Operation Barbarossa: German Invasion of Russia | Part One

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History Hit

History Hit

Күн бұрын

'Brutal Reality of Eastern Front Exposed by Lost German Diaries'
On 22 June 1941, Hitler's Germany launched ‘Operation Barbarossa’, the attack of the Soviet Union, the largest invasion in military history. In June 2019, twelve dusty notebooks and a wealth of loose paperwork were discovered in Germany; the diaries of Oberleutnant Wilhelm Sander, a young officer in the 11th Panzer-Regiment who took part in the enormous campaign. On every single day Sander, in a brutally honest manner, elaborately recorded his experiences, impressions and the events he witnessed.
Now transcribed and translated for the first time, they offer a brutally honest, intimate and fascinating view into the murderous and unforgiving nature of war on the Eastern Front from the summer of 1941 to the eventual German retreat in the terrible winter of 1941/1942, while offering a unique glimpse into the world of thought of a highly politicised officer of the German Wehrmacht and member of the NSDAP.
Follow the path of Leutnant Friedrich Sander, a Panzer officer in the German Wehrmacht during Operation Barbarossa, the attack on the Soviet Union.
In the first part of a two-part film, we follow Leutnant Sander on the strenuous, and costly race towards Leningrad and learn about the murderous and terrifying goals of the German campaign in the east.
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Пікірлер: 6 600
@HistoryHit
@HistoryHit Жыл бұрын
The wait is over... PART TWO of Barbarossa: The Lost Diaries has just been made available 👉kzbin.info/www/bejne/n5KUpKlpq6-Kj9U
@cpurssey982
@cpurssey982 Жыл бұрын
Is there anywhere I can watch this without the censorship of the dead bodies? Morbid I know but I think to get the real feel of this horrid war one must see the true devastation.
@davev.4364
@davev.4364 Жыл бұрын
Why are images blurred?
@jackblack-gn1cc
@jackblack-gn1cc Жыл бұрын
Germans should pay for this, how much money costs 1 livie?
@herbshore
@herbshore Жыл бұрын
,0😊⁸😊😊
@TheMormonPower
@TheMormonPower Жыл бұрын
I just watched it, well worth the wait. There are endless documentaries on You tube about the war, but very few first hand narrative accounts like this that really bring it to life, Sander, the diarist, give his narration such a humanist tone, teaching us all what he'll war can be 🧐
@HistoryHit
@HistoryHit Жыл бұрын
Hey guys, due to popular demand we have reuploaded the first part of our Barbarossa: Lost Diaries series! Let us know in the comments if you enjoyed and would like to see more of these kinds of documentaries.
@SamSamSamSamSam
@SamSamSamSamSam Жыл бұрын
Bizarre that you deleted it in the first place! Whoever came up with that brainwave needs to have their decision making skills relegated to the coffee run.
@Rex1987
@Rex1987 Жыл бұрын
How come you had to re-upload the video? Due to a rights issue or what is the deal?
@sentionaut6270
@sentionaut6270 Жыл бұрын
So where is part two? I liked this video and I'd like to hear the rest.
@adamcrookedsmile
@adamcrookedsmile Жыл бұрын
Firstly, I think the documentary shines an appropriate light on the atrocities of Nazi Germany, is a bit vague on the repression, murders and deportations of the Soviet Union in Eastern Europe. The Soviet Union did occupy the Baltic states and parts of Poland in 1940 plus attacked Finland, a tiny country on its northeastern border which managed to avoid complete defeat. The Soviets were no "heroic resistance fighters against nazism", they were a blood-soaked revoutoinary socialists who did not hesitate to mass murder, persecute and torture anyone who opposed them even if they opposed by peaceful and democratic means. Secondly, the Nazi intelligence service had done a very poor job at finding out just how industrialised and mobilised the Soviet Union was, nazi army commanders were surprised at encountering new restistance because their high command repeatedly kept telling them that the Red Army had been destroyed. The nazi fools had no idea what they were getting into.
@mattbriody7575
@mattbriody7575 Жыл бұрын
@@Rex1987 presumably to get all the people who enjoyed it to subscribe to their service.
@Errr717
@Errr717 Ай бұрын
It's incredible that they found footage that closely resembles what being described in the diary. That a lot of work to curate the films and then edit the footage needed. The narration brings out the attitude of Lt Sanders and the slight German accent in the English adds a lot of credibility to the film. Kudos to the team who worked on the video.
@HistoryHit
@HistoryHit Ай бұрын
glad you enjoyed it!
@jasonanernathy5721
@jasonanernathy5721 Ай бұрын
I can't find part 2 has anyone have knowledge of where I can find it?
@Avi-h1w
@Avi-h1w Ай бұрын
Of course they're trying to make the film fit the narrative that is a twisted German point of view. How noble the Germans are, trying to help the wounded men trying to defend their country. These beasts who, lying in pools of their own blood would dare to continue fighting. In other words, the Germans and makers of this film are full of shit.
@incomitatus
@incomitatus 27 күн бұрын
My Man, kudos to you. That took a lot of work & dedication, piecing parts of the diary with available film footage. Great, great job and many of us know how hard you worked doing it! You made a memorable video !
@jantjedevoorste-rm5tb
@jantjedevoorste-rm5tb Жыл бұрын
My granddad fought in Stalingrad with the 14th Panzer Division, he was captured and came home in 1953. Het died in 2015 at the age of 95. Before he died he told me that wanted to be cremated and not buried as he never wanted to feel the cold soil again.
@michaelmelamed9103
@michaelmelamed9103 Жыл бұрын
My grandfather was captured by the Lithuanian collaborators, confined in a ghetto, had most of his family murdered, eventually, liberated by the American army from Dachau. He died at the age of 97 in the USA. Buried according to the Jewish tradition. Cremation is what he had avoided in Dachau.
@michellekrueger5122
@michellekrueger5122 Жыл бұрын
My husband's father also fought, for Germany, do not ever let anyone, be disrespectful too your Granddad, war, changes all men...many would say your Granddad, and my father in law, were heartless monster's...much respects, to your Granddad, and to my Father in law..there is so much I would enjoy telling you, about how the war started.
@RoyalFizzbin
@RoyalFizzbin Жыл бұрын
@@michaelmelamed9103 Condolences to your granddad. I hope he lived a good life after the horrors of the war. My great uncle was an anti-aircraft gunner working a four-barrel .50cal. He had three confirmed kills on Luftwaffe aircraft, and one unconfirmed kill on a Nazi sniper on the ground. Despite fighting and killing Nazis, it still upset him to see dead ones, especially the one time they brought him out to one of the downed aircraft (to confirm). Though they were his enemy, he was disturbed by it.
@kenhart8771
@kenhart8771 Жыл бұрын
⁠@@michaelmelamed9103Try with Lithuanian freedoms fighters. We all know the families of Schiff and Rothschild financed the communist revolution and got the Tzar Nikolai II and his family murdered in cold blood 🩸 Who is keep pushing for a war in Ukraine and Russia?
@daveyork0
@daveyork0 Жыл бұрын
That's 11 years as a POW, 8 of them after the end or hostilities
@Ziggle-ky9kv
@Ziggle-ky9kv 4 ай бұрын
There's a book called Windswept Lies of War, and it talks from censored history and hidden secrets to lost files and classified documents about World War II, it's the real deal.
@jonahphilip263
@jonahphilip263 3 ай бұрын
What does it says, where can I find it
@XXXTENTAClON227
@XXXTENTAClON227 3 ай бұрын
The likes… the recent date… the lack of replies… I smell a bot
@cojaysea
@cojaysea 3 ай бұрын
@@XXXTENTAClON227no such book , can’t find it
@smokeykitty6023
@smokeykitty6023 2 ай бұрын
It's a book that some nobody self published. You can only find it by going to that KZbin channel and clicking on the blue comment. It takes you to a God only knows where website to buy his homemade book with probably no bibliography for $21.99. I'd be careful putting my card number on that site...
@starzkream
@starzkream 2 ай бұрын
I have seen this exact same post on multiple WWII videos. It is definitely a bot. The book is probably written by AI with no notes or references.
@Captain-ln3vh
@Captain-ln3vh Жыл бұрын
It’s crazy to me how people read about the death and destruction of war, and watch the movies yet never realize how difficult the loss of life is. Not just seeing it but the sounds and smells. Having someone begging you to help them and you know nothing you do can save them. Telling them anything you think can comfort them and knowing they are already dead. What haunts me is the look on someone’s face. As a medic they believe that you are going to save them and they have that hope when you are there. Only those who don’t know death want war.
@trackrunner11
@trackrunner11 Жыл бұрын
Only thoes who want war don't understand death? That might tell you a lot about politicians! I once looked at memorial in front of a High School in Mobile, Alabama. It was dedicated to 7 classmates who were drafted to serve in Vietnam. Think about it. Your 18 or 19 child who had his whole life in front of him , was suddenly sent across the world to fight in a jungle and asked to give his life for our country.
@aceclash
@aceclash Жыл бұрын
Scale of war in eastern front was insane. Both largest armies going at it 100%.
@ErickZ-mi3lb
@ErickZ-mi3lb Жыл бұрын
Pretty sure Hitler personally saw lots of death up front in the trenches and essentially masterminded this whole war.
@feloniousfloyd2203
@feloniousfloyd2203 Жыл бұрын
Everyone knows death. It haunts everyone at every turn, and it will eventually conquer every living creature on this earth.
@Britton_Thompson
@Britton_Thompson Жыл бұрын
I don't think we can say that actually; I don't think "...only those who don't know death seek war" is a good qualifier. Look no further than the primary belligerents of WW2. Adolf Hitler himself survived 4 years of absolute carnage and human suffering during WW1. Same can be said for Herman Goering, an ace pilot war hero. Benito Mussolini also served as a sniper for Italy in WW1. Hideki Tojo in Japan also had previous combat experience. These leaders were the ones who were most aggressive at pursuing war in the 1930s. And we can't forget about French general Charles De Gaulle. Churchill and Roosevelt considered him a stubborn hawk determined to have his moment of glory, and he had extensive combat experience in the trenches in WW1. On the other hand, you have Neville Chamberlain, FDR, and Josef Stalin. They were trying to avoid war at all costs through appeasement policies, non-aggression pacts, and strict isolationism just to kick the can down the road long enough for someone else to eventually have to deal with it instead of them. We can also extrapolate this out to other wars. Many will argue that the Korean War was the most pointless and unnecessary war in US history. The president who gave the green light for that war was Harry S. Truman, an artillery commander in WW1. Vietnam festered under Eisenhower, and finally acted upon by Kennedy- a naval gunboat captain who fought in the Pacific theatre of WW2. So I don't agree with your statement that only the oblivious want war. The veterans seem pretty damn motivated to pursue conflict too.
@YouriCarma
@YouriCarma Жыл бұрын
These personal diaries paint a far more detailed picture of what it was like to be in that war than some dry map movement accounts you often see in WWII documentaries. It also gives us an inside in what was going on in these soldier's minds in these campaigns.
@djharto4917
@djharto4917 Жыл бұрын
The narrator always adds in his propaganda against the German soldiers though
@thomasneal9291
@thomasneal9291 Жыл бұрын
@@djharto4917 where? because all of the german accented voiceover you hear is literally reading from german soldier diaries.
@djharto4917
@djharto4917 Жыл бұрын
Plenty was said off script. Our masters are always mentioned aren’t they?? Something that supposedly happened them.
@TheBanjoShowOfficial
@TheBanjoShowOfficial Жыл бұрын
I think both are quite useful actually
@DawnOfTheDead991
@DawnOfTheDead991 Жыл бұрын
@@djharto4917 Sure, the German soldiers were such sweet people who only wanted to help the poor Soviet people especially the JEws, right? /s
@Jay-Niner
@Jay-Niner Жыл бұрын
Watched this when it first came out and am glad to see it back. One of the best history documentaries on KZbin and I can’t wait for part 2!
@HistoryHit
@HistoryHit Жыл бұрын
Cheers Jan! Glad you enjoyed
@Mustang1984
@Mustang1984 Жыл бұрын
@@HistoryHit Yeah, you guys do great work!
@magnusarpi204
@magnusarpi204 Жыл бұрын
Part two is already avaliable, link in the video description.
@vishwajeetbhardwaz9576
@vishwajeetbhardwaz9576 Жыл бұрын
Massive mistake- The Nazi Symbol was Haken Cross, A European catholic Christian symbol, not Swastika. Kindly apologize immediately and rectify.
@thomassch3952
@thomassch3952 Жыл бұрын
@@vishwajeetbhardwaz9576 And what kind of "catholic christian symbol" should that be?
@JohnHannigan-wx8ng
@JohnHannigan-wx8ng 9 ай бұрын
We are all adults stop blurring the images
@bigmojito1765
@bigmojito1765 8 ай бұрын
Do you not understand how censorship works?
@2dogsmowing
@2dogsmowing 8 ай бұрын
The real problem is. That any graphic images under news media or documentary content. Does not need to be censored. It upsets me when it is censored. Because it goes against the reason why our soldiers fought and died for. If someone is disturbed by images can change the channel or just deal with it. But when censorship starts taking over the truth of anything. That's when we lose our freedom and trust in news media. Which is already happening.
@BillWJS
@BillWJS 8 ай бұрын
YT is too busy making everything child’s proof. They like children.
@BillWJS
@BillWJS 8 ай бұрын
We need an adult YT…I PAY for premium to avoid adds. So stupid. 😡
@homiehomerson2705
@homiehomerson2705 8 ай бұрын
What "blurred" images?
@jakethetool698
@jakethetool698 Жыл бұрын
Captivating. In my humble opinion, this Era is one of, if not the most monumental, of modern times. The insight these accounts allow, is priceless.
@mikesummers6880
@mikesummers6880 Жыл бұрын
Max Hastings interviewed a old German soldier once who said that when he was moved from the Eastern front to the western front he thought he was a holiday compared to what he had experience.
@Дмитрий-х9з4г
@Дмитрий-х9з4г 8 ай бұрын
Восточный фронт для фрийцев был наказанием. 😂Мои соотечественники защищали свою Родину СССР.
@JGD185
@JGD185 7 ай бұрын
​@@Дмитрий-х9з4г before that you guys invaded Finland and Poland, stop trying to act all innocent
@leighz1962
@leighz1962 Ай бұрын
@JGD185 ..and before that, they deleted millions of their own that gave fear/inspiration to Shartler and other ilk..
@sleepman801
@sleepman801 Күн бұрын
@@JGD185 Может хочешь сказать что польша жертва??? ЛОЛ. А про ЗАользье ничего не хочешь сказать??
@АнтонДоленко-т1щ
@АнтонДоленко-т1щ 17 сағат бұрын
@@JGD185 Финам предлагали обмен территориями, да и воевали они на стороне Гитлера, так что перед большой войной ославить будущего союзника Германии было вполне оправдано, западные страны делали тоже самое в своей истории, Отдавать всю Польшу Гитлеру было бы глупо, перед большой войной. Польше предлагали союз, предлагали чтобы она пропустила советские войска в Чехословакию, для помощи в отражении агрессии Германии, ещё во время Мюнхенского сговора, когда Британия с Францией сдавали Чехословакию, в надежде что Гитлер пойдёт на восток и они с ним как ни будь договорятся. Так что в логике войны, если она неизбежна, лучше когда вторгаешься ты, а не в тебя.
@NoXeB1995
@NoXeB1995 Жыл бұрын
My great grandmother that died just 3 years ago, was in Leningrad during the siege and starvation. Life has brought us apart so I could not ask her in detail during my adult years, how was this time in person, but I have been told by my dad and grandmother about her time there. She suffered immensely as did people in the city, some even went as far as cannibalism, as the hunger sometimes makes people insane with it. Seeing dead bodies on the streets was just another normal day, people collapsed. To the last day she died she never allowed anyone or herself to waste a crop of bread. She miraculously survived and was captured by Germans and sent to Berlin for forced labour. It's insane, literally every Russian and Soviet family was affected by this war, EVERY single one.
@nickhayley
@nickhayley Жыл бұрын
And yet, look at the horror the Russian people are now inflicting on Ukraine. They have learned ABSOLUTELY NOTHING about the horrors of war or about compassion and respect of a sovereign nation. All the Russians involved are complicit in mass war crimes - if you're a Russian living in Russia, it is your obligation to NOT participate in this war and your duty to oppose Putin, a megalomaniacal, hateful war criminal. It saddens me to say this, but I never want to see Russia. Unless there is huge upheaval, but from most of what I've seen, all the people who disagree with the evil of the Kremlin have left. There is only evil, the spineless and the fearful left.
@sammler100
@sammler100 Жыл бұрын
Was die Wehrmacht in Leningrad veranstaltet hat, ist ein Kriegsverbrechen und das sage ich als Deutscher.
@waynrbunyea7059
@waynrbunyea7059 Жыл бұрын
So was everyone else's 😢
@chrislove1357
@chrislove1357 Жыл бұрын
Imagine what will happen when the next war starts, we won't be needed for forced labor because robots can do that. What value will we have then? This history into human nature should frighten even the stoic person when contemplating the technological revolution of today's age and what that implies when it comes to the darker world were barreling into. I'm glad your grandma got out to make a good impression. Let her RIP, it's our time to see some crazy things, beyond her wildest dreams.
@charleslaing148
@charleslaing148 Жыл бұрын
horrorfying the germans were not human
@M.Godfrey
@M.Godfrey Ай бұрын
Read I assume word for word from a journal, these insights, their word choice, descriptions of people. Truly immersive. Thanks for sharing
@neal.karn-jones
@neal.karn-jones Жыл бұрын
I've been an amateur WWII history fanatic since the 1980's and have been watching the same information over and over, and still enjoy those documentaries, but the diaries are new to me and fascinating. Showing the film and reading the diaries like this is a great idea and I hope to see many more.
@ortegaJfk
@ortegaJfk Жыл бұрын
Since 1980 dam u need to do better. Research
@rsmetz88
@rsmetz88 Жыл бұрын
​@@ortegaJfk So you would call yourself a professional even if you've never made a dime and have zero recognition outside of your preferred hobby?
@ortegaJfk
@ortegaJfk Жыл бұрын
@@rsmetz88 yes
@nyccoyax3831
@nyccoyax3831 Жыл бұрын
This video is based on book Im sure of it, Ive listened to 3 books atleast that begin with invasion of russia, not sure the name tho
@davidobriend8560
@davidobriend8560 Жыл бұрын
​@@ortegaJfkit's tough to call yourself a professional at something if you don't do it as a profession.
@malcolmledger176
@malcolmledger176 Жыл бұрын
Excellent! The co-ordination between the diary extracts and the footage is outstanding.
@mitchsavini
@mitchsavini Жыл бұрын
This was one of the best documentaries I have every seen on KZbin....the side from the German perspective was so revealing. Please do more of these!
@ursulaba1
@ursulaba1 Жыл бұрын
Yes, I agree. I'm searching the faces of the soldiers to see if I can identify my father. He survived the war and died in 1973. My parents had divorced in 1943 and I had seen him only 3 times in my life. My mom who had gone to her parents home in East Prussia in 1943, fled from the Russians to Duesseldorf, the British Zone in 1945 and married an English soldier who took her to England. I, her daughter, was raised by foster parents and after searching for her for many years, found her through the German Red Cross living in England in 1975.
@TheKing-nu4fk
@TheKing-nu4fk Жыл бұрын
I don't know the circumstances but how did she leave you behind?
@WakingSimon-g6k
@WakingSimon-g6k Ай бұрын
As veteran who have invaded Iraq, Afghanistan. If you close your eyes this could have been us going into Baghdad thinking it was going to be be easy. RIP SSG Travis! KIA ❤️‍🩹
@wikiwikiwik4898
@wikiwikiwik4898 Жыл бұрын
This is amazing, never heard this detailed of a German perspective during Barbarossa. Absolutely brutal.
@adamrichardson6821
@adamrichardson6821 2 ай бұрын
Yes, this really is amazing. Everything I've watched and read over the years stressed how one-sided the battle was for the Germans in '41--smashing through the hapless Red Army, huge encirclements, victory almost assured until Hitler interfered. But then, in the spring of '42 it's almost glossed over that the Germans had lost a million men the year before...one third of their army. Even with the terrible retreat from Moscow, that casualty count seemed incongruous. Here, from the German side, we see how that happened; a slug fest, all the way from day one. Brutal indeed.
@Doug333
@Doug333 Жыл бұрын
Such a brutal and heart aching experience from a single soldier in a war so incomprehensible in size. Lest we forget, I take gratitude in living a peaceful life. Listening to diaries like this can truly shift ones perspective.
@amuddymoose
@amuddymoose Жыл бұрын
War is brutal for all involved.
@dudebro3250
@dudebro3250 Жыл бұрын
I learned about this in the Europa the last battle documentary.
@skepticalbadger
@skepticalbadger Жыл бұрын
Yeah, given the admissions of war crimes I don't feel too bad for this twat.
@sodlayer5288
@sodlayer5288 Жыл бұрын
Qa
@tomdavis3038
@tomdavis3038 Жыл бұрын
Not so peaceful if you’re in Ukraine Cheers
@peterwilson5528
@peterwilson5528 Жыл бұрын
This is a historical gem. Very well-kept diary.
@Struktur.d.M
@Struktur.d.M 29 күн бұрын
This is so well made. Thank you for some calmness where so much media is so hectic.
@jameswells-green9476
@jameswells-green9476 Жыл бұрын
This is a gem. The system of 2 narrators works very well - it maintains the vital distinction between the textual and the supra textual thus providing greater depth to the work. The context to the experiential coverage of events, is thoroughgoing and mutually supportive.
@HistoryHit
@HistoryHit Жыл бұрын
Much appreciated!
@huwhitecavebeast1972
@huwhitecavebeast1972 Жыл бұрын
Yeah they needed the second narrator for propaganda purposes, otherwise the Germans would look too good and not the monsters they have been portrayed to be.
@UKCheeseFarmer
@UKCheeseFarmer Жыл бұрын
@@huwhitecavebeast1972 Don't get Nazis and the SS mixed up with the Wehrmacht!! It shows your complete ignorance.
@generaldilvry69
@generaldilvry69 11 ай бұрын
judging from the prose and reoccuring keywords these are the words of the same solider...if so, he merc'ed mad bodycount
@Maxrodon
@Maxrodon Жыл бұрын
I have German relatives who fought in Stalingrad and one often recited the disgust in how decent Germans due to hunger and desperation, during the winter, if a comrade died from freezing/fatigue, everyone would quickly rush his body for any food/items they can salvage in a sort of every man for himself style. And how 1 minute that’s a friend and next minute he’s just a “body” and how impersonal it gets. Another relative developed severe PTSD from the Katyshas (Stalins Organs) and would wake up at high shouting take cover in full panic and on his deathbed relived that moment before passing.
@20chocsaday
@20chocsaday Жыл бұрын
Sudden death can be like that. You don't need to be freezing and starving or even cold or hungry. One evening we were planning what we would do in the coming months. Then within half an hour my lively outgoing wife turned from being in my plans to being a body in my arms.
@admiralbenbow5083
@admiralbenbow5083 Жыл бұрын
Sh-t like that doesnt tend to happen if you avoid invading other peoples countries.
@prunepoo
@prunepoo Жыл бұрын
Glad our country hasn’t done that.
@AwesomeDude272
@AwesomeDude272 Жыл бұрын
​@@20chocsaday I'm sorry for that. Terrible
@20chocsaday
@20chocsaday Жыл бұрын
@@AwesomeDude272 Thanks. It was a cold feeling, realising how much the world had lost in one person. The intentions, the care for others as well as part of my life left and I was left holding a husk that was once a person. Sorry if I have saddened you but this happened to many more people later on. A young woman later sent me the last photo of her mother alive as they tried to let her sip cold water.
@derin111
@derin111 Жыл бұрын
My Grandfather, born 1910 in Northern Germany near Hannover, was in the RAD too before volunteering for the Wehrmacht in 1938. He was eventually wounded out of the war in 1943 in Russia. It’s so apparent from these accounts and from what he told me how different and more difficult things were in the invasion of the Soviet Union. You can sense from this diary that even within a week things were going wrong and badly off schedule.
@funnyman8691
@funnyman8691 Жыл бұрын
how many Poles or Russian granpa kill ?? Did he never mention it? Or, like every German, he was a "knight" and only the SS kills innocent poeple ?
@bpet6990
@bpet6990 Жыл бұрын
Luckily it went very bad for those Coward germans…..are you looking for pity here?
@baabun-ssd
@baabun-ssd Жыл бұрын
Evil bloodline. Tfu
@spencer6094
@spencer6094 Жыл бұрын
Must be good to have a nazi grandad? I'd love it
@MrNiceGuyHistory
@MrNiceGuyHistory Жыл бұрын
@@baabun-ssd Your comment shows that you are capable of the same evils as the national socialists..
@Mutsky1953
@Mutsky1953 Жыл бұрын
The diaries and footage paint an honest picture of the Eastern front. Sure there are extracts from the diaries which describe people and situations which in todays terms are unacceptable, but hey, this is a good thing as it is honest and a true historical reflection of that period in history. The last thing we should be doing is editing history to appease the sensitivities of today’s cultures. An excellent historical documentary - Bravo.
@GoldenGateNum9
@GoldenGateNum9 6 ай бұрын
"which in todays terms are unacceptable", ha, you think so? maybe in mainstream polite society it seems that way, yeah your right, thankfully we can watch a neutral unbiased documentary and make our own minds up, which is how it is supposed to be. ✌🏻🌹♥️🌹 Love Edda
@Love.life.ashigzoya
@Love.life.ashigzoya Жыл бұрын
This is a remarkable and gripping presentation of the diary bringing out not only battle effects but also the mental attitude that provided drive that led to clash between the two powers. The philoloshy and ideology that steeped the two opposing societies leaving no room for compromise. This made war in East most brutal. Very educative and valuable diary . Merits wide circulation. Mahj Gen IA
@seniordavidmanderson9232
@seniordavidmanderson9232 Жыл бұрын
D. Anderson, USMC, Hotel Company, 2dBn, 9th Marines, 3d MarDiv, 2/9/3, 68-69 Operation Dewey Canyon. In memory of 58,281 men including 8 women, all nurses, 16 clergy members and 160 Medal of Honor recipients who served in the Vietnam War and later died as a result of their service. We honor and remember their sacrifice. Many carry a sense of having been betrayed by civilian and military leaders and by society generally. Be-trayed by politicians who resorted to war under false pretenses and took advantage of their patriotism and youth (the average age of a soldier in Vietnam was 19) and who placed constraints on war strategy that set them up for failure. It's easy to forget that those who served in Vietnam grew up in a time when politicians were seen as statesmen focused on the common good. Most trusted their leaders when told that war was necessary to stop the spread of communism. Despite stereotypes to the contrary, most volunteered. They were part of a generation raised with stories about how their fathers and uncles had accepted the duties of citizenship and won the Great War. These soldiers realized quickly that their fathers war was very different than the one into which they had been led. Their fathers had typically fought as parts of large coordinated forces against a massed enemy, taking and holding territory and attaining measurable strategic objectives, each of which moved them closer to victory. This was not true in Vietnam. Due to geopolitical constraints there would be no invasion of North Vietnam. Rarely would they face a massed force fighting in conventional fashion. In Vietnam, the enemy was often invisible, attacking then slipping away. Though the Army of North Vietnam was a conventional guerilla force, the Viet Cong were often indistinguishable from civilians. A rotational system of deployment that constantly shuffled around the membership of units and which some believed undermined unit cohesion and morale, negative media stereotypes of American soldiers, exposure to conditions of intense privation, chronic feeling of being under threat with no safe place to go, and faulty equipment that broke down under fire. Others were stung by leadership claims that the war was necessary to liberate the people of South Vietnam only to find, as one veteran put it, "Those people just wanted us out and some wanted to cut my throat." I've known many who continued to resent what they saw as lies told by military and civilian leaders claiming progress was being made when the experience on the ground suggested they were stuck in a quagmire. Then there was the betrayal of the homecoming. Though the antiwar movement had broad roots composed of people who genuinely wanted to stop the war, there was a segment openly hostile not just to the war but to the troops who fought it. Returning veterans who had given everything they had and who simply wanted to return home were often met with hostility. Vets often say things such as, "We were spat on, called baby killers, treated like dirt when we arrived back home." Others remember subtle hostility: "I was afraid to wear my uniform in public because of the looks I'd get." Many contrast their experience with an earlier generation. "Those World War 2 guys got parades and ticker tape; we got stabbed in the back." D, Anderson USMC 2/9/3 68-69
@lilblackduc7312
@lilblackduc7312 Жыл бұрын
@@seniordavidmanderson9232 And now, OBiden wants Americans to fight some half-assed European Civil War that's been going on for over 100yrs? Or, is it going to be in the Pacific, again? Some rich S.O.B.'s silicon factory? How is the U.S. going to fight a war when politicians have sold-off, or, depleted Strategic Fuel Reserves & most of the weapons?
@libbyhobbs4637
@libbyhobbs4637 Жыл бұрын
@Senior David M Anderson from my husband Vietnam Era Navy Corpsman.... Your words,ALL of them ring true,unfortunately our.youth don't give a flyin frog what happened THEN. See how many will show up on the next unavoidable DRAFT.!Better all have passports.... WTF was up with all the VETERAN TRAITORS ON J6?? KMA! THIS is what he fought for...Fascist republican morons in Megamall? NO!!
@hansgolieberzuch1804
@hansgolieberzuch1804 2 ай бұрын
Never trust any politician no matter from where! All European countries have their dead bodies in their cellars and hands full of blood! And don't forget: the ground for this war was laid in 1914 (British and French decided to destrot Germany- their General,Staffs met already in 1906 to workout the detais). Or do you think the colonial powers, the US in Viet Nam, Afghanistan,Irak etc. visited these countries to bring pralines or chocolate to the populations! Or look at the massmurder genocid the Zionists are up to fullfill, according to the ICJ! Maybe the "human being" in generell or as such is a misconstruction!? And should have stayed like their closests copies on the trees ?
@hoacha1
@hoacha1 Жыл бұрын
The real German stories are far superior to the fictional Hollywood garbage . Part 1 is Fascinating.
@sandwichninja
@sandwichninja Жыл бұрын
Correct.
@tomdavis3038
@tomdavis3038 Жыл бұрын
Everything is far superior to Hollywood propaganda Cheers
@paulmartin6419
@paulmartin6419 Жыл бұрын
Fascism is fictional garbage.
@sirvilhelmofyonderland
@sirvilhelmofyonderland Жыл бұрын
Hollywood just depicts Germans as monsters. There were a lot of great German people who had to follow orders.
@daddyjay6375
@daddyjay6375 Жыл бұрын
A nazi would say!
@MRJBS117
@MRJBS117 Жыл бұрын
I’m glad to see a German documentary about ww2 as you rarely see anyone talking about the axis or soviet sides of the war in-depth. Great video 👍🏻
@josephfiore9233
@josephfiore9233 Жыл бұрын
great question its not what we are taught here in U S A WE ARE TAUGHT WHAT THE MEDIA WANTS YOU TO BELIEVE just like HITLER KILLED HIMSELF which he didnt
@t.j.payeur5331
@t.j.payeur5331 Жыл бұрын
Axis and Soviet perspectives are all over the internet, all you have to do is look for them.
@heinzjoachim7907
@heinzjoachim7907 Жыл бұрын
Leider sehr einseitig und Geschichtsverfälschend.
@MRJBS117
@MRJBS117 Жыл бұрын
@@heinzjoachim7907 Was meinst du?
@MRJBS117
@MRJBS117 Жыл бұрын
@@t.j.payeur5331 not to this extent tho.
@jennykay-hutchinson3091
@jennykay-hutchinson3091 Жыл бұрын
Thanks
@etiennenobel5028
@etiennenobel5028 Жыл бұрын
If it wasn't history; one can hardly comprehend the stupidity of war that causes so much suffering for no gain at all but a descent into barbarism.
@misteryummyearth1055
@misteryummyearth1055 Жыл бұрын
Stupidity ? Evolution of man from monkey to human? Laughable. They're currently in Ukraine snorting yabba yabba doo
@whysoserious7553
@whysoserious7553 Жыл бұрын
World war 2 caused the end of colonies
@JeanmarieRod
@JeanmarieRod Жыл бұрын
Makes more sense than this Ukrainian conflict
@HonorableBeniah-A
@HonorableBeniah-A Жыл бұрын
Pray that Ukraine will stop sending untrained men into the grinder.
@beargillium2369
@beargillium2369 Жыл бұрын
​@@HonorableBeniah-A prayer is the lazy man's way of not actually doing anything.
@logycaa
@logycaa Жыл бұрын
This is some of the best WW2 related content I have ever had the pleasure of watching.
@danfield6030
@danfield6030 Жыл бұрын
Right on brother! I'm gonna check it out, right nowwwwwww
@johnlescault3737
@johnlescault3737 Жыл бұрын
Agreed, Seems like we are rarely shown the German attitude and position, very humanizing, something that most documentaries fail to do, it’s usually just “the Germans where animals”.
@somniumisdreaming
@somniumisdreaming Жыл бұрын
@@johnlescault3737 How can you humanize a Nazi when you see the terrified faces of the children and Jewish ppl being taken to slaughter.
@johnlescault3737
@johnlescault3737 Жыл бұрын
@@somniumisdreaming it’s easy if you understand that human nature is basically evil if left unchecked, I’m not saying they are human in a good way, I’m saying we should all be able to see that we are capable of the same if left to our own rationalization. It’s the people that don’t realize their condition, that are likely to repeat the mistakes of the past.
@Napolean45
@Napolean45 Жыл бұрын
@@somniumisdreaming imagine. They expect us to see them as lambs when we know that the wars they were fighting were all about racial genocide
@KingMan34874
@KingMan34874 Жыл бұрын
The logistics involved in Barbarossa were absolutely INSANE!!!!
@dubya85
@dubya85 7 ай бұрын
yes, yes they were
@jakoblindelof92
@jakoblindelof92 7 ай бұрын
@@dubya85 never underestimat the importance of the logistics regiments / logistic soldiers.
@Rage-td9wv
@Rage-td9wv 5 ай бұрын
Most of ours has been contracted out to private companies which won't bear well in a real war as nothing will be fixed on the front line. Just in the rear if lucky enough for them to be there charging by the hour.
@GlendaMasterson
@GlendaMasterson 3 ай бұрын
I have never understood how Germany thought they could have won a war against the USA. I guess Adolph thought we were still cowboys. They didn’t do their homework with the US or Russia.
@Сергій-м2л
@Сергій-м2л Ай бұрын
вона була чудовою
@kapitanmuahaha6240
@kapitanmuahaha6240 Жыл бұрын
Great documentary! Wished you didn't have to blur the images at some points! Keep up the good work.
@scottteams3361
@scottteams3361 Жыл бұрын
Absolutely love to hear the German and Soviet perspective that has mostly been lost to history. Understanding though the causes they were fighting for were vastly different, the horrors and trauma of war were the same. Cannot wait to see the second episode!
@Ailasher
@Ailasher Жыл бұрын
Sorry. No Soviet perspective. Because Soviet/Russian archives, and Stalin and the Communists are baddies. And, you know: Mongols... Enjoy the magnificent and truthful historical narrative, carefully selected by Halder and his group, after being captured by the Allies, and footage from Die Deutsche Wochenschau, where there practically are no horses and wagons at all.
@agirlisnoone5953
@agirlisnoone5953 Жыл бұрын
​@@Ailasher English must not be your first language. Your comment is so choppy and vague.
@Дмитрий_Тихомиров
@Дмитрий_Тихомиров Жыл бұрын
​​​@@Ailasher, ​what are you writing? Are you crazy? Stalin and the Communists saved the world from destruction. Millions of communists died so that you could be born and live. They volunteered to go to the front and died for you. Their children were orphaned or were not born at all, but you were born and live happily. You are just an ungrateful stupid illiterate person, a victim of anti-communist propaganda or a scoundrel. You are spreading vile lies here. Communism is justice, humanity and freedom. Read the authentic works of Marx, Lenin, Stalin, and not false interpretations about them. Что вы пишите? Вы сумасшедший? Сталин и коммунисты спасли мир от гибели. Миллионы коммунистов погибли ради того, чтоб вы смогли родиться и жить. Они добровольцами шли на фронт и погибали ради вас. Их дети остались сиротами или вообще не родились, а вы родились и живёте счастливо. Вы просто неблагодарный тупой неграмотный человек, жертва антикоммунистическтй пропаганды или негодяй. Вы распространяете здесь гнусную ложь. Коммунизм - это справедливость, человеколюбие и свобода. Читайте подлинные труды Маркса, Ленина, Сталина, а не лживые интерпретации о них.
@flexltu
@flexltu Жыл бұрын
@@Ailasher both nazis and soviets are baddies. Both started ww2, slaughtered millions and caused suffering. Except one of them were tried and made some changes in their society, while the other's results can be seen even today.
@Ailasher
@Ailasher Жыл бұрын
@@agirlisnoone5953 I'm trying to master the language of the Higher Race, thank you.
@ToddiusMaximus
@ToddiusMaximus Жыл бұрын
You guys need to do more of this! Eastern Front is so interesting!
@sirchromiumdowns2015
@sirchromiumdowns2015 Жыл бұрын
This documentary is fascinating. I've read many firsthand accounts of war on the Eastern front, and this man's story brings out the true horror of war as well as any of them.
@russiansarefilthyapes1660
@russiansarefilthyapes1660 Жыл бұрын
Germans was right! History show that. USA and England should not support and safe rusians and let the germans do what they have to do for goodness Germans ❤❤❤❤!
@russiansarefilthyapes1660
@russiansarefilthyapes1660 Жыл бұрын
russians =🦧🦍🐒
@russiansarefilthyapes1660
@russiansarefilthyapes1660 Жыл бұрын
Germans was right!
@russiansarefilthyapes1660
@russiansarefilthyapes1660 Жыл бұрын
History show that. Germans ❤❤❤❤!
@Pau_Pau9
@Pau_Pau9 Жыл бұрын
Really love seeing those tanks and troop carriers!
@hertzair1186
@hertzair1186 8 ай бұрын
My father was In Barbarossa, was wounded by a Russian sniper in the leg, he fell in the snow and both his feet froze and gangrene took one foot and half of another. He spent the rest of the war in his hometown of Emden getting bombed at night by the British and by day by 5h3 Americans. Survived the war, married my mother and emigrated to the USA where my mother had relatives who sponsered them. Lived to age 86 ….mom to age 98. Both had good lives here in the USA.
@seanohare5488
@seanohare5488 8 ай бұрын
USA is the greatest
@Mazxxi
@Mazxxi 7 ай бұрын
Wasn’t he tried for war crimes?
@Wilt8v92
@Wilt8v92 7 ай бұрын
​@@MazxxiHe was not a War criminal obviously,learn some history...
@Mazxxi
@Mazxxi 7 ай бұрын
@@Wilt8v92 how do you know that historian?
@Wilt8v92
@Wilt8v92 7 ай бұрын
@@Mazxxi I don't get drawn into debates with trolls and idiots,goodbye...
@LoveBagpipes
@LoveBagpipes Жыл бұрын
It's interesting that he doesn't have enough self reflection to understand the Russians were probably likewise stating the same comments he repeatedly makes, "they will pay for this" Or the fact, it was their country he was intruding within
@Fen3rbahce
@Fen3rbahce 8 ай бұрын
Russian has been killing ethnic germans in other countries like Poland , they didn’t just invade Russia for no Reason . Plus they are commies.
@simonbanks3058
@simonbanks3058 Жыл бұрын
I am obsessed with WW2 and this was an exceptional documentary, thank you.
@Rasarel
@Rasarel Жыл бұрын
The reason why you are obsessed with WW2 is simply because your mind can't wrap itself around it. You are missing the central point. 🧬 Around 1900 the Zionists movement declared that they want to create a Jewish country. All the world leaders refused them. Eventually after the years of despair, Nazis needed help to power and they made a pact with the Zionists in the early 1920' Zionists instructed Hitler on blood science and he agreed to help them to create Israel. They were deporting Jews from Hamburg and Bremerhaven to Palestine. All the info is in the newspapers 1932-1939
@DionPryor396
@DionPryor396 Жыл бұрын
Perhaps some of us were there in person in another life if you believe in reincarnation.
@uldos3193
@uldos3193 Жыл бұрын
I hope we don't make same mistakes again.those days there were no nukes.this time around it will affect everyone
@simonbanks3058
@simonbanks3058 Жыл бұрын
@@uldos3193 Yes, those people were in a form of hell, and we should learn from what happened then never forget.
@uncledavys
@uncledavys Жыл бұрын
i am from India and obsessed too. This has been through all my teenage years. I loved Commando comics.
@Porkleaker
@Porkleaker Жыл бұрын
Good to hear Artur! Look after yourself first and foremost, and never feel guilty for taking a day off if you need it. Nowdays people are far more understanding, plus just watching all those gory videos day in and day out can have an impact. Stay happy and safe! 😊
@acaciablossom558
@acaciablossom558 Жыл бұрын
40:10 poor guy. He’s hoping for a lack of mosquitos and horse flies, but has no idea the horror of the Arctic winter he is going to have to endure.
@crand20033
@crand20033 2 ай бұрын
Mosquitos kill more people than any other living thing under the sun.
@granatnyk
@granatnyk Жыл бұрын
I ve never seen such a great documentary in my life. Congratulations!
@crand20033
@crand20033 2 ай бұрын
I wonder how he managed to film it under all the terrible conditions he was in.
@kelseylogas1580
@kelseylogas1580 Жыл бұрын
I am mesmerized by this fellow's lack of self-awareness. He has no idea why the common folk would be so kind and gracious to an invading army with a bunch of tanks and guns, and barely a breath later has no idea why enemy soldiers would be so cruel to an invading army with a bunch of tanks and guns. How dare people defend their homes and lives against invaders. Boggles the mind. "Ive never before seen so many corpses." Well, this is what happens when you want to exterminate people. Excellent documentary with very good footage. I do wish you wouldn't blur things out, but KZbin will be KZbin. Please upload part 2 soon.
@stevejohnson6593
@stevejohnson6593 Жыл бұрын
Germans on the western front did surrender quite a few times, mainly because the allies weren't fired up with propaganda to destroy all and anything german. Also, in case it didn't come to mind.. people were conscripted, perhaps not automatically fond of the political ideas presented to them (imagine that old jewish WW1 veteran next door suddenly becoming part of a demonized religious group), perhaps there was propaganda that showed the jews were treated all right in the camps, I don't know.
@fifthbusiness1678
@fifthbusiness1678 Жыл бұрын
“Of the 5.5 million Soviet prisoners in captivity, 3.3 million did not survive the war.” That is stunning ...
@fukuswii4370
@fukuswii4370 Жыл бұрын
.. and you still have Germans talking as if they were the victims when the Red Army stepped in Berlin..
@sandwichninja
@sandwichninja Жыл бұрын
​@@fukuswii4370 People who starved in German camps died because of the aggressive use of siege tactics by the Allied forces in the final 2 years of the war. What's the Soviet excuse for the over 2 million accounts of rape of German Women? By all means though, keep parroting that mainstream kosher dogma like broken record...
@JohnDoe-fj2vz
@JohnDoe-fj2vz Жыл бұрын
Yeah, but it will be always Stalin bad, not the germans who exterminated 14 million Soviet civilians
@sextempiric7137
@sextempiric7137 Жыл бұрын
And narrator still thinks tah Soviet propaganda painted Germans too bad.
@rodafowa1279
@rodafowa1279 Жыл бұрын
He said 5.7, not 5.5.
@BenLim-zd1zv
@BenLim-zd1zv 9 ай бұрын
This is an incredible find to hear "the other side" thank you.
@jeffcool9769
@jeffcool9769 Жыл бұрын
Fascinating study, and wonderful narration. Thanks for the rare moments of film and still photos.
@Trevor-ps2oe
@Trevor-ps2oe Жыл бұрын
This history is very important to remember and to understand. Thank you.
@youme1414
@youme1414 Жыл бұрын
The problem is that we can remember history and never learnt from it. We keep repeating it all the time. Of what use is history to man in that regard?
@xjr13john
@xjr13john Жыл бұрын
I would like to see more of these kind of documentaries but without the blurred images, its all part of history!
@Aries816
@Aries816 Жыл бұрын
I’d like to see a real well done high budget series covering the entirety of WW2 from all perspectives. With good actors and cinematography and CGI. Like Game of Thrones format but WW2
@taglor
@taglor Жыл бұрын
I agree, surely people should be cautioned about the truth of war. The real horror. However, the powers that be will always need cannon fodder and can't let the lie of a 'boy's own adventure' die.
@timothybarker3589
@timothybarker3589 Жыл бұрын
KZbin guidelines won't allow.
@jasonpip5417
@jasonpip5417 Жыл бұрын
No need to see dead people...
@thalesofmiletus2966
@thalesofmiletus2966 Жыл бұрын
@@jasonpip5417 I disagree. The brutality of war kills, maims and destroys people. It shouldn’t be akin to a computer game that is sanitised. Real war isn’t like that.
@chrisscott1633
@chrisscott1633 Ай бұрын
I have Appreciated this Documentary Thoroughly ,I look forward to Part2 of Barbarossa.
@reinholdschrader4125
@reinholdschrader4125 Жыл бұрын
You need to make more documentaries like this. I am tired of seeing productions that revolve around the presenters. Excellent work and thanks a lot for sharing it with us. ❤
@benitoharrycollmann132
@benitoharrycollmann132 Жыл бұрын
"Am I too much of a materialist if I claim that the upper levels of a population can bear their ideational loss better than the working class can bear the material loss? That's saying it carefully. I don't want to be classed as a Bolshevist..." What a crucial insight into the often ponderous mind of a front line soldier/officer.
@Дмитрий-х9з4г
@Дмитрий-х9з4г 8 ай бұрын
Что плохого в большевизме? Это он сломал хребет фашизму. И создал первое в мире госурство рабочих и крестьян. Беда в том, что этому государству с начало его основания всё хотели уничтожить.
@ronrabuck1498
@ronrabuck1498 Жыл бұрын
The most brutal fighting and casualties in history took place during Barbarossa. Both sides treated each other's prisoners horribly
@dragonsdynamite6403
@dragonsdynamite6403 11 ай бұрын
Unsurprisingly
@billharpster7968
@billharpster7968 10 ай бұрын
This is one of the best diary videos out there it’s followed with black-and-white pictures and film of the era. I watch a lot of these I haven’t seen a lot of the film that was in this video. Highly recommend.👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
@WormholeJim
@WormholeJim Жыл бұрын
Weird, little inconsequential fact about the German build up to Barbarossa: None of the soldiers that had taken part in the campaign on Balkan in '41 and who made up the bulk of Armeegruppe Süd, had gasmasks in their gasmask cannisters, having ditched the gasmasks all around Greece and former Jugoslavia in the excessively hot summer of 1941. Instead they used the sturdy metal cannisters for storing food and booze supplies. This caused a minor meltdown in Armeegruppe Süd's military police attachment as when they first went out to reinforce army regulations of what was supposed to in a gasmask cannisters (a missing cannister by those regulations was punishable by death as sabotage of the war effort and usually would result in disciplinary housearrest and a hefty fine), they discovered they had close to 350.000 suspected saboteurs on their hands - and no army if they went ahead processing them all. So they had to let it slide and just hope the Russians wouldn't start using gas defending themselves.
@ButeSound
@ButeSound Жыл бұрын
I often note my grandfather being shot whilst up a tree deep in Russia somewhere seeing where the Russians were (and surviving) as a moment of how close we are to not being here in the first place. Got sent back east when recovered and almost blown up. Survived and we played golf. My grandmother's brother, 20 yr old kid, got a one way trip to Stalingrad. No winners eh.
@westho7314
@westho7314 Жыл бұрын
Golfing Nazis. who knew?. we have a few of those Nazi's still playing golf and wanting to play president again..Pretty pathetic.
@herbertvonsauerkrautunterh2513
@herbertvonsauerkrautunterh2513 Жыл бұрын
My grandfather was a truck driver with a panzer regiment. He went all the way to Moscow. Got shot through the shoulder in 1945, met my grandmother in Halle then fled home to the west and survived
@stanleybroniszewsky8538
@stanleybroniszewsky8538 Жыл бұрын
My maternal great uncle served in the German Navy during WW2. I didn't learn much even though he survived the war. I just know in the early 50s, my mother went with her dad to visit relatives in Germany. Looking at the pictures taken, it seemed so surreal looking at people my mother knew but didn't say much.
@fukuswii4370
@fukuswii4370 Жыл бұрын
​@@stanleybroniszewsky8538 he should have been captured and sent to Siberia
@skindianu
@skindianu Жыл бұрын
@@fukuswii4370 you should be quiet and sent to your room. No more basement for you!
@John-381
@John-381 Жыл бұрын
What was he looking for there in the foreign country?
@Kitiwake
@Kitiwake Жыл бұрын
May we have an end to war in our lifetimes.
@1seansouth
@1seansouth 8 ай бұрын
excellent work, thank you for posting. Very interesting to get a first hand account. The sheer human waste of it all is exhausting. You look at all those rockets blasting into air, the three million men involved, all could have been put towards building hospitals in Germany or helping the poor.
@seanohare5488
@seanohare5488 8 ай бұрын
In other words a more Christian world
@Mildain2000
@Mildain2000 Жыл бұрын
It's insane to think that a soldier was upset that a population he was invading was upset he was there
@markr.devereux3385
@markr.devereux3385 Жыл бұрын
There is a point when occupation necessitates the population be civil if they know what's good for them. It's that simple.
@pomodorostudyclub
@pomodorostudyclub Жыл бұрын
My grandma lived in occupied Norway. She said that it became part of normal life. German Soldiers would share their rations with locals and play with kids in the snow in the winter. She said she threw snowballs at them and even spat on a soldier from a tree once, but they were never punished
@markr.devereux3385
@markr.devereux3385 Жыл бұрын
@@pomodorostudyclub great illustration of an occupied country. No need to escalate things every second.
@Mildain2000
@Mildain2000 Жыл бұрын
​@@pomodorostudyclub Right, I'd imagine life wasn't so bad in Nazi-occupied Norway considering the country is quintessentially Aryan (if not more so than Germany) and had the lowest Jewish population of the territories invaded. Still, 1/3 of its Jews were deported to the camps. I don't think Norway is the best example of the reality of Nazi-occupied territories.
@pomodorostudyclub
@pomodorostudyclub Жыл бұрын
@@Mildain2000 you’re right, I probably should have added that context myself. Just wanted to share a personal memory that came to mind when I saw this video and comment.
@jblauh01
@jblauh01 Жыл бұрын
The Nazis march into Russia makes me think of that scene from Return of the King. “You march to war, but not to victory…”
@survivehistory
@survivehistory Жыл бұрын
I've never seen this footage before! Incredible.
@kellywright540
@kellywright540 Жыл бұрын
My Dad fought in Patton's Third Army, 4th Armored Division from the end of July, 1944 until the end of the war. He then stayed on as part of the American occupation forces until February of 1946. He saw it all, from the race across France to the Battle of the Bulge, into southern Germany with a quick stop to help liberate the Buchenwald concentration camp and then onto Czechoslovakia. We knew some of the horror that he had seen and been a part of. Buchenwald came back to haunt him in the early 1980's when some idiot was on a TV talk show and was telling the audience that the Holocaust never happened. I had been working nights and woke up to him yelling at the TV with tears in his eyes. He was yelling "No, NO! I WAS THERE!" When I came into the TV room to see what was going on, he looked at me and said, "Kelly, I was THERE! The bodies were stacked like logs Kelly! Kelly, THE OVENS WERE STILL WARM!!" That last sentence will stay with me until I die - "The ovens were still warm!" In the 25 years that I hung out with my Dad, I never saw him cry, and after that outburst, I never saw him cry again. War is a dirty, haunting business. Only the ones who never fought in one think it's somehow glorious...
@francisschweitzer8431
@francisschweitzer8431 Жыл бұрын
DO YOU HAVE any roster of Patton’s Staff? MY UNCLE ARTHUR was on Patton’s personal Staff … went to Bastogne with Gen Patton
@cgee6867
@cgee6867 Жыл бұрын
Wow.....isn't it so sad that too many want to wipe the Holocaust away and pretend it never happened. This is why so many survivors have come forward to tell their stories of what they went thru... I went to college with a Jewish gal whose father was in a concentration camp. He somehow escaped and was able to walk across Europe until he found the Allies. He was barely alive and weighed 70 lbs. My college friend said she was woke up nightly by his screams in the night. Soon they will all be dead but their stories will live on....
@MikeWilliamson-dp6cp
@MikeWilliamson-dp6cp Жыл бұрын
Yeah, the issue with this comment and a well-meaning one, at that... His outbursts after seeing the man on TV saying it never happened appears to be coming from a place of guilt. For something that is "true", one wouldn't have such outbursts at those who say it never happened but ignore the people who claim to have been a survivor (of which, many have been exposed for lying) and get caught lying about their victim status while benefiting financially from their lies in their books, documentaries, or speeches at schools. If it is illegal to question this event or deny it.. Should it not be equally illegal to lie about it? Should you return the money made from the lies? Not only do I make this observation based on that, I also make this observation because: 1) By the time FDR recognized the Soviet Union government in 1933, Stalin had nearly 20 million Russians and Ukrainians executed, sent to slave labor camps (millions died in the slave labor camps) and death camps (even more millions killed in these camps) scattered throughout Soviet Union Russia. Once FDR recognized and established relations with Stalin, he worked in overdrive to cover up their genocide in the Soviet Union and Ukraine purging any and all mentions of it. He appointed Stalin-linked agents as his advisors in the WH and appointed more to positions of influence in the US government. 2) You are told that before WWII, Hitler was rounding up Hebrews in Germany and having them killed. This is quite a bold lie meant to be smoke and mirror to divert attention away from Stalin's genocide in the Soviet Union and Ukraine and even his mass executions numbering 700,000 Of Russians in government, the military (the soldiers family were also executed if their child gets falsely accused of treason), and many civilians based on "lists of names" and quotas for the NKVD to meet in regards to the executions of Russians, prior to WWII in the '30s. In Germany, Hitler did NOT use violent means to force Hebrews out of Germany nor mass arrests and executions. He made it illegal for them to hold positions of power, education, media, financing, and such. 1933-39, 2/3s of German Hebrews left Germany with their wealth and possessions. This is known as the Transfer Agreement of which Hitler and Hebrew Germans negotiated and signed. The worldwide Hebrews screeched and yelled about this agreement and did everything to prevent this agreement from carrying out, calling for even more boycotts against Germany. The infamous "Crystal night" was a reaction by the Germans after news of the German diplomat in Paris being assassinated by a Hebrew communist. 3) "Tonight, you have the opportunity to go to the big city (Berlin) and to light a fire in the belly of the enemy and burn his black heart." - orders from Churchill on RAF terror bombings. "We owe the Germans no sympathy, no understanding, we owe them nothing. You ask what is our policy? I will say to you: We have nothing to offer the Germans, but blood, sweat, toil, and tears. It is to wage war by sea, land and air, with all our might and with all the strength that God can give us." From the launch of the RAF's night time terror bombings and shortly the American day time terror bombings of German civilians, the Allied powers dropped nearly two million tons of incendiaries and bombs on German civilians who had NOTHING to do with the war. Your father, under the impression he was “liberating” Buchenwald, absolutely did NOT liberate the camp. The allied powers bombed that camp and killed many. The UK dropped phosphorus bombs along with incendiary bombs with heavy bombs onto many Germans in cities throughout Germany. Many cities contained UK POWs and refugees that were fleeing from the Soviet Union. This did not stop the RAF from bombing these cities. Many of the refugee camps and POWs were connected to hospitals. The Uk bombed the hospitals and strafed the refugee camps. Killing many civilians and refugees. The Germans trapped in basements were literally in a “oven” because of the flames from the phosphorus bombs and incendiary bombs that burned them to ashes with human fat being turned into liquid. Bodies were stacked and still hot to the touch. The bodies belonged to the victims who were sucked into the mile(s) wide infernos. 4) Your father believed he was fighting evil but in reality, his nation allied with the very evil nation (soviet union) that was responsible for millions of Europeans being butchered and burned alive before WWII, before the Allied powers invaded Europe to “liberate” the Europeans from Hitler and Germany, they knew of the mass arrests and executions of Poles in Poland and the 1941 NKVD massacre that killed 10,000 to 40,000 (or more) Poles, Russians, Ukrainians, Hebrews, and other nationalities. He knows that he was lied to and he feels guilt for his role (unbeknownst to him) in the millions killed by the Soviet Union that his leaders covered up and blamed Germans and Hitler. They were busy arming and sending 11.3 Billion (130 billion today) in funds and military equipment and supplies for the Red Army. Italy, Finland, Romania, Spain, Czech, Cossacks, tartars, French, British, Lithuanians, Ethiopians, Dutch, Ukrainians and Russians fought along side Germany for Europe and to defeat Bolshevism that sought their destruction. If I was your father, I wouldn’t want my children to know the truth and have them curse me as I lay in my grave. After finding out how the Allied powers helped evil and aided this evil in their mass murders and mass r**e of European women and girls. The mutilation of European men and boys. That your nation had policies in the war that ordered AF pilots to bomb and strafe any moving target, whether civilian or military, in the country side. Killing many children and women in trains fleeing from the Soviet Union as they began their advance towards Germany. The trains which carried wounded refugees and POWs to Germany because had they stayed behind, the Soviet NKVD would kill them. How America and the West turned over 5 million Russians, military and civilian, to the Soviet’s to appease Stalin. Which he promptly had them murdered along with their families. And turned a blind eye as Stalin’s NkVD that forcibly deported Germans citizens and soldiers to via death marches or cattle trains to Serbia where 5.8 million Germans were killed.
@kellywright540
@kellywright540 Жыл бұрын
@@MikeWilliamson-dp6cp yeah, then there is that... WTF dude! 🤦‍♀️
@johngorman5245
@johngorman5245 10 ай бұрын
Your pal Adolph Hitler announced, that any new war would result in the destruction of European Jews. There is the direct evidence of the Holocaust.
@ossi4766
@ossi4766 Жыл бұрын
Well done one off the best eastern documentary i have ever watched.
@pedrovision6987
@pedrovision6987 Жыл бұрын
Is there a version of this documentary that doesn't have half of it "fuzzed" out??? Very annoying to have someone deciding what I can and cannot see. (Don't get all up in my face telling me it's for my own good...just point me in the direction of an uncensored version of this excellent documentary. Thank you.)
@seanohare5488
@seanohare5488 8 ай бұрын
Agree well said
@mattmansell4238
@mattmansell4238 Жыл бұрын
When I was growing up WWII vets were everywhere. I see them so rarely now its terrible. My 4yo son and I ran into a Army Ranger in a wheelchair last week in the store with a WWII hat. I knew we had to talk! I even took a pic of him with my boy. It's so sad my son will grow up without these heros in his life like I did. My sons will never really know how hard these guys were/are. Different Era. I cherish what little time I can create to listen to these old boys now.
@mynamedoesntmatter8652
@mynamedoesntmatter8652 Жыл бұрын
I grew up with them, and my father and uncles were some of those great men. I’m glad you got that photo of the man and your little boy, and I hope that he cherishes it.
@alanaadams7440
@alanaadams7440 Жыл бұрын
The great generation
@mynamedoesntmatter8652
@mynamedoesntmatter8652 Жыл бұрын
@@alanaadams7440 *The Greatest Generation. Yes indeed, they certainly were.
@huwhitecavebeast1972
@huwhitecavebeast1972 Жыл бұрын
My Godfather fought with Patton. Patton said we fought on the wrong side after having observed the situation in Europe, and I agree. We were duped into helping the enemy. Patton wanted to take out the Soviets but traitors Truman and Eisenhower wouldn't let him. We could have been spared the whole cold war and massive nuclear proliferation. I still respect the valor and sacrifice of those vets, even if we did fight on the wrong side and hurt ourselves in the long run. I had lunch with my godfather every 2 weeks until he passed, and heard many war stories. He had severe PTSD.
@BasementEngineer
@BasementEngineer Жыл бұрын
@@donaldothomoson Rubbish! The communists were on the side of the goood guys, don'tcha know. Sarcasm off.
@Maxime2000-Paris
@Maxime2000-Paris 7 күн бұрын
I'm from the USSR.My grandfather died near Leningrad in 1941, and two grandmothers survived the siege. What a powerful German military machine was first stopped by the Soviet people , and then its spine was broken! I would like to bow to all Soviet soldiers and Soviet people. We must value and cherish peace and a peaceful life, and we must stand up to idiots who want war. That at that time, the United States and Britain stuffed Germany with money and weapons, brought Hitler to power so that he could "Move forward to the East," which is now the case with Ukraine.
@davidhine6775
@davidhine6775 Жыл бұрын
Cannot wait for part 2, great documentary
@fr.michaelknipe4839
@fr.michaelknipe4839 Жыл бұрын
This was very well done in every way. The diary contrasted with the obvious crimes against humanity. Then, the footage so well matched to the text. Effective history in the best sense
@happydeathtv150
@happydeathtv150 Жыл бұрын
war is a real face of humanity - even tho we love to pretend innocent
@MrReymoclif714
@MrReymoclif714 Жыл бұрын
Admittedly they are not very confidence inspiring? Well, I never? Viewpoint is noticeable!!
@happydeathtv150
@happydeathtv150 Жыл бұрын
@@MrReymoclif714 Why do we even look widely when it's so hard to notice even our surrounding? A crime is always happening under our noses
@captainhurricane5705
@captainhurricane5705 Жыл бұрын
I've watched some diary videos recently that were completely bogus, but this one seems legit. Well read and nicely tied to film footage from the war.
@MrReymoclif714
@MrReymoclif714 Жыл бұрын
Did you see those mosquitoes??? Alaskan mosquitoes!
@gwmba1989
@gwmba1989 28 күн бұрын
A small portion of the doomed German invasion of the Soviet Union expertly narrated and backed up with excellent footage that is so effective, that it seemingly transports the viewer back in time over 80 years. Whilst watching, I felt that I was part of that German unit which was striving towards Leningrad. Amazing!
@HistoryHit
@HistoryHit 27 күн бұрын
glad you enjoyed it!
@nassermj7671
@nassermj7671 Жыл бұрын
What a discovery - well worth a sub. Great work this one. How could it get any less personal, moment by moment brimming with human emotions.
@АндрейКаминский-г9в
@АндрейКаминский-г9в Жыл бұрын
The people who survived all this horror were the most staunch supporters of peace. They could endure everything, their requirements for the comforts of life were simple: "If only there was no war".
@abecadlo15
@abecadlo15 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, the most common slogan in post WW2 Poland was "No more war"
@fukuswii4370
@fukuswii4370 Жыл бұрын
​@@abecadlo15 Poland today wants war with Russia 😂😂😂
@nickhayley
@nickhayley Жыл бұрын
​@@fukuswii4370 No they DO NOT. They are pushing the evil away from Ukraine.
@gabrielpamfile8395
@gabrielpamfile8395 Жыл бұрын
My God speak without neologism,If You are brave!
@waynrbunyea7059
@waynrbunyea7059 Жыл бұрын
Funny... I remember several soldiers who had fought in WW1 making the same speeches about just that. How they did not want war as they had fought on the front lines. All of them warned about bankers and organizations trying to undermine nations and citizens using a system of debt and usury. They wanted to change a world full of drugs and poor people in debt slavery. What is happening now? Yet these men were all executed. Some in unimaginably brutal ways. If not, then slandered until they may as well have been or thrown into camp, prison or the Gulag.
@tonibarrone854
@tonibarrone854 Жыл бұрын
These poor soldiers are so brainwashed.They knew so little about truth
@apmoy70
@apmoy70 Жыл бұрын
@@Bardamu3000 Follow your leader Nazi pos
@tonibarrone854
@tonibarrone854 Жыл бұрын
@@Bardamu3000 No I'm not
@miken2604
@miken2604 Жыл бұрын
@@tonibarrone854 Toni whats your point
@tonibarrone854
@tonibarrone854 Жыл бұрын
@@miken2604 Really? Did you hear any one beg the Nazis to bring their culture and idealize lol p
@tonibarrone854
@tonibarrone854 Жыл бұрын
perfection to them?
@jeddkeech259
@jeddkeech259 10 ай бұрын
Another awesome vid. Thanks for keeping the stories of these young men alive. May we learn from the mistakes of the past, Lest we forget, 🙏
@frankgordon8829
@frankgordon8829 Жыл бұрын
As a 2-war combat vet who was disabled in my tour of service, I can definitely relate to the miserable rain, mosquitoes, filth of not bathing & mud almost up to your knees!
@asimian8500
@asimian8500 Жыл бұрын
​@@stanleybroniszewsky8538 The part you forgot is that the Neocons who started all of these wars never sent their kids or if they did they made sure they had cushy jobs and got medals. They also made plenty of money and are laughing. There is nothing honorable in fighting for a country which starts wars and can't win them. The US hasn't won a war since Korea. The Neocons are pushing for your children to be drafted to fight Russia and China. The worst part of all this is the OP who was disabled in his tour of service and if it was a recent war he was a victim of an IED. Good luck with the VA Hospital. They have the worst and most incompetent doctors who graduated from third world medical schools. You're better off with a Witch Doctor than a VA doctor.
@fukuswii4370
@fukuswii4370 Жыл бұрын
Fighting goat headers is not being at war. Go to Bakhmut and maybe you can say that you have faught a real war
@justlucky8254
@justlucky8254 Жыл бұрын
@@fukuswii4370 cool. Where did you survive combat?
@entropy5431
@entropy5431 Жыл бұрын
​@@justlucky8254 In his parents basement, Call of Duty.
@frankgordon8829
@frankgordon8829 Жыл бұрын
@@fukuswii4370 I was done with my fighting by the time those wars came around. Yea, just curious. Where DID you serve?
@loca8048
@loca8048 Жыл бұрын
It's fascinating to listen to how he thinks of himself and Germany, not knowing how contradictory reality is to his idealistic beliefs about his "cause". 1:27:33 "If only we could look into the future". Indeed.
@eliezerwolff8336
@eliezerwolff8336 Жыл бұрын
Did he make it through the war.? His snobbishness led to his cruelty.
@j253d
@j253d Жыл бұрын
Fascinating listen and much appreciate the upload. Liked and subscribed! My family has fought in the Wehrmacht during the second world war. My Grandfather was in the 6th army 44th infantry division and saw action in Poland, France and Kharkov. He was later captured along with thousands of men at Stalingrad. He ultimately lost over 100 ounds of body weight moving around different Russian labour camps post war before finally returning home to Germany in the 1950 and lived a long peaceful life. His younger brother started off the war in the East as part of the 439th Regiment of the 134th Division and was at the battle of Moscow then later he was one of 9 survivors out of 1,000 men in his regiment to die in the battle of Kursk where he was injured and furloughed as a result. He survived heavy allied bombing and returned to active combat in the end as part of the 512th heavy tank destroyer battalion as a loader for the Jagdtiger when he surrendered to the Americans in May 1945. The eldest brother out of the 3 served in the German navy as an officer. He was on submarine U-107 which sank British ship Colonial off Guinea, French West Africa; the entire crew of 100 survived and rescued by HMS Centurion.
@panzer1925
@panzer1925 Жыл бұрын
Heroes
@funknasty9246
@funknasty9246 Жыл бұрын
​@Incognito they were nazis, not heros. Still soldiers, but on the wrong side
@richardm.170
@richardm.170 Жыл бұрын
Interesting story thank you for sharing. Most of the generals of the 6th army were turned by the Soviets during their internment. They were sour about what they considered their betrayal at Stalingrad. Many of these generals later came to be the cadre of the East German army and their leader maintained Wehrmacht traditions: marches, regalia, and toughness. Mark Felton did a video about what happened to Von Paulus generals.
@michaelreilly6447
@michaelreilly6447 Жыл бұрын
@@funknasty9246 they had little choice...brain washed with the rest...
@ekh2082
@ekh2082 Жыл бұрын
did your grandfather share with you stories of atrocities german soldiers committed against civilians? besides horrors that happened to him i m sure in Stalingrad, did he speak of horrors he brought with him to the land he dared to conquer? at one point of the documentary, they mention how many soviet soldiers died in captivity. would be interesting to see the statistics of how many captured german soldiers lived a "long peaceful life" vs soviet soldiers after the war ended. my grandpa was never captured, he fought all the way to berlin. he lived in stalingrad (volgograd) after the war for the rest of his life. he never talked about the war. but since the youngest age i was always taken to Mamaev kurgan. ps. nothing against you personally here. but whatever you call fascinating, i find very tragic. after all, 30-50 000 000 people, citizens of a single country killed is the greatest tragedy. the saddest part is that a lot of these soldiers who committed crimes against humanity, escaped their punishment or served mininum, returned to their families, and lived a long peaceful life.
@billmichae
@billmichae Жыл бұрын
It is amazing how softened and cultured has the narrative been made. The original diary text was more than savage.
@pedromarques1920
@pedromarques1920 10 ай бұрын
What do you mean ?!
@212th
@212th 8 ай бұрын
Where can I find the original text?
@TDrewBR
@TDrewBR 5 ай бұрын
I would like to see it too as i loved the forgotten soldier audiobook
@tonyjones1560
@tonyjones1560 Жыл бұрын
A few years ago I watched a documentary about young Russians who had been exhuming German war dead and sending them back to be re-interred in Germany. In many cases, you could tell the guy was buried where he fell. Sometimes two or three men were buried together and they had to separate the bones. It was…somber.
@Heopful
@Heopful Жыл бұрын
theres heaps of russian youtube channels dedicated to metal detecting around the swamps of Russia. The amount of crap they find it seems the ground is fertilized by the dead . They'll find an 80 year old rifle in some mud and be disappointed because it's only a common mosin
@kNINER-tj6mq
@kNINER-tj6mq Жыл бұрын
The sad part is all the young boys didn't know what he'll truly awaited them until they were already in the midst of it.
@mikekaroules2820
@mikekaroules2820 Ай бұрын
I believe they were decived and propagandized into believing that Barbarossa would not take too long .
@chrisjohnson3590
@chrisjohnson3590 Жыл бұрын
Oh that was immense, hard to imagine what it was like being there but this is a pretty good depiction. I went to St Petersburg in 1986, stunning place.
@jerryrichards8172
@jerryrichards8172 Жыл бұрын
Think about the winter there sleeping in a fox hole with only summer cloths at 50 degrees bellow 0.
@jonforti7691
@jonforti7691 4 ай бұрын
Excellent documentary! Please continue your excellent history channel!
@medbenselem790
@medbenselem790 Жыл бұрын
A grim wasted existence for so many otherwise interesting people on every side ...what a cynical tragedy
@NT-qj1sy
@NT-qj1sy Жыл бұрын
Re upload. was hoping for part 2 😢
@michaeldean1289
@michaeldean1289 Жыл бұрын
Great piece of work guys, nice footage which really does give it justice in supporting the storyline ❤😊
@mlucera2000
@mlucera2000 7 ай бұрын
Great video. Thank you!
@chetfrench1756
@chetfrench1756 Жыл бұрын
Excellent documentary. I've been a lifelong student of WWII history and I was quite pleased and surprised with how much I learned. Well done!!
@crand20033
@crand20033 2 ай бұрын
It wasn't a good time in History. The Germans are embarrassed by Hitler and the Russians are embarrassed by Stalin.
@aretallick1
@aretallick1 Жыл бұрын
This is really good content to explore the history of WW2 from a completely different angle. I used to discuss WW2 at length with a D Day veteran that went on to cross Europe and went right to Berlin. He was a despatch rider attached to a tank regiment. As they crossed France, they had no idea if the next village was occupied by the Germans. So they sent him to scout on his motorbike. If he was met by gunfire, the CO deduced that the village was Nazi occupied. They'd then call in air recon, followed by air strikes if necessary, and the tanks would roll forward into decimated forces. You don't get this picture without first hand accounts.
@MNAHN-T.GOF-NN
@MNAHN-T.GOF-NN Жыл бұрын
How does this veteran feel about the state of 'his' country now during a time where, say, trans kids and the like are not only being tolerated, but encouraged? kzbin.info70v0wwgB5vo kzbin.info/www/bejne/rZTRgn2alL2Fh7M
@Sandwichking-hikes
@Sandwichking-hikes Жыл бұрын
It amazes me how this soldier is doing such obvious evil deeds yet talks about it as if good, this is human kind
@brandonhemphill5638
@brandonhemphill5638 Жыл бұрын
This is war
@terrieormonde2340
@terrieormonde2340 Жыл бұрын
​@@brandonhemphill5638NO excuse
@dougrobbins5367
@dougrobbins5367 11 ай бұрын
No, it's perversion and sickness. The allies never spoke about doing evil as righteous, and they did very little evil.@@brandonhemphill5638
@Wesker10000
@Wesker10000 8 ай бұрын
​@@brandonhemphill5638War doesn't require genociding defenseless civilian populations.
@Fen3rbahce
@Fen3rbahce 8 ай бұрын
There’s both sides to a story and only the the victors will tell the story
@southerncross86
@southerncross86 10 ай бұрын
Great video, thanks for it again!
@RickWilliams-uj9nr
@RickWilliams-uj9nr Жыл бұрын
Please do more of these, it’s so good hearing a first hand account.
@GoldenGateNum9
@GoldenGateNum9 6 ай бұрын
The best man lost🌹♥️🌹 Thanks for these docs, they are amazing, music is very beautiful, Love Edda 🌹♥️🌹 Apocalypse the 2nd world war 2009 is amazing also 🌹♥️🌹
@DelDuio
@DelDuio Жыл бұрын
This is awesome, thank you. Question: Why are some scenes blurred out?
@John-mf6ky
@John-mf6ky 11 ай бұрын
This whole documentary is phenomenal! This really helps bring the reality of the Eastern front to life theough Wilhelm's excellent writing.
@kdr121279
@kdr121279 Жыл бұрын
It's interesting to hear that Russian soldiers regarded German soldiers as "beasts" and murderers. Considering the Wehrmacht was complicit with actions conducted by the Einsatzgruppen and similar SS formations, as well as the fate which awaited almost three million Russian POWs, they were right to think this way.
@confusedbadger6275
@confusedbadger6275 Жыл бұрын
The Germans were told the Soviets were subhuman, yhe Sovieta were told ghe Germans were beasts etc. It was done so that neither wwould want to surrender
@ToMbA_La_BoMbA
@ToMbA_La_BoMbA Жыл бұрын
​@@confusedbadger6275Soviets raped 2 millions German women. From 6 to 97 yo.
@TheArrowedKnee
@TheArrowedKnee Жыл бұрын
To be fair, while it was still propaganda, it wasn't entirely wrong considering how few Soviet PoWs actually survived.
@BillSikes.
@BillSikes. Жыл бұрын
My name is David Umbongo-Olyufemwe-Olyufemwe I am from Nigeria and I stand with Israel 🇮🇱
@DoktorDoof-c6u
@DoktorDoof-c6u Жыл бұрын
@@confusedbadger6275 The NKVD murdered 20,000 Poles, deported and murdered some thousand Baltic people and about 100,000 "political enemies" during the first 2 weeks of the German soviet war. Take this and all those mutilated German POW in the first days of German-Soviet war and you know why German soldiers did not NEED any propaganda to believe this war is going to be cruel. But its intersting to see how these inconvenient facts disappeared from history book (or never made it in there)....
@shahbazahmed6650
@shahbazahmed6650 Жыл бұрын
Man's inhumanity to his fellow man has no limits. It will happen again, except it will be worse. One day, humans will be extinct. My very young son asked: "Dad, isn't war killing of your own kind?" I hugged him tightly.
@theresaserentas9088
@theresaserentas9088 Жыл бұрын
I always enjoy watching documentary such as this because it's based on a true story not fiction
@salvaged_title
@salvaged_title 8 ай бұрын
Very well done production! 👍
@samrodian919
@samrodian919 Жыл бұрын
This documentary was both fascinating and horrifying. Personally I am old enough to not have bad scenes blurred out. If I'm going to watch warfare in its entirety, that must include the horrifying parts of it as well. I am looking forward to the second part of this documentary. This diary series is explosive in its "on the ground, in your face" truth from a German tank officers perspective during the actual time of his involvement in operation Barbarossa.
@Crusade777
@Crusade777 Жыл бұрын
Yes , now youtube is censoring videos,and the audio. I can only imagine what else they are censoring.
@holeef...v2994
@holeef...v2994 Жыл бұрын
U cant see everything cos u have to think war is cool adventure
@RichardAugustMatthew19Man
@RichardAugustMatthew19Man Жыл бұрын
Why video distort the images of the dead? This is history. Leave it as it is.
@spaceghost8995
@spaceghost8995 Жыл бұрын
DUMBEST COMMENT EVER.
@BJJISTHEGAYPARTOFMMA
@BJJISTHEGAYPARTOFMMA Жыл бұрын
Blame youtube.
@brianhanley1903
@brianhanley1903 Жыл бұрын
Allways blur the truth. It must be seen and told the real truth.
@ZAMOLXEDARK
@ZAMOLXEDARK Жыл бұрын
KZbin sucks.. that's why .... meanwhile comercials at gambling sites all good..
@tripltred65
@tripltred65 Жыл бұрын
This was amazing. Felt like I was in the vehicles with them. Just amazing, and would love to see more.
@ahmedpasic4916
@ahmedpasic4916 11 ай бұрын
Luckily you were not in the vehicles with them.
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