When Manstein Ignored Hitler's Order: German Army Trapped in Ukraine | Korsun-Cherkassy | WW2

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  • Опубликовано: 25 дек 2024

Комментарии • 313

  • @richardscanlan3419
    @richardscanlan3419 26 дней назад +97

    Always found the Eastern Front theatre of WW2 absolutely fascinating.Just a bloodbath on steroids.

    • @MWL4466
      @MWL4466 25 дней назад +5

      Same here. The numbers are just staggering ! Unbelievable losses. If old Adolf had got his mitts on the oil fields of the Caucases it could have been much different.

    • @richardscanlan3419
      @richardscanlan3419 25 дней назад +3

      @@MWL4466 yes,it certainly would have been.Access to the Caucusus oil feilds ( Maikop/Groznty) would have at least extended the war in the east.
      Sobering that the video says the russkies lost another 9 million before the end of the war.

    • @TheJimmyidol
      @TheJimmyidol 25 дней назад +3

      My main area of interest as well.

    • @richardscanlan3419
      @richardscanlan3419 25 дней назад

      @@TheJimmyidol yeah,and the thing is we have all the footage of these events unfolding.
      Seriously harrowing stuff.

    • @ruthmoreau6419
      @ruthmoreau6419 24 дня назад +3

      That's where the real war was fought!

  • @lesbarfield305
    @lesbarfield305 26 дней назад +56

    Thank you. This story almost completely unknown, overshadowed by Moscow, Stalingrad, Kursk, but amazing story

  • @zacjames938
    @zacjames938 26 дней назад +131

    Mainstein always looked after his soldiers...

    • @jorgebarriosmur
      @jorgebarriosmur 25 дней назад +13

      His reputation also allowed him to get away with some things, other people would have paid a high price for

    • @patrickwatrin5093
      @patrickwatrin5093 25 дней назад +4

      Oh yeah?

    • @MK-nd2ij
      @MK-nd2ij 24 дня назад

      Don't play stupid, if you know something he doesn't just explain it to him. You lack maturity and education.​@@patrickwatrin5093

    • @vietcongnva1197
      @vietcongnva1197 24 дня назад

      @@patrickwatrin5093 much more than Hilter cares for German Aryan for sure.

    • @ghosted2187
      @ghosted2187 22 дня назад +8

      Manstein was a soldiers soldier

  • @aldebaran19752000
    @aldebaran19752000 26 дней назад +100

    von Manstein saved his troops but lost his command. He was replaced by Model

    • @nefasto11a
      @nefasto11a 26 дней назад +20

      Actually, his removal of command came a month later, during the battle of the Kamenets-Podolsky pocket, where the 1st Panzer Army became encircled on 21 March, when permission to break out was not received from Hitler in time. Manstein flew to Hitler's headquarters in Lvov to try to convince him to change his mind. Hitler eventually relented, but relieved Manstein of his command on 30 March 1944.

    • @danielb7253
      @danielb7253 26 дней назад

      Hitler never trusted him 100%. some say..Mannstein was part Jewish.

    • @LemonHead-sq5ws
      @LemonHead-sq5ws 22 дня назад

      @@nefasto11aactually who cares

    • @LemonHead-sq5ws
      @LemonHead-sq5ws 22 дня назад

      @@nefasto11aActually 🤪

    • @faunbudweis
      @faunbudweis 21 день назад

      @@LemonHead-sq5ws ignorants dont care

  • @jerrycoronado6887
    @jerrycoronado6887 24 дня назад +22

    This story is eerily reminiscent of the breakout of the German 9th Army after Seelow Heights to link up with the 12th Army shortly after Halbe. That breakout was a stern test of German resolve and for those who made it they were able to surrender to the US Army instead of the Russians.

    • @brianford8493
      @brianford8493 23 дня назад

      @@jerrycoronado6887 The whole thing was so attrociously mismanaged it beggars belief......the Panzer myth which never addresses the reality that even there industrial and scientific was being run in a deeply flawed way . like what Donny is just about to do in Der States✌️

  • @wolfgangnickisch3916
    @wolfgangnickisch3916 24 дня назад +5

    Danke!

  • @Neso-be2lj
    @Neso-be2lj 26 дней назад +132

    Russians did not came to play around with Germans! I'm by no means a fan...but they where brave Soldiers...they just keep on comming,pushing,atacking,despite crazy losses...You can't win against Army like that...just relentless,but Germans did enormous damage to Russian core population...20 million gone in 4 years,they still can't properely recover even today from that.

    • @kieranororke620
      @kieranororke620 26 дней назад +44

      ​@erichhartmann3960It doesn't matter what help They got. The Soviets still had to defeat the Germans themselves, fighting and dying in vast numbers, whether they had Western supplies or not. Too bad the Nazis believed their own deranged ideology instead of facing the reality that these eastern 'subhumans' were just as hard, tough-willed and ready to sacrifice themselves for their cause as we're the German soldiers themselves.

    • @Bullet-Tooth-Tony-
      @Bullet-Tooth-Tony- 26 дней назад +20

      @@kieranororke620 Yeah tbf lend lease didn't arrive in force until 1942, and they had already pushed Army Group Centre back some 150 miles from Moscow in 1941.

    • @Anajlirv
      @Anajlirv 26 дней назад +26

      ​@@Bullet-Tooth-Tony-Don't forget that the Wehrmacht NEVER had a chance to win in the East... FAR too much was asked of far too few men.

    • @timpatrick2109
      @timpatrick2109 26 дней назад +18

      @@Anajlirv Hitler expected a quick collapse especially after a decade of Stalins purges and perhaps a government overthrow and quick surrender. Stalin nearly had a mental breakdown and was surprised his underlings didn’t hang but instead pleaded for his leadership. AH rolled the dice and lost. I think providence played a role.

    • @Bullet-Tooth-Tony-
      @Bullet-Tooth-Tony- 26 дней назад +15

      @@Anajlirv Probably not win, but I think had they not been at least tied down in other fronts in North Africa, Sicily, Italy etc and focused all of those additional resources in the East, the Germans might have forced a stalemate situation where neither side can advance.

  • @TheMrmango69
    @TheMrmango69 26 дней назад +20

    always the the best ww2 videos - hidden gem of a channel, glad to see you're growing too! Well deserved

  • @Anajlirv
    @Anajlirv 26 дней назад +31

    Thank you for yet another awesome video!

  • @victorydaydeepstate
    @victorydaydeepstate 26 дней назад +26

    Isn't this where Léon Degrelle won his knights cross of the iron cross?

  • @kennethmcintosh5545
    @kennethmcintosh5545 18 дней назад +5

    Another excellent documentary. Great work guys

  • @markmccormack1796
    @markmccormack1796 26 дней назад +18

    So sad for the fighting men of both sides.

    • @josephberrie9550
      @josephberrie9550 14 дней назад

      why do idiots like you feel sorry for german facists invading another country and killing millions of civilians and captured russian soldiers and destroying villages towns and cities.....just why

  • @otfriedschellhas3581
    @otfriedschellhas3581 24 дня назад +13

    My dad (Waffen SS, Das Reich Div.) Considered the Finns "out only worthwhile comrades in arms,". He also liked their country, having been there on a forest combat course.

    • @josephberrie9550
      @josephberrie9550 14 дней назад

      yes the lovely division that murdered the whole town of oradour sur glenn men women and children..get back under your rock

  • @Bullet-Tooth-Tony-
    @Bullet-Tooth-Tony- 26 дней назад +31

    The Germans were very skilled at pulling back and holding a corridor to escape. It's no surprise that 29,000 men managed to slip out of the Korsun-Cherkassy encirclement, they had done the exact same thing in the Falaise Gap in Normandy.

    • @DeepTexas
      @DeepTexas 26 дней назад +7

      perhaps it’s a shame that hitler was obsessed with holding out until the last man

    • @jeffreyball6618
      @jeffreyball6618 26 дней назад

      Hitler was a fanatic and la la la. Also people. Need to educate themselves no savior is on the scene and people need to stop listening to clowns. ​@@DeepTexas

    • @leighz1962
      @leighz1962 25 дней назад

      @DeepTexas
      Shartler was obsessed with Russia and Germany being destroyed.. like he was some British puppet.

    • @therealjaystone2344
      @therealjaystone2344 24 дня назад

      @@DeepTexasHitler thought they can be like Japan

    • @7ismersenne
      @7ismersenne 24 дня назад +5

      @@DeepTexas "a shame"? I think it was extremely beneficial for the Allies during WW2. Hitler's obsessive refusal to allow tactical retreats thru out the War was a minor factor in Germany's defeat.

  • @DeepTexas
    @DeepTexas 26 дней назад +9

    great channel!

  • @junestanich7888
    @junestanich7888 21 день назад +1

    Great quality video, love the original footage and live narration

  • @rf3495
    @rf3495 22 дня назад +3

    The final river crossing was a reminder of Napolian’s retreat over the Berezina River.

  • @cavetroll666
    @cavetroll666 26 дней назад +8

    Thanks for video

  • @donaldshotts4429
    @donaldshotts4429 14 дней назад +4

    My ex is from Korsun. They had alot of German equipment in their museum there in 2018. The turret of a Panther for one. I have no idea why the Germans thought they could cover that kind of distance against those overwhelming numbers

    • @jucaxpto4173
      @jucaxpto4173 3 часа назад

      They did it ! Crazy but they did it.

  • @nickthurlow4456
    @nickthurlow4456 26 дней назад +17

    Amazing Footage , thanks for the video

  • @michaelstudd533
    @michaelstudd533 26 дней назад +9

    Your videos are so good, how the hell do you get this footage? After over 20 years of WW2 I never see the footage you use ever before. Just amazing

  • @johnandersen5959
    @johnandersen5959 26 дней назад +12

    Manstein did not allow the 6th army to abandonn Stalingrad- yet later he blamed Pauli’s not a honest fact.

    • @winstonsmith565
      @winstonsmith565 22 дня назад +4

      After the encirclement, abandoning Stalingrad would have meant 6th Army being massacred on the Steppes. They were doomed from the moment the Russian bridgeheads to the north weren't cleared. And they didn't have the troops to clear them. Manstein was lucky to pull 4th Pz Army from the Caucuses.

    • @horstnietzsche1923
      @horstnietzsche1923 20 дней назад +1

      ​@winstonsmith565 arguably, he had a few days to breakout whilst unlikely given his orders they could have broken out if they abandoned their heavy equipment. A lot of them would have died but it was definitely briefly possible I think.

    • @chris99103
      @chris99103 13 дней назад

      bullshit, this is absolute hogwash, who is speading such nonsense ???

  • @ricardojsalinas1
    @ricardojsalinas1 5 дней назад +1

    Great video, but it would be nice if you could add more maps!

  • @JohnWick-el9yw
    @JohnWick-el9yw 26 дней назад +12

    I heard H/itler would confront his generals really angry when they talked about retreat.

    • @jeffreyball6618
      @jeffreyball6618 26 дней назад

      Hitler was not a citizen of germany. Not educated. A clown drug addict etc The dude who took peoplet

    • @jeffreyball6618
      @jeffreyball6618 26 дней назад +2

      Koresh took people to central america. Etc. People need to think

    • @danilorainone406
      @danilorainone406 25 дней назад +1

      der furhrer doin der donald duckischer fitzen

    • @leighz1962
      @leighz1962 25 дней назад +4

      I heard gumshots when the soviet commanders suggested retreat.

    • @jamestaylor1984
      @jamestaylor1984 25 дней назад +6

      ​​@@leighz1962that's what the Commissar's were for, shooting Soviet soldiers who refused to commit suicide via Wehrmacht.

  • @zacjames938
    @zacjames938 26 дней назад +6

    Love watching your documentary’s factual and emotional can only guess what them men went threw real hard soldiers never given up....thanks and keep up the good work big shout out from the uk🙂

  • @philbradley7859
    @philbradley7859 26 дней назад +8

    Another excellent video , well done

  • @Europa_woche
    @Europa_woche 26 дней назад +7

    beautiful video, thanks ❤

  • @JayTide
    @JayTide 26 дней назад +8

    Great video. Well done

  • @WarMonkeyOG
    @WarMonkeyOG 12 дней назад +1

    Fantastic documentary!!

  • @NikhilSingh-007
    @NikhilSingh-007 24 дня назад +6

    Ah yes, the 'get out of jail Hitler madman card'.

  • @Peter-sl6mf
    @Peter-sl6mf 8 дней назад +3

    You could feel pity for the germans. Then you remember what they did to the conquered lands and its people. Sad, but this is what the political and bureaucratic class brought to their people

  • @Joshtow167
    @Joshtow167 12 дней назад +1

    Man the eastern front makes the western front look like walk in the park. Germany in their prime is no joke. Germany weathered so many battles even their lowest ranks had more battle prowess or more ornless knew how to keep their heads on. The soviets were like zombies in world war Z. Never let up.

  • @zillsburyy1
    @zillsburyy1 26 дней назад +2

    32:14 MP44? whats the date this all took place?

    • @JunkyardDogffa
      @JunkyardDogffa 25 дней назад

      That could be an mkb42(H) or mp43. It's impossible to tell from the grainy footage provided. There were almost 30,000 of these weapons in the field by the end of 1943.

    • @donaldkepple4927
      @donaldkepple4927 16 дней назад

      January 1944

  • @jaribg.romero-bp2yf
    @jaribg.romero-bp2yf 9 дней назад +2

    War is hell.

  • @Samila009
    @Samila009 25 дней назад +8

    Germanys only fault, they stretched too much , but still I salute all the soldiers during ww2 , betrayed by their governments by denying adequate supplies for oil ,food , and moreover chilling winter took a toll on german soldiers, poor training specially for Russians😮
    Their government did kill these innocent soldiers, people for their own interests...

    • @John-c6d5i
      @John-c6d5i 19 дней назад

      The rich declare wars, the poor die in those wars.

  • @2kt2000
    @2kt2000 20 дней назад +1

    Amazing footage...coming from a WW2 fiend of decades, well done and well done narration and editing! However I will suggest that you NEED more maps and fairly descriptive maps to match the narration. I KNOW you realize this as you are obviously a WW2 media aficionado. I want your channels success is why I mention this. Most WW2 "fans" love seeing our maps. I sometimes will forward thru video and if it has no maps I wont watch it. WW2 battle docs NEED maps, it supports the narration and context massively (and is extremely engaging and dare I say enjoyable. Its a feature). Consider this please, its not a preference..in the big pic its actually important, I'd all but guarantee in the long run more subs and return viewers. Also everything else was so well done I would be remiss if I didnt mention MAPS (maps are 10-20% of a WW2 battle docs. at minimum. I Know you know this)

  • @retiredcolonel6492
    @retiredcolonel6492 26 дней назад +22

    The Wehrmacht fought for an evil cause and they are not innocent of many acts of the Holocaust, but as a soldier I admire their bravery and devotion in fighting to the bitter end even knowing that there was no hope for victory after Kursk in the East and the Ardennes in the West. The Russians were tough too but their commanders wasted their lives. In Ukraine today one sees the lack of concern for the lives of Russian soldiers.

    • @leighz1962
      @leighz1962 25 дней назад

      It also shows how little the all lies allies care about 2020 or 1920/30 gennocides.. when the govts are all run by zionists clearing out their homeland/links in Ukraine..

    • @tuncozbora2244
      @tuncozbora2244 25 дней назад +4

      How do you know , Russia lack of concern for his sons ? How do you know ?

    • @alexandermelbaus2351
      @alexandermelbaus2351 25 дней назад

      Germany saved half of Europe and suffered near total destruction. The Europeans lead by Germany fought to the bitter end to save Europe from the Communist thugs that had taken over Russia; (Allies) Austria, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, Romania, Italy, Croatia, Bulgaria, Finland and Slovakia. Volunteers joined the SS from across Europe; 20,000 from France and 60,000 from Holland are two countries from a long list. I suggest people familiarise themselves with this cause.

    • @kenlake270
      @kenlake270 25 дней назад +5

      Russia has always treated it's men as cannon fodder. The militaryleXef

    • @VVeltanschauung187
      @VVeltanschauung187 25 дней назад +8

      The Allies and the Soviets were much more evil.

  • @joachimdippold8763
    @joachimdippold8763 24 дня назад +2

    Respect! for pronouncing the german names quite good, i think youŕe not a native speaker so really: well done!

  • @HealthTubeOfficial_
    @HealthTubeOfficial_ 26 дней назад +4

    🔥

  • @MikeLuzzo-qd6jd
    @MikeLuzzo-qd6jd 15 дней назад +1

    The Soviet tactic of hammering a line until a breakthrough was made in a line. All forces would exploit the breakthrough. Re: Inside the Soviet Army

  • @alexmuenster2102
    @alexmuenster2102 22 дня назад +2

    40:10 "wounded - carried on PANJAYS - to be carried across..." What are "panjays?"

    • @achimotto-vs2lb
      @achimotto-vs2lb 21 день назад +1

      hors drawn carts , Panje means PONY in Russian

    • @alexmuenster2102
      @alexmuenster2102 20 дней назад

      @@achimotto-vs2lb Thanks awfully for your help!

  • @yukeenkape2540
    @yukeenkape2540 13 дней назад +1

    Napoleon ❌ Hitler ❌ who is the next ☢️💀 ?

  • @christopherfriend7402
    @christopherfriend7402 24 дня назад +1

    The bravest of the brave, and probably the craziest of all had to be the tank crews of both sides. I can't even imagine what must have been going through what remained of their sound minds as they drove their tracked monsters into what they had to know was an almost certain gruesome death. Nor can I imagine the PTSD suffered by the survivors.
    It's an understated shame the men of both sides had to suffer so much and sacrifice their lives for two murderous evil dictators. But I salute them all as brave soldiers.

  • @PakawanDuangsuwan
    @PakawanDuangsuwan 24 дня назад +1

    If I'm right at 06:22 we can see soldiers taking cover behind walls of frozen mud, snow, poo and corpses. This is also what veterans of the Belgian SS units told in the TV series "De Oostfronters" van Maurice de Wilde. This documentary series also has a episode about the Cherkasi pocket. Veterans described the horror scenes at the river, tanks driving back and forward over the escaping men and also Leon de Grelle in full uniform with his romanticised views on the events.

    • @alejandrocarreno647
      @alejandrocarreno647 21 день назад

      Yea you right l wonder in what year was take that footage of those soldiers

  • @slimbim77
    @slimbim77 10 дней назад +1

    36:31 , 39:37 -Are you really refering to Fritz Hamann, the later serial killer??

    • @slimbim77
      @slimbim77 День назад

      ..it should've said "the former serial killer", my fault.

  • @dukejulito
    @dukejulito 25 дней назад +2

    Sometimes the narrator's voice get slow and then accelerates , it's normal?

  • @gma729
    @gma729 20 дней назад +1

    I LOVE YOUR CHANNEL. HISTORY AT WAR IS PURE EXCELLENCE !!! KEEP UP THE GREAT WORK 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏

  • @seebass7
    @seebass7 26 дней назад +5

    Why does this guy sound like he’s sounding out common words for the first time ever at random spots in the video?

    • @jayo3074
      @jayo3074 26 дней назад +10

      Either he's reading from a script or he wanted to pronounce the German names correctly. Just be happy it's a human narrating and not some awful AI

    • @leighz1962
      @leighz1962 25 дней назад +2

      He is British. It is new to him to speak English clearly.

  • @TheWellnessHub15
    @TheWellnessHub15 26 дней назад +3

    Yessss

  • @johntherecluse5121
    @johntherecluse5121 19 дней назад +1

    More maps with detailed movements of formations would have offered a far better description of the narrative than irrelevant combat footage.

  • @mohammedsaysrashid3587
    @mohammedsaysrashid3587 25 дней назад +1

    Cruelty of weather combination of wars brutalities besides the insisting of victory ✌️ results by both sides desirable (which is unreasonable) created ultra beast circumstances

  • @dimitriwolfs9370
    @dimitriwolfs9370 23 дня назад +2

    Damn that'"rasputitsa" mud like you've never known. Maybe like ww1's Paschendale ground.

  • @jeanlauridsen8596
    @jeanlauridsen8596 22 дня назад +1

    During that battle , there were more german soldiers than soviets.

    • @jucaxpto4173
      @jucaxpto4173 3 часа назад

      Nope... 330.000 russians x 140.000 germans

  • @kennyw907
    @kennyw907 20 дней назад +1

    With the current state of affairs in Western Europe, I’ve seen quite a lot of English and others say “ We fought the wrong enemy” in regards to Germany in WWII. Well I’d like to say that we also fought the wrong enemy in Russia. Despite the ideological and political differences. The Bolsheviks were the enemy, but the people of Russia are warriors and Hitler underestimated them. Some historians theorize that the Soviets would have eventually attacked Germany if they weren’t attacked first. Either way, the world order would have been in a better place if Russia and Germany had been geopolitical allies. Hitlers admiration for the English and his obsession with trying to make peace with them was a huge part of the downfall of the Third Reich. This obsession was perhaps the most logical reason why he allowed 300k + troops to escape at Dunkirk. It’s a travesty that so many Germans and Russians killed each other in this war

    • @colinhunt4057
      @colinhunt4057 19 дней назад

      Mostly wrong. Nazi Germany and the USSR were allies at the beginning of WW2. They collaborated in dividing Poland. They divided between them all the remaining border areas in Eastern Europe. The Soviet Union was busily supplying Germany with the resources it needed up until the start of Barbarossa. The main war aim of Nazi Germany was always the same, "invade the lands of the east, kill everyone, and steal everything they owned." This had been clearly stated in Mein Kampf in 1923.

    • @IvarEriksson83
      @IvarEriksson83 13 дней назад

      Sadly, both World War have involved Germanic blood on both sides. It’s like a giant Germanic blood sacrifice. American Germans killing Germans,many Russians have Germanic blood from Scandinavia… the international banking cartel got its wet dream…

    • @IvarEriksson83
      @IvarEriksson83 13 дней назад

      @@colinhunt4057 You’re mostly wrong. While Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union did sign the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact and collaborated in dividing Poland, their relationship was far from a true alliance. It was a temporary, opportunistic agreement based on mutual self-interest rather than ideological alignment. Let me break it down:
      1. Temporary Alliance, Not True Partnership: Nazi Germany and the USSR were not allies in the truest sense. Their pact in 1939 was purely pragmatic. Both sides were buying time and securing strategic advantages. They knew their ultimate goals were incompatible, and each anticipated a future conflict with the other.
      2. Soviet Aims Were Defensive: The USSR’s main goal wasn’t to help Germany conquer Europe. Stalin’s actions were focused on regaining territory lost during the Russian Civil War and creating a buffer zone to protect against an eventual German invasion. While opportunistic, this was about self-preservation rather than alignment with Hitler’s goals.
      3. Resource Supplies Were Tactical: Yes, the Soviets supplied resources to Germany, but this wasn’t some grand gesture of support. It was a tactical exchange-resources for industrial equipment and technology. Stalin wasn’t fueling Hitler’s war machine out of shared ambition; it was pure pragmatism.
      4. Germany’s Goals Were More Complex: Hitler’s plans weren’t just about “killing everyone.” While his genocidal policies, especially against Jews, are undeniable, his broader goal was Lebensraum-seizing and colonizing Eastern Europe for the German people. It was exploitation and domination, not simply extermination.
      5. Mein Kampf Isn’t a Step-by-Step Plan: Citing Mein Kampf as if it was Hitler’s rigid blueprint for war oversimplifies things. Sure, Hitler expressed his ideological goals in 1923, but his strategy evolved over the years based on political and military circumstances.
      The early relationship between Nazi Germany and the USSR wasn’t an alliance; it was a temporary arrangement between two regimes with fundamentally opposing long-term goals. Stalin was preparing for eventual conflict, and Hitler’s invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941 was always inevitable. They were never true partners-just two powers using each other until their ambitions clashed.

    • @colinhunt4057
      @colinhunt4057 13 дней назад

      @@IvarEriksson83 "They were never true partners-just two powers using each other until their ambitions clashed."
      That's what all alliances are.

  • @donaldkepple4927
    @donaldkepple4927 16 дней назад +1

    I have the book hells gate the battle of the cheekassy pocket by Doug Nash outstanding read he puts the reader in the action so the reader experience the hell

  • @JakeConny12
    @JakeConny12 26 дней назад +2

    🎉🎉🎉

  • @luismrtnz78
    @luismrtnz78 21 день назад +1

    Mainstein was the mastermind to delays Russian advance. Battle of karkov

    • @colinhunt4057
      @colinhunt4057 19 дней назад +1

      What mastermind? He promptly lost it all when he mishandled the batlle of Kursk that summer. His bungling allowed Rumania, Germany's only source of oil to be lost at the end of 1944.

  • @NileBoat
    @NileBoat 26 дней назад +6

    Ahem.. the Fritz Hamann of this ww2 engagement was NOT the man pictured. The man pictured in this video was infamous serial killer Fritz Haarmann, executed in 1925.

    • @historyatwar
      @historyatwar  26 дней назад +8

      Yes I’m aware unfortunately my editor added the wrong photo, we really struggled to find a photo of Fritz and we found this photo on a forum, it was in Russian we thought it was him, our mistake!!

  • @schwatzy6362
    @schwatzy6362 21 день назад +1

    Soviets were raging about German scorched earth? Hahah That's rich. That is exactly what they did to their own villages and towns when they were retreating from the German onslaught earlier in the war. I think they just used it as an excuse to act out their brutal ways They still do torture their Ukrainian captives to death in this current war

  • @polarstorm5986
    @polarstorm5986 24 дня назад +1

    It is...well..."amusing"...how the definetly young narrator trys to put "weight" into this by the choosing of words and pronounciation but the gravitas still is missing.

  • @brendanreynolds8994
    @brendanreynolds8994 26 дней назад +30

    Got to give it the germans fought like shit out numbered but fought like shit great soldiers dont forget that

    • @timpatrick2109
      @timpatrick2109 26 дней назад +21

      One of the benefits of having a cohesive Army bound together by culture and love of country. Exactly the things “ they “ are trying to destroy in every Western nation today.

    • @blakegoulds8313
      @blakegoulds8313 26 дней назад +22

      Germans were the finest soldiers in WW2. Unity is a strength. Not diversity.

    • @joachimthielker3132
      @joachimthielker3132 26 дней назад +3

      Imagine we (I am a German) had won the war. A world I do not want to live in.

    • @Bullet-Tooth-Tony-
      @Bullet-Tooth-Tony- 26 дней назад +4

      @@timpatrick2109 Yes, the German 'mission based' training allowed their officers down to lowest junior level to be far more flexible in responding to quickly altering scenarios on the battlefield.

    • @timpatrick2109
      @timpatrick2109 26 дней назад

      @@joachimthielker3132 Me either. But certain forces who are equally evil as the N…S, and just as power hungry, like to shame the German people and the other successful Western nations into cultural self destruction and self hatred. This is evil in the opposite way of what the N…S were doing and should be resisted.

  • @ErikLundgren-p5p
    @ErikLundgren-p5p 9 дней назад +1

    It was just a waste of a whole generation

  • @JosephPercente
    @JosephPercente 22 дня назад +3

    Tik wouldn't like this.

  • @Jeff50-q5d
    @Jeff50-q5d 19 дней назад +1

    Are the Walloons Belgian SS?

    • @colinhunt4057
      @colinhunt4057 19 дней назад

      Himmler recruited SS murderers from any group that would volunteer or be drafted. There were even Lithuanian and Latvian SS by 1945.

  • @WilliamandGabesWorld
    @WilliamandGabesWorld 25 дней назад +7

    Such brave men. Germany army was something special

    • @thomasmyers9128
      @thomasmyers9128 24 дня назад

      If murderous invaders are special….
      Then they are equal too today’s Russian military….

    • @UnderpaidKraken
      @UnderpaidKraken 24 дня назад +3

      @@thomasmyers9128 you’re pretty slow, aren’t you buddy?

    • @thomasmyers9128
      @thomasmyers9128 24 дня назад

      @ compared to Putin… I make Einstein look stupid…. 😳

    • @AAZZ010408
      @AAZZ010408 23 дня назад

      Perdieron la guerra,como final grandioso los soviéticos en Berlin les sacudieron con 40.000 cañones

    • @achimotto-vs2lb
      @achimotto-vs2lb 21 день назад

      they should rebuild it

  • @TonySimpson-f9t
    @TonySimpson-f9t 21 день назад +2

    BLOOD FROZE INSTANTLY ON MY HANDS.THATS WHAT A GERMAN SOLDIER TOLD.IF U RELIEF URSELF SIMILAR SITUATION 😮 6:00

  • @ViktorPushkin
    @ViktorPushkin 9 дней назад +2

    Never heard of the German Jew-52. Must be newly discovered😂

  • @richardkeilig4062
    @richardkeilig4062 24 дня назад

    Terrible war. If one who wants war could watch and experience this hell, as told in this story, there would be no more wars. Pray for peace.

  • @shwetvicks
    @shwetvicks 11 дней назад +1

    I am interested in learning about the incident where Hitler and Guederian almost got into a physical altercation over a similar matter. 😅

  • @melvinjohnson2074
    @melvinjohnson2074 24 дня назад +3

    As Paulus's immediate superior he let the sixth army die at Stalingrad.

  • @doug-ij7tb
    @doug-ij7tb 22 дня назад +2

    8:34 Jew 52 transport planes?

    • @achimotto-vs2lb
      @achimotto-vs2lb 21 день назад

      its was called yunkers

    • @carpecanem611
      @carpecanem611 17 дней назад

      I have always heard it pronounced "jay ewe fifty two" in English.

  • @JosephPercente
    @JosephPercente 22 дня назад +1

    Maps aren't very good.

  • @craigtank4067
    @craigtank4067 25 дней назад +2

    I don’t think you can impute knowledge of atrocities or complicity in them to the front line German soldiers. The atrocities were happening behind them. I think the only time frontline German soldiers would have had knowledge of atrocities would have been because they saw it because of a retreat. Hitler didn’t allow much in the way of retreats.

    • @justinrichardson4456
      @justinrichardson4456 24 дня назад +1

      No atrocities. Allied lies.

    • @Ben_Sahar
      @Ben_Sahar 20 дней назад

      What??😂😂😂😂😂

    • @justinrichardson4456
      @justinrichardson4456 20 дней назад

      @@Ben_Sahar No atrocities. Allied lies.

    • @Ben_Sahar
      @Ben_Sahar 20 дней назад

      @@justinrichardson4456 Go back to the hole where you sit all the time, stay there, and don’t speak up.

    • @colinhunt4057
      @colinhunt4057 19 дней назад

      @@justinrichardson4456 Sorry, most of you are lying or ignorant of the facts. Walter Reichenau's Severity Order indicates just how guilty the Wehrmacht was in atrocities. It's only means of feeding itself was from murdering and pillaging the local peasantry.

  • @theplayerofus319
    @theplayerofus319 21 день назад +1

    just ordered "Lost victories", Mansteins Book, however in german.

  • @slickwoodworker3023
    @slickwoodworker3023 12 дней назад +1

    At the 8 minute mark (roughty) he said "Jew 52...: I think he meant Ju 52. It's a plane

  • @poppymyth8868
    @poppymyth8868 26 дней назад

    ❤❤❤

  • @davidh6300
    @davidh6300 25 дней назад

    Wow

  • @michaelmccartin2054
    @michaelmccartin2054 22 дня назад +2

    The Eastern front is a crazy thing for me, I am so against Hitler and I support the Russians but at the same time I can't stand the Soviet Union and Stalin! But if Hitler had not taken control of the Army and used Ukrainians, Finnish, Lithuanian, Latvian and Estonian people as allies, especially Ukrainians they would have fought with the Germans, fed and clothed the Army, made V-1 and 2 rockets in Poland to use against Soviets he could have defeated them.

    • @Sjsjsjsjsjks1
      @Sjsjsjsjsjks1 21 день назад +1

      Don't think beyond the limit brother 😂 it's going very wrong way😂

    • @michaelmccartin2054
      @michaelmccartin2054 21 день назад

      @Sjsjsjsjsjks1 it's like Satan against the Grimreaper, 2 evils fighting each other, I just have sorrow for the civilians and soldiers who were just doing their duties. I listen to WWII German audio books on RUclips and the regular soldiers didn't want to hurt civilians, they talk about how helpful they were, some worked for them and they liked them, even in some of the stories they didn't like the SS going around and killing them.

    • @sthrich635
      @sthrich635 20 дней назад +1

      It wasn't just about the dictator - the German armies had no plans to feed themselves but take food not just for millions of Axis troops but tens of millions of German civilians inside the Reich.
      Quite an imagination that Ukrainians, after the usual scorched earth tactics enforced by Red Army, somehow still had enough food to feed all three Ukraine, Germany, and the Wehrmacht inside Ukraine.
      And then Germany somehow had enough guns and transportation to give hundreds of thousand Ukrainians actual weapons to fight with, when German armies barely able to supply themselves, and other Axis armies were starving for modern equipment and guns.
      Again another cheap and old "Germany could've won if..." myth and fantasy.

    • @colinhunt4057
      @colinhunt4057 19 дней назад

      @@michaelmccartin2054 Drivel. Read Walter Reichenau's Severity Order. The purpose of Operation Barbarossa was to seize the lands of the East, to kill everyone, and seize everything they owned. From the outset of the invasion, they were an army of murderers and rapists. All of them; not just the SS.

  • @georgiebestmanutd4746
    @georgiebestmanutd4746 25 дней назад +1

    Why are the Brits BoJo, Sunak, Starmer so blood thirsty 4 Slavic blood Special Military Operation. One of the Wehrmacht who escaped cauldron, survived WW2 & retired in France. In fluent French, he confessed to French TV he never complained about anything ever since he escaped the cauldron

  • @PrussianBlu3
    @PrussianBlu3 22 дня назад +1

    Riveting.

  • @sthrich635
    @sthrich635 26 дней назад +1

    Great video footage, but let's look into the bigger picture: the battlefield on and above the army group level, since Hitler and the High Command was viewing and making decision at that level.
    For this particular encirclement battle, lets' start with the Panther-Wotan Line, a defensive line set up behind the then frontlines - a kind of defense in depth - its construction was ordered by Hitler himself in mid 1943, so the portray of him never ordering retreat held little ground since it showed he did consider a fall back line then, but why he didn't authorize the withdrawal of German forces leading up this pocket? Soviet advance, and its advance fast and deep as it became highly mechanized with US/UK made trucks.
    At the end of 1943, Manstein ordered the withdrawal of AG South to the Panther-Wotan Line, despite the line had barely started the construction and thus had little actual contribution against Soviet forces. In any case, the Soviets crossed the Dnieper River there, with the 1st and 2nd Ukrainian Front on the German side of the river, posing a significant threat of breaking into German Army Group South's strategic rear areas, as there was little prepared defense standing in the way. Once breakthrough is achieved, the Soviets tank armies could very well extend deep into German lines till the Carpathian Mountains, possibly cutting the whole Army group in two.
    In addition, the Soviet advance created a German salient that soon to be Korsun Pocket. For a bit of military tactics overview, a salient wasn't having a sole purpose of being encircled, but rather it incentivize the enemy to deal with it first (usually by encircling), since it would greatly extend the flank of advancing forces that bypass it. In addition it could be a staging area of offensive (though a bit irrelevant for the Germans then). For this reason, that's why the Germans couldn't just ignore Kursk in 1943.
    To reinforce the crippling situation of Army Group South, German divisions were already called from Western Europe and many other areas, yet they need time to arrive. In order to buy time for reinforcement, Hitler decided to keep the salient as an ad-hoc obstacle for the two Ukrainian Fronts, and letting them undergo an encirclement operation in late January meant the inevitable deep-thrusts into AG South could be delayed into March, where German rear areas and reserves were strengthened by transfer of forces from other theatre. In fact, in the subsequent Kamenets-Podolsky pocket in March, it was Paul Hausser's SS Panzer Corps from France that linked up the surrounded 1st Panzer Army, saving from its complete destruction, though still with heavy material losses.
    Had Hitler withdrew the salient leading up to Korsun pocket, then instead in early February they would have a Soviet offensive operation into Army Group South strategic rear, and without the timely reinforcement the offensive would be even more successful and German 1st Panzer Army might likely be completely destroyed in the process. What Hitler did with the salient was to buy time, delaying the eventual Soviet final major thrust into his army group, trading parts of 8th Army (even then it was able to partly breakout) to strengthen the Army Group rear areas, the towns, roads, railways, leading the Soviets paying a high price in their March offensive.

  • @Artemis-d2c
    @Artemis-d2c 25 дней назад +1

    Just like russian army ignored civilian putin's order and trapped in Ukeaine? lol

  • @juliopelayo8514
    @juliopelayo8514 20 дней назад +1

    The German army was the best army ever the only problem was Hitler thought that the east was as the west and take over the decision of the generals very very very bad idad because he was a painter not a Studied General

  • @brianford8493
    @brianford8493 25 дней назад +2

    And how did that all work out for Frirz? 😂

  • @narva8474
    @narva8474 23 дня назад +1

    Why are you talking so slowly sometimes?

  • @BorderGuardJaegerFinlandia
    @BorderGuardJaegerFinlandia 25 дней назад +5

    Russians aren't brave soldiers, only because they had people prepared to kill them if they didn't do as they where told. This is also happening in Ukraine today.
    My grandfather fought these Red Bolshevik bastards in the Finnish Winter War and Continuation War.
    The POW told how stuff worked and why they attacked even if they knew that they wad to die.
    They got an honorary dead instead of a death of a coward.
    People do not understand what tyranny and dictatorship is all about, and think it's bravery by their people, when it's the stupidity of their leaders that it's all about

    • @jrobertsoneff
      @jrobertsoneff 25 дней назад

      Teenagers are dragged off the streets in ukraine to fight in Yankee nazi war just like in finland.

    • @puppet7889
      @puppet7889 24 дня назад

      My Great-Great Grandfather fought the Reds in the Finnish Civil War, and my Great Grandfather fought them in the Winter and continuation war

  • @WilliamHobbs-n1c
    @WilliamHobbs-n1c 23 дня назад

    Im very anti comm but if Russia fell its over we all be speaking german

    • @colinhunt4057
      @colinhunt4057 19 дней назад

      Because of Germany's horrible logistics, there was no real chance of that happening. Germany had no oil. And it was slowly starving to death even before the war started.