Operation Barbarossa: When The Nazis Invaded The Soviet Union | Battles Won And Lost | Timeline

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  • Опубликовано: 28 апр 2024
  • Retracing The Conflicts of WW 2 - Across every theatre of the Second World War battle strategies were designed to capitalise on terrains with better access to supplies. Despite these tactics, many forces were stretched beyond their limits, facing unforeseen conditions and underestimating targets. These battles won and lost would determine possession of territory, resources and the strength to go on fighting.
    For some of the battles it was the victory that most influenced the future course of the war. For others, it was the defeat. From sweeping offensives to special operations, this is the story of the battles won and battles lost that shaped the outcome of the greatest conflict in history.
    It's like Netflix for history... Sign up to History Hit, the world's best history documentary service, at a huge discount using the code 'TIMELINE' ---ᐳ bit.ly/3a7ambu
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    This channel is part of the History Hit Network. Any queries, please contact owned-enquiries@littledotstudios.com

Комментарии • 1,6 тыс.

  • @floridas_own
    @floridas_own Год назад +46

    I’m grateful I wasn’t born in these times. What a shame losing your life fighting a war of horrible leaders.

    • @Atomus87
      @Atomus87 9 месяцев назад +9

      War is quite same now. You die for some decent propaganda dehumanizing oponent. Now its happening during Ukraine vs Russia

    • @san-863
      @san-863 3 месяца назад +1

      Sigh again in Israel Palestine but the real enemy is the usa ​@@Atomus87

    • @beng4647
      @beng4647 2 месяца назад

      The exact same thing is right around the corner...never forget...we already have

  • @aweewa5659
    @aweewa5659 Год назад +45

    No matter what, it takes a lifetime to understand this war completely.

    • @robertmaybeth3434
      @robertmaybeth3434 Год назад +10

      ...concur, been studying WW2 for 50 years, every month there is something new. It was a world war, every country was involved more or less, so much new information constantly being declassified or made public.

    • @aweewa5659
      @aweewa5659 Год назад +4

      @@robertmaybeth3434 That's right, I have for 30 years.

    • @MrVaypour
      @MrVaypour Год назад +5

      @@robertmaybeth3434 Only 10% of the totality of classified documentation has been released, some of which is deemed to be to sensetive for exposure.

  • @robertasliutas2903
    @robertasliutas2903 Год назад +244

    I've been watching videos about WWII for a long time and every time I watch a new one- there's something new to learn about it.
    The saddest part is that with every new video there are less and less witnesses to comment/talk about it... 😔
    Rest in peace, Heroes! 🙏❤️

    • @halfdollar86
      @halfdollar86 Год назад +4

      I too have been watching videos on it ever since I have been on RUclips. My grandfather was in WW2 in the European arena. Now that I know so much more about the history of the war, I would love to talk to him about it. He past away 18 years ago though. Several men from our community were veterans of WW2 and I don’t think any are alive still.

    • @LookHereMars
      @LookHereMars Год назад +8

      Decades happened in those 6 years. I am 33 now and have been intently interested and studied WW2 since I was 6 and I am still learning new things.
      One recent discovery of mine was the battle of Bamber Bridge in England. British soldiers and civilians fighting with U.S soldiers over racial segregation. An interesting event.
      Might I also suggest if you have not already checking out Mark Felton Productions here on RUclips. He focuses in on important but lesser known facts.

    • @robertasliutas2903
      @robertasliutas2903 Год назад +4

      @@LookHereMars thank you so much for the advice/suggestion! Absolutely love that channel!

    • @ron88303
      @ron88303 Год назад +2

      @The Living Man Then perhaps you can do everyone a big favor and point us to the truth?

    • @jackberry8674
      @jackberry8674 Год назад

      @The Living Man where can you watch that?

  • @RA10H56
    @RA10H56 2 года назад +401

    Can you imagine!!!! That's like half the USA and Canadian border! What a massive battle field!!! And it got bigger as they pushed forward

    • @stellarwind1946
      @stellarwind1946 2 года назад +42

      The main problem of any invasion of Russia: geography.

    • @stellarwind1946
      @stellarwind1946 2 года назад +63

      @@tiagomcoelho2000 climate is not as big of an impact as you might think. It was actually the mud that slowed the German blitzkrieg, not snow or extreme cold. Once winter was over, they were back on the offensive again. The problem? They had outpaced their supply lines, which eventually allowed them to be flanked from behind at Stalingrad.

    • @karencarter8292
      @karencarter8292 2 года назад +2

      I don't think the documentary mentioned the volunteer Belgian brigade and there were some Italian volunteers and at least one Englishman with the Germans.

    • @AngelGonzalez-pd4cn
      @AngelGonzalez-pd4cn 2 года назад +16

      @@tiagomcoelho2000, People have been talking about the Russian winter since long ago, when Napoleon invaded Russia it was on June 12, 1812, thjere was no winter, it was the heat, the heat and heat-related illnesses such as typhus and dysentery killed nearly half of Napoleon's army before taking Moscow. The Russian winter only made it more difficult for Napoleon's demoralized army to retreat.

    • @cojaysea
      @cojaysea 2 года назад +3

      Yes the front would widen as you advanced spreading you thinner and thinner .

  • @illmatic87
    @illmatic87 2 года назад +10

    Watching this channel without an adblocker is brutal

  • @loyaip4004
    @loyaip4004 2 года назад +57

    My grandfather was the only one in my family who survived World War II. All 8 brothers died for Germany. I'm glad I was able to talk to my grandfather about it all...

    • @pmbarro
      @pmbarro 2 года назад

      What he say

    • @kjvnews8326
      @kjvnews8326 Год назад

      They didn't die for Germany. They died for a racist, anti-Semitic madman.

    • @urbichh3389
      @urbichh3389 Год назад +3

      I am also curious… must be fascinating

    • @nalakittymeow
      @nalakittymeow 9 месяцев назад

      For germany?

    • @janettummey3416
      @janettummey3416 4 месяца назад

      @@urbichh3389❤

  • @Stephen-wb3wf
    @Stephen-wb3wf 4 года назад +132

    It's nice seeing different footage for a change. Thank you.

    • @RA10H56
      @RA10H56 2 года назад +5

      I agree! Definitely new images and films!

    • @Stephen-wb3wf
      @Stephen-wb3wf 2 года назад +4

      @Sikho Mbixane No i mean after watching ww2 docs all my life I saw a lot different footage in this particular doc which i appreciated. I love the famous Tiger II propoganda reel you see in every single WW2 doc but you want something else, something new after a few decades.

  • @eckobrown7902
    @eckobrown7902 Год назад +202

    One of the biggest mistakes he ever did invading Russia,it was his down fall

    • @onlythewise1
      @onlythewise1 Год назад +17

      or didnt know about the winters and he didn't listen to his generals to pull out

    • @eckobrown7902
      @eckobrown7902 Год назад +7

      @@onlythewise1 Everyone knows what happen to Napoleon and yes he should have pull out of the city's

    • @michaelwackers6475
      @michaelwackers6475 Год назад +28

      @@onlythewise1 Or didn't know about the winters? MY FOOT! The winter did not stop the Nazis.! It was the tenacity of the Soviet defenders that stopped their advances!

    • @yorkroman
      @yorkroman Год назад +15

      @@michaelwackers6475 they were actually very ill prepared for combat under those weather conditions

    • @BalenCM
      @BalenCM Год назад +6

      Well he had to invade Russia, he started ww2 to take Russia

  • @apoc3037
    @apoc3037 4 года назад +389

    Incredible they don’t mention oil and food the 2 biggest motivations for Germany during 41

    • @brianoc22
      @brianoc22 4 года назад +25

      They did mention that Rommel was short on fuel in north Africa. Would have been interesting to hear more on the effort to secure Baku for the oil..

    • @bradsully6620
      @bradsully6620 2 года назад +5

      @@brianoc22 and wasn't Baku like 3000 miles away from where the Germans were??

    • @ritobrotosengupta
      @ritobrotosengupta 2 года назад +8

      They mentioned about the food during Lebenstraum, and oil during the N Africa campaign.

    • @Ror0009
      @Ror0009 2 года назад +5

      Fertile Ukraine

    • @dickie9502
      @dickie9502 2 года назад +6

      Listen harder!

  • @brodybouillion1750
    @brodybouillion1750 2 года назад +38

    Fun fact about WW2 generals Rommel and Patten, their sons were born on the same day dec 24 and we’re friends for nearly 30 years

    • @kongmik
      @kongmik 2 года назад +16

      Another fun fact about Patton: he said that we fought the wrong enemy!

    • @Stress_._Free
      @Stress_._Free 2 года назад

      @@kongmik who was the real enemy?

    • @anjum2008
      @anjum2008 2 года назад +6

      @@Stress_._Free USSR.

    • @dorange_
      @dorange_ 2 года назад +3

      fact but not fun one...' America has no permanent friends and enemies... only interests ' - Henry Kissinger
      enemies to allies...allies to enemies & so on

    • @froggerfromspace
      @froggerfromspace 2 года назад +3

      That’s really great to hear! So glad on your behalf that you are friends with both Rommel and Patton’s sons! But why did you stop being friends with them after 30 years?

  • @dharmabum9709
    @dharmabum9709 2 года назад +100

    It was well spent 50 minutes watching but the title "Operation Barbossa" is misgiving as the invasion of Russia takes up only 10 minutes; while the rest is about other fights...

    • @brewtalityk
      @brewtalityk 2 года назад +2

      yeah that part really threw me

    • @angsanlaton9348
      @angsanlaton9348 2 года назад +1

      Right. I was like that's it for the title?

    • @OliBolivia
      @OliBolivia 2 года назад +3

      They always do that

    • @happyvideos7791
      @happyvideos7791 2 года назад

      There’s a 3 hour long version this must be the short one.

    • @Grnademaster
      @Grnademaster 2 года назад +2

      I know. Why are they moving into the Pacific with the Japanese? Bad title.

  • @chukemmang
    @chukemmang Год назад +24

    World War 2 is such an interesting war. And it has given us one of the best movies.

    • @peeinthequran5467
      @peeinthequran5467 Год назад +2

      🤡 5th most interesting war

    • @voraciousreader3341
      @voraciousreader3341 Год назад

      How about books, @Jaja?!? You don’t get history from movies, you should know that!!

    • @voraciousreader3341
      @voraciousreader3341 Год назад

      @@peeinthequran5467 In _your_ opinion….you don’t get to speak for everybody.

  • @jamiedriscoll9781
    @jamiedriscoll9781 Год назад +8

    17:18 the Neosho deserves her own story. She survived Pearl Harbor, was set ablaze at the battle of Corsl Sea, her crew fought to keep her afloat until rescue 11 hours later...

  • @sifridbassoon
    @sifridbassoon 4 года назад +10

    олег милый!
    like the way you show the troop movements on the map with the two "generals"

  • @souravroy137
    @souravroy137 2 года назад +2

    AFTER DISCOVERING THIS CHANNEL,
    HISTORY BECAME MY NO.1 HOBBY.....

  • @TheSNIPERmac
    @TheSNIPERmac 2 года назад +100

    Every year, these Heroes get fewer and fewer and it won't be long before they are all gone to a better place, But as long as we remember them, they will live forever in our hearts and memories. I thank you all for your your service to rid the world of a great threat.

    • @Vols69
      @Vols69 2 года назад +8

      Yes! I'm glad and very thankful for the ones who gave their life so I and my family can live in a free nation. But I have to say back then we had A different breed of men and Women in Service... Today yes I'm glad we still have a great military but today our military is full of Brats and entitled millennials. I'm afraid if a war like this broke out today we would be in trouble!

    • @user-fy2ml8ks2r
      @user-fy2ml8ks2r 2 года назад

      Yes! Thanks to them our countries are being flooded with nonwhite immigration, our children are being exposed to sexual perversion constantly and our governments serve the interests of globalism rather than the people. Thanks greatest generation!

  • @BobbleWorld
    @BobbleWorld 2 года назад +39

    First time hearing from an Indian veteran. I'm from Canada, and it's honestly something I wish I had heard more about.

  • @josephzacharias7992
    @josephzacharias7992 2 года назад +11

    I think my favorite part of learning about history is, a 5 minute ad interrupting my learning literally every 3 minutes. I love it so much.

    • @Fred-ek6en
      @Fred-ek6en 2 года назад +1

      Just had to watch two 20 seconds unskippable ads in a row what a joke

    • @senoow4215
      @senoow4215 Год назад +2

      Buy youtube premium bro

    • @josephzacharias7992
      @josephzacharias7992 Год назад

      @@senoow4215 I'm not feeding the beast. I hate that I even have to use RUclips for most stuff.

    • @senoow4215
      @senoow4215 Год назад +1

      @@josephzacharias7992 your time and mental health is def worth 10$/month, try it 🙏

    • @senoow4215
      @senoow4215 Год назад +1

      @@josephzacharias7992 u make them even more money with ads 🤷

  • @Russia-bullies
    @Russia-bullies 4 года назад +163

    The Soviet scorched earth policy was partially responsible for the failure of op Barbarossa.
    The Axis powers did not learn from Napoleon Bonaparte’s mistakes.

    • @vicksss807
      @vicksss807 4 года назад +15

      Chen fawn Meng: Not only the scorch earth policy, but also the Syberian Army that was relocated to Moscow and finally the Russian winter..Those three factors contributed greatly in the battle of Moscow!

    • @BatkoNashBandera774
      @BatkoNashBandera774 3 года назад +12

      And Bonaparte had not even heard of the Mongol Invasions or Swedish invasions of Moscovite Rus/Russia. The repetition is like clockwork.

    • @cyrosubod2317
      @cyrosubod2317 2 года назад +2

      Its the manpower tbh with you the germans cant replace a good army the longer the wars the germans are losing men while the soviets makes new good unit so its the beggining of their downfall

    • @Jagnole101
      @Jagnole101 2 года назад +2

      @@vicksss807 they were relocated because they knew America was locked in with Japan.

    • @DiskWizard001
      @DiskWizard001 2 года назад +8

      @@Jagnole101 nope. Because soviets knew japanese are not going to attack.

  • @mikotagayuna8494
    @mikotagayuna8494 4 года назад +42

    Whatever board game the two guys are playing, I want a copy of it.

    • @frankknudsen842
      @frankknudsen842 3 года назад +2

      It should be stratego/ battleship combo board.✌

    • @BatkoNashBandera774
      @BatkoNashBandera774 3 года назад +6

      Risk, 1941 edition.

    • @markhammar3977
      @markhammar3977 2 года назад +1

      Axis and allies, original is a great start I think it's better than risk.

    • @bobbyshmurda5225
      @bobbyshmurda5225 2 года назад

      I like it 🎇🎆 makes you understand the wars more..

    • @kingcobra7183
      @kingcobra7183 2 года назад

      RISK wehraboo edition

  • @styx4947
    @styx4947 2 года назад +81

    In Barbarossa the schedule "slipped" indeed. Very much as the "Schlieffen plan" schedule slipped in 1914. Von Kluck's infamous left turn, leading to the "Miracle on the Marne". The rest as they say, is history.

  • @LichsuhoathinhDrabattle
    @LichsuhoathinhDrabattle Год назад +10

    Informative, nuanced and amazing narration. Keep up the amazing work! 💗🤞✨

  • @HebrewHakaishin
    @HebrewHakaishin Год назад +30

    My Eritrean great grandfather died in Russia in operation barbarossa. He was fighting for fascist Italy. Italy was never anti semitic. So I'm saying this to let you know on both sides there were good men. They had families and loved there countries. This was a different time, things were different. Understand and over stand this. I respect the sacrifice both sides made for there nation. I salute the greatest generation, and I respect and admire you.

    • @marilynwillett804
      @marilynwillett804 Год назад +4

      People today cannot compare in any way to that generation. My dad fought in WW2, I was born afterwards, he went to work to support his family, never once complained or whined about what he endured in New Guinea. I know he spent time in and out of V A hospitals, died at 52 after providing us with a good childhood. I had a blood stained Japanese flag that he took off an enemy he killed in the jungle. kill or be killed. That is combat.

    • @lamontmelrose7640
      @lamontmelrose7640 Год назад +2

      No need to explain, we know for sure that it was a different time... fighting for one's country meant something back then. Honor, respect, courage, integrity, and dignity ruled many a men's hearts then. A rarity today I know, that's why I just keep praying and trying to be the best that I can be for someone else. I respect your comment. God bless

    • @FatRescueSwimmer04
      @FatRescueSwimmer04 Год назад

      Shame he passed away, but thank god that Battle destroyed that Army!

    • @simpsbelongtothegulags3702
      @simpsbelongtothegulags3702 Год назад +2

      he is a hero

  • @BlancoDevil
    @BlancoDevil 2 года назад +219

    I've never been able to understand the attack on the Soviets. It saved my Father's life, who was in the 101st Airborne. If the men lost in Russia had been there to stop the Allied forces, it would be a different world today.

    • @0mggLily
      @0mggLily 2 года назад +15

      Btw we are gojnn into world war 3

    • @dominusnox8231
      @dominusnox8231 2 года назад +13

      Because they don’t teach the war from Germany’s point of view. The attack on the communists seems silly until you understand that defeating communism was the entire point and his most consuming goal.

    • @Enkabard
      @Enkabard 2 года назад +27

      This, just comparing the outcome. Biggest battles against Germany that USA had to fight ended up with few thousand dead Germans (feel free to correct me on this one), compare that to largest battles against Soviets where hundreds of thousands German soldiers died.

    • @horstfricke6188
      @horstfricke6188 2 года назад +53

      Soviets planed to invade Germany, Germany knew that and engaged first when the Soviets were still weak and beatable

    • @pehuk
      @pehuk 2 года назад +1

      @@0mggLily going*

  • @muzimazibuko3124
    @muzimazibuko3124 Год назад +4

    I loved watching ads every 2 minutes, this channel is great!

  • @brianmacadam4793
    @brianmacadam4793 4 года назад +69

    Without oil from the caucasus region the German war machine would have ground to a complete halt. The German war machine was built around fast short battles.

    • @Nashandme74
      @Nashandme74 2 года назад +12

      Blitzkrieg is the name for that kind of fighting.

    • @lloydchristmas1086
      @lloydchristmas1086 2 года назад +8

      They never got that oil it did grind to a halt

    • @simonepeterson3301
      @simonepeterson3301 Год назад +1

      Yup they are lucky the had Albert Speer,the war would have been over had it not been for him

    • @robertmaybeth3434
      @robertmaybeth3434 Год назад +1

      Not really! The main source of German oil was, of course, Ploesti in Rumania, and Barbarossa was launched, in large measure, to push the Soviets out of air range of the oil fields. As it happened by the time the Germans got to Baku, the Soviets had thoroughly wrecked the oil rigs, and the Germans could not draw a drop of that oil, because by the time they fixed the oil wells, the Germans were already being driven back by Bagration and other Russian offensives. Also the oil from Baku held high sulfur content oil of a very low grade, so it was almost useless to Germany without further processing of the oil, which the Germans were in no position to do by then.

    • @brianmacadam4793
      @brianmacadam4793 Год назад

      @@robertmaybeth3434 I agree regarding Ploesti, I should have been clearer in that the germans NEEDED the caucasus resources to cover their requirements.

  • @dhirendrapsingh6758
    @dhirendrapsingh6758 2 года назад +2

    Informative. Useful. Calming. Inspiring. Life-changing. Enjoyable. Heart-warming. Other.

  • @vagabon5130
    @vagabon5130 2 года назад +357

    I consume all things WW2. I watch and re-watch to be reminded of the sacrifice all these men and women made. Those who survived and those who didn’t. Nothing but the utmost respect, legends one-in-all.
    Bc we can’t imagine what it was like to fight this war - they lived it.
    Semper fi.

    • @finalelement3296
      @finalelement3296 2 года назад +13

      the demons won the war son

    • @maydate86
      @maydate86 2 года назад

      Putin has made the same claim. More land in the Ukraine 🇺🇦. Another useless European war is taking place.

    • @JnstBrimstone
      @JnstBrimstone 2 года назад +9

      "Men and women," you say. How many men and how many women?

    • @IronMan-tk8uc
      @IronMan-tk8uc 2 года назад +5

      World War II shaped the current world, that's why it has such a level of importance.

    • @sgill4833
      @sgill4833 2 года назад +2

      Well now your witnessinh it unravel in real time.

  • @mervviscious
    @mervviscious 2 года назад +67

    My dad was on the USS Phelps.. always has been my hero. I could not imagine the battles he went through..

    • @alfredabramian4299
      @alfredabramian4299 2 года назад

      امل،بعد از اهو دشت،نرسیده به چمستان،روستای باغبانکلا،مرزنده ،نرسیده به کوچه مدرسه،ساختمان با دیوار سیمانی قرمز رنگ

    • @mervviscious
      @mervviscious 2 года назад +4

      @@alfredabramian4299 oh cool

    • @bobbyshmurda5225
      @bobbyshmurda5225 2 года назад

      Fear and Excitement 👊 I'm sure he wanted to be there..

    • @finalelement3296
      @finalelement3296 2 года назад

      traitor

  • @danhanqvist4237
    @danhanqvist4237 2 года назад +47

    Barbarossa was probably always doomed, but the major slip in the timing was the German detour into the Balkans and Greece to try and sort out the mess Mussolini had created by playing at being German.

    • @damianstages442
      @damianstages442 2 года назад +5

      Dan Hanqvist,totally agree with you,was doomed from the very start. I think it was always going to fail due to Mussolini etc.

    • @damianstages442
      @damianstages442 2 года назад +3

      Meglomania,psycopathy,Narcisissm etc,etc,etc.!!!

    • @WestIndianAK
      @WestIndianAK 2 года назад +4

      Actually, I’ve read an argument that the Balkan campaign didn’t really make a difference. Lemme see if I can dig it up…

    • @eddiemerc1986
      @eddiemerc1986 2 года назад +3

      Nope. You have to read the details on Barbarossa. It was planned to last 6 weeks. After that Soviet capitulation. Now if you calculate the starting date june 22nd 1941( delayed by greeks according to Churchill) and add 6 more weeks, germans were supposed to finish off the Red Army by mid august. Still having 2 months to spare before winter months, right? But the Wermacht was submitted into such attrition than 6 months later and nazis were still figuring out why the reds were still fighting. So the alledgedly delay to help the soviets was irrelevant to the outcome of Barbarossa. I can assure you Mussolini or the greeks were not in Hitlers mind on what went wrong with Barbarossa.

    • @danhanqvist4237
      @danhanqvist4237 2 года назад +6

      @@eddiemerc1986 Barbarossa was probably doomed by the German miscalculation of what the Soviet Union was capable of. That miscalculation was probably ideologically pre-programmed and pretty much invincible. The detour through the Balkans would not have changed the final outcome but if it had not occurred thing would have unfolded along the way to the same end-result. Whether it would then have been more costly in human lives is probably not possible to say.

  • @TON-ws9og
    @TON-ws9og 2 года назад +186

    The operation was named after Frederick Barbarossa ("red beard"), a 12th-century Holy Roman emperor and German king.
    Barbarossa famously fell off his horse and drowned, an eerily similar fate to the invasion that later carried his namesake.

    • @praveens8124
      @praveens8124 2 года назад +8

      Interesting!

    • @celieboo
      @celieboo 2 года назад +13

      Thank you for this. I always wondered why they called it Barbarossa.

    • @kimmoreels7950
      @kimmoreels7950 2 года назад +3

      thank you buddy :) have a good day sir

    • @FranciscoLopez-zz5fp
      @FranciscoLopez-zz5fp 2 года назад

      Nothing has changed. Now there is another war.

    • @EHonda-ds6ve
      @EHonda-ds6ve Год назад +4

      @@celieboo Here they wanted to conquer land in the east.
      And Emperor Barbarossa drowned on the way to a crusade to reclaim Jerusalem. He drowned near modern day Antalya.

  • @kanthector
    @kanthector Год назад +43

    I think a battle between Soviets and Nazis was inevitable at some point or the other irrespective of who struck first..

    • @SUPERNOVA0360
      @SUPERNOVA0360 Год назад +2

      Most HYPE battle though like out of a comic book. 💯🔥

    • @VNn2023
      @VNn2023 Год назад

      First, sorry for my bad english. You totally wrong, Soviets under no circustance would invade Germany.

    • @akashagrawal188
      @akashagrawal188 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@VNn2023 Soviets had planned to invade Poland and Romania in July 1941 which would have bought them in clash with Nazis controlling much of the area of these regions.

    • @kylemendoza8860
      @kylemendoza8860 10 месяцев назад

      The Soviets are the ones that broke the pack. They were antagonistic.

    • @user-vh3fr3lb8w
      @user-vh3fr3lb8w 8 месяцев назад

      ​@@kylemendoza8860unapologetic germans always say this.

  • @vette4403
    @vette4403 4 года назад +80

    The two guys acting tough with the oversee board is just plain tacky

    • @munchmacuchi7502
      @munchmacuchi7502 4 года назад +8

      its so tacky it works, in my opinion

    • @vette4403
      @vette4403 4 года назад

      Munchma Cuchi your opinion hurts my feelings

    • @edward4828
      @edward4828 4 года назад +10

      its hilarious. so cringey 😂😂

    • @vette4403
      @vette4403 4 года назад

      Alex B'Stard true that brother

    • @rascallyrabbit717
      @rascallyrabbit717 3 года назад

      That icy glare it stabs @thee

  • @dwissba68
    @dwissba68 2 года назад +366

    Say what you want about Russia but we owe a great deal of thanks for the sacrifices they made in driving out the Germans. Not sure if the Americans or Britts could have defeated the Germans had Russia lost in the East.

    • @shanebell2514
      @shanebell2514 2 года назад +19

      indeed.

    • @morokeiboethia6749
      @morokeiboethia6749 2 года назад +11

      Most Russian soldiers wanted Stalin dead. They were fighting only because Stalin signed a new law into affect saying that if you desert they come and get your family and kill them. Communism was never voted in by the people. It comes in by a hijacking of your gov.

    • @shanebell2514
      @shanebell2514 2 года назад +22

      @@morokeiboethia6749 True, but whatever the case the Germans were coming, and the Soviets were being invaded anyway.

    • @ziumzium5049
      @ziumzium5049 2 года назад +4

      @@morokeiboethia6749 People like you should really visit Russia someday. Although you would be probably beaten unconcious after uttering such grotesque american propaganda.

    • @musashidanmcgrath
      @musashidanmcgrath 2 года назад +12

      What? The Soviet Union was a far more brutal and barbaric ideology than the Germans. From the Bolshevik revolution all the way through, and into China and half of the world. Communism has been responsible for 100s of millions of deaths. If anything, the Brits and the Yanks fought the wrong enemy.

  • @abdulwahabmohddangata3863
    @abdulwahabmohddangata3863 Год назад

    The stories keep getting interesting every time I watch it.

  • @JDD8888
    @JDD8888 Год назад

    "Now winter joined the battle", great quote.

  • @Smartbot64
    @Smartbot64 2 года назад +13

    Beautiful to watch, but sad to say that nations would create wars, the innocent people would die, while the war planners were safe and cheering.
    Mankind wasn’t supposed to create all this disaster 💔

    • @cindys9491
      @cindys9491 Год назад

      @Paddy le Blanc Right, and in this age of nuclear weapons etc, it's mutual self preservation that humans need to think about before starting the next war. This isn't 2700 BCE and the consequences are much worse now.

  • @pillettadoinswartsh4974
    @pillettadoinswartsh4974 2 года назад +6

    Colonel Klink was deathly afraid of being sent to the Russian front.

  • @assumptionisthemotherofall2402
    @assumptionisthemotherofall2402 Год назад +2

    Well now we know where
    “Winter is coming “ quote came from

  • @llaauuddrruupp
    @llaauuddrruupp Год назад +2

    2:12: I didn't expect to see NoHo Hank in a WWII documentary.

  • @merlingeikie
    @merlingeikie 3 года назад +6

    Great series, thanks very much.

  • @voraciousreader3341
    @voraciousreader3341 11 месяцев назад +16

    I’m really glad that this series was produced by Australians, because then people can see how much their contributions, and also those of the Burmese, Indians, etc., meant to the war and eventual victory. Now Canada needs to produce a huge WWII documentary series for the exact same reason!

    • @jay2936
      @jay2936 10 месяцев назад +7

      They didn’t do a damn thing.

    • @vladeputinovic6128
      @vladeputinovic6128 7 месяцев назад +1

      🤣🤣

    • @ikonxTech
      @ikonxTech 5 месяцев назад

      😂😂😂 what

    • @f.wiseman
      @f.wiseman 4 месяца назад

      ​@@jay2936That's probably what he's trying to say :)

  • @zdzichus.3264
    @zdzichus.3264 4 года назад +5

    29:00 "three Africa Corps" - I've always thought there was just one, integral, Africa Corps, under one command??? (btw - those guys keep their yearly meetings to this very day!) The last toast is down to the last member of The Africa Corps!

  • @pOpCoRn0531
    @pOpCoRn0531 4 года назад +6

    Pretty thin on contents this documentary. Is there another part to this?

  • @og_sane
    @og_sane 2 года назад +12

    If only there was English subtitles for this interesting documentary? As a Finn I understand English quite well, but subs would still help. You native English speakers are actually very lucky when it comes to any films or docs like this.

  • @mohandinkarsubhedar2442
    @mohandinkarsubhedar2442 2 года назад +4

    Beautiful documentary 👌👌❤

  • @TeamKuukiFoodGames
    @TeamKuukiFoodGames 2 года назад +1

    I was confused at first as to why, the battle of the coral see was featured at length, in a documentary about operation barbarossa lol

  • @thomaskeil1437
    @thomaskeil1437 2 года назад +6

    Kudos to the those who created this series of videos. The two characters pushing symbols, not really necessary.

  • @chriswebertreesurgeon
    @chriswebertreesurgeon 2 года назад +8

    First let me say I enjoy these and appreciate seeing them on RUclips for free. At 9:09 and again at 9:11 we clearly see a blown-out Sherman Tank. Is it possible these clips were from France by mistake or were these some of the Shermans sent to the Soviets in '41 under the Lend Lease act?

    • @ChadnBobby
      @ChadnBobby 2 года назад

      They also say “250,000 tanks” were captured.. couple head scratching moments

    • @natebenetard5100
      @natebenetard5100 2 года назад +1

      I think they just show "stock" footage when dont have any appropriate footage to show concerning what they are talking about. I dont think USSR was getting Sherman's in 41. So yes you are probably correct, footage from france a few years later

    • @Bootbandwarlord
      @Bootbandwarlord 2 года назад

      They did start receiving them in 1942, so it could be footage from that theater, just not in 1941.

  • @512TexasRed
    @512TexasRed Год назад +5

    I always appreciate the response to why X commander tried y failed offensive. "They thought they could win."

    • @solar9610
      @solar9610 Год назад

      It was also existential seeing as it's now known that the Soviets had their own invasion plans drawn up for the Reich, just years later when they were more prepared, somewhere around 1942-1943 as opposed to the spring of 1941.
      Soviets were still fairly weak at the time, so the Germans took the impetus - a lot of Soviet survival can be owed to the American Lend-Lease Program honestly.

  • @stellarwind1946
    @stellarwind1946 Год назад

    9:32-10:26 is great info and analysis

  • @readynow12345
    @readynow12345 2 года назад +17

    All those poor horses, either worked to death or killed on the battlefield, most people never consider this as if they was something to throw away.

    • @user-lb8sk4kf3o
      @user-lb8sk4kf3o 2 года назад +2

      Compared to the human loss of life it is irrelevant

    • @kphillipeb
      @kphillipeb Год назад

      @@user-lb8sk4kf3o why is it?

  • @vicksss807
    @vicksss807 4 года назад +58

    My great grandfather was part of the 29th division that assaulted Omaha. He survived the landing but was killed 4 days later while in battle!!!

    • @TheNextGoogification
      @TheNextGoogification 3 года назад +1

      Wowzer that's something else! What was the attrition rate on Omaha? Did you grandfather had a chance to write back about anything once he landed? I don't know if he was allowed to say

    • @TheNextGoogification
      @TheNextGoogification 3 года назад +1

      Anything? That was real Harry those boat Landings, a lot of guys of course drowned, they just jumped off they didn't know how deep the water was, as you know. And then a lot of the boats were wiped out before they could do anything, by the machine gun fire. Then I imagine your grandfather was killed going Inland? What happened? Thanks in advance. Glad he served.

    • @kongmik
      @kongmik 2 года назад

      He fought the wrong enemy

    • @wesdemoss809
      @wesdemoss809 2 года назад

      Brings tears to my eyes...

    • @wesdemoss809
      @wesdemoss809 2 года назад

      My deepest condolences... Brave men. Who fought and died for us. Also THI M... The Bible says. One day man will look around look around and ask where has all the good gone...

  • @Bruno86457
    @Bruno86457 2 года назад +8

    How did this story change from "Operation Barbarossa" turned into "Pearl Harbor", and then into "D day"?.

  • @marcrigor6423
    @marcrigor6423 2 года назад +3

    Didn't know they had footage of the actual generals playing their cards.

  • @rogersledz6793
    @rogersledz6793 Год назад +4

    Thank you so much for uploading this video. It is helping me get through the pandemic!

  • @bobertalanzadogamones7075
    @bobertalanzadogamones7075 2 года назад +4

    I like the narrator's voice its very thrilling

  • @All-By-Myself
    @All-By-Myself 2 года назад +1

    good documentary!

  • @positionthepositron
    @positionthepositron 2 года назад

    Oh man these are really excellent 👍👍👍

  • @jaredquinney204
    @jaredquinney204 2 года назад +9

    I was always curious about why he wanted to invade the Soviet Union

    • @LeonardStauffer
      @LeonardStauffer Год назад

      AH’s main goal was always the East. He said so in Mein Kampf. This was due to hatred of Bolshevism, which he regarded as a Jewish creation and his desire for more “living space”, resources for Germany. Plus he regarded Slavs as inferior to the German.

    • @Worldaffairslover
      @Worldaffairslover Год назад

      Them Bolsheviks were a huge scapegoat!!

    • @Crying_dog
      @Crying_dog 9 месяцев назад

      Mainly oil.

  • @rickjensen2717
    @rickjensen2717 6 месяцев назад +3

    He attacked the Soviet Union because he needed their resourses, particularly food. Germany and much of central and eastern Europe was in debt and lacking in food, partly because of the sanctions against Germany.

  • @EdgarVillegasG
    @EdgarVillegasG Год назад

    Which book is recommended for learning more about the Coral Sea battle?

  • @salwaz
    @salwaz Год назад

    This is for free?? Huge hats off to this channel!

  • @silence-humility-calmness
    @silence-humility-calmness 2 года назад +5

    i thought Normandy was the biggest invasion, but indeed it sounds from the shallow research i did that normandy only consisted of about half a million men vs 3 million in barbarosa

    • @lionelhutz5137
      @lionelhutz5137 2 года назад +1

      Operation Overlord was the largest sea landing invasion.

    • @silence-humility-calmness
      @silence-humility-calmness 2 года назад

      @@lionelhutz5137 since you used the code name you might as well have used the correct terminology: amphibious invasion:-)

  • @moneyupgangtv3msmusic848
    @moneyupgangtv3msmusic848 2 года назад +8

    Love the learning about the art of war they had for the invasion

  • @maverickcorner
    @maverickcorner 2 года назад +2

    We look at history to learn from the it, and then we repeat it, again and again; the characters keep changing but the basic human consciousness of "becoming", breeds the thirst for power, remains

  • @bcdefghjlmpqrsuvwxyz8524
    @bcdefghjlmpqrsuvwxyz8524 Год назад

    Your space exploration and the love of human kindness is seriously getting out of hand

  • @osman7240
    @osman7240 2 года назад +18

    Not quite what I was expecting, I was expecting the battles on the eastern front and the eastern front only, not the war in the pacific.

    • @merk69
      @merk69 Год назад

      Still a treat if you ask me

  • @CanuckPlay
    @CanuckPlay 3 года назад +13

    The Canadian's landed on Juno. Not the British.

  • @CliSwe
    @CliSwe 4 года назад +1

    Pardon my ignorance, but - Is this the first in a series? Because it starts with a campaign some 18 months after when WW2 actually started. As though the Battle for France and Battle of Britain had never happened.

  • @samuelsilas4464
    @samuelsilas4464 2 года назад +1

    I like war documentary its vary educational on history

  • @Blue1479758
    @Blue1479758 Год назад +7

    Why? That was literally his intention from the beginning. He actually didn't want war with England

    • @beezihester9807
      @beezihester9807 Год назад

      He bombed them everyday

    • @Blue1479758
      @Blue1479758 Год назад +5

      @@beezihester9807 after they were at war....

    • @Crying_dog
      @Crying_dog 9 месяцев назад

      Is it because a British soldier spared him?

  • @starter47990
    @starter47990 2 года назад +3

    I thought this documentary was about Barbarossa. This is more about WW2 in general

  • @benjaminrush4443
    @benjaminrush4443 Год назад

    Great Stuff. Thank you.

  • @cellarorcs4190
    @cellarorcs4190 2 года назад +2

    is the spanish volunteer division the basis for the story of pans labyrinth?

  • @raiderrichard7291
    @raiderrichard7291 2 года назад +7

    9:27 I notice that the taller Russian POWs are all to the left and the shorter POWs soldiers (and Jiminy Christmas they’re short) are on the right. Makes sense though. You don’t want any soldier hidden. All must be visible for the bullet.

  • @at6686
    @at6686 4 года назад +39

    It can be both. For example Dunkirk. You'd think it was a German victory, but because they let the bef escape they planted the seeds of their own eventual defeat.

    • @busTedOaS
      @busTedOaS 3 года назад +29

      it still puzzles me how many people think ww2 was decided on the west front

    • @F.R.E.D.D2986
      @F.R.E.D.D2986 2 года назад +2

      @@busTedOaS thats how i feel

    • @Enkabard
      @Enkabard 2 года назад +5

      yeah, british forces heroically managed to avoid the fight.... to avoid heroically more fights until the war was decided on Eastern Front. Its just depressing knowing that Germany lost probably less soldiers fighting all british forces on all fronts across entire planet, then they lost against soviets fighting for a single city block.

    • @darylgrimes2601
      @darylgrimes2601 2 года назад

      Britain didn't do anythng in the war
      They watched and did nothign while half the continent burned under the nazs
      Britain made practically nodifference to the outcome of the war.
      Britain was as irrelevan in the war as the dirt on the top the grass in my garden

    • @amanrob
      @amanrob Год назад +1

      @@busTedOaS It was both. The Red Army was a big reason, but to have it on multiple front was like a boa constrictor slowly enclosing and suffocating the Germans.

  • @car110233
    @car110233 2 года назад

    u guys made this very well

  • @MrEjofast
    @MrEjofast Год назад

    Interesting video, I would have enjoyed watching it fully but after about 15 minutes of being interrupted repeatedly by ads, I gave up.

  • @johnwright291
    @johnwright291 2 года назад +4

    No mention of operation tiger at slappton sands. It was quite an embarrassment to the allies.

  • @KarlEriksenopinion
    @KarlEriksenopinion 2 года назад +7

    Montgomery had the luck to be promoted to lead when the material abundance of the US, as well as the full production of the UK were made available to to him. He was also smart enuf to realize that his task was to simply hold, close to his supply line, until the material superiority of the allies could be concentrated in such a way that the superior leadership and training of the Germans could be simply overwhelmed. In terms of strategy and tactics, Market Garden is a good demonstration of Montgomery's abilities. He did not follow up on details, or change plans based on a changing situation. He was overly concerned with his own glory, vain, and infected his chain of command with these flaws. Critical aspects of Market garden were completely neglected including communications (radios did not work), intelligence (powerful SS formations were present right near paratroop landing zones) was ignored, and decisions on the ground were not monitored closely (colonels and generals on the ground were not always working together, and need the overall commander to intervene at times) and subordinates performance was not monitored.

    • @FuShengAlex
      @FuShengAlex 2 года назад

      I watched the movie tonight A Bridge too Far. What a horrible strategy indeed!

    • @Bullet-Tooth-Tony-
      @Bullet-Tooth-Tony- 2 года назад

      @@FuShengAlex Whats so horrible about potentially shortening the war?

    • @larrybuchannan186
      @larrybuchannan186 Год назад

      Britain was largely irrelevan in the war
      British front of the war was like a friendly football match compared to the soviet front of the war
      Battle of Britain was a teenytiny nothingburger battle

  • @DeeRuss
    @DeeRuss Год назад +2

    Should’ve respected that non aggression deal

  • @adamsawyer122
    @adamsawyer122 Год назад

    Very nice video!

  • @caseyburton4679
    @caseyburton4679 2 года назад +23

    So what exactly happened to all of the prisoners of war on both sides? Did anybody learn anything from the horrors of war or from anything about their experience?

    • @mitchellgiles6869
      @mitchellgiles6869 Год назад +3

      I actually watched a video about what happened to the German soldiers that the allies captured and it was basically slave labor. Like they came up with some ridiculous justification for why they technically didn't count as POW's anymore (either that or it was that it can't be war crimes if there's no war happening) but it was bad. A lot of the ones the Western allies captured ended up getting shipped off to the Soviet Union if that gives you an idea

    • @juliancumming6893
      @juliancumming6893 Год назад +1

      @@mitchellgiles6869 the justification they used was because there was technically no German government so they weren’t technically German POW’s any longer.

    • @mitchellgiles6869
      @mitchellgiles6869 Год назад +1

      @@juliancumming6893 that basically feels the same as what I said lol

    • @robertmaybeth3434
      @robertmaybeth3434 Год назад

      The Germans captured by the Russians mostly died, the Soviets did not release most of those even living for 10 years! The Russians captured by the Germans, those who survived, did NOT want to return, they knew what would happen - Stalin sent all the survivors to the Gulags! They needed to be punished for surrendering, you see. Every Russian was supposed to fight to the death rather than surrender according to crazy Uncle Joe, and those who didn't, should pay the price, and they did.

    • @DominiqueDeMann
      @DominiqueDeMann Год назад

      @@mitchellgiles6869 A lot of Germans were Sentenced to be roped by the neck. Not sure if youtube will let me use the real meaning

  • @kdfulton3152
    @kdfulton3152 3 года назад +17

    It couldn’t have been Sixth Army with Rommel at Normandy because the Sixth Army was annihilated at Stalingrad in February, 1943.

    • @busTedOaS
      @busTedOaS 3 года назад +4

      Armies can be reformated, as the 6th was. But that one fought in the east, too, so you're still right.

    • @IsaacMuntz
      @IsaacMuntz 5 месяцев назад

      Both german 6th army were encircled and destroyed by the soviets

  • @padrekalibre779
    @padrekalibre779 2 года назад

    What if Barbosa force face the Normandy landing..what would be the result

  • @pinkbunny6272
    @pinkbunny6272 2 года назад

    I did Pilates watching a documentary on tank battles.

  • @marcobagut
    @marcobagut Год назад +5

    How did this documentary answer the question as to why Germany invade the USSR?

  • @James-gh9qm
    @James-gh9qm 2 года назад +33

    most people fail to take account of the achievements of indian army ...they held land ....took important raids ....and won many ground...all fighting under British flag

    • @eddiemerc1986
      @eddiemerc1986 2 года назад +12

      Meaning? Soviet suffering outmatch anyone else's. If you have a free nation today is because of that. Anything else is just your own people's duty.

    • @osman7240
      @osman7240 2 года назад

      @Chano Leyva absolutely,

    • @Softpaw1996
      @Softpaw1996 2 года назад +1

      @@eddiemerc1986 didn't age well with the current events regarding soviet v2

    • @darylgrimes2601
      @darylgrimes2601 2 года назад

      @Chano Leyva The wost were the gemans

    • @mtadams2009
      @mtadams2009 2 года назад

      @@eddiemerc1986 How is that working out for Ukraine? You must be a Trumper.

  • @pilotdude9833
    @pilotdude9833 3 месяца назад +2

    Germanys war machine wasn’t good over large distances and time. It just wasn’t designed for that. The supply lines. The repairs weren’t well thought out at all.

  • @zew1414
    @zew1414 2 года назад +2

    Oh no, not these dudes at the table again! Staring at each other after moving the little markers around...

  • @bobkohl6779
    @bobkohl6779 4 года назад +11

    F6F and Essex carriers in footage for the Coral Sea? Nope. Footage is sloppy

  • @lucienlessard7020
    @lucienlessard7020 2 года назад +15

    Tic Heinz Guderian in his book Panzer Leader made reference that during early 1943 the Soviets began the practice of forcing any male in reconquered Russian territory capable of holding a rifle into mandatory military service. If those civilian soldiers survived their first battle they were considered veterans. While this increased their manpower, it also shortened Russian supply lines, because the Russians were able to strip the soldiers families of whatever supplies they had. The NKVD also massacred any collaborators real or imagined left behind in those towns and villages. This also reduced the need for food for the civilians and supplied the Red Army. The numbers of civilians killed by the NKVD is unknown. Same with the forced military "volunteers", numbers unknown. Hope this helps. Thanks for your brilliant series.

    • @user-fn7xv2nq9w
      @user-fn7xv2nq9w 2 года назад

      Well, why did the Russians resist, they would just die in German camps, is this not such a bad fate? In addition, these camps were not even fed often, of course, but they were fed, and Auschwitz in general was a resort sanatorium in which millions visited in a couple of years, no complaints were received

    • @wederMaxim
      @wederMaxim Год назад

      The Soviet Union has not existed for more than thirty years. Stop lying already.

    • @lucienlessard7020
      @lucienlessard7020 Год назад

      @@wederMaxim tell that to Putin

  • @odenshiddentreasure2717
    @odenshiddentreasure2717 Год назад

    The most remarkable thing of all is how many men will participate in such wars all for another’s ideology and ideas may the truth always prevail

  • @chriseaton7887
    @chriseaton7887 17 дней назад

    Just imagine if he had waited a few more years before starting the war im not sure things woulda turned out the way they did scary to think about

  • @Football__Junkie
    @Football__Junkie 2 года назад +7

    D-day, Pear Harbor, Battle of the Bulge get most of the attention from WWII in the West. But the West has no real grasp of the wanton death on the Eastern Front during Barbarossa and the Soviet counter attack

    • @Football__Junkie
      @Football__Junkie 2 года назад +5

      The numbers are unbelievable. Within 3 months, 2,000,000 Soviet POWs. Germans had lost 400,000 soldiers. Mind boggling. Not to mention how many civilians were killed and no one knew.

    • @nickb3164
      @nickb3164 2 года назад

      @@Football__Junkie operation barbarossa was an act of genocide; the nazis saw this as part of their extermination of "judeo-bolshevism"

  • @ualrdyknowaitiz
    @ualrdyknowaitiz 4 года назад +4

    "scratch one, flattop!"

  • @billgaters8101
    @billgaters8101 Год назад

    I didn’t really comprehend the fact that Russia really were just waiting on overlord to relive some pressure from the offensive

  • @Habsfan56744
    @Habsfan56744 8 месяцев назад +1

    I love learning about ww2

  • @BatkoNashBandera774
    @BatkoNashBandera774 3 года назад +44

    Interesting how the two biggest battles of WW2 were faithfully omitted from the documentary: Stalingrad and in Manchuria. The former being the turning point of the war, the latter being the day the Soviet Forces dismantled the entirety of the Japanese/Chinese land forces. I suppose [this] documentary was made to serve a purpose and not to inform.

    • @jacencade4019
      @jacencade4019 3 года назад +4

      Yep. The military channel which is a subsidiary of the history channel has been often criticized for its biased omitions from its many documentaries and docu-series'

    • @timphillips9954
      @timphillips9954 2 года назад +4

      North Africa and the Battle of Britain. The Commonwealth took part in every front from Africa to Asia and Europe. The Battle of the Atlantic the biggest and longest of all was not mentioned also won by the commonwealth. Without the Brits and the Commonwealth there would have been no second front. The Germans and Italians would have got to Suez
      and the oil resulting to a toss of a coin on the Eastern front. If the Brits had given up after Dunkirk the Americans would not have been drawn into the war until the Germans were ready for them. The Americans would not have control of the Atlantic or the skies over Europe. I would not have fancied the Americans in a head to head against the Germans!

    • @brunos.654
      @brunos.654 2 года назад +4

      Stalingrad was not part of "Barbarossa" (1941 - summer campaign) but "Fall Blau" (1942 - summer campaign), which they are not covering judging by the title of this video.

    • @eddiemerc1986
      @eddiemerc1986 2 года назад +14

      @@timphillips9954 . Sorry to disappoint you but no. All other battles across the globe were merely skirmishes compared in scale and objectives fought in the eastern front. Nazis had been the biggest threat to modern civilization ever. Period. And nobody proved they could be stopped until the soviets. At a huge cost. A cost I would dare anyone to affirm if Britain, France or the US were prepared to take. But that was needed to erase that racial nonsense from the face of earth. And a final number to you. 70% of all casualties the germans suffered in WW2 were anhilated in the eastern front. Along 60% of the Luftwaffe. Now imagine the soviets capitulating in 1941 just like everybody else. What were britain chances to stand really alone then?

    • @tonyromano6220
      @tonyromano6220 2 года назад +1

      Clown