It's so refreshing seeing ww2 film footage that is not the same old footage that every movie used since the 50s. Thank you ❤
@ColinFreeman-kh9us2 ай бұрын
Well said . Amazing footage
@TP-ie3hj2 ай бұрын
right on and it was in line with the narration, correct for area and battle for the most part and not one singled destroyed Sherman from normandie.
@Ssseexxxyyman2 ай бұрын
why they dont show the children kz from krupp or how mutch make krupp and how mutch die for nothing
@kevinh53492 ай бұрын
yeah 99% of the WWII stuff on YT is poor because they use the same old stock footage that has nothing whatsoever to do with the narrative.
@TP-ie3hj2 ай бұрын
@@Ssseexxxyyman Because thats another story. This is a story about a battle fought in 1944 not the story of the abuse of children in ww2 which would include krupp along with the Soviet factories and Japanese etc. Every nation abused children for the war to some degree. In addition "abuse" would be in todays terms looking back. Arguable at best.
@UnfinishedSymphony2 ай бұрын
Interesting footage, thanks. What a horror. Having been a Panzergrenadier myself for some years at german Bundeswehr, I feel blessed that I never had to go to war. I´m 55 now, hope it stays like that. Regards from Germany and stay safe everyone.
@globalcitizen832127 күн бұрын
Yeah, it is incredible that in 2024 it looks like that the risk of conventional war in Central Europe is greater than it used to be during the height of the Cold War during the 1980's .... There was a much "controlled" situation back then, presidents and high commands been less reckless and more rational. Greetings from South America
@ottovonbismarck24432 ай бұрын
Grossdeutschland was on paper the single strongest Panzergrenadier Division already in 1942 and it still grew larger until 1944. After the action in Romania, several battlegroups/brigades/battalions were added and it became a Panzerkorps. Von Manteuffel went on to commanded 5th Panzer-Armee in the Ardennes. He was the one that broke through in the South rushing for Bastogne and the Meuse. You made a good point: although German tanks weren't beaten in this occasion, the grenadiers took heavy casualties. Tanks alone can't take or hold ground.
@markuhlig86262 ай бұрын
otto?
@johnnyb29092 ай бұрын
5 divisions
@ottovonbismarck24432 ай бұрын
@@johnnyb2909 On paper ... Serious shortages of, well, everything. All in all probably equal to three fully equipped divisions. Also, at that point, you wouldn't find tier 1 (or even 2) replacements anywhere in Germany. A distant uncle served with GD in late '44/early 45, he was just 18. First "combat experience" after training was him riding on the back of a StuG III through a forrest. The next thing he remembered was waking up in a field hospital having a stiff arm for the rest of his life. Given the blood toll GD usually paid, he got the lucky "home shot". he wasn't killed on impact, he almost didn't make it to the hospital due to loss of blood, he almost lost his arm and he still made it back home to Aachen safely (that is across all of Germany). He won the war lottery three times.
@johnnyb29092 ай бұрын
@@ottovonbismarck2443 my grandfather commanded the Infanterie Regiment Großdeutschland, and he survived the war.
@ottovonbismarck24432 ай бұрын
@@johnnyb2909 Which infantry regiment ?
@garyhardison92652 ай бұрын
One overlooked aspect of the Tigers was that the crews were handpicked and the best available in the Wehrmacht
@JuergenGDB2 ай бұрын
So were those in the IS-tanks. At least what the Soviets had to offer.
@lennykump83962 ай бұрын
The bigger difference is that the tools in the German tanks were much advanced. It's not only about armor thickness and gun.
@VivecsTDawg2 ай бұрын
That is one of Germany's downfalls however. Compared to Germany's counterparts in WWII, England, US and Sov all used their tank and pilot aces for training new recruits and strategizing, whereas Germany used them on the battlefield to motivate troops around them. But as a consequence, lost many of their experienced tank and pilot aces.
@DarkElfLover2 ай бұрын
@@lennykump8396they weren't advanced they just brought previously established concepts into a single vehicle.
@0Turbox2 ай бұрын
@@DarkElfLover What does that even mean?
@ColinFreeman-kh9us2 ай бұрын
Great footage. The famous Tiger commander who owned and ran a pharmacy in Germany post WW2.destroyed multiple IS 2 ‘s in one engagement. He was shot when caught by Russian infantry shot multiple times, even through the neck and survived went back into combat. Later on writing the book “ Tigers in the mud “
@Arnor22072 ай бұрын
Carius never faced is2s. In narva hé fought against around twenty t34s and kv1s with 2 tigers
@aleksazunjic96722 ай бұрын
Yeah, but in his dreams 😁 There were no IS-2 in that battle.
@Tyrfingr2 ай бұрын
@@Arnor2207 He destroyed an abandoned IS2 according to his own writing. But that's all i remember.
@saber18852 ай бұрын
He took people's lives then after the war he helps save people's lives by selling medicinal drugs
@ColinFreeman-kh9us2 ай бұрын
@@Arnor2207 he did. It’s on record
@jebbroham17762 ай бұрын
What most people don't realize, is that even after Berlin fell and the Reich was split completely in half between the Western Allies and the Soviet Union the German military still had 2 million men under arms across the areas of Europe still under their control, along with their armor and tanks. The elite divisions in Eastern Austria around Vienna and Western Czechoslavakia protecting Prague were at nearly full strength and still had hundreds of Panther and Tiger 1 and II tanks with supporting Stug III assault guns and various other AFV's. Between them they had a million men alone in these two regions. In Norway there were 400,000 troops, 185,000 in Northern Italy, 200,000 in the Courland pocket, and various other holdouts. The German army had been decisively beaten, but where it was still able to concentrate these forces it was still capable of winning battles and indeed it did even in late April 1945, most notably against the Soviets in Czechoslovakia at the Battle of Bautzen which inflicted severe damage on attacking Polish and Soviet troops and armor advancing on Prague.
@hoyschelsilversteinberg45212 ай бұрын
Yep correct. The quality of the German soldier was such that it did indeed take the combined might of the Western and Eastern world to match and even still never actually did. This was achieved by a Germany that wasn't even prepared for war unlike the allies and especially the Soviets.
@ambulanza2 ай бұрын
@@hoyschelsilversteinberg4521 but they hadnt fuel and really low ammo. they were already beaten, and by themselves. Allowing hitler to diktat the strategies was the sponsor of their ultimate failure
@hoyschelsilversteinberg45212 ай бұрын
@@ambulanza That is actually incorrect. It was thanks to Hitler that they got as far as Stalingrad. Hitler was responsible for a large portion of the major successes and without his genius would have succumbed to Poland given the original idea the generals had when attacking Poland. The generals wanted to B line it straight to Danzig which could have cost the Germans dearly had they gotten bottle necked at any point. Hitler instead created two huge pincer movements to capture the Polish army and crushed them. Same with Norway, sniffing out the potential for a catastrophe if the English were to take Norway in an attempt to cut off German iron ore from Sweden. Hitler pre-empted the British and secured Norway just as the British arrived. He also masterminded the annihilation of France's enormous and superior army. An army that took on Europe for 20 years in Napoleon's era and were unbeatable for 4 years in WW1 he had absolutely destroyed thanks to his strategy in just 3 days and that was at a fraction of the death caused within the first hour of Passchendaele. Operation Barbarossa was another genius play as Hitler confirmed the worst, that the Soviet Union was poised to invade Europe with a gigantic army and saved Europe from Soviet rape/murder for a few years at least. What Germany achieved with so little could never be replicated in the modern era (and hasn't been, look at the catastrophe in Ukraine right now after 10 years of no progress). I don't know how many lifetimes you'd need to match the success of Hitler let alone surpass it but I'm sure it would have to be in the many billions of attempts without assurances of ever coming close even with knowing everything we know today.
@peterrobbins28622 ай бұрын
True but they didn't have the resources to do much apart from that simply put they were out of fuel
@hoyschelsilversteinberg45212 ай бұрын
@@peterrobbins2862 That's why the Baku Oil fields was a strategic objective. The disaster at Stalingrad basically ruined that objective and started the retreat from that goal.
@kw191932 ай бұрын
Manteuffel was one of the finest, most capable and intelligent leaders the German war machine produced in W W II - which is saying something in light of the overall high quality leadership that the Wehrmacht and S S were renowned for. He was one of the very, very few commanders whom Hitler would actually listen to and accept criticism from although, fortunately, Hitler seldom took his advice. A fine video, very well done mate. Cheers!
@pj1953a2 ай бұрын
@@kw19193 didn’t Germany lose the war?
@kw191932 ай бұрын
@@pj1953a Indeed they did, thankfully. However, had Hitler allowed his commanders, like Manteuffel, more leeway to operate as to what each operation dictated the war would have lasted much longer and at greater cost to the Soviets and western allies. Cheers!
@LawrenceofIsrael2 ай бұрын
@@pj1953aIf Mike Tyson fought against 6 professional boxers and lost, what would that mean?
@apatheticbystanders2 ай бұрын
Thank god we dont speak German eh
@kw191932 ай бұрын
@@apatheticbystanders Ja, in der tat. Prost!
@SomeOne-xm5mq2 ай бұрын
Despite the declining phase of the German army and the approach of the end of the world which they were ultimately defending (götterdämmerung); it goes to show us the character of the troops and the men on the field, that nowadays any leader, whether in the West or East, can only wish for.
@ColinFreeman-kh9us2 ай бұрын
Only Putin stands close ironically
@eeferms32922 ай бұрын
That's because it was a world war, if a similar situation happened today (WW3) the brave young men or teenagers of contesting armies would show similar courage. Very patriotic countries like Great Britain and Germany would see a huge surge in young men ready to defend their homeland at any cost.
@SomeOne-xm5mq2 ай бұрын
@@eeferms3292 The first to die in every major war so far were always the best representatives of the nations - valiant fellows, those who have Race. Nowadays, there aren't such caliber of men, expect for here and there some naive fools/romantics, then largely mercenaries, (mostly adrenaline-junkies) and general slaves of countries forced to be in predetermined conflicts for all this transient goals of democracy, "humanitarianism", "equalities" - contrary to true warrior initation and hierarchized law of origins which gets "democratized"-atomized through acts of modern war that only enforce the will of third entity. All the rest who allegedly aspire to the strength & bravery through the "multicultural values" that make up their nations, are in fact wannabes who most of the time signal virtue and they won't get further from their basement in which they enjoy their abstract freedom the most. I'm afraid that's the image of the West today and its new generation; especially in Germany, UK, Sweden, etc. not to say America.
@Reinhard_Erlik2 ай бұрын
@@eeferms3292 That is already questionable, their fight has diminished and is diminishing.
@seanohare54882 ай бұрын
Agree godlessness has taken over in those countries @@Reinhard_Erlik
@robertbruce77722 ай бұрын
The Tiger had the speed advantage in loading. The IS-2 shell was so big it required a separate powder charge put behind it, so the loader had to load two things to the Tiger loaders one.
@teedepefanio4974Ай бұрын
That and training..
@RedLine006928 күн бұрын
also the 122mm gun from the IS-2 was not very accurate, the same thing cant be said from the Tiger's gun
@matthewhuszarik41735 күн бұрын
The IS2 didn’t require a separate charge. It did because it was a Naval gun where they used separate shells and charges. Modern tank round are just as large and are one piece.
@TheSelfeDestruct2 ай бұрын
Great video, 95% of that footage I had never seen before. When you were talking about IS-2's or Pz. 4's that's what was on the screen at that time, which is more than I can say for the other videos out there. Great explanations and break downs as well.
@FactBytes2 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@Rusty_Gold852 ай бұрын
Atrocious amount of AI shit being made
@TheSelfeDestruct2 ай бұрын
@@Rusty_Gold85 Yes, I agree. And they all mispronounce everything. You can tell this guy put some time and effort into it.
@piotrmalewski81782 ай бұрын
Too bad the introduction was bad. First, it was not 'Yosif Stalin the IS-2'. The tank was 85mm IS-1 and IS-2 came later on, while T-34/85 arrived between them. Also, Soviets had known already that 85 was not enough; from KV-85 and ballistic tests. Still, it was more than adequate against most German tanks
@piotrmalewski81782 ай бұрын
So of that is digitally aged footage from a Soviet movie 'Liberation 1'
@lordvader52462 ай бұрын
"It was an outstanding victory for the germans, but the battle was far from over" - story of their lives
@robertmiller217329 күн бұрын
Thank you! My father was a Tank Commander or a M4 Sherman in Italy. His was powered by the famous Ford GAA V8 18 Litre Engine…..When he came home to New Zealand he would buy a brand top of the range Ford going at the time. I remember his Mk 2 Ford Zepher but my favourites were a 1966 Ford Falcon 500, 3.65 Litre Straight 6 Station Wagon and then he had basically the same colour and all but this one had the amazing 4.1 Litre engine!……. The Sherman tank was specifically designed to fit on Railway gear in the USA, UK and Europe, it was designed to be able to be lifted by cranes at these ports.. Watching this and thinking about Ukraine we just might have to give our Kiwi Pakeha and Warriors troops some action. Putin, Xi, Lukeshenko, Oban, Kim Jong Un, and the Tosser from Iran are itching for a fight. They are mad! Go Ukraine Love from the ANZACs
@BruceBailey-b7x2 ай бұрын
Mr. FB, I was born way back in 1952, only 7 years after the war ended. I've been watching actual WW2 footage almost all of my life. I'e seen a LOT of it, and some of it a LOT of times. Which is why I'm really impressed with the footage you played with this video! I don't think I've ever seen ANY OF IT before!! Got a like and subscribed outa me!! Well done, whole video, with maps and many great close ups of the troops and your clear explanation of the confusion of battle make your work here wanna see more of your stuff!
@123Goldhunter112 ай бұрын
The misery that has gone down on this planet is beyond comprehension.
@johnhahn81302 ай бұрын
Absolutely true
@neilgutteridge64052 ай бұрын
The problem is......we still haven't learned from it.
@АлександрПрибой-х8юАй бұрын
The name of this misery - humanity.
@sergsilvestr12172 ай бұрын
At the time of this battle, on central and northern sectors of frontline, Soviet armies were preparing for one of the most successful operations of the war, operation “Bagration”. That operation brought end of existence of whole group Armies Center and inflicted have damage to Group Armies North. That was a victory. After Bagration was completed, the operation “Big waltz” took place. 57 000 german POW, including many generals of high command and high commanding officers were captured and marched on streets of Moscow . Batter in Romania was a screen smoke, to divert attention. Soviets pretended to attack and capture Ploeshti oilfields. Vermaht swallowed the “bait“ and didn’t have any doubts, until Red Army, push through endless swamps and forests, appeared in front of German defense lines and open fire. Check it out, it’s very interesting strategic operation.
@Zapto012 ай бұрын
My great grandfather was awarded a medal for protecting his comrades in a trench, a russian threw a grenade between their legs and him, being the bravest in the village that he came from, picked the grenade with his hands and threw it back. The grenade was so hot that his skin melted and he suffered severe burns in his palm. He was awarded the medal for courage and honor, along with some others the we still keep in the family. He walked back home months, on foot, from Russia to Romania along with his surviving friends. After the war, years later, when they were meeting every few months, eating and drinking, talking about the war period, them being a couple of big strong men from the country side, that lived a simple life, were crying and screaming, hugging each other remembering what they went through, people that they killed and people that died next to them along with the hard winters with no food they survived. My great grandmother that told be the story along with others is 95 years old, she said when they starded crying, they were heard from half way across the village. He dies 2-3 months before i was born, i am 28 years old and i have a huge respect for this man, even if i have never seen him.
@jerryrichards81722 ай бұрын
@@Zapto01 the winters on the eastern front was brutal if you survived one you was awarded a medal. The was just another enemy. First winter they just had there normal summer coats at down to 100 below!
@phil_yakubchuk2 ай бұрын
@@jerryrichards8172 as if winter only hits Germans. If you are not ready for winter - its your own mistake. Aswell as invading Russia with a criminal and sadistic goal to exterminate Russians and other nations.
@alexalexin9491Ай бұрын
so you;re a nazi great grand son, eh?
@jasongibson8114Ай бұрын
War is hell
@youthofindia2459 күн бұрын
@@jasongibson8114true
@razvanmocanu817828 күн бұрын
I was born in Tg Frumos, I knew about that battle, some of the images look like from the area, If not, at least the geographic landscape matches, so the author did a good job ilustrating the story
@razvanmocanu817828 күн бұрын
Also I recognozed the hills numbered in the map, and yes, from the top you can see in some direcțions even 10-15km away.
@geetee71542 ай бұрын
This is a great video, I have been studying WW2 for most of my adult life, (66 now!) this a battle I've not seen or heard of before, plenty of action shown & concise narrative, a new subscriber here👍
@imperialsecuritybureau60372 ай бұрын
You should check out “Europa: the last battle” and “Treblinka: a Dumb Dumb Portrayal of Evil” for some truly top-notch historical WW2 content (with admittedly more political content, but nevertheless fascinating and very thought-provoking.)
@billbonanzza49572 ай бұрын
what a hack you studied and not knowing about this battle which is mention in all military books and is subject of study in all usa-european military schools. unfortunately the presentation is not quite accurate; this so name presenter was very very bias. the Rumanians who participated in the battle and covered the German flanks unebbing the soviets to encircle from the both side the german army.
@truthseeker94542 ай бұрын
@@billbonanzza4957 "what a hack you studied and not knowing about this battle which is mention in all military books" It is *not* mentioned in all military books. _You haven't read all military books._ Neither have I, but I've read enough to know every one does not mention this battle. You're losing a much more important battle with civility. I suggest you learn how to express yourself without insulting others.
@Ssseexxxyyman2 ай бұрын
if you study it where are the woamns or childrens dig in murdering is now guilty to, why they run away if they 100 % nazis, why the soldiers die and they run away, in witch country they run van braun and others, you talk to them
@Ssseexxxyyman2 ай бұрын
how the nazis loos they citys never understand this if they have bunkers and dots and other stuff
@davidjackson21792 ай бұрын
This was impressive. Well narrated without blowing hot air to the Wheraboos or the Soviets. This really was an effective defensive tactical victory, even if it didn’t change the strategic balance. Also nice work matching the actual footage of appropriate units with the narration. So many other documentaries show random footage from operation Barbarossa in 1941 during a video about the Cherkassy pocket or something from 1944. It’s the little details that make this well made.
@ivanmonahhov23142 ай бұрын
It is comically bad. Is-2 weighting 57 tonns - how about no. Also tank casualties of 250 to handful.
@juansintierra25902 ай бұрын
This tremendous battle was a master example of defensive movements confronting masses of enemy armor and troops. During the Cold War, especially in the 70's and 80's, NATO's academies studied in depth this formidable battle to extract valuable lessons from the German actions, as in those days NATO was expecting a massive invasion of West Germany from the Warsaw Pact forces.
@libertycowboy24952 ай бұрын
Whereaboos? No idea...where do you think the boos are? 🤔
@williamsmith73402 ай бұрын
Agreed. You did a superior job of editing the images to the content of the narration.
@marcel49412 ай бұрын
My great grandfather fought in this battle as a Panzergrenadier under Manteuffel. Always very interesting hearing new things
@Angeliter2 ай бұрын
Yes, the 'one man teufel' that the narrator mentions every now and then was actually Lt.Gen. Hasso von Manteuffel who survived the war and died in 1978.
@TrollerHorse2 ай бұрын
Finally a good detailed view of this operation. I am from Iasi (Jassy) and did know that this battle happened, but never knew the details. You just earned yourself a new subscriber and a genuine human: Thank you for teaching me something new!
@FactBytes2 ай бұрын
Cool, thanks
@utcnc7mm2 ай бұрын
Excellent footage that I've never before seen from WWII of a battle that I've never heard of either.
@whocares2252Ай бұрын
Wow, you put alot of fresh combat footage here. Excellent work well done.
@FactBytesАй бұрын
Thanks for the visit
@M4V3RiCkU2352 ай бұрын
This is Gold ! Those are footages never seen before. Tigers vs IS-2 in Romania ? Never heard this before, but seen. As I said, pure gold for our history !
@Super_SznАй бұрын
Awesome video, thank you! Also great footage bunch of stuff I haven’t seen before
@pinkybrown15252 ай бұрын
Dude, fantastic editing. The images match the narration. Way better then most.
@FactBytes2 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@wingmasterjimmy67242 ай бұрын
A well rounded and informative documentary ,condensing three days fighting into 26min!
@pauldavies18532 ай бұрын
Thank you for a very well put together presentation. Very informative, great footage (none repetative) and excellent naration. I'll be subscribing the minute I finish typing here!
@FactBytes2 ай бұрын
Thank you 👍
@pauldavies18532 ай бұрын
@@FactBytes I look very much forward to watching more of the same! Thank you 👍
@mebeasensei2 ай бұрын
Exactly one year to the total German surrender May 7, 1945, two whole years and three months after the surrender at Stalingrad. Hard to fathom.
@Uthandol2 ай бұрын
War is hellish and wasteful. But the soldiers of all sides bravery must be remembered.
@bullbutter96992 ай бұрын
They were Primitive Humans back then......not so Brave just Stupid really.
@isaacfaith9369Ай бұрын
They were all human and to imagine being in their situation is almost impossible.
@eddiXXD2 ай бұрын
Insanely enjoyable and, at least for me, thought provoking video! I was born somewhat close to Târgul Frumos, în Suceava, and while I knew that both Nazi and Soviet forces passed through occupied that area, I never knew that such a significant battle, with high ranking officials and now iconic machines was fought so close to my home city. Also seeing clips from what I’m assuming is that battle is insane because that part of the country is not very remarkable, but yet a significant battle in WW2, that was later studied by NATO, took place there, very close to where I was born.
@billbonanzza49572 ай бұрын
In the past, I had the chance to talk to many Romanian veterans who fought on the Eastern Front. Two conclusions can be drawn from these discussions. The German army remained a formidable force until the end and did not collapse as the Russians and Westerners expected. The German soldier, perfectly disciplined with a physical and mental state, worked like a machine without feelings. The second aspect mentioned by these veterans is that although the Romanians were Germany’s main ally, the relations were not good due to the Germans’ arrogant attitude and the fact that the Romanians were often left without German support in almost all battles and were much less equipped than the Germans. All the veterans I spoke with pointed out that this aspect ultimately led to the loss of the war. My uncle participated in both Stalingrad and the Battle of Târgu Frumos, where the Romanians managed to hold the front despite being technically inferior and not supported at all by the Germans. As seen in the report, although the Romanians were more numerous and had to cover a larger front, they are not even mentioned. Shameful. Unfortunately, the Germans continued to deteriorate relations with the Romanians, and eventually, the inevitable happened on August 23, 1944. History is not quite as it is presented by various historical weasels.”
@sthrich6352 ай бұрын
In reality it was less of Germans' attitude or conduct but more of the reality of Eastern Front that negatively impact the desire of Romanian to stay on Axis side. Throughout the Eastern campaign, German forces' logistics were overstretched and overburdened, just barely supplying its own troops. Most of the time German forces itself had little heavy equipment to spare, and despite the lack of effectiveness of Romanian's heavy guns and vehicles, Germans simply could not provide what they needed, sometimes not for even their own German troops. Once the Western and Southern Front opened up in 1943 more German supplies and equipment were diverting, leaving even less hope for Romanians, or any other Axis allies, to receive German support more than simple "friendly gesture" act. The fact Germany did send a number of valuable panzer tanks to Romania did show its effort to help, but like most things it was too little. Coup or not, Romanians weren't going to keep the massive Soviet forces out by August 1944 and had little choice but to switch sides.
@elbrover2 ай бұрын
Thanks. Yes, this was very sad
@saucewalker71022 ай бұрын
Ummm, the Romanians certainly didn't hold the line😭 they failed, and couldn't even be trusted to hold a forward position so they were assigned to the flank, which they failed.
@GothPaoki2 ай бұрын
The point about German army not collapsing is completely innacurate. By the end of the war not only logistically they were finished but also the main core of their army consisted of young men drawn from the nazi youth who had zero battlefield experience. Young men barely above 20. In fact in famous battles like d day most of the German army was Nazi youth ill equipped and ill trained.Germany lost the vast majority of their best units against the Soviets. These were not losses that could be replenished and it clearly showed towards the end of the ear. The part about Germans not liking Romanians probably true though. Hitler hated slavs in general.
@gravol-yul2 ай бұрын
@@GothPaokiRomanians are NOT slavic people. They are a mix of Romans and local Dacians. Romanian is a latin language, like French
@ThuHtut2 ай бұрын
thanks for your hard work and dedication😊
@FactBytes2 ай бұрын
😊
@Silverritter2 ай бұрын
Great and well done presentation. Thank you very much.
@FactBytes2 ай бұрын
You are welcome!
@Atmr21342 ай бұрын
Man kann nur den größten Respekt vor der Wehrmacht haben, die gleichzeitig gegen 3 kolossale Supermächte gekämpft hat. Diese Taktik war perfekt. 10 Panzern verloren gegen 400 !
@cy18412 ай бұрын
Can't agree more ❤
@Ssseexxxyyman2 ай бұрын
was ist mit den verscharten kinder und frauen morde verjährt ned, gibts da bücher oder was hat krupp an gewinn bekommen und wie viele starben für nichts
@Ssseexxxyyman2 ай бұрын
find es eschade das viel nach 6 jahre frei kamen wette wen die kinder mörder freun mörder gewonne hätten wäre ich ned da schade das ne d so wie die deutsche alte den mörder ihres kinder erschoss ned die nazi mörder erschossen wurde aa sehr sehr schade, oder die sssr die länder frei gaben
@Ssseexxxyyman2 ай бұрын
hat sich ausgezahlt für die de fraun wenn aj viel männer tot waren wer hat sie gefickt super sache für das volk hat sich ausgezahlt ww1 ww2
@robertmaybeth34342 ай бұрын
yep Tiger, Tiger 2/Royal Tiger, and Panther were awesome machines. You can tell the Germans expected great things from the Panther, as they were somehow able to manufacture over 5,000 of them. But unfortunately even that was a drop in the bucket of tank production, Russians made 50,000 T-34's.
@metalfire86able2 ай бұрын
Never tired heard brilliant tactical from German side. Fascinating as usual
@Ssseexxxyyman2 ай бұрын
why if they agro thy know how to figth have they a radio and comunicate in the tanks or they have flags lol why the france loos and engalnd run away think they are warriors to lol how mutch countrys help 3 reich
@metalfire86able2 ай бұрын
@@Ssseexxxyyman Fighting spirit and discipline.
@BlessedFallout2 ай бұрын
Great breakdown. Thank you for an awesome video.
@JoannaJarocka-m5g2 ай бұрын
Great footage. The famous Tiger commander who owned and ran a pharmacy in Germany post WW2.destroyed multiple IS 2 ‘s
@roybrowning2685Ай бұрын
Otto Carius.
@Watchyourselvez2 ай бұрын
Lots of footage that I haven't seen before. Awesome! Thanks
@FactBytes2 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it
@abaj0062 ай бұрын
57 ton IS-2, man that is such a heavy tank, the crew must weigh 3 tonnes each! The IS-2 is 46 tonnes btw.
@andrew32032 ай бұрын
Tigers reached 57 tons, the Stalins were not as heavy.
@Wim-d5m2 ай бұрын
Von Manteuffel, Hermann Balck, Hans Valentin Hube en Walther Model the best german eastfront commanders.
@bloke7552 ай бұрын
Marshall Erich von Manstein says hello ...............
@MarkPulford-p7i2 ай бұрын
It is in English but their names are German!!!
@theplayerofus3192 ай бұрын
Manstein was the top dog 1943-1944
@Wim-d5m2 ай бұрын
@@theplayerofus319Von Manstein. 11e leger 1942. Legergroep Armygroep Don 1943. Legergroep Armygroep South 1943-44.
@geraldhagen29892 ай бұрын
What about Rommel?
@comsubpac2 ай бұрын
My Grandfather fought in that battle.
@izwanwan32172 ай бұрын
Yo which side?
@tiborjakkel1452 ай бұрын
@@izwanwan3217well.dose it matter for you?
@bullbutter96992 ай бұрын
So did my Granny
@scotttyson79702 ай бұрын
What Division.?
@comsubpac2 ай бұрын
@@scotttyson7970 Großdeutschland.
@MechanizedWerewolf16 күн бұрын
I had passed Tg. Frumos a lot of times, didn't know much about this battle, thanks!
@oxcart41722 ай бұрын
This was very well researched and written
@Jules-h2cАй бұрын
Excellent footage and a battle I hadn't heard of very good. I'm going to subscribe
@FactBytes29 күн бұрын
Much appreciated!
@Robotix-ly3xj2 ай бұрын
Thanks, a really informative video.
@FactBytes2 ай бұрын
You're welcome!
@elisa20vallejo14 күн бұрын
Fantástico video, y fantásticas fuerzas las alemanas !!! Muchas gracias
@boborenebobo2 ай бұрын
Losing hundreds of tanks cant be a small battle.
@andrew32032 ай бұрын
The Soviets lost about 100000 tanks during WW2. Procentualy, losing 300 tanks here was like 0.03%, so nothing worth mentioning.
@allansmith38372 ай бұрын
win as many battles as you like it makes no difference. Its a war of production a war off the factory's. even Hitler was gobsmacked that the Soviets could produce so much armour in such a short time.
@JohnMoses18972 ай бұрын
Soviet leadership viewed men & materials as expendable, especially since US & Britidh Lend Lease. 75% of doviet trucks where lend lease Studabaker 2.5 tons. So they didn't focus on trucks, just tanks. Weldbon a few handrails & 16 infantry can ride (dangerously exposed & thrown off yo get run over by following tank) into battle - if they get blown off, they should have jumped off sooner. When you are the property of the state, your f**ked
@peterbaker84432 ай бұрын
I watch a german tiger commander peak on t34s he said we destroyed the by the dozens but dozens more would come over the hill. They werent better just more of them. There was nothing to fear at all from shermans he said: we could hit them way before they hit us. Terrible thing how they burned up he said terrible to see.
@allansmith38372 ай бұрын
@@peterbaker8443 as Stalin said quantity has a quality all of its own.
@ik89702 ай бұрын
Great footage from a almost unknown battle. Never saw the most of the Wochenschau content ! Were do you find it ? Congrats. Not to forget: For us Germans the original voice over would be interesting…
@andrew32032 ай бұрын
The author just said this battle is a NATO manual case, taught to all officers for how to withstand a Soviet offensive.
@wrayjohnson19052 ай бұрын
A good video. Well narrated. Nicely done.
@FactBytes2 ай бұрын
Glad you liked it!
@tarapita2 ай бұрын
What narration? Robot that's counting one Manteuffel, two Manteuffel? :D
@wrayjohnson19052 ай бұрын
@@tarapita Not sure but perhaps you're right. If so, my mistake.
@Tsagia2 ай бұрын
@@tarapita At first I thought "Wow,finally an excellent narrator!" Then I was wondering if it's a bot. Then I thought it sounds way too natural to be a bot. And then I start hearing |Aso One Man"...and "One Man toy fell"
@crazyclammer2 ай бұрын
@@tarapita i think the narrator is AI
@stefanzmed30192 ай бұрын
Very well documented video! Well done and greetings from Romania
@davidgoodfellow23842 ай бұрын
Have to admit the tiger 1 was the most bad ass looking tank of ww2
@seanohare54882 ай бұрын
Well done on a mostly unknown Battle in wwtwo
@brandywell442 ай бұрын
The powerful resourceful forces that supported both sides have led us into the turmoil we are now facing today
@raducristea41162 ай бұрын
The is2 did not weigh 57 tons not even the is3 weighs that much, perhaps you got mixed up with the tiger 1s weight which was around 57 tones
@davidtorre73702 ай бұрын
IS 2 weighed about 45 tons, maybe a couple more - about as much as the "medium" tank Panther.
@simondubois31652 ай бұрын
@@davidtorre7370 51 short Tons (US) tiger 1 60 short tons tiger E 63 short tons
@WigglyWings2 ай бұрын
@@simondubois3165 Another weird unit used by USA. They will do anything to not use the metric system lol.
@crhu3192 ай бұрын
@@WigglyWingsmetric is Communist😂😂😂
@WigglyWings2 ай бұрын
@@crhu319 Ahh yes, everything is communist except USA.
@TheRumbles132 ай бұрын
Thanks for your hard work! Subbed for the real voiceover not AI. Cheers from Canada
@joshuafairbanks56432 ай бұрын
This is AI though 😅
@sayhey74822 ай бұрын
at 25:50 i believe yu have footage of a german artillery piece getting hit , 1st looks like a recoil but longer look shows more ,iether incoming explo or the round blew up being fired, all in all MUCHO footage iv never seen and at 70 iv seen ALOT ! GREAT STUFF
@FactBytes2 ай бұрын
Thanks for the visit
@jaroslavpalecek45132 ай бұрын
First! Thanks for video. Best wishes. Greetings from Czech republic! Jaroslav.
@FactBytes2 ай бұрын
Thanks for the visit.
@ayadnakshabandi15262 ай бұрын
Thanks Sir Great Excellent reporting ❤
@FactBytes2 ай бұрын
Thanks and welcome
@mathewweeks90692 ай бұрын
Awesome video you rock be safe out there big fan of tanks
@FactBytes2 ай бұрын
Thanks 👍
@mathewweeks90692 ай бұрын
@@FactBytes your very welcome have awesome day be safe out there 👍😎👍
@oldcrow-iw3kc2 ай бұрын
Very good documentary . This was one battle l was unaware of so thanks for enlightening me . Also some of the footage l've not seen before . Well done. l have subscribed .
@FactBytes2 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it
@juansintierra25902 ай бұрын
I wonder why the former Allies (eastern and western) have always kept hidden from the public this tremendous battle.
@GeorgiJorov-pf5ge2 ай бұрын
One very interesting thing that many people don't know. Apart from the well-known characteristics of Rusian and German tanks there was one important detail. Steel plates used to make Russian tanks were generally of much lower quality compared to the German tanks. This means that during a battle after taking 2-3 non-penetration hits metal of the Russian tanks was losing its durability and was much more prone to deformations and cracks. Which meant that the next hit almost certainly was fatal and the structure of the metal couldn't resist. On the opposite the quality German steel on german tanks helped them withstand many non penetration hits in a row without a problem. I think there is a documented case where a German tank had sustained over 100 hits in its frontal plate and survived. And l know this from Russian historians who investigated this matter.
@peterbaker84432 ай бұрын
Yes over tempered steel shattered when hit on them.
@ondroed692 ай бұрын
That had changed with german's losing Ukraine and its manganese
@eradicatethem61152 ай бұрын
well , kolobanov's KV1 also took 100ish hits in one battle and still kept fighting , i think its more about the factory they came from .
@GeorgiJorov-pf5ge2 ай бұрын
@@eradicatethem6115 I don't know about Kolobanov, I didn't found anything about how many hits he took, only tanks destroyed. And at the time he was against PzII and PzIII, which didn't have enough penetrating power against KV1 As I said Russian historians claim this, not me. Russian tanks cracked open after taking just a few hits. Because they were made from poor quality steel One of the reasons perhaps Soviet tankers liked and prefered some of the tanks supplied by the Allies. Like the Churchill.
@AquaNomad342 ай бұрын
@@GeorgiJorov-pf5ge The Panzer that you're talking about which survived over 100 hits was literally a Tiger I which at the time (1943) was almost impenetrable anyway, not because the German armor had better quality than the russians, but simply because the Tiger had very *THICK* armor plates at the time (100mm front and 80mm side) which was storng enough to resist most russian cannons in 1943 wnyway. For the same reason the Russian prefered the Churchill over the T34, because the Churchill tank also had very thick armor similar to the german Tiger. So this has nothing to do with superior or inferior quality of the armor, rather it's just the effective thickness and strength of the armor. Sloped armor of the T34, Panther and Tiger II also helped to increase the effective armor strenght, because a sloped armor plate has more effective resistance compared to a vertical (flat) armor plate of the same thickness. By the way, sometimes german Panzers also suffered cracked armor plates, for example when it was hit by a big gun (such as 122mm from the IS2 or 152mm gun from the ISU152)
@grimlock59902 күн бұрын
Great video, very informative.
@FactBytes2 күн бұрын
Glad it was helpful!
@ChrisLi5012 ай бұрын
My grandfather fought in this battle. A.A. Artillery - 75 mm Vikers guns. In the morning of April 9, when the Russians attacked, they shot down 15 Russian planes out of 16. The 16th was shot down by a German Stuka. Because Vikers guns were very effective against tanks, his unit fought in the front line including against tanks. To be sure of success, they received a recommendation from the German command to shoot only when the tanks are close enough. Most of the units that fought, either German or Romanian, were units with experience on the front, and that mattered. He also participated in the Battle of Stalingrad, managing to escape before being surrounded.
@АнатолийБ-ю5нАй бұрын
Последнее предложение полностью испортило героическую биографию вашего дедушки
@gabyspan94020 күн бұрын
@@АнатолийБ-ю5н everyone fought for their country so pls stop demoting other heroes...dont act like the russians were some saints...on the contrary
@АнатолийБ-ю5н20 күн бұрын
@@gabyspan940не за свою страну вы сражались, а за Гитлера, ему и присягали. Как сказал один пленный немецкий офицер,- если бы к нам также относились, как мы к русским, то германской нации бы не было! Позор вам и презрение, главное, что жизнь вас ни чему не научила
@filipflysjo715614 күн бұрын
@@АнатолийБ-ю5н Well if so, then the same thing could be said about Russias soldiers in Ukraine.
@АнатолийБ-ю5н14 күн бұрын
@@filipflysjo7156Ты совершенно глуп и к тому же ничего не знаешь. Как легко ты перепрыгнул с темы 2-й мировой войны на тему войны на Украине. Тебе для интеллекта, российские войска, в отличии от украинских по гражданскому населению не стреляют
@TheStefancelmareАй бұрын
I've travveled over 100 times on that zone of Romania. I've never heard about WW2 memorials. Too sad. Even I'm still living and travveling northern Romania including Targu Frumos , Suceava, Botosani and iasi, iT's strange to hear what happedned 80 years ago. I'll think about the souls who died for fatherland
@klausmerker98902 ай бұрын
The best of the best, really respect 👌
@Americal-v6rАй бұрын
Excellent study of this battle. Breaking it down and analyzing each part of all participants, weaknesses,strengths,manuvering, counter attacks. the skilled military professionalism, tactics of the great general Manteuffel. 🫡 RESPECT!
@yungcaco14432 ай бұрын
Really great documentary 👍🏻
@ATHFShakeZulah2 ай бұрын
I remember this mentioned in Guy Sajer's book, "The Forgotten Soldier".
@Kppot2 ай бұрын
19:44 dude really wasn't expected that lid to shut
@terraflow__bryanburdo45472 ай бұрын
Superb storytelling.
@FactBytes2 ай бұрын
Thanks a ton
@KLThomaston2 ай бұрын
Very cool documentary... I just subbed... Keep it up❤
@FactBytes2 ай бұрын
Welcome aboard!
@Roodski2 ай бұрын
Jesus Christ I’ve heard so many takes on WW2 tanks in Europe at this point I kinda stopped caring and it really doesn’t matter. Good job history guys this is where an interested person ends up
@Bigsky19912 ай бұрын
To understand and appreciate this is to know just how immense these fronts were...spanning time zones, several regions and Countries. This particular event especially because of the famous Units involved. This particular engagement was the very last time it fought as a fully manned Division. After this battle GD was fragmented and never fought as an intact unit again.
@haddad84092 ай бұрын
Yet, you're still here 😂
@Roodski2 ай бұрын
@@haddad8409 the actual account of the events is what is interesting, not the sizing up of different tanks over each other a subject none of these history guys can ever agree on (or get me to care about ever again)
@Frank-jg4tq2 ай бұрын
Formidable video, thanks
@FactBytes2 ай бұрын
Glad it was helpful!
@maapaa20102 ай бұрын
I'm glad the Germans and Japanese are on the allies side in the modern world as they were truly terrible enemies to have! Such efficiency, discipline and engineering prowess was a real brick wall.
@crhu3192 ай бұрын
Incorrect. The allies is the side that has Russia, China, Belarus who took the most civilian losses. Germany and Japan side is the AXIS. UK only gets in Sept 1939, US Dec 1941 so they don't count for determining who is Axis and who is Allies.
@seazonchik2 ай бұрын
Don't be happy. Maybe you're on the future side of the losers.
@bluefox94362 ай бұрын
@@seazonchikpretty hard to lose a war with US coverage tbh
@beadsman132 ай бұрын
@@bluefox9436 You sure. I can name 2 recent and 1 at late 60's.
@bluefox94362 ай бұрын
@@beadsman13 Vietnam yes, but apart from that the US volunteered to leave - if the US chose to stay there's nothing the taliban could've done apart from killing a few soldiers here and there. The only reason they were able to do anything in the first place was, because the US actually tried to avoid causing harm to civillians - just gaining the land would've been a walk in the park for them.
@marcoortiz45792 ай бұрын
Great video, well described without taking political sides.
@s1nb4d592 ай бұрын
Good footage to go with the well narrated video.
@Bl00dMalice2 ай бұрын
Great content and the B-roll footage is nice. But I would suggest perhaps some kind of animated overhead map to showcase locations and pushes. It's a bit confusing to keep up with from where and what direction all the action is taking place during this battle.
@flycatchfulАй бұрын
The Germans only produced 1500 Tiger II in total. This number was too little to counter the Russian armor.
@johndoe1.1969 күн бұрын
Quantify has a quality of it's own, especially when fighting collectivists who don't value individual lives.
@therectorkid97082 ай бұрын
Very good....Juan Mantueffel, 😊
@FlorinSutu2 ай бұрын
"Târgul Frumos" means "beautiful market" in Romanian language. 6:45 - "Ruginoasa" means "rusty" (as of oxidized iron) + + + Days after Operation Bagration started on June 22 , 1944, in Belarus, it became a serious problem for the Germans. They moved from Romania almost all armored units and all of their most elite divisions. From that moment, the Romanian Army remained practically alone on the battlefield, yet it held the Red Army at bay for almost two months, until a coup d'état overthrew the Romanian leadership on August 23, 1944. (There were still many German AA units and Luftwaffe fighters deep in the rear, protecting Ploesti and Bucharest, that is why I added "on the battlefield" after "alone".)
@konradhenrykowicz18592 ай бұрын
I thougt it means "fruit market" :)
@FlorinSutu2 ай бұрын
@@konradhenrykowicz1859 - Trust me, Romanian is my native language.
@vladdumitrica849Ай бұрын
Maybe fairground, not market
@FlorinSutuАй бұрын
@@vladdumitrica849 - It seems that you are right. There are many Romanian equivalents for "market", synonyms: piaţă, târg, cerere, obor, debuşeu, iarmaroc.
@whocares2252Ай бұрын
Did you make all ofnthisnfootage yourself? I mean, who or where is your film source?? Ive seen years and years of eastern front combat footage and ive seen none of what youve posted here. Wow, excellent work. Thank you.😁
@cascadianrangers7282 ай бұрын
People forget how fast Tigers were; their cross country speed was equal to that of early Sherman tanks and only a little less than that of T34
@gkauto19592 ай бұрын
Yes youre right about their speed over terrain when they had to really get going they certainly could! Their only drawback was that huge appetite for fuel, it seems the germans always had to have a gas truck nearby to feed these things! That and the fact that the transmission was really only rated for 45 tons, yet they managed somehow to get it to work in the 56 ton tiger, but constant and hard use of them usually meant their transmissions and final drives broke down under hard field use. Then it was a nightmare to replace the tranny under field conditions!
@TTTT-oc4eb2 ай бұрын
@@gkauto1959 The Tiger 1 used LESS fuel than any Sherman variant.
@gkauto19592 ай бұрын
@@TTTT-oc4eb Love to learn how you found that out! If you take a heavy car and a light car and run them both the heavy car always burns more fuel since it takes more to re establish inertia once youve braked the vehicle; so how does a 30 ton Sherman burn MORE FUEL than the 56 ton Tiger?? And did you know that in the north african desert there were Shermans with hot vapor carburetors that doubled their range? Please advise how you came to find out how fuel efficient Tigers really were??
@TTTT-oc4eb2 ай бұрын
@@gkauto1959 The Tiger had a fuel tank containing 548 liters of fuel and a max range of 195 kilometers under optimal conditions. A late war M4A3 had a fuel tank containing 630 liters of fuel and a max range of 160 kilometers. A small car with a poor power to weight ratio may use as much, or even more fuel, than a heavier car with a good power to weight ratio due to less stress on the engine. The Tiger 1 had a better power to weight ratio than almost any Sherman variant. In addition it had a much more advanced transmission and drivetrain.
@gkauto19592 ай бұрын
@@TTTT-oc4eb OK! So that explains why so many of them broke down on the battlefield due to their running gear breaking, specifically the transmission going out and winding up getting parked. That advanced transmission is a German trait that is still with us today, who in their right mind would buy an Audi or Mercedes with all their complexity and tendency for expensive repairs? And your comparison with a small car with poor power to weight ratio does not hold water in the real world, most of the small cars on the road today are Japanese vehicles, and they all move along very well and are quite reliable as well besides being lighter than say a Camaro with a V8. They build lighter vehicles that run better than the competition and even outlast them as well, typically going over 200k. Lastly the average V8 has 8 cylinders to feed, so with equal power to weight ratios for both vehicles (what engineer would set up a small car with a poor power to weight ratio? It would not sell or get good mileage) the 4 cylinder vehicle will always consume less.
@despahoria30432 ай бұрын
Nice defence operation you have there Hans! How about my Operation Bagration?
@Panzer-Storm2 ай бұрын
Insane victory halting the soviets from taking the oil fields for another 10 months
@dmitryisaev595511 күн бұрын
Still ass kicked the Germans while the Allies were still sitting on the fence… cowards.
@tekis02 ай бұрын
I'm loving your channel! The narration is good and I'm seeing some of this footage for the first time with very little repeating within the video. Sub-SCRIBED!
@FactBytes2 ай бұрын
Welcome aboard!
@mikesbaseballcards2 ай бұрын
Great documentary & combat footage. Its quite obvious the Wehrmacht was far superior. The russians had quantity, thats it. Give credit to the Wehrmacht. I dont know how my Opa survived fighting in Army Group Sourh. At one point earlier in the War he was in Budapest.
@teedepefanio4974Ай бұрын
The IS-2 is actually a very good tank, for that era.. I'd give it up to training as to why the Tigers often had the upper hand..
@yvesdupont75952 ай бұрын
Very good stuff !
@FactBytes2 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@scotttyson79702 ай бұрын
The Germans just couldn't quite handle 3fronts . What great fighters.
@JoeyStarleyАй бұрын
They would have prevailed if they could have concentrated on the eastern front.
@user-fq4hu1sv2lАй бұрын
Great footage..thx
@FactBytesАй бұрын
Thanks for watching
@boborenebobo2 ай бұрын
A battle very little known because history is written by winners. Here is one of few soviet massive offensive stoped.
@AR-ly7yt2 ай бұрын
Awesome video keep it up
@FactBytes2 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@Januszekm562 ай бұрын
The Wehrmacht's armored vehicles were very deadly n effective. The Allies could only defeat the Germans thanks to their endless resources. Best regards from Poland.
@lostinspace0132 ай бұрын
Stop telling stupid stories. German tanks are incredibly overrated, and producing Tigers and Panthers was the final nail in the Germans' coffin. Very often they caused more problems than they had advantages. First of all, they broke down a lot (especially Panthers), required a lot of attention, spare parts, burned an ocean of fuel (at a time when the Germans were constantly short of it), were very expensive, their production took too long, they were too heavy (they destroyed bridges and roads), and towing a damaged Tiger from the battlefield was a nightmare and rarely ever succeeded. People like you have no idea that the most common enemy of a tank was... infantry, bunkers, fortified positions. Only about 15-20% of tank combat was against other tanks. That's why it made much more sense to produce lighter, more reliable tanks than heavy ones - at a time when you have too little steel, rubber, fuel, people...
@pj1953a2 ай бұрын
The terrorists Nazis lost the war. The deserve no credit for anything.
@lyvekis88242 ай бұрын
@@lostinspace013 Yeah, that is why you hear similar stories with allied tanks where one tank took out multiple german heavy tanks. Oh wait, there are no such stories. German tanks were very good compared to the allied ones. Yes, they had problems and were rushed out the development line but they delivered on the battlefield. There is a reason why allied tactics involved either hit and run, total bombardment or overwhelming with troops.
@pj1953a2 ай бұрын
@@lyvekis8824- who won the war?
@TTTT-oc4eb2 ай бұрын
@@lostinspace013 A lot of parroted myths... Both the Tiger and Panther (by 1944) were reliable by WW2 standards. All tanks require a lot of attention and spare parts. Even the Tiger 1 used LESS fuel than ANY Sherman variant. Only the diesel engined Shermans came close. The Panther cost only 10-15% more than a Panzer IV, despite being twice the tank, and was easier to mass-produce and maintain. And the Tiger only twice as much as a Panther, not any different than any other heavy tank from any other nation.
@SamThesillyStuka-bo4quАй бұрын
Tiger and IS-2 tanks:15% Preparations:25% Battle:50% Weather:10% Epicness:100% Things I did not knew: 85% Good video? : YES
@Sofia-00012 ай бұрын
You mention only the 2nd battle of Tg Frumos but a massive Soviet attack by Konev group was also repelled in early April. Also you don't seem to be aware that between 1939 - '41 Romania built 2 large defensive lines between Iasi - Chisinau, codenamed Dacia and Traian, while since Sept '43, 2 more fortified lines were made in depth, codenamed Decebal and Stefan. The Soviets had no chance to break the Romanian front without the relentless US air attacks on the oil fields and the war production, which forced Romania to switch sides. The Romanian army dealt alone with all German attempts to restore Antonescu to power, so the Soviets couldn't claim later that they freed Romania from Nazis, because was not the case. After Aug 23-25 the Soviets advanced unopposed the 3rd Ukrainian army, led by Malinovsky, to Bucharest and king Michael hoped that his efforts will be recognized by his new ally, but was not like that with the Soviets. Until the Armistice was signed on Sept 12 with the Soviets the Romanian units suffered an humiliating disarm, while more than 140k were sent to soviet concentration camps. In the west offensive Romania reengaged 560k men and they were essential in many battles for the break of German - Hungarian defense on the Carpathians in Transylvania, Hungary and Czechoslovakia, but again, from your angle you can only see battles between Germans and Soviets.
@admontblanc2 ай бұрын
I mean, what did you guys expect you would get from turning coats? And on top of it you were dealing with communists, that had America's full backing at the point. Churchill himself admitted, after the war, how it had been a mistake to side with the USSR, but he still signed the pact with Stalin and FDR at Ialta. They didn't care about you, the Hungarians, Czechs, Poles or anyone else one bit, as long as they were able to defeat Germany they were willing to sell themselves to the Devil, and so they did. But it's plenty of fun to read about all these geniuses' post-war regrets. So it didn't turn out as you wanted eh? Should've thought it out better beforehand.
@nicktozie66852 ай бұрын
Great video
@FactBytes2 ай бұрын
Thanks for the visit
@VighneshPawar-tk5qz2 ай бұрын
Thanks for vedio and great information
@FactBytes2 ай бұрын
Most welcome
@EdBert2 ай бұрын
"In 1959, Hasso Von Manteuffel was charged for ordering a 19-year-old shot for desertion in 1944 and was sentenced for 18 months in prison but was released after 4 months. Hasso Von Manteuffel died on September 24th of 1978 in Tyrol, Austria."
@bwilliams4632 ай бұрын
4:17 Rare sighting of a British Valentine in Soviet service. Seems like many wartime images of KV and IS tanks show a lot of slack in their treads. Did they wear badly?