HITLER - A STRATEGY OF FAILURE

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The War Channel

The War Channel

Жыл бұрын

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@dkcorderoyximenez3382
@dkcorderoyximenez3382 Жыл бұрын
The only thing wrong with this video is that it was too short...I really enjoyed it...
@mikeaguilar5764
@mikeaguilar5764 Жыл бұрын
No. I'm about 3/4 through it and it's had two "inaccuracies" and two outright lies so far.
@mentalasylumescapee6389
@mentalasylumescapee6389 Жыл бұрын
@@mikeaguilar5764 why did you keep watching it so far in then?
@mikeaguilar5764
@mikeaguilar5764 Жыл бұрын
@@mentalasylumescapee6389 It killed time while drinking.
@m42037
@m42037 11 ай бұрын
@@mikeaguilar5764 Ya Hitler was. responsible for more like 50-60 million, the rest of the 70-100 million were due to the Japanese
@mayurdhwaj5127
@mayurdhwaj5127 9 ай бұрын
​@@mikeaguilar5764which were they?
@bftdr
@bftdr 9 ай бұрын
hitler signed chamberlain's piece of paper to get rid of chamberlain. hitler had no intention of honoring the piece of paper.
@robertewing3114
@robertewing3114 Ай бұрын
The piece of paper was a calculated diplomatic game, explained to Douglas Home in Munich. This data began to be universally available in 1946, and scandalous ignored generally despite Home himself publishing it.
@bobbowie5334
@bobbowie5334 10 ай бұрын
Adolf was bound to fail like any gambler who can not know when to quit while still ahead.
@ThelloGregoria
@ThelloGregoria 5 ай бұрын
Good analogy and point my friend
@oilsmokejones3452
@oilsmokejones3452 Ай бұрын
I agree but he was not really all that bright..evidently had never heard of Napoleon Bonaparte...
@bobbowie5334
@bobbowie5334 Ай бұрын
@@oilsmokejones3452 Keep in mind that Germany had already beaten Russia in wwi. Round two was going to be different though.
@oilsmokejones3452
@oilsmokejones3452 Ай бұрын
@@bobbowie5334 If Germany "beat Russia" it was not in Russia and certainly not in a Russian winter....
@Ira88881
@Ira88881 Ай бұрын
@@oilsmokejones3452 The effect of the Russian winter has been way overblown. Most historians now say it was just coincidental, and impact not critical: Germany simply had an impossible task ahead of it (conquering the massive USSR!?), and were unable to supply their troops via such long distances. Even WITH airdrops!
@MrIcumbia
@MrIcumbia 8 ай бұрын
This is what I think: Nazi Germany's plan to invade and conquer Europe, which would include battling against at least three military super powers in air, sea and land operations, was delutional to start with. Yeah, the quick first invasions where impressive but they were not succesfully sustained or replicated. How long could've they stayed occupying "conquered" countries while facing forceful military challenge and civilian resistance or could've they kept a nation-wide war machinery production, economy and way of life. Not for very long I suspect. Not to mention the holocoust horror which was another "front" on its own also guided by delusional ideology. Two years into the six-year war and the light at the end of the tunel was already somewhat visible...that of the train of defeat coming the opposite direction. The whole thing was a suicidal enterpise from the beginning til the end to the point that committing suicide became letmotiv amongst Nazi officers from the very top down. Paradoxically, it'd appear that deep down underlying the ideology of superiority, grandiosity and inmortality there was a death drive towards self-anihilation. On that front, they succeded.
@niladrichoudhury9548
@niladrichoudhury9548 3 ай бұрын
Very well articulated
@virginiasoskin9082
@virginiasoskin9082 3 ай бұрын
The Nazis eventually ran short of soldiers to control the nations the Nazis had conquered. Eventually I think the Nazis planned to make the citizens of the conquered nations like Poland or Czechoslovakia slave laborers. As they died off from overwork and starvation, German families would have moved in to Nazify the countries. There were not enough soldiers to serve on the various war fronts as well as maintaining control of these conquered countries. It was definitely suicidal but what I wonder (and I have watched MANY of these docs) is why the German people followed Hitler, treating him as God. I think it was because he preyed on their grievances about the large reparations required of Germany by the victors of WW1. I think they also needed someone to blame for the weak economy and hyperinflation and the Jews were an easy group to blame. Completely unfair and vicious. Most of the generals and admirals got caught up in the war fervor and believe that Germans were supermen. They followed his rules, but the officer corps was eventually decimated due to war deaths and so were the guys in the trenches. And tell me this, if the Nazi soldiers were fine examples of supermen, why were they all provided with amphetamines to keep them awake for long periods during crucial operations? The whole military was rife with amphetamines right up to Goering and Hitler. Some supermen, eh?
@tonyolivari2480
@tonyolivari2480 2 ай бұрын
The main problem was that for too long he was allowed to bully Europe exp Britain. Once he got the Sudaten land he thought he could take Poland and the British and French would back down again. They didn't/ He really wanted to get at the Soviets but Poland was in the way. I doubt that if the USSR was on Germany's border in 1939 and Hitler had attacked it that Britain or France would have got involved
@paddycoleman1472
@paddycoleman1472 Жыл бұрын
There are many aspects to what caused the rise of Hitler but one of the biggest was the Treaty of Versailles. With hindsight it was insane to inflict such penalties on the people of Germany and simply led to hate, anger, frustration and extreme poverty. These conditions were perfect for extreme political views (right or left) to flourish as was seen in Russia a couple of decades earlier. Fortunately the allies had learnt their lesson and instigated the Marshall Plan at the end of WWII.
@Napolean46
@Napolean46 Жыл бұрын
It was a punishment for aggressive and militaristic german
@Acolyte_of_Cthulhu
@Acolyte_of_Cthulhu Жыл бұрын
USA gave alot of founding to hitler, even supplied ingredients for gunpowder almost to the end of the war.
@DanLetts97
@DanLetts97 Жыл бұрын
I don’t agree. Although that’s a common misbelief. The Versailles Treaty definitely gave birth to right wing parties in Germany, and was certainly leveraged by Hitler, but it didn’t play nearly the role in his rise to power as many think. Keep in mind that Hitler never won an election, nor was he ever going to. The German people were not interested in dictatorship at that point in time. Furthermore, fascism had already come to Spain and Italy, so that tells you that the winds of nationalism were blowing across Europe, and Hitler just rode a wave.
@PastInNumbers
@PastInNumbers Жыл бұрын
Treaty of Versailles wasn’t anything new for peace treaties. And if you think about what Germany would have done to the Allies it’s actually beyond reasonable. Right after wwi when the Great Depression hit the usa even suspended reparation payments and i don’t think they ever resumed until after ww2. Yeah plus a bunch of other reasons the treaty was reasonable and Germany was just bitter and used treaty to justify war again
@flashgordon6670
@flashgordon6670 Жыл бұрын
Hitler escaped to Argentina, watch the documentary film Greywolf and Mark Felton Find the Fuhrer.
@ronaldgreen8423
@ronaldgreen8423 9 ай бұрын
I'm black but I have a half German cousin whose great uncles were in the German Army. They were on the Eastern front and were lucky to have not been killed. They lived to be old men and passed away from natural causes. But the stories they told will never be forgotten,ever.🤔
@virginiasoskin9082
@virginiasoskin9082 4 ай бұрын
My aunt had a German pen pal in the 1930s as a teenager, and of course, he served in the German Army and their correspondence ceased during the war. He must have been on the Eastern front as well, because he was captured by the Russians and was in a Russian prison camp. I do not know how long he was there but I am sure the conditions led to many deaths of the prisoners. I met him when he came to the US along with his wife to visit my aunt in the late 1970s. They had continued to correspond after the war up to the time he died during the a990s. So I got to meet a guy who had been a Nazi. He was a nice, kind-looking man with a pretty good command of English, though his wife only spoke German; but being my aunt spoke some PA German she and the wife could make out pretty well what each other was trying to say. My husband who is Jewish was at that visit and I don't know if the pen pal knew of his religion or not. That was an interesting visit. My aunt also went to Germany several times to visit him and his family.
@SMichaelDeHart
@SMichaelDeHart Жыл бұрын
6:25 geez, y'all need to get your history straight. H!there was sentenced to 5 YEARS imprisonment, BUT, only SERVED 9months 🙄🙄
@muchosgracias3764
@muchosgracias3764 Жыл бұрын
, drives snow along the edge ... in transit., Let us wait for the , , but there are many of us., it doesn't matter. Nothing that is , they caught up with fear!
@SMichaelDeHart
@SMichaelDeHart Жыл бұрын
@@muchosgracias3764 mucho grcias...I guess!!
@robertliskey420
@robertliskey420 Жыл бұрын
54;42 WHEN was Normandy? And WHO was sleeping?
@SMichaelDeHart
@SMichaelDeHart Жыл бұрын
@@robertliskey420 exactly 💯. I missed that one.
@flashgordon6670
@flashgordon6670 Жыл бұрын
Hitler escaped to Argentina, watch the documentary film Greywolf and Mark Felton Find the Fuhrer.
@Apaleutos24
@Apaleutos24 Жыл бұрын
It is mind boggling how far he went from a homeless failed or wannabe painter/artist to a Chancellor of Germany when in fact was an Austrian and all the odds were clearly against of what actually happened! If I was in his position I'd rather leave my mark for something kind and good, something to be admired and remembered in a very beautiful way! Instead he destroyed everything and more than 60 million people for actually what??? For his ego and his sickening beliefs....Too shame fate was kind to him and his attitude was a disgrace to everyone.....
@daleburrell6273
@daleburrell6273 10 ай бұрын
...LIKE I SAID BEFORE: HITLER HAD AN AWFUL LOT OF SUPPORT FROM FORCES "BEHIND THE SCENES"!!! (YES, THERE WAS A CONSPIRACY!!!)
@tomassmolen9443
@tomassmolen9443 10 ай бұрын
its fake story for masses, he was a british agent donated by bank of England
@2true359
@2true359 Жыл бұрын
At first he had a strategy of success. Then the strategy of failure.
@jaywolfdesigns
@jaywolfdesigns Жыл бұрын
Exactly
@thomashenebry8269
@thomashenebry8269 11 ай бұрын
Now, tell us something we don't know.
@ehisgeorge414
@ehisgeorge414 11 ай бұрын
His only errors were invading Soviet Union. If he had remained friendly, Stalin would not have come in and Britain would have been crushed and the US would have relaxed after all some elements in US government were secretly supporting the Nazis.
@TheRealBillBob
@TheRealBillBob 11 ай бұрын
Yep, in regard to the video, I find it interesting that everyone is on the "Hitler stunk as a strategist" or "Thought he knew more than his Generals". The fact is: both were probably true. His success throughout Europe were phenomenal. Every campaign was like a hot knife through butter. His only failure was to declare war against the US and invade the USSR. Had he ONLY invaded the USSR, and not declared war against the US, he would have won and could have continued to wear down the UK.
@jaymxu
@jaymxu 3 ай бұрын
Only becauae he was fighting on all fronts at the same time if japan didn't awake the second giant, adolf would have tsken over all of europe and africa.
@mikeaguilar5764
@mikeaguilar5764 Жыл бұрын
No action was taken by the Luftwaffe because by then (mid-June 1944) there was almost no Luftwaffe to take action. I gotta ask, is this video a student project at the junior high level?
@roncolemanlaw
@roncolemanlaw 10 ай бұрын
Nailed it. What could they be talking about?
@josephlininger2677
@josephlininger2677 8 ай бұрын
I appreciate the fact that just watching it is much more than what most do. Sometimes , depending on your knowledge it may seem elementary but it is our responsibility to use that historical knowledge to wake people up. I watch the politicians today and admire hardly any but we control them and don't forget it.
@fredsimchawang6327
@fredsimchawang6327 Жыл бұрын
Just one correction here in 1925 Germany's Parliament was called the Reichstag not the Bundestag. The latter is a creation of the Bundesrepublik Germany which came about in 1948 thank you very much and have a great afternoon
@roncolemanlaw
@roncolemanlaw 10 ай бұрын
Also "Nazi" is not an acronym. It's the first two syllables of "Nazional"
@fredsimchawang6327
@fredsimchawang6327 10 ай бұрын
@@roncolemanlaw Nazi is derived from the official name of the party which was Nazional Sozialistischer Deutscher Arbeiters Partei acronym NSDAP. It happens to be that I speak German fluently so I am certainly familiar with this matter. In addition like you I am a lawyer dually qualified both North American common law as well as European civil law. Thank you very much and good night
@roncolemanlaw
@roncolemanlaw 10 ай бұрын
@@fredsimchawang6327 Well done!
@Joe-ro9ck
@Joe-ro9ck 8 ай бұрын
@@fredsimchawang6327I don’t get it though did they just move letters around
@patch22607
@patch22607 Жыл бұрын
08:16. Correction: The German parliament during the Weimar Republic was called the Reichstag, not Bundestag. The Bundestag only came along with the creation of the Federal Republic of Germany in 1949.
@marcelbork92
@marcelbork92 Жыл бұрын
By the way: I have never ever seen him making a fist. And you also never have, that's for sure.
@boandlkramer2539
@boandlkramer2539 Жыл бұрын
Kaiser Wilhelm ii nannte das Parlament ein Affenhaus ☝️ Es lebe der Kaiser 👍😊
@mrs6968
@mrs6968 Жыл бұрын
Don't forget d day in Normandy wasn't on June the 22nd errors all throughout this program
@b.g.5869
@b.g.5869 11 ай бұрын
The Nazis didn't call themselves Nazis; it was a term of derision used by their opponents.
@MikeWoot-swp
@MikeWoot-swp 22 күн бұрын
Be kinda wild if they did. Considering that most nazi's didn't speak English. 🙆‍♂️ 🤔💭 Any idea what they called the US military?
@b.g.5869
@b.g.5869 22 күн бұрын
@@MikeWoot-swp Nazi isn't an English word. It's an abbreviation derived from the full German spelling of the NDSAP, Nationalsozialistische. By the start of the 30s, 'Nazi' came to be mainly used by the political left as a derogatory term for the National Socialists, analogous to the right's derogatory term for the socialists, 'Sozi'. "Nazi" also had a negative connotation in German because it sounded a lot like "Ignatz", which was and is a German name associated with the German equivalent of hillbillies; sort of like "Cletus" or "Bubba" in the US. The term "Nazi" was used by the US and Brits simply because it was a lot easier to say than "Nationalsozialistische". The Nazi nickname for US soldiers was "Amis".
@marc2638
@marc2638 7 күн бұрын
Germans called themselves National Socialists back then because that’s what they were and their political party was said title, National Socialism. The word or acronym NAZI means NSDP which is National Socialist German workers party, it makes no sense in English but in German it looks like this,, NSDAP NATIONALE SOCIALISTISCHE DEUTSCHE ARBEITS PARTEI. That word worker/workers always pops up because that’s what National socialism supports, the workers of a society that make the society work and be able to live and survive,,, its people the country’s people, socialism, social and then National, nation, meaning all, everybody, together. That’s why you see the unity in Germany the solidarity the togetherness the pride that most call it but it wasn’t even pride it was just being part of society a German workers society, that’s what Hitler did, he unified Germans and made a pact with them (society, social, socialism) everyone works for all, all work for everyone, and the crazy part is National Socialism actually worked!!! Under his I’ll say supervision because Führer doesn’t mean leader, in German that word does not mean leader it’s more closely related to guide. Another reason national socialism worked,,,, Hitler wasn’t making it look like he was ruling Germans the Germans felt they were being guided and people tend to much more follow someone who isn’t a dictator but makes it look like he’s there with them just guiding them giving direction not demands, I don’t know about any of you but that’s pretty smart even though he was top dog he portrayed himself equal to his people. My grandmother grew up under Hitler and even she to this day said Hitler made the streets safe for women to walk down them alone again and many many people loved him, men respected him women loved him. He was taken out because hitlers idea of national socialism worked plain and simple, no other society today can send a worker abroad on vacation with money in their pocket enjoy that vacation and come back home happy and ready to work, he had it figured out, capitalism is about money not the man making it that’s the difference!!! Money is importsnt to our society not the worker and if we honored and respected workers this country would turn around for the better too
@marc2638
@marc2638 7 күн бұрын
And by vacation I mean the average blue collar American worker,,, our workers are so poor in our society we have to decide pay a bill or buy groceries?? Our society doesn’t sound very appealing anymore, the worker is held responsible to support the few at the top when it should be the worker working together to support a nation,,, I don’t think a McDonald’s worker should make the same as a Construction worker I’m not about that and neither is national socialism but I would love to be in a society where things are fair and there’s no class Distinction, you pay should directly be related to your skill set and should increase over time along with your skills, we should have way more trade schools and we should have a pension for careers not jobs, there is a difference between jobs and careers, career is what supports you and your family your life a job is a low paying stepping stone, and something that should not be viewed as a dependence to sustain a life, lotta people don’t understand that here today, careers pay jobs don’t and you can’t have a high paying job it ruins everything else, jobs are for the elderly, or teenagers starting off but if you’re an adult you shouldn’t have a job as main source of income it’s not sustainable. That’s why we need schools to educate people in their career and enable them to improve their way of life, a persons career gives them purpose and keeps them going we are missing that in our society today that’s why America is the way it is, we have no pride in our work and we contract it out for others to do,,,, why??? When we are perfectly Capable doing it for ourselves
@b.g.5869
@b.g.5869 7 күн бұрын
@@marc2638 What the hell are you rambling about? Vacation? Whuh?
@Patrick_Cooper
@Patrick_Cooper Жыл бұрын
Okay, at 54:51 the narrator gets the freaking date of the D-Day invasions. June 22? Who wrote the script for this thing. Not pointed at the The War Channel, unless you guys did write the script for this. Someone needs a historian and editor...
@Mark-qq9cd
@Mark-qq9cd Жыл бұрын
Maybe thinking Barbarossa invasion date? Still not an excuse.
@ActiveAussie2024
@ActiveAussie2024 Жыл бұрын
Yeah they must have confused D -Day with Barbarossa. I m just a very amateur historian and even I wouldn't have fucked that up.
@elvynjones2489
@elvynjones2489 Жыл бұрын
It's full of mistakes.
@johnwayne2140
@johnwayne2140 Жыл бұрын
Facts and historical dates do not matter in our days. It is quite fashionable to make mistakes and contradict oneself. It is not even considered wrong or a big deal. It is the political opinion and position that truly matter
@Cromwelldunbar
@Cromwelldunbar 10 ай бұрын
@@johnwayne2140 If only « to prove you’re human and apt to make mistakes » and watch it, don’t insist on their mistakes before they call you a Nazi!
@ggall001
@ggall001 2 ай бұрын
Thank you for not censoring the horrors & cruelty of war. Censoring only guarantees repetition of events.
@goneforever4659
@goneforever4659 Жыл бұрын
6:18 You misspoke there, SA was there long before the SS....
@louisgiokas2206
@louisgiokas2206 Жыл бұрын
At about 42:40 a statement that was clearly untrue. Prior to Pearl Harbor it is true that the US was supplying the British, but they were not "piling up men and supplies" for an invasion at that point. In fact, the US would have been quite happy to concentrate on Japan and leaving Europe alone. The reason that the US did not get involved in WWI and WWII early was an aversion among the populace to getting entangled in European wars. In fact, there was much debate in US political and military circles, even after Germany's declaration of war, about who to defeat first. After WWII, the US decided to learn its lesson and remained firmly involved in Europe and Japan after WWII.
@flashgordon6670
@flashgordon6670 Жыл бұрын
Hitler escaped to Argentina, watch the documentary film Greywolf and Mark Felton Find the Fuhrer.
@virginiasoskin9082
@virginiasoskin9082 4 ай бұрын
Yes, the Lend Lease Act was passed on March 8, 1941. So yes, before (12/7/1941) Pearl Harbor we were "lending" the UK war materiel. FDR told the American ppl about a simple way to look at Lend Lease: Your home is on fire and you go to your neighbor and ask if you can borrow his hose to put out the fire. He says yes, so you put out the fire and return his hose to him afterward. Well, that was kind of simplified because in reality the UK was not going to return ammo, planes, jeeps, etc. They were going to use them up -- the items would be destroyed in battle. Anyway, I think FDR came up with Lend Lease on a cruise he went on. He sat on deck in the sunshine and formulated Lend Lease in his mind. And none too soon for the UK which was hanging on by a thread. He could send this materiel to our allies while still insisting to American mothers that none of their sons were going to go to war.
@louisgiokas2206
@louisgiokas2206 4 ай бұрын
@@virginiasoskin9082 Kind of cynical. Who wants their sons to go to war when you have not been attacked. Don't forget that the main policy of the US from its inception was to not get involved in European wars. Just looking at the time up to the founding of the US, Europe always seemed to be at war. The colonists were even involved in what many consider the first world war, the Seven Years War, just prior to independence. By the way, the UK did pay back money to US. The last payment was at the end of 2006.
@colder5465
@colder5465 Жыл бұрын
As for Austria: After the dissolution of Austro-Hungarian Empire Austrians were in the mood of uniting with Germany, Hitler or no Hitler. But that reunification was outright forbidden by Versaille victors. They felt being capable of direct forcing other nations what to do what not to do. That greatly misfired in the future.
@colder5465
@colder5465 10 ай бұрын
@@semsemeini7905 But certainly the majority
@mikeaguilar5764
@mikeaguilar5764 Жыл бұрын
America was piling up men and supplies in England by the beginning of December 1941 in what universe exactly? It took the US a few months before even US Army Air Forces began going.
@dougrobbins5367
@dougrobbins5367 7 ай бұрын
Learn English, then people might have some idea what you are talking about
@mikeaguilar5764
@mikeaguilar5764 7 ай бұрын
@@dougrobbins5367 Who might that be you're referring to?
@dougrobbins5367
@dougrobbins5367 7 ай бұрын
In March 1941 the lend lease act began shipping weapons, money, and food to britain, china, and russia. In what universe? In the real universe. It took the US a few months? A few months to do what? There was a "few months" between two events, apparently. What were those two events? "before even US army air forces began going" Why "even"? Began going where? To Britain? Very confusing@@mikeaguilar5764
@Churchill867
@Churchill867 11 ай бұрын
Hitler wasn't wounded in the beer hall pouche. That was Hermin Goring who got shot in the stomach. Which in turn led to his long term addiction to morphine.
@Michelles222
@Michelles222 11 ай бұрын
Yes hitler was wounded.
@constanceduval-on7fu
@constanceduval-on7fu 6 ай бұрын
Yes, he had a dislocated shoulder
@williamdorsey2029
@williamdorsey2029 4 ай бұрын
Goring was shot in the groin during the Beer Hall Putsch but he did become an addict because of the morphine.
@MikeWoot-swp
@MikeWoot-swp 22 күн бұрын
Well, where exactly Hermann Göring's groin stopped and his stomach began, was another continously changing line throughout the years. 🙋🏻‍♂️
@mikeaguilar5764
@mikeaguilar5764 Жыл бұрын
The invasion of Normandy was on June 6th, 1944; not the 22nd. This is an egregious error that befuddles me how you can try and pass it off.
@monoecumsemper
@monoecumsemper Жыл бұрын
54:40 "an egregious error": unbelievable that it was not corrected
@sapas100
@sapas100 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for saving my time. I could not with all good conscience watch a documentary that was capable of making such an embarrassing error
@mikeaguilar5764
@mikeaguilar5764 Жыл бұрын
@@sapas100 Meh. It killed some time.
@vincentlussier8264
@vincentlussier8264 Жыл бұрын
I'm not watching this if the facts are wrong!
@hajime2k
@hajime2k 9 ай бұрын
To be fair, June 22 was Operation Bagration which much more damage to the German forces.
@rikijett310
@rikijett310 Жыл бұрын
You're breaking my heart Adolf. You were supposed to destroy the Sith, not join them!!! 😂
@fritzforsthoefel8031
@fritzforsthoefel8031 Жыл бұрын
It happens
@gaozhi2007
@gaozhi2007 Жыл бұрын
"My powers have doubled since the last time we met, France!"
@thomashenebry8269
@thomashenebry8269 11 ай бұрын
How old are you, 10?
@hopolang99
@hopolang99 4 ай бұрын
😂
@hopolang99
@hopolang99 4 ай бұрын
@@gaozhi2007indeed
@THEMICROMARKSHOW
@THEMICROMARKSHOW Жыл бұрын
if he had just made Germany strong again without murdering thousands of people. germany might have been one of the greatest countries. but he wasted his might through war and murder.
@thomashenebry8269
@thomashenebry8269 11 ай бұрын
The Germans make sure Germany will never be great.
@virginiasoskin9082
@virginiasoskin9082 4 ай бұрын
Oh, he wanted REVENGE for his many grievances: 1) his father's verbal and physical abuse toward young Adolf, who had to go to his mother for comfort; 2) his failure to become an artist for lack of talent and/or the willingness to put in the work to learn how to improve his work; 3) his wounding in WW1; 4) the heavy reparations Germany was forced to pay by the victors in WW1. He imagined others as well -- his antisemitism, for example. He blamed Jews for everything that went bad in Germany with absolutely no proof of anything they might have been doing; perhaps he equated Jews with Bolsheviks, who he feared. But not ALL Jews were Bolsheviks; but that would not have mattered -- to get rid of the Bolshies you had to get rid of all the Jews to make sure you did a thorough job. His usual mentality when wanting to take over a country by force would be to have some of his thugs create some protests and fistfights in that country, and then say that the country was on the brink of anarchy so he would send in the Wehrmacht to restore order his own pawns destroyed. No "treaty" he signed held any weight. Finally after five or six countries were taken over, they finally realized that you could not take him at his word. They learned to watch what he did rather than what any treaty said. Any time you have a maniac or sociopath with imagined grievances, you better look out because if he attains power he is going to take revenge on everyone who ever said a bad word about him.
@moodswingy1973
@moodswingy1973 Ай бұрын
LOL all thousands of people 😂
@ednorton47
@ednorton47 Жыл бұрын
It was Britain and France that declared war on Germany, not the other way around.
@davecopp9356
@davecopp9356 Жыл бұрын
Well said. History is a lie the victors agreed upon. Napoleon
@taliabraver
@taliabraver Жыл бұрын
Thank you god!
@chunkycornbread4773
@chunkycornbread4773 11 ай бұрын
Judging by the comments on this video humanity learned nothing from the millions of people who died in ww2.
@chrisoleary9876
@chrisoleary9876 3 ай бұрын
Especially the 20 million Russians.
@robertewing3114
@robertewing3114 Ай бұрын
Blame destroys, gratitude builds. Culturally, we pursue blame, and politicians are the target, so very little has been appreciated of pre-war Europe, because the most recent politicians are the most popular targets, those in power from 1933...
@Lukejb2Butterworth
@Lukejb2Butterworth Жыл бұрын
25:55 No June 1940 was not the nazis greatest extent at all , that came after the invasions of the Balkans , USSR and nth Africa . That date came in late 1942 .
@DrJones20
@DrJones20 11 ай бұрын
There are sooo many mistakes in this documentary, was it made by an AI?
@martinbeausoleil5229
@martinbeausoleil5229 6 ай бұрын
For example, the documentary says he was sentenced to nine months after the Beer Hall Putsch in 1923. False! He SERVED only nine months in Landsberg Prison, but he was SENTENCED to five years' imprisonment.
@salt27dogg
@salt27dogg 4 ай бұрын
And they act like Hitler went and tried to conquer France . France and UK declared war on Germany over Poland and didn’t lift a finger to help Poland and Russia also took half of Poland and didn’t even blink at them.
@stevenmaginnis1965
@stevenmaginnis1965 3 ай бұрын
D-Day was June 6, 1944, not June 22.
@GeorgeHutchins
@GeorgeHutchins Жыл бұрын
Missing: Slovakian Representatives were jailed in Prague, by Czechs, when asking for independence from Czechoslovakia, so Slovakia asked for German military assistance, which led to German intervention. Then, Slovakia remained a German Ally throughout World War Two.
@davecopp9356
@davecopp9356 Жыл бұрын
Very well said. History is a lie the victors agreed upon. Napoleon
@mclaughlinja1995
@mclaughlinja1995 11 ай бұрын
42:18 is incorrect - Hitler wasn’t “furious” with the Japanese over not having been consulted in advance about Pearl Harbor. His staff described him as “ecstatic” and “jubilant,” and Ian Kershaw’s biography quotes Hitler as telling his generals immediately after learning of the attack, “We can’t lose the war at all. We now have an ally which has never been conquered in 3,000 years.” Hitler also praised the Japanese for attacking without a formal declaration of war, saying that it was “great nations” do.
@DaRyteJuan
@DaRyteJuan Жыл бұрын
Wow. This docu was so well done. No frills and no fluff. Just straightforward storytelling. 👍
@thedon1570
@thedon1570 Жыл бұрын
They won a lot though so how is that well done?
@linclinc-km6kj
@linclinc-km6kj 11 ай бұрын
I agree. That's what I like from this channel thus far.
@RocknRollAddicts
@RocknRollAddicts Жыл бұрын
More content like this, please!
@Patrick_Cooper
@Patrick_Cooper Жыл бұрын
At 42:00 WTF. Is the music some sick joke, or famous Japanese battle song, I have never heard of. Or did the sound guy mess up and put some of children's show music in by accident?
@virginiasoskin9082
@virginiasoskin9082 4 ай бұрын
I know -- that was very weird -- like music box music. That was sicko.
@bobby.m136
@bobby.m136 Жыл бұрын
The first question this documentary asks is if Hitler deserved the recognition for this war absolutely yes he did he started this war? Absolutely yes.He started it, it was his to own.
@flashgordon6670
@flashgordon6670 Жыл бұрын
Hitler escaped to Argentina, watch the documentary film Greywolf and Mark Felton Find the Fuhrer.
@arthunterns
@arthunterns Жыл бұрын
Germany started two biggest conflicts on this planet
@bobby.m136
@bobby.m136 Жыл бұрын
@@arthunterns yup...just didn't play well with others
@CreepBoot
@CreepBoot Жыл бұрын
@@arthunterns im curious at how do you think they started the first one?
@redseagaming7832
@redseagaming7832 Жыл бұрын
Also did Hitler bring down his own economy trying to kill Jews while he was in the middle of a war Yes absolutely.
@kathrynmcadams8091
@kathrynmcadams8091 11 ай бұрын
Very simplistic look at this history.
@mikeaguilar5764
@mikeaguilar5764 Жыл бұрын
Wow. Just. Wow. From about 55:00 onward this devolves into what appears to be the results of somebody throwing darts at a board with World War II happenings to write the video script with no regard for factual accuracy. Prior to that it had a couple issues but ....... I'm at about 58:00 and I can't keep watching. It hurts to see/hear someone passing this part of it off as a documentary.
@davecopp9356
@davecopp9356 Жыл бұрын
History is a lie the victors agreed upon. Napoleon
@joseluisrosales4104
@joseluisrosales4104 Жыл бұрын
Porqué ha olvidado el narrador que la URSS invadió simultáneamente el este de Polonia ? De hecho se asigna en el mapa de la invasión que toda Polonia fue adquirida por la fuerza a Alemania. Cosa que es incierta puesto que solo se llegó hasta la línea de Brest-Litrov acordada en el pacto Germano-Soviético. Es un fallo muy grave para un canal de historia militar.
@Dth-str
@Dth-str Жыл бұрын
Agree with you
@timothyfeldhaus3823
@timothyfeldhaus3823 Жыл бұрын
His crimes against humanity are unparalleled, but he was a mastermind and went from a homeless painter to the most powerful man on Earth.. 🤷🏻
@signalhilltv5237
@signalhilltv5237 Жыл бұрын
ROFl Thutmoses was the Napoleon of Europe? Napolean and Hitler lost!!!!!!!!!!!
@dougrobbins5367
@dougrobbins5367 Жыл бұрын
He had the manipulative cunning of a criminal. "Mastermind" my butt. "The most powerful man on earth" shot himself in his bunker while german children on the streets above faced the Russian tanks. No greater coward ever walked.
@6876I
@6876I Жыл бұрын
What crimes.
@fritzforsthoefel8031
@fritzforsthoefel8031 Жыл бұрын
Hitler won medals during the first world war
@kurtvonfricken6829
@kurtvonfricken6829 Жыл бұрын
Most powerful man on Earth? Hardly😂.
@thiago.c123
@thiago.c123 11 ай бұрын
Your analysis of the reasons Hitler didn't wipe out the French and British troops at Dunkirk is shallow and flawed. Your main thesis is that Hitler was in doubt between listening to the Luftwaffe or the Army giving the British time to escape. Bollocks.
@rbilleaud
@rbilleaud Жыл бұрын
Usually this channel is pretty good, but several unforgivable mistakes. D-Day was June 6, not 22nd. Hitler was NOT injured in the Beer Hall Putsch. There were others. Come on, get it together.
@mmjhcb
@mmjhcb 9 ай бұрын
Hitler WAS injured! He had a badly dislocated shoulder.
@robertmccall2464
@robertmccall2464 4 ай бұрын
True..these facts as well known.. precise clipped presentation is just a part of a documentary.. facts should be accurate.
@Cata-Holic_Doode
@Cata-Holic_Doode 4 ай бұрын
Hitler got tear gassed in the riot and wrote the art of war in art school remember? 🤣
@maratibragimov338
@maratibragimov338 Жыл бұрын
Saar was NOT "ceded to France" but placed under administration of League of Nations with intrinsic right to self-determination to be exercised after 15 years since 1918..options stood 1.Return to Germany 2.Join France 3.Become Independent State..
@bhewi1982
@bhewi1982 9 ай бұрын
The Russians already had them on the ropes by the time the allies invaded in June of '44. The Russians would've still pushed them back all the way to Berlin, just would've took a bit longer
@Movingforward2000
@Movingforward2000 9 ай бұрын
Not without the Americans intervining
@rtm8575
@rtm8575 Жыл бұрын
Beginning at 46:48, what is the name of this piece of music?
@CO2Giger
@CO2Giger Жыл бұрын
Great documentary! ! !
@colder5465
@colder5465 Жыл бұрын
Second: why Hitler came to power so smoothly without any outer resistance. Very simple: he was viewed by western powers as a counterweight to Communism in general and Soviet Russia in particular. In such role Hitler was great for Britain and especialy for a sweet couple Chamberlain - Halifax. Chamberlain utterly hated Russia and Russians up to losing adequacy. He was prone to sign any treaty with Hitler. Completely forgetting centuries old British policy of not allowing any continental hegemony in Europe. The Munich agreement was Chamberlain's victory in the sense that he managed to kick out Russia out of European affairs. Britain and France clearly showed that any treaty with Russia was meaningless because all leading European powers acted as if there wasn't such a treaty at all. That in turn greatly misfired for Britain when Stalin - suddenly for the British - decided to wash his hands of European affairs and went into non-agression pact with Hitler.
@luidefunes
@luidefunes 10 ай бұрын
15 Jahre hat er zur Macht gebraucht. Du hast keine Ahnung von deutscher Geschichte.
@scasey1960
@scasey1960 7 ай бұрын
Woodrow Wilson did not support the treaty of Versailles as drafted by the English & French. British foreign policy decisions have been a disaster for the world over the last 100 years. We are still living with the horrible consequences these decisions.
@ZeeMiucin
@ZeeMiucin 4 ай бұрын
thank you !!!❤
@davidsleith7222
@davidsleith7222 Жыл бұрын
good docu, cheers bigears.
@aranireland
@aranireland Жыл бұрын
Fantastic videos
@tonyobadinage6647
@tonyobadinage6647 Жыл бұрын
54:42 "When the invasion finally happened on June 22nd, 1944..."??? Sure to goodness they could have got that date correct!
@jamielynn656
@jamielynn656 Жыл бұрын
It's like watching a train reck. It's the reason I watch. Although, I'm sure it wasn't all like that if you were there. THANK GOD he went down. Less we forget those that fought to kill him.
@TheRealBillBob
@TheRealBillBob 11 ай бұрын
Well, in regard to the video, I find it interesting that everyone is on the "Hitler stunk as a strategist" or "Thought he knew more than his Generals". The fact is: both were probably true. His success throughout Europe were phenomenal. Every campaign was like a hot knife through butter. His only failure was to declare war against the US and invade the USSR. Had he ONLY invaded the USSR, and not declared war against the US, he would have won and could have continued to wear down the UK.
@ronwilsontringue6574
@ronwilsontringue6574 10 ай бұрын
Adolf liked cats - he couldn't have been all that bad.
@virginiasoskin9082
@virginiasoskin9082 4 ай бұрын
Don't forget his German Shepherd, Blondi, a gift as a puppy from Martin Bormann. Blondi slept on Hitler's bed, but Eva did not like Blondi so she disapproved of that. Blondi went into the bunker with Hitler toward the end. Hitler got cyanide through Heinrich Himmler in case he wanted to use it to kill himself, but he wanted to make sure it was lethal and would work. So the doctor in the entourage gave a capsule to Blondi, who quickly died. When committing suicide, Eva took cyanide while Hitler shot himself.
@80harrison
@80harrison 10 ай бұрын
The poor Poles suffered so much!
@claudettes9697
@claudettes9697 Жыл бұрын
Really great documentary. Haunting and not glorifying a thing. Intense and not overly done. A gd nightmare.
@foucault8964
@foucault8964 Жыл бұрын
Doesn’t it always come down to the British voice over?
@claudettes9697
@claudettes9697 Жыл бұрын
@@foucault8964 no but thanks for commenting
@arulraj3076
@arulraj3076 Жыл бұрын
What a sad history, for all humanity. Death n distruction only through wars !
@louisleder3026
@louisleder3026 Жыл бұрын
Let’s not forget who really is in charge of the world and who raises in stature evil men to start wars
@malcolmledger176
@malcolmledger176 Жыл бұрын
Who?
@dreamawake2670
@dreamawake2670 Жыл бұрын
@@malcolmledger176 The globalist, the international clique.
@julianmarsh8384
@julianmarsh8384 Жыл бұрын
Outdated documentary...should have started with Munich and Hitler's pledge that he had no further territorial demands within Europe...when he violated this only six months later when he took over all of what was left of Czech., England and France finally concluded one could not deal with Hitler. At that point they issued their proclamation that if Hitler attacked Poland, they would declare war. France did launch an offense after Hitler invaded Poland but quickly lost their nerve and retreated...the war did continue after the fall of Poland but only in the air and on the sea...Hitler invaded Norway because he suspected England planned to invade them first...the Allies fought in Norway and could have held on in northern Norway but panicked when Germany invaded France...and on and on it goes...
@alfredpetrie7920
@alfredpetrie7920 Ай бұрын
It was absolutely ridiculous to have a situation with so much power in the hands of one man
@opoxious1592
@opoxious1592 11 ай бұрын
54:35 the narrator says that the Normandy invasion took place on 22 June 1944. What a terrible mistake. The invasion was on June 6th of 1944 The date 22 june, was the start of tyhe Russian invasion in 1941
@dougrobbins5367
@dougrobbins5367 11 ай бұрын
The grim, intense, horrific, yet incredibly compelling history of this conflict is here disrespected by loud, idiotic, pounding, relentless, irrelevant "music" that no one in their right mind would want to listen to. How anyone can sit through that meaningless sonic diarrhea is beyond me.
@fonziebulldog5786
@fonziebulldog5786 Жыл бұрын
The true evidence that if you are stupid enough but have some real luck for some time everything could sadly be possible in that moment even if you walk straight into hell with millions of dead humans.
@Divine-Thunder.
@Divine-Thunder. Жыл бұрын
Hitler-Stalin pact! Molotov-Ribbentrop. Beria-Himmler same thing.
@virginiasoskin9082
@virginiasoskin9082 4 ай бұрын
His signature meant nothing and was normally used merely to confuse his fellow signers, and to play for time if he needed it to get his troops or planes into readiness. Sociopaths have NO trouble lying over and over because they have no sense of why someone would be honest and not be out for his own power and wealth. Like when Trump asked someone about the dead soldiers in a cemetery, asking someone, "I don't get it. What was in it for them?" He has no sense of honor, of patriotism, of giving your life for freedom or for an idea -- democracy. He really does not understand anyone's sacrifice. He is INCAPABLE of understanding that. And therefore he expects total loyalty from his employees but gives NONE in return because he is only ever out for himself.
@DavidRing-c8s
@DavidRing-c8s Жыл бұрын
yea another idiot coward having other demons to do his dirty work was the meth a real factor i think so..
@nathanaeljohnsonjr6805
@nathanaeljohnsonjr6805 2 ай бұрын
Satan was the head factor
@syedadeelhussain2691
@syedadeelhussain2691 Жыл бұрын
Inflation brought fascists into power. Economic mismanagement was the root cause.
@dennisweidner288
@dennisweidner288 2 ай бұрын
While generally correct in general terms, this video accepts a range of popular beliefs that have been questioned by historians as well as some absolutely ridiculous mistakes such as dating D-Day to June 22, apparently confusing t it with Barbarossa. [54:35]
@ehisgeorge414
@ehisgeorge414 11 ай бұрын
Now the Poles and Ukrainians have forgotten that they are Slavs. Their attempts to become Westerners is bringing woes upon them.
@Schrodinger99
@Schrodinger99 Жыл бұрын
What are the soundtracks?
@Alan1234x
@Alan1234x 8 ай бұрын
Everyone is a critic.
@iiitiberiusiii3441
@iiitiberiusiii3441 Жыл бұрын
Are you kidding me? Not a single word about Molotov-Ribbentrop pact and the fact that Poland was invaded and split by both Germany and the USSR? On the map you show Poland fully occupied by Germany, are you insane? And btw, it's not Russia, it's USSR, very different. Go educate yourself, before you try to educate others.
@stevenmaginnis1965
@stevenmaginnis1965 3 ай бұрын
The Molotov-Ribbentrop pact allowed Stalin to annex the Baltic States as well. Hitler also used some sort of excuse to get the Czechs to capitulate that, if I'm not mistaken, had something to do with the Slovaks. Slovakia was made a separate country under German domination. It was a Nazi satellite state much like postwar Czechoslovakia would be a Communist satellite state under Soviet domination. Also, consider Imperial Germany's northeasternmost city - Memel. It's a seaport that is now the Lithuanian city of Klaipeda and was part of Lithuania between the wars. Hitler managed to get Lithuania to ceded it back to Germany. It was his last peaceful acquisition of territory.
@PoorMansChemist
@PoorMansChemist 10 ай бұрын
When you can't get the most basic facts right how trustworthy is the rest of your information?🙄
@jet63919
@jet63919 Жыл бұрын
You watch this shit to possibly get answers and they always start with questions...WTF....
@NateTheGnat
@NateTheGnat Жыл бұрын
Whistling "Whos Afraid of the Big Bad Wolf" in his bunker. Sounds like something Adolf would do...
@virginiasoskin9082
@virginiasoskin9082 4 ай бұрын
I know, that is really creepy. How about "When You Wish Upon a Star"? He evidently loved Disney movies.
@tomcrabill2819
@tomcrabill2819 Жыл бұрын
Outstanding documentary. I had read that Hitler was still in the army when he started attending National Socialist German Workers' Party meetings. This documentary says he was working for the police. Does anyone know which version is right?
@tomcrabill2819
@tomcrabill2819 Жыл бұрын
The Holocast Encyclopedia says- The German Army (Reichswehr) employed Adolf Hitler as an educator and confidential informant. It was in his capacity as a confidential informant that Hitler attended a beer hall meeting of the German Workers' Party (Deutsche Arbeiterpartei-DAP) on September 12, 1919.
@flashgordon6670
@flashgordon6670 Жыл бұрын
Hitler escaped to Argentina, watch the documentary film Greywolf and Mark Felton Find the Fuhrer.
@evancohen1503
@evancohen1503 Жыл бұрын
Military, not the police.
@ActiveAussie2024
@ActiveAussie2024 Жыл бұрын
He was specifically sent there to basically listen and gather intelligence about possible threats to the existing government. The German Workers Party was considered to be a potential threat, even though it was ( very small ) at the time. Communist Party ( KPD) was also considered to be a threat Anton Drexler really got sidelined when Hitler joined the DAP, Hitler had charisma and was an orator, Drexler was not.
@davidauflick2758
@davidauflick2758 Жыл бұрын
June 6th 1944 not June 22nd
@alberteinsteinthejew
@alberteinsteinthejew Жыл бұрын
The thumbnail reminds me of Inspector Kido in the Man in the High Castle
@john4896
@john4896 Жыл бұрын
Also, Stalin, Tojo, Hirohito, Yamamoto, Genda, Mussolini, Goring, Himmler, Borman. Just to name a few.
@sharifhosain9891
@sharifhosain9891 Жыл бұрын
Stephen Greif voice make this video more audible.
@Cromwelldunbar
@Cromwelldunbar 10 ай бұрын
Not a single syllable on the war fronts in North and East Africa, nor in the North Atlantic, nor in Asia, Burma or the Pacific to the shores of Australia…before the closing parts of the doc. Shame after an interestingly promising start.
@ralfrufus6573
@ralfrufus6573 8 ай бұрын
Why no subtitles?
@robertewing3114
@robertewing3114 Ай бұрын
Hitler didnt set about demanding the Sudetenland, he set about attempting war in 1938. MI6 told Chamberlain, and since Daladier and France wanted out of their obligation to defend the Czechs, Chamberlain intervened, knowing diplomacy was required if the empire would ever back threats, and the piece of paper was calculated with US opinion in mind, it wasnt a simple proposal, it was a game, and this data was first published in 1946, but without the reference to, I quote, the Americans.
@erikwitkowski
@erikwitkowski Жыл бұрын
The winter did not stop Hitler in Russia. It was the Soviets’ dogged resistance and the German spreading logistics lines. Credit where credit is due.
@matthiusantonin2652
@matthiusantonin2652 Жыл бұрын
All 3 factors plus Allied supplies to Soviets. The commentary is way way off on so many things you wonder what was true.
@thomashenebry8269
@thomashenebry8269 11 ай бұрын
I'll credit the severe winter, but not the Soviets
@williemccovey859
@williemccovey859 Ай бұрын
No, it WAS winter and the great land mass of Russia that foiled Barbarosa. The blitzkrieg tactics used by Germany to invade the other countries could not be sustained invading Russia. The Russian winter stopped the assault on their soil just like it did to Napolean.
@ronaldstrange8981
@ronaldstrange8981 2 ай бұрын
Excellent production, narration and presentation. Most grateful, England, July, 2024.
@waynelittle646
@waynelittle646 Жыл бұрын
Winners write history, winners publish history, winners own history, and most of us know only what the winners want us to know
@sammik3959
@sammik3959 Жыл бұрын
This again 😂 🤡
@neal.karn-jones
@neal.karn-jones Жыл бұрын
That used to be the case but now we have physical evidence, films, pictures, first hand documents and historians from all countries involved saying mostly the same things. Plenty of German and Japanese historians who are not hiding the truth.
@flashgordon6670
@flashgordon6670 Жыл бұрын
Hitler escaped to Argentina, watch the documentary film Greywolf and Mark Felton Find the Fuhrer.
@davecopp9356
@davecopp9356 Жыл бұрын
@@neal.karn-jones You mean plenty of so called historians who are payed by the fake media, fake news and Hollyweird, all the others got canceled by the woke mob who hates the truth. To many lies by the All lies. History is a lie the victors agreed upon. Napoleon
@elvynjones2489
@elvynjones2489 Жыл бұрын
Facile observation. 😊
@marcelbork92
@marcelbork92 Жыл бұрын
When any thinking man thinks back, he always thinks either things before or things after Hitler.
@Fearls1
@Fearls1 Жыл бұрын
Holy shit! Is the commentator the same one that announces World of Warcraft Vanilla races starting zone?
@tomdelia
@tomdelia 10 ай бұрын
D-Day was not June 22……June 6
@Enzo012
@Enzo012 Жыл бұрын
'His first name, Adolf, was derived from the Old High German name, Athalwolf, which means “noble wolf.' Hence the whistling of the Disney tune, you've got the 'Wolfs Lair' and the werwolves as well. He was wolf themed.
@doomjuan4892
@doomjuan4892 Жыл бұрын
His moustache even makes him look a bit like a wolf, i.e. big black nose.
@marine4lyfe85
@marine4lyfe85 Жыл бұрын
That's reaching a bit..lol
@Enzo012
@Enzo012 Жыл бұрын
@@marine4lyfe85 'In 1942, Adolf Hitler named the OKW and OKH field headquarters, at Vinnytsia in Ukraine, "Werwolf", and Hitler on a number of occasions had used "Wolf" as a pseudonym for himself.' 'Hitler used the codename wolf and referred to the SS as wolf pack. The wolf trap was the badge of several SS battalions and the Wolf's Den.' He definitely had a running theme going on there. There were U-boat 'wolfpacks' as well.
@mentalasylumescapee6389
@mentalasylumescapee6389 Жыл бұрын
the name also means "noble in battle/combat" if he wanted to be a "wolf" he didn't choose his name, his family did. some royals with Adolf name: "Adolf Frederick, King of Sweden (1710-1771) Adolf I, Prince of Schaumburg-Lippe (1817-1893) Adolf II, Prince of Schaumburg-Lippe (1883-1936) Adolf of Altena (1157-1220), Archbishop of Cologne Adolf of Nassau (1540-1568), Count of Nassau, brother of William the Silent Adolf, Count Palatine of the Rhine (1300-1327) Adolf, Duke of Bavaria (1434-1441) Adolf, Duke of Holstein-Gottorp (1526-1586) Adolf, Duke of Jülich-Berg (1370-1437) Adolf, King of the Romans (1255-1298), King of Germany" also his father "Alois Hitler always wore his uniform, and insisted on being addressed as “Herr Oberoffizial Hitler.” so yeah i think it's a "battle" themed name, not a "wolf"
@virginiasoskin9082
@virginiasoskin9082 4 ай бұрын
And not forgetting his German Shepherd Blondi; Germans coveted this breed because they believed it derived from wolves.
@marekrochowski562
@marekrochowski562 10 ай бұрын
You don’t mention, Poland was attacked by two, Hitler and his ally, Stalin. Non-aggression pact (Ribbentrop-Molotov pact) was about a partition of Poland between those two. Russians have always been a war seeking nation and you, English speakers always forget about it, that’s why we have Putin now
@deeppurple883
@deeppurple883 11 ай бұрын
He Was sentence to five years in prison and only served nine month's. History has to be truthfully accurate, learn before you print ✌️☘️
@TonyMidyett
@TonyMidyett 11 ай бұрын
Fascism is capitalism, and capitalism is fascism.
@steveng1349
@steveng1349 4 ай бұрын
😂
@ChocolateAfterDark
@ChocolateAfterDark Жыл бұрын
I still don’t understand we he invaded RUS when he did. All he had to do was wait a while he could have had it all.
@Stephen-wb3wf
@Stephen-wb3wf Жыл бұрын
Soviets were building up at a massive scale at the same time and were even considering a pre-emptive attack. At least Zhukov wanted to anyway. A few years later it would've been too late and you can't start in the east just as the Western powers were going to be ready to attack as well. Hitler and the rest of the General Staff knew they had till 43 to deal with the east. Also the wounds from Stalin's purges would've healed more by then. There would've been a ton more heavy modern tanks as compared to the terrible bt-7s the Soviets were loaded with at the start of the war. A few weeks EARLIER was actually their best chance. We know how it all ended but it did almost work. Every other nation before USSR cracked at the initial offensive. They hoped it would happen again but even though it almost did the Soviets amazingly didn't collapse even after 4 million casualties in 41 alone! I doubt any other nation could survive that. Look how crazy we in America got after 50,000 casualties in Vietnam...
@unapologeticallywhite7920
@unapologeticallywhite7920 Жыл бұрын
Watch Greatest story never told.
@gaagsl
@gaagsl 2 күн бұрын
What is absolutely terrifying is that there are people here in the comments who seem to be sad about the fact that Germany lost that war. If you think this was a tragedy, you must be insane. You need some help.
@elvynjones2489
@elvynjones2489 Жыл бұрын
There is so many errors and mistakes in this video.
@constantineblinkov2972
@constantineblinkov2972 Жыл бұрын
When I saw two Danzigs on the map in the video, I started "ask kwestionz"...
@ritaeichler2066
@ritaeichler2066 Жыл бұрын
Hitler committed suicide on 4.29.45 not 4.30.45
@geridayao8924
@geridayao8924 Жыл бұрын
Was there not so much struggle to say that the strategy did not succeed?
@k.gopalakrishnan4819
@k.gopalakrishnan4819 Жыл бұрын
Celebrated historian on Hitler: Before the war,Hitler scored a series of diplomatic triumphs that eclipsed the fame of Bismark. During the ear,Hitler scored a series of military triumphs that eclipsed the fame of Ludendorf and Moltke and challenged comparison with the victories of Frederik The Great and even Napoleon. It is customary to decry this achievent to the disunity among his opponents,luck of findingGuderian' panzer divisions and Manstein. If there were disunity among his opponents,it was Hitler who divined them. If Guderian the effectines of Panzers,it was Hitler who provided 10 such Panzer divisions. If Manstein was the man who provided the plan to overcome Maginot line,it was Hitler who took it when there was opposition to any such plan. Hence Hitler deserves major share of the victories of 1940. Captain Liddel on Hitler's strategy: Hitler was too brilliant a strategist and suffered from the natiral faults that accompany such brilliance. He was a master of the psychological side of war which he raised to a new pitch. No strategist in history has been more clever in playing on the minds of his opponents,which is the supreme art of strategy.
@davecopp9356
@davecopp9356 Жыл бұрын
Very well said. Too many videos are created to make him look bad and forget what Napoleon ones said: History is a lie the victors agreed upon. Napoleon Too much lies by the All lies, the fake media, fake news and Hollyweird are in the mainstream today.
@alexandrugurgu7126
@alexandrugurgu7126 11 ай бұрын
😢 Germany - the shame of Europe!
@davids4313
@davids4313 Ай бұрын
At that time. Not now of course.
@rogerevans9666
@rogerevans9666 Жыл бұрын
@14:16 Hitler wearing glasses, a rare sight.
@pollylewis5984
@pollylewis5984 7 ай бұрын
Eva Braun took photos of him in glasses. He seldom - if ever - wore them in public.
@slimfit55
@slimfit55 Жыл бұрын
At 54:38 the invasion of Normandy was on 06 June 1944 not on 22 June 1944 as mentioned here
@tomwinstanley1915
@tomwinstanley1915 10 ай бұрын
The last I heard, the invasion of Europe commenced on 6th June '44 not 22nd as stated in the film.
@kensmith8152
@kensmith8152 Жыл бұрын
The one thing that this video failed to discuss was that Hitler and many of the Nazi elite and many of the elite in the German establishment were involved in theosophy and the occult!
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