Two prisoners meet at a concentration camp. Asks the first one: "Why you here?" - "Well, I said on May 1st that Hess is crazy. And you?" "Well, I said on May 30th that Hess isn't crazy"
@Kriegter4 жыл бұрын
ohhhhhh lololol
@planescaped4 жыл бұрын
Hess is -a perfectly sane individual- maniac!
@davethompson33264 жыл бұрын
Variation on an old soviet joke Three men are sitting in a cell in the (KGB headquarters) Dzerzhinsky Square. The first asks the second why he has been imprisoned, who replies, "Because I criticized Karl Radek." The first man responds, "But I am here because I spoke out in favor of Radek!" They turn to the third man who has been sitting quietly in the back, and ask him why he is in jail. He answers, "I'm Karl Radek."
@norberthiz93184 жыл бұрын
@@davethompson3326 We have a joke in Hungary from the early communist years, that is literally the same with László Rajk. He helped Rákosi(the first communist leader of Hungary, and is commonly called "the best apprentice of Stalin") make the country a dictatirship, and was killed by Rákosi afterwards.
@davethompson33264 жыл бұрын
@@norberthiz9318 Sadly, jokes like that can be used too often :-(
@DotepenecPL4 жыл бұрын
The truth is, Hess arrived to politely ask could he have the Enigma back.
@od96944 жыл бұрын
Makes about as much sense as the actual reason
@UrWifiIsSlow4 жыл бұрын
And they agreed
@pez44 жыл бұрын
But they didn't let him go back
@fatehyabali4 жыл бұрын
No!
@shaider19824 жыл бұрын
I thought he was having just his eyebrows trimmed.
@randomguy-tg7ok4 жыл бұрын
Bletchley Park: Hey, Crete's going to be Paradropped in these locations. We know this for definite. Freyberg: Nah, don't think so.
@roum224 жыл бұрын
Knew when where and how many were coming and still managed to bungle it...He may have been a hero of WW1 but must have been a complete imbecile..
@merdiolu4 жыл бұрын
@@roum22 Actully a full New Zeland infantry brigade was placed in Malame airfield which was close to coast also but brigade commander James Hargest was given vague orders easy to misinterpet
@QuizmasterLaw4 жыл бұрын
He obviously wasn't read in to WHY London Knew.
@tando62664 жыл бұрын
Thats not rally fair, field commanders were not told where the intelligence was coming from. In actuality he was probably told a deserter has said, or something like that. Bletchley parks very existence wasn't known to anyone below theater commanders.
@QuizmasterLaw4 жыл бұрын
@@tando6266 why, are you saying that this is an ULTRA secret as in beyond top secret something that even generals and admirals weren't read in on?
@vonliberte90634 жыл бұрын
Friedrich Paulus, ironic He could save others from low supply, but not himself
@taufiqutomo4 жыл бұрын
What do you mean? The balance of forces (and officers) suggest the Germans are going to do just fine if they ever invade USSR.
@lorenzodimaio66724 жыл бұрын
The air supply was not organized by Paulus, but by the Luftwaffe, Paulus asked during the 3 months siege what to receive, in some periods he asked for more food, others more fuel or ammo, but that was due to what the other german generals were up to, especially when Manstein was going to launch Wintergewitter, Paulus asked for more fuel in order to break out, but when Manstein was blockded, Paulus acknowledged the situation and requested food, now he couldn't break out. So he was not a stupid as many tend to believe. And the reason because received so few resources was because the soviet air force took down the german aircrafts, after a year since Barbarossa, the soviet air force had recovered.
@Rendell0014 жыл бұрын
@@lorenzodimaio6672 Yup, there is a very informative programme on this very topic which shows just how far the Soviets had come from 1941 and they made sure the German transports went down in ever increasing numbers as the siege wore on. The only way the airlift might have worked is if the entire Luftwaffe just carpet bombed the area between the forward airfields and Stalingrad (all eighty miles of it) day after day...
@thebog114 жыл бұрын
It's not a story the Allies would tell you. It's an Axis legend.
@Raskolnikov704 жыл бұрын
I've never thought about that aspect of it before. He knew how rough the Afrika Corps had it because of their extended supply lines, and I wonder if he gave it any thought as they kept pushing deeper and deeper into Soviet territory in 1942. How could he not have seen what would happen at Stalingrad?
@gianniverschueren8704 жыл бұрын
Classy and relatively simple compared to some of the eye-catchers we've seen in the last few months. Nothing wrong with it though. 3/5
@ArtrexisLives4 жыл бұрын
I now look forward to Gianni's tie assessment in the comments as much as @Marcus Bierman's "SIDES AT PRESENT" update.
@s.v.berezin15624 жыл бұрын
It is very amusing that Indy's choice of tie is just as important to people as the history is!
@gianniverschueren8704 жыл бұрын
@@s.v.berezin1562 Vital
@DaveSCameron4 жыл бұрын
Raise the bar!
@purpandorange4 жыл бұрын
You're gonna be devastated if Indy ever changes his fashion choices.
@merdiolu4 жыл бұрын
After Hess flight to Scotland , once initial shock , disbelief and frenzy/rage period of Hitler and Nazi leaders passed , there remained the problem of what spin to put on the event. Hitler had already summoned all the Reich Leaders and Regional Party Leaders to the Berghof. On 13 May 1941 he repeated to them that Hess , the Deputy Fuhrer , Hitler's Personal Secretary and one of his closest comrade in arms for almost 20 years was mentally ill. In an emotional appeal to their loyalty, now Hitler declared that Hess had betrayed and deceived him. As Goebbels had thought, the idea that his deputy had been mentally deranged for many years did not cast a particularly favourable light upon either him or his regime. Many Party members refused to believe the news at first. ‘Depression and uncertainty’ were the prevailing feelings noted by Nazi surveillance operatives. ‘Nobody believes he was ill,’ reported a local official in the rural Bavarian district of Ebermannstadt. Lore Walb, now studying history at Heidelberg University, agreed. ‘If he had really been ill for a long time before (mentally ill, from time to time?), then why did he keep his leading position?’ she asked. Most German people seem to have felt sympathy for Hitler at his deputy’s supposed betrayal. They relieved their anxiety, bewilderment and disorientation by telling jokes. One of the jokes about Hess and his flight : ‘So you’re the madman?’ one joke had Churchill saying to Hess as he arrives in the Prime Minister’s office for an interview. ‘No,’ Hess replies, ‘only his deputy.’ Another joke is like this ‘British Press Notice: “Today we learned that Hess is indeed insane - he wants to go back to Germany.”’ ‘That our government is mad is something we’ve known for a long time,’ Berliners were reported as saying, ‘but that they admit it - that’s something new!’ Evans, Richard J.. The Third Reich at War (The History of the Third Reich)
@TheLocalLt4 жыл бұрын
If they didn’t believe he was mentally ill, what did they believe? That he was simply defeatist? I don’t really get that, Germany was very much in position to win the war/create a stalemate with Britain at that time. Hess didn’t flee because he felt Germany was going to lose, he fled because of social rejection by the Nazis in a desperate attempt to win back Hitler’s favor by “saving” Germany in a grand deal with Britain
@stevekaczynski37934 жыл бұрын
Germans were executed for telling jokes or making wisecracks like that. One was executed for making the following remark, apparently sometime during the Stalingrad fighting - "You probably think this is another Blitzkrieg, just like the Thirty Years' War." It was considered defeatism, undermining the war effort etc.
@matthewconradi18404 жыл бұрын
@@stevekaczynski3793 I presume it's easier to get away with a joke like that if you're a civilian and not a frontline soldier though
@1183newman4 жыл бұрын
The british after interviewing Hess also thought there was something wrong with him.
@panchopuskas14 жыл бұрын
I find it difficult to believe that Hess could commandeer a plane and get a crew to fly him to the UK without Hitler's knowledge......the more you look at the Hess affair, the more curious it gets.....
@viettrungnguyen12424 жыл бұрын
Imagine Hitler yelling: Hess! x10 instead of Fegelein! Fegelein! Ja... Ja.. Ja... Ja
@davidpesha38414 жыл бұрын
Wankstain!
@HWDragonborn Жыл бұрын
Bringen Sie mir Hess! HESS! HESS! HESS!
@merdiolu4 жыл бұрын
Unfortunetely the simple brutal fact for Allies before and during Operation Mercury is this : Even if you have first class intelligence about enemy plans and intentions , it is NOT enough unless you have main baseline factors like air superiorty (Luftwaffe had total air dominance over Aegean Sea and Crete) , proper organisational chain of command (an entire elite New Zealand 21st Brigade left to defend Malame airfield but their commander General Hargest were given vague orders that were easy to misinterpet) , equipment and supply/reinforcement (lack of radios and severing of phone lines by Luftwaffe bombing would cripple British Commonwealth defence and since Grman air attacks were so severe little or no supplies or reinforcements were coming by sea and defending British New Zealand Australian Greek forces lacked heavy weapons like armor , AA guns , guns and motorised vehicles in comparison incoming German airborne attack would utilise Luftwaffe flying artillery fully , most defending Commonwealth troops had limited amunition enough for two or three days fight actually )
@apmoy704 жыл бұрын
You probably mean 21st Battalion, there was no 21st Bde on Crete. 21st NZ Btn belonged to the 5th NZ Bde under Brigadier Hargest
@merdiolu4 жыл бұрын
@@apmoy70 True
@mitanni04 жыл бұрын
I wonder how german air power versus allied sea power will play out...
@Arhiroukounas4 жыл бұрын
well,in the grand scheme of things,keeping Ultra secret was far more valuable than saving Crete
@skeeterfinklage4454 жыл бұрын
Spare me your arm chair general bullshit. You have the benefit you look at everything afterwards so its not that insightful or profound you fucking cheap intellectual. You're like the midwit's smart guy, good for you.
@lucianene77414 жыл бұрын
That Earl of Suffolk is a true hero. He had surely volunteered for this most dangerous job.
@tando62664 жыл бұрын
Before everyone hate the crete inaction: Bletchley parks very existence wasn't known to anyone below theater commander level. Everyone else was told, 'a prisoner said this' or 'a source within x embassy has said'. Confirmation by bletchly looks identical to well believed speculation outside of the very upper echelon of command. This was intentional, and saying that 'bletchley has intercepted communication' would get you a noose before it got you a medal
@longnguyenson6464 жыл бұрын
Great insight. History is always biased, even on a channel like this. Thank you.
@lf91772 жыл бұрын
Agreed. There were even cases when British command lost on purpose just to hide that they've broken Enigma. Germans believed Enigma to be unbreakable until the end.
@LysergicAcidDerivate4 жыл бұрын
Do you know what locals used to call place where Hess landed in Scotland? Loch Hess... 😮
@wheresmyeyebrow16084 жыл бұрын
Hah
@apmoy704 жыл бұрын
This week in Greece: On Wednesday, May 14, 1941, the German Lufwaffe began fierce bombing raids targeting the three airfields on Crete, the port of Heraklion and Suda bay. The Germans tried to halt supplies sent from the Middle East and destined for the allied defence of the island. The biggest raid occured on May 16 when Heraklion experienced a devastating bombing raid. Many civilians were killed. Also on May 14, Cretan irregular units were formed, comprised of civilians under Greek Army reserve or retired Army and Gendarmerie officers, or former Cretan revolutionaries, tasked with patrolling the beaches of the fear of invasion. Some irregular bands were under Orthodox priests or monks - which explains the hostile German attitude towards the Orthodox Church on Crete during the occupation years - or under British officers. The Allied 'CreForce' on the island was put under the NZ Lt. Gen. Bernard Freyberg, and combined five defensive sectors; four at the three airfields of Crete and the capital Chania, and one at Suda bay. The Commonwealth forces comprised of: -5th New Zealand Infantry Brigade (Brig. James Hargest), tasked with defending the Maleme airfield and protecting the coastline W of the Cretan capital, Chania. -4th New Zealand Infantry Brigade (Brig. Lindsay Inglis) & 10th New Zealand Infantry Brigade (Lt. Col. Howard Kippenberger), tasked with protecting Chania, and guarding the valley and the hills SE of the town, and Suda bay. -19th Australian Infantry Brigade (Brig. George Vasey), tasked with defending the minor Rethymnon airfield, and guarding the beaches and approaches to the town. -British 14th Infantry Brigade (Brig. Brian Herbert Chappel), tasked with defending the Heraklion airfield and the city's port, vital for the allied resupply in case Suda bay fell to the Germans. -The Mobile Base Defence Organization, a division-sized composite force of artillery, infantry, and Royal Marines under Maj. Gen. C.E. Weston, deployed around Suda bay, tasked with defending the port from airborne and seaborne invasion. The Greek forces on the island were under the 'Greek Higher Military Command' (Maj. Gen. Αchilles Skoulas) and comprised of mostly local Cretan recruits, one ex-V 'Cretan' Division battalion aka 'Empedon' left behind to garrison the island when the rest of the division was transported to Albania in two waves (the bulk of the division left for Albania in November 1940, two battalions out of the three left behind to garrison the island, were transferred to Albania in January 1941), supplemented with battle-hardened troops who had arrived from the mainland, the freshmen cadets of the Greek Army Academy, and the Gendarmerie cadets of the Royal Gendarmerie Academy that had arrived from the Peloponnese. The Greeks organized into reduced strength 'regiments'. The Greek units were attached to Commonwealth higher echelons: -1st Infantry Regiment (~1,000 all ranks under Lt. Col. Alexandros Skordilis) & Greek Army Academy Contingent (317 officers and freshmen cadets under Lt. Col. Loukas Kitsos) were attached to the 5th New Zealand Infantry Brigade. -6th Infantry Regiment (~1,400 all ranks under Lt. Col. Michael Gregoriou) & 8th Infantry Regiment (~900 all ranks under Lt. Col. Panaghiotis Karkoulas) were attached to the 10th New Zealand Infantry Bde. -3rd Infantry Regiment (~700 all ranks under Lt. Col. Antonios Betinakis), 7th Infantry Regiment (~900 all ranks under Lt. Col. Evanghelos Chairetis) & Heraklion Garrison Battalion (an 830-strong, ex-V 'Cretan' Division's battalion under the Gold Cross of Valour recipient in the Greco-Italian War, Lt. Col. Anastassios Dalipis) were attached to the British 14th Infantry Bde. -4th Infantry Regiment (~1,300 all ranks under Col. Michael Tryfon) & the most reliable, well-equipped, and well-trained gendarmerie force, the Gendarmerie Field Battalion (916 all ranks including the majority of the gendarmerie cadets, under the Gendarmerie-Major Iakovos Chaniotis) were attached to the 19th Australian Infantry Brigade. One independent Gendarmerie Cadet Coy deployed at Panormos, 22 km (13.6 mi) E of Rethymnon, while the majority of the local Gendarmerie chapters, supplemented with armed civilians, acted independently too. The Gendarmerie forces on the island were put under the recalled to active duty, 73 yo Maj. Gen. Ioannis Vourakis. The Greeks were armed with ex-Austrian Steyr-Mannlicher M1895 rifles (post-WWI reparations), the antique Gras Mle 1874/M14 rifle, and the standard-issue rifle of the Greek armed forces Mannlicher-Schönauer M1903/14/27 - M1903/14/30 (the gendarmes of the Field Battalion and the 'Empedon' Battalion were equipped with it). The Army Academy cadets were armed with the obsolete Mauser M1887 rifle (war spoils from the Ottomans during the 1st Balkan War) and each cadet carried 60-80 rounds. All in all, 42,940 all ranks, supported by 151 Field & AA artillery pieces, 16 Light Mk VI and 9 Matilda Infantry tanks, would defend the island. On Thursday, May 15, the allied command on Crete put its armed forces on full combat alert. Lt. Gen. Bernard Freyberg, overall commander of the Allied 'CreForce', expected the Germans to launch their attack on May 15. The Germans too expected to begin the airborne assault in mid-May but supply problems in Greece delayed the assault. Hitler considered Crete the ideal place for an effort undertaken by airborne forces. In fact he saw Crete as the first of a series of stepping-stones, followed by Cyprus, and leading to the ultimate goal, the Suez Canal. 'Unternehmen Merkur' (Operation Mercury) the airborne operation for the capture of Crete was entrusted to Colonel-General Alexander Löhr, overall commander of Air-Fleet IV. consisting of Air-Corps VIII. under Maj. Gen. Wolfram Freiherr von Richthofen, which was to provide the 650 reconnaissance, transport, fighter, and bomber aircraft, and Air-Corps XI. under Maj. Gen. Kurt Student, the mastermind behind the operation, which contained all the troops to be landed by air or sea on the island. Air-Corps XI. comprised of the Airborne-Assault-Regiment with three battalions of Fallis and one of glider-borne troops, initially under Maj. Gen. Eugen Meindl, later under Col. Hermann-Bernhard Ramcke, and 7. Air-Division under Maj. Gen. Wilhelm Süßmann, with three regiments of Fallis. Student's plan anticipated that: -'Gruppe West' (Maj. Gen. Eugen Meindl), codenamed 'Comet', with the largest proportion of the forces, would capture Maleme airfield to the W of the Cretan capital, Chania, in order to allow a much larger force to land. 'Comet' constituted the first wave of air assault. -'Gruppe Mitte (Centre)' (Maj. Gen. Wilhelm Süßmann), codenamed 'Mars' would capture the valley around Chania, Suda bay, and the Rethymnon airfield. -'Gruppe Ost (East)' (Col. Bruno Bräuer), codenamed 'Orion', was to capture the Heraklion port and the city's airfield. Both 'Mars' and 'Orion' groups constituted the second wave of attack that would arrive a little later after 'Comet'. The Germans brought with them a new weapon in Crete, the 7.5 cm Leichtgeschütz 40 recoiless rifle. It would see widespread use by German Fallschirmjäger units, Waffen SS, and mountain troops, for the rest of the war. All in all 22,750 Fallis, infantry, mountain troops, one Panzer battalion, one motorcyclist battalion and various other units, were bound for the island. The Germans expected to be ready for the invasion, early next week.
@Coolcleverstone4 жыл бұрын
Well done
@Bernie_7474 жыл бұрын
Hi, your post is a great summary - very concise - well done ! Saves reading a book 😉 ! Indy should invite you to the upcoming video ! Kind regards from 🇦🇹 !
@steliospolychronakis87404 жыл бұрын
General Ioannis Vourakis, the 73 year old CO of the Greek Gendarmerie forces on Crete had an interesting story. He was retired, living in Athens at the time of the German invasion, when he put himself forward to rejoin and help with the effort against the Germans but his application was rejected by the Greek Minister of Defence. Just before the Germans entered Athens, he got on a boat and fled to Crete. The boat was bombed and sunk near the island of Milos, but Vourakis was saved by a British submarine and made it to Crete. Once there, he presented himself to the exiled Greek government, and this time was given the role of CO of the Greek Gendarmerie in Crete. When the invasion started, he fought in the field with his gendarmes in the Chania sector, where he was captured by the Germans. The Germans apparently did not recognise the Gendarmerie as a legitimate military force and Vourakis was charged with killing German soldiers so his fate was very different to that of high-ranking officers of the Army. He was put in jail, first in Crete and then in the Dachau camp in Germany where he died.
@andro78624 жыл бұрын
I wish I could save this.
@Raskolnikov704 жыл бұрын
I wonder if the folks in Crete felt like they had a chance of repelling the invasion at all, or if they were preparing with a sense of resignation and fatalism. Hoping to hold off an elite modern army with leftover 19th Century rifles... they must have felt like people watching a giant tsunami coming at them.
@HistoryHustle4 жыл бұрын
Once again an amazing episode and big cheers to the makers of this channel and Eastory!
@WorldWarTwo4 жыл бұрын
Thank you very much! And of course hats off to Eastory as well!
@TotalRookie_LV4 жыл бұрын
It's hilarious how Hess was held in a prison in West Berlin until his very death in 1980s. And he was guarded by representatives of all victorious allied nation in turns. French and Brits numerous times proposed to move Hess to some other location, but Soviets every time turned the proposal down, as they absolutely loved the situation, which allowed them to legally send almost 40 soldiers into western territory, so Hess was used by Soviets as a tool to crowbar themselves into West Germany.
@jamesdunn96094 жыл бұрын
For the last 11 years of his life he was the only inmate at Spandau Prison. He finally hung himself at the age of 93. What a strange tale about a very strange man!
@QuizmasterLaw4 жыл бұрын
it's not hilarious, it's tragic; he was an idiot, sure, a literal nazi, but the criminal regimes crimes weren't so grave as they would become. he was a pawn, his entire life, just a stupid and then decades long imprisoned pawn. oh, and he may have been murdered.
@TotalRookie_LV4 жыл бұрын
@@QuizmasterLaw Be 1941 it was really bad already, as it was years after Kristallnaht, and being so high in Nazi hierarchies, Hess should have been aware of it. Also "they die like flies, but they are Nazis, so who cares?!"(C)
@QuizmasterLaw4 жыл бұрын
@@TotalRookie_LV sure, but these are crimes against Germans, not other countries. See?
@TotalRookie_LV4 жыл бұрын
@Blanc Neige There is no honor in insane stupidity, and that's exactly what both Nazism and Communism were about - both ignored reality and pushed some agenda of "brighter future" by means of killing off "wrong people".
@rurikhistorik63384 жыл бұрын
This week, on May 11 rock singer Eric Burdon was born. In 1967 he will write a song 'When I Was Young": "The rooms were so much colder then My father was a soldier then And times were very hard When I was young"
@speedydb554 жыл бұрын
Britain: "YES! We're finally on the scoreboard!" Germany: "Pfft....big deal. It was against the Italians."
@ChrisHodgsonCorben-Dallas4 жыл бұрын
This channel tends to downplay the naval events. Take those into account and the Allies got on the scoreboard pretty quickly en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_the_River_Plate
@samuelgordino4 жыл бұрын
@@ChrisHodgsonCorben-DallasTrue but there were also several defeats that dint appeared in the regular episodes.
@TheLocalLt4 жыл бұрын
Chris Hodgson naval events don’t change the map, it’s not such a tangible victory for the people. With this victory the British could publish maps with British East Africa instead of Italian East Africa. That’s huge for morale
@mikepeel40054 жыл бұрын
Chris Hodgson Indy does emphasize its the first ground victory they do go over victories at sea but one German ship won’t change the tide of war
@ChrisHodgsonCorben-Dallas4 жыл бұрын
I wouldn’t disagree with the perspective that a small naval victory changes nothing on land, I’m speaking from a family that was heavily RN, and felt events like the loss of HMS Hood like a family bereavement. The little victory at River Plate comes at a critical time in the Phoney War when the mass populations of Britain and France wonder if going through The Great War 2 is worth defending a country on the other side of Europe (do you see much American or Russian interest in defending Poland in 1939?) In June 1940 public morale becomes absolutely critical for the (remaining) Allies to continue with the war against the Nazis, and its here when the little victories like River Plate, Narvik and even Dunkirk make their presence felt. Thanks for the replies, this is a great channel which prompts intelligent responses.
@LetsTakeWalk4 жыл бұрын
This might've been the most surreal thing that a high level Nazi has done.
@cgaccount36694 жыл бұрын
I think it really shows some mental illness. We like to think the nazi leaders were ill but really they were usually quite intelligent. But evil. It makes their crimes all the more disgusting. They knew better
@QuizmasterLaw4 жыл бұрын
Allow me to present WEWELSBURG...
@shako49074 жыл бұрын
@idoj654123 Sweden wouldnt have killed Himmler. That would have been a shitshow
@jmaaybraak4 жыл бұрын
I doubt it lol
@andrewsoboeiro6979 Жыл бұрын
Michael Ondaatje's "The English Patient" contains the best best dramatization of the saga of Lord Suffolk (sadly, left outta the movie)
@timholder68252 жыл бұрын
My dad joined up, with his two elder brothers, September 5th. They were both KIA. First one (Tom) trying to defuse a UXB. No remains.
@merdiolu4 жыл бұрын
10 May 1941 , London , UK , Luftwaffe conducts its heaviest night bombing raid over London under a "full bombers moon" with 507 bombers. This would be hardest but also the last raid of Blitz over British capital. RAF Chain Hoıme Stations and early warning tracked German navigation beam over London towards afternoon and RAF air defences and night time defences of London were in full alert , London Emergency Services were in full alert with all firefighters and Civil Defence Units but nothing prepared anyone savagery of the attack. Over 2.000 fires started by bombing raid , nine of them were classed as conflagations requiring over 100 water pumps , since Thames River is very low in May and countless water mains were damaged it is not possible to stop all fires. The House of Commons , the roof of Westminister Hall and top of Victoria Hall are alight. the City of London , the Mint , the Tower were ablaze. Next morning 1.436 civilians were counted killed or missing , over 1.800 injured and one third of the streets were impassable in British capital. Rescue parties would be searching and saving countless people and pulling bodies from wreckage incoming days. At least 5.000 houses were destroyed. Every railway termainal on main line is out of action. Over 150.000 people are without gas , water and electricity. In exchange 15 German bombers were shot down by RAF nightfighters or British anti aircraft guns.
@liampett13134 жыл бұрын
@idoj654123 There was an Instance of more bombs being dropped on Hamburg in a weekend then London in the entire war. I'm with you on Hiroshima, but at the time Dresden had little strategical importance and the war was very soon drawing to a close. It's not an argument either of us can truly win but it's certainly not black and white. Also the Marshall plan and Berlin airlift were anything but sympathy but rather establishing long term political goals.
@derricklarsen4624 жыл бұрын
Japan and Germany entered war under the childish assumption that they would do all the bombing and nobody would bomb them. They sowed the wind and as a result they reaped the whirlwind.
@AnthonyBrown12324 Жыл бұрын
Having access to airfields near the North Sea and English Channel was of enormous advantage to the Luftwaffe ; coming from France was a short distance ; giving the RAF little time to intercept . . London particularly was easy to find having the Thames smack in the middle bombs anywhere within miles could do damage . This was the German bomber crews happy time . Never to be repeated on this scale later . I am sorry but I have little sympathy for the Germans .They were happy to bomb London and murder occupied people , into the millions . As Harris said" the sowed the wind and reaped the whirlwind ." there are many German propaganda films celebrating in a cheerful tone bombing England . Perhaps it never occurred to them it might happen in reverse . Only then did we hear about terror bombing .
@pablononescobar4 жыл бұрын
Good thing this show goes week by week--no other WW2 doc I've seen has covered the Ethiopian campaign in such detail!
@Raskolnikov704 жыл бұрын
I like that they're covering the war in China too. It's always been kind of a mystery to me because it rarely gets mentioned in any kind of venue - but I guess the WW2 channel is teaching us why. Seems like the entire war there was one big murky stalemate without much in the way of dramatic victories or clearly defined campaigns that most other theaters had.
@ChrisHodgsonCorben-Dallas4 жыл бұрын
I read somewhere that Churchill was informed of the Hess news when he was on his way out to see a movie, and he responded "Bugger Hess, I'm going to see The Marx Brothers"
@merdiolu4 жыл бұрын
That is true. Ian Kershaw's Hitler biography writes this in detail
@ChrisHodgsonCorben-Dallas4 жыл бұрын
@@merdiolu It is too perfect to be not true isn't it? the only thing the Hess defection story needs to be more insane is mention of The Marx Brothers. I'd love to know what Churchill thought of Groucho, Harpo and co because that zany level of comedy is surely a bit cutting edge for an Edwardian like Churchill. It's like finding out Harold Macmillan is a Monty Python fan was it en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Big_Store ?
@peteranderson0374 жыл бұрын
@@ChrisHodgsonCorben-Dallas Something tells me that Winston Churchill had a very good sense of humor.
@DG9-q6f4 жыл бұрын
@@ChrisHodgsonCorben-Dallas I actually find it believable. Sometimes extra hurry produces opportunities, sometimes it does not. And there were bonus points for showing his subordinates, and to a lesser extent Hess, what Churchill thought of the latter.
@raptormaster6664 жыл бұрын
@@peteranderson037 Bessie Braddock MP: “Winston, you are drunk, and what’s more you are disgustingly drunk.” WSC: “Bessie, my dear, you are ugly, and what’s more, you are disgustingly ugly. But tomorrow I shall be sober and you will still be disgustingly ugly.”
@Kriegter4 жыл бұрын
Love the phone calls keep doing them for the rest of the series
@WorldWarTwo4 жыл бұрын
Thanks! We got some good ones planned!
@Kriegter4 жыл бұрын
@@WorldWarTwo That's great!
@daryljonesfoster41024 жыл бұрын
@@WorldWarTwo what a tease .
@Raskolnikov704 жыл бұрын
But what will they do if the wires get cut due to a bombing?
@gunman474 жыл бұрын
5:25 Sounds like a foreshadowing of likely what will happen next week when the war reaches Crete... 9:12 Operation Battleaxe huh? For some reason, it rings memories of the good old Battlefield 1942 map of the same name when I heard this.... In any case though, it's good to finally hear a victory by the British Commonwealth in the East Africa Campaign after a string of losses elsewhere...
@chuckh59993 жыл бұрын
For a bit of light relief - "Tony Hancock and the unexploded bomb".
@PhoenixNoKiseki Жыл бұрын
Germany: You have who? Hess, Hess who? Never heard of him. I appreciate Indy’s enthusiasm for history, he and the whole team make engaging content.
@WorldWarTwo Жыл бұрын
Thanks for your support!
@ScooterWeibels4 жыл бұрын
I really enjoyed your coverage of the East African campaign, it is generally overlooked, and with the victory the allies now have complete control of the Horn of Africa and safe passage to Egypt from India.
@hannahskipper27644 жыл бұрын
Hess: Hi, Brits? 👋 Rommel: finally, I'm gonna get some new equipment around here. 🙄 British: we won, we won, we won!!!!🥳 Hitler: yeah, against Italians. 🙄
@Raskolnikov704 жыл бұрын
I thought the same thing as Indy was describing what an "awesome victory" it was. "Um.... it was the Italian Army....." :D
@eetutorri87674 жыл бұрын
Despite being glossed over and being very limited offensive, Operation Brevity had unforeseen consequence for British as Rommel was actually surprised by this offensive. And only reason why it didn't turn into a succesful attack was because of spirited defense given by 2 Italian bersaglieri battalions stationed in Halfay Pass that gave Rommel time to send reinforcements (very limited ones at that) there. And reason why Italians gave ground there was because they lacked proper anti-tank weaponry, to take on Matilda tanks to be specific. After re-capturing said pass, begun defensive works that would fix that said tank problem. There is good reason why Halfay Pass was nicknamed as "Hellfire Pass" by British a month from now on.
@askar93674 жыл бұрын
ayyyyyyyyy man Rudolf Hess week finally, we did it guys
@sparrow76254 жыл бұрын
I would like it if you did an infantry tactics series. Showing how the various armies attacked and coordinated. For many movies get it wrong.
@IntyMichael4 жыл бұрын
Every time I see the Heinkel 177 in the back I have the fear that it catches fire.
@kelzuya4 жыл бұрын
Rudolph Hess week, noone told me. I better bust out the costumes for the family to wear.
@merkavamayhem58464 жыл бұрын
I demand we see Indy's tie collection in its full glory
@WorldWarTwo4 жыл бұрын
By watching every episode on World War Two and TimeGhost, you _are_ seeing the tie collection in all of its magnificient glory
@ozza44964 жыл бұрын
Happy Rudolf Hess week everyone
@LightxHeaven4 жыл бұрын
And so Martin Bormann enters the stage, a hugely underestimated figure in history.
@williestyle354 жыл бұрын
Like a "bridge" from the younger generation to the leadership. XD
@ottovalkamo14 жыл бұрын
Also, when the Brits/Commonwealth forces won the East African Campaign, it made the Red Sea indisputably safe, compared to previous possible Italian Regia Marina convoy interception.
@borispapic95104 жыл бұрын
One of the reasons Hess remained in prison for so long after the war was exactly because of the fact that he didn't mention anything about the invasion of the Soviet Union, even outright denied it. Soviets really didn't like this so they kept him in prison well into the 80s (well, alongside the fact that he was still somewhat supportive/apologetic of the nazi regime so many years after the war ) despite many appeals from his family and despite most other nazi high ranking officers being released years before him.
@davethompson33264 жыл бұрын
He remained in prison becaue the Soviets would never accept his release The prison arrangement meant they had a presence in W Berlin
@julemandenudengaver45804 жыл бұрын
By hess in prison in west Berlin the sovjet coud no be denied access to west Berlin.. And at the time Hess flew to UK, he where practical out of influence, an wherent at the high up meetings, so i don't really think de did know anything about operation babarossa
@williestyle354 жыл бұрын
Hess did get the briefings with Hitlet *for all future projects*, up till he began losing influence around 6 months before he left.
@luciusvorenus94454 жыл бұрын
Another fantastic episode. Particularly enjoyed the information on the East African Campaign. It seems to get lost in the shuffle of other WWII presentations! Thank you.
@briancostello80532 жыл бұрын
Really good stuff Indy and co 👍
@WorldWarTwo2 жыл бұрын
Thanks @Brian Costello!
@vickicaldwell20914 жыл бұрын
For some reason or another, this episode lifted my spirits.
@od14524 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the up date. The Hess saga is interesting as there seems to be much secrecy that makes one wonder if the Government is really telling all. The most interesting thing is that Hess' flight is well planned and pretty well executed. He breaches British air warning and anti aircraft positions at perhaps the most venerable place. Some intercepting aircraft seemed to be turned back. It does look like he was helped by someone on the British side. (That doesn't mean they did.) And Sikorsky dashes back to Scotland from Canada... looking (to me) like he is afraid Poland might get sold out again..It's a mystery that will probable not be discovered for more decades. Whatever the truth.. I suspect there is much more to the whole thing.
@cdcdrr4 жыл бұрын
General: Duce, Gondar calls for aid. How shall we respond? Mussolini: Do I *look* like I can help them?
@HistoryTimes4 жыл бұрын
Four more years to come with this channel, unbelievable but true
@oliversherman24143 жыл бұрын
Hess: please surrender Britain: no Hess: pwetty pwees
@macarthur28634 жыл бұрын
We learn almost every year when we celebrate our independence from the germans that even old men and women used farming tools and other similar tools to fight off the germans
@DATA-qt3nb4 жыл бұрын
I still wonder if Rudolph loved that brow or completely hated it, either way he definetly rocks it hard
@LarkinJackson4 жыл бұрын
Who has been watching since week 1?
@pnutz_24 жыл бұрын
the real question was who was donating before week 1 when it was only like $1600/mo instead of the 24k or something it is now (diclaimer: I starteddonating just before it hit 5k)
@TheExecutorr4 жыл бұрын
I haven't, but I'm catching up right now. Only 6 months to go until I reach current day.
@taufiqutomo4 жыл бұрын
A more saddening question: how many people watched week 1 but are not around with us today? Some of them died of natural causes, some due to COVID-19, some due to other possible causes of death.
@Crump_Hole4 жыл бұрын
I wish I had a map big enough to cover an entire wall. Especially such a nice historical map.
@Raskolnikov704 жыл бұрын
Sounds like a great interior design project, just grab some paint...
@vickicaldwell20914 жыл бұрын
Oh, I forgot! Do any of you remember the program " Danger UXB"? Good program.
@finchborat4 жыл бұрын
One interesting fact I learned last month while watching Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory. The picture of the fake golden ticket winner is actually one of Martin Bormann. Had the movie been made/released a year or two after his remains were found, another picture would've been used.
@audiosurfarchive2 ай бұрын
That's absolutely absurd--history and this entire human existence is a clowncar crashing into a mausoleum
@sjnm49444 жыл бұрын
Somewhere in Italian army HQ on the plight of besieged Italian forces in Ethiopia: "Gondar calls for aid!"
@rabihrac4 жыл бұрын
"That's one small step for a nation, one giant leap for the Allies" Neil Armstrong time travelling to WW2
@milostomic85394 жыл бұрын
Draza Mihailovic was one of the most important, influential and also tragic figures of the Serbian history from XX century.You'll see why.
@Yeo123Zg4 жыл бұрын
Marginal, genocidal war criminal, guilty of burning down 300 muslim villages in Bosnia to create land for greater Serbia, also setting up conflicts there for later war in the 90s? Arguably, even worse than most of the Nazis, whom he later collaborated with. Please tell me.
@milostomic85394 жыл бұрын
@@Yeo123Zg "Nazi" decorated by Charles de Gaulle and Harry S. Truman?Are you kidding me?"Nazi" who has monuments in Serbia, USA, Canada, Australia. "Nazi" who saved, hid and evacuated 512 American airmen in 1944.
@rogyn84844 жыл бұрын
@@Yeo123Zg If he collaborates directly then how it come that in 1943 Wehrmacht issues warranty of 100.000 Reichsmarks in gold as the prize to those who catch Draža Mihailović and Tito dead or alive? Did he have negotiations with them - yes of course (as the Partisans do too), did some of his units participated in the joint attack against Partisans - yes especially on the end of the war when he totally lost control over the certain commanders. Also people mixing up Chetniks of Draža Mihailović and Chetniks of Kosta Pećanac, those are two totally different things and organizations! Most of the pictures where you have Chetniks with Germans which will be afterwords use as communist propaganda are actually Pećanacs Chetnik troops who were even clashing with the Chetniks of Draža Mihailović. Mihailović declares Pećanac as a traitor and send his people to execute him later. I really hope that this will be all covered in more details because this topic is so deep and creates divisions even today. About muslim villages there is a truth in this but as well muslims who sided with Nazis did the same things to the Serbian villages, that area by the way was a truly huge mess over the whole war with tons of fractions, local gangs, different troops passing, capturing-re-capturing...
@Vilamus3 жыл бұрын
Thank you fopr bringing up the East African campaign. Until this series, I had no idea it even happened, and I consider myself well up on WW2 history. Also, in defence of the Italian soldier, it really does look like Rommel messed up North Africa. For once, Germany dragged Italy into an avoidable war.
@michaszkot44194 жыл бұрын
11:41 I barely noticed Victor Emmanuel
@mistressa3933 Жыл бұрын
I remember a little story about Tito! He had been very disliked by Stalin and since Tito controlled a communist state, he wanted him gone. He sent assassin after assassin after Tito and eventually Tito got so tired of dealing with the assassins that he sent a letter to Stalin saying that he was tired of the assassins and if Stalin didn’t stop sending them, he would only need to send one to Moscow to get the job done. With that message, Stalin stopped trying to assassinate him.
@merdiolu4 жыл бұрын
16 March 1941 , Bremenhaven , Germany , 52.000 ton German ocean liner Bremen was set alight by a crew member while at her dock in Bremerhaven and completely gutted. A lengthy investigation discovered that the arson was the result of a personal grudge against the ship's owners, and was not an act of war.
@ternes35yolo4 жыл бұрын
Do you mean may?
@erichstreberg71014 жыл бұрын
Can we talk about how absolutely horrendous the germans parachute rigs seem to be? Does anyone know why on earth they used that attached to the back system vs risers?
@Raskolnikov704 жыл бұрын
I'd be terrified to use one of them because it doesn't look like there's any way to steer or slip your chute before landing - hope you avoid rivers and manure pits through blind luck, I guess. They also jumped without their rifles or other necessary equipment and as a result were extremely vulnerable until they could get organized on the ground. I went through US Army airborne school and everyone, combat or non-combat personnel, trains the same way to jump and land with your weapon and equipment on your body. It's a good question. Maybe the concept of airborne troops was so new and untested that they hadn't had the chance to learn how to do things better? But even in training it must have been obvious that their methods were seriously flawed.
@merdiolu4 жыл бұрын
13:44 the ground gained by British Commonwealth in Cyreneica-Libya was not COMPLATELY lost , British and Australians still holding port of Tobruk under siege , barring any Axis advance to Egypt , speaking of which British counter attack Operation Compass retook the regions of Egypt Italian 10th Army invaded previous December. And yes East African Campaign in Somali , Ethiophia , Eritea was criminally ignored by popular histories despite the fact that over a huge naval shipping and then supply over land with very hostile terrain with gorges rivers mountains etc , British Commonweath land forces from various countries UK , India , Nigeria , Free Belgians knocked Mussolini's East African empire dreams down and strategically accomplished a huge sucess by securing East African - Red Sea shores. From now on Allied convoys can travel from Red Sea to Indian Ocean , Persian Gulf and Bay of Bengal safely without any interference from Italians in East African bases.
@TheLocalLt4 жыл бұрын
merdiolu81 British Empire no? The only “Commonwealth” countries at this time would be Ireland no? And Ireland had formally stopped talking about it and was well on their way to severing ties, not participating in the war at all, so despite using the title in 1953 for Queen Elizabeth’s crowning and Australia’s use of the term in the legal name, there defacto was no Commonwealth to rule over yet because no Commonwealth Realms (as in a self-governing realm retaining the British monarch but totally outside of Britain’s sovereignty and suzerainty) yet existed, as I mentioned Ireland was defacto one during this vid despite officially still being a dominion, but by 1953 Ireland had totally left the picture and gone its own way. There were no more Commonwealth realms until several Caribbean islands became independent in the 1960s and 70s, and then Canadian independence in 1982 and New Zealand and Australian independence in 1986 created the commonwealth we know today. All those realms were still dominions during this video. And yes Canada still goes by that name but like the above example with Australia it’s just a title, it’s a Commonwealth realm since 1982.
@williestyle354 жыл бұрын
merdiolu81 well said (:
@sreckoopancina27774 жыл бұрын
You got to do an episode covering Draza Mihailovic life and role he played in WW2!!!
@WorldWarTwo4 жыл бұрын
You're right, we gotta! Some day in the future
@BokicaK14 жыл бұрын
@@WorldWarTwo but include Struganik, Brajici, Divci, Gornje Lipovo, Razana... "legalization" of his forces. It would be very, very interesting
@carlosramos-yf8ns4 жыл бұрын
@@BokicaK1legalization of some of his forces won't happen until winter of 41/42. we still have time...;)
@BokicaK14 жыл бұрын
@@carlosramos-yf8ns yep, and rest of events are from autumn of 1941-august of 1944. I forgot to mention Svetomir Đukić's mission and meeting with Ante Pavelić. (Mihailović was godfather or best man to Đukić's son). Legalisation of chetniks forces would fell in category of Baldrick's "cunning plans": it didn't fool neither Germans, nor Partisans, nor British, nor Serbian people...
@Raskolnikov704 жыл бұрын
I'm looking forward to hearing about the partisan conflicts in Yugoslavia, hopefully the channel has a few special episodes about it planned out because it deserves a lot of attention.
@TheVarskvlavtbichuna4 жыл бұрын
Holiday in Crete soon to end...sucks
@El_Presidente_53374 жыл бұрын
10:28 Damn villagers. I always knew that you can't trust them. They already want four wheat and an emerald for an bred!
@Raskolnikov704 жыл бұрын
The new 1.14 villager mechanics are a lot better. More trades, plus you can zombify them and heal them and they'll give you great discounts on everything :)
@El_Presidente_53374 жыл бұрын
@@Raskolnikov70 My ran away to the next village
@Raskolnikov704 жыл бұрын
@@El_Presidente_5337 Put them in minecarts or boats, that way they can't escape. Villagers have always been a pain to deal with but they're worth it in later game play.
@williestyle354 жыл бұрын
It is in the ... odd little things where anything can become farce. Hess was trying to reach Lord Hamilton, who's actual name is Douglas Douglas - Hamilton! lol, his parents actually thought that was a good idea¿ Great episode and storytelling about a good example of just some of the work from Bletchly Park. Crete was such a... different point of conflict then we've seen to this point in the Med. After Fort Eben-Emael, who knew what could be done? It is the litte things ... I've always pronounced Heraklion as Hera• klee on. huh 🙃 Thank you World War Two and TimeGhost History for all the hard work and good content! :-)
@williestyle354 жыл бұрын
r. i. p. Charles Howard, Earl of Suffolk.
@markyoungman14810 ай бұрын
Saying "Belfast in Ireland" to a Brit is like saying "San Antonio, in Mexico". Belfast is in the UK, in Ulster, Northern Ireland. #justsaying.
@adamvink1174 жыл бұрын
Indy, if you haven't already picked it up, "The Forgotten 500" by Gregory Freeman is a fantastic secondary source for the study of the Yugoslav resistance. The events of the main narrative take place a couple of years from where you are in the chronology, but it contains a lot of background information on the main participants. Thanks for being so awesome and in-depth with your docu-series. I miss "It's Sunday Baseball". too.
@BokicaK14 жыл бұрын
I recommend Jozo Tomasevich as even better source for that resistance (actually collaboration force)
@milostomic85394 жыл бұрын
@@BokicaK1 That "collaboration force" in 1942 had the largest Allied army between London and Cairo.Some 50.000 men by the spring 1942. Also, The Forgotten 500 is one the history's most spectacular rescue missions deep behind enemy lines.That was one of the reasons why Harry S. Truman awarded the Legion of Merit to Draza Mihailovic, although posthumously.Charles de Gaulle decorated him as well with Croix de Guerre. You think they would decorate a Nazi collaborator?I don't think so.
@BokicaK14 жыл бұрын
@@milostomic8539 that collaborationist force with so many generals, colonels, majors was defeated numerous times by soldiers commanded by captains, lieutenants and sergeants of ex-Yugoslav Army and Republican volunteers from Spanish Civil War. Operation Halyard was nothing spectacular: chetniks hid and fed downed airmen, built an airstrip and American C-47s did rest of job. Partisans also saved downed American airmen. American planes relieved supplies, and partisans board downed airmen and wounder partisans. Mihailović got his medal from Truman in early Cold War, probably to irritate Tito, whose army brought down few American planes for violating Yugoslav airspace. Truman might or might not hear for Churchill address in House of Commons on 24 May 1944...
@milostomic85394 жыл бұрын
@@BokicaK1 Chetniks didn't bulit an airstrip in Pranjani, peasants did.Mostly women and children because all men were already in guerrilla force. I don't think medal was a way to irritate Tito.It was, in fact, declared as a state secret.USA couldn't just announce something like that because Yugoslavia was now a communist one party dictatorship state. I suggest reading "'Kriegstagebuch des oberkommandos der Wehrmacht", an incredible piece of evidence and history from German perspective and also getting familiar with Cambridge Five, a group of British spies who worked for the Soviets.
@BokicaK14 жыл бұрын
@@milostomic8539 If You want German sources, then I suggest Hermann Neubacher (or whatever You want to explain transfer of Nedić's forces to Mihailovic, or Nedić's and Mihailović's wishes to obtain weapons from Germans, Đurišić's return to Montenegro and failed retreat to German occupied Slovenia). If you want English sources, then I suggest William Bailey (he was with Mihailović from December 1942 until 1944) or Basil Davidson if you want to hear SOE Cairo. Have You ever heard for ULTRA (until this episode?)
@taufiqutomo4 жыл бұрын
Imagine your army being so incompetent that even attempting to surrender ended in a failure.
@Lorscia4 жыл бұрын
I'm sorry, what was that? German's and Japanese's stupid decisions during the war were so huge that I didn't noticed the Italian's ones.
@Rendell0014 жыл бұрын
@carmine paola There obviously were capable Italian officers - Giovanni Messi would be a particular example - but in fact it was Italy's out of date equipment tied to old school senior officers that did them the most harm. Mussolini of course wasn't a "details man" and just expected his generals to magic victories out of thin air. That said, certain Italian units fought with distinction even despite these handicaps - the Alpini mountain divisions and the Bersaglieri Elite light infantry are particularly noteworthy as is the Folgore Paratroop division and the Ariete and Littorio armoured divisions. Oh and then theres the Decima MAS frogmen commandos but thats a whole other story...
@Rendell0014 жыл бұрын
@Plo Koon I notice you didn't reply to my comments yesterday - you seem to be trolling Carmine instead. Whats the matter, chicken?
@Rendell0014 жыл бұрын
@Plo Koon Ah.... "most of the Italian high command was a joke" okay so you're changing tack now are you? See it's okay to have an opinion but the question is: do you want to have a proper grown up discussion or do you simply want to troll?
@Rendell0014 жыл бұрын
@Plo Koon Right - so you didn't make that clear earlier when you just seemed to be trading insults. Glad we got there in the end.
@nicci_valentine3 ай бұрын
"Belfast in Ireland" lmao
@MicaelSG234 жыл бұрын
Oh man, I can't wait for Operation Barbarossa. I can already sense the awsomeness of that episode.
@Raskolnikov704 жыл бұрын
It's going to be 2 hours long, and epic :)
@NamFlowEN4 жыл бұрын
10:35 Locals: _Less talking, more killing!_
@IrishTechnicalThinker4 жыл бұрын
I love the background, my wife now hates our bedroom because it's very similar.
@WorldWarTwo4 жыл бұрын
You have a 1944 Military map in your bedroom?
@IrishTechnicalThinker4 жыл бұрын
@@WorldWarTwo Yes! Next to it, is old officer landline phone, gas mask and a firearm cleaning equipment. Your room inspired me to do it! Cheers old bean. Tally Ho!
@merdiolu4 жыл бұрын
10:10 Duke of Aosta surrendered Amba Alagi fortress because British Indian artillery fire destroyed fuel depots at Amba Alagi and leaked fuel fouled up water supplies of entire Italian garrison atr Amba Alagi.. Without that lucky hit by British Commonwealth artillery , Italians could resist a few more weeks in Amba Alagi maybe but loss of their water supplies permenantly , sealed the fate of entire Italian force trapped there and accelerated the inevitable outcome anyway. Mind you after his capture , British showed a huge deal of respect to Duke of Aosta , Italian Commander in Chief and Viceroy of East Africa ,British considered him a gentelman (he studied in Oxford before the war , he was very fond of British and lamented the fact that Britain and Italy at war) , cared prisoners of war under his custody according international treaties and rarely if ever used Scorched Earth tactics against civilian Ethiophian population (unlike previous Italian viceroy Marshal Graziani who made himself in the region with nickname "Butcher" due to his atrocities) During his captivity in British Kenya , Duke of Aosta was shown full military honors by his captors and he was even allowed to carry his sidearm. When he passed away due to dysentery in 1943 , British buried him with a full honors military funeral
@stevekaczynski37934 жыл бұрын
One reason they held out as long as they did was to avoid having to surrender to Ethiopian or Eritrean irregulars.
@TheLocalLt4 жыл бұрын
merdiolu81 he can’t have been treated too well if he got dysentery
@merdiolu4 жыл бұрын
@@TheLocalLt Sorry he actually passed away from as a result of complications from both tuberculosis and malaria (which were highly contagious diseases in Africa infected many European settlers as well as local population. One third of British colonists in Kenya and Congo struck down with diseases like these in 1930'ies
@tikiblue31524 жыл бұрын
I guess East Africa was the first successful land campaign but I would have thought that Operation Compass would have been considered the first British Commonwealth land victory against the Italian 10th Army as the plan was to capture and occupy Cyrenaica and entrap the Italian 10th Army, which occurred finally at Beda Fomm. British/Commonwealth Troops were then sent to Greece with a holding force left in Cyrenaica as the objectives were achieved. The defeat of the Italian 10th army occurred before Rommel/ DAK arrival and the commencement of Operation Sunflower as the subsequent counter attack.
@pnutz_24 жыл бұрын
9:37 I remember this map from bf5
@yourstruly48174 жыл бұрын
Never played it, I don't need far-left virtue signalling in my video games.
@pnutz_24 жыл бұрын
@@yourstruly4817 don't worry no virtue signallers left now lol
@Raskolnikov704 жыл бұрын
@@yourstruly4817 Hey now, there were lots of disabled transgender otherkin who fought in WWII, you just don't hear about it because of racist historians who wrote them out....
@strikerkhan904 жыл бұрын
@@yourstruly4817 You are Brave and Stunning
@yourstruly48174 жыл бұрын
@@strikerkhan90 Thank you!
@kingjonny3944 жыл бұрын
Gondar calls for aid!
@JasonCliftJones4 жыл бұрын
To quote a bit of graffiti that is apparently the source of a particular 80's band's name... "Rudolf Hess, all alone, dancing the Spandau ballet"
@GunnyKeith4 жыл бұрын
Thanks brother, well done
@yukikaze34364 жыл бұрын
See the book "Malta the Hurricane Years 1940-41" and "Dust Clouds in the Middle East" also see the TIK (History presentation Operation Brevity)
@PersuChogo4 жыл бұрын
I hope you will find unbias story to tell about Yugoslavia... i know. It is a hard and ungreatful job to do it... good luck.
@Raskolnikov704 жыл бұрын
I have no doubt this channel will do an excellent job of covering the conflict. They've been focused on presenting facts and staying as unbiased as they can since day one and I'm looking forward to seeing their specials about it. If only because almost every author or documentary producer seems to have a bias or an axe to grind about it.
@QuizmasterLaw4 жыл бұрын
There was also a naval invasion, or more accurately attempted naval invasion of Crete; it was intercepted and some ships were sunk the remainder turned back.
@QuizmasterLaw4 жыл бұрын
later in the battle some Italians were in fact landed, but not during the initial invasion (which was to have been a simultaneous air and naval landing).
@wfp93784 жыл бұрын
Freyberg... an incredibly brave and daring man. Had his convictions about Crete been correct he would have been praised for his foresight, but instead, he distrusted the new fangled intelligence and became judged as backward and obstinate.
@steliospolychronakis87404 жыл бұрын
We will never know exactly how his mind worked. Granted, he had a very difficult task, organising the island's defence at very short notice, with no heavy artillery and with no air power. However he had more troops on the island than the Germans and the best intelligence any CO could ever have. Ultimately, generals and leaders are judged by results, and Crete fell, partly, due to some poor decisions he made.
@DeathAngelKari4 жыл бұрын
A little off-topic question. Is it possible to purchase the Indy mug in the background? If yes, where? I would love to get Merchandise of this channel if that is possible.
@mikestewart9964 жыл бұрын
Imagine being Mussolini's son in law! When she brings you home to meet the family for the first time that would be.....an experience!
@HS-su3cf4 жыл бұрын
This channel must have the best comment field in the world.
@WorldWarTwo4 жыл бұрын
We agree with that!
@maciejkamil4 жыл бұрын
So the allies finally won a lasting victory. Let's hope, that they will continue to win.
@Rhubba4 жыл бұрын
Next week, the maiden voyage of the Bismark!
@chiranjibbaruah50443 жыл бұрын
Hess: I am here for us to be allies. Brits: Are you insane, you magnificent idiot? Adolf, is he not one of yours? Hitler: I have never seen that man before in my entire life.
@KiwiForce1234 жыл бұрын
I hope Indy brings up that Freyberg is in fact, a New Zealander. While born in the UK, he is largely considered a Kiwi and considered himself one. Apart from Charles Upham, he's one of the most well known NZ soldiers.
@davidswift77764 жыл бұрын
#90 5-16-41 Nutsy Nazi Hess arrives via parachute in Scotland! Wants to meet his buddy the Duke of Hamilton. Meanwhile, attack on Crete and the Brits know ahead of time! East Africa is an Ally victory, their first! Thanks for this impressive week’s insight 👍 ... and Indy’s perfectly pronounced African site 👌
@VENKATESH10954 жыл бұрын
How did you get these information? Actually I didn't Read these kinds of information even in world war 2 books
@WorldWarTwo4 жыл бұрын
There is a source list in the description, can you see it?
@VENKATESH10954 жыл бұрын
@@WorldWarTwo Yeah Thanks Please provide your official mail ID in description for queries
@LightFykki4 жыл бұрын
I wonder what the Duke thought hat Rudolf Hess coming to him so personally. Huh, must have been a bit awkward.
@PatrickBoylanWriter4 жыл бұрын
How long has that coffee mug been there? The red one to our screen right and Indy's left flank?
@patrickazzarella67294 жыл бұрын
Germans in the U.S.:Hey Japan we are pretty sure you naval codes been broken by the U.S. y'all should be concerned. Japan:Nah I dont feel like it. That's impossibrul
@jimpierce50864 жыл бұрын
Such a great channel
@heralds Жыл бұрын
looks like that plan is capuzzo
@ognjenpetrovic58434 жыл бұрын
More of the hess, this week was full of Hess. And just wait for Rudolf Hös to show up
@pnutz_24 жыл бұрын
"more hess content?" you already had the video on tuesday
@WorldWarTwo4 жыл бұрын
Yeah we won't have more hess content. He means this week of the war (which included Tuesday).
@hueylong25904 жыл бұрын
I think it’s important to fully cover Hess, because there’s a lot of Nazi sympathizer myth about him.
@Nicitel944 жыл бұрын
We had one, yes, but what about the second video?
@sub_zero98854 жыл бұрын
Hello indy, one slight correction there at the end, the first allied nation to achieve success on land against the axis , was Greece against the italians where they counterattacked them through Albania , also i think it was the first allied county to liberate a foreign country occupied by the axis too! Cheers
@WorldWarTwo4 жыл бұрын
Two things: The Greek campaign was undisputably a victory for the Greeks initially but don't forget it ended in Axis victory. Secondly, the British and Commonwealth forces did not see action in that campaign until April 1941, when the whole country was being steam-rolled by the Wehrmacht.
@sub_zero98854 жыл бұрын
@@WorldWarTwo hello thanks for responding, if we are talking about the British , yes it is! But indy said "This is the first real allied victory of the war" and Greece was part of the allies so.. anyway now that i think about it , it might had been an allied victory but not a decisive one for sure because later the German boot came...
@Aeyekay04 жыл бұрын
Any resource suggestions to find military service records? Both my grandfathers serve in the war but I don’t know anything about their service.