Soviet Invasion of Finland: Winter War 1939-40 (Documentary)

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  • Опубликовано: 20 дек 2024

Комментарии • 818

  • @realtimehistory
    @realtimehistory  2 месяца назад +31

    Get Winter War by Wargame Design Studio for 25% off: wargameds.com/pages/realtimehistory

    • @eugenlitwin5887
      @eugenlitwin5887 2 месяца назад +2

      i have a short question, has Finland been in contact with UN on subject of decolonization of South Karelia (occupied parts) ? looks like you can easily have it back, using Chagos Archipelago as a precedent, you can contact James Ker-Lindsay , he knows the drill . South Karelia is Finland!

    • @CoreyIsTheName
      @CoreyIsTheName Месяц назад +2

      @@eugenlitwin5887 I'm sure they've never thought of that. If only they watched youtube.

    • @Therealfrazer
      @Therealfrazer 23 дня назад +1

      @@eugenlitwin5887 Hi, Finn here. The thing is, the areas conquered by SU are no longer Finland, in the sense that there are no Finns left, no Finnish culture, nothing. Most people fled to other parts of Finland at the end of the war, and those who remained, well, got Russified or something (pretty much what Russia is doing in occupied regions in Ukraine now). In addition, the areas are really poor and rebuilding them to Finnish standards of living would be really expensive, so Finland and most Finns really have no interest in getting the areas back.
      The only sort of major benefit that I could easily see is getting the Saimaa canal back.

  • @wicNKWD37
    @wicNKWD37 2 месяца назад +497

    My great grandfather fought in the war while my grandfather and his siblings were sent to Sweden as refugee children to be taken care of. A young man that saved my toddler grandfather from drowning died fighting the Russians.

    • @Andy_Sidaris
      @Andy_Sidaris 2 месяца назад +13

      I've served there many times too. Always tough holding off the ussr in hoi 4

    • @scottparker1741
      @scottparker1741 2 месяца назад +1

      No he didn’t

    • @Cronin_
      @Cronin_ 2 месяца назад +42

      @@scottparker1741 Why do you say that? Finnish kids, so called "War children" WERE sent over to Sweden for the duration of the wars (in some cases even longer. Some didn't go back at all).

    • @extragoogleaccount6061
      @extragoogleaccount6061 2 месяца назад +33

      @@Cronin_ The guy is just a jaded cynic who thinks that just because nothing ever happens in his own life, then nothing must ever happen. Pay no mind.

    • @vitalyalx
      @vitalyalx 2 месяца назад +1

      NKVD37?

  • @trikyy7238
    @trikyy7238 2 месяца назад +396

    "We have no allies, no men, no tanks, no planes, no guns, no ammunition, no hope of victory. But we will fight nevertheless."

    • @Finnmark4
      @Finnmark4 Месяц назад +62

      Sisu

    • @RR-jz2up
      @RR-jz2up Месяц назад +57

      Finns have balls of steel

    • @matshansson7915
      @matshansson7915 Месяц назад +5

      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swedish_intervention_in_the_Winter_War

    • @Mr.Funnyman273
      @Mr.Funnyman273 Месяц назад +5

      they lost miserably lmao

    • @trikyy7238
      @trikyy7238 Месяц назад +35

      Yeah ivan, you totally conquered and annexed Finland, twice.

  • @retrieveri
    @retrieveri 2 месяца назад +284

    My grandfather was in JR7 (Army Regiment 7) in Winter War and in JR36/ErP 25 Separate Batallion 25 in Continuation War. He got wounded in Äyräpää bridgehead in 1944. Earlier he never talked about the war, but after he turned 80, he did talk a lot. He lived to be 91.

    • @herptek
      @herptek 2 месяца назад +4

      JR stands for "jalkaväkirykmentti" or infantry regiment. JR7 was formed during the interim peace and took part in the continuation war as a part of the second division. I think you are confusing things about the winter war.
      A whole lot of people from the 2. Division were killed or wounded in Äyräpää in 1944. ErP 25 was among the defending force, but not a part of JR7 or JR49 which were mainline regiments of the division.

    • @retrieveri
      @retrieveri 2 месяца назад +9

      @@herptek In his service card (kantakortti) Winter War part it says JR7 and in internet I found that JR17 was renamed to JR7 1.1.1940. He volunteered to Winter War in early 1940 when it already was JR7. Battles Summa, Majajoki, Rajakorpi and Viipuri are mentioned. In Continuation War he was in JR36 and transferred to ErP25 (seems like 4.4.1944).

    • @herptek
      @herptek 2 месяца назад +4

      @@retrieveri Okay, I thought you were confusing the events or units of the separate wars. There was such a renaming of JR17 which was mobilized for the winter war. The "real" (that I thought you meant) JR7 as formed during the interim peace, a different regiment, was indeed also present in the battle and responsible for the front in the Äyräpää bridgehead position in 1944.

    • @egertroos-qh7hw
      @egertroos-qh7hw 2 месяца назад +8

      ​@@herptekGreetings from Viro

    • @Mal0Imperzia
      @Mal0Imperzia Месяц назад

      My great grandfather served on the Eastern Front for Italia before being called back to defend Sicilia. We both fought socialism

  • @jeffbosworth8116
    @jeffbosworth8116 Месяц назад +85

    I am not Finnish, but I did live there for just under 2 years and learned the language a long time ago. Nothing but respect and admiration for the Finns. They more than earned their right to be free. And it's nice to see someone bother to pronouce the Finnish correctly.

    • @northernerfromfaraway
      @northernerfromfaraway Месяц назад +1

      What freedom are you talking about? Were they not free? Were they free when they were part of Sweden?

    • @pekkaollila8505
      @pekkaollila8505 Месяц назад

      ​@@northernerfromfaraway ruzia has not earned to be free. Ruzia belongs to Mongolia.

    • @SenSirpale
      @SenSirpale Месяц назад +15

      @@northernerfromfaraway Of course Finns were not free under Russian rule.

    • @northernerfromfaraway
      @northernerfromfaraway Месяц назад +1

      @@SenSirpale the Russians freed fins from Sweden.

    • @timowallin278
      @timowallin278 Месяц назад

      My country is Finland.

  • @Karpaneen
    @Karpaneen 2 месяца назад +288

    2:17 Placement of Leningrad is waaaay off.. Like almost 80 kilometers. The place where the video points, is a small village called Dusevo.

    • @realtimehistory
      @realtimehistory  2 месяца назад +112

      thanks we will fix that for the combined version of our 1939/1940 videos

    • @lordski1981
      @lordski1981 2 месяца назад +12

      Nerd!! 🤓 Seriously though, impressive! I didn't even notice that at all.

    • @samarkand1585
      @samarkand1585 2 месяца назад +5

      Okay so there was a reason why I felt puzzled when I saw it. I just assumed it was me who remembered wrong

    • @joenarbronarsson1347
      @joenarbronarsson1347 2 месяца назад

      yep wow.

    • @kollo3869
      @kollo3869 2 месяца назад +13

      @@lordski1981 I get that you're being a bit sarcastic but it's not really that nerdy. Even on the map they're using they have Leningrad/St. Petersburg appear as an actual city with buildings while placing the dot nowhere near the place. Also it's a big and especially very important city even today, so to miss the mark by how much they did is not a small mistake

  • @archiesmile6639
    @archiesmile6639 2 месяца назад +254

    “We are so few and they are so many. Where will we find the room to bury them all?” - Finnish soldier 5:48
    I feel honored by just reading this

    • @nuoksu
      @nuoksu 2 месяца назад +19

      The other, rhyming version is "We are so few and our country so small, where will we find the space to bury them all". Both are very likely an American invention, not something said by the Finns.

    • @mojewjewjew4420
      @mojewjewjew4420 2 месяца назад +21

      A soviet officer/General said they won enough land to bury their dead.

    • @gerryhouska2859
      @gerryhouska2859 2 месяца назад +3

      As do I. The same could be said by Ukraine today.

    • @harrikuusjarvi3795
      @harrikuusjarvi3795 Месяц назад +4

      @@nuoksu No. This same phrase was used before us for sure. Nobody know exatlty where it came but it even dont suit America and was used before America was founded in Europeans.

    • @АлександрИванов-ч4б3с
      @АлександрИванов-ч4б3с Месяц назад

      @@mojewjewjew4420 Tell me the name of this general or admit that it's a lie. Like a lot of things about the "Winter War" is a blatant lie.

  • @toinenosoite3173
    @toinenosoite3173 2 месяца назад +31

    This probably is the best video about the Winter War that I have ever seen. Kudos!

  • @Alien.Musk666
    @Alien.Musk666 2 месяца назад +47

    Both of grandfathers fought in Winterwar. My grangranfaters in civilwars. My father worked in Sodankylä jägerbrigade as Sotilasmestari. I did my service in Sodankylä also in 1st jägercompany. Army is big part of culture in Finland.

  • @mhh7544
    @mhh7544 2 месяца назад +136

    When you Google Winter War you get a photo of Finnish MG post in winter . Its my grandad behind the gun. Photo is from Lemetti motti .

    • @TacticalCatAirsoft
      @TacticalCatAirsoft Месяц назад +5

      onko hän viellä hengissä

    • @mhh7544
      @mhh7544 Месяц назад +8

      @@TacticalCatAirsoft Ei , kuoli kun mä olin pikkupoika

    • @crazyfinn66
      @crazyfinn66 Месяц назад

      @@mhh7544 Valitan surun

    • @TacticalCatAirsoft
      @TacticalCatAirsoft Месяц назад +6

      @@mhh7544 rip

    • @Chiwula
      @Chiwula Месяц назад +3

      Mun pappa oli samoissa hommissa koko 5 vuotta, miinus kranaatin aiheuttamien vammojen takia jonkin aikaa välissä sairaalassa.

  • @Karpaneen
    @Karpaneen 2 месяца назад +176

    19:03 It is true that Finland was in dire situation at the final days of the Winter War but Viipuri was not taken by the Soviets before the armistice. Red Army reached Viipuri area yes, but they didn't manage to take it.

    • @herptek
      @herptek 2 месяца назад +20

      That is correct.

    • @tedmccarron
      @tedmccarron Месяц назад +13

      You are right. They were fighting in the southern suburbs and started to flank them from the east as well but they never got into Viipuri and never surrounded it before the peace treaty took effect.

    • @burimfazliu3102
      @burimfazliu3102 Месяц назад +2

      They did not. When the war was over, the Finnish flag was still flying.

    • @Vlad79500
      @Vlad79500 18 дней назад

      Aren't you surprised that after passing the Mannerheim Line the Red Army suddenly "couldn't" take Vyborg, which there was no one to defend? Maybe they achieved what they asked for in order to avoid war?

    • @herptek
      @herptek 18 дней назад +1

      @@Vlad79500 It wasn't like they didn't try. Viipuri was the most stubbornly defended and harshly contested point on the western Isthmus near the end of the winter war. If the Soviets had been under the belief that they could have taken it easily by force they would have kept on trying to do just that in an attempt to clear a way to Helsinki. The closest location of the Mannerheim line was not far from Viipuri anyway and there were secondary defence lines in depth that had been fought over after it.

  • @Stroocker
    @Stroocker 2 месяца назад +93

    Use of the Word *PERKELE* increases by 5000%

    • @TheAxeaman
      @TheAxeaman 2 месяца назад

      Cringe

    • @Stroocker
      @Stroocker 2 месяца назад +24

      @@TheAxeaman Perkele

  • @CaptCanuck4444
    @CaptCanuck4444 20 дней назад +8

    Finns spanked the Soviets. The difference is that Stalin didn't care about Soviet casualties, and the Finnish leadership did.
    Very reminiscent of the current Russian invasion of Ukraine.

  • @amogusenjoyer
    @amogusenjoyer 2 месяца назад +92

    A detailed series about this war would be awesome, especially the lessons the soviets learnt from the war, etc.

    • @realtimehistory
      @realtimehistory  2 месяца назад +47

      The Finnish archives have tons of photographs available for this and the Continuation War. From the Russian site, we didn't find much, so we couldn't really illustrate specifically the Red Army.

    • @tabull8180
      @tabull8180 2 месяца назад +30

      @@realtimehistory Thats interesting but maybe also expected. russians don't want to go recording their mistakes too detailed.

    • @jmirsp4z
      @jmirsp4z 2 месяца назад +29

      looking at ukraine they learned absolutely nothing..

    • @sethhanson6412
      @sethhanson6412 2 месяца назад

      Go to the World War 2 channel Indy did it back 6 years

    • @jarisaarelainen5086
      @jarisaarelainen5086 2 месяца назад +4

      @@realtimehistory Sniper Simo Häyhä did not use any optical scope . And after the end of this war the continuation war started on June -41, not in less than a year after the winter war. Too much of these pics and clips were not taken from the winter war.

  • @stefanholmstrom68
    @stefanholmstrom68 2 месяца назад +50

    My grandparents told me how crazy it was to evacuate Hanko in 1940. My grandfather worked at the munitions factory (the "Dynamite factory", nowadays Forcit) and the whole production line was moved far north, to Ostrobothnia (the factory actually moved back after the war). My grandparents (with a 2 year old son, their first child) tried to save as many belongings as they could, even the boat was dragged over the ice to Bromarv, just north of Hanko. Much was lost in the chaos, as stuff was just dumped from the trains in the snow in Tammisaari so the trains could return as fast as possible to Hanko. My great grandfathers' house was in ruins when they returned. My father now lives in a house where there was a a machine-gun nest in the cellar during the occupation. As a kid it was easy to still find shrapnels and cartrigdes in the terrain, you can still see the trenches the Russians digged and there are quite many bunkers left (exciting places to play in as a kid, of course). I recently visited a friends' home in Hanko, they had repaired one of their walls and found out a big shrapnel embedded in the timber wall.

    • @herptek
      @herptek 2 месяца назад +3

      The Soviets had it worse during their evacuation of Hanko, if that pleases you. Most of them perished.

    • @timoterava7108
      @timoterava7108 2 месяца назад +6

      ​@@herptek
      Too many of them survived.

    • @TheAxeaman
      @TheAxeaman 2 месяца назад

      ⁠@@timoterava7108oh nice, calling for death for civilians are we?

    • @TheAxeaman
      @TheAxeaman 2 месяца назад +2

      Spännande ti si en annan finlandssvensk här.

    • @cassu6
      @cassu6 2 месяца назад +1

      @@timoterava7108 Bruh. You think the normal troops there had anything to do with the war? Get your head straight boy

  • @jl88570
    @jl88570 2 месяца назад +57

    Large respect to the Finns. Their tactics on the Winter War can really be a great lesson of war strategy for smaller ccountries.Excellent work friend. Make a video and for the Greco-italian war please.

  • @MilitarySummaryChannel2024
    @MilitarySummaryChannel2024 2 месяца назад +146

    *“The true soldier fights not because he hates what is in front of him, but because he loves what is behind him.”*

    • @TheAxeaman
      @TheAxeaman 2 месяца назад +7

      Except for the Palestinians, right?

    • @FerretCuddles
      @FerretCuddles 2 месяца назад +1

      Ok pseud reddit is thataway

    • @looinrims
      @looinrims 2 месяца назад

      No, the most effective soldiers are those with a severe hatred for their enemy, soldiers fight harder and more effectively.

    • @markknivila8383
      @markknivila8383 Месяц назад +1

      @TheAxeman chillout, roscoe! Wrong part of the world, for that!

    • @TheAxeaman
      @TheAxeaman Месяц назад

      @@markknivila8383 The argument still stands.

  • @TommiSRP
    @TommiSRP Месяц назад +10

    My grandfather fought as a messenger in both the Winter and the Continuation War. The war cost him his hearing, but he lived relatively healthy to the ripe age of 94.
    The last years Altzheimers took his ability to speak, but the years before were filled with stories from the war.
    The Independence day means a lot to me. It gives me a chance to appreciate the freedom and the country he fought for and to remember him for his heroism.

  • @captaincentury
    @captaincentury 2 месяца назад +87

    My grandfather Aleksi fought in the Winter War. He told me later how winter itself was their ally. "First it was minus 30 degrees, then minus 40 and finally even minus 50. But it did not bother us so much, since we knew it would bother the enemy more."

    • @northernerfromfaraway
      @northernerfromfaraway 2 месяца назад +3

      Why would in bother the enemy more? Russia has much more harsh climate in some places. Even the russian region Karelia witch borders with Finland has more cold climate. P.S. And not once during the entire war did the temperature drop to -50 degrees Celsius.

    • @deleon129
      @deleon129 2 месяца назад +31

      ​@@northernerfromfarawaythere was no Russia, it was a soviet union back then and Karelia belonged to Finland. But to answer your question, soviets had much worse winter gear than finnish and little of shelter or food which we denied from the enemy.

    • @yayaya4345
      @yayaya4345 2 месяца назад +39

      @@northernerfromfaraway It being -40 in some remote uninhabited place in siberia doesn't do much when most of the troops were pulled from south like ukraine and given warm thoughts for equipment.

    • @captaincentury
      @captaincentury 2 месяца назад +15

      @@northernerfromfaraway Finns had proper winter gear, often their personal gear from home, including skies and white snow costumes. Soviets were poorly prepared for winter conditions; they anyway believed the war would be short parade to their victory. Their troops were often not from northern areas; for example the 44. Division completely destroyed at Raate Road was Ukrainian. Finland was agrarian country; practically all men were used to operate in winter forest (hunting, logging etc.) And finally, our military tactics and training emphasized forest and winter conditions.

    • @northernerfromfaraway
      @northernerfromfaraway 2 месяца назад +1

      @@deleon129 Yes, it was the union, but why don't you look ate the soviet map and look for the Karelo-Finnish SSR wich was part of the USSR.

  • @spudeism
    @spudeism 2 месяца назад +22

    There's a (tragic) story of about my grandfathers uncle in Winter War.
    The story goes the that he was wound fatally in around 9am on the last day of Winter War, around 10pm he was treated on his wounds, around 11am on that same that day ceasefire was drawn and shortly after the said ceasefire that said relative died even after all the treatment he got.

  • @Maininki1
    @Maininki1 2 месяца назад +10

    My father had to go that war when he was 17 old and fighting 4 years and survived there to come back home.
    He didn't tell much about that time, but things that he told was....and i had nothing to say, that was so beyond belief to me . War is terrible.

  • @zombieatdt1230
    @zombieatdt1230 2 месяца назад +92

    I guess that the distrust toward Russians go far beyond Winter and Continuation War. Great Northern War had definitely put the great distrust and hatred toward Russians to the Finnish DNA. As well as two russification periods 1899-1905 and 1908-1917 affected that as well. Winter and Continuation War just added to that and now we see in Russian aggression in Ukraine that nothing has really changed in that country.

    • @user-ce6iy2nw5o
      @user-ce6iy2nw5o 2 месяца назад +21

      The tavastians were at war with novgorod already during the viking age. That is why the western finnish tribes allied with the swedish crown and converted to catholicism for military support

    • @x-wing8785
      @x-wing8785 2 месяца назад +6

      @@user-ce6iy2nw5o Biggest nonsense I've read in a long time.

    • @willydawiller
      @willydawiller 2 месяца назад +11

      @@x-wing8785 biggest nonsense? Most of that was factual, you can debate the conversion to catholicism and the motives, but the tribal wars between finns, swedes, and tribes in Russia are surprisingly well documented

    • @x-wing8785
      @x-wing8785 2 месяца назад +4

      @@willydawiller It's all BS. Tribal wars were raids. They weren't real wars. Rest of the comment was just a hilarious fairytale.

    • @willydawiller
      @willydawiller 2 месяца назад +13

      @@x-wing8785 i think you'll find most wars in history can be described as "raids"
      And these raids between finns, russian tribes, and swedes, ended with peace treaties when one side got beaten hard enough

  • @1joshjosh1
    @1joshjosh1 2 месяца назад +17

    I remember one finish commander saying that 1 thing about the soviet forces was inexhaustible supply of artillery shells.

  • @RubberToeYT
    @RubberToeYT 2 месяца назад +33

    Great doc, the background footage and photos were class

  • @Eralun
    @Eralun 2 месяца назад +126

    The similarities between this and Russias invasion of Ukraine is striking.

    • @cinderellaandstepsisters
      @cinderellaandstepsisters 2 месяца назад +12

      The difference is that Finland was never a communist country and not an eastern bloc country.

    • @cinderellaandstepsisters
      @cinderellaandstepsisters 2 месяца назад

      @@pbradics3670 a lot.

    • @looinrims
      @looinrims 2 месяца назад +14

      @@cinderellaandstepsistersso no difference? Just nonsense rhetoric you put out? Ok

    • @eugenabelb1492
      @eugenabelb1492 Месяц назад +32

      "we don't need an inch of foreign land" proceeds invading the neighbor. Same lies.

    • @butterflies655
      @butterflies655 Месяц назад +1

      ​@@looinrims No nonsense at all.

  • @juhokuusisto9339
    @juhokuusisto9339 2 месяца назад +20

    Molotov cocktails weren't the cloth ones, they used bengal matches (storm matches) taped on the side of the bottle.

  • @jtukko
    @jtukko 2 месяца назад +58

    Against all odds but with the "spirit of the winter war" Finland stayed independent.

    • @CootieCommando
      @CootieCommando 2 месяца назад +4

      SISU

    • @RestlessBogatyr
      @RestlessBogatyr Месяц назад

      "Independent" is a really strong word. Read a detailed list of Reparations the Finnish had to pay. It was incredibly heavy handed. And the Soviets very likely had to answer for it in the Potsdam Agreement.

    • @butterflies655
      @butterflies655 Месяц назад +11

      Finland retained its independence and freedom. Finland was never a part of the Soviet union. Never under communism and never an eastern bloc country. ​@@RestlessBogatyr

    • @RestlessBogatyr
      @RestlessBogatyr Месяц назад +1

      @@butterflies655 "Erm. It was never part of the Soviet Union" (Gets economically buttfucked by the USSR) But atleast Finland remained independent (Forced to fight germany in the Lapland War) And Finland lived happily ever after (As per the treaty the Soviets banned most political parties they didn't agree with and imprisoned the President of Finland and high ranking personal) But hey. Hey retained their "Independence"

    • @RestlessBogatyr
      @RestlessBogatyr Месяц назад +1

      @@butterflies655 Again. Read a detailed list of Reparations. They were given a heavy handed letter.

  • @CalinGilea
    @CalinGilea 2 месяца назад +27

    2:18 Leningrad is not on the banks of Lake Ladoga but a little to the west on the banks of the Gulf of Finland 🇫🇮. More like 60 km from the former border with Finland 🇫🇮.

    • @WhiskyandBacon
      @WhiskyandBacon 2 месяца назад +4

      From the old Finnish border its 32 km to Leningrad.

    • @egertroos-qh7hw
      @egertroos-qh7hw 2 месяца назад +4

      ​@@WhiskyandBaconLeningrad aka Petersburg is also finnic

  • @franklinclinton4539
    @franklinclinton4539 Месяц назад +6

    My great grandpa fought in the 8th separate battalion. He was wounded in late January and died of his wounds 3 days after the war ended.

  • @_ArsNova
    @_ArsNova 2 месяца назад +67

    The name "Molotov cocktail" originates from this conflict, it was the Finns ad hoc response to a need for infantry anti-tank weapons. Bit of pointed humor towards the much loathed Soviet foreign minister.

    • @raksanrambo1230
      @raksanrambo1230 2 месяца назад +23

      It came from when the soviet union denied bombing civilians and instead said they were dropping food packages. So the finns also started giving the soviets food in the form of molotov cocktails

    • @pekkasiren4532
      @pekkasiren4532 Месяц назад

      No from Spanish civilwar.

    • @eeros4192
      @eeros4192 Месяц назад +13

      @@pekkasiren4532 No the NAME originates from Winter War. And Finnish version was different, Better.

    • @wolfgangemmerich7552
      @wolfgangemmerich7552 Месяц назад +6

      The zivilian population of helsinki got first time in war history bombed with cccp clusterbombs . They called them ,, Molotovs Bread Baskets " .

    • @eeros4192
      @eeros4192 Месяц назад +4

      @@wolfgangemmerich7552 Yes. My mother remember those Russian "bread baskets" . They did kill...

  • @OscarLikesArt
    @OscarLikesArt 2 месяца назад +31

    My then 11 year old great grandmother was one of the over 400 000 who fled their homes because of the war. She never forgave and I don't blame her.

    • @RiasSenpaiTheWallet
      @RiasSenpaiTheWallet Месяц назад

      same, but my grandma was 12, turning 13. Now she's 98 and wondering why Russia always has shitty leaders.

    • @Vlad79500
      @Vlad79500 19 дней назад

      Didn't she forgive the Finnish government that chose war?

    • @misterserious3522
      @misterserious3522 14 дней назад

      @@RiasSenpaiTheWallet Kremlin is cursed with devils.

    • @misterserious3522
      @misterserious3522 14 дней назад

      @@Vlad79500 Idi, k chort, trupe

  • @mrfivethumbs
    @mrfivethumbs 2 месяца назад +90

    "Finland-Soviet relations have been rocky since Finland declared independence in 1917." - What? I believe they have been rocky since medieval times for what Novgorod did to us. Not to mention that Russia also invaded Finland (then under Swedish rule) twice in 1700's, and murdered and pillaged the country to brink of existence. When Sweden lost Finland to Russia, the Russians finally went too far trying to "russify" us, eventually leaving no choice but declare independence. The Russians have always been known to Finns to be the Enemy. This distaste for Russia is inherently in our DNA at this point. Anyway, to think the relations started being rocky in 1917 is just ignorant on so many levels.

    • @tabull8180
      @tabull8180 2 месяца назад +23

      The relationships went to awful at 1899 at the start of russification period. Before that for some time the relationship was better than long average. But saying that the relationship went bad after 1917 is misleading.

    • @caballeroarepa9223
      @caballeroarepa9223 2 месяца назад +5

      Its not meant as a ethnical stance, but as a diplomatic one, because your people can hate each other, but the governments can keep it neutral.

    • @TheAxeaman
      @TheAxeaman 2 месяца назад

      Saying that we have distaste for a certain group of people in our DNA sounds like some sort of twisted race biology.

    • @_ArsNova
      @_ArsNova 2 месяца назад +5

      He meant specifically between the USSR and Finland as nation states. The Bolsheviks were not in power prior to 1917. Obviously yes, Finnish - Russian enmity goes back much further.

    • @Kenruli
      @Kenruli 2 месяца назад +5

      Russians were quite kind to Finn's when they initially took Finland from Sweden.
      After new rulers came to power in Russia then it started to go downhill.
      But yeah they have mostly just done awful things to us

  • @rathchain3287
    @rathchain3287 2 месяца назад +10

    Great stuff. I have a pair of skis supposedly worn by a great uncle during the war, but I know little about him other than he served. Really appreciate learning anything I can about this part of history.

  • @viikinki8204
    @viikinki8204 2 месяца назад +12

    4:57 I would like to point that despite of having big shortage of guns, many finnish people had still own gun for hunting for example, and used it in war. The biggest and most severe shortage was ofc in artillery, anti-tank and anti-air weapons, also not having the needed equipment like uniforms for common soldier and many finnish soldiers used own clothes in war for example.

    • @taahaseois.8898
      @taahaseois.8898 28 дней назад

      The word "gun" was indeed a term for artillery, at, aa etc. Not small-arms.

  • @gerryhouska2859
    @gerryhouska2859 2 месяца назад +9

    I really liked the Finns I met here in Australia. Splendid mates.

  • @jarihusso1750
    @jarihusso1750 Месяц назад +27

    Never forget, never forgive.

    • @wolfgangemmerich7552
      @wolfgangemmerich7552 Месяц назад +1

      One reason more to keep simo häyhä in mind and spirit of all suomi population.

    • @pekka1900
      @pekka1900 25 дней назад

      Never forget, but you'd think at some point you can surely forgive?

    • @Tespri
      @Tespri 25 дней назад

      @@pekka1900 Only when the Ruz Empire had collapsed to the ruins.

    • @pekka1900
      @pekka1900 24 дня назад

      @@Tespri Jesus commands us to forgive those who trespass against us, for an eye for an eye makes only the whole world blind. And non of those who made the decision to attack Finland are alive anymore, nor those who defended us.
      Let us remember, but harbor no ill to anyone who isn't at fault for this particular crime.

  • @Juhkusworld
    @Juhkusworld 19 дней назад +5

    USSR is going at it again. For some strange reason people tend to think modern USSR will somehow behave differently than in 1940's.

  • @noreply-7069
    @noreply-7069 2 месяца назад +12

    The new thumbnail picture is from the Continuation War (1941-44) and not Winter War. The soldier isn't even wearing snow suit since it isn't winter and has a Swedish helmet that was used later.

  • @NikKauFilms
    @NikKauFilms 26 дней назад +1

    My great grandfather fought in the Winter War, and as said in the video; granades were dangerous. He lost his right arm after tossing a granade which exploded immediately after he let go. He lived to be 90 years old, and told me many stories. My mom wasn’t quite happy about it as I was still around 8 haha.

  • @yo388
    @yo388 2 месяца назад +7

    You know bodies are gonna get stacked when Christopher Lee shows up

  • @Keinapappa
    @Keinapappa 2 месяца назад +15

    Ylmari Kihanto is actually Ilmari Kianto.

    • @A_Casual_Observer
      @A_Casual_Observer 2 месяца назад +12

      It seems they used a Russian translation of a book by a Finnish author (Keskisarja, credited as Кескисарья) as a source, and just transliterated the name the best they could.

    • @Keinapappa
      @Keinapappa 2 месяца назад +2

      @@A_Casual_Observer That explains it. Thx for the info.

  • @Ishjaerta_Nordic
    @Ishjaerta_Nordic 20 дней назад +2

    My father's grandfather fought in Finland and Norway plus was a "underrättelse officer" for Great Britain, but he was Swedish. But on the other side my mom's side: Mom's grandmother was from Wasa (finlandssvenska) she was involved in the freedom fight before this in Finland. After that she moved to Sweden.

  • @danielkarlsson9326
    @danielkarlsson9326 2 месяца назад +24

    That was 33% of the Swedish Airforce at that time.
    Sweden itself was under immense pressure by Germany which had threatened with invasion if Sweden went to war by Finlands side.
    So Sweden went around that by calling itself a nonbelingurent or non battling party in the conflict.
    This meant that the over 9000 Swedish volunters which almost all was from the Swedish Army and Swedish Airforce was not officially approved by the state of Sweden but inofficially they was given paid leave and some other benefits from the state, and most importantly they were not deemed as Desertors from the Swedish forces.
    USA and Great britain and France did offer Finland to put their troops in Northern Finland to aid, but that was sadly not true as the allied forces wanted to take Control of Norther Norway especially Narwik with its important Port, Northern Sweden with all the Iron mines and the very Artic Port in finland which Stalin wanted.
    After the plans had been leaked Finland refused together with Sweden as this was nothing more than an Invasion force.
    this play by France, USA and Britan is a big part in Why Sweden was forced to play nicely with all sides during the war.
    Why Finland later on had to accept a shaky alliane with Germany and why Norway and Denmark was invaded.
    This important part of why the Second World War became what it became is often not spoken about especially not in USA, France and G.B and that is quite sad as it points out the Allieds own mistakes quite well.

    • @henrikg1388
      @henrikg1388 Месяц назад

      But... the USA was not involved at that point, iirc.

    • @mst3rfox
      @mst3rfox Месяц назад

      Just like now, the West is buying Ukraine. Only Finland was smart enough to understand this. People don't want to learn and don't want to understand this.

    • @adifreitag8579
      @adifreitag8579 8 дней назад

      @@henrikg1388
      That's not entirely true. The USA was already indirectly involved in the war in 1939. They massively supported the British with money and weapons. After the outbreak of the German-Soviet war, they also supported the Soviet Union materially. For example, they supplied more than a hundred thousand trucks. The chassis on which the so-called Stalin organ was mounted also came from the USA.
      When the German-Polish war began in 1939, the French and British declared war on the German Reich. However, the Soviet Union was spared a declaration of war, although it also attacked Poland. Later, when the Soviets invaded and annexed the Baltic states and committed their aggression against Finland, the Western powers also remained calm. So why only start the war against Germany? Later, they even made a pact with the devil Stalin with the aim of conquering and destroying Germany.
      The late American politician Henry Kissinger summed up the Western powers' motivation for war: "Ultimately, two world wars were fought to prevent Germany from playing a dominant role."

    • @adifreitag8579
      @adifreitag8579 8 дней назад

      I consider it an unproven claim that Sweden wanted to give up its neutrality and officially enter the war on Finland's side. Hitler certainly knew that Swedish volunteers were fighting on Finland's side and that Sweden was secretly supplying Finland with weapons, but he did nothing about it. I think he even had sympathy for it. The pact between Ribbentrop and Molotov was not a matter close to Germany's heart. The pact was only intended to forestall an alliance between the Western powers and the Soviet Union, which was being negotiated in parallel.
      The German invasion of Denmark and Norway was not an attack, but a military necessity to secure the delivery of Swedish iron ore via the Norwegian port of Narvik. I would like to remind you that a British invasion army was already on its way to occupy Norway.
      Relations between Germans and Finns had been friendly since the First World War. After all, the Germans fought for Finland's freedom from Russia with the blood of their soldiers. The Balts also owe their independence from Russian rule to the Germans after the First World War
      Songs about Finland's freedom from Russian rule
      Song about the liberation of Helsinki 1918
      ruclips.net/video/9iRJo0UPoxs/видео.html
      Finnish White Guard Song about Kaiser Wilhelm II
      ruclips.net/video/S0Zv6VMzKAU/видео.html
      Songs about the freedom of the Baltic nations from Russian rule
      The flag crackles towards the enemy
      ruclips.net/video/PNxkXEeXvX4/видео.html
      On Baltic watch
      ruclips.net/video/GrJySE9HctI/видео.html

    • @henrikg1388
      @henrikg1388 8 дней назад

      @@adifreitag8579 I don't disagree totally. My point was simply that there was not an official state of war between the USA and Germany at that time. Aid was being sent to the UK, but not directly to the Soviets. There were American volunteers in Finland, but they were not allowed to engage in battle like Nordic volunteers could.
      Later on, is a different ballgame.

  • @claykkari
    @claykkari Месяц назад +1

    By far the best overview of Winter War, amazing work

  • @CootieCommando
    @CootieCommando 2 месяца назад +3

    My pampa and a few of his brothers fought in the war, and he met my mummi shortly after it was over for Finland.
    If it wasn't for that, and Finland's heroic victory at the Battle of Tali-Ihantala, I wouldn't be here today 🇫🇮

  • @vjbd2757
    @vjbd2757 2 месяца назад +6

    Finland: "You won!"
    USSR: "Yes."
    Finland: "But at what cost?"
    USSR: "Four times your men"

  • @henkkatin
    @henkkatin 2 месяца назад +9

    Leningrad is in wrong place in the map at 2:25! Ffs, get your maps right

  • @user-yu1zp2vu9x
    @user-yu1zp2vu9x Месяц назад +4

    Thanks for sharing this video. I love when the underdog has success. The Finn warriors used what little equipment they had available to survive and have much success. They made up for the material shortages with intelligence, skill, and determination. Similar to the Vietcong fighting the French and USA in my mind. Large superpower countries need to respect the small isolated countries. Much respect and admiration for the Finn warriors from Texas in the USA.

  • @Jarmo60
    @Jarmo60 Месяц назад +3

    Father's father reportedly wore a military uniform for 7 years. He lived through all three wars, i.e. the Winter, Continued and Lapland wars.

  • @MsZeeZed
    @MsZeeZed 2 месяца назад +5

    10:20 - When anyone tells you that 1941/2 was the worst winter in decades and did for Operation Barbarossa, just remember that winter 1940 was exactly the same and the Soviets blame it for slowing them up this time in Finland. It’s often 40 below in a Baltic winter.

    • @Vlad79500
      @Vlad79500 17 дней назад

      It is interesting to read unsubstantiated things. At least look at the map of Finland in Google Maps, if the school curriculum does not include geography lessons. I will not explain that the Finns are not a problem at all - the problem is the landscape - hills and forests. Hitler wrote that it is impossible to fight in the forests, meaning the Ardennes - a virtually flat surface. The commander of the Norway group wrote that it is impossible to fight and move around the territory of Finland. In the end, the Finns and Germans together were unable to capture Karelia or Murmansk without the Mannerheim Line in their path for 4 years. Unlike them, the Red Army achieved its goal.

  • @panza.
    @panza. 2 месяца назад +18

    That famous finnish writer's name was Ilmari Kianto, not Ylmari Kihanto :) He also made this poem called "Nälkämaan laulu/Song Of The Hunger Land" And Oskar Merikanto composed it to song. It's pretty famous song in here and used in lots of tv movies/series. Ilmari got into trouble when the war started once he leave a note to ruskies.. :o But that's a different story.
    In Molotov's cocktail what we used had tar, kind of a diesel (petrol) and alcohol.

  • @pasilehtola4365
    @pasilehtola4365 2 месяца назад +10

    If you check names???...Ylmari Kihanto...Right name is Ilmari Kianto.

  • @wolf2912
    @wolf2912 2 месяца назад +28

    My grandma family knew of one swedes that went to Finland to fight
    Finland sak är vår

    • @northernerfromfaraway
      @northernerfromfaraway Месяц назад +1

      I believe Finland was part of Sweden for some time?

    • @wolf2912
      @wolf2912 Месяц назад

      for 700 years yes until the finnish war of 1809

    • @Silveirias
      @Silveirias Месяц назад

      @@wolf2912 Not entirely true. Sweden lost parts of eastern Finland to Russia earlier already.

  • @grf15
    @grf15 Месяц назад +1

    Really fond of this narrator. A wonderful, concise, presentation.

  • @ANJING_SITUMORANG
    @ANJING_SITUMORANG 2 месяца назад +12

    Why these maps have Leningrad in wrong place?

  • @ClassicFormulaOne1
    @ClassicFormulaOne1 2 месяца назад +4

    Perfect video again Jesse & Team! ❤

  • @robertjarman3703
    @robertjarman3703 2 месяца назад +17

    That would be like if the US attempted to fight a Canada with approximately 20% of its present population, taking 4 months to do so, and for all that effort, gained about half of NW Ontario and the part of Canada below the TransCanada highway in Alberta and BC east of Abbotsford and below the Yellowhead Highway in Saskatchewan and Manitoba (with the line connecting the two highways being SK Highway 11 between Regina and Saskatoon), and took about twice the losses the USSR experienced in this video in all categories (given that 335 is roughly twice the USSR population back then of 170 million). Rather pathetic.
    You know well Jesse about the magnitude of those estimates I just gave and the shape of the outline I used here would be.

    • @MM22966
      @MM22966 2 месяца назад +1

      Ironically, what you described is almost exactly what happened in Harry Turtledove's Great War book series.

    • @Alfonse-dm6ht
      @Alfonse-dm6ht 2 месяца назад

      ​​@@Lenn869 Isn't Your Pfp The One That Got Shot By The Partisans ?

    • @alexp7579
      @alexp7579 2 месяца назад +2

      Finland population was 3.5 million and USSR 170 million so it was actually about 2% but I get the point

    • @robertjarman3703
      @robertjarman3703 2 месяца назад +1

      @@alexp7579 I meant 20% of Canada's population. So about 10 million. Divide that by 335 million.

    • @alexp7579
      @alexp7579 2 месяца назад +1

      @@robertjarman3703 True my bad. Apparently the nuance was too tricky for my English skills lol

  • @GregorydavidMck
    @GregorydavidMck 2 месяца назад +4

    Another great episode. Well done.

  • @parvuspeach
    @parvuspeach 2 месяца назад +119

    Imperial Russia: uses own soldiers as meat puppets.
    Soviet Russia: uses own soldiers as meat puppets.
    Putin's Russia: uses own soldiers as meat puppets.
    What a depressing culture.

    • @catlover-banana24
      @catlover-banana24 2 месяца назад +6

      Roger Waters admires them

    • @tonymastro42
      @tonymastro42 Месяц назад +21

      Refusing to learn from history causes it to repeat. Total collapse incoming

    • @WENDIGO0
      @WENDIGO0 Месяц назад +3

      Пропаганда это не культура,стоит знать.

    • @JonDoe-ln6nl
      @JonDoe-ln6nl Месяц назад

      @@WENDIGO0 What was said about Imperial Russia + Soviet Russia + Putin Russia using soldiers as meat puppets is TRUE and ACCURATE. What is "propaganda" about the truth?? Is it the Russian 'culture'? or better defined as the Russian 'psyche'? Either word you choose doesn't change the FACT that a Russian soldier's life is worth ZERO.

    • @Markov16
      @Markov16 Месяц назад

      The old grandpa is mocking Zelensky as a dictator though when they were caught in Kursk😅.

  • @aarolamsa2756
    @aarolamsa2756 2 месяца назад +2

    My great grandfather fought in the battle of Suomussalmi in the Er.P 16(Seperate batallion 16) during the winter war. He went on to fight in the continuation war and the Lapland war.

  • @MM22966
    @MM22966 2 месяца назад +38

    "History rarely repeats but it often rhymes..."
    and then sometimes it just repeats. At least the Ukrainians are getting more help than the Finns did.

    • @yaroslavmyhero
      @yaroslavmyhero 2 месяца назад +1

      what kind of help, don't be ridiculous.
      10 tanks in half a year.

    • @realtsarbomba
      @realtsarbomba 2 месяца назад

      ​​​@@yaroslavmyhero Patriot, NASAMS, IRIS-T, SAMP-T, Brimstone air defense systems...
      Thousands of different varieties of IFV's & AFV's.
      F-16, Mirage 2000 and JAS Gripen fighter jets of which F-16's are now getting transported to Ukraine.
      Thousands of guided & unguided anti tank missile systems and thousands of Mistral, Starstreak, Stinger MANPADS.
      Hundreds of HIMARS and comparable MRL systems.
      Hundreds of modern towed artillery systems as well as hundreds of SPG's plus steady supply of shells.
      Radar systems, EW-systems, tens of thousands of assault rifles and sidearms plus millions of rounds of ammunitions, grenades, air-to-air missiles, hundreds of thousands of medium caliber ammo...
      Oh yeah...and *MORE THAN 800 TANKS.*
      Let's start with these, now go touch grass since you obviously aren't capable of using internet search engines and instead opted to try (and miserably failed) to troll with such an asinine question.

    • @peketee2278
      @peketee2278 2 месяца назад +1

      @@yaroslavmyhero yes, but they have been quite expensive tanks, when the USA has paid 150 billion for them and Europe 200 billion...

    • @OptimusWombat
      @OptimusWombat 2 месяца назад

      @@yaroslavmyhero Putin's SMO is approaching 3 years. The Winter War ended after 3.5 months.

    • @0Letten0
      @0Letten0 2 месяца назад +5

      ​@@yaroslavmyherohow many tanks did Findland get?

  • @Dave1-08
    @Dave1-08 2 месяца назад +5

    The world will know that free men stood against a tyrant, that few stood against many.

  • @Kalleri13
    @Kalleri13 Месяц назад +3

    This was must have been an utter nightmare to fight. Poor people who had to do it.

  • @JarmoNurmiainen
    @JarmoNurmiainen Месяц назад +1

    As a finnish history nerd, I approve this dokument. One mistake I found though: In the intro maps Leningrad is located too far east, Thank you for fine dokument.

    • @jaripaananen1363
      @jaripaananen1363 7 дней назад

      Tuo "Olavi siippaisen sanonta..." ollako punaisia vai fasisteja suomalaisia".... EI kuitenkaan tunnu oikealta... OLLI VEHVILÄISEN KIRJASTA LAINAUS.

  • @kymensotaveteraanit
    @kymensotaveteraanit Месяц назад +7

    Welcome to our channel for interviews of Finnish war veterans. Several videos have subtitles, more to come.

  • @hlynnkeith9334
    @hlynnkeith9334 2 месяца назад +8

    I applaud your hook up with the wargame company.

  • @l.f.bittaker.6182
    @l.f.bittaker.6182 24 дня назад +7

    My great grandfather was a Swedish volunteer. My grandfather had his dad's "Finlands sak är vår" (Finlands cause is ours) poster until his death, now it's framed and sitting on my bookshelf.
    If it ever happens again, just know that Swedes will honour our past commitments and pass over the Swedish/Finnish border once again. Forever brothers! (Except when it comes to Hockey and skiing 😉)

    • @Vlad79500
      @Vlad79500 19 дней назад

      Should I remind you how the Finns loved you when the "Finnish" territories were part of Sweden? Some Karelian tribes moved as far as Tver or further into Siberia from the strong loving embrace of the Swedes... Lol
      And the same Karelians fought against the Finns in the 1940s or escaped from military units created by the Finns from prisoners
      For some strange reason, you did not create for them a Finnish autonomous administrative-territorial entity, statehood, did not introduce the Finnish language, but forced them to use Swedish. Finnish was the language of the peasants. You did not create traditions for them so that they could be different from you)). You persecuted Orthodoxy - which became the reason for the exodus of the tribes. And protecting them from you, it was the Russians who were in your grandfather's place...

  • @RedOneM
    @RedOneM Месяц назад +3

    I'm being really sentimental right now, so many men (realistically generalized) had to give up their lives for both sides. To think that so many souls end up in bad situation and have the same depth as me today just die over political battles is bleak. I'm honored to live in the current world, even though unfortunate conflict continues in many corners of the world. War really is an endless plague of human nature.

  • @franklinclinton4539
    @franklinclinton4539 Месяц назад +1

    *The road and border of Raate, there now is written "EU and Finland". An unkept winter road and forests all around. "Here we remained, the whole lot, not a soul came back."*

  • @FrankThings-t2c
    @FrankThings-t2c 24 дня назад

    Shaposhnikov also came up with the original plan to invade Finland aka "look helsinki is right there we just drop everyone in that direction", but Stalin didn't think it was grandiose enough

  • @antoniofernandesmarchetti1097
    @antoniofernandesmarchetti1097 2 месяца назад +2

    Great documentarie has always!

  • @VisciousPhishes
    @VisciousPhishes 2 месяца назад +1

    Another fantastic video! Thanks!

  • @mitah4
    @mitah4 2 месяца назад +14

    My family lost our "tribes" lands (one big island) that we owned so long that nobody can even remember. It was called koivisto and it is leningrad oblast these days.

    • @Alfonse-dm6ht
      @Alfonse-dm6ht 2 месяца назад

      So You Guys Got Assimilated To The Greater Ethnic Group Of The Europeans There
      Or Are You Just Became One Of Minorties Of The Nation There

    • @herptek
      @herptek 2 месяца назад +8

      @@Alfonse-dm6ht The Karelian Isthmus had been populated by Finns as a majority before the winter war. Finland evacuated most its population from finnish Karelia during the war and the Russians brought in all kinds of less European populations among them when they repopulated the areas that fell into their hands. The newcomes would too would have leave quicly soon after, however, because the area was fought over again in 1941.

    • @Alfonse-dm6ht
      @Alfonse-dm6ht 2 месяца назад

      @@herptek Then Afte The Continue War ?

    • @herptek
      @herptek 2 месяца назад +8

      @@Alfonse-dm6ht It was evacuated again during the war. It was interesting how uncivilized and uncultured the Russians had been during the interim peace. The whole place was found totally in disrepair in 1941 and the buildings had been misused in comical ways, as if the Soviets didn't know how to live in a city. There were instances where they used apartment blocks in Viipuri to house livestock with the people as if they had come directly from some backwards third world country to populate an abandoned first world city, not having seen one before.

    • @adskafjrufhauäšhlklöjlllhhhui
      @adskafjrufhauäšhlklöjlllhhhui 24 дня назад

      ​@@Alfonse-dm6htsome 420000 were evacuated, officially 9stayed, and 17went back.

  • @Ernn321
    @Ernn321 7 дней назад

    christopher lee, fights in the most destructive bloody war ever and later proceeds to play one of the most iconic and recognizable sith lords, what a legend

  • @raimohaajanen2782
    @raimohaajanen2782 2 месяца назад +3

    Huh! - Where you put Leningrad - Absolute wrong place!

  • @tederikon8960
    @tederikon8960 29 дней назад +2

    2:17 thats not Leningrad?

    • @jussim.konttinen4981
      @jussim.konttinen4981 27 дней назад

      Funnily enough, there is a dirt road at that point. Lavrovo is 100km from the Hermitage Museum.

  • @ursus9104
    @ursus9104 2 месяца назад +2

    The fighting on the Karelian Isthmus was terrible for both sides. The Finns fought bravely from their machine guns hidden in bunkers until the Russians deployed flamethrower armor that drenched the bunkers in oil which then ignited and burned entire crews alive. Finaly the Russians managed to break through the defense lines.

    • @jaripaananen1363
      @jaripaananen1363 7 дней назад

      What bunkers...? Your fairytales are from movies.. Somewhere else..

  • @generalsandnapoleon
    @generalsandnapoleon 5 дней назад

    Nice work on this!

  • @xjuliussx
    @xjuliussx 2 месяца назад +2

    great video! i need to ask - do you consider to sell your digital maps used in your videos? We would like to buy them!

  • @DominikFleury
    @DominikFleury 2 месяца назад

    Another very informative and entertaining piece
    Keep it up!

  • @SuperEsseesse
    @SuperEsseesse 2 месяца назад +2

    Umm 2:24 that is not where Leningrad ( nowadays St. Petersburg ) is located

  • @MrDaviyd
    @MrDaviyd 2 месяца назад +1

    As always excellent doc, thank you!

  • @Petteri_FIN
    @Petteri_FIN 15 дней назад

    Superb documentary, thanks. Kiitos

  • @pomicultorul
    @pomicultorul 8 дней назад

    thank you for your continuous efforts!

  • @indianajones4321
    @indianajones4321 2 месяца назад +1

    Another epic documentary RTH!

  • @TheTePeHa
    @TheTePeHa 20 дней назад

    @2:20 How, just how can you place Leningrad there?

  • @theplayerofus319
    @theplayerofus319 2 месяца назад +1

    thx for the upload

  • @chriskoort5717
    @chriskoort5717 17 дней назад +3

    "Don't worry, comrade. It's gonna take us 3 days, tops. We don't even have to call it a war, it's gonna be more like a special military operation where we take Helsinki..."
    You russkies really didn't learn from the first lesson, did you?

    • @КолтуновСерёга
      @КолтуновСерёга 17 дней назад

      English Wikipedia "Winter War"
      =Negotiations=
      The meetings began on 12 October, with Molotov's offer of a mutual assistance pact, which the Finns immediately refused. To the Finns' surprise, Molotov dropped the offer and instead proposed an exchange of territory.[68] The offer stipulated that the Finnish-Soviet border on the Karelian Isthmus be moved *westward to a point only 30 km (19 mi) east of Viipuri* (Russian: Vyborg) and that Finland destroy all existing fortifications on the Karelian Isthmus. Likewise, the delegation demanded the cession of islands in the Gulf of Finland as well as Rybachy Peninsula (Finnish: Kalastajasaarento). The Finns would also have to lease the Hanko Peninsula for 30 years and to permit the Soviets to establish a military base there. In exchange, the Soviet Union would cede Repola and Porajärvi from Eastern Karelia (2120 square miles), an area twice the size as that of the territory demanded from Finland (1000 square miles).[65][70][71]
      *westward to a point only 30 km (19 mi) east of Viipuri*
      What makes you think that the Soviets were going to take control of Helsinki???

    • @perkele2802
      @perkele2802 12 дней назад +5

      ​@@КолтуновСерёга 😂 They did same bs with Baltic countries and what happened to them? They also wanted us destroy our fortifications like Mannerheim line. But sure Ivan, there was nothing tricky in that 😂

    • @КолтуновСерёга
      @КолтуновСерёга 11 дней назад

      @@perkele2802 "They did same bs with Baltic countries and what happened to them? "
      ( The Soviet Union banned the swastika in the Baltic countries. Apparently this upsets you??? )
      Finnish Wikipedia address "Hakaristi"
      =In the 19th and early 20th centuries=
      The Vilnius Commission of the League of Nations chose the swastika as a symbol of peace in the 1920s. In the following decade, Estonia, Finland, and Latvia adopted it as their national symbols.

    • @markohuttunen8625
      @markohuttunen8625 7 дней назад +4

      ​@@КолтуновСерёгаone thing that makes me think they really were going to take Helsinki is... That they said that they are going to take Helsinki?
      Ever heard of Otto Wille Kuusinen, a finnish traitor and quisling, and the Terijoki government?
      Stalin backed puppet who declared the red flag will fly in Helsinki in two weeks? Rings a bell?
      Of course Stalin was about to take whole of Finland. He just couldn't.

  • @anttitheinternetguy3213
    @anttitheinternetguy3213 2 месяца назад +4

    I have my grandad's war diary. He served in JP2 (Jääkäripataljoona 2) through winter- and continuation war. He talked about war only once, and then he only said that he had never seen anyone as brave as a russian soldier, running towards fire to give his life for his country. Here is what he wrote onto the book at the day the war was declared:
    "31-XI-39 13.45. hours
    Today at 11.35 hours there was an air alarm. - We were just informed that ruskies had made air attacks against Finland around Helsinki, Vyborg and elsewhere and they had made infantry attacks around the isthmus. I still do not believe it would be True. - I dont want to believe.
    16.55 hours. Two air alarms during the day. - They told us that ruskies had made several attacks over the Finnish border - so it appears war is a fact. But they also told us that two ruskie airplanes were shot down and that Finnish troops had made an counter attack in the isthmus.
    30-XI-39 - THE WAR IS DECLARED!
    "Ruskies really want to get beaten up" - that is the general mood here in the army. -
    WAR IS NOW A REALITY!
    1.XII-39 at 16 hours only four air alarms.
    Our russian friends have been mighty friendly and understanding for, at least til this point in time, they havent disturbed us even once during our meal time."

    • @juhakorpi8372
      @juhakorpi8372 2 месяца назад +2

      They had rifle behind, no retread...thats why

    • @mabussubam512
      @mabussubam512 2 месяца назад

      @@juhakorpi8372 Debunked already. Try again.

  • @seneca983
    @seneca983 Месяц назад +1

    2:00 Why is Leningrad located in the Kirovsky district?

  • @DrMattBug
    @DrMattBug 24 дня назад +1

    My grandfather fought in the continuation war, and his brother was MIA, never recovered.
    I curse Russia for what it did to him, and the damage it caused to the rest of his life. No support was given to him for trauma of his experiences, and his inability to express himself emotionally except through hidden grief and frustration took its toll on our family.
    I understand why Finns generally might still hold a grudge, and why, especially now, we don't trust anything that comes out of the Russian mouthpiece. We've spent generations preparing for the Russian threat, and nothing has changed.

  • @superchug2469
    @superchug2469 Месяц назад

    Great video loved it.

  • @marceldavis5600
    @marceldavis5600 2 месяца назад +1

    Why is Leningrad so out of place? It is almost at schlissleburg at 2:25

  • @mattbarbarich3295
    @mattbarbarich3295 29 дней назад

    Yay ! 👏 👏 Correct and precise historical borders on the maps, a nice change from slackers who draw present day borders while talking about past events. Lots of great film and pics as well of the time.

  • @Nimzowitz
    @Nimzowitz 5 дней назад

    This is perhaps the most accurate depiction of the Winter War.

  • @jakkeledin4645
    @jakkeledin4645 2 месяца назад +5

    Great Britannia and France was not going to sent anybody. It was full! They didn't do any real thinks that they can sent any in spring. UK has been allways Russians friend and shell Finland.
    They change their " help" to spring because they know that everyday is miracle.

    • @mtlb2674
      @mtlb2674 2 месяца назад

      Actually France was honestly willing to help Finland unlike UK. France donated us 130 fighter planes (only less than 40 were delivered before the war ended). They donated us a lot of other weapons too: machine guns, anti-tank guns etc.

  • @Crocodylan
    @Crocodylan Месяц назад +4

    History repeating itself

  • @joebush1663
    @joebush1663 Месяц назад +12

    I always admired the Finns. They were caught between a rock and a hard place yet still maintained their independence. They fought alongside our sworn enemy because they had no choice.

    • @Vlad79500
      @Vlad79500 17 дней назад

      Who are you trying to fool, yourself?

    • @jaripaananen1363
      @jaripaananen1363 7 дней назад

      @@Vlad79500 Sure your trying To fool yourself.... As an DENIAL.. Thats Why now fasist imperialist russia repeats its Fasist imperialist history again

  • @thilomanten8701
    @thilomanten8701 Месяц назад +4

    So many similarities to todays Ukraine - it is painstakingly obvious!

  • @brendan5813
    @brendan5813 Месяц назад

    Why is lenningrad shown in the wrong location at 2:24?