Hamburg's Firestorm - WWII: Witness to War - S01 EP105 - History Documentary

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Witness the relentless air war over Germany in WWII as Allied forces unleashed their fury on cities like Dresden, Hamburg, and Berlin. From daring missions to thousand-bomber raids, this film delves into the unimaginable destruction caused by bombing campaigns. Featuring real footage, personal testimonies, and advanced technology, the video showcases the toll on civilian populations and the strategic aims of the attacks. Experience the courage of RAF Bomber Command, the Dam Busters' precision strikes, and the firestorm that engulfed Hamburg. Discover the moral dilemmas and human stories that shaped the outcome of World War II.
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Пікірлер: 842

  • @jayfelsberg1931
    @jayfelsberg19317 ай бұрын

    "War is cruelty, there is no refining it" - William T. Sherman. He would know.

  • @501sqn3

    @501sqn3

    17 күн бұрын

    .....War , is the continuation of politics by other means.

  • @DrPlatypus1
    @DrPlatypus15 ай бұрын

    I can't tell you how much I appreciate an uncensored, non-blurred WWII documentary. Thank you.

  • @rosemarylusty8045
    @rosemarylusty80457 ай бұрын

    Pleasing to read the comments and note people comprehend that Hamburg was nothing -1 night compared to 57 continuous nights over London, including a 998 -bomber raid by nazis in 1940's But like all war the women, children, infirm and elderly paid the price.

  • @achitophel5852

    @achitophel5852

    6 ай бұрын

    And Liverpool, the second most concentrated blitz on England, so nearly successful that Churchill suppressed any news about it - that's why Liverpool is seldom mentioned even now. Had Liverpool docks been destroyed, that would have been it.

  • @scarihscheidenkleister8998

    @scarihscheidenkleister8998

    5 ай бұрын

    Death of british civil: 50000 Death of German civil: 600000, dont Talk bs.

  • @mikemines2931

    @mikemines2931

    5 ай бұрын

    @@scarihscheidenkleister8998 Concentration camp victims 6,000,000 that we know of.

  • @annoyingbstard9407

    @annoyingbstard9407

    4 ай бұрын

    I think, German holocaust apart, more men die in war than women, children, infirm and elderly.

  • @2Greenlid

    @2Greenlid

    4 ай бұрын

    Don’t forget the millions of soldiers & Jews …

  • @manfredwesteroth8241
    @manfredwesteroth82414 ай бұрын

    I was 3 1/2 years old when this happened,we lived just west of Hamburg and I remember the droning of the bomber as they flew over our town towards Hamburg. I'll never forget that sound.

  • @moayyadkh

    @moayyadkh

    3 ай бұрын

    Now something like this is happening to gaza , & palestiains are paying the price for the war that happened in europe!

  • @pragerbest7848

    @pragerbest7848

    Ай бұрын

    how do you know English? Germans those days usually don't know English

  • @michaelbinney9913

    @michaelbinney9913

    Ай бұрын

    My mother used to tell us war stories about German planes following the shine on the river Don from the sea to there target to Sheffield. She said same as you the droning of multiple aircraft engines getting closer is a sound that stays with you, then the explosions start shaking houses 9 miles away.

  • @rolandgeorgschramm1839

    @rolandgeorgschramm1839

    Ай бұрын

    @@pragerbest7848 Maybe he is a teacher , teaching English. Or has the talent learning foreign languages ... If I remember correctly you could take English as an extra subject now it is mandatory...

  • @derin111
    @derin1117 ай бұрын

    As a child my Mother lived through the bombing of Hannover, another very heavily bombed city with over 90% of the central city destroyed. By 1945, aged 5 years old, they lost their dwellings for the second time only a few weeks before the end. Yesterday (October 9th )marked the 80th anniversary of heaviest of the 89 raids on Hannover. It is commemorated as “The Black Day”…..9. October 1943. People would often shelter in the cellars of the apartment buildings where they lived. On the second occasion their building took a direct hit. They only managed to escape the burning cellar because my Grandfather, who had been wounded out of the war on the Eastern Front in 1943, managed to hack their way out with an axe. My Mother is 83 now……she has never ever set foot inside a cellar ever since.

  • @EricCalves

    @EricCalves

    6 ай бұрын

    Nazis….!!!!!

  • @mcmc2386

    @mcmc2386

    5 ай бұрын

    Your grandma slept with me last night

  • @theccpisaparasite8813

    @theccpisaparasite8813

    4 ай бұрын

    That's why you don't start wars, they are appalling

  • @user-hg2be5dl2u

    @user-hg2be5dl2u

    4 ай бұрын

    My dad was overhead in a b 17. After the war, he never stepped foot in a plane again.

  • @derin111

    @derin111

    4 ай бұрын

    @user-hg2be5dl2u That's amazing too! Terrible wars.

  • @MM-iy7gz
    @MM-iy7gz7 ай бұрын

    Never Forget Warsaw, Manila, Nanking, Rotterdam, Stalingrad, Belgrade.

  • @catiagranico7796

    @catiagranico7796

    7 ай бұрын

    A vingança apenas torna o vingador igual ao criminoso.

  • @MM-iy7gz

    @MM-iy7gz

    6 ай бұрын

    Ok Chamberlain

  • @anthonycaruso8443

    @anthonycaruso8443

    6 ай бұрын

    Dachau,Bergen.Sobibor etc.

  • @damonmelendez856

    @damonmelendez856

    6 ай бұрын

    The poor innocent Bolsheviks, oh the horror.

  • @daleburrell6273

    @daleburrell6273

    6 ай бұрын

    ​​@@damonmelendez856...AND THE ORDINARY CITIZENS OF THE USSR SUFFERED A HECK OF A LOT TOO- A GREAT MANY OF THEM WERE NO FRIENDS OF STALIN AND HIS GANG, AND THEY WOULD HAVE SIDED WITH THE GERMANS IF THEY WERE OFFERED THE OPPORTUNITY...

  • @richardsimms251
    @richardsimms2513 ай бұрын

    I have an elderly friend with a vivid memory of him at age 12 in London during 1944-1945. He recalls watching and hearing the V1 jet bombs hitting his neighbourhood. He told me about the “hot pieces of metal” and shrapnel falling off the roofs of the houses which he picked up when they cooled. RS. Canada

  • @mikekeelan5428
    @mikekeelan54284 ай бұрын

    Hello. Hamburg was a horrific event -- there is no doubt. However, what is the expression? "You reap what you sow." Be safe! Mike

  • @jacksimpson-rogers1069

    @jacksimpson-rogers1069

    14 күн бұрын

    I am haunted by the suspicion that the bombing of Dresden may have been partly revenge for London. I've read that some of the aircraft crew were too sickened by it to drop their bombs on the city.

  • @bobdinwiddy
    @bobdinwiddy7 ай бұрын

    @20:00 the impact of the Dam Busters Raid : a THREE MONTH DELAY recent research published in Holland shows ALL building works on the Atlantikwall were immediately halted as all able workmen and resources were recalled to Germany to restore the damaged industry there. High Command records show that work was delayed for three months following the raid. Source: “Atlantikwall in Kaart” 2023.

  • @Volcano-Man

    @Volcano-Man

    7 ай бұрын

    That was known in 1943! Amazing that you present it as recent news!

  • @landsea7332

    @landsea7332

    3 ай бұрын

    @@Volcano-Man This documentary incorrectly states the the dam buster raid did not have much effect on Germany's industrial war production and was more of a moral boost . Bobdinwiddy corrected this error and pointed the raid knocked out industrial production in the Ruhr Valley for 3 months . Also , repairing the 2 dams would have taken resources away from other areas .

  • @ande100
    @ande1008 ай бұрын

    My parents and Grandparents survived the attacks of the Rhine-Ruhr are. Well, my father was deployed to march towards Stalingrad. Thats a different story.

  • @MrDaiseymay

    @MrDaiseymay

    7 ай бұрын

    My great Aunt and her mother didn't survive the indiscriminate bombing of Liverpool. WAR HEH ?

  • @julianneale6128

    @julianneale6128

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@MrDaiseymaywell yes, the Americans dropped a few bombs too, just not as many as the Brits.

  • @craigoliver8712

    @craigoliver8712

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@julianneale6128Stupid comment of the week award coming your way

  • @model-man7802
    @model-man78027 ай бұрын

    WHAT ABOUT COVENTRY,Rotterdam,London,Kiev,,Moscow,WARSAW???

  • @Am_Yisrael_Chai_7

    @Am_Yisrael_Chai_7

    7 ай бұрын

    🤨

  • @Romulan-Tal-Shiar

    @Romulan-Tal-Shiar

    4 ай бұрын

    Moscow was barely touched.

  • @Jillkews88

    @Jillkews88

    2 ай бұрын

    British civilians killed: 50,000 German civilians killed: more than 635,000 “But what about-“ doesn’t even compare when it comes down to overall casualty figures, shut up

  • @Jillkews88

    @Jillkews88

    2 ай бұрын

    Also Rotterdam is laughable, barely 1,000 people were killed by German bombing, whereas 37,000 people were killed in Hamburg

  • @jacksimpson-rogers1069

    @jacksimpson-rogers1069

    14 күн бұрын

    Coventry, like Hamburg, was a valid target. It was an important supplier of the Rolls-Royce engines for the RAF. I am sorry in a way for the poor devils that flew the aircraft as Germans rather than the outright Nazis.

  • @hebneh
    @hebneh2 ай бұрын

    I watched the 1950s British film "The Dam Busters", a dramatized version of the actual event, repeatedly on TV when I was a kid in the '60s. So I've always remembered this story.

  • @raywhitehead730

    @raywhitehead730

    Ай бұрын

    Actually, the real "Dam Busters" took heavy losses. You should read up on it.

  • @hebneh

    @hebneh

    Ай бұрын

    @@raywhitehead730 I'm aware of what the actual damage was.

  • @jessh5310
    @jessh53104 ай бұрын

    My mother tells me constantly about seeing the fires of Coventry, She lived 46 miles from Coventry,

  • @landsea7332

    @landsea7332

    3 ай бұрын

    My parents were 11 miles away from Coventry and said the sky looked like daylight . People who experienced these raids nearly always talk about the droning sound of the Luftwaffe twin engine bombers . British scientist RV Jones discovered the Luftwaffe were using radio beams to navigate at night . However , on Nov. 14th , 1940 something happened with the radio frequencies , so the British didn't jam the radio frequencies . .

  • @tonymercer7759

    @tonymercer7759

    16 күн бұрын

    @@landsea7332 Allegedly Churchill had warning of the intended raid on Coventry but did not put up the RAF to defend it for fear that it would give away the intelligence Britain had acquired

  • @landsea7332

    @landsea7332

    15 күн бұрын

    ​@@tonymercer7759 This was a myth started by intelligence officer FW Winterbotham . What actually occurred was that Luftwaffe bombers were using a navigational technology of radio beams . British scientist RV Jones discovered this and was able to jam the beams during other bombing raids . The process of the Luftwaffe changing radio beams & frequencies , and the British jamming them , became known as the " battle of the beams ." But the night of Nov 14th , 1940 , the Luftwaffe had a receiver technology with a small band width , and the British were slightly off with their jamming frequency . .

  • @Anglo_Saxon1
    @Anglo_Saxon14 ай бұрын

    Arthur Harris,what an absolute legend.

  • @rolandgeorgschramm1839

    @rolandgeorgschramm1839

    4 ай бұрын

    Yep , the question is . What kind of legend ?

  • @mhodgson4574

    @mhodgson4574

    3 ай бұрын

    some documentaries portray Harris as a fiend and others,, like myself, believe he carried out his orders and made no secret of his belief in them. @@rolandgeorgschramm1839

  • @Jillkews88

    @Jillkews88

    2 ай бұрын

    London looks like a third world dump now, enjoy it

  • @Astrid-jt8cd

    @Astrid-jt8cd

    Ай бұрын

    He was a disgusting lowlife. He was as low as they come

  • @Ordinz

    @Ordinz

    12 күн бұрын

    Harris was an absolute reactionary who hated all members of the working class even in his own country. He was a despicable human been, far from what you call a hero.

  • @konradhenrykowicz1859
    @konradhenrykowicz18597 ай бұрын

    He who sows the wind, reaps the storm

  • @jamesferguson2353

    @jamesferguson2353

    7 ай бұрын

    shall reap the whirlwind

  • @konradhenrykowicz1859

    @konradhenrykowicz1859

    7 ай бұрын

    @@jamesferguson2353 and the thunder

  • @catiagranico7796

    @catiagranico7796

    7 ай бұрын

    Uma frase copiada e repetida por Arthur Harris, um genocida impune.

  • @woodenseagull1899

    @woodenseagull1899

    7 ай бұрын

    Germans are slow at leaning...! It wasn't supposed to happen. N

  • @wiretamer5710

    @wiretamer5710

    6 ай бұрын

    That's about all the bombs did... inspire colourful metaphors.

  • @sifridbassoon
    @sifridbassoon6 ай бұрын

    One thing not mentioned is that the attack on Hamburg took place over several nights. Each night a different section of the city was targeted. The firestorm took place on the third night and concentrated on an area north of the Elbe river and east of the Alster lake. It was an area with a lot of blue collar workers.

  • @islandblind

    @islandblind

    6 ай бұрын

    You're basically right, however, the firestorm took place on the 27th of July, 1943, and this was the second major raid of Operation Gomorrah, rather than the third. The third raid was aimed at Barmbeck, and it caused a major area fire, but no true firestorm.

  • @jeanmeslier9491

    @jeanmeslier9491

    6 ай бұрын

    I'm 83 and still don't like Germans

  • @HikerBikerMoter

    @HikerBikerMoter

    5 ай бұрын

    blue collar workers who contributed to the german war effort that resulted in 60 million killed

  • @conveyor2

    @conveyor2

    5 ай бұрын

    @@jeanmeslier9491 What about Austrians?

  • @daleburrell6273

    @daleburrell6273

    5 ай бұрын

    @@conveyor2 ...WHAT ABOUT THEM?!!

  • @ericday4505
    @ericday4505Ай бұрын

    This is a most devastating look at the horror of war, and it's destruction. Wow.

  • @tiamatxvxianash9202
    @tiamatxvxianash92027 ай бұрын

    As a life-long student of Bomber Command, I appreciated the high quality of your presentation. Thankfully the WW2 post war era of "RAF bombing guilt" has now passed. Your reverence towards the leadership of Sir Arthur Harris has indeed earned its rightful place alongside the likes of Sherman and Halsey among the pantheon of great warriors. This is a blessed message received over the celestial wireless to all those crews of the "Many", whom continue to maintain perfect speed, altitude and heading in the immortal Bomber Stream.

  • @stephenrice4554

    @stephenrice4554

    7 ай бұрын

    Remember them . Blue skies gentlemen. 🇬🇧

  • @dukeofdelight-tf6xy

    @dukeofdelight-tf6xy

    7 ай бұрын

    @@datruth66392 : All things considered I couldn't agree more with you. However, there is no question that the allied bombing of German cities was retaliation for the bombing of London. That doesn't make it right unless you consider the alternative. The German people were manipulated, intimidated and indoctrinated into believing in their fascist leader's victimization and nationalistic philosophy to their own detriment, or else. My fear is that here in the US we have been experiencing a growth in this same kind of criminal behavior under the similar guise of victimization and nationalistic philosophy. It will most likely end the same way. There are no heroes in war, only men and women who do their duty and victims. This is why most veterans who actually experience combat refuse to talk about it. They grieve both their losses and their victims, not all of whom were innocent.

  • @MarktheMole

    @MarktheMole

    7 ай бұрын

    Absolutely right. My forthcoming book on Bomber Command emphasizes its crucial importance in the Allied victory, not least because it forced the Germans in 1943 to its three biggest, costliest errors of strategy: withdrawal of fighters, and then 85% of 88mm guns, from the Eastern front - making the task of the Red Army vastly easier - and the green light for the monstrously wasteful V-weapons programme. It severely delayed both the Me-262 programme, cut the Tiger tank production total by one third, and near halted the operational introduction of the super Type-21 submarine - among other achievements. Its role in blasting the front lines of German army defences in Normandy was also pivotal. It forced German industry into huge, inefficient schemes of dispersal to avoid the bombs, including construction of enormous caves, tunnels and bunkers. If the concrete and manpower used in constructing the French U-boat pens had been properly used to build the Atlantic wall - an 8ft high structure from Calais to Bordeaux would have made D-Day near-impossible. If you want a copy of my book, let me know. Marcus Gibson

  • @JoseRios-mf5qq

    @JoseRios-mf5qq

    7 ай бұрын

    B ;;b. M

  • @daleburrell6273

    @daleburrell6273

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@dukeofdelight-tf6xy...YOU SUMMED IT UP PRETTY WELL-!!!

  • @nigellawson8610
    @nigellawson86106 ай бұрын

    It was really shameful how Churchill turned his back on the boys of Bomber Command at the end of the war. It was not his finest hour.

  • @daleburrell6273

    @daleburrell6273

    6 ай бұрын

    ...AND I THINK IT'S SHAMEFUL HOW THE BRIT VOTERS TURNED THEIR BACKS ON CHURCHILL, NEAR THE END OF WW2!!!

  • @PeterMayer

    @PeterMayer

    5 ай бұрын

    That's because he was a fat weasel.

  • @TheTexasmick

    @TheTexasmick

    4 ай бұрын

    Wait a minute. Churchill was not even in office at the end of the war. It was a closet communist who was fairly elected that turned his back on Bomber Command. NOT Churchill. The people of Britain turned their back on the Greatest Prime Minister in British history.

  • @HughBond-kx7ly

    @HughBond-kx7ly

    3 ай бұрын

    Yes they never got a campaign medal unlike the army and RN.

  • @vicsaul5459

    @vicsaul5459

    2 ай бұрын

    The Dardanelle campaign in ww1, was not his finest hour either.

  • @johnholmes6897
    @johnholmes68977 ай бұрын

    The V1's and V2's were aimed at military targets? NO.

  • @user-se2xm5yp6u

    @user-se2xm5yp6u

    15 күн бұрын

    No to my cost they were aimed at London, and put me in Hospital

  • @jacksimpson-rogers1069

    @jacksimpson-rogers1069

    14 күн бұрын

    The USA *_ought not_* to have made a hero of Werner von Braun.

  • @Raydensheraj

    @Raydensheraj

    2 күн бұрын

    ​@@jacksimpson-rogers1069but...but....buuu....ComMuNiSM eVeRyWhERe!!!!! - The Republicans.

  • @hiloviking
    @hiloviking5 ай бұрын

    Being an allied airman in those days was a low life expectancy job. 30,000 of them died, thousands more wounded or ended up as POWs.

  • @peterflynn9123

    @peterflynn9123

    3 ай бұрын

    54000 died in RAF bomber command alone

  • @501sqn3

    @501sqn3

    17 күн бұрын

    @@peterflynn9123 55,000 .

  • @alanward4506
    @alanward45064 ай бұрын

    Plumber pilot Guy Gibson,marvellous stuff.

  • @Coltnz1

    @Coltnz1

    Ай бұрын

    Actually Guy Gibson was hopeless at plumbing.

  • @kindnessfirst9670
    @kindnessfirst96707 ай бұрын

    During Covid I read quite a number of books about WW Two and was surprised how highly inaccurate bombing was- often they missed entire cities they aimed at. Things smaller than cities were almost pointless as targets.

  • @dukecraig2402

    @dukecraig2402

    6 ай бұрын

    That's not exactly true, many historians who report the bombings in that context do it simply because they don't do the proper research, or they are heavily biased towards making claims like that simply for sensationalism in an effort to sell books, nothing like getting people to talk about something to get books selling. Think about it, you couldn't miss an entire city if you tried, you wouldn't even need bomb sights to hit something as big as an entire city, you could have guys chucking bombs out of the bomb bay by eye and you'd still hit it, in the cases where entire cities were missed it wasn't because the bombing systems (sights) were so inaccurate they were incapable of hitting a city that's an entire mile across, it's for reasons like the lead navigator flying the formation to the wrong target resulting in it getting bombed and going on record as "zero bombs on target" even though the bombardiers absolutely plastered what they were actually aiming at, then years later instead of researchers subtracting the results from that when talking about bombing accuracy they include it in their math when talking about bombing accuracy. There's many other things that factor in that shouldn't be included when talking about bombing accuracy, like the Germans camouflaging targets and setting up decoys nearby, or them lighting off smoke pots to obscure visibility, but the biggest one is how the majority of bombs were aimed, all kinds of people claim that the Norden bombsight used by the US bombers was supposedly inaccurate, but the fact is 65% of the bombs aimed by the 8th Air Force over Europe weren't aimed optically with the Norden bombsight they were aimed using the H2X ground scanning radar system due to cloud cover making optical sighting impossible, especially during the winter months when overcast clouds were the norm, yet all the historians who bash the Norden bombsight don't subtract the results from the missions where the H2X system was used to aim the bombs, I don't think the majority of those so called experts even know about the H2X system and how much it was used. So the claim that they missed entire cities isn't at all true, they hit what they were aiming at it's just that they were aiming at the wrong thing because of navigator errors or other factors like decoys being bombed, even in WW1 where at first a guy was hanging over the side of the plane dropping bombs he couldn't miss an entire city, that claim is made by so called researchers just saying things out of context to make a lot of noise trying to make a name for themselves. The subject of accuracy is one thing, the subject of results is something entirely different, and the difference between the two speaks to the conditions that the bombing campaign happened under along with thing's like human error and deception added in.

  • @vernongoodey5096

    @vernongoodey5096

    6 ай бұрын

    The US airforce once missed japan! Due to high winds they set their bomb sites and without knowledge of the jet stream in those days literally overshot Yokohama and bombed the Pacific so missing a whole country

  • @partygrove5321

    @partygrove5321

    6 ай бұрын

    Only 5% of the RAF bombs came within FIVE miles of the target in the first year of night bombing. It wasn't until the UK's boffins developed electronic guidance system did most of the bombers at least find the city. @@dukecraig2402

  • @partygrove5321

    @partygrove5321

    6 ай бұрын

    Which the USAAF quickly learned from it, while it took more than a year for BC to even find a city. @@vernongoodey5096

  • @gc3847

    @gc3847

    5 ай бұрын

    @@vernongoodey5096 Not the first time ,the American military dont seem able to catch a bus at times. Numbers dont always equate to excellence. EG 2 air craft on 9 11 for the entire Eastern seaboard? Why this never became a major scandal ,defies belief. A training exersize that day???

  • @ronalddesiderio7625
    @ronalddesiderio76256 ай бұрын

    You start the wind 💨 You reap the whirlwind. WAR. All bets are off No Holds Barred

  • @georgebrown8312
    @georgebrown83126 ай бұрын

    Total war stinks in more ways than one. It stinks not only of rotting bodies but of evil and horror as well. For those who want to see real-life horror movies, a documentary of war is the thing to see. It shows the hellish nature of bombings and the subsequent destruction of human lives and infrastructure. It also shows the atrocities inflicted upon innocent civilians caught in the path of soldiers who are fighting their enemies. Thank you for this eye-opening video of the awful firestorm in Hamburg, Germany during the second world war.

  • @asullivan4047

    @asullivan4047

    3 ай бұрын

    Unfortunately there are always going to be civilian casualties in times of war😢. After a couple German cities being leveled. The disillusioned leadership in Berlin. Should have telegraphed London with surrender request.

  • @daydays12

    @daydays12

    3 ай бұрын

    I so agree.

  • @jacksimpson-rogers1069

    @jacksimpson-rogers1069

    14 күн бұрын

    Strangely enough, were not the civilians in Japan less guilty of what the Emperor's military were doing and had done, than the responsibility for the Nazis that German civilians who'd had more political power?

  • @user-if4fd5wl1y
    @user-if4fd5wl1y7 ай бұрын

    during the 90,s building recession i like thousands of brit construction workers went over to germany for work and in hamburg and hanover worked on sites that were shut when finding unexploded bombs 50 years after the event

  • @Coltnz1

    @Coltnz1

    Ай бұрын

    Unexploded WW2 bombs are still being found both in Germany and Britain.

  • @Coltnz1

    @Coltnz1

    Ай бұрын

    And they’ll still be finding them for many years to come, as they do in UK.

  • @ClearedAsFiled
    @ClearedAsFiled7 ай бұрын

    Excellent commentary.... Thank you....

  • @michaelbinney9913
    @michaelbinney99136 ай бұрын

    Bomber Harris raised his concerns about bombing Dresden saying it wouldn't make any difference to the outcome amongst other things but he was ignored.

  • @HughBond-kx7ly

    @HughBond-kx7ly

    3 ай бұрын

    In 1945 at Yalta meeting Stalin asked Churchill to bomb Dresden as it was a major transport hub for vermacht troops and munitions going to the eastern Front and Churchill obliged him otherwise Dresden would most likely not have been bombed.

  • @user-ho9yp1le9u

    @user-ho9yp1le9u

    Ай бұрын

    nonsense

  • @michaelbinney9913

    @michaelbinney9913

    Ай бұрын

    @@HughBond-kx7ly correct

  • @Coltnz1

    @Coltnz1

    Ай бұрын

    In Dresden there were at least 127 factories and workshops producing vital military equipment.

  • @asullivan4047
    @asullivan40473 ай бұрын

    Interesting/informative/entertaining. Excellent photography job enabling viewers to better understand what the orator is describing. Special thanks to veteran soldiers sharing personal information pertaining to daily activities/experiences . Serving as ( R.A.F.) Pilots/crews/many whom never returned after a bombing mission. Last if not least the aerial photographers who's expertise made this documentary authentic and possible -!!!😉

  • @user-ks7pm7bc1p
    @user-ks7pm7bc1p7 ай бұрын

    A well constructed piece of history. Accurately shows the price civilians pay for the actions of their government. When you wage war the horrors of humanity are sure to come out in the mist of total destruction.

  • @daydays12

    @daydays12

    3 ай бұрын

    Well remarked.

  • @johnreed8336

    @johnreed8336

    Ай бұрын

    Ye shall sow the wind . Ye shall reap the whirlwind .

  • @bro5800
    @bro58007 ай бұрын

    Oh my days! I am thinking of those small children who still get killed any where in the world because of war.

  • @georgebrown8312

    @georgebrown8312

    6 ай бұрын

    Yes, war is still tragic, no matter where it happens. It does not discriminate between innocent civilians and soldiers who fight in the battlefields. I hate seeing the innocent men, women, and children perish in the crossfire of war.

  • @asullivan4047

    @asullivan4047

    3 ай бұрын

    Is it any different than an abortion clinic -???😈

  • @ElieGroff

    @ElieGroff

    2 ай бұрын

    All of Germany was complicated with the war, there were no innocents!!

  • @craigoliver8712

    @craigoliver8712

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@asullivan4047Yes

  • @craigoliver8712

    @craigoliver8712

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@ElieGroffDo you mean 'complicit"?

  • @kevinsrennoer7553
    @kevinsrennoer75537 ай бұрын

    He who sleeps in his bed, often awakes rested in the morning.

  • @TheTexasmick

    @TheTexasmick

    4 ай бұрын

    Man, that's deep philosophy. Did you learn that from the "Science Guy ?"

  • @islandblind
    @islandblind6 ай бұрын

    Hans Jeshoneck died by suicide on August 18th, 1943, following the RAF on the rocket research facility at Peenemunde, not in 1944, as claimed here. Also, the battle of Stalingrad ended in January/February of 1943, while Hamburg was bombed in July of 1943.

  • @stevemartin6144
    @stevemartin61447 ай бұрын

    I feel most honoured to have been able to correspond with 4 mentioned within: Hajo Herrman, Arthur Harris, Johnny Johnson and Barnes Wallis.

  • @daleburrell6273

    @daleburrell6273

    6 ай бұрын

    ...YOU'RE LUCKY...!!!

  • @lennartforsberg1519
    @lennartforsberg15197 ай бұрын

    You can also find some interesting books about this topic. Inferno: The Fiery Destruction of Hamburg, 1943 by Keith Lowe was an interesting book.

  • @Charlesputnam-bn9zy

    @Charlesputnam-bn9zy

    7 ай бұрын

    And Martin Caidin's 1964 "The Night Hamburg Died"

  • @traybern

    @traybern

    7 ай бұрын

    Turning Germans into Hamburg-er MEAT!!

  • @kidmack3556

    @kidmack3556

    7 ай бұрын

    Hamburg bombings survivor Hans Massoqui's "Destined to Witness"

  • @ludovicleprinceroyal8721

    @ludovicleprinceroyal8721

    7 ай бұрын

    David Irving "The Destruction of Dresden"

  • @daleburrell6273

    @daleburrell6273

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@ludovicleprinceroyal8721...HOLOCAUST DENIER-(!)

  • @willhovell9019
    @willhovell90197 ай бұрын

    The amazing Sergeant pilots of the RAF from all around the world

  • @davidburton2732
    @davidburton27327 ай бұрын

    Yes indeed. They sowed the wind................................

  • @catiagranico7796

    @catiagranico7796

    7 ай бұрын

    Eles irão pagar pelo vento e vocês irão pagar pela tempestade! É a Lei de Causa e Efeito.

  • @davidburton2732

    @davidburton2732

    7 ай бұрын

    Seguimos esperando casi 80 años después....@@catiagranico7796

  • @pigmanobvious
    @pigmanobvious7 ай бұрын

    It got so hot that people got stuck walking down asphalt streets as it reached melting temperature. It was rumored that in the morning death squads were sent out to put people out of their misery.

  • @davidlauder-qi5zv

    @davidlauder-qi5zv

    5 ай бұрын

    Why no sympathy for the British victims of German bombing? Don't you realise that firestorms also affected London, Coventry, Clydeside etc?

  • @mhodgson4574

    @mhodgson4574

    3 ай бұрын

    I agree with you. I would love to learn more about the firestorms in Britain@@davidlauder-qi5zv

  • @Jillkews88

    @Jillkews88

    2 ай бұрын

    @@davidlauder-qi5zvbecause the figures don’t compare Britain suffered 50,000 casualties during the war Germany suffered more than 650,000 casualties from UK bombing, they don’t compare

  • @techzone1552

    @techzone1552

    Ай бұрын

    @@davidlauder-qi5zv I have plenty of sympathy for the British victims. It's terrible on both sides. You lunatics just like hearing about the deaths of Germans who don't even exist anymore, generations before you were even born.

  • @Billmawkee
    @Billmawkee3 ай бұрын

    No, Britain was NOT standing alone. We Canadians as well as other countries of the Empire were there with the British. We did not have the much bigger forces of the U.S., but we punched well above our size. This reminds me of the tendancy of U.S. movies and popular historians to focus almost totally on the U.S. experience on D-Day, June 1944. We were also there, and in fact were first to get ashore in France, and also got the furthest inland that day.

  • @HughBond-kx7ly

    @HughBond-kx7ly

    3 ай бұрын

    Yes and it was mainly Canadians who participated in the August 1942 Dieppe raid fiasco Just another example of using the colonials as cannon fodder

  • @richardvernon317

    @richardvernon317

    2 ай бұрын

    @@HughBond-kx7ly There were Brits there as well.

  • @davidcarr7436

    @davidcarr7436

    Ай бұрын

    ​@HughBond-kx7ly our people at home and the newspapers were clamoring that our troops who had been in Britain since 39, start seeing some action. Our pilots were in the air, our navy was hunting submarines and escorting convoys in the Atlantic. We needed to feel like they were "doing something." My uncle was at Dieppe with the Calgary Regiment. One of the few tankers to get back. Went on to fight in Sicily, Italy and then NW Europe. Survived the war.

  • @raywhitehead730

    @raywhitehead730

    Ай бұрын

    Lesson, make your 0wn movies about WW2.

  • @intercommerce

    @intercommerce

    Ай бұрын

    Canada had the third biggest navy and the fourth biggest air force in the world, by 1945.

  • @SpartacusErectus
    @SpartacusErectus7 ай бұрын

    Germany deserved far worse they’re lucky we stopped when we did…

  • @catiagranico7796

    @catiagranico7796

    7 ай бұрын

    Vocês irão pagar, do mesmo modo que os alemães, a partir de quando começaram até onde pararam.

  • @daleburrell6273

    @daleburrell6273

    6 ай бұрын

    ...THAT'S FOR DOGGONE SURE- THE GERMANS WERE SOUNDLY DEFEATED, AND THE ALLIES RUBBED THE GERMANS' NOSES IN IT!!!

  • @techzone1552

    @techzone1552

    Ай бұрын

    Okay psychopath.

  • @jacksimpson-rogers1069

    @jacksimpson-rogers1069

    14 күн бұрын

    Berlin was very unlucky to have Hitler's worst minions forbidding surrender.

  • @traybern
    @traybern7 ай бұрын

    American manufacturing, the DEFINITION of PRODUCTION!

  • @annebremer8011

    @annebremer8011

    27 күн бұрын

    I am here in E. Hartford CT home of Pratt and Whitney Aircraft. Two of my great uncles worked at P and W. One was an experimental metal worker. People like Lenny and Felix won the war, as well as the troops.

  • @nigellee9824
    @nigellee98246 ай бұрын

    Let’s not forget the number of civilians across Europe that died at the hands of the Germans ……

  • @conveyor2

    @conveyor2

    5 ай бұрын

    Let's even begin to faintly recall the number who died at the hands of the Soviets...

  • @mynamedoesntmatter8652

    @mynamedoesntmatter8652

    5 ай бұрын

    @@conveyor2 . . . And that started long before WWII.

  • @user-jx7dg7ci9g

    @user-jx7dg7ci9g

    4 ай бұрын

    50000 under Staleen !

  • @dirkvonriegen5267

    @dirkvonriegen5267

    4 ай бұрын

    Yes, and does that “justify” the Allied bombing terror against old people, women and children? So "an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth"... Well, the Israelis do it the same way... Was seid ihr nur für Heuchler und Moralisten🤮

  • @randyrussell9755
    @randyrussell97557 ай бұрын

    I don’t feel sorry for Germany or Japan. They started it. The Allie’s stoped it.

  • @anthonycaruso8443

    @anthonycaruso8443

    6 ай бұрын

    Correcto.

  • @PeterMayer

    @PeterMayer

    5 ай бұрын

    The who? It's "allies" genius.

  • @69JONESYrugbyCHAPELHILL

    @69JONESYrugbyCHAPELHILL

    2 ай бұрын

    I am just being "snarky". But...France declared war on Germany first...Sept 03, 1939...and invaded Germany first...Sept 07, 1939. (Saarland)

  • @sararet5

    @sararet5

    Ай бұрын

    They've learned now not to be so cruel to others... KARMA

  • @joelspringman523

    @joelspringman523

    Ай бұрын

    They brought it on themselves. They're lucky they lost to the Americans. Reference "The Mouse That Roared".

  • @EllieMaes-Grandad
    @EllieMaes-Grandad7 ай бұрын

    Anti-radar strips were known as "window", not 'windows' . . .

  • @doctorsocrates4413

    @doctorsocrates4413

    5 ай бұрын

    Magnesium was used also...pathfinders dropped windows and magnesium to light up dresden for instance...

  • @EllieMaes-Grandad

    @EllieMaes-Grandad

    5 ай бұрын

    "window", not 'windows' Target flares were based on magnesium - it burns well . . . @@doctorsocrates4413

  • @mynamedoesntmatter8652

    @mynamedoesntmatter8652

    5 ай бұрын

    @@doctorsocrates4413 It’s ‘window,’ not plural. That was the point of the original comment.

  • @mikemarley2389
    @mikemarley23897 ай бұрын

    Trying to make Germany the victim over Dresdan does not compute😮.Also I am convinced that if Germany had a nuclear bomb they would have used it.Same with Japan.

  • @stephenrice4554

    @stephenrice4554

    7 ай бұрын

    Without question

  • @jo.s7993

    @jo.s7993

    7 ай бұрын

    The Germans were actually developing a nuclear device. Britain was doing the same, but was ahead of the Germans in this respect. Because of the devastation the UK suffered in the blitz, they had other financial priorities e.g. rehoming two million people, who's homes were severely damaged or destroyed, killing 40 to 60 thousand civilians in the process. They decided to hand all of their research & development to the US &, sent scientists to Los Alamos to join the Manhattan project.

  • @jamesgilliam5278

    @jamesgilliam5278

    7 ай бұрын

    Guaranteed.

  • @wor53lg50

    @wor53lg50

    6 ай бұрын

    Thats Hollywood for you, it makes you think who the allies and friends actually where and are....

  • @johnsmith-mq4eq

    @johnsmith-mq4eq

    6 ай бұрын

    dresden was an allied war crime no doubt about that

  • @mylesba1
    @mylesba16 ай бұрын

    Great videos!

  • @kennethmaney914
    @kennethmaney9147 ай бұрын

    How dare anyone say we where as bad as the Nazis. Animals never change there habits. But we tried..we tried. Oh one word...COVENTRY.

  • @dougclevenger6748

    @dougclevenger6748

    7 ай бұрын

    Dresden was payback for Coventry

  • @jo.s7993

    @jo.s7993

    7 ай бұрын

    Indeed, & PLYMOUTH is another city almost completely destroyed, although many people don't know it even happened. As a naval base, I accept it was a prime military target, but the actual naval base was/is outside the city (Devonport). Nevertheless, Germany carried out fifty nine separate air raids on the base & the city itself, leaving it decimated, so it sickens me that Germany now acts as the victim.

  • @Volcano-Man

    @Volcano-Man

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@dougclevenger6748No it wasn't. Dresden, Leipzig at al; stood in front of the advancing Red Army. Zhukov halted his advance and through Stalin demanded that they be bombed to enable his advance to continue. Dresden was an essential hub for communications, German troops moving to and from the front, and materiels of war either being stockpiled or moved to to the front. Coventry - well there was also London, Southampton, Portsmouth, Plymouth, Liverpool, Manchester, Belfast and others; all bombed by the Luftwaffe in 1940-41, and later - look up the Baedabecker Raids, all had been avenged long before Dresden.

  • @tabularasa9104

    @tabularasa9104

    7 ай бұрын

    Please do not insult animals only humans who are SUPPOSED to know better behave like this. I live in Africa and have never seen any animal doing this in my long life. I am 70.

  • @daleburrell6273

    @daleburrell6273

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@tabularasa9104...YOU SUMMED IT UP PERFECTLY- AND YOU HIT NAIL RIGHT ON THE HEAD-(!)

  • @annoyingbstard9407
    @annoyingbstard94077 ай бұрын

    The main complaint by Germans seems to be we did it better than them 😂

  • @michaelmueller6083

    @michaelmueller6083

    7 ай бұрын

    Who is we?? And why did take so long ?? Ah , we had to ask the Americans again .😂

  • @dianeunderhill8506

    @dianeunderhill8506

    7 ай бұрын

    @@michaelmueller6083 No we did not ask the Americans again! They were drawn into the war when the Nazis declared war on USA after the attack on Pearl Harbour.

  • @daleburrell6273

    @daleburrell6273

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@dianeunderhill8506...WASN'T "LEND-LEASE" STARTED LONG BEFORE THE U.S. OFFICIALLY ENTERED WW2-(?) MOST AMERICANS WANTED NO PART OF ANOTHER WAR IN EUROPE- AND FDR LITERALLY RISKED BEING IMPEACHED BY ILLEGALLY SENDING SUPPORT TO BRITAIN UNDER THE TABLE!!!

  • @catiagranico7796

    @catiagranico7796

    7 ай бұрын

    Vocês foram melhores do que eles no genocídio.

  • @geoffreycodnett6570

    @geoffreycodnett6570

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@michaelmueller6083The US joined the war when Japan, an ally of Germany bombed its fleet in Pearl Harbour declaring war. The US sat on its hands until 1941 end.

  • @traybern
    @traybern7 ай бұрын

    President ME would have FLATTENED EVERY BUILDING in GERMANY!!!

  • @matthiassancken6082

    @matthiassancken6082

    6 ай бұрын

    Yeah? Would you have killed every child and old woman yourself?

  • @JeffreyDRein

    @JeffreyDRein

    6 ай бұрын

    That was unnecessary, wasn't it.... The Brits were quoted as stating the Americans have no stomach for war because The English wanted to sow the land with salt so nothing would grow there for 1000 years... Americans wanted to build a buffer state against the soviets

  • @daleburrell6273

    @daleburrell6273

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@JeffreyDRein...I'D SAY THAT THE AMERICANS WERE ABSOLUTELY RIGHT- (BUT I'M BIASED)...!!!

  • @craigoliver8712

    @craigoliver8712

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@daleburrell6273Americans right?there's a 1st time for everything I suppose

  • @rolandgeorgschramm1839

    @rolandgeorgschramm1839

    Ай бұрын

    You defently have a problem upstairs!!!!

  • @kenjohnston8173
    @kenjohnston81737 ай бұрын

    My stepfather was a navigator on a b17, and he dudnt like talking about the war. He was especially angered over Dresden, that it was not necessary, as was his fellow friends dying right in front of his eyes.

  • @anthonycaruso8443

    @anthonycaruso8443

    6 ай бұрын

    Dachau was not necessary either.

  • @damonmelendez856

    @damonmelendez856

    6 ай бұрын

    @@anthonycaruso8443Nor Guantanamo Bay either

  • @user-ho9yp1le9u

    @user-ho9yp1le9u

    3 ай бұрын

    DRESDEN was absolutely necessary. SOVIET UNION ASKED us to hit Leipzig Chemnitz and Dresden . So we did. THATS what allies do. We had asked them to attack during Battle of BULGE SO THEY DID .

  • @jamesbugbee9026
    @jamesbugbee90267 ай бұрын

    Using Hamburg as clickbait is disappointing 4 N inadequately brief history of the bombing of Germany; all the ruses, technology, techniques, circumstances, the pacing of different stages in the Hamburg campaign, & the full denouemont of it, R not presented here

  • @ludovicleprinceroyal8721
    @ludovicleprinceroyal87217 ай бұрын

    "We stuck the wrong pig." General George S. Patton

  • @None-zc5vg

    @None-zc5vg

    7 ай бұрын

    The U.S. élite was pro-fascist before the war and saw to it that its counterparts in W Germany got off lightly after it, regardless of the show trials: Patton was part of that elite, as was John McCloy, their man who ran W.Germany, who'd been the U.S. lawyer for the powerful I.G. Farben chemicals group which had funded the Nazis and which had important plants at Auschwitz that McCloy (as a wartime military planner) saw to it were not bombed by the Army Air Corps. He also saw to it that many German war-criminals got off lightly.

  • @ludovicleprinceroyal8721

    @ludovicleprinceroyal8721

    7 ай бұрын

    @@None-zc5vg History has shown that communism is infinitely worse than fascism in terms of human casualties.

  • @tabularasa9104

    @tabularasa9104

    6 ай бұрын

    Pigs do not behave like this only immoral humans...

  • @daleburrell6273

    @daleburrell6273

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@tabularasa9104...THAT'S THE TRUTH- I'M SAD TO SAY...!!!

  • @stevemartin6144
    @stevemartin61447 ай бұрын

    This documentary states, "US Air Force". That did not exist until 1947.

  • @49kittypretty1

    @49kittypretty1

    7 ай бұрын

    What was it caused? That’s interesting.

  • @stevemartin6144

    @stevemartin6144

    7 ай бұрын

    @@49kittypretty1 it was the USAAF......United States Army Air Force during WW2 if that is what you were asking.

  • @daleburrell6273

    @daleburrell6273

    7 ай бұрын

    ...THE "U.S. AIR FORCE" DIDN'T EXIST AS A SEPARATE BRANCH OF THE U.S. ARMED FORCES UNTIL 1947!!!

  • @Volcano-Man

    @Volcano-Man

    6 ай бұрын

    @stevemartin6144 True, but we all know that the US Air Army Force was referred to EVEN by its own officers and men, believe it or not as 'US AIR FORCE,' or simply 'AIR FORCE,' and strangely still is!

  • @stevemartin6144

    @stevemartin6144

    6 ай бұрын

    @@Volcano-Man odd then that 13 people agree with me.

  • @sparky123984
    @sparky1239847 ай бұрын

    Our wonderful RAF and the American bombers

  • @conveyor2

    @conveyor2

    5 ай бұрын

    Heroic but misguided.

  • @PeterBezemer
    @PeterBezemer7 ай бұрын

    Pro tip: don't vote dictators into power.

  • @jacksimpson-rogers1069

    @jacksimpson-rogers1069

    14 күн бұрын

    Let's tell that to the Supreme Court of the USA.

  • @davidcarr7436
    @davidcarr7436Ай бұрын

    Of the 133 crew members in 617 Sqn., 30 were Canadian.

  • @LoranHarding
    @LoranHarding5 ай бұрын

    The RAF lost 55,000 flyers over Europe during WWII. The Eighth AF lost 80,000.

  • @mynamedoesntmatter8652

    @mynamedoesntmatter8652

    5 ай бұрын

    26,000. Eighth AF lost 26,000.

  • @jacksimpson-rogers1069

    @jacksimpson-rogers1069

    14 күн бұрын

    It's a bigger proportion of the British populace, but it may be that the Americans did more damage per death. I get the impression that in destructive success per crewman lost, the "mad" wooden Mosquito was the winner.

  • @chrisjackson6582
    @chrisjackson65823 ай бұрын

    It annoys me when British talk about standing alone you were not standing alone you had the Colonial and Dominion forces so let’s start to acknowledge that Britain survived that period because of the then Empire

  • @jacksimpson-rogers1069

    @jacksimpson-rogers1069

    14 күн бұрын

    Most of the British reckon Canada, Australia, and even the Falkland Islands as British.

  • @saraprva4172
    @saraprva41725 ай бұрын

    If this happened today, would thousands protest in London calling for ceasefire ?

  • @annebremer8011

    @annebremer8011

    27 күн бұрын

    Young people have become incredibly ignorant.

  • @garyyarago2096
    @garyyarago20966 ай бұрын

    Harris certainly acheived his whirlwind, Biblical pillars, tornados of fire, like Le May he was a realist with no illusions about the fruit of his labors, mega death.

  • @walterkronkitesleftshoe6684

    @walterkronkitesleftshoe6684

    5 ай бұрын

    Took his initial lessons from the Geman firebombing of Coventry in Nov 1940.

  • @diggernash1
    @diggernash13 ай бұрын

    When wars were won, not just fought continuously.

  • @user-uk9wf5yw7x
    @user-uk9wf5yw7xАй бұрын

    The Germans started this and they did indeed reap the whirl wind...While London was bombed more heavily and more often than anywhere else in Britain, the Blitz was an attack on the whole country. Very few areas were left untouched by air raids. In relatively small compact cities, the impact of a severe air raid could be devastating. From mid-November 1940, major provincial cities and industrial centres were targeted. In early 1941 another wave of attacks began, primarily against ports. Respite finally came from June when much of the Luftwaffe was directed against Russia and targets in the Mediterranean. In these nine months, over 43,500 civilians were killed. This is how the Blitz affected towns and cities across the United Kingdom.

  • @jacksimpson-rogers1069

    @jacksimpson-rogers1069

    14 күн бұрын

    The interesting thing about the "Blitz" was that it was a blitzkrieg that wasn't. Blitzkrieg means lightning war.

  • @brandoncriner5480
    @brandoncriner54803 ай бұрын

    So could Lynette Nusbacher been drafted to fight for the allies?

  • @ElieGroff

    @ElieGroff

    2 ай бұрын

    No HE couldn't!😂😊

  • @kostasvrionis781
    @kostasvrionis7817 ай бұрын

    Μου αρέσουν πολύ αυτά τα πολεμικά ντοκιμαντέρ που τα βλέπω συχνά στο Netflix, εντελώς τυχαία είδα το κανάλι σας, Μπραβο Πολύ ωραία θέματα και ευχαριστώ πολύ. Χαιρετισμούς από την Μακεδονία Ελλάδα 🇬🇷🇬🇷🇬🇷🇬🇷🇬🇷

  • @jagaszepielak2601

    @jagaszepielak2601

    6 ай бұрын

    Giasu re kostaki me ton sfixto to kolaraki😅

  • @RobertCollard-uz9ox

    @RobertCollard-uz9ox

    4 ай бұрын

    19:16

  • @justinthyme5730
    @justinthyme57307 ай бұрын

    Germany reaped what it had mercilessly sown.

  • @glennquagmire1747

    @glennquagmire1747

    7 ай бұрын

    Yeah but it was Winston Churchill who started the bombing campaign on civilian population in Berlin in 1940 despite signing a treaty to bar civilian population as targets from bombing, and for your information in 1923 article 51 was signed by Britain and they ignored it when there bombers flew to Berlin and killed innocent civilians so Germany in turn did the same, you should research this matter before making comments then you have no clue or understanding of what happened back then.

  • @justinthyme5730

    @justinthyme5730

    7 ай бұрын

    @@glennquagmire1747 Germany invaded... Austria, Belgium, Czechoslovakia (modern Czech Republic and Slovakia), Denmark, Estonia, France, Greece, Guernsey (U.K. Channel Island), Hungary, Italy, Jersey (U.K. Channel Island), Latvia, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Monaco, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Russia (partial occupation), San Marino, Ukraine, Yugoslavia, (modern Albania, Croatia, Montenegro, North Macedonia, and Serbia). Like I said, my friend... Germany reaped what it had mercilessly sown. And let's not bring the Holocaust into the equation.

  • @glennquagmire1747

    @glennquagmire1747

    7 ай бұрын

    @@justinthyme5730- The ramblings of a wannabe historian, like I said do some research and learn something lol

  • @renegade8558

    @renegade8558

    7 ай бұрын

    Germany attacks London in 1939 ,, bombing civilians,,, Germany U-boat attacks targeted civilian ships ,,, They got what was coming

  • @Realguy11

    @Realguy11

    7 ай бұрын

    Germany bombed civilians in England first. Then Winston bombed Berlin

  • @Jeffei-qs7kp
    @Jeffei-qs7kp7 ай бұрын

    This was the 40s not the 60s. Civil-rights where and how ?

  • @richierugs6544
    @richierugs65446 ай бұрын

    I hit subscribe before the first bombs fell!

  • @tomobedlam297

    @tomobedlam297

    3 ай бұрын

    Thank you for your service! 💂

  • @kevinquist
    @kevinquist7 ай бұрын

    well. if any one knows what a war crime was and how to commit one, it was germany.

  • @dieterspringer9177

    @dieterspringer9177

    7 ай бұрын

    Is it possible that Germany learnt from the Brits about war crimes against civilians in the Boer War?

  • @arnenelson4495

    @arnenelson4495

    7 ай бұрын

    @@dieterspringer9177 No

  • @catiagranico7796

    @catiagranico7796

    7 ай бұрын

    Não existem inocentes numa guerra.

  • @johnsmith-mq4eq

    @johnsmith-mq4eq

    6 ай бұрын

    it was England that declared war on Germany not the other way round

  • @Coltnz1

    @Coltnz1

    6 ай бұрын

    @@johnsmith-mq4eq England did that after Germany invaded Poland.

  • @darrelneidiffer6777
    @darrelneidiffer67777 ай бұрын

    Is the narrator named Baldrick? Sounds like that guy on Blackadder😅! Great documentary though.

  • @hawnyfox3411

    @hawnyfox3411

    6 ай бұрын

    ^^^ Yep, It's "Baldrick" ( aka Sir Tony Robinson ) from Blackadder = He also narrates "Time Team" (the original) .

  • @landsea7332

    @landsea7332

    3 ай бұрын

    @@hawnyfox3411 Yes , its Sir Baldrick .

  • @michaeldelahunty2440
    @michaeldelahunty24403 ай бұрын

    Mums school got bombed in Nottingham ,then she worked as a switch board operator at 14 years old

  • @annehat4833
    @annehat48334 ай бұрын

    Note....no roads suffered during the war.....looks like perhaps implosion rather than explosion !

  • @Calidore1
    @Calidore16 ай бұрын

    This is such a low point in human history, I hope they rebuild all of those towns as they were.

  • @SharonBook

    @SharonBook

    4 ай бұрын

    They did. Lived in Germany for 3 years. It is a beautiful country

  • @jackhouston357
    @jackhouston3577 ай бұрын

    how many people killed on the ground from all those machine gun bullets falling down?

  • @cwj9202

    @cwj9202

    7 ай бұрын

    None at all, because those machine gun bullets would have lost most of their velocity.

  • @carlsherwin5557

    @carlsherwin5557

    7 ай бұрын

    A few people were killed from falling flak in ww2 I've been reading about it! Google it

  • @hawnyfox3411

    @hawnyfox3411

    6 ай бұрын

    @@cwj9202 = He's just too thick to realise it !!!!!

  • @dannywlm63
    @dannywlm637 ай бұрын

    ❤ RAF Bomber Command

  • @botsharing1702
    @botsharing17025 ай бұрын

    There are no crimes in war. The only crime is losing.

  • @thesceptic1018
    @thesceptic10184 ай бұрын

    In war, worse and worse behaviour becomes normalised as opponents match each other’s atrocities

  • @kindnessfirst9670
    @kindnessfirst96705 күн бұрын

    In 3 days of German aerial bombing of Stalingrad in August 1942 40,000- 70,000 civilians died. This rarely even gets mentioned because it pales given that 1- 3 million people died (on all sides) in the Battle of Stalingrad.

  • @givenfirstnamefamilyfirstn3935
    @givenfirstnamefamilyfirstn39357 ай бұрын

    There is something difficult about Mr Robinson’s voice, it isn’t quite pleasant. The bombastic American chap seems to have faded away.

  • @EllieMaes-Grandad

    @EllieMaes-Grandad

    7 ай бұрын

    Sneeringly supercilious maybe?

  • @daleburrell6273

    @daleburrell6273

    7 ай бұрын

    ...well, "if ya don't LIKE IT- then ya don't have to EAT IT!!!"

  • @davidlauder-qi5zv

    @davidlauder-qi5zv

    5 ай бұрын

    ​​@@EllieMaes-GrandadAnd with an apparent callous disregard for the victims of German bombing. Were the civilians of Guernica, Warsaw, Rotterdam, London, Coventry, Liverpool, Birmingham, Manchester, Portsmouth, Plymouth, Clydeside, Swansea. Cardiff, etc., to blame for their own fates? And for the record, firestorms happened in London, Coventry, Clydeside. etc. as well. Also, let's not pretend that the Germans (as some claim) only bombed military targets. That was not so. Ever heard of the Baedeker air raids? Look them up.

  • @EllieMaes-Grandad

    @EllieMaes-Grandad

    5 ай бұрын

    Seems I know more than you . . . @@davidlauder-qi5zv

  • @davidlauder-qi5zv

    @davidlauder-qi5zv

    5 ай бұрын

    @@EllieMaes-Grandad Care to explain?

  • @carrickrichards2457
    @carrickrichards24577 ай бұрын

    The Firestorms tactic was not Harris', but Portal's concept. It happened 3 times in WW2: Hamburg (August, 1943: ~40,000 dead), Dresden (February, 1945: ~25,000 dead) and Tokyo (March 1945: ~100,000 dead). Compare those numbers to any other city. Harris was the only C-in-C not enobled after the war, as the morality of this strategy was well recognised as problematic, even as 'Total War' was accepted: Anything was justified if it sped the end to the war.

  • @lancelot1953

    @lancelot1953

    7 ай бұрын

    Not really, firestorms happen many, many more times, they were not as "scientific" and extended as later in the war. Starting with Nazi's attack on Poland (Wieluń, Wapol, ...), then Rotterdam, ..., and Coventry... The Germans set the ground work and started the indiscriminate bombing of civilian populations (do not forget Guernica leveled by the Condor Legion during the Spanish war, a practice for WW II Luftwaffe bombing campaign). Of course, during that time, the extermination taking place in concentration camps, in China/Manchuria, POW camps under Axis powers was going very "well". My uncle, a Naval Officer, was tortured and eventually killed after one year of mistreatment building a camp by the "peace-loving Japanese people, in the suburb of Tokyo in 1945. Many younger generation members sadly enough like to criticize the Veterans (from any warring country) because the Allies "won" the war, remembering only the cities you mentioned and forgetting the indiscriminate atrocities that the Axis powers committed on civilians. Let's not forget, Ciao, L (Veteran)

  • @royroach5328

    @royroach5328

    7 ай бұрын

    Your numbers are way off.

  • @daleburrell6273

    @daleburrell6273

    6 ай бұрын

    @@royroach5328 ...SUPPOSE YOU ENLIGHTEN US-(?)

  • @MarktheMole

    @MarktheMole

    6 ай бұрын

    Dresden was only 10,500 - ie less than the 17,800 Russia suffered and lost for every single day of the war.

  • @easterworshipper730

    @easterworshipper730

    5 ай бұрын

    Strategic bombing happened several Times during the war.

  • @michelliew9652
    @michelliew96527 ай бұрын

    That nutsacker is a weird dude

  • @damonmelendez856

    @damonmelendez856

    6 ай бұрын

    (Nutsacker) is angry af

  • @scoutandastir
    @scoutandastir7 ай бұрын

    ...but the hamburgler lives on!

  • @OKFrax-ys2op
    @OKFrax-ys2op4 ай бұрын

    How many cities,towns, jungles, and anything that moved were destroyed since WW2. Never learning about the past is to destroy the present. That’s my quote today 🤔

  • @Astrid-jt8cd
    @Astrid-jt8cd17 күн бұрын

    Yes

  • @jatzbethstappen9814
    @jatzbethstappen98148 ай бұрын

    Love this series! Tony Robinson makes it. Thanks!

  • @jimmypage201
    @jimmypage2015 ай бұрын

    The history improved that the allies were fight the wrong enemy.

  • @scottkrater2131

    @scottkrater2131

    4 ай бұрын

    And you couldn't even say that right.

  • @user-jx7dg7ci9g

    @user-jx7dg7ci9g

    4 ай бұрын

    So what ! You got his meaning ! Patton," we fought the wrong people ! "

  • @scottkrater2131

    @scottkrater2131

    4 ай бұрын

    @@user-jx7dg7ci9g Sympathizer says what?

  • @landsea7332

    @landsea7332

    3 ай бұрын

    @@user-jx7dg7ci9g During the Yalta Conference in Feb 1945 , there were 6.8 million Soviet solders in Eastern Europe , Poland and 80 km from Berlin . Soon after Yalta , Stalin reneged on his agreement to let Poland have free elections . Churchill was warning FDR , and later Truman , that Stalin couldn't be trusted . However , the American's needed Stalin's commitment to attack the JIA and help end the war with Japan . In May 1945 , Churchill asked his military staff to examine if the Soviet Army could be pushed out of Poland . They came back and said it would lead to total war . Operation Unthinkable was declassified in 1998 . .

  • @ruscador1
    @ruscador121 күн бұрын

    so interesting to watch they got back what we recieved

  • @kindnessfirst9670
    @kindnessfirst96705 күн бұрын

    By "deadly accuracy" at 26:30 in the video he means the planes actually found the city.

  • @marvwatkins7029
    @marvwatkins70296 ай бұрын

    A great city. A phoenix reborn.

  • @damonmelendez856

    @damonmelendez856

    6 ай бұрын

    Hamburg is a bit sterile nowadays I’ve found, no?

  • @user-se2xm5yp6u
    @user-se2xm5yp6u4 ай бұрын

    Never forget London

  • @lindamac7465
    @lindamac74658 ай бұрын

    Excellent

  • @MarkVickers-xq9si
    @MarkVickers-xq9si4 ай бұрын

    The subsonic, aging , B - 52 , with non - nuclear weapons, gives me a chill . During WW2 , the slow Lancaster was the doomsday weapon . Total war , total Hate . It's all sickening .

  • @ArturoRodriguez-xh3vk
    @ArturoRodriguez-xh3vk2 ай бұрын

    My dad fought against the Japanese,he was three major incursions. He brought back a sword a Japanese soldier he killed.we have it displayed on the wall framed.

  • @Astrid-jt8cd

    @Astrid-jt8cd

    Ай бұрын

    You are morbid

  • @dougking4377
    @dougking43777 ай бұрын

    and how many London citizens were targeted/killed by Germany?

  • @adammitchell3462

    @adammitchell3462

    7 ай бұрын

    Not the point. The point is to win a war,not keep things proportional.

  • @adammitchell3462

    @adammitchell3462

    7 ай бұрын

    It's terrible really though, all these poor people who were just escaping the war....I hope this never happens again

  • @milanbrakus8704

    @milanbrakus8704

    7 ай бұрын

    10 puta više je engleska bombardovala nemačku a Drezden je ratni zločin bez premca.

  • @watkinsrory

    @watkinsrory

    7 ай бұрын

    ​@@milanbrakus8704A crime by todays standards yes but it was not back then.

  • @milanbrakus8704

    @milanbrakus8704

    7 ай бұрын

    @@watkinsrory Za Englesku ništa nije zločin šta ona radi a lista kroz istoriju je dugačka jednom će morati da se plati.

  • @ArturoRodriguez-xh3vk
    @ArturoRodriguez-xh3vk2 ай бұрын

    He's name is P.F.C Felix Rodriguez.R.I.P. Dad.

  • @bold58
    @bold587 ай бұрын

    Regardless of who did what, just striking at civilians is absolutely wrong !! Weather it be the initial German bombing of Poland or the revenge of the British bombing of Hamburg . Both sides needed to focus on military airfields and bases not on helpless people .

  • @hiloviking

    @hiloviking

    5 ай бұрын

    In the middle of a war like WW II it was all about hitting the other country, didn’t matter whether civilians or military. While military and industry were the target just hitting a city was often done just to punish the enemy. After all Germany was bombing London too so revenge was a motivation.

  • @HughBond-kx7ly
    @HughBond-kx7ly3 ай бұрын

    I don't understand why RAF Bomber command didn't adopt The Luftwaffes Knickerbein radio beam bombing aid which was very succesful in locating British cities at night in any weather. They certainly knew how it worked by 1941 and should have been adopted soon after.

  • @Luke_Sandy_High_Ground

    @Luke_Sandy_High_Ground

    3 ай бұрын

    The RAF had Gee

  • @richardvernon317

    @richardvernon317

    2 ай бұрын

    The RAF had much better navigation aids than the Germans by 1943. Gee, G-H, Oboe and H2S.

  • @cuthbertjolly4859
    @cuthbertjolly48595 ай бұрын

    War crimes? Let this sink in: All the warring nations in world war 2 dropped a total of 4 million tons of bombs. The United States dropped 8 million tons of bombs in Indochina between 1962 and 1973 during the Vietnam war.

  • @philipinchina
    @philipinchina3 күн бұрын

    Sew the wind, reap the whirlwind.

  • @intercommerce
    @intercommerceАй бұрын

    Its really too bad this could not have been broadcast to Germany in 1939, asking their leaders & public "Is this what you want to see happen to your precious cities?"

  • @albertmarnell9976
    @albertmarnell99766 ай бұрын

    My mother and her parents had been in the U.S. since right after WW l. She was born in Hamburg. Her relatives were still in Hamburg. My grandfather became a U.S. citizen during the war. He went back to Hamburg as soon as possible. He had many relatives there. The worst of the bombings of people burning alive was confiscated by the British so that the world would not see what the Americans and British had done. That is why you see only mostly buildings and not the horrors of the dead civilians. The present death toll is a lie. It is so easy for the victors to lie about death tolls. One would have to be an idiot to believe it. If the injured die in a week, they are still considered injured. The allies have no shortage of bodies to show of their side, but it is rare that you see the amount of horrific deaths of German civilians.

  • @anthonycaruso8443

    @anthonycaruso8443

    6 ай бұрын

    Stop invading countries.

  • @damonmelendez856

    @damonmelendez856

    6 ай бұрын

    Well stated

  • @albertmarnell9976

    @albertmarnell9976

    6 ай бұрын

    Thank You! It is true! @@damonmelendez856

  • @HikerBikerMoter

    @HikerBikerMoter

    5 ай бұрын

    you are correct.. if nazy Germany were the victors you won't see accurate death tolls and zero reports on dead in the concentration camps

  • @mynamedoesntmatter8652

    @mynamedoesntmatter8652

    5 ай бұрын

    It also looked the same from the side of the Brits when Germany bombed England’s cities. It didn’t help to elide the fine points regardless of where the bombs were dropped, and by whom. It’s always the same, the senseless struggle and the oneupmanship; the scorched earth heaving its death count again and again.

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