How was the German Army so Successful at the Start of WWII Against Vastly Superior Numbers?

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  • @TodayIFoundOut
    @TodayIFoundOut10 ай бұрын

    Special thanks to our sponsor War Thunder for helping us be able to make such lengthy deep dive videos like this one. Play War Thunder for FREE on PC, PS®5 and Xbox Series X|S: playwt.link/tifo2023 . Follow the link to download the game and not only support this channel and videos like this, but get a massive free bonus pack including vehicles, boosters and more!

  • @everypitchcounts4875

    @everypitchcounts4875

    10 ай бұрын

    Can we get a video about George Beurling the Falcon of Malta or Laurel Canyon Lookout Mountain Airforce Station

  • @jasonpenn5476

    @jasonpenn5476

    10 ай бұрын

    What a simple question to answer... The reason that Germany was so successful early in the war was due to superior tactics in use at the time combined with the fact that nobody was really ready for another war.

  • @lizgreer6888

    @lizgreer6888

    10 ай бұрын

    My Dad was a combat veteran. War video games were absolutely banned from the house growing up and we were not to play them at other people's houses. He said "I lived a war. It was not a game and it should never be a game. It was awful, terrifying and real people died." I guess if you've never had to witness ptsd in a combat veteran, war would be a game...

  • @jasonpenn5476

    @jasonpenn5476

    10 ай бұрын

    @@lizgreer6888 To each their own.... I have served in multiple combat deployments and have seen shit that I wouldn't want anyone else to see, let alone my kids, but I am smart enough to understand that a video game is not real life and mature enough to teach my kids the difference between real life and fantasy. After all, we have Grand theft Auto available, but you don't see a massive amount of car jackings despite how popular the game is. Does anyone ever confuse Donkey Kong for being real?

  • @cameronklein7980

    @cameronklein7980

    10 ай бұрын

    What rank are you at on WT Simon?

  • @despot666
    @despot66610 ай бұрын

    The financial aspect of all this is fascinating and very rarely spoken of. Going from crippling debt and ridiculously high inflation to arming, training, feeding, and clothing a military force strong enough to conquer Europe in so short a time is quite the financial feat.

  • @adriansmith7473

    @adriansmith7473

    10 ай бұрын

    They should have attacked once instead of twice they might have actually conquered Europe

  • @ltmund

    @ltmund

    10 ай бұрын

    Not when you can repay that debt by stealing the wealth of your neighbours, have an oppressed population, and an evil, almost religions, ideology.

  • @colonel.h.stinkmeaner

    @colonel.h.stinkmeaner

    10 ай бұрын

    This is how you most easily take the Domination victory on Deity in Civ VI

  • @TheStephaneAdam

    @TheStephaneAdam

    10 ай бұрын

    At the cost of sustainability though. Germany attacked when it did in large part because it's financial system would have crumbed otherwise, and during the War it sustained itself by draining conquered territories of all wealth. Economic growth was actually slower than in neighboring countries and driven by state spending, Nazi German was doomed to burn itself out sooner than later.

  • @davidcomtedeherstal

    @davidcomtedeherstal

    10 ай бұрын

    The bargain of money includes the Indemnities from The Great War.

  • @menwithven8114
    @menwithven811410 ай бұрын

    Fun fact that is always overlooked about the early dominant German Army. They took over 500 thousand HORSES into Poland. Most people think of just panzers but early on they had an enormous amount of troops on horses!!!

  • @terryarmbruster9719

    @terryarmbruster9719

    10 ай бұрын

    Actually most of those horses were pack

  • @kb4903

    @kb4903

    10 ай бұрын

    Yeah for supplies not fighting.

  • @NKA23

    @NKA23

    10 ай бұрын

    @@kb4903 Nah, there where also many "troop transports" that were large open coach wagons.

  • @Blox117

    @Blox117

    10 ай бұрын

    because germany was just leaving an economic stagnation and politically motivated dissolution of the former german military. they had to start over from scratch

  • @daviddwyer6824

    @daviddwyer6824

    10 ай бұрын

    The Fat Electrician covers this in his video about the last war chief.

  • @skykid
    @skykid10 ай бұрын

    One other less talked about advantage they had was the use of radio for interunit communication to coordinate formation movement and tactics. Radio was obviously something every side had but Germany used it extensively on a micro scale. Throughout history it can be said that one of the biggest reasons armies underperformed was lack of coordination and cohesion owing to bad communication😊

  • @sir_dreadlord_on_blitz7042

    @sir_dreadlord_on_blitz7042

    10 ай бұрын

    Absolutely. This can be Seen best in the eastern Front where Soviet T34 and KV1's were driving around aimlessly while the much inferior Panzer 3 and 4 were outmanouvering them because they can coordinate themselves with their 2 way Radios. Soviet Tanks Had No Radio, the comand Tank maybe Had a Radio Receiver, to get Orders from the top. Funny how this rigid comand structure of the russians can still be Seen in Ukraine today

  • @gw7624

    @gw7624

    9 ай бұрын

    There was nothing groundbreaking about this, but one of the reasons the French performed so poorly was that they hadn't updated their field comms since WW1.

  • @chartreux1532

    @chartreux1532

    7 ай бұрын

    Grandson of a Waffen-SS Soldier and SS-Hauptsturmführer in rank here. All my other relatives were also Waffen-SS Veterans, some volunteers and some drafted in 1943 when the Waffen SS ran out of Soldiers. Anyway: The feats and accomplishments of ANY WW2 Soldiers of any Nation and any Group are all to be seen as factual without using it to claim "they were the best of WW2". I say that mainly because my paternal Grandfather who is STILL alive at the age of 105 was a SS-Hauptsturmführer of the 1st Waffen-SS Division "LAH" throughout WW2 and while growing up (being born in the early 80s) i got to meet MANY American, British, Australian, French and even Russian WW2 Vets who came over in Summer to have a BBQ with my Grandfather and the one thing that stood out to me was that unlike "Online WW2 Specialist Commentators" the actual WW2 Vets who were former Enemies respected eachother in a mature way. There was no "OMG youre so wrong! The Blabla Unit of the Blabla were ACKSHUALLY the best" and other nonsense like you see in this Thread

  • @ChrisJensen-se9rj

    @ChrisJensen-se9rj

    5 ай бұрын

    The Soviets had severe shortages of radios such that for a platoon of six tanks, only one out of the six was radio equipped, meaning that the other five tanks had to play follow the leader and essentially fight whatever engagement as individuals rather than as a team. This explains why Soviet tank losses in the first 12 months of " Barbarossa" were so severe. During the war entire they lost over 35000 T34 series vehicles to all causes, not helped by terrible staff work, indifferent logistics and supply, coupled with obsolete design, slapdash production values and profound lack of spare parts production, focussed as they were on turning out whole units . During 1941, they rarely controlled the field at the conclusion of an engagement, making recovery of disabled and abandoned vehicles very problematic.

  • @R2debo_
    @R2debo_10 ай бұрын

    My dad fought in WW2 with the 147th combat engineers. He often spoke highly of the german's intelligence & technology.

  • @Noise-Bomb

    @Noise-Bomb

    10 ай бұрын

    @@imnotyourfriendbuddy1883 Don't be disrespectful to my great-grandpa he suffered in the gulag after the war.

  • @jrmckim

    @jrmckim

    10 ай бұрын

    ​@imnotyourfriendbuddy1883 wow really disrespectful... even to mordern Germans...

  • @imnotyourfriendbuddy1883

    @imnotyourfriendbuddy1883

    10 ай бұрын

    @@Noise-Bomb did he kill any Ivans?

  • @zeitgeistx5239

    @zeitgeistx5239

    10 ай бұрын

    Weaaaboo detected. German intelligence was famously so good that it failed to detect multiple Soviet armies and thought it was several million men smaller and predicted that the USSR would collapse after encircling its army.

  • @usmcson3

    @usmcson3

    10 ай бұрын

    As bad as there morals were, they had far superior technology, tactics, and intelligence. It was a small country absolutely smashing basically the whole world. Bad, but really impressive.

  • @hafenbraut
    @hafenbraut10 ай бұрын

    I think one often overlooked or underestimated factor of the early superiority of the german forces was a lack of "leftovers", so to speak. The entire military had to be rebuilt basically from the ground up - no outdated services (like a cavallery with ages of tradition and influential staff) still existed and therefore couldn't seriously hamper the introduction of modern tactics and weapons for fear of loosing their time-honored status (and with it, budget). Same goes for kit, from simple handguns all the way to tanks and airplanes. There was simply no huge stock of "will do"-weaponry from the last big war that was kept in use due to better successors being deemed too expensive. The german army had the challenge to produce nearly every single bit of kit completely anew, which in return yielded the benefit of having an up-to-date inventory across the board. This was surely no war-winning advantage on it's own, but I believe it played a noteworthy role in the bigger picture.

  • @thebeefyjunior

    @thebeefyjunior

    10 ай бұрын

    i never considered this, very well thought out comment. although germany was far less hampered by world war 1 and the old breed as say a nation like france, they still had problems with some modernization. for example, hitler himself directly turned down the mass production and reissuing of stg-44’s (not what they were called at the time) because he believed they weren’t sufficient. it got to the point that the army working on them had to rename them to the mp43/44 to sneak them through as they were disguised as “just another submachine gun”

  • @Vandelberger

    @Vandelberger

    10 ай бұрын

    You could say the same about the US. General Marshal basically fired all the old farts well into 1940.

  • @feldgeist2637

    @feldgeist2637

    10 ай бұрын

    the Panzer I II and even III which made up pretty much the whole early Panzerwaffe I would call leftovers from an already bygone era quite unsuitable for the tasks assigned to them right from the beginning.......at least in shallow theory.....

  • @hafenbraut

    @hafenbraut

    10 ай бұрын

    @@feldgeist2637 Yes, at least the Pz.II was - on paper - totally inadequate as a frontline tank by 1939. However, it was already designed to carry a radio set, unlike most of the other nations models. That's what made it punch way above it's weight class, as it fit seemlessly in the modern doctrine of combined arms warfare. Looking solely at armor/armament numbers, the french should have wiped the floor with those tincans, which still made up a huge portion of the german forces during the invasion of france.

  • @hafenbraut

    @hafenbraut

    10 ай бұрын

    @@thebeefyjunior There was quite a bit of delay due to incorrect assumptions and personal taste, although some of that came rather later in the war. Not only did Hitler misunderstand the Stg44, the military also put little interest in jet engines. They believed by the time those were ready, the war would already be over, and since the 109 had performed so well in the first campaigns, they thought any fancy new technology would be a waste of effort. By the time they realized their mistake, it was again Hitler who made their lives harder by demanding the 262 to become a bomber, not a fighter. However, in the early phase of WWII that was not such a big factor. I'd say the neglectance of heavy bombers was the first mistake to really make a difference, starting with the battle of britain.

  • @TimRrstrm
    @TimRrstrm10 ай бұрын

    Saying that Denmark capitulated in a day is really rather generous; we were overrun by the Germans in less than two hours, mostly due to it being a surprise attack on a neutral nation that only partially had an expectation of any sort of aggression until a few minutes until the actual occupation occurred.

  • @logangrimnar3800

    @logangrimnar3800

    10 ай бұрын

    Dutch: "What are you guys doing here?" German: "Occupying" Dutch: "Occupying what?" German: "You. We invaded." Dutch: "Invaded? No, you didn't. I didn't hear about that." German: "Well we did, that's why I'm here." Dutch: "Pretty sure that's illegal. Hold on, I'm going to go check."

  • @noobster4779

    @noobster4779

    10 ай бұрын

    Even if Denmark had mobilised before, they had 0 chance The germans literally drove into Copenhagens harbour with ships and captured it in minutes. If Denmark doesnt have naval superiority it is literally undefendable against Germany. I mean the only danish "victory" during the 6 hours conflict was the danish royal guard fighting of a german attempt to capture the royal palace in copenhagen (they already had captured everything else in the city).

  • @rauctt

    @rauctt

    10 ай бұрын

    ​@@noobster4779to

  • @jamesregiste960

    @jamesregiste960

    10 ай бұрын

    Denmark was the only European country that didn't collaborate with the Nazis, for instance not one jew was handed to Nazis by Denmark. By contrast Neville Chamberlain,was a secret Nazi, so was Elizabeth 11!

  • @narfle

    @narfle

    10 ай бұрын

    @@noobster4779 There were actually machinegun nests in Jylland (or "jutland" as the english likes to call it), who simply never got the news that we had surrendered, so they just sat out there for basically the entire day and night, dumping ammo. Since Hitler had such a massive fetish for Denmark, however, the invasion was to be "mild", just like the occupation also was, and these danish variants of redneck farmers probably had a field day running the machineguns. I would also like to add that it was not anything to do with the navy why we surrendered virtually immediately. I mean, germany is the only land border we have. They could more or less just drive. The remaining island-hopping needed.. well, lets just say that our islands are located quite close to each other : P No, the main killing blow was that when they invaded, they flew bombers over many of our culturally cherished buildings and threatened to bomb our cultural heritage into the ground. That is when the leadership decided that since we could never actually WIN against them, we might as well keep as much as possible whilst losing. Its also worth adding that the occupation of denmark was a nazi experiment in a softer touch. We took full advantage of that, smiling to their faces, but with knives as soon as the back was turned. Sabotage became the national past-time and we gladly ruined our train network, so the nazis could not use it. It was a very collective effort and the amount of nazi collaborators was very low, particularly if you compare to Norway, which is not the most unreasonable comparison. It was also by this deception that Denmark obtained a proud record in a tragic discipline. We exported 99%+ of our jews before the nazis could get their hands on them. Again, this was a collective effort that virtually the entire nation was behind. There is a bench in a park somewhere in Israel that they put up as a thank you! The "thx for saving almost all the danish jews, we will remember your effort with a bench and then start calling you antisemitic later, when you complain about how we treat the palestinians". It is a very nice bench. I think the israeli stopped cleaning it though.

  • @gabrielseth5142
    @gabrielseth51427 ай бұрын

    I think the best answer as to WHY the Axis powers and specifically the German military performed so well in WWII is also the most simple answer: they were the ones who started it. They started the war and for years they were preparing for THEIR war, while the Allies, although not caught by surprise or were wildly unprepared, were still unprepared, especially for what was to come.

  • @ChrisEdling

    @ChrisEdling

    3 ай бұрын

    No, that's the public school narrative. It was much more complicated then that

  • @aerldonathan4381
    @aerldonathan43813 ай бұрын

    Heinz Guderian took that straight from Percy Hobarts playbook(he literally had copies of all his strategies and SOPs) and the fact that he wasn't even mentioned is unfortunate.

  • @letsdothis9063

    @letsdothis9063

    3 ай бұрын

    To be fair, Guderian read everything tank-related that he could get his hands on. He took the best ideas from everything that he learned.

  • @mswayner65

    @mswayner65

    24 күн бұрын

    So I take it you watch The Fat Electrician's videos too?

  • @steveclapper5424
    @steveclapper542410 ай бұрын

    Not since Napoleon has the world seen this level of tactical dominance.

  • @vereenigdeoostindischecomp9932

    @vereenigdeoostindischecomp9932

    10 ай бұрын

    Owh boy i am sorry but nato out performs it now again by a lot

  • @drmartin5062

    @drmartin5062

    10 ай бұрын

    NATO could never operate on that level. Lol, they speak 17 different languages, use different gear mostly, and have never done full scale exercises. Please tell me where that opinion comes from?

  • @vereenigdeoostindischecomp9932

    @vereenigdeoostindischecomp9932

    10 ай бұрын

    @@drmartin5062 this is just too retarded to respond, you're comparing an 1800s general who conquered a bunch of small countries to the most powerful defensive organisation at this current time, NATO has operated on a greater scale to napoleon, i don't think napolean could have invaded iraq and occupy it for 8 years

  • @RedWinter21

    @RedWinter21

    10 ай бұрын

    ​​​@@drmartin5062I've found that when people mention nato and it's military might on the net (especially) they really mean the US. 😂

  • @Amerigmatic-ud7ty

    @Amerigmatic-ud7ty

    10 ай бұрын

    @@vereenigdeoostindischecomp9932NATO can’t even win a proxy war.

  • @Makeyourselfbig
    @Makeyourselfbig10 ай бұрын

    For the same reason the Japanese army was. They were working to a plan while their opposition was trying to figure out what that plan was and how to react to it. Nations that start wars tend to have the initial success. But once attrition sets in it's usually the side with the greater resources who eventually wins. Hence the allies won because they just had more of everything. Bigger armies, bigger navies, bigger air force and greater material resources to create more should they need them. Don't count the Italians. They were just hopeless. Even the Germans had no time for them.

  • @TomFynn

    @TomFynn

    10 ай бұрын

    Another advantage for the Japanese was that the troops they faced were little more than police forces to quell local uprisings. Who had probably enjoyed the tropical climes a bit too long. When suddenly a determined, battle-hardened foe appears, bravery can only do so much, when quick reaction honed by constant practice is non-existent.

  • @777SNYM

    @777SNYM

    9 ай бұрын

    You two don't seem to know that the only reason Americans used nukes was because the Japanese would have cost millions of American lives if there was an invasion. You speak as if you've never heard of Pearl Harbor.

  • @possumpatrol45
    @possumpatrol4510 ай бұрын

    It wasn't the tactics, it was the drip.

  • @blockade4961

    @blockade4961

    10 ай бұрын

    Absolutely, the drip was unbelievable

  • @letsdothis9063

    @letsdothis9063

    3 ай бұрын

    Absolutely

  • @user-en1mj8uc5f

    @user-en1mj8uc5f

    Ай бұрын

    Germans always had the best style whether they were winning or not

  • @jrmckim
    @jrmckim10 ай бұрын

    Im proud of both sets of my great grandparents. They saw what was happening and decided to leave in the early 30s. It would take years for them to leave but they resettled in the US by 1943. My grandfather's parents had a hard time since their oldest son was in the Hitler youth. Practically kept him drugged or drunk until they were on the ship to the US 😅 they first lived in Florida then San Antonio. Then finally settling in New Orleans. My great grandmother was something else though.. she dipped powered tobacco and carried a double barrel shotgun all while wearing a dress and apron. My grandfather said one of his first memories of his mom was her fishing on the banks of a river and shooting a snake 👀

  • @jeffduncan9140

    @jeffduncan9140

    10 ай бұрын

    Bruton's Sweet Snuff? Little orange can, maybe? My grandmother always had hers.

  • @peterplotts1238

    @peterplotts1238

    10 ай бұрын

    @@jeffduncan9140 Likewise. Their like is not in the world today, and we are poorer for it.

  • @bboi1489

    @bboi1489

    10 ай бұрын

    Lmao. Southern people are no joke. The first time I heard a gun go off, I was visiting the family plot in Missisipi when a bass fish started flopping in the distance of the nearby lake. I pointed it out, and my uncle, who's like 50, went "Wait, hold on a minute" and let fucking loose on it's general direction, with 11 year old me right next to him, hardly able to hear now. I'm proud to be an American.

  • @sir_dreadlord_on_blitz7042

    @sir_dreadlord_on_blitz7042

    10 ай бұрын

    People from this time Period are Something else

  • @peterplotts1238

    @peterplotts1238

    10 ай бұрын

    @@sir_dreadlord_on_blitz7042 What will they say about the people of our time?

  • @bcn1gh7h4wk
    @bcn1gh7h4wk8 ай бұрын

    there was a game (actually, *several* games) back in the late '90s for Sega consoles and PC, about fighting the battles of WW2 as either Germany or Britain, throughout the whole campaign. some were simplified as "move, attack, capture", and some were more complex with transfers of troops back and forth, pre-planning of flights and landings depending on weather, and projections for funding and taxes to make up for repairs and replacements. most of them boiled down to "It's all fun and games until you need to wait for a supply truck to reload." that was basically it.... you were good for the first 5 to 10 turns, and if you didn't win by then, you had to put actual planning to effect, bringing up reserves, supplies, upgrades and fortifications. and, it was all turn-based! you HAD to remember to move the supply forward *EVERY turn!* it wouldn't be until the mid 2000's with the advent of real time strategy, that you could manage the load of maneuvering and planning all at once. and even then, it took SERIOUS fighting to outmaneuver and outsmart your opponent, because armies would usually be capped, and whatever total of assets you could field, could be negated by a much smaller force if played correctly. so, you had to balance might, price and versatility.

  • @peterplotts1238
    @peterplotts123810 ай бұрын

    That bit about the disproportionately high casualties inflicted on adversaries was exactly right, as well as the superior training of German soldiers. They were the best soldiers in the world then, though sadly, in the service of a criminal regime.

  • @thehappymarmot

    @thehappymarmot

    10 ай бұрын

    I think the NZ Māori battalion or the ghurkhas might disagree. The Rats of Tobruk took everything Rommel had and held firm. The marines on Guadalcanal had to be some of the toughest soldiers in history. I believe the Germans had a much better understanding of modern warfare much earlier than anyone else. Once the Allies adapted to the new tactics Germany were done

  • @peterplotts1238

    @peterplotts1238

    10 ай бұрын

    @@thehappymarmot Agreed. It wasn't meant to diminish Allied forces, especially the British, including ANZAC forces. They were terrific soldiers and respected by their foes.

  • @thehappymarmot

    @thehappymarmot

    10 ай бұрын

    @@peterplotts1238 I saw no slight to anyone just an opinion. I just thought I would add my own take on this!

  • @peterplotts1238

    @peterplotts1238

    10 ай бұрын

    @@thehappymarmot If I knew how to get to the emojis, I would send you the "thumbs up," but you have the idea. I saw a really negative, i.e., defamatory, video and comment directed at my country (America) on another channel. I returned fire, and my brain had yet to wholly transition to this more peaceful and respectful forum.

  • @thehappymarmot

    @thehappymarmot

    10 ай бұрын

    @@peterplotts1238 well greetings from Australia and have a great day mate!

  • @ChrisJensen-se9rj
    @ChrisJensen-se9rj5 ай бұрын

    When your operational objectives revolve around busting communication and lines of retreat combined with encircling, you can turn a body of troops into an armed rabble whose only recourse is to fight to the end or surrender

  • @notyourbusiness1980
    @notyourbusiness198010 ай бұрын

    They were highly trained professionals with advanced tactics. The Auftragstaktik was groundbreaking and is adapted till today

  • @saltyyankee5149
    @saltyyankee514910 ай бұрын

    I'm surprised how little light is given to the German use of artillery in support of movement attacks. What struck me in Gudarian's papers was his innovation of turning artillery fire from an indirect fire weapon for long distance work into a direct fire weapon to tear through opposing armor and formation

  • @kb4903

    @kb4903

    10 ай бұрын

    Like the 88s?

  • @saltyyankee5149

    @saltyyankee5149

    10 ай бұрын

    @@kb4903 I was pulling from deep memory of study in the 90's, but that sounds familiar

  • @Vandelberger

    @Vandelberger

    10 ай бұрын

    Ah yes, Guderian “I invented it all,” lol. Sorry, but yes that was a tactic used even back in WW1 to stop the new British Mk1 and French tanks. Try and look last end of war German Nazi general propaganda that the west spread in the Cold War. Remember that these guys wanted to 1. Cover their ass 2. Show how they could be useful to NATO and claim it was all Hitlers fault they lose.

  • @cookingonthecheapcheap6921

    @cookingonthecheapcheap6921

    10 ай бұрын

    Guderian's "innovation" to use close support artillery was developed from British tank doctrine in the first world war. He had a bigger stake in the idea of having dedicated self propelled assault guns, the STUG series of fighting vehicles were the fruit of this endeavour, to support infantry movement in attack and defence. The 88s were more "forced" into the role when the Germans met French heavy tanks and as a means to break hard points in defensive belts. The door knocker was no use in this role. I recommend Dr Robert Citino's book about the development of bewegungskrieg between the wars. Blitzkrieg was a term coined by the English press.

  • @MaFo82

    @MaFo82

    10 ай бұрын

    @@kb4903 The use of the 88mm AA-gun for anti-tank duty was not a genius move but something born out of desperation after having witnessed the complete ineffectiveness of their AT-guns against the Soviet T-34:s.

  • @Graceland2776
    @Graceland277610 ай бұрын

    I love that there’s always new content on at least one of Simons channels… like I always have something to procrastinate on.

  • @tietosanakirja
    @tietosanakirja2 ай бұрын

    A curiosity about the covert submarine op was that the Dutch company further subcontracted building early prototypes for the Type VII U-boats to a Finnish shioyard _Ab Crichton-Vulkan Oy._ Four boats were built and tested in the baltic. As a war seemed inevitable, Finland bought the prototypes for themselves to create a submarine fleet for themselves. The subs served with some success over the war, and all survived the war. After the war, the Soviet Union banned Finland from having a submarine fleet, so all but one sub were scrapped in 1950s. The remaining sub was put on display at a coastal fort Suomen Linna on an island of the coast of Helsinki. The sub is now a museum attraction and open to the public.

  • @MrTryAnotherOne
    @MrTryAnotherOne10 ай бұрын

    Recommendable literature on this topic: "Fighting Power: German and US Army performance, 1939-1945" by Martin van Creveld

  • @peterplotts1238
    @peterplotts12389 ай бұрын

    This was exceptionally well-written and generally well-done.

  • @bobbyx5373
    @bobbyx537310 ай бұрын

    In the Adam Tooze book “The Wages of Destruction” he posits blitzkrieg was necessary because of the Germans relative lack of resources, especially fuel. If the enemy had been able to hold out then they would have been in trouble. Also look to the Eastern Front where supply lines became stretched causing the initial speedy impetus to slow, allowing the Soviets to regroup.

  • @noobster4779

    @noobster4779

    10 ай бұрын

    The germans also knew about that themself. The guy in charge of making a planning study in Winter 1940/41 about a possible invasion of the soviet union under economic consideration, General THomas, basically came to the conclussion that it was a bad idead because the lack of fuel was so huge and the germans would need to capture the oil production within the first 3 to 6 months. One massive aspect often forgotten is that fuel was not only needed for the german military but for the agriculture production in the occupied area of the soviet union. And germany needed the soviet food to keep its population (and half of europe) somewhat feed throughout the war. This then resulted in the criminal strategy of "lets just take the food and starve soviet civilians in all areas that dont produce enough food locally. Oh and prisoners of war? Lets starve them so we save the food for germans. Fuel and food were the two most important aspects and problems of germany during WW2. They "solved" one of the problems by literally starving millions all over europe to death.

  • @sulate1

    @sulate1

    10 ай бұрын

    @@noobster4779 Absolutely. The German Quartermaster General (Wagner?) predicted that Barbarossa would not be able to push, and hold, territory further than Smolensk. Also, German trains supplying the armies in the Soviet Union were using more capacity carrying fodder and veterinary supplies than men, human food and ammunition.

  • @Bahamut3525

    @Bahamut3525

    8 ай бұрын

    German fast paced strategy existed since kingdom of Prussia. Due to nature of Prussia surrounding enemies and need to beat them fast.

  • @waltertomashefsky2682
    @waltertomashefsky268210 ай бұрын

    Why am I seeing Arte Johnson on Laugh-In in a German helmet saying "verrry interesting - but schneaky?

  • @jimbryce6982
    @jimbryce698210 ай бұрын

    Wow! This presentation pulled so much together so quickly. Excellent insights. It would be helpful to have the videos referenced in the last couple of minutes assembled together at the end. Perhaps they are, but I've not seen them yet. Training, training, training. So much to learn, so little time.

  • @cesarvidelac
    @cesarvidelac10 ай бұрын

    Nobody talks about the Prussian training model. It was successfully exported to numerous countries before the end of WWI.

  • @nathanlandry1016
    @nathanlandry101610 ай бұрын

    Always love your world war content. Perhaps we can delve into WWI a bit more here and there. Like how the British executed many of their own men suffering from shell shock. Or how acoustic triangulation was used to hit artillery that was kilometers away

  • @NahBroUK
    @NahBroUK10 ай бұрын

    You only need to hear Simon’s pronunciation of SKODA to get that lives in Praha

  • @776football
    @776football10 ай бұрын

    Germany also had an extremely experienced leadership due to them gaining a ton of experience against massively powerful armies during WW1

  • @maxbracegirdle9990

    @maxbracegirdle9990

    10 ай бұрын

    Also, rumour is, they all spent a vast amount of their free time playing this videos sponsor, War Thunder.

  • @kk7324

    @kk7324

    10 ай бұрын

    @@maxbracegirdle9990 it was clear that german generals grinded a lot of good traits in Spanish's civil war

  • @paulie_one_eye

    @paulie_one_eye

    10 ай бұрын

    Brits and Frenchies obviously did not gain any experience during WW1 cause they were fighting not very and for sure not "massively" powerful German army, right?

  • @kk7324

    @kk7324

    10 ай бұрын

    @@paulie_one_eye in fact ww1 kinda traumatized both of them to the point that they would mold their war industry after it. People say at the start of battle of france, french tanks were better armored. Of course they were. They were supposed to be moving pill boxes. Not to mention, their entire plan depended on Belgian not being overrun like in ww1.

  • @paulie_one_eye

    @paulie_one_eye

    10 ай бұрын

    @@kk7324 that has nothing to do with experience gained or not gained during previous war. I’m not discussing doctrine or morale.

  • @Asgar1205
    @Asgar120510 ай бұрын

    Calling Germany a small nation is a very American thing

  • @neal_rigga90

    @neal_rigga90

    10 ай бұрын

    I find it it crazy that my home state of texas alone, is bigger than alot of European countries.

  • @MN-vz8qm

    @MN-vz8qm

    10 ай бұрын

    Germany was nearly twice more populated than france at the start of ww2. It was the demographic ogre of the early 20th century, just like napoleonic france was the ogre of the early 19th

  • @egoalter1276

    @egoalter1276

    8 ай бұрын

    And its incredulous even by the standards of the time. Germany had a population of 85 million, the USA 140. Germany had an ocvasionally higher GDP. It was the fith most popolous and third most powerful single polity in the world.

  • @Bahamut3525

    @Bahamut3525

    8 ай бұрын

    Americans think just in terms of territory size which is just empty. But Germany is a big nation just as to what it can do with its size. It’s a powerhouse of industry and know how.

  • @KaiBrunk125

    @KaiBrunk125

    7 ай бұрын

    Literally a UK based channel lol

  • @DaemlichesStueck
    @DaemlichesStueck10 ай бұрын

    Towards the end they got desperate though. My grandpa Friedrich was 17 towards the end of the war and he was just given some things and sent to russia with a metaphorical slap on the back for good luck

  • @maynardburger

    @maynardburger

    6 ай бұрын

    After the Battle of the Bulge, the German military potential really was basically spent. 1945 saw a break down of much of what made them so effective earlier on. In any more sane world, Germany would have surrendered very early in 1945 at the latest. Every death on either side after that was completely and totally needless.

  • @stacyscott2720
    @stacyscott272010 ай бұрын

    Could it be postulated that the German army was effective at the beginning of the conflict due to the length and scope of its training? But, as the war wore on and the German army sustained extraordinary casualties, that training regimen became impossible to maintain leaving the army less professional and effective?

  • @colmcmillan173

    @colmcmillan173

    9 ай бұрын

    Exactly

  • @08995

    @08995

    8 ай бұрын

    Yes. However the combat effectiveness of most German units was still very high in 1944. They managed to inflict 50% or even more caualties more on the Allies then.

  • @maynardburger

    @maynardburger

    6 ай бұрын

    To a degree, but if Germany had been able to sustain a manpower equivalence with Russia in the east and UK/France/US in the west, along with some more fuel, they probably could have held out and forced these countries to the peace table. German soldiers were still extremely formidable even during all the retreating they did in 1943 and 1944. It wasn't until 1945 that they really started to break down more. Overall, German command, be it at a lower level or higher level(even with Hitler crippling this), was still basically operating at or better than Allied level. Pound for pound, Germans were the best military basically all throughout WW2.

  • @benjamineer3045
    @benjamineer30458 ай бұрын

    To me it is stunning how similar WWII and the Napoleonic Wars were. Maybe in a weird way history kind of repeats

  • @ivancho5854

    @ivancho5854

    Ай бұрын

    The geography was... identical. 😉

  • @weisthor0815
    @weisthor081510 ай бұрын

    the fact that over 80 % of the german army in 1939 still relied on horses to move equipment around makes their military achievements even more admirable.

  • @johnridgeway5265

    @johnridgeway5265

    10 ай бұрын

    Tanks were in the majority. The horse still pulled the odd cart around Germany. Even WW 1 was mainly motorized.Even Hitler rode a motorbike between the trenches in WW1 as a liaison.

  • @weisthor0815

    @weisthor0815

    10 ай бұрын

    @@johnridgeway5265 you are either trolling or you have no clue what you are talking about

  • @johnridgeway5265

    @johnridgeway5265

    10 ай бұрын

    @@weisthor0815 In the First world war Hitler was a dispatch rider and he carried messages to the front. He was caught in a gas attack and was awarded the iron cross second class so my book said that I read thirty years ago . Fact. There were also a lot of pack horses but nothing like the previous war.The statement was horses IN Germany .On the Russian front horses declined rapidly in numbers and a lot were eaten or died of starvation because of the supply lines and winter. Unlike most I don't use Google to teach myself. Thanks.

  • @weisthor0815

    @weisthor0815

    10 ай бұрын

    @@johnridgeway5265 hitler was no rider, he was a runner. you don´t ride through the trenches. he was even awared the iron cross first class later, so your book was not the best, i guess. and i wrote "still relied on horses" which implies germany already did this in ww1. and they still did this to a great extend in ww2. only very few divisions were fully motorized.

  • @pachpach6101

    @pachpach6101

    9 ай бұрын

    @@johnridgeway5265Germany invaded the Soviet Union with 500,000- 750,000 horses

  • @ItsAVolcano
    @ItsAVolcano10 ай бұрын

    In regards to France, one of the key problems they faced was that their defense doctrine called for French troops to be in place in Belgium the moment German mobilization started. Unfortunately for them, the French governments willful ignoring of German seizure of Austria and the sudetenland meant Belgium (and especially its king) had no faith in French promises of support and refused to cooperate with them.

  • @volbound1700

    @volbound1700

    9 ай бұрын

    IMO France (and maybe Norway) are the only really impressive win by Germany. The rest of the nations where way outgunned by Germany.

  • @wolf310ii

    @wolf310ii

    4 ай бұрын

    It wasnt a promise of support, it was a promise to fight a war between France and Germany in Belgium, no wonder Belgium didnt liked the idea to turn Belgium into Verdun, and that was long befor Germany started its expansion. Belgium already said no when France wanted to build the maginot line through Belgium.

  • @ItsAVolcano

    @ItsAVolcano

    4 ай бұрын

    @@wolf310ii the French and Belgians had a mutual defense pact with a hidden plan of stationing troops in Belgium at the border at the start of a German mobilization specifically to avoid having the war *in* Belgium. France refusing to aid their other allies led to them opting to try a neutrality approach, which had worked for their neighbor the Netherlands in WW1.

  • @wolf310ii

    @wolf310ii

    4 ай бұрын

    @@ItsAVolcano Even that pact ended befor Germany started its expansion

  • @morten3465
    @morten346510 ай бұрын

    Being the first army to industrialize the use of amphetamines for soldiers and, for example, keeping many of them awake and aggressive for almost 3 weeks straight during the push in France probably helped.

  • @egoalter1276

    @egoalter1276

    8 ай бұрын

    It was certainly becesseary for the 3 day-night nonstop road march to even begin the assault.

  • @letsdothis9063

    @letsdothis9063

    3 ай бұрын

    Previtin. Lol

  • @ivancho5854

    @ivancho5854

    Ай бұрын

    One of the reasons which might account for Germany not pushing into Dunkirk may have been that their soldiers needed to rest because the amphetamines had exhausted them to the point that they could go no further.

  • @him050
    @him0502 ай бұрын

    To help put into perspective how massive militaries were back then - the Luftwaffe had 900,00 servicemen and around 4000 aircraft. Compare that to the RAF today that has around 550 fixed wing aircraft and 35,000 personnel. The UK army currently has around 75,000. The German army in 1939 was over 2.5 million. Those numbers are just truly mind-boggling.

  • @carltonleboss
    @carltonleboss10 ай бұрын

    I never knew the German armed forces was so well trained.

  • @florianschneider3982

    @florianschneider3982

    10 ай бұрын

    You thought you could take half of Europe without good training?

  • @kb4903

    @kb4903

    10 ай бұрын

    It’s easier when the soldiers are brainwashed and no is not an option.

  • @pierce7992

    @pierce7992

    10 ай бұрын

    @@florianschneider3982 thats why they brutalized the ussr

  • @PineappleOnPizza69

    @PineappleOnPizza69

    10 ай бұрын

    Prussian discipline, my guy. It's in their blood.

  • @Peter-vf3dl

    @Peter-vf3dl

    10 ай бұрын

    @@PineappleOnPizza69 Rather not. It is because of training. Since Frederick II, Prussian (later German) doctrine put emphasize on individual skill as a force multiplier. German lack of ressources and menpower (esp. in the case of Frederick's Prussia as a surrounded little state) mandated, according to the doctrine, a superior discipline and training in comparison to their enemies who had the advantage of having the numerical superiority. The whole German strategy of "local superiority", speed of action, quick mobilisation, being efficient with few ressources etc is a thing of century long training and drill, not genes ;)

  • @fukkitful
    @fukkitful10 ай бұрын

    The Hitler's Youth program is another reason as to why German soldiers were more effective. The soldiers had been training and taught skills important in combat beginning around 10 years old.

  • @adifreitag8579

    @adifreitag8579

    9 ай бұрын

    That's probably true. Children and young people were systematically raised to fight. Whoever sacrificed his life for the people and fatherland was a hero. They also wanted revenge for the humiliation caused by the Versailles peace dictate. I myself have three great-uncles who fell in good faith for the people and the fatherland. The first fell as a paratrooper in Crete at the age of 19. The second fell at the age of 17 as a member of the 12th Panzer Division in Normandy. The third was young pilot 'early 201 years, who had his last action in early 1945 in East Prussia against the invading Russians. He knew it was a one-way operation, a kamikaze mission. Our flag flutters ahead of us kzread.info/dash/bejne/qZaBpZKelsXKkbw.html Hitler Youth kzread.info/dash/bejne/hKGfuKp7hLa4n9Y.html Panzer Division Hitler Youth kzread.info/dash/bejne/an54zcacYpecgbQ.html Kamikaze song kzread.info/dash/bejne/k3Z6x7Ryd7ivh6g.html

  • @jaydearien8624
    @jaydearien86248 ай бұрын

    I continue to be blown away by the quantity and quality of material you keep putting out. Do you sleep? Do you have clones of yourself working? Anyway, I accidentally deleted this post, mid-post, so here goes again. I had a chat with a Soviet historian who said that Stalin had all of his forces in extreme forward deployment (preparing to invade Germany, ostensibly), like, right up into ox-bows of major rivers and such, and that Hitlet launched Barbarossa and went around them all (and presumably mopped them up after flanking, but my guy didn't say). In a way this makes more sense in terms of explaining Stalin getting caught with his trousers around his ankles and Hitler's awful planning with no winter equipment and pressing on to Moscow and so on. Maybe Stalin wasn't taken by surprise as was sailing too close to the wind and was beaten to the punch (by a matter of days?). Maybe Hitler didn't launch the biggest invasion since the Mongols on a whim with poor planning and over-confidence, and slavishly repeat Napoléon's mistakes, as hastily grab everything together so he could take out Stalin's advance forces before he rolled in, and then kept going once Stalin was on the canvas? What evidence for or against this can you find? Ever since Glasnost, there's been stuff coming out (in Russian) that supports a different view of how things went down during WWII and the Cold War. I'd be interested!

  • @ivancho5854

    @ivancho5854

    Ай бұрын

    Your comment is extremely interesting and I agree with it completely. This additional piece of information may interest you: I recently watched a video here on KZread which stated that Swedish decryption was very advanced particularly at the start of the war (if I can find it I'll post the link). The Swedes were rightly concerned about both Germany AND the Soviet Union. They were working on German codes and passed useful information about Enigma to the UK when Poland was invaded. They had broken the Soviet codes and were aware that the Soviets were planning to invade Germany through German occupied Poland, but we're waiting for Germany to commit troops to the invasion of the UK in operation Sea Lion. Sweden passed the Soviet communications to Germany (and also the UK) towards the end of the Battle of Britain IIRC. Upon learning of this Hitler invaded the Soviet Union roughly 9 months before he had planned to, which was the main reason that German troops were unprepared for the Russian winter. I believe that it was never a priority for Germany to invade Britain as they recognised that a) it would not be easy due to the Royal Navy primarily and b) it did not fulfil their war aims to seize the Caucuses oil fields. Instead Germany wanted the UK and her colonies out of the war through a negotiated peace. This would also ensure that, despite the low probability from the German perspective (I don't think that Japan ever shared their intention of attacking Pearl Harbour with Germany), the USA would never enter the war against Germany as they would be unable to without the UK acting as an unsinkable base. I personally think that Germany was extremely surprised with their success in France, the Low Countries and later Norway, which diverted their attention from their primary goal of securing an oil supply in the east. (Having to assist the Italians in the Balkans and North Africa also didn't help as Germany had not anticipated this.) This of course was the intention of the UK which realised that although the German forces were the most competent at aggressive manoeuvre warfare, they would ultimately not have the endurance for a long war against the colossal numbers which the Soviet Union could ultimately bring to bear given enough time. The Soviet war machine was pondering and slow to mobilize, but securing Germany's western flanks by taking France and Norway was too time consuming. Ultimately it was IMHO impossible for Germany to wage war on two fronts as we know now, but perhaps they were assuming that the Soviet Union would collapse as Russia did in WW1, which could have been a logical assumption. War is never straightforward as the enemy never cooperates. For me the information about Sweden's involvement certainly was a key piece of the puzzle of why Germany invaded Russia exactly when it did and why they were not as prepared as they were for every other country which they invaded. I found this revelation truly fascinating. All the best Ray from bonnie Scotland.

  • @ivancho5854

    @ivancho5854

    Ай бұрын

    Search for the Swedish mathematician Arne Beurling.

  • @FrankOdonnell-ej3hd
    @FrankOdonnell-ej3hd9 ай бұрын

    this is very interesting didn't know german rearmament actually started with the weimar republic the way the various steps germany took to rearm is well explained and takes away a lot of the mystery (to me) of how they were able to accomplish so much at least initially⚛

  • @VaderFluffington
    @VaderFluffington10 ай бұрын

    They also blooded number of soldiers using volunteer detachments during Spanish Civil War.

  • @alfredlear4141
    @alfredlear414110 ай бұрын

    Germany ... 34 Nobel prizes for engineering, None for peace ...

  • @viktorr7115

    @viktorr7115

    10 ай бұрын

    Drone king Obama got one, so that shows how much the peace price is worth.

  • @THIS---GUY

    @THIS---GUY

    10 ай бұрын

    Obama got a peace prize while actively bombing field hospitals and funerals

  • @JR-zv7ws

    @JR-zv7ws

    10 ай бұрын

    @@viktorr7115 the fact you choose to parrot the drone narrative instead of *checks notes* criticizing the Obama administration for helping Saudi Arabia create a famine in Yemen that killed hundreds of thousands shows how I'll informed you are. I do agree him getting that trophy was undeserved. But you're still a shill.

  • @Blox117

    @Blox117

    10 ай бұрын

    so germany is more honest than other nations

  • @granatmof

    @granatmof

    10 ай бұрын

    ​@@viktorr7115dude Henry Kissinger has one, that's a clear sign the Peace price is worthless.

  • @HyBr1dRaNg3r
    @HyBr1dRaNg3r10 ай бұрын

    Captain of IBS would def have a different connotation today😂😳

  • @mejuliie
    @mejuliie8 ай бұрын

    Props to Arnaldo for the script. Took me less than a minute into the intro to know that it was written by one of the amazing writers for Casual Criminalist!!

  • @j4s0n39
    @j4s0n3910 ай бұрын

    @28:00 your picture of the Ardennes offensive is the one from December 1944. There was no snow on the ground the first time they invaded.

  • @eaphantom9214
    @eaphantom921410 ай бұрын

    Certainly the Panzer VIII Maus DIDN'T play its part! 😅 Neither did the Graf Zepplin!

  • @Lonovavir

    @Lonovavir

    10 ай бұрын

    Wehraboos: The ratte would've turned everything around... and Steiner's counterattack.

  • @Julian-tf8nj
    @Julian-tf8nj3 ай бұрын

    I always wondered the questions that this video addressed! I appreciate the depth of analysis rather than simplistic answers...

  • @georgewilkie3580
    @georgewilkie358010 ай бұрын

    WOW! All I can say is ...WELL-DONE!

  • @jakhaughton1800
    @jakhaughton180010 ай бұрын

    My wife’s uncle, a rear gunner in Lancasters with 39 missions, so the late 20th century he saw the change in the Uk and always wished Hitler had invaded Britain.

  • @markmarkson2666

    @markmarkson2666

    10 ай бұрын

    Your wife’s uncle is/was a bit of a fool then 😂 Our whole national identity today is that we stood our ground and weren’t defeated. If he’s talking about the fact that it’s not 99% white anymore then he’s a racist and should steer his hate towards british imperialism rather than defeating the Nazis

  • @geofff.3343
    @geofff.334310 ай бұрын

    Poland were actually blunting the German advance with scary effectiveness, but they couldn't take Germany and the USSR.

  • @ericharrison7518

    @ericharrison7518

    10 ай бұрын

    No..no they weren't. At all. By the time the Soviets invaded eastern Poland on September 17th, the Germans had already besieged Warsaw and the Polish Army was attempting to withdraw to the southeast of the country to defend the Romanian Corridor. I don't know how you can even remotely claim the Poles were successfuly blunting the Wehrmacht when the Germans had advanced over 200 km's within the first 7 days. Even taking casualties into account, over the course of the entire campaign, the Germans suffered 52,000 dead, wounded, and missing. Contrast that with the 875,000 Polish dead, wounded, or captured. By no definition of the word were the Poles "blunting" anything. It was a complete catastrophe for them from start to finish. They just simply weren't prepared for the modern force that cut right through them.

  • @geofff.3343

    @geofff.3343

    10 ай бұрын

    @@ericharrison7518 Because there are German records of their frustrations dealing with Poland. I'm not saying they fought them to a standstill but the Polish action was never about stopping them, it was about trading for time until the French and British held up their end of the bargain, which didn't happen. Poland was not caught unprepared in the slightest. They knew exactly what was coming, they knew what they had to do, and they even tried to bait the Germans into attacking earlier to try and get--again--England and France to commit.

  • @Bahamut3525

    @Bahamut3525

    8 ай бұрын

    German soldiers had high losses in Poland, but because they were still green. Also lots of German losses due to friendly fire. Scared German soldiers mowing down own soldiers.

  • @WormholeJim
    @WormholeJim10 ай бұрын

    The organisation of the German regular forces 1939-1945 was named die Wehrmacht and it was split up in the three traditional parts of army (der Heer), airforce (die Luftwaffe) and the navy (die Kriegsmarine - not Kriegsmarinade, as Simon pronounces it) The SS (Shutz Staffel) sorted under RSHA (Reichs Sicherheits Haupt Amt) along with Gestapo and Gefepo both subcatagorized under SD (Sicherheits dienst). All this just because Simon happens to say der Heer was an alternate name for die Wehrmacht. It was only concerning the landbased troops as these were somtimes referred to as die Wehrmacht by contemporaries.

  • @jmanj3917
    @jmanj391710 ай бұрын

    14:25 A warrant officer is not an NCO (Non-Commissioned Officer, which is an enlisted person's rank ). Warrant officers are "in between" the enlisted ranks and the officer corps.

  • @wecx2375

    @wecx2375

    9 ай бұрын

    They are more like technical officers. Like helicopter pilots or something. Not in between anything, but definitely closer to NCO because they don't hold a command position like commissioned officers

  • @aSSGoblin1488
    @aSSGoblin148810 ай бұрын

    germany had radios in a tactical level. their tank org was concentrated rather than spread out

  • @paulie_one_eye

    @paulie_one_eye

    10 ай бұрын

    oh yeah, radios... yes... that must be it. All right tho, now everything is clear for me, thx.

  • @MrSniperfox29
    @MrSniperfox2910 ай бұрын

    WW2 in a nutshell The allies were told X was going to happen The allies ignored it because "well those Germans are honest fellows"...

  • @davidcomtedeherstal

    @davidcomtedeherstal

    10 ай бұрын

    Not quite!

  • @PineappleOnPizza69

    @PineappleOnPizza69

    10 ай бұрын

    They are honest and loyal people. But place a really terrible person in charge, that loyalty can be easily exploited.

  • @I-HAVE-A-BOMB

    @I-HAVE-A-BOMB

    10 ай бұрын

    If X didn't happen you'd be a starved communist rn with no internet access.

  • @re1010

    @re1010

    10 ай бұрын

    Not really, tgey just wanted to avoid another war.

  • @rogertaylor6386

    @rogertaylor6386

    10 ай бұрын

    It was those same honest and loyal people who voted Hitler into power,along with a bunch of S.A thugs.Hitler did not come out of the blue they worshipped the man and all his evil way

  • @Sugarnaut
    @Sugarnaut10 ай бұрын

    Good to know appeasement hasn’t gone out of style.

  • @WEREONFIRE111
    @WEREONFIRE1113 ай бұрын

    It’s great and refreshing to hear a take that’s not just “THEY DID THE BLITZKREIG ON METH”

  • @MrZsasz25
    @MrZsasz2510 ай бұрын

    Just wondering: Has Simon abandoned the Biographics Channel in favour of putting out more material on other channels like this one?

  • @EmilyJelassi

    @EmilyJelassi

    10 ай бұрын

    I’ve noticed that too. Biographics, Top Tenz and a couple other channels..

  • @anandm4748
    @anandm474810 ай бұрын

    This is completely correct. In fact, the Germans were not only numerically inferior but also technologically inferior, especially against the French. Unlike the French, the Germans were enormously under mechanized and extraordinarily dependent on cavalry and horse drawn logistics. However the Germans still had better TACTICS, and that made all the difference.

  • @biglez32420

    @biglez32420

    10 ай бұрын

    The french had 'supperior' tech? 😂😂😂 🎉🎉🎉

  • @jim85ps2

    @jim85ps2

    10 ай бұрын

    Logistics is what wins wars not tactics, allies could out produce and replace men and vehicles far quicker than the nazi's

  • @helloitsme6056

    @helloitsme6056

    10 ай бұрын

    ​@@jim85ps2Most importantly they had enough oil, the most underrated Ressource in WW2 already ...

  • @finnwheatley2194

    @finnwheatley2194

    10 ай бұрын

    Sort of. It’s a bit more complex than that. My particular focus would be to emphasise their C2 rather than tactics as such

  • @Bahamut3525

    @Bahamut3525

    8 ай бұрын

    German combined arms was way more advanced than anything the western allies had. Stuka dive bombers absolutely fcked the allies front line and routed them countless times as panzers also broke through.

  • @steverichards7623
    @steverichards76238 ай бұрын

    Before watching i'd guess its that the Allies didnt want war (hence Appeasement) where as the German's were driven at least partially driven by revenge. A rolling snow ball of victories....however when stopped, it was difficult to pick up momentum against powerful opponents. Its a bit like the puncher who needs the knockout punch against a reluctant boxer, if it doesnt ket the KO, then the powerful technician will (especially in this case with America's industrial might) always grind out the victory??? Great series

  • @LunaWingz
    @LunaWingz10 ай бұрын

    I appear to have retained more of my history major than expected when I remembered all these when Simon started this video 🤣

  • @darthkahnobis
    @darthkahnobis10 ай бұрын

    Pervetin and lots of it! I swear you covered this on a different channel already, but I could be mistaken.

  • @andrelinman4877

    @andrelinman4877

    8 ай бұрын

    That stuff also helps if one wants to binge-watch these videos for days without becoming tired🤔🤣

  • @Bahamut3525

    @Bahamut3525

    8 ай бұрын

    The drug excuse is what americanaboos say to slander the German army performance.

  • @drmartin5062
    @drmartin506210 ай бұрын

    They were all homogenous, with one goal, one mission, one oath. We say things like diversity is our strength. Let’s hope all those navy ships with 40% women don’t ever have to fight China.

  • @Bahamut3525

    @Bahamut3525

    8 ай бұрын

    That helped but don’t underestimate German training. Nearly all countries Germany fought were homogeneous but didn’t have same performance as Germany. If you know the Prussian attitude and precision, there is something to it that’s special.

  • @seanguffey3161
    @seanguffey316110 ай бұрын

    Your the man! I love the detailed info!

  • @jmanj3917
    @jmanj391710 ай бұрын

    12:10 Training is always the most telling of those inputs.

  • @seantlewis376
    @seantlewis37610 ай бұрын

    To look at the early successes of Germany, I think it is necessary to also look at the support they had from prominent US businessmen like Henry Ford, Nelson Rockefeller, and (rumored) William Randolph Hearst. They weren't alone. Many "giants of industry" in the US liked the idea of fascism, as Mussolini said, the merger of corporation and government.

  • @theBlankScroll

    @theBlankScroll

    10 ай бұрын

    Not much has changed.

  • @timothycsauer1

    @timothycsauer1

    10 ай бұрын

    @sean You forgot Joe Kennedy. American businesses and businessmen doing business with Communist China today is worse. It wasn't until the end of the war that anyone knew about the Nazi concentration camps. American businessmen and corporations today know that Chinese Communist have concentration camps as terrible as the Nazis were. Yet they still get rich from China. If you bought a Nike or Apple product over the last few years, there is a good chance it was assembled by a concentration camp victim.

  • @lordlopikong6940

    @lordlopikong6940

    10 ай бұрын

    US is just as racist, if they had non US neighbors they would have massacred them... Oh wait that's how they started.

  • @1984isnotamanual

    @1984isnotamanual

    10 ай бұрын

    Its important to note i think that the “giants of industry” back in the day were scared stiff that Communism would spread to America, etc. The Russian Revolution was in these peoples memories as were the stories of land owners getting lynched on mass. Communism hadn’t been shown to be a sham by history yet. I would imagine that influenced their behavior.

  • @robbynew100

    @robbynew100

    10 ай бұрын

    I know that Ford has rightly been criticized for profiting from nazi slave labor but I haven’t heard the argument that the Ford-nazi relation was key to nazi’s early success in the war. Did money from Ford constitute a large portion of nazi funds? Also, if it’s true that the Hearst-Nazi relation is only rumored rather than confirmed, then I don’t it belongs on the list of things it’s “necessary” to look at to explain nazi’s early success.

  • @Ellecram
    @Ellecram10 ай бұрын

    I love these lessons. So satisfying to increase my knowledge. My father was just a teenager at the end of WW2 and joined the US Navy right during the final months of the war. He spent his time on a ship but thankfully did not participate in any battles. He was a medical corpsman and treated some of the injured. Even at that level of participation he did not talk about it until the end of his life.

  • @paulie_one_eye

    @paulie_one_eye

    10 ай бұрын

    You definitely won't learn anything true about WW2 from this vid. You better read some books and try to think for yourself.

  • @everypitchcounts4875
    @everypitchcounts487510 ай бұрын

    Germany's version of what we call thunder runs now

  • @Demented13
    @Demented1310 ай бұрын

    Had some old videos of yours pop up on my recommended, I knew something was very off, but I couldn't place it at first, it's the beard, younger Simon was a cursed egg

  • @Occident.
    @Occident.10 ай бұрын

    Because they were the best trained, and disciplined army in the world, great fighters plus they believed in their country and the ideology of the country. It took the world to defeat these men.

  • @RomaInvicta202

    @RomaInvicta202

    10 ай бұрын

    Impressed? Does murdering civilians by their millions also impress you?

  • @Bahamut3525

    @Bahamut3525

    8 ай бұрын

    @@RomaInvicta202allies did the same especially USSR.

  • @edocsil123
    @edocsil12310 ай бұрын

    Imagine a Germany where where hitler doesn't meddle, where they focus on britain before invading the ussr, where they start developping a nuclear weapon early, where they drive the BEF into the sea instead of halting, where göring is sacked,... Frightning what could have if they weren't so incompetent. (Speaking with hindsight vision ofcourse)

  • @fearthehoneybadger

    @fearthehoneybadger

    10 ай бұрын

    And where the Germans didn't declare war on the US when the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor.

  • @mrhumble2937

    @mrhumble2937

    10 ай бұрын

    They lose. Whenever the rest of Europe teams up because 1 country is going crazy. It always wins. Same with Nopoleon.

  • @SEAZNDragon

    @SEAZNDragon

    10 ай бұрын

    They would still had material and fuel issues.

  • @nick22091

    @nick22091

    10 ай бұрын

    @@mrhumble2937Napoleon and Hitler were defeated by the same enemy, General Winter. Neither ever recovered after facing the Russian winter

  • @edocsil123

    @edocsil123

    10 ай бұрын

    @@mrhumble2937 If you destroy the BEF in 1940 and follow up with early developed nukes during the battle of britain, the UK would have folded. That first week of Barbarossa where Stalin had a breakdown and just sat around for days doing nothing and you dropped some nukes on major soviet cities, they wouldn't recover from that. And than hitler just doesn't declare war on the US because of japan and bam, you just conquered Europe.

  • @Ciarananthonymitchell844
    @Ciarananthonymitchell8443 ай бұрын

    Well Done Simon that was a lot of information in 40mins

  • @clarencehopkins7832
    @clarencehopkins783210 ай бұрын

    Excellent stuff bro

  • @JayMH409
    @JayMH40910 ай бұрын

    The Germans never faced vastly superior numbers at the start of WWII. They greatly outnumbered the Poles and attacked from Germany, From Czechoslovakia, and from the North out of East Prussia. The Poles had 39 Divs, the Germans, 59, the Soviets, 34. Three German divisions attacked Denmark. The Danes had two divisions, but they were not mobilized. Norway had six divisions, but they were not mobilized and only part of the Norwegian 6th division managed to mobilize, before quickly surrendering. Holland, with 10 divisions, was attacked by 29 1/2 divs, three of them armoured. Belgium, with 22 Divisions, faced 45 1/2 divisions. The French and British armies had 87 Divisions, with 22 in reserve, 109 total. The Germans had 94, with 42 in reserve, 136 total. For the invasion of Russia, German, Romanian and Hungarian Divs totalled 3 million Men. The Russians had 2 million in the Western Military districts. It was the Germans who had superior numbers, and in some cases, were vastly superior.

  • @paulszymanski2513

    @paulszymanski2513

    10 ай бұрын

    Lets not forget Russia invaded Poland from the east too. That combined with fact Poland was handicapped by their alliance with UK and France and was forbidden from offensive manouvers in fear of breaking the defensive pact. 😂

  • @MasterFeidn

    @MasterFeidn

    10 ай бұрын

    You list shows that you do not know what you are talking about. Take the Western Area. Germany against Belgium, Netherlands, Luxembourg, France, UK. The Western allies outnumbered the germans. What you list is Germans against Netherland, against Belgium, against UK etc. This is called defeating in Detail. The germans had a larger force concentrated at points of efforts to avoid the Western allies to consolidate there whole power. Subsequently one piece after the other fell instead facing the combined power. Furthermore your numbers seem really questionable as I read from other sources that the germans in the attack movement (not talking about reserves in Germany who did not take part) outnumbered the french only after dunkirk.

  • @paulszymanski2513

    @paulszymanski2513

    10 ай бұрын

    @@MasterFeidn Why are you totalling the ally numbers? The entire point of the Blitz was to never face them all in one place.

  • @MasterFeidn

    @MasterFeidn

    10 ай бұрын

    @@paulszymanski2513 exactly you are right. Hence the list of jayharper is pointless. It is like you would say Alexander the Great had the higher number of men during the battle of Gaugamela as his riders outnumbered Dareios III in point of interest and you only compare the part of troups which are in these various small skirmishes - and additionally throw reserves into the mix which not even took part. Or take the famous battle of leuthen were at the point of clash the prussians outnumbered the austrians although the austrians had double the amount of men in total. The goal was to defeat the various part of the opposing army before the other could react. Sadly that led to tragedies like the bombing of Rotterdam as speed was of essence. Exactly how the german did it with there numerically smaller army at various battles.

  • @JayMH409

    @JayMH409

    9 ай бұрын

    @@paulszymanski2513 I didn't forget Russia. That's why I included their 34 known divisions. If Poland had engaged in Offensive action it wouldn't have changed anything, because they were greatly outnumbered and attacked from all sides.

  • @croaklikeatoad4384
    @croaklikeatoad43846 ай бұрын

    In the Silk Roads by Peter Frankopan he suggests that because the Germans lacked food supplies at home, they planned to essentially feed themselves by looting farms on the way east, but this didn’t actually work and they lacked the supply lines and money to get enough food to the army

  • @SuperGamingguitarist
    @SuperGamingguitarist6 ай бұрын

    I remember contradicting my history teacher in the 9th grade when she taught us that the nazis won the early battles because of blitzkrieg. It was largely due to better training, especially in the situation where the commanding officer would be shot and killed. The allies would then run around like headless chickens or retreat. There goes the entire troop with literally one hit. The nazis were trained so that the next in rank would assume command if the commanding officer got killed, and could push on. That's an IMMENSE advantage. The misconceptions on blitzkrieg being the big factor was made by the victors, to not seem like straight up shitty sholdiers in comparison to the nazis.

  • @drane10
    @drane1010 ай бұрын

    2 words: German Engineering

  • @Lonovavir
    @Lonovavir10 ай бұрын

    Not first!!!!! The British, Belgians and French made too many mistakes and in the East the Germans had help from the USSR which also invaded Poland as well as giving them vital supplies. The Germans weren't better, they were lucky.

  • @Varzaak
    @Varzaak3 ай бұрын

    One of the biggest reasons they did so well is the most overlooked one. They grew good soldiers. The Germans before the unification had been small kingdoms who lent their young men as mercenaries. For hundreds of years that was the case. Then enter a leader who started grooming children to do combat. Their Boy Scouts impressed the US Army enough to say that those German kids were better in the field than their own troops. That was in the mid 30s. Good training supersedes everything. It allows you to function as a soldier in the most adverse conditions. Because to hold a defensive position it takes smarts, ammo, food, and man with a resolve holding a gun. To take that position it takes 3 men to dislodge one. The majority of this war was fought without armor present. There were 3 million men going into Russia. The tanks used at the start were no better than the Russian ones. Russia was so immense that infantry rarely got armor support. The Germans used their armor for breakthroughs. The infantry dealt with surrounded troops while the tanks went to the next hot spot. The problem was Germany was at war with the entire world. Any other army under those circumstances wouldn't have lasted that long.

  • @alexbowman7582
    @alexbowman758210 ай бұрын

    Blitzkrieg is the Allied name for what the Germans called schwerpunkt or hammer point which sums up the idea to hit hard at certain points.

  • @joelellis7035
    @joelellis703510 ай бұрын

    Basically, Germany prepared for war while the allies didn't. This is why Germany had the advantage initially, but lost it as the allies switched to a war footing.

  • @Bahamut3525

    @Bahamut3525

    8 ай бұрын

    This is complete bs. The British and French prepared for war in the 20s and 30s already.

  • @brianjohnson5272
    @brianjohnson527210 ай бұрын

    The reason why Blitzkrieg warfare was so good in WW2 was because it was a NEW style of warfare. Mechinized infantry was new, Tanks were new, Combined arms involving aircraft was new. Lets also looked at the W/L for blitzkrieg. Chekoslavakia win Poland win France W because of political infighting and poor leadership. Greece L due to terrain Britian L in Africa supply chain isdues Russia L until winter and supply chain issues. The US L due to massive discrepancy in production. The only reason why Blitzkrieg was so effective was because it was untested and therfore an unknown factor. Try a Blitzkrieg today and its in theory no where was effective ....... oh wait, Russia did annnnnnddddd.😢

  • @hippyraverocker
    @hippyraverocker10 ай бұрын

    Sponsored segments OR KZread ads, pick ONE.

  • @-Angelscor-
    @-Angelscor-21 күн бұрын

    Perfect training, solid discipline, unshakeable determination, and loyalty driven by a totalitarian regime. The German military was definitely way ahead of its time in the late 1930s. About that topic, I'd also highly recommend Liddel Hart's "The German Generals Talk" book. It sheds light on events regard of the early victories of the Wehrmacht and future defeats.

  • @sceema333
    @sceema33310 ай бұрын

    whats often overlooked with the appeasement policy is, that, while undoubtedly unethical, dishonest and far from an elegant solution, the western allies enacting said policy werent really believing that if they gave hitler enough leeway in annexing his neighbors he would at some point just be satisfied and stop invading to become a productive and friendly member of the european family, rather had they been hesitant to accept the fact that another big, big war was looming on the horizon and therefore needed to buy time through not taking action until they were at least somewhat ready to face the third reich (even though, as became obvious in 1940, they still werent ready enough in the end lol). so yes, while britain and france kinda fucked up in that regard, after failing to act and take measures in time, appeasement was the most sensible and viable course of action they could take given their precarious situation. at least thats to my understanding, feel free to disagree and share your take ! :)

  • @Telcontar86

    @Telcontar86

    10 ай бұрын

    It started out like that for sure, but at some point both Britain and France realized that N. Germany wouldn't stop, and they _did_ begin to prepare for war again. But they dragged their feet (not helped by the fact they'd waited too long to remobilize) and were still stuck in the previous conflict mentally, so even though France had the most powerful army in Europe on paper, they were unprepared for the way the Germans waged their war. If France had been better prepped the war might've ended in 1939, when they "invaded" Germany while the army was in Poland. Just... so many opportunities to stop them and the Allies didn't take any because they didn't want another Great War, leading to a much worse one.

  • @sceema333

    @sceema333

    10 ай бұрын

    @@Telcontar86 well yeah, that's what I meant to say, they began preparations way too late

  • @tomhenry897

    @tomhenry897

    10 ай бұрын

    The chamberlain part of Churchhills government wanted to do a peace deal with Germany after dunkrik Churchhill over ruled them

  • @navret1707
    @navret170710 ай бұрын

    I think if Hitler had stopped after taking France the world would be a considerably different world then it is today. “We defeated the wrong enemy.” General George Patton

  • @iattacku2773

    @iattacku2773

    10 ай бұрын

    I don’t think he could. Hitler’s main desire was conquering the east, getting rid of the Slavs there, and settling it with Germans.

  • @Vandelberger

    @Vandelberger

    10 ай бұрын

    No, ideology trumped logic every time. The Nazi economy couldn’t survive without war. Read “Vampire Economy,” the reich was built by stolen gold and material from all conquered countries. They didn’t believe in industry for trade but Autarky, which means in long term stagnation…. Look at Argentina for modern example.

  • @vercot7000

    @vercot7000

    10 ай бұрын

    Your quote doesn't make sense. Patton is conceding that BOTH the soviets and germany are enemies, so that implies the US would defeat both

  • @Bahamut3525

    @Bahamut3525

    8 ай бұрын

    @@Vandelbergernonsense. German economy was a powerhouse. Zero unemployment and thriving industrial base.

  • @Bahamut3525

    @Bahamut3525

    8 ай бұрын

    Difficult to say. I think Stalin would invade Germany if Hitler just sat on his laurels.

  • @markmajors3256
    @markmajors325610 ай бұрын

    Who was the German general that said we will win and win and win till we lose

  • @harryshriver6223
    @harryshriver62236 ай бұрын

    I have one word for Mr. Whistler, training, training and more training, the more you sweat during training the less you bleed in battle, it is an old army saying from an old soldier.

  • @somejerkbag
    @somejerkbag10 ай бұрын

    Meth.... the answer is meth....

  • @monamuhuthia

    @monamuhuthia

    10 ай бұрын

    I agree...it's documented that they took drugs that made them be brutal and non sympathetic. It would also help feel like super heroes☹️

  • @heavyartillery-qm5hu
    @heavyartillery-qm5hu10 ай бұрын

    I like the Germans of WW2. They played a crucial part in history's most interesting event AND they were the inspiration behind many of the great villains we have enjoyed over the years. Some say that attacking the whole world is stupid, I call it a great tale!

  • @Double_K_A

    @Double_K_A

    10 ай бұрын

    Most sensitive WWII enthusiast.

  • @Blox117

    @Blox117

    10 ай бұрын

    they were also based, unlike the gen Z creeps today

  • @ROFLtheWAFL

    @ROFLtheWAFL

    10 ай бұрын

    @@Blox117 15 million civilians methodically exterminated is 'based', huh?

  • @Blox117

    @Blox117

    10 ай бұрын

    @@ROFLtheWAFL they didnt want to fight for their freedom

  • @Bahamut3525
    @Bahamut35258 ай бұрын

    I think the fundamental reason is the professionalism of the German soldier as an individual, which then performed admirably as a whole. This despite not having the best technology (most infanterists we’re not motorised). In the post-WW1, a German general called Hans Von Seekt reformed the German army to make it an elite force. Hitler then inherited this force and expanded on it with much funding. This initial force was absolutely elite, and performed from the campaign of Poland, France, and the early part of invasion of ussr. After that, much of the men were dead or wounded. They were replaced by newer soldiers and the German army especially after 1942-1943 was nowhere near what it was in 1939-1942. You could say the crème of the German genetic material in terms of men were killed in the first 3 years of the war, especially operation Barbarossa. It’s why they even got so far into Russia despite being not well geared for winter. The early German soldiers were pretty much like Olympic athletes in terms of looks and performance.

  • @raulduke6105
    @raulduke61056 ай бұрын

    Lots of good commo and excellent staff work

  • @mswayner65
    @mswayner6524 күн бұрын

    Heinz Guderian, the so-called "architect of the blitzkrieg" actaully got his battle strategy from British tank commander Percy Hobarth. Hobarth was the first to come up with the tactic of using armored divisions to pierce through enemy lines and encircle them with a pincer maneuver. He was unpopular with other British officers sonthey dismissed his ideas, but Guderian allegedly kept copies of every paper Hobarth had ever written and used his tactics nearly idemtically to how they were thpught up.

  • @DrHalwest
    @DrHalwest10 ай бұрын

    I love the videos in this channel though i wish you'd start putting English captions since the auto generated one is not Reliable.

  • @robbabcock_
    @robbabcock_10 ай бұрын

    Great video!

  • @julianmhall
    @julianmhall7 ай бұрын

    IIRC the term 'blitzkrieg' was actually the invention of a British journalist who having realised how fast the Germans attacked wondered what the German was for 'lightning war', so it was initially just a journalistic sound-bite.

  • @phil-anthrophist3960
    @phil-anthrophist39604 ай бұрын

    Hi Simon and crew, could you possibly do some content on Australia in war?? Especially WWI

  • @kenfox22
    @kenfox229 ай бұрын

    Great channel. Thanks

  • @MB-ez7lf
    @MB-ez7lf2 ай бұрын

    Brilliant. One of your very best.

  • @tpeterson9140
    @tpeterson914010 ай бұрын

    ur a real g for putting the ad in the beginning