Play Call of War for FREE on PC or Mobile: 💥 callofwar.onelink.me/q5L6/ARGE009 Receive 13K GOLD & 1 month premium subscription, only available for the next 30 days! Sign up for Armchair History TV today! armchairhistory.tv/ Merchandise available at armchairhistory.tv/collections/all Android App: play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.fourthwall.wla.armchairhistory IOS App: apps.apple.com/us/app/armchair-history-tv/id6471108801 Armchair Historian Video Game: store.steampowered.com/app/1679290/Fire__Maneuver/ Support us on Patreon: www.patreon.com/armchairhistorian Discord: discord.gg/thearmchairhistorian Twitter: twitter.com/ArmchairHist
@tommynini2 ай бұрын
thanks
@DukeofDenmark22 ай бұрын
This was just what I was looking for! Amazing video!
@pippy71022 ай бұрын
1:03 Western Front??
@dbfi012 ай бұрын
is -40 farenheit and -40 celcius the same??!!??
@AndrewTurner-zb2si2 ай бұрын
At 17.50 you say the red army achieved nothing besides casualties. War happens in many ways they did not achieve any ground however the stress on soldiers and supplies contributed to the collapse
@jadeorbigoso52122 ай бұрын
You can't expect someone to surrender if you literally named your war to them as " War of Annihilation"
@DavidNaval2 ай бұрын
and then kids say if he just captured moscow they would have won, it didn’t work when napoleon took the city, so why would they surrender now, against an enemy that would exterminate every russian
@jadeorbigoso52122 ай бұрын
@@DavidNavalSoviets already prepared to Transfer their new Capital to Ural Perm, and Novosibirsk at that point them just in case and the most industrial equipments is already transferred and now starting to pumped out new Tanks in Urals.
@generaltom68502 ай бұрын
@@DavidNaval I think that the Napoleon comparisons aren’t that great, the differences are too great.
@jadeorbigoso52122 ай бұрын
@@DavidNaval they thought Soviet Union is similar to France both Politically and Geographically
@haythemz88882 ай бұрын
@@DavidNavalif Moscow falls, stalingrad won't make it neither other city, ussr will continue but so weak
@yetanotherwarhammernerd41272 ай бұрын
How dare KZbin hide this from me for 3 minutes
@SilverSpike_Gaming2 ай бұрын
It was 50 minutes for me
@thekebab16552 ай бұрын
It was an hour for me!
@Twiggo_The_Foxxo2 ай бұрын
We're not doing another "43 likes in 2 seconds? Bro fell off" type of comments again
@tinkudas49802 ай бұрын
Two hours for me youtube are you serious!!!!
@ExPraetorianGuard-dl1pz2 ай бұрын
WTF youtube?!
@martialartsNerd102 ай бұрын
I just know a Sabaton fan is going to quote the lyrics to their Moscow song eventually.
@robertoleary54702 ай бұрын
I know this is a bit of a knob question but what was that song?
@joeallen91042 ай бұрын
@@robertoleary5470 The song was called: Defence Of Moscow.
@robertoleary54702 ай бұрын
@ thanks.
@ppszthunder2 ай бұрын
Bet
@ppszthunder2 ай бұрын
Defense of Moscow @@robertoleary5470
@joaoborges21672 ай бұрын
Even if Hitler had captured Moscow, that victory most probably wouldn't have handed him the war, as Napoleon's spirit could have told him upon his visit to L'Empereur's tomb, in 1940...
@user_____M2 ай бұрын
It was still very important but if they captured the Caucasus it was all over, no fuel for the Soviets regardless of how many trucks the US would send it would be futile.
@justafaniv10972 ай бұрын
@@user_____M The US was also a major exporter of fuel. Just ask the Japanese.
@thelvadam28842 ай бұрын
napoleon's campaign and the one from Hitler are different wars. the latter was a full sized front the fromer a small spear head,
@vampi-chan37932 ай бұрын
idk why people compare Hitler's Soviet Union invasion with Napoleon's march on Moscow, completely different scenarios.
@pax68332 ай бұрын
@@justafaniv1097 there is simply no way to ship that much fuel across the pacific and transport it to western russia.
@MissileStrikeProductions2 ай бұрын
9:40 Historically accurate battle of Moscow
@swatcccp46732 ай бұрын
Radioactove stalin gaze)
@kg71622 ай бұрын
Staline blast
@SleepyjoeOG2 ай бұрын
@@kg7162Joe Biden: *is it possible to learn this power?*
@JaHail-oy6vq2 ай бұрын
more like staling glazers is crazy
@kg71622 ай бұрын
@@SleepyjoeOG ''not from a capitalist pig''
@RevolutionaryGoose2 ай бұрын
Battle for Budapest please
@itsblitz44372 ай бұрын
Or WW2 from the Hungarian perspective.
@hank7802 ай бұрын
@@itsblitz4437Agreed
@Cartooncatedits2 ай бұрын
Or battle of vienna 1945 or Breslau
@NickAndriadze2 ай бұрын
That'd be great and something I have already requested, so I agree.
@lucaa.97092 ай бұрын
Why though? just was a violent onesided 2 month siege
@Nfsbelka2 ай бұрын
My grand-grandfather, Andrei Il'ych perished in the Vyaz'ma forests 7:29 in November during Defence of Moscow His son, my grandfather, that time a little 7 year-old boy with two brothers, told me once how he saw his father for the last time. It was middle July 1941, near Smolensk, in his small hometown of Duhovschina. The German troops were rapidly approaching Smolensk, the "gate of Moscow", as it was called ever since Napoleon wars. Civilian women, children and elders were rushing out of Duhovschina, while lacking manpower Red Army units and people's militia were taking positions in the nearby approaches of the town It was a total mess His father, me grand-grandfather, who was a local man and grew up there, shortly before that just volunteerely enlisted as a soldier and was given an anti-tank rifle. At that morning he was eagerly rushing his wife and children, including my future grandfather, to settle up on the wooden cart, driven by an old horse. He hugged my grandfather, his brothers and mom, tightly for the last time in their lives. After the children were seated, he ran up to the horse, slapped it hard on the rump and shouted "Go!" Then he turned away and never look back, running towards his positions, which were only a hundred meters away as our family's house was on the western edge of that smalltown As my little grandfather was watching his father running away with anti-tank gun on the shoulder, he saw how in the distance, about 3 km away, from behind the western forest, the German panzers appeared and were slowly moving towards the town We always believed that my grand-grandfather died right at that particular battle, but in 2021 I looked up for the archives, and found out he survived that battle and fought up until November 1941, where he eventually went missing somewhere in Vyaz'ma deep forests, maybe in encirclement Many say that winter prevented Hitler from capturing Moscow, but if were not for heroic defense of Smolensk in the summer of 1941, the Wehrmacht could have reached Soviet Union's capital much earlier, and perhaps would have managed to take it By the way, I think that German casualties in battle of Moscow are being constantly lowered If Wehrmacht lost only 250.000-400.000 out of 2 million men of Army Center, as it claimed by West, while all Red Army lost from 600.000 to 1.3 million (from also total 2 million on that front, which was also not all-at-once amount), it means that after the battle it would be still 1.400.000 - 1.750.000 Wehrmacht soldiers against only 400.000-700.000 Soviets. With such claimed ratio of casualties Germans could easily destroy the remnants of Soviet troops, moreover it would mean that Germans won. But in fact, that didn't happen. So, logically, it seems to me a little bit nonsense
@dilejjja2 ай бұрын
What a story... There are millions similar to that and every each one of them is touching and heartbraking.
@bigjake-ev7nj2 ай бұрын
My deepest respect to your great-grandfather. He was a man of courage, getting his family to safety and fighting to protect both them and his Motherland. May his spirit and those of the 27 million Soviet dead rest in eternal peace and light.
@AzureRek2 ай бұрын
Wow that's an absolutely incredible story. Your great grandfather is a hero and literally helped changed the course of history. Spasiba.
@Nfsbelka2 ай бұрын
Thank you very much guys, i didn't expect i will receive such warm words, thank you for everyone, and may there be peace upon the world!
@tangle25312 ай бұрын
Not to be "That Guy 🤓" but it's quite plausible that even with the 1.4-1.7M German figure that they still couldn't have taken Moscow even against a Smaller force. Oil was running out, their trucks were broken and lacked spare parts, partisans/red army remnants were wrecking the rear lines, and many other factors contributed to making the German army having a logistical nightmare especially with how rapid the advance was exhausting troops and material (which seldom had even a day to rest). not to mention the Germans having to stretch their forces along the entire length of the Front whereas the Soviets could ignore unimportant places to concentrate their strength for defense or counterattack alongside deploying or cycling in fresh forces straight from their reserve. in the end, the Wehrmacht's bane was Logistics, and almost every major offensive failure by them can be traced back to it. as shown later by Stalingrad, where several times the Germans could've ended the Battle but routinely had little to no ammunition and had to focus on company sized operations in-order to do anything. Strategies win Battles, Logistics win Wars. and ultimately while the Germans were good at winning the Battles, they fumbled hard when it came to everything else and actually winning the bigger picture. which was something their opponents were much better at doing.
@DavidNaval2 ай бұрын
glad to see this video remade
@itsblitz44372 ай бұрын
Same here.
@build4timetfisakilometer2 ай бұрын
wait this was remade?
@DavidNaval2 ай бұрын
@@build4timetfisakilometer yes he made a video on moscow a few years ago
@wititorac2 ай бұрын
@@itsblitz4437
@moodswingy1973Күн бұрын
Remaking the video and still calling it the "Western Front" sounds like something I would do LOL.
@KO-sx9uy2 ай бұрын
That the Soviets would destroy Berlin only 4 years later was prob unimaginable to the Germans
@instrumentsofdestruction57372 ай бұрын
With a LOT of help from American air power.
@KO-sx9uy2 ай бұрын
@ the Battle of Berlin was almost entirely Soviet, even the air strikes
@vampi-chan37932 ай бұрын
@@KO-sx9uy yeah, well, soviet supply lines were more american than any other thing. US lend-lease act contributed greatly in Soviet Union's victory.
@KO-sx9uy2 ай бұрын
@ Most of the fighting in WW2 was done by the Soviets. I’m American I don’t know why you’re acting like America won the war.
@kg71622 ай бұрын
Can we just stop arguing that the War was one by one country it was won by the sacrifice of every nation against the axis and not just the typical ''soviet blood,american War machine....'' no real coordination between country that turn Ally against a common ennemi and won with those sacrifice made, please have some respect
@thecobaltemperor2 ай бұрын
North Africa, Pacfic War, Western Front: Hard difficulty Eastern front: nightmare mode
@300thNPCАй бұрын
Pacific War is nightmare mode considering what happened to China
@اسكندرفكار16 күн бұрын
@@300thNPC China was under equipped and strategicly weak
@300thNPC16 күн бұрын
@@اسكندرفكار I was referring to the genocide
@اسكندرفكار16 күн бұрын
@@300thNPC The og comment was mostly about the tensity of the military struggle
@300thNPC15 күн бұрын
@@اسكندرفكار Still not accurate. Pacific War wasn't any less brutal than the Eastern Front, it was just on a smaller scale.
@mikeFolco2 ай бұрын
The production quality is impressive. Engaging writing. Slick graphics. Very good.
@philipsullivan48852 ай бұрын
Always great with the Armchair Historian.
@thelvadam28842 ай бұрын
@@philipsullivan4885 thats not an acronym you want to use kek
@marilynlucero93632 ай бұрын
@@philipsullivan4885 TAH.
@neilhannan51122 ай бұрын
Everyone remembers the battle of Stalingard and the siege of Lenningrad but not that many remember the Battle of Moscow where brave soldiers fought to defend their homeland fighting for 3 months 5 days and losing 60'000 to 1'600'000 men dying for their families friends and lives
@itsblitz44372 ай бұрын
Good point very underrated.
@Englishman_2001AD2 ай бұрын
It's simply known as the Great Patriotic War in Russia. (Paraphrased) "Name is unknown, but your deed is immortal". My girlfriend is Belarusian, not many talk about what happened in Belarus
@giorgijioshvili97132 ай бұрын
@@Englishman_2001AD not only in russia, many ex soviet countries call it that way
@keegobricks97342 ай бұрын
dying to protect one of the worst regimes in human history, is what you meant to say.
@radajradaj2 ай бұрын
@@chrisstucker1813 They even had to crawl through bunch of dead corpses
@BlenderisedMind2 ай бұрын
Massive props to the artist(s) who do such amazing work on these!
@Sun-Tzu-2 ай бұрын
When talking about the Russian winter, why do people only ever think it affected the Germans? It has been widely accepted that the roll the winter played on helping the Soviets on the Eastern Front has been greatly exaggerated.
@maryrosetran5109Ай бұрын
Because the Russians know how to live in very harsh winter conditions. More importantly, they know how to live in their land. Notice the Russian winter caps as opposed to the German steel helmets? Steel helmets won't keep you warm. Russian vehicles have wide tracks as opposed to German ones. They know the deep mud is a problem. Russians know how to make and keep fire in deep winter without spending fuel, Germans don't. The Russians were affected too, and very badly affected by the harsh winter, but they knew what was coming. For the Germans, let's just say they thought all winters are the same (conditions-wise, not temperature-wise).
@mirthmagic6370Ай бұрын
Because it significantly simplifies everything, eliminating the need for further analysis and comparison of facts.
@therandomtankАй бұрын
I wouldve thought you knew this Sun-Tzu, but have you ever tried fighting a battle while you can't feel your limbs because its really really cold?
@ericeverett510Ай бұрын
Russians were acclimated to the weather. Russians are from Russia. Real complicated huh?
@Sun-Tzu-Ай бұрын
@ericeverett510 Yeah because all Russians are from Siberia, and obviously Russian fuel also doesn't freeze in the cold.
@satyamrajrawat5947Ай бұрын
12:42 borodino is also the place where Napoleon took heavy casualty during russian invasion and it was the turning point.
@jadeorbigoso52122 ай бұрын
Another factor why Moscow didnt fall is that Soviet troops didn't suffer from the lack of supplies
@itsblitz44372 ай бұрын
Down side of being the invader.
@jadeorbigoso52122 ай бұрын
@@itsblitz4437also their supply lines is always been attacked by Partisan movement , blowing the railways, and roads to slowdown them at maximum extent
@grandcanyon-d4d2 ай бұрын
Imagine if the Japanese attacked the lend leases @@jadeorbigoso5212
@brandonlyon7302 ай бұрын
@@itsblitz4437 Unless you’re the Mongols.
@JeffreyHornick-ep3si2 ай бұрын
Soviet scorched earth policies didn’t help either
@jacobfrost21312 ай бұрын
There is legend that Zhukov critisised Stalin a lot (he was one of the few people who could afford this) and they had a big quarrel after the fall of Kiev. That time Zhukov was a Chef of JCS, and Stalin said:"I don't need a chef who critisises me" and Zhukov answered and "than i'll be not". In fact putting him as field marshal was like a punishment. He was lowered in occupation, not to mention that the task he was ordered with was almost impossible: to stop the enemy who has conquered the Europe and almost destroyed the whole Red Army. And against all odds Zhukov succeseded.
@marshaloftheussr82392 ай бұрын
The only problem with this narrative is that Stalin remained in Moscow. If he believed stopping the Germans was impossible this would be suicidal. Stalin is a little more multifaceted than the traditional evil caricature presented in the west or the rosy hero that is sometimes presented by communists.
@ChristoffelTensors2 ай бұрын
It’s a myth created in the West. Zhukov had great respect for Stalin and Stalin respected him likewise.
@planetkc2 ай бұрын
Zhukov hated Stalin whatchu mean. Stalin feared Zhukov too @@ChristoffelTensors
@jacobfrost21312 ай бұрын
@ChristoffelTensors Maybe a myth, but not by west. And sure they respected each other: Zhukov owed Stalin his career, and Zhukov never failed him. But being dismissed from a position of a Chef of JCS to a field marshal is an obvious downgrade. And it's confirmed by russian historians that some failures in the start of the war happened due to direct Stalin's orders and when he stopped interrupting the work of his generals, started believing and trusting them to operate however they like, the tide of war changed. Hitler never trusted this generals and thought that he knows everything better.
@AaaBbb-pb7ci2 ай бұрын
I once made history presentation based on your old Moscow video, Im so happy to see it being updated 😊
@zanzillavids77592 ай бұрын
Can u do a video on the fall of Singapore or Hong Kong cos those were Britain's most embarassing defeats
@itsblitz44372 ай бұрын
That would be awesome I like to see more Armchair Historian videos on the Pacific War.
@Bullet-Tooth-Tony-2 ай бұрын
Or Bill Slims victory over the Japanese at Kohima and Imphal
@Englishman_2001AD2 ай бұрын
@@Bullet-Tooth-Tony- leave it. These people cope knowing Britain had the largest empire.. many battles happened, many were lost. You could win 999 battles, but they only remember that 1 loss. Is what it is*
@MrSoap2302Ай бұрын
@@Englishman_2001AD everyone remembers the usa for vietnam and afghanistan. copium
@tanjeeschuan4999Ай бұрын
@@Englishman_2001AD I can feel your victim complex.
@xBGL2 ай бұрын
My grand-grand father was shot during the Battle for Moscow he survived but his health was really bad and he died in 1947. Also, it would be cool to have some info on lend-lease in this video too, but I think I saw about it in another video on this channel.
@dac57822 ай бұрын
If memory serves, while Lend-Lease was trickling in, it wouldn't arrive in meaningful quantities until much later; I'd have to dig for the book again, but I remember reading that only 7% of the initial Lend-Lease to the Soviet Union would have been delivered at that point in time.
@StrLab2 ай бұрын
Even if Germans seized Moscow, it would mean nothing. The Soviet people would still fight them and would never surrender. What did Napoleon get from capturing Moscow? As Mustafa Kemal Ataturk said "We will fight in the front of Ankara, in Ankara, behind the Ankara", answering the question on what he will do if the Greeks capture Ankara. (I am Greek still waiting for Armchair Historian to cover some parts of our 1.000 years of conflict between our noble people!!)
@jadeorbigoso52122 ай бұрын
At this point for Soviets they are now preparing Ural Perm City and Novosibirsk to become a new Capital for this War and almost all Factories are now transfered at the back of Ural mountains and Siberia
@itsblitz44372 ай бұрын
You mean the Turkish War of Independence?
@ElBandito2 ай бұрын
Besides, the Soviets would be getting massive economic help from the allies before their relocated factories can be fully online.
@kindlingking2 ай бұрын
@@ElBanditothey were already online just after they got moved. It's an incredible mostly underappreciated feat of USSR during that period. Best most people know is how in Stalingrad half destroyed factories rolled tanks straight into battle, which is also pretty notable.
@mates98162 ай бұрын
Not only that but it would be a probably very costly victory for the Germans just remember how hard the Soviets fought for Stalingrad I think it's safe to say they would fought much more harder for their capital the city was also preparing for the Germans to arrive so had the Germans actually took Moscow I think we wouldn't be talking about Stalingrad as the bloodiest battle but about battle of Moscow
@KaiserOfKnowledge2 ай бұрын
Can we all agree, this guy captivates us with his videos!
@Naltddesha2 ай бұрын
No
@zacharydokey25622 ай бұрын
Great quality videos.
@Numba0032 ай бұрын
Thank you for the video! In my experience, I've not heard much about the Battle of Moscow, so I much appreciated this. I didn't know the situation was quite so desperate for a while. God be with you out there, everybody. ✝️ :)
@thegreatmindgorb89482 ай бұрын
You should consider covering the 1848 revolutions!
@miscellaneousedits-dm8nd2 ай бұрын
If I'm not mistaken that would be austria, france, and prussia right?
@FalkyRocket22222 ай бұрын
@@miscellaneousedits-dm8nditd be like half of europe tbh
@dominikjanda88322 ай бұрын
Epic history already did that
@Ferradj.family2 ай бұрын
@@dominikjanda8832 well armchair isn't epic
@reyzhehalАй бұрын
You mixed up the 2 numbers in the middle.
@jokodihaynes4192 ай бұрын
"There is no greater training comrade then fighting to survive"-comrade comminsar call of duty 2
@pothead99632 ай бұрын
I can't explain how much i've enjoyed watching this channel for the past 4 years and seeing the animation and quality always improve. Always covering interesting topics with a clear and simple script making so many complicated scenarios/events easy for my smooth brain to understand.
@hassanmohammadian75832 ай бұрын
Minor Inaccuracy at 1:03 : On The Eastern Front not the west
@jadeorbigoso52122 ай бұрын
For Russia its the Western front for them. The eastern front for them is the Manchurian Front
@jadeorbigoso52122 ай бұрын
In Russia its literally called West Russian War or the Great Patriotic War
@hassanmohammadian75832 ай бұрын
@@jadeorbigoso5212he said in the second ww that's why I said 1:03
@drunkendwarf65872 ай бұрын
@@jadeorbigoso5212In Russia it's called (roughly) the Great War for (of?) Fatherland. Never heard of the West Russian one, because there was no Russia as an independent state.
@jadeorbigoso52122 ай бұрын
@@drunkendwarf658717:29 try to watch it again
@jasperoliger2 ай бұрын
My great grandfather fought in the Pacific, and if you asked him who saw the worst combat during the war, he'd always say "oh the Soviets for sure", every damn time! Lol let that sink in..... The man fought DEEPLY entrenched Japanese fanatics, in a brutal island to island campaign.... And he always said he was better off than "those poor commies on the western front" .......
@guardman68062 ай бұрын
A friend of my Grandfather always told me how they could see Moscows historical building from theor position. It was so close yet impossible to capture for them.
@spg17942 ай бұрын
@17:22 moving the freeze-proof siberian troops into Moscow was a total boss move...
@RangerJoe19282 ай бұрын
I would absolutely love to see you make a video covering the Spanish-American War! I feel like it’s mostly forgotten and would be super interesting to watch!!
@DaRealVonStauffenberg2 ай бұрын
I agree
@andreaguarriero9194Ай бұрын
My russian great grand mother used to tell me stories about the defencive preparations around Moscow, about how as a young girl she was sent to dig trenches before being evacuated. Chills me every time I watch videos about WWII and the Russian campaign. She also lost her older brother in Leningrad. He was a pilot and was hit down by german AAA after like 2 months of service. She did not live long enough to find out where did he crash and had no place to bring flowers to. She was always sad about it and was trying her best to find out this place way in her 80s… I feel like that generation was made of way stronger people then I’m… ❤
@proudkingmartin2 ай бұрын
This is the video we wanted but never new. This is an alternate historians dream come true
@fare118127 күн бұрын
People often say how Germany almost reached Moscow, as if reaching the city would be a significant development. The Germans reached Leningrad and Stalingrad too, and what happened?
@SafavidAfsharid31972 ай бұрын
Please cover 1971 Indo-Pakistan war, 1967 Sino-Indian border skirmishes, Kargil war, Sino-Vietnam war and Vietnamese invasion of Cambodia.
@ravenmusic63922 ай бұрын
He already did India Pakistan 1965
@aaryankumar87702 ай бұрын
@@ravenmusic639271 is entirely different
@Pratama7282 ай бұрын
71 is second Indo-pakistan war?
@killdaqueen2 ай бұрын
No it was the liberation of Bangladesh and the Pakistanis made a massive genocide (I am a Bangladeshi so I know about it) It was called "Operation Searchlight"
@amAliveTrustmeАй бұрын
Love the content brother
@ux-zd6huАй бұрын
For some reason people don't realize that Red army was ountnumbered by Axis powers in Eastern front till the end of 1943
@Mobox-mp8ylАй бұрын
I think you mean till the end of 1941
@grifissssАй бұрын
till the end of 1942* by 1943-1944 the germans were outnumbered 3 to 1 already
@gabrieleternullo83072 ай бұрын
Bro can you do the evolution of Italian uniforms from the unification to modern days?
@dillonhunt17202 ай бұрын
7:00 Those are Panthers and 2 years too early 13:24 Those are Panzer IVs not Panzer IIIs 13:27 Those T34s have the "Hexagonal" turret which didn't see use until after the T34M project was abandoned and the new turret married to current T34s later in 1942 15:00 The Panzer IV witht he L/43 gun wouldn't see service until March 1942 after the winter 16:30 All those men have German Mauser 98s 18:35 Marder III Ausf. M tank destroyers weren't made until May 1943
@dimas38292 ай бұрын
agree with most things, except Mauser. What's strange about the usage of well-known rifle that your country produced in 9 millions units? It was spread well enough to be used extensively in combat and it's not like German industry had unlimited production lines at the time to support the troops with most modern rifles instead. Like the extensive use of horses by German army during ww2 is obscured too by the propagandized tanks and motorcycles, same as their sever lack of sub-machine guns.
@dillonhunt17202 ай бұрын
@@dimas3829 Because they're Soviet troops
@thelvadam28842 ай бұрын
i love u (no homo)
@planetkc2 ай бұрын
White Americans doing European history as always, bro.
@MarcelineRaven2 ай бұрын
I think the reason for the early Panthers is that its a reference to the board game Axis and Allies where they have German tanks represented by panthers.
@abderahmanelaib73632 ай бұрын
So in another sense the battle of Moscow was what Hitler wished for when Berlin got surrounded
@jadeorbigoso52122 ай бұрын
11:15 HOI4 Players: IS THIS HOI4 REFERENCE 😮😮😮😮😮😮
@hunterbraund8156Ай бұрын
Kind of, I don't think it's intentional though, I think it was just an extra detail for the film
@potato888722 ай бұрын
If i remember from the ww2 timeghost channel that , at some point, the amount of tanks during operation typhoone was 19 tanks, still managing to push ahead
@guol77912 ай бұрын
Georgy Zhukov essentially admitted that the country's fate hung in the balance, and the pendulum could swing in any direction. Zhukov called the period from October 6 to 13, 1941, when "the Mozhaisk defense line did not provide reliable protection," the most dangerous moment for the fate of Moscow and the Soviet Union. "The road to central Moscow and the Kremlin was wide open and it was only pure coincidence that the Germans just went straight in and took the city. Stalin and Beria wanted to give up several times and cede large parts of the Western Soviet Union to Hitler.
@ElBandito2 ай бұрын
Thank Grandpa Winter for coming in sooner than expected that year.
@BlackiLP0112 ай бұрын
@@ElBandito It was the determination and willpower of the Soviet People that defeated the Reich.
@ucanhvungoc71332 ай бұрын
That seems... wrong? Stalin was adamant in defending Moscow. Whilst most of the Soviet government already evacuated to another city behind Moscow, he stayed in Moscow and never left. I don't think Stalin ever wanted to cede any apart of the Soviet Union to Germany.
@ElBandito2 ай бұрын
@@BlackiLP011 If you actually saw the video, the SU had paper thin defense by early October in front of Moscow that could have been easily broken, but early onset of mud and snow and record high cold later on sapped Germany of speed and power. Also, without allied material support, the SU could have never advanced as much as it did in the later years of WWII.
@LegioXXI2 ай бұрын
@@BlackiLP011 It was the lack of resources and logistics that broke the Germans neck. Even if the soviets never learned from their mistakes and performed just as bad as during the Finnish winter war, nothing would have changed. Germany could not win. They lacked the resources and Russia is a logistical nightmare for any invading army. Also don't forget that while Germanys land conquest of Russia looks impressive on the map, it all just means having more territory to guard and garrison - stretching their low resources even more. Honestly, the only realistic chance Germany had in defeating Russia is to not come as conquerors, but as anti-communist liberators - especially to countries like Ukraine and the baltic states. But this was impossible due to the Mustache Guy's ideology.
@diegogiurgola9822 ай бұрын
Thanks for this awesome new video!
@call_me_iori2 ай бұрын
Babe, wake up. The Armchair Historian just dropped.
@XxalightnerxX2 ай бұрын
Wish I had a babe to wake up
@goji39082 ай бұрын
14:46 actual chills
@ac-42042 ай бұрын
Lmao
@tonishiro20 күн бұрын
Lend-Lease supplies were significant, but in the context of the Soviet Union's efforts to produce its own armaments, they were relatively modest. Here's a comparison of specific figures: 1. Tanks: - Lend-Lease supplies: The USA supplied the USSR with about 7,000 tanks, mostly light tanks (M3 "Lee", M5 "Stuart", and M24 "Chaffee") and medium tanks (M4 "Sherman"). - Soviet production: The Soviet Union produced over 80,000 tanks, including the T-34, which is 10 times more than the number received via Lend-Lease. 2. Aircraft: - Lend-Lease supplies: The USA supplied over 18,000 aircraft, including fighters ("Spitfire", "Hurricane", "P-40"), bombers ("Liberator"), and transport planes ("C-47"). - Soviet production: The Soviet Union produced about 140,000 aircraft during the war, including fighters (e.g., Yak-1, La-5) and bombers (e.g., Il-2). This is 7-8 times more than the Lend-Lease supplies. 3. Trucks and Automobiles: - Lend-Lease supplies: The USA supplied about 400,000 vehicles, mostly trucks (Dodge, Studebaker, GMC). - Soviet production: The Soviet Union produced about 700,000 vehicles, including trucks, passenger cars, and specialized vehicles. Lend-Lease vehicles accounted for about 57% of domestic production. 4. Food and Material Resources: - Lend-Lease also included a significant amount of foodstuffs and materials like oil, rubber, and copper, vital for the Soviet economy. - Food: Over 4 million tons of food, including meat, sugar, wheat, and canned goods, were supplied. - Oil and materials: Lend-Lease also supplied essential resources like oil, rubber, and copper, crucial for the Soviet war effort. 5. Weapons and Ammunition: - Lend-Lease supplies: The USA provided small arms, ammunition, artillery, and mines, but most artillery and small arms were produced by the Soviet Union. - Between 1941 and 1945, the USSR produced over 100,000 artillery pieces and more than 10 billion rounds of small arms ammunition, significantly exceeding Lend-Lease supplies. Comparison: - While Lend-Lease was important, especially in the early years, it made up a small portion of the armaments and equipment produced by the USSR. The Soviet Union used its industrial capacity to produce most of the war materials. - The production of tanks and aircraft in the Soviet Union far exceeded Lend-Lease supplies. - The supply of vehicles and trucks, however, was crucial for improving logistics and transportation to the front. In conclusion, Lend-Lease played an important role, but the Soviet Union's mass production and industrial mobilization were the main contributors to the success in the war.
@tonishiro20 күн бұрын
During World War II, the Soviet Union relied on both internal resources and foreign assistance to produce weapons. While the majority of critical resources came from within the USSR, Lend-Lease provided essential support in areas where the Soviet Union faced shortages. Below is a summary of the resources delivered through Lend-Lease, their volumes, and their proportion compared to Soviet domestic production. 1. Oil and Petroleum Products - Lend-Lease Deliveries: The United States and the United Kingdom supplied the Soviet Union with approximately 2.5 million tons of oil and 3.5 million tons of petroleum products. - Soviet Production: The Soviet Union produced about 150 million tons of oil between 1941-1945, covering most of its wartime needs. - Percentage of Soviet Production: Lend-Lease supplies accounted for about 1.5% of the total oil production in the USSR. Although Lend-Lease was important for fueling the military, especially in the early years of the war, the Soviet Union largely supplied its own oil. 2. Metals - Lend-Lease Deliveries: The US provided about 1.2 million tons of strategic metals, including aluminum, copper, lead, and tin. - Soviet Production: The Soviet Union produced approximately 10 million tons of steel and more than 2 million tons of aluminum during the war. - Percentage of Soviet Production: Lend-Lease supplies accounted for less than 5% of total metal production in the USSR. Despite this, these metals were critical for aircraft and tank production. 3. Weapons and Ammunition - Lend-Lease Deliveries: The United States sent various types of weapons, including small arms, artillery, ammunition, and mines, but most Soviet weapons were produced domestically. - Soviet Production: The Soviet Union produced over 100,000 artillery pieces and billions of rounds of small arms ammunition during the war. - Percentage of Soviet Production: Lend-Lease supplies made up a small proportion of the total Soviet weapon production. However, these supplies strengthened the Soviet army, especially in the early stages of the war. Summary: Lend-Lease was vital in supplying the Soviet Union with necessary resources and equipment during World War II, especially in areas where Soviet production faced challenges. However, the majority of critical resources, such as oil, metals, and weapons, came from domestic production. Lend-Lease accounted for a significant portion of some materials, such as vehicles and food, but overall, it made up a smaller percentage of total wartime production in the USSR. In terms of vehicles, Lend-Lease made up 36% of total Soviet production, while aircraft accounted for 13%. Lend-Lease provided around 1.5% of the total oil production and less than 5% of metal production. Despite these contributions, the Soviet Union largely relied on its own resources to produce weapons and support the war effort.
@RotaryMC24_Hello2 ай бұрын
0:58 Turning point of the Western front?
@t.hurson2298Ай бұрын
Your videos continue to amaze me in content and animation! Keep it up!
@zimovkakia2 ай бұрын
Battle for Moscow happened in 1941, but why you made all Soviets in your video wear 1943 uniform?
@swatcccp46732 ай бұрын
Probably to save time on new sprites
@zimovkakia2 ай бұрын
@@swatcccp4673 But they already used proper 1941 uniform in 2022-2023 projects about Soviets in WW2
@swatcccp46732 ай бұрын
@dachavanderlinovo413 no idea then. Perhaps time constraints then
@thelvadam28842 ай бұрын
@@swatcccp4673 lame excuses, if he has them already there is no point. also there are many other errors. the germans tanks shown arent the correct one, neither are the soviet
@sebalakner81942 ай бұрын
@dachavanderlinovo413 oh my god🙄. What a small and insignificant detail. Go touch some grass buddy
@largemouthbass355Ай бұрын
This is so incredibly well done. Awesome video
@GGHanoj2 ай бұрын
Amazing video!
@russram2102 ай бұрын
You didnt even finish watching the video
@inflamedzero49942 ай бұрын
you watched a 20min video in 54 seconds?
@DavidNaval2 ай бұрын
@@russram210bro it’s armchair historian we already know it’s gonna be amazing
@GGHanoj2 ай бұрын
@@russram210 correct :)
@GGHanoj2 ай бұрын
@@DavidNaval Exactly and I was right
@speak_russianАй бұрын
Just a small remark: as a man from Smolensk, I can assure you that Rzhev is absolutely and completely in the wrong place on the 12:00 map segment) It should be quite significantly further north-east.
@spiffywolf28502 ай бұрын
"some of the tanks were unenviable" looks at the number drop from 2k to 750. lol
@proudkingmartin2 ай бұрын
Can't believe it took you 8 years to make this Can't believe KZbin hid this for me for 8 hours
@BulgarianDuck2 ай бұрын
can you do a vid about Bulgaria please?
@Fallen_Arrow2 ай бұрын
love the videos man
@Δούρειος_962 ай бұрын
12:50 whats the name of that awesome background music, it rocks! If anyone know please tell me
@nighfinite2 ай бұрын
Welllll
@talhasial55022 ай бұрын
It's Extraction by Christoffer Moe Ditlevsen
@Δούρειος_962 ай бұрын
@@talhasial5502 thank you friend that's what I was looking for you are the best!
@talhasial55022 ай бұрын
@@Δούρειος_96 cheers!
@chrislarson9762 ай бұрын
Man this video dropped perfectly with the eastern front books I just got into.
@Alexthegreat12012 ай бұрын
LOVE the videos, bro! ❤️👍🏻
@slatoerАй бұрын
glorious video
@commandercorl15442 ай бұрын
0:57 hey wait a second
@MILLSTONE-70x72 ай бұрын
Who ARE YOU?
@KornPop962 ай бұрын
Exactly what I was about to say. Moscow? Western front? You sure about that? 😂
@bidyarnovhazarika494Ай бұрын
@@KornPop96 for USSR that was the western front
@TheOhioNews2 ай бұрын
7:03 love the Axis and Allies pieces ❤
@Worldbreaker-d5b2 ай бұрын
Wallpaper worthy thumbnail no cap
@itsblitz44372 ай бұрын
Finally with the now updated videos of Stalingrad, Leningrad, and now Battle of Moscow. The Soviet Union WW2 Battle trilogy is now complete.
@ElBandito2 ай бұрын
Gotta add Kursk on top, my man.
@itsblitz44372 ай бұрын
@@ElBandito we got that video about the Battle of Kursk from the Aerial perspective but that's not the same.
@miscellaneousedits-dm8nd2 ай бұрын
pls cover the philippine-american war and it's opening battle (either the shooting at at Sta. Mesa, Battle of Manila Bay, or Mock Battle of Manila)
@mj_sykiАй бұрын
Best history channel...love from Greece 🇬🇷🙏
@taliz10552 ай бұрын
The German Army had almost 20 % casualties before moscow. The Wehrmacht was already too exhausted. Thanks to the fierce sowjet resistance.
@sparkyfromel2 ай бұрын
A factor not mentioned is the mid October panic in Moscow when law and order broke down rail stations were full of people desperate to get away with trains taken by storm , stores ransacked , party cards thrown away in the street and administration burning their files the Germans were sure to have been informed of this by friendly embassies and made them think it would be easy In fact , Stalin nominated the commissar Artemei to re-establish order which was done in a few days with great brutality that influenced Stalin not to leave the city , the General were told to keep their lines , or else !
@jenb23932 ай бұрын
Armhcair Historian I really enjoy your videos and for a young and new historian like myself I like to absorb as much info as I can especially when it comes to my favourite conflict WW2 I have seen your videos on Poland in WW2 but I feel like it is an extremely underrated and undercovered topic so I hope one day you will do some more videos as the topic is quite interesting thanks for the work you do and have a good day
@EroPantherH2 ай бұрын
4:50 oh ho, hang on a second there bud. Is that an MG42 in 1941? 6:52 damn, 1941 warplanners were already using Panther figurines.
@kyrios4432 ай бұрын
What’s the point of this comment ?
@fabovondestory2 ай бұрын
This channel is just for entertainment, it has no historical value
@pizzamovies232 ай бұрын
@@kyrios443 To make others aware of historical inconsistencies.
@Iieiduduhdhdhb692 күн бұрын
1:05 he said western front instead of eastern
@michaellynes35402 ай бұрын
Skip to 2:05
@bryananderson377228 күн бұрын
Thank you
@demis.farrugia2 ай бұрын
1:03 - did I hear well that you said "western front"? 🤔 Nonetheless, very cool documentaries you make, keep it up! 👍 ❤
@duquedeniseemille65552 ай бұрын
Battle of Manila 1945 please
@jellyfishmappingАй бұрын
Sane people: how do we protect everything? Stalin: just defend everything bruh
@_chaos_insurgency95462 ай бұрын
very cool👍
@Somerandomturkie2 ай бұрын
War is just terrifying.especially in battles where its cold and in a urban setting. Youre freezing to death in a city where any move could get you shot. We humans are so scared of hell, yet so eager to create it ourselves here on earth.
@drg86872 ай бұрын
Just for clarification, there was no Judeo-Bolshevism in Europe in any meaningful way. There were about 15,000 Bolsheviks who were Jewish.
@Mobox-mp8ylАй бұрын
Yeah it's just an anti-semitic myth.
@Gnosis639Ай бұрын
It was propaganda to influence the German people to be comfortable with genocide in Russia. They already influenced them to accept Jewish as sub-human.
@АнатолийШахов-ж5цАй бұрын
Но были англо-советы, так в некоторых речах нацистские идеологии описывали союзников А ещё были недолюди евреи и люди третьего сорта, народ рабов для Германии, то есть славяне
@jaredchacon26452 ай бұрын
Man i love this channel
@davelynch7042 ай бұрын
Western front ?? 1:02
@АнатолийШахов-ж5цАй бұрын
Ой да какая разница, все равно Рузвельт проиграл и застрелился в бункере, а флаг Франции гордо реял над Берлином (вы европейцы все на одно лицо)
@NickAndriadze2 ай бұрын
I'm really glad you made a remake of your Battle of Moscow video! While the old one's great it definitely showed age.
@Hunter-jo8ud2 ай бұрын
Damn this is so interesting.
@DukeCannon2 ай бұрын
This battle was never mentioned in history class. I only heard about in past 10yrs. No movies are made about it either.
@mace16332 ай бұрын
If your in America then you won't get the full story on ww2 unless you research yourself
@BalthasarGelt-x2d2 ай бұрын
High school history classes can’t cover topics in depth because they have too much time and ground to cover. IMO they should focus less on wars and focus more on civics. Every American should read the Federalist papers and Antifederalist papers.
@mace1633Ай бұрын
@@BalthasarGelt-x2d maybe the old America our new county is completely different
@yousufmirza53282 ай бұрын
Armchair historian, with all due respect do not spread misinformation. The myth of the "Siberian divisions" was made by the germans which used to say "the Siberians are coming!". In reality, only 14 divisions were called west during August to October 1941, Of these 14 divisions, two were small mountain cavalry divisions from Central Asia, while the three tank and mechanised divisions were very new and had very little (if anything) to do with Siberian personnel. The 58th and 60th tank divisions had only started forming in March-April 1941. Of the rifle divisions, three arrived in August and September and were sent to 11th Army defending the southern approaches to Leningrad or 7th Army defending the far north against the Finns. Only six rifle divisions arrived in October and only four of these went to any Army that could be even remotely linked to defending Moscow against Army Group Centre. These were the 32nd, 93rd, 78th and 238th Rifle Divisions. Of these only the 32nd and 93rd Rifle Divisions had a significant proportion of Siberian personnel, while the 238th had only started forming in March 1941 in Central Asia. What of Siberian divisions formed after 22nd June 1941? There were six rifle divisions formed after June 1941 in the Siberia Military District. They were the 366th, 374th, 382nd, 372nd, 376th and 378th Rifle Divisions. All six divisions were assigned to the 59th Army in Volkhov Front defending south of Leningrad in November 1941. These were all brand new Divisions, their combat performance was average and they had nothing to do with the winter offensive against Army Group Centre. Whichever way data is analysed, the whole Siberian transfer story is a myth in all respects: including timing, numbers, source of personnel and overall combat performance. Source: Soviet millatry documents, and this article: www.operationbarbarossa.net/the-siberian-divisions-and-the-battle-for-moscow-in-1941-42/
@jessecollingwood100223 күн бұрын
Who ever did your animations had the Soviet troops holding k98 Mausers for the parade portion. But great info. Loved it
@brokenbridge63162 ай бұрын
Marshal Zhukov actually said that Stalin's Chief Military Value was as a Military Economist. He credited him for the Russian's being able to throw huge numbers of soldiers into battle against the Nazi's.
@dansmith4077Ай бұрын
Awesome video thanks
@jadeorbigoso52122 ай бұрын
This is what happened if you underestimated your enemies too much. FAFO
@Jarod-vg9wq2 ай бұрын
Stalin”this is where we fight! This is where they die!”
@davidebommartini18412 ай бұрын
HELL YEAH
@thesnazzycomet2 ай бұрын
A surprisingly "unknown" battle, considering the stakes and significance! Really interesting to see early war German and Soviet tech
@colonelx1852 ай бұрын
Wake up Eva, armchair historian just posted a ww2 video
@sirgluk8904Ай бұрын
Thank you, yet another great historical documentary video. love your world war 2 stuff!
@swedish_main2 ай бұрын
One of the most important battles in the Second World War on which a lot depended
@grandcanyon-d4d2 ай бұрын
It was Stalingrad
@kindlingking2 ай бұрын
@@grandcanyon-d4dno, it was Moscow. It demonstrated that germans had their limits too and more importantly they were already pushing them. Stalingrad is when it became really apparent.
@grandcanyon-d4d2 ай бұрын
@kindlingking if their laeder let his generals do their work, Europe might have fallen, including Russia and Britain, what if Japan attacked the lend leases? If Stalingrad had fallen, Germany would have had their way to so much oil for their war machines.
@ITZ_mymelodyshines2 ай бұрын
Very interesting video! Cool animation!
@sector76682 ай бұрын
Cold War Content Please❤❤❤
@Намбаванинзеворлд2 ай бұрын
Greate video! I want to mention that you can still see anti tank hedgehogs while you are driving from the Moscow airport. Also they have entered in satellite towns.