German Leaders Surrender - Doenitz, v. Kleist, Goering, v. Rundstedt, Kesselring, Frank, etc

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  • Опубликовано: 3 фев 2025

Комментарии • 692

  • @AudieMurphyAmericanLegend
    @AudieMurphyAmericanLegend  10 месяцев назад +5

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    •  9 месяцев назад

      losers

  • @michalukasz1660
    @michalukasz1660 5 лет назад +113

    AT 1:18 the narrator made a small mistake: the man wearing the m43 hat is Karl Hermann Frank who was the ss and police leader in occupied Czech Republic (Protectorate of Bohemia Moravia) . It was Hans Frank who was in Poland . I dont know if they were related, but these men were in 2 different countries during the german occupation.

    • @michalukasz1660
      @michalukasz1660 4 года назад +19

      @Isabella Adamowicz The narrator speaks about governor of GG Hans Frank in general gouvernement =occupied Poland, the pictured man is Karl Hermann Frank the HSSPF, high leader of ss and police in Bohemien Maren Protectorate . Its a big difference in their rank and country were they resided.

    • @angelsanchez5715
      @angelsanchez5715 Год назад +6

      Hans Frank and Karl Hermann Frank were not related. They just shared the last name. Hans Frank was born in Karlsruhe, Germany and Karl Hermann Frank was born in Karlsbad in the Sudetenland part of Czechoslovakia.

  • @overworlder
    @overworlder 3 месяца назад +5

    I like the smooth American pronunciation of Seyss-Inquart - 'Size-Inkwhat'

  • @bamboozle83
    @bamboozle83 7 лет назад +293

    Goering was not , "captured". he presented himself to the US.

    • @RevRSleeker
      @RevRSleeker 7 лет назад +74

      Let's be frank, he ran from the Russians...

    • @celloswiss
      @celloswiss 6 лет назад +11

      What a heap of idiotic nonsense. Goering was relieved he was capured by the Americans and not the Russians. He was his usual flabby and obese and was noticed to have manicured fingernails. So much for the man who promised to change his name to Meier if the Luftwaffe weren't to win the Battle for Britain. This fatso was a disgusting piece of shit and should
      have been handed to the Russians on the spot for immediate execution.

    • @kimberlywilliams7543
      @kimberlywilliams7543 6 лет назад +32

      Goeing surendered with his wife, daughter and driving up to the US US Army Base located in Nuremberg!

    • @Zooumberg
      @Zooumberg 4 года назад +31

      @@celloswiss Not to mention the SS were after him as well.

    • @thomasaffolter4386
      @thomasaffolter4386 4 года назад +11

      LOL, presented himself at point of a gun.

  • @wcatholic1
    @wcatholic1 6 лет назад +55

    I think they confused Karl-Hermann Frank with Hans Frank.

  • @ericwanderweg8525
    @ericwanderweg8525 2 года назад +11

    I love how Karl Dönitz’ name always comes out as DOUGHNUTS with the captions on

  • @dankwartdenkhardt5714
    @dankwartdenkhardt5714 9 лет назад +66

    At 1:18 you don´t see Hans Frank, "the last King of Poland" but Karl Hermann Frank, successor of Heydrich in Bohemia and Murawia. He got hanged as well

    • @tedmccarron
      @tedmccarron 4 года назад +3

      Thanks for clarifying.

    • @jamesp8569
      @jamesp8569 3 года назад +3

      What an excellent spot. I knew it wasn't Hans Frank and I've rarely seen KH Frank wearing a closed collared uniform. Here he's passing himself off as a military SS general, although he was the Higher SS Police leader for the protectorate. One of the giveaways to his status is the war merit cross around his neck, which was only awarded to non combatants. This is the man responsible, after Heydrich's assassination, for the liquidation of Lidice, amongst many other atrocities. There is footage of his trial and subsequent public execution.

    • @maralajtkep2900
      @maralajtkep2900 3 года назад +3

      In fact he was not Heydrich´s successor, that was Kurt Daluege (still as the acting reichsprotektor instead of Konstantin von Neurath) and then Wilhelm Frick (official Reischprotektor). Frank was a state minister (der Staatsminister), which was something little bit different...

    • @AlexFranceParis999
      @AlexFranceParis999 3 года назад +3

      Thanks for this comment. I asked me also : who is that guy ? I know how Hans Frank looks like ... I was surprised that this guy wearing a SS uniform in rank of SS-Obergruppenführer (equivalent to a 3* general in the US army) was presented as "Hermann Frank, governor of Poland" . Now, all is clear.

    • @KristVladic
      @KristVladic 3 года назад +2

      Many claun's from Germany and Russia still dreaming " Oh! Polish crown".

  • @nautifella
    @nautifella 2 года назад +80

    This clip of Goering is backwards. At first he was pleasant and convivial with the reporters, but you can see a distinct change in his demeanor (the first part o the clip) when he is told he was being charged as a war criminal.
    Goering turned himself in expecting to be relieved of his military and political titles, but keep his aristocratic titles and property as the europeans have done for centuries. When he was told that he was under arrest, he knew he was done.

    • @cavejohnson982
      @cavejohnson982 2 года назад

      well he was quite an idiot :D

    • @christophj3014
      @christophj3014 2 года назад +15

      Goering had no aristocratic titles.

    • @legalmexican
      @legalmexican 2 года назад +3

      @@christophj3014 Just a former street thug.

    • @Bigguy5154
      @Bigguy5154 2 года назад

      All just for making Lews do manual labor.

    • @christopherwelch136
      @christopherwelch136 2 года назад +1

      And he offed himself. Yay!

  • @jamesfields2916
    @jamesfields2916 2 года назад +21

    Doenitz lived until December 1980. He was the last European leader from WW2. Hirohito died in 1989.

    • @jadejun5930
      @jadejun5930 2 года назад +5

      Should include Rudolf Hess who died in 1987?

    • @daveg6839
      @daveg6839 2 года назад +9

      King Michael of Romania died in 2017 at age 96. He led the coup in 1944 that ousted Ion Antonescu.

    • @ionionescu6777
      @ionionescu6777 8 месяцев назад +2

      Last one was King Michael of Romania, died 2017

    • @HerrHeissler
      @HerrHeissler 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@jadejun5930 Hess was not the fuhrer. Doenitz was

    • @barsanyibela4027
      @barsanyibela4027 3 месяца назад

      @@HerrHeissler Dönitz wasn't a Führer either. He was "appointed" as the president of the "republic" in the last days of the war by Hitler's will. He's other major position, the chancellorship was "left" to Goebbels, who committed suicide soon after him. The "Führership" consisted of these two positions together. Quotation marks are used to emphasise the highly questionable legality of these transfers.

  • @michaelharrison8036
    @michaelharrison8036 2 года назад +27

    I wish they would play Goring's comments to the assembled news media that he made, would be interesting to hear what he actually had to say.

    • @BlutUndEhre88
      @BlutUndEhre88 2 года назад +15

      Maybe they don't want anyone to hear what he has to say.

    • @michaelharrison8036
      @michaelharrison8036 2 года назад +5

      @@BlutUndEhre88 I'd like to hear what he said...but I'm sure it was all sanitized for consumption anyway. I think he did say he wanted to meet with Ike, who refused.

    • @blackwingvisuals5017
      @blackwingvisuals5017 Год назад

      ​@@BlutUndEhre88 you sir / madam are a genius i recommend you stay away from deep bodies of water and oil drums! Put oil drums and Lake Mead in the same Google search entry if my comment is not understood! "There is nothing on TV that someone doesn't want you to see!"

    • @BlutUndEhre88
      @BlutUndEhre88 Год назад

      @@blackwingvisuals5017 that one took a sombre turn, huh...

    • @pierregarcia156
      @pierregarcia156 9 месяцев назад +3

      En 1939, il a fait l'impossible pour éviter la guerre.

  • @サユキハナ
    @サユキハナ 3 года назад +18

    Late war U Boat crews was so lucky, they were in captive for just days and months unlike Heer, and Luftwaffe in eastern front.

    • @gamerdrache6076
      @gamerdrache6076 2 года назад +1

      easter front people most died in gulag and theyw ere realeased 1948 i think

    • @lucatricky1457
      @lucatricky1457 2 года назад +6

      @@gamerdrache6076 the last german pows were released by the Russians in 1956/1957, at least the few who survived to the gulags

    • @chrisstucker1813
      @chrisstucker1813 Год назад

      @@gamerdrache6076the Easter front doesn’t sound too bad. I’d rather fight some bunny rabbits than Russians, plenty of chocolate to go around too

    • @gamerdrache6076
      @gamerdrache6076 Год назад

      @@chrisstucker1813 Easter front was not too bad you say in the battle of stalingrad alone more pople died than in the entire nromand invasion and germany invasion

  • @rickjohnson9558
    @rickjohnson9558 2 года назад +27

    I had an idea to open a chain of Donut shops called "Karl's Donuts", which would feature "sinkers" and "Luftwaffles". Couldn't get a small business loan, however.

  • @BlutUndEhre88
    @BlutUndEhre88 2 года назад +54

    Donitz wasn't "self-styled". He was appointed as such by AH.
    No surprises considering this video was made by the British.

    • @HooDatDonDar
      @HooDatDonDar Год назад +3

      I think this is an American film clip. It gets a few things wrong, as others have pointed out.
      Doenitz was not appointed the ‘new fuehrer’. Chancellor Hitler had combined the offices of president and chancellor in August 1934, when the incumbent President Paul von Hindenburg died. Hitler used the Enabling Act to merge the office of chancellor with that of the president to create a new office, "the leader" (or Führer). He had been unofficially called that before, as leader of the Party.
      Although the offices were merged, Hitler continued to be addressed as "Führer und Reichskanzler" indicating that the head of state and head of government were still separate positions, albeit held by the same person.
      When he died, he had left instructions that the offices were to be split again. Doenitz was to be President, and Goebbels was to be chancellor. So, there never was but one fuhrer.
      What kind of a name is ‘judenfrei’?? I like these videos, but neo-Nazis hang around them, like a bad smell hangs around garbage.

    • @deanpd3402
      @deanpd3402 9 месяцев назад +1

      Perhaps you can take your complaint to the the people who made this news report back in 1945.

    • @Mankymeg
      @Mankymeg 2 месяца назад

      It's an American reel you plank

  • @stelleratorsuprise8185
    @stelleratorsuprise8185 4 года назад +30

    Ewald v. Kleist was arrested after the failed assasination of Hitler but was released from jail later. After he was captured by US forces he was handed over to the British Army who extradited him to Yugoslavia where he was sentenced to 15 years later he was extradited to the Soviet Union where he died in captivity ... he has never been in the trial in Nurenberg and I don't really know if he was really guilty for war the crimes he was accused to.

    • @stelleratorsuprise8185
      @stelleratorsuprise8185 3 года назад

      @@tonyhill5235 Thank's for clearing my error

    • @der_kluger_gunther8391
      @der_kluger_gunther8391 2 года назад

      @@tonyhill5235 the fieldmarshall got arrested too, but released 'cause the gestapo couldn't find any connections to the plotters. the soviets couldn't find any proof that he committed war crimes so, they accused him of being "kind with the southern soviet people" making a "good" propaganda to the n*zis.....
      he changed all the prisons of the soviet union dying in the one close to moscow, and there are rumors (theories tho) that they used him to test poison or some sh!t like that. i f*cking had tears in my eyes when i saw this..... he believed in god until the end.
      last thing, the dad of the other ewald got executed by the gestapo but his son lived pretty long tho.

    • @tonyhill5235
      @tonyhill5235 2 года назад

      @@der_kluger_gunther8391 yes aware what scrubbed history tells us. That is not what happened. I know this pig Nazi family and how their Nazi records were scrubbed...paul didn't even die in Russia. Although some know this personally we all have to remember generally that the u.s. coveted these Nazi and cleaned their names and backgrounds.

    • @popseven9283
      @popseven9283 2 года назад +1

      Of course he wasn't guilty! He was an "angel"....

    • @Tarquin21723
      @Tarquin21723 2 года назад +19

      He was almost sacked, because he told the SS "there are to be no excesses in my area of command." basically telling them to screw off. The SS got so pissed off with Kleist that they complained to Goebbels. But, Kleist was so well respected that the complaints didn't lead to anything. In fact, Kleist even recruited Partisan units in Ukraine. He was able to do this, because instead of letting the SS just murder everyone, he won over the Ukrainians by giving the SS the boot. He was sacked after he was barely able to retreat from the Caucuses, leaving all their heavy equipment behind, after the defeat at Stalingrad. Hitler wanted to execute Manstein and Kleist for retreating, but their reputations were so strong that Hitler was wisely advised not to do it. Kleist wasn't a nazi party member, but he was still complicit in aiding the regime. He wasn't an angel, but he deserved better than to die in a Soviet Prison camp. The Source for this information is Hitler's Field Marshals and their Battles by: Samuel W. Mitcham.

  • @georgschmidt5281
    @georgschmidt5281 3 года назад +49

    Goering was an air ace in ww1.

    • @bkreed27
      @bkreed27 3 года назад +1

      And was so disliked by his comrades in JG1 that they never invited him to their reunions.

    • @warrenash5370
      @warrenash5370 2 года назад +4

      Commanded the Red Baron's old squadron.

    • @Briman2052
      @Briman2052 2 года назад

      @@bkreed27 Why was he disliked?

    • @bkreed27
      @bkreed27 2 года назад +4

      @@Briman2052 he was apparently quite arrogant, a braggart, etc. May also have been related to the fact he took over from Richthofen who, one can imagine, was a tough act to follow

  • @mercomania
    @mercomania 9 лет назад +135

    Very interesting that they were being called war criminals even before the trial.

    • @mercomania
      @mercomania 9 лет назад +31

      +HBB "Discovered" I always thought that a trial was there to prove responsibility and not to pre-judge. After the war many Allied and Soviet atrocities have been discovered, but strangely no show trials.

    • @mercomania
      @mercomania 9 лет назад +30

      Lets start with concentration camps, they may have been introduced into Germany in 1937 but only copying a British idea from 1901/02 whereby the "kind and considerate" British decide to ethnic cleanse the Boer Republics and commence a campaign of killing women and children to persuade the "bitter enders" to acquiesce to British rule. If you are a student of this period in history please investigate the Rhine Meadows, ethnic cleansing in Silesia, ethnic cleansing in Sudentanland, ethnic cleansing in Elsass and the terror bombing of German cities in 1945 before you attempt to whitewash the Allies and the Soviets. The Soviets who were such "brave and honorable" allies in 1945 but were despicable enemies in 1946. Do not pretend that the victors justice was honest and fair when the Soviets were sat on the judicial panel, the victors write the history of any war that is understood, but look deeper and you will always find that wars are not a simple division of good and evil. They are vile expressions of man,s hatred and jealousy, but never try to make one side to be saintly and the other evil, evil exists in all men. If you wish to stick with your simplistic view of the war all well and good but please do not try to paint the allies as saints

    • @mercomania
      @mercomania 9 лет назад +7

      As you say war is far from simplistic, explain your simplistic comment "Germany started the war". As an historian of this period I find your comment simplistic and it is not what it is.

    • @mercomania
      @mercomania 9 лет назад +3

      Very simplistic, just very glad you were not my one sided history teacher. Whatever happened to research? Obviously your prejudices severely distort your view on world events. It is really depressing to think that you consider yourself a teacher of history, I feel sorry for your students who have to listen to what is nothing more a regurgitating propaganda lesson.

    • @vaioszverkos1785
      @vaioszverkos1785 9 лет назад +7

      eat shit and follow your leader if you can't live in a world without nazizm

  • @paulspydar
    @paulspydar 9 лет назад +124

    I have a huge respect for those U-Boat crews, Such a dangerous mission with a very high mortality rate , especially towards the end of the war & after the Enigma was cracked.

    • @erikharmon4773
      @erikharmon4773 4 года назад +21

      @Isabella Adamowicz study the history correctly. no u-boat captain ever gave the order to shoot survivors in the water or lifeboats. if they had, then why were there no u-boat captains at the nuremburg trials? nice try!

    • @shimshonbendan8730
      @shimshonbendan8730 4 года назад +14

      When you think about all the merchant marine crews who went down, that alone should take of the respect off. You need to get off your romantic idealism of these people.

    • @shimshonbendan8730
      @shimshonbendan8730 4 года назад +14

      @Isabella Adamowicz Isabella, they don't want to know the truth because their minds have already been made up. There was nothing noble about U-boat crews.

    • @thejamaicanpolak3988
      @thejamaicanpolak3988 3 года назад

      @@shimshonbendan8730 You know your country did the same against your own allies. Look at the attack on the U.S in the 60's. The pilots even said "They are American". They strafed the survivors too..

    • @ronniehopper2726
      @ronniehopper2726 2 года назад +10

      @Bella Adamowicz so did the Americans

  • @reginaldmcnab3265
    @reginaldmcnab3265 4 года назад +55

    The war criminals who invaded Iraq looking for fictional weapons of mass destruction! They got away!

    • @GravityXheavy
      @GravityXheavy 4 года назад +3

      Every inch of land taken from Islam is a victory for indigenous people and freedom. Africa should try it sometime.

    • @alexwilliamson1486
      @alexwilliamson1486 4 года назад +5

      Yes but they didn’t murder 7 million Iraqis in a 3 year period did they dumbass

    • @None-zc5vg
      @None-zc5vg 4 года назад +3

      'Victors' justice'.

    • @GravityXheavy
      @GravityXheavy 4 года назад +1

      @@None-zc5vg Freedom's justice.

    • @baldurvondzulthom
      @baldurvondzulthom 2 года назад

      🔥

  • @wolfgangmuller-thurgau6796
    @wolfgangmuller-thurgau6796 4 года назад +20

    It is not Hermann Frank (Generalgouvernement), but Karl-Hermann Frank (Protektorat).

  • @SeamHead33
    @SeamHead33 4 года назад +29

    WW2 was Man vs. Evil, and Man lost

  • @schaerffenberg
    @schaerffenberg 6 лет назад +94

    The lesson from all this: NEVER SURRENDER!

    • @alexwilliamson1486
      @alexwilliamson1486 4 года назад +23

      No don’t follow a madman and fight a global conflict.....

    • @dankwartdenkhardt5714
      @dankwartdenkhardt5714 4 года назад +11

      @@alexwilliamson1486 Yeah, I think this would be a more appropriate lesson.

    • @kimchipig
      @kimchipig 4 года назад +7

      @@alexwilliamson1486 "don't invade Russia" would be useful advice.

    • @canerbeyaz8003
      @canerbeyaz8003 4 года назад +1

      @@kimchipig not really, get your back secured, collab with USA, then attack Russia asap.

    • @Bronzebk
      @Bronzebk 4 года назад +3

      @@alexwilliamson1486
      Excellent response Alex.

  • @wombatwilly1002
    @wombatwilly1002 2 года назад +19

    Goering knew and spoke perfect English

    • @gustav-no8rz
      @gustav-no8rz 2 года назад +10

      Goering was kind of disappointed. He thought he would be treated as a celebrity. Instead, he was treated as the war criminal he was. I know, history is written by the victors. But Goering was a bit delusional. He didn't think their ideology was a bad thing.

    • @cfvgd
      @cfvgd Год назад

      @@gustav-no8rz none of them did. and many lived on with their lives after the war

  • @MrBagpiperob
    @MrBagpiperob 4 года назад +19

    A bit strange how most of the generals surrendered/captured wearing their best uniforms, and various paraphernalia of rank and complete with ribbons and awards, oblivious to what they would represent to the people meeting them. Goering was stripped of his awards and ribbons but left with his hat and shoulder boards for a time.

    • @roybean7166
      @roybean7166 4 года назад +2

      German generals looked like Christmas trees, with all the nonsense on their chests.

    • @petekdemircioglu
      @petekdemircioglu 2 года назад +2

      @@roybean7166 Yes. Flashy psychopaths

    • @michaelharrison8036
      @michaelharrison8036 2 года назад +1

      I suspect that the Wermacht uniform code for standards of dress and turn-out obliged them to wear all of their awards when in the presence of other high-ranking ( or foreign) personnel. What's so interesting are the shots of Rastenburg when they visited Hitler: they were all wearing their Knight's Crosses to the Iron Cross, carrying their Field Marshal's batons, etc.

    • @DonMeaker
      @DonMeaker 2 года назад +3

      Like Lee, surrendering to Grant, the German generals made a sacrifice of their lesser quality uniforms to the gods of war, keeping their best, if they could.

    • @roybean7166
      @roybean7166 2 года назад

      @Vernichtungskrieg Sure, same type of people.

  • @tb7771
    @tb7771 3 месяца назад

    Some glaring mistakes, however this was made in 1945 and shown in movie theaters in the US. Gotta love the footage of Smiling Al!

  • @drezworthy
    @drezworthy 7 лет назад +10

    Fascinating.

  • @roberthudson1959
    @roberthudson1959 2 года назад +13

    Two quibbles, one minor and one major. First of all, referring to Kleist and Runstedt as "v. X" is like calling Arthur Wellesley "of Wellington." More importantly, Grand Admiral Doenitz did not name himself as German head of state. Hitler named his successor in his will.

    • @LadyFairChildVideo
      @LadyFairChildVideo 2 года назад

      he sure as hell went along with it though with the Flensburg government. he could've told whoever to EFF OFF and not assume the position.

    • @faithlesshound5621
      @faithlesshound5621 2 года назад +1

      Two more corrections.
      After the abolition of titles in Germany in 1919, nobiliary particles became part of the surname, so by then "von Kleist" WAS his surname.
      And the grand admiral was named by Hitler only as Präsident, not Führer of Germany. The latter title was assumed by Hitler when he combined the roles of chancellor and president.

    • @May-ve6sr
      @May-ve6sr Год назад +3

      @@LadyFairChildVideo And who do you think would have over saw the German surrender? If not him then somebody else would have. Someone in a German leadership position had to tell their military to stop fighting.

  • @draganostojic6297
    @draganostojic6297 6 месяцев назад +1

    What a dramatic music

  • @readynow12345
    @readynow12345 3 года назад +10

    Goering thought he was going to be treated like a star lol..

    • @gerrynightingale9045
      @gerrynightingale9045 3 года назад +2

      *He was 'treated like a Star' because of all the information in his head and that fact that he was the only one of 'highest-rank' other than Hitler himself to be taken alive*

    • @readynow12345
      @readynow12345 3 года назад +2

      @@gerrynightingale9045 For like a day.

    • @WilloSNoack
      @WilloSNoack 3 года назад +1

      Göring liked to take drugs after he had been hurt during Hitlers attack against the German government in Munih 1920. Therefore had been unable to realize the real intentions of his enemies and to command the German Air force!

    • @christophedallaporta8836
      @christophedallaporta8836 3 года назад +1

      Which goes to show a bloated ego will make you act like a fool and having a high iq won't change anything about it. These guys didn't have clue what they were doing . they were like a fox in a henhouse.

    • @gerrynightingale9045
      @gerrynightingale9045 3 года назад +3

      @@christophedallaporta8836 Goering knew exactly what he was doing in joining the 'NSDAP' and he felt "Desperate times call for desperate measures" insofar as 'War Plans' were concerned, as did 1.8-million veterans of the 'Great War' that saw Germany collapse in every way possible and growing worse by the month as France and England began 'stripping-away' industry and refusing to negotiate in any manner*
      ( *In many ways, the 'War' never ended for Germany because of severe demands from the Allies* )
      *As for 'bloated ego' he was of 'Royal Blood' and a fearless pilot who became an 'Ace' and was Manfred's successor to the 'Flying Circus' squadron during the 1st. World War*
      *He was in the 'front line' with Hitler during the 'Munich Putsch' were he was shot by someone's pistol 3-times and the stomach wound never healed properly, where lesions and strictures caused him constant pain for years, making it difficult to sleep and causing him to 'snack' frequently because a full meal was too much for his system to cope with*
      *In 1935 Goering 'countermanded' the 'political imprisonment of Jews at Buchenwald' ordering that 'All Jewish males who served honorably during the 'Great War' are to be released and their properties and effects are to be restored to them'*
      *This caused Himmler no end of grief since it violated his own orders, yet there was little he could do against the 'ReichsMarshal' who was second only to Hitler in authority*
      *At the Nuremburg trials, Goering was the only 'Nazi' to never denounce Hitler or the 'Party' saying "We did all we did to save Germany from utter ruin and take-over by the Communist Party" and although he was disgusted by films of the 'Death Camps' he could never accept that it was Hitler's own private orders that allowed and encouraged it all, saying "This was Himmler's doings and I doubt Hitler knew the extent of such mindless murders occurring'*

  • @gerrynightingale9045
    @gerrynightingale9045 3 года назад +18

    *Doenitz was never remotely 'Fuhrer' or 'Chancellor'*
    *Hitler gave him "Full authority to act in my name with such forces as you have to continue the fight in your region"*
    *Technically, Goering was 'ReichsMarshal' as per the mandates of 1935 and he was actually 'Head of State'*
    *Goebbels was the 'Party Leader' at the instant of Hitler's death...but had no authority over military forces*
    *Himmler was 'unemployed' at the instant of Hitler's death, since he had no true military rank other than his command of the 'SS' and that was more a political distinction than anything else, since all of the 'SS' were adjuncts to Hitler himself*
    *Doenitz had full command of whatever was left of the Navy and a few assorted battalions and nothing more*
    *He would have to 'take orders' from Goering had any been issued, but the surrender was already underway so that point is moot in any event*
    *Much has been made of Hitler's orders regarding Goering over "He's to be stripped of his immediate authority and placed under arrest at his home!" yet no one ever made any attempt to implement that 'Fuhrer Order' because everyone knew Hitler would countermand it in a few hours time and it was never 'Officially sent and recorded'*
    ( *Goering enjoyed 'special status' with Hitler because he was one of, if not the only man Hitler trusted implicitly to always
    'have his back' given that during the 1923 'Putsch' Goering had been in front of Hitler on the street and taken a severe bullet wound in the belly as well as at least one other 'thru-and-thru' bullet in a thigh* )
    *The abdominal wound caused many strictures and adhesions after the pistol-bullet was removed that took months to heal and Goering never enjoyed his former robust health again and his morphine addiction did not help either in later years*
    *Hitler never forgot 'Providence meant for him to protect me so the Party would not lose it's Leader so early in the struggle'*

  • @mehudspith
    @mehudspith 4 года назад +11

    "Arthur Seyss-Inquart, the traitor of Austria!". Looking forward to a fair trial then.

    • @ScottyDont1945
      @ScottyDont1945 3 года назад +2

      A lot of these trials are just for show, all the evidence was clear and cut, only reason a few didn't get hung was because they didn't lie through their teeth and accepted responsibility

    • @adamanderson3042
      @adamanderson3042 3 года назад +4

      @@ScottyDont1945 A lot of the evidence was definitely clear and cut for some of the really big names but there were almost 200 people tried I think in total. A lot of those people needed investigations and lawyers and a decent chunk were innocent and/or acquited/received no charges at all.
      It definitely doesn't seem like it was all for show, it was a lengthy process that was just arguably the most judicially minded court case in human history up to that point and possibly even still to this day. Literally thousands of legal experts and lawyers on site from dozens of countries able to advise and go through the paperwork. It definitely had the added side effect of putting on a good show I guess, as if to say "Look, we are correcting for the wrongs of the Nazi atrocities!" but at the end of the day I think there are arguments that this was actually more fair and justice minded than most normal murder cases, especially since the high profile nature probably meant they had quite good lawyers I would imagine.

    • @bkreed27
      @bkreed27 3 года назад +2

      6 1/4

  • @georgschmidt5281
    @georgschmidt5281 3 года назад +43

    Those submariners were very brave men. You could not get me to serve on a submarine in peace time. Those WW2 subs were very cramp quarters and the death rate was high.

    • @petermacander2061
      @petermacander2061 2 года назад +4

      To say nothing of the many innocent commercial ship noncombatant sailors they murdered on the high seas.

    • @gamerdrache6076
      @gamerdrache6076 2 года назад +3

      @@petermacander2061 because they had weapons?

    • @unclexeres
      @unclexeres 2 года назад +1

      @@gamerdrache6076 German U-Boats were sinking every type of vessel around the British Isles during the blockade, armed and unarmed, these men were killers, of which they were quite proud.

    • @gamerdrache6076
      @gamerdrache6076 2 года назад

      @@unclexeres americans and soviets and british airraids too if you say they did it to win faster then u wrong since uboat was the same

    • @unclexeres
      @unclexeres 2 года назад

      @@gamerdrache6076 look, the War is over and we know how it started and why and we know how it ended.
      That's enough, relitigate it all you want but it won't change the outcome.
      Best to let it go.

  • @christophbreitenbach4112
    @christophbreitenbach4112 2 месяца назад +1

    What is the sense of the stupid noise in the background?

  • @occidentadvocate.9759
    @occidentadvocate.9759 2 года назад +17

    Ain't it odd the "War Criminals" are allways on the losing side!

    • @tonyves
      @tonyves 2 года назад +1

      You suggesting they weren't war criminals? Get a grip Occident.

    • @occidentadvocate.9759
      @occidentadvocate.9759 2 года назад +8

      @@tonyves Alies committed plenty war crimess. Soviets murdered and raped millions for instance. The British and American indiscriminate bombing of cities was a war crime.

    • @BruderSenf
      @BruderSenf Год назад +6

      @@occidentadvocate.9759 would be unbelievable naive to think war crimes only come from one side

  • @TANKTREAD
    @TANKTREAD Год назад +4

    Good 'ol Dunkin' Doenitz.

  • @fabiolone70
    @fabiolone70 7 лет назад +4

    Now I understand where john williams arranged some main lines of star wars soundtrack...

  • @rainerstahlberg2486
    @rainerstahlberg2486 Год назад +3

    If you here the self-important voice of the speaker in this clip, you immediately realize that is the same style the Nazi leaders made their announcements. Steep learning curve!

  • @ILWU4Ever2024
    @ILWU4Ever2024 6 месяцев назад +1

    Many of these German officers surrendered to the U.S., England, and France, rather than surrendering to the USSR. They felt and knew, that one day, the U.S., England and France would one day fight against the Soviets.

    • @ImrightYourewrong-gs4pz
      @ImrightYourewrong-gs4pz 6 месяцев назад

      That's not why they surrender to them

    • @peterhopkins9187
      @peterhopkins9187 3 месяца назад

      Nobody surrendered to England any more than they surrendered to Texas or Normandy. England is part of Britain, just as Texas is part of the USA and Normandy is part of France. England would find it difficult to fight against the Soviets as they would have to declare independence first to do so - and why would they? The Soviet Union ceased to exist long before RUclips was a twinkle in its Daddy's eye, and quite wrong. What a strange comment to make!

  • @philipppaasch8929
    @philipppaasch8929 3 месяца назад

    Gab es nicht mehr als 240p damals?

  • @TangledUpInBlue631
    @TangledUpInBlue631 9 месяцев назад +3

    Sinister music when featuring the Germans. A strong and happy tune for the Americans meting out out justice to the vanquished.

    • @louisewalker9074
      @louisewalker9074 3 месяца назад

      🙄

    • @ronaldmessina4229
      @ronaldmessina4229 3 месяца назад +1

      @tanglesupinblue631 why do u write ✍️ that the music 🎶 for the Germans is sinister? & for the yanquis strong & happy? What u do not realise is that many of the Germans had to fight for the idiot of hitler, & if they did not, their families would have been tortured or killed by the nazis 🎉🎉😢😢😢

  • @JK-br1mu
    @JK-br1mu 3 месяца назад

    They were trying to find Heinz von Panzer, but he got away.

  • @jerrymarshall2095
    @jerrymarshall2095 4 года назад +10

    Goering should bought a new miracle bra for the occasion.

    • @sudfac
      @sudfac 3 года назад

      Kesselring, Rundstedt, Dönitz - these bastards had to go to Russian Siberia.

    • @charliecummquat3558
      @charliecummquat3558 3 года назад +2

      After his capture he lost much weight

    • @R.Lennartz
      @R.Lennartz 3 года назад +1

      @@charliecummquat3558 He did, and stopped using opiates, which made him his old self again, sharp and witty.

  • @simeonivanov3507
    @simeonivanov3507 2 года назад +9

    The last of the Great Europeans .

    • @dans9463
      @dans9463 2 года назад

      Grow up..
      Admiring evil don't make you attractive to the woman folk.

    • @jokerpoker2094
      @jokerpoker2094 2 года назад +2

      We need another great Europeans!

  • @thehumancanary131
    @thehumancanary131 7 месяцев назад

    'Interviewed by a live reporter'........😂😂😂

    • @benoitpellet1657
      @benoitpellet1657 16 дней назад

      I think that is actually « Allied news reporters » but it does indeed sound like « alive ».

  • @paulorchard7960
    @paulorchard7960 9 месяцев назад

    None of these men were captured, some surrendered themselves and the others were simply rounded up!

  • @thomasaffolter4386
    @thomasaffolter4386 4 года назад +6

    The Germans never really accepted that they were defeated in WWI, so the leadership did not have to surrender. German pride must have been hurt real bad when the allies steamrolled and walked all over Germany in April 1945.

    • @j3lny425
      @j3lny425 4 года назад +1

      I wonder if the allies insisted on unconditional surrender in WW2 so they would not have to listen to any stab in the back garbage again? In 1945 the Germans KNEW that they had lost the war.

    • @thomasaffolter4386
      @thomasaffolter4386 4 года назад +3

      @@j3lny425 I think the record shows that the allies would have insisted on unconditional surrender anyway -- leaving Germany "intact" was not a real option. But the fact that the Germans engaged in revisionist history about WWI didn't help, you're right.

    • @petekdemircioglu
      @petekdemircioglu 2 года назад +3

      Should have stayed in Germany and not attack the whole world than

    • @brendonnz1964
      @brendonnz1964 2 года назад

      Well, Stage 1 of the Breakdown of Germany was achieved in WW1, The Prussians were basically removed from power in the German State. It is actually the Prussians that made Germany Industrially and Militarily Powerful by WW1. So, since WW1 there has been a decline of Germany.

  • @T-Square
    @T-Square Год назад

    I find it fascinating that these big Nazi criminals didn't skip. It's as if they believed they were immune to prosecution.

  • @HooDatDonDar
    @HooDatDonDar Год назад

    Admiral Horthy, Regent of Hungary is interesting. Hungary had no monarch, but he was that monarch’s regent, and Hungary had no navy, but he was an admiral in that navy.
    He tried to take Hungary out of the Axis alliance in October 1944 , and was deposed and arrested by Hitler. That all worked in his favor, and after giving some evidence he was allowed to retire to Portugal. Lucky guy. Hitler did not shoot, and the Allies did not prosecute.

  • @wcatholic1
    @wcatholic1 8 лет назад +6

    The SS general was Karl Herman Frank of the protectorate?

    • @Pillemann
      @Pillemann 8 лет назад +1

      yes

    • @wcatholic1
      @wcatholic1 8 лет назад

      OK. Narrator probably got him mixed up with Hans Frank.

  • @scottwalker8038
    @scottwalker8038 9 лет назад +46

    i dont think he was a war criminal, considering the allies did the same things as goring did.

    • @kimberlywilliams7543
      @kimberlywilliams7543 6 лет назад

      SCOTT WALKER IS A HOTSI TATSI NEW BORN NAZI!!!

    • @davidllerallera2115
      @davidllerallera2115 6 лет назад +6

      scott walker I sugest you to begin using your brain to start thinking

    • @dans9463
      @dans9463 2 года назад

      Don't negate..
      It's not equivalence

  • @ricdavid7476
    @ricdavid7476 3 года назад +2

    1.20 dont think that was Hans Frank the govenor general of Poland think that was Karl Herman Frank the "protector"of Moravia and Bohemia . He was an animal just as was Hans Frank and they both were hanged. I may be wrong.

  • @paintdoctor5532
    @paintdoctor5532 5 лет назад +11

    Very intriguing fact.. almost none of those old Nazis could beat Hitler in a hot dog eating contest.. Georing was the only one to give him a good run...

    • @balrog322
      @balrog322 2 года назад +2

      Silly. He was a vegetarian.

    • @BlutUndEhre88
      @BlutUndEhre88 2 года назад +1

      They could, since he was a vegetarian.

    • @chrisstucker1813
      @chrisstucker1813 Год назад

      Yeah…hitler the vegetarian lol

    • @HooDatDonDar
      @HooDatDonDar Год назад

      @@BlutUndEhre88 No, he was not. He liked a spicy kind of Bavarian sausage, the restaurant across from the old chancellery always was careful to have a good supply on hand.
      Nor was he a teetotaler. Not much on hard liquor, but not above a beer to wash down the sausage.
      It is true that he was a fanatic non-smoker.

  • @larry1824
    @larry1824 2 года назад +1

    Not much else they could do. Goering's pistol is in West Point Museum a Smith and Wesson 38

  • @ThunderAppeal
    @ThunderAppeal 6 лет назад +1

    For those that comment.
    He would be considered a criminal because he failed to act to prevent war crimes.
    Failed to report them, failed to take actions that would have prevented those crimes.
    Today it is called complicit, an accessory.

  • @UrbexSniperHunter
    @UrbexSniperHunter 3 месяца назад +2

    Deutsche Helden !! German Heros.

  • @miiawesterinen946
    @miiawesterinen946 7 лет назад +4

    What wrong Dönitz did?

    • @dichse2157
      @dichse2157 7 лет назад

      Asura Nuremberr trails found him guilty of accusation points 3 and 4: planning and executing an agressive war

    • @2343r-b9f
      @2343r-b9f 7 лет назад +3

      It could be right if there was such a law at the time when, according to the prosecution, he did it. Lex retro non agit. But history is written by victors and for defeated is 'justice'.

    • @warrenash5370
      @warrenash5370 2 года назад

      @@dichse2157 La de Frikin da. So did we. Nobody hung Eisenhower!

    • @Occident.
      @Occident. 4 дня назад

      Lost a war, that the money power first declared on Germany back in March 24th 1933.

  • @infinitycoffe
    @infinitycoffe 7 лет назад +6

    Good job

  • @Anonymous-g8h
    @Anonymous-g8h Год назад +1

    The narrators voice is absolutely brilliant its poerfull British empire voice

    • @peterhopkins9187
      @peterhopkins9187 3 месяца назад

      It's an American voice, not British. Pretty obvious and quite different.

    • @porksausage-t1b
      @porksausage-t1b 2 месяца назад

      ​@@peterhopkins9187sounds absolutely British upper class aristocracy clear proud noble Anglo Saxon the best

  • @overworlder
    @overworlder 3 месяца назад +1

    Horthy has the flattest flat cap I've ever seen, almost a parody

  • @AjitMD
    @AjitMD 6 месяцев назад

    Herman Goering was smart enough to know that Germany would loose WW2 before it started and even contemplated overthrowing Hitler. I am surprised he did not line up a long range airplane and head for Spain… Franco owed him. The rest could have got into U-Boats to Argentina if they planned in advance. Type IX had the range.

  • @awkwardsean5141
    @awkwardsean5141 8 лет назад +2

    Wait, they allowed Doenitz to go about doing his duties?

    • @jamesbarker5254
      @jamesbarker5254 4 года назад +13

      Yes till around the 23rd of May 1945 he ran a Nazi government with the uks blessing in northern Germany so the Russians would stay out of Denmark and Norway. Once the US and Britain's troops made it that far north he was removed as head of state and taken into custody. Crazy right?

    • @cavejohnson982
      @cavejohnson982 2 года назад +1

      watch mark feltons video on that!

    • @mattbarbarich3295
      @mattbarbarich3295 2 года назад

      He was one that should've been hanged but survived and some in Whermacht that were hanged didn't deserve to be.

    • @jamesfields2916
      @jamesfields2916 2 года назад

      Doenitz lived until 1980.

    • @charliecooper6586
      @charliecooper6586 2 года назад +1

      @@cavejohnson982 what are the mark feltons vids called ? I have watched a lot of his stuff but never seen them ?

  • @ltcajh
    @ltcajh 9 лет назад +9

    Herman let himself be captured, unlike his beloved leader.

    • @intermilan9731
      @intermilan9731 4 года назад +4

      Well herman was an addict and had a cultural decay and cowardice about him from the start.

    • @eleenprosser1577
      @eleenprosser1577 2 года назад

      @@intermilan9731 p

    • @Bigguy5154
      @Bigguy5154 2 года назад

      "Hitler should have surrendered so he and his wife could be dismembered in an extra judicial killing by Jewish partisans."
      *wipes drool*

    • @michaelharrison8036
      @michaelharrison8036 2 года назад

      Actually, I think Herman just gave up and surrendered. He reportedly said , "Well, I've had a good run for my money" (!)
      Outrageous.

    • @MrBagpiperob
      @MrBagpiperob 2 года назад +1

      Goering surrendered. He thought that he would be treated like a gov't leader and have a role in the new Germany. He thought he could talk his way out of anything at trial and not be treated as a war criminal. He was rather successful initially in his defence at Nuremburg. He never suspected that the allies would be able to find enough records, witnesses and evidence to convict him of war crimes.

  • @andyplus1352
    @andyplus1352 2 месяца назад

    Goering was not brave as I had expected.
    As a first world war Veteran Pilot.
    He should have attempted the brave move similar to the one that was done by Rudolph Hess. Hess in 1941 saw that Adolf Hitler was leading Germany to it's doom embarked on a solo flight to Great Britain were he crashed his plane on a farm land and disembark from the sky to the ground.
    In the case, of Hermann Goering he was so fearful of Hitler, blind to Hitler, materialistic, and not intelligent enough to see the Handwriting on the wall.

  • @PhilippedeHerte
    @PhilippedeHerte 6 лет назад +118

    The Allied propaganda commentary is insufferable.

    • @dougrobbins5367
      @dougrobbins5367 6 лет назад

      To an ignorant nazi pig

    • @olasek7972
      @olasek7972 3 года назад +29

      your propaganda lost badly comrade

    • @Capt_OscarMike
      @Capt_OscarMike 3 года назад

      THERE ARE NO PROPAGANDA PRODUCTIONS THAT WILL EVER PROVIDE A NANO-OUNCE OF THE HORRORS, SAVAGERY THE AXIS NON-POWERS CAUSED MILLIONS OF PEOPLE WORLDWIDE...SO STFU...

    • @AwesomeDude272
      @AwesomeDude272 2 года назад +26

      @@olasek7972 your ancestors would join our side if they'd know how bad things are today in the Western world

    • @olasek7972
      @olasek7972 2 года назад

      @@AwesomeDude272 your side cheats, attacks neighboring countries and you can’t even build enough toilets and have tiny economy, pitiful snd still Bolshevik country with highest abortion rate in the world and on of the most atheistic countries - comrade, you are the last country to be defender of conservative values

  • @riedelpedrosa2934
    @riedelpedrosa2934 6 лет назад +2

    BEM,ELES TENTARAM POR EM PRATICA TODA SUA LOUCURA.MAS, DIFICIL É PREVER O FUTURO.

  • @MarceloCunha2011
    @MarceloCunha2011 2 года назад +1

    Goering at that time takes a lot of “good drugs”

  • @maxschmidt1787
    @maxschmidt1787 7 лет назад +39

    Maybe i need some new glasses,... but i dont see war criminal Churchhill there?!

    • @RevRSleeker
      @RevRSleeker 7 лет назад

      I wish we had leaders today with his balls and charisma, the Europe he fought to preserve has been given away by idiots more interested in bringing the worst of the third world to overwhelm their own citizens with the threat of death and destruction as a thank you for their wretched resettlement... I guess you need more than glasses, the victors didn't want war ...he fought to win by all means necessary you babbling fool

    • @HooDatDonDar
      @HooDatDonDar 6 лет назад

      Have you actually read ‘Mein Kampf’?
      And: citations for the Rothschild and letter quotes, please?

    • @holdinmuhl4959
      @holdinmuhl4959 6 лет назад

      Fielmann!

    • @davewilliams5102
      @davewilliams5102 6 лет назад +1

      You won't see him as he never was a War Criminal. Read more then say less.

    • @SarveshKumar-gr9co
      @SarveshKumar-gr9co 6 лет назад +4

      Dave Williams assholes like you dont know anything and rant here shits..churchill was the biggest motherfucking war criminal of ww2 with that communist pimp joseph stalin.

  • @philiphorner31
    @philiphorner31 3 года назад

    Nice swagger stick.

  • @winstonseecharan2962
    @winstonseecharan2962 8 лет назад +4

    America was under pressure I am sure they made an agreement with soviet Union

  • @kimberlywilliams7543
    @kimberlywilliams7543 6 лет назад +4

    LOVE THE REICHMARSHALLS HAT!

  • @justhimo2728
    @justhimo2728 3 года назад +3

    some of them is innocent but not all of them

  • @blitzblutz
    @blitzblutz 2 года назад +1

    What were these guys thinking?!? Germany was playing chess against three Grand Masters and they started the game missing two knights.

    • @gamerdrache6076
      @gamerdrache6076 2 года назад +1

      no german had all pieces but after they killed like 4 or 3 and they lose 1 the enemies get them back

  • @matteojorg415
    @matteojorg415 2 года назад +7

    A legend in military history ❤️ respect forever ❤️

  • @JL-rv9lm
    @JL-rv9lm 7 месяцев назад

    Hi. We are skinheads. Let's worship a group of people that lost a war so decisively, America still occupies their country 79 years later.

  • @namenloser419
    @namenloser419 6 лет назад +22

    butcher harris was war crimenal two...

    • @dougrobbins5367
      @dougrobbins5367 6 лет назад +1

      You are a brainless nazi asswipe

    • @drwlpwasright5132
      @drwlpwasright5132 4 года назад +5

      @Isabella Adamowicz
      Evidently you don't know nothing about real History.

    • @acustomer3518
      @acustomer3518 4 года назад +1

      @Isabella Adamowicz my friend was in dresden when they scorched it after being brave in the battle of arnhem the germans marched him to dresden to a P.O.W camp where he described people melting in to the tarmac during the raid, there was no need..............obviously hes gone now bless him

    • @osamabinliner9781
      @osamabinliner9781 3 года назад

      @Bella Adamowicz exactly I'm sick n tired hearing this shit about bomber Harris as he said they have sown the wind now they will reap the whirlwind ene of and Britain didn't have fuckin execution squads or practised industrialised murder during boer war bloody boers just didn't know when the game was up it was disease in these camps and both sides suffered

  • @bogunnarakesson4416
    @bogunnarakesson4416 8 месяцев назад

    fel bild på Frank, generalguvernör i Generalguvernememtet ( fd Polen), Bilden visar Franck som var vice ståthållare i Böhmen Määhren😂❤

  • @Jotha555
    @Jotha555 7 месяцев назад +1

    Héroes.

  • @robingardner334
    @robingardner334 6 лет назад +10

    It is amazing to me the arrogance of those men. They have lost the war and everything they believed in. They are on the way to the POW camp. They are smiling and getting into the trucks, like they're going out to dinner.

    • @KarilynM
      @KarilynM 6 лет назад +9

      Robin Gardner they were captured by British or Americans so they were happy it wasn’t the Soviets

    • @sapujapu6323
      @sapujapu6323 6 лет назад +2

      Robin Gardner They probably acted nice in hopes to get a smaller punishment

    • @herrlich1461
      @herrlich1461 2 года назад

      Why "arrogance"? They fought for their country and tried to save the civilised world from Marxism. They lost, Marxism won. The state of the western world is in now, proves they were on the right side of history. The final destruction is well under way.

  • @raymondtonns2521
    @raymondtonns2521 2 месяца назад

    not too many of the surrendering German officers or men look worried.

  • @panchorancho643
    @panchorancho643 2 года назад

    The Good, the Bad and the unoposed Trials of

  • @aaraar4055
    @aaraar4055 Месяц назад

    Sans the soldiers of the British Indian Army, you wouldn't have been quite so smug. Infact this movie would have been quite different.

  • @nassermj7671
    @nassermj7671 Год назад +1

    @1:32 Nazi General keeping himself warm. Anyone else automatically thought of the Jews who died from desperate cold related discomforts. I'm a proud Muslim

  • @scottwalker8038
    @scottwalker8038 9 лет назад +7

    and donitz was never fhurer he was president. :)

    • @RevRSleeker
      @RevRSleeker 7 лет назад

      however briefly 'tis true

    • @bradmeeds1226
      @bradmeeds1226 5 лет назад

      The president had more power then chancellor so same

    • @warrenash5370
      @warrenash5370 2 года назад

      I never understood why, the Admiral that led the U-boat arm, was considered a war criminal. What did he supposedy do? Man got the shaft, I think.

  • @alcoreiter2
    @alcoreiter2 4 года назад +1

    Hermann Franck was in Tchecoslovakia no Poland...

  • @pascalfolacci1905
    @pascalfolacci1905 2 года назад +1

    I can imagine how difficult the wake up was for all these criminals ! Unfortunately many of them were hired by the Americans / CIA or protected by German law and had a nice live at the end. Disgusting like always justice is just symbolic

  • @jaimelarroyo5368
    @jaimelarroyo5368 4 года назад +2

    Cobardes nuestro Fuherer ordeno q no nos dejaramos capturar evitando humillaciones..estos desobedecieron

  • @M4levolence
    @M4levolence 9 лет назад +2

    Arthur what? :O

  • @robertomeneghetti6215
    @robertomeneghetti6215 2 года назад

    They all are no more arrogant
    and self-conceited as some
    time before...

  • @paulnobles7520
    @paulnobles7520 3 года назад +24

    German heroes

    • @YOUPIMatin123
      @YOUPIMatin123 2 года назад +1

      yeah they surrendered, ending a terrible regime. They stopped fighting, making the heros

    • @popseven9283
      @popseven9283 2 года назад

      Those "heroes" ran out Infront the Red army like the biggest sissies! Denazification is ON again! This time we will destroy all of you forever!

    • @tonyves
      @tonyves 2 года назад

      To an idiot.

  • @sujitwarkari7108
    @sujitwarkari7108 2 года назад +2

    The best GERMANY'S

  • @dannystaton5386
    @dannystaton5386 8 месяцев назад

    😢😢😢😢😢😢

  • @joaquimtavares9680
    @joaquimtavares9680 4 года назад +2

    Ai dos Vencidos...

  • @silverfletcher2560
    @silverfletcher2560 4 года назад +5

    Those who sow wind will reap whirlwind. That's the lesson of history. Those who attack other countries and want to use the force,, must have the force at least.

  • @oswald1068
    @oswald1068 Год назад +3

    the war criminals were behind the camera too

  • @santoshkolte6308
    @santoshkolte6308 7 месяцев назад

    captured!?? they surrenderd!!

  • @zsuzsamold
    @zsuzsamold Год назад

    All of them thought they going to be treated army leaders excecutives not as a bunch of criminals 😂

  • @alexandrkamyshnikov8839
    @alexandrkamyshnikov8839 6 лет назад +3

    Американцам сдались,надеясь избежать казни за свои зверства. Некоторым удалось,например Менгеле за ценную информацию по опытам над людьми.

  • @baldurvondzulthom
    @baldurvondzulthom Год назад

    Now we know we were suffering due to the $

  • @mattg8431
    @mattg8431 3 года назад +4

    Goering being interviewed, like a celebrity, wtf?

  • @brianonesmus5418
    @brianonesmus5418 3 года назад +2

    Most were sent to the gallows..

  • @TheMuston
    @TheMuston 2 года назад

    Nice bunch of scoundrels. Not one to save the other (not event the generals)