Otto Skorzeny: The Most Dangerous Man in Europe

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  • Опубликовано: 2 фев 2025

Комментарии • 3,2 тыс.

  • @Biographics
    @Biographics  5 лет назад +251

    Have you checked out my latest channel Business Blaze? It's interesting business stories with a dose of ridiculousness thrown in. Check it out here: ruclips.net/channel/UCYY5GWf7MHFJ6DZeHreoXgw

    • @seanoshea6106
      @seanoshea6106 5 лет назад +3

      Do a video on Friedrich Von Ribbentrop!
      He was killed at the Nuremberg trials for helping begin the war in Europe and ushering in the final solution. He was also my boss' great grandfather.

    • @hddun
      @hddun 5 лет назад

      Will you pay me to watch....I hear Bill Gates is worth $30 Billion so your new gig should pay people to watch then you get rich on the TV rights and revenue stream...

    • @onkelwaldo39
      @onkelwaldo39 4 года назад

      Sean O'Shea Don’t you mean Joachim von Ribbentrop?

    • @seanoshea6106
      @seanoshea6106 4 года назад +1

      @@onkelwaldo39 I mean Ulrich Friedrich Wilhelm Joachim Von Ribbentrop.

    • @onkelwaldo39
      @onkelwaldo39 4 года назад +1

      Sean O'Shea OK, same guy, then, the Nazi foreign minister, history usually mentions him by another of his first names - Joachim.

  • @QuakeNukem
    @QuakeNukem 3 года назад +2094

    This guy played WW2 on the hardest difficulty. How he managed to survive all those incidents is insane.

    • @Otto9393
      @Otto9393 2 года назад +42

      True ! It seems you know me well ! 😊

    • @cdeschrevel5341
      @cdeschrevel5341 2 года назад +38

      And the most legendary part of your reaction is that WWII was only the first level of the game he was playing

    • @MrMancreatedgod
      @MrMancreatedgod 2 года назад +13

      It's sad you can compare anything about ww2 to video game. Check yourself.

    • @MrMancreatedgod
      @MrMancreatedgod 2 года назад

      @@Otto9393 way to idolize a nazi for internet clout. 🙄

    • @SpinConez
      @SpinConez 2 года назад +21

      @@MrMancreatedgod why?

  • @danilo16410
    @danilo16410 5 лет назад +2178

    Possibly "the more dangerous man", but surely "the most dynamic man." His life deserves a movie.

    • @roeng1368
      @roeng1368 5 лет назад +143

      Depends who would make the film, knowing Hollywood they would make a mess of it.

    • @dalhousieDream
      @dalhousieDream 5 лет назад +33

      @@roeng1368 Yes -- Brits should try it.

    • @garyroberts3020
      @garyroberts3020 5 лет назад +6

      Definitely..

    • @jewcanboy
      @jewcanboy 5 лет назад +20

      Johnston Steiner calm down! You don’t need to mention “JEWISH reasons”. If it would be any other race they also probably wouldn’t make a movie about him due to obvious reasons.
      Hollywood makes movies about villains at times... perhaps a netflix documentary.

    • @DevoGaming93
      @DevoGaming93 4 года назад +8

      Literally ending at his funeral, Nazis and Swastikas everywhere and there's Joe just like *otto ded*

  • @twingoliebhaber1873
    @twingoliebhaber1873 3 года назад +2664

    I actually have quite an interesting story from my grandfather about Skorzeny. When he was very young living in Vienna, I’m told my grandfather actually met Skorzeny in a café and they talked. My grandfather said something along the lines of: “Otto, if you are not going to be a special man in the future, I don’t know who is”. Skorzeny replied: “ Stop believing all the bs the people in the RUclips comment section write about supposed stories of their grandpa having met nazi war criminals.”
    End of the story…

    • @DarthVader-ig6ci
      @DarthVader-ig6ci 2 года назад +84

      😂

    • @KidDynamite6
      @KidDynamite6 2 года назад +121

      ya got me lol

    • @smikkelbeer7890
      @smikkelbeer7890 2 года назад +187

      He truly was a man ahead of his time.

    • @xcell_r4thr87
      @xcell_r4thr87 2 года назад +84

      You had us in the first half not gonna lie

    • @sovietalt7489
      @sovietalt7489 2 года назад +29

      Wow, did that really happen? I didn't think they had RUclips or anything in the 1990s? And isn't Vienna in Paris, Germany is on the other side of the world

  • @ImplodedAtom
    @ImplodedAtom 5 лет назад +4817

    This dude makes James Bond look like Johnny English!

    • @eddiesanchez1899
      @eddiesanchez1899 5 лет назад +299

      Hans Willwiedermett Johnny English knows no fear. He knows no danger. He knows... nothing

    • @hddun
      @hddun 5 лет назад +52

      Funny you mention James Bond. I remember the day the Bond movie Skyfall opened in theaters. I was thinking of going when Obama came on TV to say our SEALS had killed Osama Bin Laden. I thought damn this Bond guy kills low lifes while the REAL HEROES are killing Bin Laden most hated man in the world.

    • @ImplodedAtom
      @ImplodedAtom 5 лет назад +10

      Love these replies! 😂

    • @hddun
      @hddun 5 лет назад +18

      @Hans Willwiedermett Dude, I remember a TV series where Bean played as a Captain (British) in the World War One...too funny--much satire--

    • @jcrhea001
      @jcrhea001 4 года назад +31

      @@hddun Skyfall came out a year and a half after Osama was killied.

  • @LancasterResponding
    @LancasterResponding 4 года назад +1630

    “WHO DO YOU WORK FOR?!?”
    “Everyone.”

    • @ThunderBunny30
      @ThunderBunny30 4 года назад +19

      It would be shorter if he made a list of those he didn't work for in Europe / Mediterranean.

    • @HelmutVonZeche
      @HelmutVonZeche 4 года назад +32

      More like: Who do you work for?
      Otto Skorzeny: Yes.

    • @cvek21
      @cvek21 4 года назад +6

      For everyone haha,

    •  3 года назад +1

      Do you wanna know how I got this scar? You see my Father was a German...

    • @robertbohnaker9898
      @robertbohnaker9898 3 года назад +12

      …It depends. Who’s winning ? 😂🤣😅

  • @M4ruta
    @M4ruta 4 года назад +479

    Skorzeny being recruited by the Mossad is my favorite espionage story ever.

    • @walterweiss7124
      @walterweiss7124 4 года назад +2

      you probably never heard of Krystyna Skarbek

    • @M4ruta
      @M4ruta 4 года назад +17

      @@walterweiss7124 I had not, in fact. But judging from her wikipedia entry, she was a wicked piece of work herself. Thanks for the heads-up!

    • @walterweiss7124
      @walterweiss7124 4 года назад +1

      @@M4ruta they say she was Fleming's inspiration for Bond

    • @poo-tinthedwarfbunkerb1tch535
      @poo-tinthedwarfbunkerb1tch535 3 года назад +12

      @@walterweiss7124Except she wasn't...

    • @black_hand78
      @black_hand78 2 года назад +3

      @@walterweiss7124 no they don’t lol. Flemings inspiration was Serbian Secret Service agent Dusko Popov. Many people also confuse Sir Christopher Lee with being Flemings inspiration but that just isn’t the case.

  • @sas2300
    @sas2300 5 лет назад +1852

    I would agree he was very dangerous, he appears to have worked all sides with some of the most dangerous intelligence services in the world and yet still made it to old age. He was clearly a master of disinformation and was likely never killed because no one appears to know who he really worked for and also because he was likely a bit of a badass and not easy to kill.

    • @Noobie2k7
      @Noobie2k7 4 года назад +95

      That and he avoided being killed by always being of use alive to somebody.

    • @paulheap1982
      @paulheap1982 4 года назад +44

      @@Noobie2k7 you basically said what he said, but simified.

    • @laszlogman2545
      @laszlogman2545 4 года назад +28

      He was not killed because he had no flag, they respected what he did, he went after the Communist and the bad guys. Even though he was a Nazi.

    •  3 года назад +1

      @@Noobie2k7 Just like Thomas the Train Engine if you're always Really Useful then they won't send you to the scrap yard.

    • @davidsmithson865
      @davidsmithson865 3 года назад +4

      You have to admit that this guy never gave up! Smarter than the average bear, what a story!

  • @tophatproductions3031
    @tophatproductions3031 5 лет назад +2883

    You know Skorzeny was interesting by the fact that his SS career and WW2 is barely half the video.

    • @philippvoid1800
      @philippvoid1800 5 лет назад +59

      he did manage to kill half a million people in those few minutes thou

    • @Saskmopar
      @Saskmopar 5 лет назад +64

      Fairly certain that Otto was pivotal in the CIA's psyop Phoenix Program during the Vietnam war. The Phoenix Program being the grandfather to tactics used by the CIA's torture program in the Middle East.
      He has also been implicated to be involved in NATO's stat behind army(s) to fight against Soviet encroachment, an operation known as Operation Gladio.
      And, if recall correctly, he was a pivotal character in the creation of the Green Berets and its operational procedures.

    • @Saskmopar
      @Saskmopar 5 лет назад +22

      I should also note as an aside that Dick Cheney(and possibly Donald Rumsfeld, I'll have to double check that) was involved in the Phoenix Program.
      Many, many ties between Nazis and the Executive(ordered) alphabet agencies of the US.

    • @joelbento3599
      @joelbento3599 5 лет назад +4

      @Nick with no last name he kind of was since he fucked up the latter leader because he didn't wanted to do it.
      but it's ok people doesn't need to be good to be interesting.

    • @tristanburton3554
      @tristanburton3554 5 лет назад +9

      If wss a American of German heritage and born in the modern era, he probably would have been a navy seal, lol.

  • @oscar_eslava_
    @oscar_eslava_ 4 года назад +608

    Here's a family anecqdote: my father met in person with Skorzeny when he was a boy. Skorzeny came several times to my granny's aunt home, in Madrid, for picking his wife, who went there for the testing of bespoke dressings sewed by them - they run a home-based tailoring business for posh ladies. My father is a tall man (1,85m) and was a tall teenager, but he claims to have been impressed by the imponent stature of this guy.

    • @walterweiss7124
      @walterweiss7124 4 года назад +28

      1,85m might be tall for a sothern European, but not for a central European

    • @oscar_eslava_
      @oscar_eslava_ 4 года назад +40

      @@walterweiss7124 Indeed. Especially in the 50's! I'm myself 1,89 and everytime I visit Germany I have a taste of what must feel for my fellow average spaniards around me when my head pops up in the subway train.

    • @derdude8201
      @derdude8201 3 года назад +9

      I‘m 1,86m living in Germany. It’s not very tall here. 2m and more is tall...

    • @dangster010
      @dangster010 3 года назад +16

      I'm dutch 1,95m tall and there are lots of ppl here on the street that are taller or just as tall as me. We must be fucking giants over here

    • @jonathonruane5060
      @jonathonruane5060 3 года назад +9

      @@dangster010 I think I did hear that the Dutch are the tallest people on average, passed down from the Frisian people who were known for their height.

  • @HollerScholar
    @HollerScholar 5 лет назад +1313

    Gotta admit, that scar is badass.

    • @skankhunt-zh8ky
      @skankhunt-zh8ky 5 лет назад +44

      That's the first thing i thought lol

    • @alexeajames4200
      @alexeajames4200 5 лет назад +22

      Mr.Cleanydeezy And it makes him looks sexy AF... Nazi or not. Just saying 😈🤘

    • @brendanaschaubine8180
      @brendanaschaubine8180 5 лет назад +22

      People still do this in Austria - it's the first sign someone is a nazi/Deutsch national. (most)girls don't think that's sexy

    • @TheWolvesCurse
      @TheWolvesCurse 5 лет назад +43

      back in the day a "schmiss" or more formally "rennomier schmiss" was a sing of a guy being good "wedding material" as it was a sign of higher education and manlyness.

    • @tallthinkev
      @tallthinkev 5 лет назад +16

      But not as badass as the man who gave it to him

  • @ARIXANDRE
    @ARIXANDRE 5 лет назад +1251

    No joke or spoilers. This might be one of the most fascinating episodes in Biographics.

    • @CaptainGyro
      @CaptainGyro 5 лет назад +17

      I concur. Skorzeny was probably the inspiration for Nike's motto, "Just Do It".

    • @gipsydanger7379
      @gipsydanger7379 5 лет назад +14

      You should read The Devils Disciple. It's a fantastic book on him. He was a fascinating character.

    • @TechnoLion1
      @TechnoLion1 5 лет назад +1

      Abbey Roadster **This might be one of he most fascinating episodes in Biographics**

    • @Mr379789
      @Mr379789 5 лет назад +1

      Actually, I was expecting smth more because of the fact that he was not very successful during the Nazi operations

  • @lunadomenico1049
    @lunadomenico1049 4 года назад +138

    How on earth nobody never made a film about this man's life,it will be truly an epic.

    • @puhpuh3037
      @puhpuh3037 4 года назад +23

      Nazism doesn't market very well.

    • @pimplepickerton
      @pimplepickerton 2 года назад +15

      @@puhpuh3037 says who? I beg to differ.

    • @johnmason1239
      @johnmason1239 Год назад +2

      The whole of Germany in WW2 when millions of disabled& minorities obviously”disappeared.” Are we the bad guys??? 😅🤦‍♂️😘

    • @MatewanMassacre
      @MatewanMassacre Год назад

      Especially, if we consider all of the Nazi sympathizers that inhabit, or have worked in, Hollywood.
      I'm shocked, too, that they have yet to make a film glorifying this scumbag.

    • @Mshi-
      @Mshi- Год назад +2

      @@puhpuh3037who cares?

  • @trankt54155
    @trankt54155 5 лет назад +520

    This man was in it for the thrill and survived until his old age.

    • @renataostertag6051
      @renataostertag6051 3 года назад +4

      "Old age"?! He died at age 67! 67 is hardly old - it is middle-aged. "Old age" is when a person is over 90.

    • @trankt54155
      @trankt54155 3 года назад +34

      @@renataostertag6051 That was mid 20th century......not 21st century 2021 mate...

    • @renataostertag6051
      @renataostertag6051 3 года назад +1

      @@trankt54155 So? Back then people lived even longer because they did not have to deal with all this "modern" stress.

    • @DogDogGodFog
      @DogDogGodFog 3 года назад +6

      @@renataostertag6051 Dude living past 90 is rare even if nothing happens to you, too many old age complications to take into account

    • @sinbad5715
      @sinbad5715 3 года назад +12

      @@renataostertag6051 Even in 2021, the average lifespan is 70.
      He died 3 years before that.
      Life expectancy actually doesn't count accidents,suicide or any kind of deaths that arent natural.
      If you were to count every death and see the average atleast most people die before 45.
      Living till 67 is an incridible achievement

  • @chrisd2051
    @chrisd2051 5 лет назад +1519

    My friend: "Avengers is the most ambitious crossover event in history."
    Otto Skorzeny: "Hold my bier."

    • @slick8038
      @slick8038 5 лет назад +33

      Mein bier

    • @user-vp9zw8is3o
      @user-vp9zw8is3o 5 лет назад +17

      Otto Skorzeny:"james - hol schon mal den wagen." oder wer immer da gespielt hat.

    • @taomane3949
      @taomane3949 4 года назад +8

      Otto: Hold my bag of Jewish scalps

    • @gerarduspoppel2831
      @gerarduspoppel2831 4 года назад +2

      Weet nu gelijk dat je Nederlands bent. Bier.

    • @SM-qo9gr
      @SM-qo9gr 4 года назад +1

      @@slick8038 und Bratwurst

  • @syphon4671
    @syphon4671 3 года назад +641

    "So Otto, you participated in Barbarossa?"
    "Das Reich"

  • @melvinshelton8448
    @melvinshelton8448 5 лет назад +617

    I once read a biography of Otto Skorzeny, formerly an officer of the Waffen SS, German Third Reich. It was entitled, "Commando Extraordinary", written sometime in the 1960s, and may by now be out of print. At any rate, the writing was done after WW-II, when Skorzeny was living in Madrid. He was interviewed at least once by the author, and the book was written with his personal cooperation. Its title was "Commando Extraordinary". I don't remember who wrote it (I was a kid.), but it was well-written. I thought It was clear that the author had to an extent fallen under the Skorzeny's charm, which was known to be exceptional. He described his first meeting with Skorzeny, who arrived late for the meeting, apologizing for his tardiness. The author arose from the table, arm outstretched for a handshake. As he did so, he noticed that many of the other diners had paused in their meals, staring blatantly up at Skorzeny as he passed. The author admits, somewhat grudgingly, "And so, from my six feet, did I." Skorzeny is described as standing between 6'3" and 6'4" tall.
    Startlingly, he denies ever having been an ardent Nazi. Instead, he states that he saw himself as an ardent anticommunist, and if that constituted being a Nazi, then he had always been a Nazi, and he still was. He was proud of having been in the Waffen SS, which he completely dissociated from the heavily, if not totally, SS-run concentration camps. He dismissed those SS members linked to them simply as executioners. I got the impression that he was contemptuous of them, but his feelings toward them, and Hitler, are not recorded.
    The vid does not describe many of Skorzeny's postwar activities, e.g., his purely combat actions in Vietnam against the Viet Minh/Viet Cong, whom he describes as "the same enemy in a different uniform", but describes the French Foreign Legionnaires (who were in Vietnam before Americans were involved there), as "magnificent fighters". He describes, with obvious pride, using the communists' own tactics against them, and winning. For example, he would tie the families of the enemy to his tanks to stop their attacks, goading them to utter impotent fury at their inability to do anything about it but stop fighting and go home.
    He is contemptuous of South Vietnamese soldiers.
    Period.
    Having seen this vid, which I think is also very well done, it is interesting to compare the book and the vid, and see what each leaves out of picture. The book doesn't mention his pride in the third world army troopers he trained after the war. His describes them, before training as useless. After training, he says simply, "You could incorporate the into any army in the world, without further drilling".
    The vid includes a far larger account of Skorzeny's interactions with the German Army brass, and in passing, with Hitler himself.. But most importantly, the vid describes the virtually unbelievable range of countries and organizations for which he conducted clandestine operations at the close of the war, and afterward. I didn't take notes. But they included the Mossad (Israel) and the NKVD (USSR). As for the OSS (USA), again, surprisingly, not much of anything.
    I think the grand total of espionage customers he had was somewhere around nine or ten. He must have worked like a banshee screams. He may have been a grandmaster at time management. It seems that much, or most, or all of these jobs must have been done simultaneously. Maybe he just didn't breathe, and I don't recall any reference to a family.
    I am a psychiatrist and a neuropsychologist. I would like to have had
    his only client, l sometimes merely the most important. For a while, I wondered whether he had ever felt empathy, or even sympathy, for another person. MAYBE HE DID: He didn't kill the villagers he had kidnapped and used as shields. He let them go home. MAYBE HE DIDN'T: He didn't kill his hostage families after the battle was won. But he didn't need to; it would accomplish nothing other than further uniting the furious enemy fighters, and pissing them off even further, maybe even to the the point of death by proxy, in battle. 0
    This man was like an onion: a little deeper, and you will find something completely different.

    • @user-vp9zw8is3o
      @user-vp9zw8is3o 5 лет назад +5

      frohe weihnachten - melvin

    • @blueberrymcphuckerson9821
      @blueberrymcphuckerson9821 5 лет назад +26

      I think you can get the book on Amazon. A book about him with that title was made by an author Charles Foley.

    • @TheLyraki1
      @TheLyraki1 5 лет назад +2

      you can also buy his own book.Very interesting to read.

    • @1958Shemp
      @1958Shemp 4 года назад +44

      @Ben Siener The guy's whole career could be summed-up thus: "Which way is the wind blowing? To whom could I be useful and profit from?"

    • @Mikhail-Tkachenko
      @Mikhail-Tkachenko 4 года назад +10

      He had layers like an ogre. I mean onion.

  • @4BCJesus
    @4BCJesus 5 лет назад +3920

    We need to get Otto Skorzeny on Joe Rogan.

    • @cheknecht3092
      @cheknecht3092 5 лет назад +63

      JR had Tim Kennedy on his show and he talked about Otto Skorzeny.

    • @andrewmacdonnell4536
      @andrewmacdonnell4536 5 лет назад +152

      Joe: Otto, bro, ever smoke DMT?

    • @jduff59
      @jduff59 5 лет назад +4

      Good shout, I'd love to see it

    • @owenedwards9807
      @owenedwards9807 5 лет назад +34

      Hasn't he had enough Nazi sympathisers on his show?

    • @BamaChad-W4CHD
      @BamaChad-W4CHD 5 лет назад +133

      @@owenedwards9807 that's pointless to say. He has a huge variety of people on his show. He has the good and the bad. He is better than all mainstream media. At least he shows different sides of things instead of pushing one agenda down our throat. Well he does push the legalize pot thing very hard lol

  • @avamasquerade
    @avamasquerade 3 года назад +92

    I genuinely don't understand how one person can simultaneously have dead eyes and also the eyes of someone who will never die....it's baffling...

  • @friendlyatheist387
    @friendlyatheist387 5 лет назад +757

    Me: who do you work for?
    Otto: yes

    • @moongoat7863
      @moongoat7863 4 года назад +7

      how ironic im jobless, my name is otto, i had a hedgehog also named otto and you have a hedgehog as a pfp.... wtf

  • @Ehsan793
    @Ehsan793 5 лет назад +747

    He most employed guy in europe.

    • @nativeson3365
      @nativeson3365 4 года назад +12

      😁😁 And also the most overworked guy

    • @danialyousaf6456
      @danialyousaf6456 4 года назад +23

      Johnny sins : "finally ! A worthy opponent. Our battle will be legendary !"

    • @konradhomiak3700
      @konradhomiak3700 4 года назад +4

      Danial Yousaf congrats. Tonight you have captured the award of the best thing I’ve seen this week.

    • @danialyousaf6456
      @danialyousaf6456 4 года назад +2

      @@konradhomiak3700 thanks man.

    • @Shareefhamida
      @Shareefhamida 4 года назад

      Lol!!!

  • @sisterspooky
    @sisterspooky 3 года назад +18

    Surprisingly, with the copious amount of documentaries I’ve watched about WWII, the literature I’ve read about WWII, and the various news reels I’ve seen from WWII - I’ve never heard of this guy. Thanks @Biographics for sharing this!

  • @skyden24195
    @skyden24195 5 лет назад +852

    CIA: "Can you work for us?"
    Skorzeny: "You know I'm a little too busy."

    • @paulfrantizek102
      @paulfrantizek102 5 лет назад +35

      The only reason I didn't like this is that there are already 88 upvotes.

    • @ehrldawg
      @ehrldawg 5 лет назад +2

      LOL !!!

    • @ChristianAuditore14
      @ChristianAuditore14 5 лет назад +9

      He probably did work for them too

    • @htx92
      @htx92 5 лет назад +1

      The only reason I didn't like this is that it's stupid.

    • @padraig5335
      @padraig5335 5 лет назад +2

      @@paulfrantizek102 Can't change yours. You have 14

  • @HistoryExplained
    @HistoryExplained 5 лет назад +833

    Think you know everything about the letter T?
    That’s just the half of IT.

    • @RichMitch
      @RichMitch 5 лет назад +5

      Get it

    • @trigger_once
      @trigger_once 5 лет назад +7

      ok This joke fiTs Too well.

    • @ahuddleston6512
      @ahuddleston6512 5 лет назад +5

      Awesome

    • @CorbCorbin
      @CorbCorbin 5 лет назад +4

      “But, that’s only half of IT.”
      This is how a grammar teacher told it when I was a kid.

    • @ugoeze7360
      @ugoeze7360 5 лет назад +6

      I see what you did there

  • @dangerouswater
    @dangerouswater 5 лет назад +271

    Funniest conversation in history:
    Eichmann: "Mossad is headhunting me..."
    Skorzeny: "Me too..."

    • @aidengoosemorey3499
      @aidengoosemorey3499 4 года назад +1

      @Le Naker and afterwards, he helped America in Vietnam

    • @toddwilliamson5580
      @toddwilliamson5580 4 года назад +21

      Fun fact : after the war ended, the Israeli Mossad recruited him in order to help hunt down Nazi war criminals who escaped to South America after the war.
      The guy was the definition of mercenary.
      He had no side.
      He only fought wars and carried out raids, and undercover operations because of the sheer fun of it, but also because he cared about how much it pays.

    • @68majortom
      @68majortom 4 года назад +10

      @@toddwilliamson5580 the last interview I saw with Skorzeney he said "I'm still a proud National Socialist & wouldn't change a thing" working for the Israelis nah no chance!!!

    • @duckduck168
      @duckduck168 4 года назад +7

      @@68majortom You should look into how Zionists and National Socialists actually did work together... Zionists used the NS to increase their numbers in Palestine so they could eventually create Israel, which Hitler supported.

    • @NickB1967
      @NickB1967 3 года назад +14

      @@toddwilliamson5580 "Better to have him inside the tent pissing out than outside the tent pissing in...." - what the Mossad must have been thinking, to paraphrase LBJ.

  • @MeganChic
    @MeganChic 5 лет назад +439

    Sounds like a real life James Bond. He’s not in it for the money just the adrenaline rush.

    • @-VAJRA-
      @-VAJRA- 3 года назад +5

      Just to survive

    • @krh5081
      @krh5081 2 года назад +2

      You're thinking of Christopher Lee.

    • @idek8718
      @idek8718 Год назад

      google dusko popov, james bond is literally based off of him, he was a triple spy during ww2

    • @MatewanMassacre
      @MatewanMassacre Год назад

      In it to kill, and be a state-backed criminal.

  • @Braeden123698745
    @Braeden123698745 4 года назад +586

    CIA "Lets use a Nazi, he's not an ex-Nazi, still totally a Nazi, to kidnap the leader of a sovereign nation."
    JFK: "Yeah we're not gonna do that..."

    • @paulbrancato7729
      @paulbrancato7729 4 года назад +9

      Do you have a source for that? Serious question - I’m not dissing you.

    • @rickmathews6044
      @rickmathews6044 4 года назад +5

      @NibiruLives i believe this either alone or a big conspiracy but they definitely played a part

    • @mechadonia
      @mechadonia 4 года назад +43

      And then he got 360 noscoped by Oswald

    • @FALslayer
      @FALslayer 4 года назад +15

      Operation Paperclip was formed by the CIC which invited and extracted high nazi officials to use them for their selfish capitalist gains. Look at Werner-von-bruan

    • @Noobie2k7
      @Noobie2k7 4 года назад +18

      @@FALslayer I mean it's just smart practice really. You've already won the war, there's really no logical reason to not try to recruit as many of the most competent or intelligent members of the losing side. Yeah, this was often done in incredibly immoral or legally questionable ways but it's still just common sense. Plus in a lot of cases the Nazi's were just people loyal to their country doing a job and looking out for themselves. So once they lost there's no reason to not be allowed to continue doing what they've been doing just for someone else.

  • @phillipbrewster6058
    @phillipbrewster6058 5 лет назад +200

    So it sounds like he became a double quadruple octagonal agent!

  • @boxogoxo3899
    @boxogoxo3899 5 лет назад +366

    Tito was such a badass even Otto Skorzeny couldn't kill him

    • @zoltancsikos5604
      @zoltancsikos5604 5 лет назад +7

      Nimar X He was a joke.

    • @martinheretics2645
      @martinheretics2645 5 лет назад +9

      @@zoltancsikos5604 Better then, your Horthy....by finishing rollover in the carpet :-D & sent to mandatory holidays in Bavaria....

    • @meranzo8665
      @meranzo8665 5 лет назад +7

      Even he came to funeral of him

    • @dabome4001
      @dabome4001 4 года назад +16

      not only Otto,but one much more dangerous guy called Mustafa Golubić

    • @laszlogman2545
      @laszlogman2545 4 года назад

      Yes , he was

  • @acerbicatheist2893
    @acerbicatheist2893 4 года назад +46

    It was Otto's paratroopers that were the inspiration for David Stirling to model the nascent SAS upon; mobile, skilled, and capable of improvisation around any basic plan with great flexibility to ensure success with a very small number of men. Skorzeny wasn't happy with the high profile he'd attained because it prevented him from getting proper medical care for the cancer that ultimately killed him. A most remarkable man and a most remarkable life.

    • @paigetomkinson1137
      @paigetomkinson1137 2 года назад +10

      That's a bit confusing, as the SAS was formed in 1941 North Africa by the incredible David Stirling, and Otto's team not until 1943.

    • @ToreDL87
      @ToreDL87 Год назад +1

      @@paigetomkinson1137 Yeah I'd sooner expect it to be the other way around.

  • @sammorgan1963
    @sammorgan1963 4 года назад +38

    Great stuff and very informative.
    My father WWII veteran James T. Morgan, 100 years old, passed 25 March 2020. After WWII he was a CIC agent. During the 1940s he operated in New York City. Later 1951-58 we were a spy family in Bavaria. As a young boy met famous and infamous people in our German home. To me they were dad's friends. Dad was aware of Skorzeny but not his play pen, I think.
    You mentioned JFK. In 1963 some one tipped off the CIC about a hit. My father most definitely is not Secret Service. Yet, for several days he and another trusted agent Al, "took Kennedy's limo apart." They were looking for 'bugs and bombs.' I asked, last year, who ordered you to to do this? He replied, "I can't remember." I said , dad why was the CIC trying to protect Kennedy? He said, "orders from above."
    Bye-the-way, dad 'encountered' Skorzeny and friends during the Battle of the Bulge.

  • @rebelliousnature4795
    @rebelliousnature4795 5 лет назад +239

    15:45 This level of research is why I love this channel, deep digging and fact checking, superb, you guys are awesome, thanks for all you do!

    • @rvanhees89
      @rvanhees89 5 лет назад +15

      Yeah..... no. This is wikipedia level research, and they make a lot of mistakes in their videos that are really clumsy and lazy

    • @joevenespineli6389
      @joevenespineli6389 5 лет назад +8

      @@rvanhees89 These videos aren't supposed to be substitutes for actual research

    • @dadadannn
      @dadadannn 5 лет назад +7

      These videos are pretty much paraphrases of Wikipedia pages

    • @rvanhees89
      @rvanhees89 5 лет назад +1

      @@joevenespineli6389 tell that to the rest of the flock lol

    • @arnaldoteodorani277
      @arnaldoteodorani277 5 лет назад +1

      Nick with no last name Actually the video does not say that Skorzeny deported Hungarian Jews. That simply wasn’t his job. He simply participated in the removal of Horthy. According to the video it was Horthy’s successors who did the deporting.

  • @sorcererberoll4641
    @sorcererberoll4641 4 года назад +136

    Ah the guy who couldn’t be put on trail without making the allies seem like humongous hypocrites

    • @aickavon
      @aickavon 4 года назад +51

      "YOU WORE ENEMY UNIFORMS!"
      "So... did... you?"

    • @jamesavery3559
      @jamesavery3559 4 года назад +9

      did the same thing with karl doenitz.

    • @wallykloubek4079
      @wallykloubek4079 4 года назад +25

      The Americans executed several Germans for operating behind their lines in American uniforms...He and his men survived because their lawyers brought forth evidence that the allies had done the same....yes, hypocrites....cheers🍷🇨🇦

  • @mcmasters1484
    @mcmasters1484 5 лет назад +612

    “So you’re telling me hitler put him in charge of a tank division”
    “Das Reich”
    2:05

    • @matmat3126
      @matmat3126 5 лет назад +11

      Colton Barta that was a good one

    • @joshjwillway1545
      @joshjwillway1545 5 лет назад +6

      Nice one

    • @machida58
      @machida58 5 лет назад +4

      SSSHHHIZAAAAAAAAA

    • @machida58
      @machida58 5 лет назад +6

      The dank division

    • @AbtinX
      @AbtinX 5 лет назад +2

      I don't understand. Am I too old?

  • @dulio12385
    @dulio12385 5 лет назад +118

    Otto Skorzeny: The poster boy for multi-class employment.

  • @JagerLange
    @JagerLange 4 года назад +82

    "He jumped into Iran packed with gold and explosives"
    Ouch.

  • @anthony777100
    @anthony777100 5 лет назад +135

    Netflix needs to make a show about this guy's life.

    • @shaunmattice6413
      @shaunmattice6413 5 лет назад +3

      @@flemishnatsoc3152 Idiot.

    • @UlfhedinnNorsk
      @UlfhedinnNorsk 5 лет назад +2

      Shaun Mattice Is this guy for real?🤦🏻‍♂️

    • @UlfhedinnNorsk
      @UlfhedinnNorsk 5 лет назад

      tess sanders 😂 What’s an “ant-American”? Like an Ant- man American?

    • @stever6894
      @stever6894 5 лет назад +1

      ​@@flemishnatsoc3152: Every time you spew that nonsense, your lack of education becomes evident to everyone. Wasn't the appreciation and frequent use of your literacy something they encouraged in you on a regular basis? Or did they just plop you down in front of a television?

    • @kcbh24
      @kcbh24 5 лет назад

      @marios gianopoulos don't you just love the smell of anti-Semitic trolls in the morning? Makes it easier to track and report them.
      Bye, you hateful slug.

  • @philippeszwarcbart6507
    @philippeszwarcbart6507 3 года назад +15

    “You help us out German scientists in Egypt and we won’t kill you”
    “Ok”

  • @b.w.22
    @b.w.22 5 лет назад +189

    After this guy was captured, my grandfather was tasked to interrogate him for the first time. According to my grandad, he was crazy intimidating in person.

    • @Fors3s
      @Fors3s 2 года назад +12

      very true..

    • @Balrog-tf3bg
      @Balrog-tf3bg 2 года назад +7

      Your grandad came out of that room being the one who was interrogated

    • @idontcareidontcare901
      @idontcareidontcare901 Год назад +5

      Sure definitely believe you..😐

    • @b.w.22
      @b.w.22 Год назад

      @@idontcareidontcare901 - Well, you can look him up yourself. His name was Stuyvesant Wainwright II, was in the early OSS but later transferred to the intelligence section of the First Army which was a sort of front for his work on Project Ultra for which he was interviewed in Stephen Ambrose’s book “Ike’s Spies.” I wish he spoke more about his role in WW2 but he was reticent about it - to Ambrose he said it was down to how the US only restricted discussing specifics for like 20 years while the British had sworn him to secrecy forever with the joking(?) threat to cut off the balls of anyone who discussed any of it: Ultra was based around the use of actionable intelligence gotten from intercepted and decrypted Enigma transmissions.
      After he left the Army, he completed his studies at Yale Law and after that served for four terms in Congress representing New York’s 1st district. A little bio of him is maintained on Congress’ website.
      So yeah, that Skorzeny anecdote isn’t going to come up in a search, but he definitely wasn’t the sort to make up things. My sister seems to think he had Skorzeny’s belt around somewhere, but I never saw that. I was, however, taught to shoot with the Browning Hi-power he got of an SS officer he had to eliminate.

    • @idontcareidontcare901
      @idontcareidontcare901 Год назад

      @@b.w.22 where to search?

  • @ahuddleston6512
    @ahuddleston6512 5 лет назад +28

    This is one channel I know I can give a thumbs up even before watching it.

    • @bobbrown3667
      @bobbrown3667 5 лет назад

      I wish I could give more than one thumbed up 😀

  • @Renee2day598
    @Renee2day598 4 года назад +18

    Thank you!! Another well documented video! Skorzeny definitely had an interesting life, to say the least!
    Keep up the great work you do, Simon & all who are involved with Biographics! Cheers!

  • @fleetcenturion
    @fleetcenturion 5 лет назад +64

    5:19 - It wasn't to steal anyone's thunder. Skorzeny says in his memoirs that had Mussolini somehow not made it back, he would have had to commit suicide. This is why he flew in the plane with Mussolini the entire way, even though it was only designed for one person.

    • @paigetomkinson1137
      @paigetomkinson1137 2 года назад +4

      Inspite of the pilot telling him he couldn't fly with them because it would make the flight more dangerous with the extra weight? Interesting.

    • @Valmontst
      @Valmontst 23 дня назад

      It is well established that he embellished almost everything he said about his war stories. If you read up about the mission, he was not even supposed to have gone on it in the first place. He basically bullied several of the paratroopers, already on one of the gliders, to get off so that he and several of his men could take their places. Remember, he had two superiors over him. He was not supposed to go back in the plane, as there was a strict weight limit, but once again he bullied his weight onto the plane. It was obvious he wanted all the publicity as he had even brought along his own photographer and biographer.All of these bits and pieces can be found in other videos on RUclips about his life.

    • @fleetcenturion
      @fleetcenturion 23 дня назад

      @@Valmontst - You said pretty much exactly what I did, only you added the word, "bullied." As the Officer in Charge, he had both the right, and the responsibility to go. I can already tell you never read his account of the mission.
      Skorzeny was adamant about leading every mission personally, except for a rescue mission into Russia, from which he was expressly forbidden.
      Had he set out to embelish his exploits as you say he did, then he would have done more bragging about how smoothly the operations went, rather than how his commandos were forced to deal with unplanned events, and gross incompetence.
      There also would have been several sequels, which he had ample time to write, until his death in 1975.

    • @fleetcenturion
      @fleetcenturion 23 дня назад

      @@paigetomkinson1137 - Well, that pilot was Mussolini himself. It was built for one. 😄 Mussolini had some serious skills and credentials, which are often forgotten.

  • @urosbozanic
    @urosbozanic 5 лет назад +27

    I just want y'all to know that I was here when the title read : "Otto Skorzeny: he Most Dangerous Man in Europe" . You have been blessed with this knowledge, use it wisely!

    • @RichMitch
      @RichMitch 5 лет назад +3

      Whatever happens to us, this knowledge will on. Like voyager or that jet fuel can't melt steel beams

    • @urosbozanic
      @urosbozanic 5 лет назад +2

      @@RichMitch That was beautifully said Mr. Rich Mitch! May this knowledge never die!

  • @primecoconut4204
    @primecoconut4204 4 года назад +97

    I bet this guy lectures the CIA, KGB and Mossad on how to be a 'proper' agent and he might have played a bigger role in the Cold War. Despite him being a Nazi and an SS, I respect him for doing his profession well above all

    • @pool2587
      @pool2587 3 года назад

      murdered tesla too

    • @Matthew-hb9ff
      @Matthew-hb9ff 2 года назад

      As a veteran, great leaders are not without faults. Dude was bad ass , just like Rommel

  • @jaimebruno7595
    @jaimebruno7595 2 года назад +6

    My dad met him, when he worked in a popular Bank, in Madrid ( in the early 60's). He attended Otto several times, and he can remember his scar and that strong austrian accent ( always very elegant). A lot of transfers, money etc ( ODESSA? Israel ?)

  • @MrDoYouKnowMe2211
    @MrDoYouKnowMe2211 5 лет назад +538

    he protecc
    he attacc
    but most importantly
    he most dangerous man in europe

    • @joevines3428
      @joevines3428 5 лет назад +11

      Boo you should be ashamed of yourself.

    • @skizzik121
      @skizzik121 5 лет назад +25

      Nah this is fantastic

    • @shooketh7285
      @shooketh7285 5 лет назад +3

      Lolololol

    • @evilubuntu9001
      @evilubuntu9001 5 лет назад +4

      The meme is dead. Please let it die.

    • @poponachtschnecke
      @poponachtschnecke 5 лет назад +1

      @@evilubuntu9001 he report of my death was an exaggeration

  • @meloniejen8400
    @meloniejen8400 5 лет назад +416

    Biographics:
    he entire comment section:

  • @torqueamerican4319
    @torqueamerican4319 4 года назад +69

    FANTASTIC true story - but you tell it so well... Otto Skorzeny's life needs to be a Hollywood film... wow

    • @patw8333
      @patw8333 4 года назад +12

      Hollywood would ruin his life's story

    • @tylersavage9173
      @tylersavage9173 2 года назад

      @@patw8333 well not only that.. he was a nazi. The very fact of that alone would suggest that his life story portrayed through a Hollywood lense, wouldn’t stand a chance of being factual and unbiased. Consisting of fact and fact only.. It’d probably come out more like a lib-tard propaganda film lol making him out to be exclusively pure evil. Rather than taking away emphasis from his nazi membership, portraying his whole life story, and leaving the judgment of character and sum of actions to the viewer. Because there was a whole lot more to this dude than the 3rd Reich. While nazis obviously aren’t cool or socially acceptable to side with, let’s face it, this dude was was a badass lol

  • @vindobonaification
    @vindobonaification 5 лет назад +286

    Otto Skorzeny's career: embracing diversity decades before the millenials.

  • @ernstvanstangl1048
    @ernstvanstangl1048 5 лет назад +75

    Film worthy bloke! He's always been intriguing to me.

  • @MrTom-xk5vh
    @MrTom-xk5vh 4 года назад +7

    I sometimes find your pieces a bit “light” in substance, but this one was great. Best to date. I am impressed how much content you crank (read) out every day.

  • @yeezyyankie324
    @yeezyyankie324 2 года назад +5

    Dude watched a James bond movie and thought:
    I should try that out

  • @ajay4319
    @ajay4319 2 года назад +8

    This guy deserves a movie or a series of his own

  • @PeterMasalski93
    @PeterMasalski93 4 года назад +70

    Skill Level:
    I'm too young to die
    Hey, not too rough
    Hurt me plenty
    Ultra-Violence
    Nightmare!
    Otto Skorzeny!

    • @miltongroppojunior146
      @miltongroppojunior146 3 года назад

      You are getting old mate, and so all other who liked your "doomed" comment (myself included).

    • @adamusso_tk
      @adamusso_tk 2 года назад

      Underrated comnent!

  • @xGaLoSx
    @xGaLoSx 3 года назад +14

    I've been watching WWII videos on youtube for 15 years and there always seems to be another amazing story i haven't discovered yet. That war was so packed with extraordinary events, it's mind boggling.

    • @projektkobra2247
      @projektkobra2247 2 года назад

      You can never know all there is to know about WW2.

  • @trainknut
    @trainknut 5 лет назад +118

    The dude's name sounds like a mix of a generic German bad guy and a generic Russian bad guy, of course he's gonna be the most dangerous man.

    • @theprofesser2618
      @theprofesser2618 3 года назад +6

      Not Russ, East Prussian.

    • @renataostertag6051
      @renataostertag6051 3 года назад +2

      @@theprofesser2618 His name is Hungarian - Austria and Hungary were once one country.

    • @FakeAssHandsomeMcGee_
      @FakeAssHandsomeMcGee_ 3 года назад +4

      @@theprofesser2618 Skorzeny sounds like it is Czech or Polish or Russian or something.

    • @TheYeti308
      @TheYeti308 3 года назад +1

      @@FakeAssHandsomeMcGee_ East Prussian.

    • @DogDogGodFog
      @DogDogGodFog 3 года назад +6

      I mean even the Wikipedia page says that his surname is of Polish origin and that it's referring to the Skorzęcin in Greater Poland.

  • @ignitionfrn2223
    @ignitionfrn2223 4 года назад +29

    0:20 - Chapter 1 - The most dangerous man in Vienna
    1:15 - Chapter 2 - The most dangerous man in Berlin
    3:05 - Chapter 3 - The most dangerous man in a glider
    11:15 - Chapter 4 - The most dangerous man in Madrid
    12:40 - Chapter 5 - The most dangerous man in Tel Aviv
    15:15 - Chapter 6 - The most dangerous man in a FOIA search engine
    19:50 - Chapter 7 - The most dangerous man is no more

    • @andreawallenberger2668
      @andreawallenberger2668 Год назад

      "The most dangerous man in a FOIA search engine" 😂😂😂👏

    • @JustAGentlemanZ
      @JustAGentlemanZ Год назад

      Thank you. I wish this was the top comment. Props to you good sir! Cheers

  • @June071710
    @June071710 5 лет назад +42

    mercenary:
    noun. 'a soldier who fights for any country or group that pays them'.
    Cambridge Dictionary

  • @boondocksaints6620
    @boondocksaints6620 5 лет назад +250

    It looks like his fencing partner didn’t “schmiss” his face !

    • @AdrianMareEWEASANTE
      @AdrianMareEWEASANTE 5 лет назад +10

      Ffs

    • @CorbCorbin
      @CorbCorbin 5 лет назад +22

      Shwing...and a shmiss.

    • @KurtisC93
      @KurtisC93 5 лет назад +12

      It was a near-schmiss.

    • @MrEnjoivolcom1
      @MrEnjoivolcom1 5 лет назад

      Ohhhhhh!!!! Too good, burn💣💥!!

    • @techsilver7761
      @techsilver7761 5 лет назад +5

      Actually, he obviously did give him a "Schmiss", evidently Skorzeny didnt keep his guard up :D

  • @chamindasilva7629
    @chamindasilva7629 Год назад +1

    1000 fake friends/pretenders but 1 genuine friend,he is the most dangerous man in Europe.

  • @thomasbleming7539
    @thomasbleming7539 4 года назад +49

    Otto Skorzeney was responsible for setting up the American special forces (a.k.a. "Green Berets").
    President John F. Kennedy invited him to the White House and made the offer to him to set up a training school at Bad Toltz, West Germany 🇩🇪.
    The school was later moved to the United States at Fort Bragg, North Carolina where it remains to this very day.

    • @Henry-zh2ci
      @Henry-zh2ci 10 месяцев назад +2

      The Soviets helped spread a rumor that he was helping train them for operations in Vietnam but it was never confirmed. Also the green berets were founded in 1952 and the first time he worked with the US was in 1953

  • @mikaelfleming
    @mikaelfleming 5 лет назад +258

    Johnny sins, is apparently also a historian now...

  • @TkKirklandReal
    @TkKirklandReal 4 года назад +25

    This man needs a movie

  • @dillon5155
    @dillon5155 5 лет назад +28

    Who needs ski lifts when you have Mountain Helicopters

  • @CultistGrenadier
    @CultistGrenadier 5 лет назад +22

    Skorzeny was there, before we knew James Bond and Solid Snake.

  • @1337fraggzb00N
    @1337fraggzb00N 4 года назад +26

    How many sides do you want to join?
    Otto Skorzeny: yes

  • @mnlpsvsapo
    @mnlpsvsapo 5 лет назад +8

    This guy's life deserved to be told in a movie !...

  • @DeepMoonChild
    @DeepMoonChild 4 года назад +8

    This episode was particularly interesting. And the music was perfect, thanks Simon for this delight. 😊

  • @electracv9154
    @electracv9154 4 года назад +72

    Why the hell did I read "the most gorgeous man in Europe"

    • @madalheidis
      @madalheidis 4 года назад +18

      You're not wrong...

    • @fixer1140
      @fixer1140 4 года назад +2

      The man was basically a poster boy for every Bond super villain 😍

    • @jonathanmichaelsmith9012
      @jonathanmichaelsmith9012 4 года назад +1

      maybe you're gay

    • @electracv9154
      @electracv9154 4 года назад

      @@jonathanmichaelsmith9012 factss, but I'm a woman so...

    • @jonathanmichaelsmith9012
      @jonathanmichaelsmith9012 4 года назад

      @@electracv9154 depending on what you're into, you could hook up with a spec ops guy.

  • @anonymousidn777
    @anonymousidn777 5 лет назад +94

    You can't make real life James Bond
    Otto Skorzeny: Hold my beer

    • @pr3cious193
      @pr3cious193 5 лет назад +3

      "Mein bier"

    • @Rico-ys1nf
      @Rico-ys1nf 4 года назад +3

      The guy who wrote James Bond was the real James Bond

    • @HauntingSpectre
      @HauntingSpectre 4 года назад

      Dusko Popov was the inspiration for James Bond. A serbian spy for the UK.

    • @Rico-ys1nf
      @Rico-ys1nf 4 года назад +1

      HauntingSpectre was Ian Fleming not? Considering he wrote it, and was a spy himself

    • @HauntingSpectre
      @HauntingSpectre 4 года назад

      @@Rico-ys1nf Look him up and find out.

  • @peculiarpangolin4638
    @peculiarpangolin4638 5 лет назад +356

    So dangerous that he did the ultimate crime....
    Flipping road signs.

    • @CanalTremocos
      @CanalTremocos 5 лет назад +6

      Mutley did most of the groundwork though.

    • @pipzilla9819
      @pipzilla9819 5 лет назад +2

      Lol

    • @jangoltz7589
      @jangoltz7589 5 лет назад +14

      to be fair without gps and only equipped with maps of areas youve never been, its sure to create confusion

    • @joeclaridy
      @joeclaridy 5 лет назад +1

      Truly a fiend deserving of the worst punishment allowed

    • @Delicious_J
      @Delicious_J 4 года назад +1

      @das wright He's being sarcastic

  • @sravans149
    @sravans149 2 года назад +5

    Man played WW2 on insane difficulty and carried on

  • @kazkk_87
    @kazkk_87 5 лет назад +51

    He was a good opportunist and that's why he survived that long

  • @SwfanredLotr
    @SwfanredLotr 4 года назад +11

    Skorzeny was a true badass. His life would be perfect for a movie.

    • @spitshinetommy3721
      @spitshinetommy3721 4 года назад

      No one who isn't a white supremacist would want to see it. Let's make a biopic about Mengele while we're at it.

    • @ecco2ks
      @ecco2ks 4 года назад +4

      @@spitshinetommy3721 people write books about hitler

    • @imq8501
      @imq8501 4 года назад +4

      @@spitshinetommy3721 Cope it’s a amazing interesting story

    • @artair70
      @artair70 4 года назад

      @@spitshinetommy3721 You lot and your obsession with him being White, FFS.

  • @john6203
    @john6203 4 года назад +13

    How a movie is not made of this mans life is beyond me. But we a Ghost Busters remake????go figure.

  • @shaconaward9487
    @shaconaward9487 5 лет назад +4

    These doco-specials are highly informative, absolutely fascinating. They were frightening times. Moreover, These specials should be televised frequently.

  • @MrDeutschGerman
    @MrDeutschGerman 5 лет назад +51

    0:35 is incredibly inaccurate. He was in a fraternity that practiced fencing (like about 1/3 of fraternities in Germany/Austria). This "academic fencing" does not really resemble fencing you see at the olympics, it's rather two opponents standing still, facing each other at a predetermined distance and only using one arm. Depending on the city, the opponents only wear metal goggles or perhaps a leather to protect one cheeck, but other than that, they are open for blows that can leave scars (Schmiss) .
    They can still happen, but are much rarer today because of medical advancements and it rather being a sign of bad cover.

    • @kennbiggs9311
      @kennbiggs9311 5 лет назад +3

      Thanks for the information.

    • @Itsrainingcatsyall
      @Itsrainingcatsyall 5 лет назад +1

      Crazy :o never would have guessed they were/ are into that!

    • @ClappOnUpp
      @ClappOnUpp 5 лет назад +3

      Wasn't the whole point for them to leave scars because it was fashionable at that time? (Just reading comments. Haven't watched video yet)

    • @norgepalm7315
      @norgepalm7315 5 лет назад +1

      @@ClappOnUpp no

    • @hughmac13
      @hughmac13 5 лет назад

      @@norgepalm7315 Yes.

  • @TheHelghast1138
    @TheHelghast1138 5 лет назад +6

    I've read a lot of books on Otto Skorzeny and I didn't even know all of this stuff, excellent video!

  • @user-mb3dx5fl9f
    @user-mb3dx5fl9f 3 года назад +9

    I find it fairly interesting that one single man managed to be one of the best SS agents and one of the best Mossad agents.

  • @ingmarfris8175
    @ingmarfris8175 4 года назад +7

    This is one of my favorite episodes of Biographics. I really love the different layers of Otto. Who did he really work for? Everyone. It's just so interesting to think that he worked for the USSR from the beginning.

  • @casselizabethxx
    @casselizabethxx 5 лет назад +465

    “He most dangerous”

  • @deanbrandsma617
    @deanbrandsma617 5 лет назад +218

    "he most dangerous man in europe"

  • @TheGodlin
    @TheGodlin 4 года назад +2

    Hands down my favorite Biographics video.

  • @gangoffour6690
    @gangoffour6690 5 лет назад +8

    Glad Marty finally made his way to the U.S. shores. Skorzany sure made some great movies with Robert Di Nero. Taxi Driver and Raging Bull were great movies. Martin Skorzany made many other great movies also 👍🏼

  • @pagedown4195
    @pagedown4195 2 года назад +4

    He was not ment to die. Surviving all those operations is insane.

  • @marcsugi
    @marcsugi 3 года назад +3

    Skorzeny is the man who has friends in every high places in the world.

  • @christopherterrell1805
    @christopherterrell1805 5 лет назад +15

    Those Fokkers in the Luftwaffe said he was too old.

  • @psbrayshaw
    @psbrayshaw 5 лет назад +18

    I love your WW2 videos! Such an interesting part of history. Thanks Simon 👍

  • @jakemocci3953
    @jakemocci3953 4 года назад +4

    Those dueling scars are absolutely badass

  • @greasybrownie
    @greasybrownie Год назад +3

    this guy was the MAIN character

  • @EnglishAdventures
    @EnglishAdventures 5 лет назад +13

    Keep up the amazing work Simon! I'm constantly impressed by the quality of your content, your eloquence, and your presentation. It is inspiring to accompany your work. Take care!

  • @brandongaines1731
    @brandongaines1731 4 месяца назад

    The "Most Dangerous Man" gags throughout had me laughing! 🤣 Well done, guys!
    I also appreciated the subtly late correction of "helicopters" to "headquarters" in the bit on Tito; I can only imagine how many comments that Simon got regarding that particular slip-up in the Tito video! 😂

  • @StaticImage
    @StaticImage 5 лет назад +114

    You make a 21 minute long video on a historical figure, or you make a video about another planet, nobody panics. Because it's all part of the plan. But when you leave one, little ole' letter out of the video title because of a typo, well then everyone loses their minds!!!
    Jesus, people. Calm down!

    • @malo9792
      @malo9792 5 лет назад +5

      It's the end of the world my man. It's a sign

    • @jamesschuellein7003
      @jamesschuellein7003 5 лет назад

      I agree and respect the hell outa that point but now ima spend the rest of the night in joker sorrow.

    • @valentindanielmargaian590
      @valentindanielmargaian590 5 лет назад +1

      I see what you did there...Joker!

    • @StaticImage
      @StaticImage 5 лет назад

      @@valentindanielmargaian590 Aaaayyyyyyyyyyyyy

    • @StaticImage
      @StaticImage 5 лет назад +1

      @Beatrice Asarte You forgot to put a space between the period and A. And now is when you shoot me.

  • @sunbursttwelve2705
    @sunbursttwelve2705 4 года назад +4

    In his interrogation video, he gives off this stare that tells you his whole life revolved around warfare.

  • @nikashford931
    @nikashford931 4 года назад +26

    As someone who has studied Mr Skorzeny's life, even owning a panzer uniformed Skorzeny Action Man toy, I only take issue with one point: : Mussolini wasn't ousted in a royalist coup, the Fascist Council deposed him.

  • @CallofDutyBlackOps28
    @CallofDutyBlackOps28 2 года назад +3

    the phrase "i can't stand this person; but give much respect to" Fits Otto to the fullest. There's always a bigger fish, even to this man; but for him, he was in his own ocean compaired to others in his field.

  • @jaskaranrajput7836
    @jaskaranrajput7836 5 лет назад +16

    Otto is so dangerous Simon was trembling as he wrote the title and forgot the T

  • @mr.crighton9491
    @mr.crighton9491 3 года назад +2

    you got a perfect voice for these episodes. And, your research and presentations are worthy of some sort of medal.

  • @CamWooster
    @CamWooster 5 лет назад +59

    This video gave me Hugo Stiglitz vibes (for those of you who've seen Inglourious Basterds).

    • @leemichael2154
      @leemichael2154 5 лет назад +14

      Everyone in the German army has heard of HUGO STIGLITZ lol

  • @Red-Feather
    @Red-Feather Год назад +3

    I read many of 5he comments here. I grew up in Madrid. My father was an ardent nazi .. long story. Otto lived literally a stone’s throw from us. My father invited him over. A story he told was that Hitler’s biggest war blunder was to not control Gibraltar. Franco was a friend. Too poor after the Spanish civil war to support Hitler. Hitler didn’t stab Franco in the back..too much. Otto said that not controlling Gibraltar allowed the N African theater to weaken German forces. After winning, the Allie’s just steam rolled north to finally defeat Germany in its backyard.

    • @Nope_Nope_Nope_Nope_Nope
      @Nope_Nope_Nope_Nope_Nope 5 месяцев назад

      Also, Franco blatantly turned down Hitler. It wasn’t about finances. it was strategic. Franco was a horrible asshole dictator and let the Luftwaffe practice bombing runs on Basque towns, but he knew he was better off sticking to Iberian neutrality with Salazar in Portugal.