the west, and 2/3 of German wartime expenditure and material resources went on their air and sea forces.

    • @DarkLordGR9
      @DarkLordGR9 Месяц назад

      @@janp5880 MUCH different!
      Constant bombing, of crucial factories in German, hindered production and technological advance, of vital weapons, spare parts, and other assets, for the German war machine, and this was excusively done, by the American and Brittish airplanes, since Soviets, didn't have any long range bombing capability.

  • @davequaschnick2559
    @davequaschnick2559 Месяц назад

    Wrong it was 501st and North Africa

    • @MrWolfgangtube
      @MrWolfgangtube Месяц назад +1

      First use of Tigers was near Leningrad

  • @gunnere-5936
    @gunnere-5936 Месяц назад

    Otto is pronounced as auto

  • @jeroenbronger7327
    @jeroenbronger7327 Месяц назад

    that constant clicking ticking tick tick most irritating
    the AI voice transcripting battle reports / weekly german newsreels rhetoric and grandpa GroSvati telling stories to his grandchildren...
    tick tick click
    from all different fronts even Wittmann gritty death race in France in grainy 3D
    yet a satisfying collection of heavy metal
    is that your mouse click tick tick ?
    peace

  • @mike72769
    @mike72769 Месяц назад

    Chatgbt summaries antank driver memoir

  • @awol354
    @awol354 Месяц назад

    Robot voice no good

  • @stevemcgee6394
    @stevemcgee6394 Месяц назад +2

    And where were the Ukrainians?

  • @jamessmith-gw1vi
    @jamessmith-gw1vi 2 дня назад

    O toe

  • @ayazziaqureshi6358
    @ayazziaqureshi6358 Месяц назад

    ❤❤❤❤❤
    ❤🎉🎉🎉❤
    ❤❤❤❤❤

  • @erikracz4162
    @erikracz4162 Месяц назад

    This is what I call a Russian Barbecue! 👍

  • @DontThinkso-kb9tc
    @DontThinkso-kb9tc Месяц назад

    All the tanks in the world didn't matter because they had no gas. Also your narration kinda sucks. Sorry.

  • @sockburner4041
    @sockburner4041 24 дня назад

    AI narration sucks

  • @jurgschupbach3059
    @jurgschupbach3059 Месяц назад +1

    70 Tonnen

  • @KC-GOD-IS.
    @KC-GOD-IS. Месяц назад

    Can not prounce Otto, it is not "O toe", it's "Auto", ridiculous absolute ignorance !

  •  Месяц назад

    Real Zero fanatics sponsored.Thumbs down.

    • @fallschirmjager0000
      @fallschirmjager0000 Месяц назад

      in other words, i dont like facts so i will stick my fingers in my ears and pretend i am offended. 👌

  • @minot.8931
    @minot.8931 Месяц назад

    I’m not a fan of using the modern names for towns. There was no Dunavpils in those days.. the battle was at Dunaberg, so we ought to refer to it as such.

    • @remartiz
      @remartiz Месяц назад

      Who cares ?

    • @minot.8931
      @minot.8931 Месяц назад +1

      @@remartiz Why, any *serious* student of history should care. It is entirely ignorant to refer to battles, or any other great event by referencing its location in modern terms. Did Alexander conquer Hillah, or did he conquer Babylon? Did the Greeks destroy Truva, or Troy? Did Rome fight decades of war with Carthage, or did it fight Tunisia? Indeed, what were Hillah, Truva, Tunisia in those days? Names that did not exist. It is merely ignorance or laziness to refer to the modern name..... and neither is more virtuous than the other sir.

    • @soiah
      @soiah Месяц назад

      ​@@minot.8931Greeks did not destroy Troy because neither the Greeks existed nor the city of Troy. It was a pelasg tragedy where achaeans with the palsg trator Achile conquered through treachery the city of Ilion.

  • @adriancamano777
    @adriancamano777 Месяц назад +22

    And fighting continues today