• 3 months ago
For educational purposes

Newsreel and eyewitness accounts of Hitler's military strategy, revealing that the self-appointed commander-in-chief was so anxious to retain centralised power he created a war council best described as inept.

More significantly, he also had an indecisive nature which led to a series of tactical blunders - notably the failure to stop the Allied retreat at Dunkirk, and the invasion of Russia, which left Germany hopelessly overstretched fighting on two fronts.
Transcript
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17:22After the victory, Hitler grew hesitant.
17:27The British did not want to dance to his tune.
17:30With Churchill, there was no more appeasement.
17:39The war in the air over England was designed to bring the stubborn British to heel.
17:43Instead, it increased their resistance.
18:00The British Isles could not be conquered with bombs.
18:07While the Battle of Britain was raging, Hitler had plans drawn up for the invasion of the Soviet Union.
18:12He was afraid of war on two fronts, yet he unleashed it.
18:17Russia is the factor on which England chiefly depends.
18:21But if Russia is crushed, England's last hope is removed.
18:26The ruler of Europe and the Balkans then becomes Germany.
18:30Decision. In the course of this conflict, Russia must be finished off.
18:38But this plan meant more than that.
18:40Operation Barbarossa was to fulfil an old dream of Hitler's.
18:45This war was to be his war, free from any thought of morality.
18:49A war of annihilation in the East to win Lebensraum.
18:54How his troops should conduct themselves was conveyed by the supreme commander through the leaders of the Wehrmacht.
19:00Bolshevism is the mortal enemy of the National Socialist German people.
19:06Germany must fight this corrupt world view.
19:11This struggle demands ruthless and energetic action against Bolshevik rabble-rousers, irregular saboteurs, Jews,
19:19and the complete removal of all active and passive resistance.
19:27Whoever broke the law in this pursuit would not be prosecuted, the commander promised.
19:34For actions undertaken by members of the Wehrmacht and its auxiliaries against enemy civilians,
19:41there is no requirement to prosecute.
19:44Not even when the deeds are military crimes or offences.
19:51Hit hard, single them out, finish them off.
19:54Quotations from the dictionary of the monster.
19:56This was more than a matter of winning territory, it was utter annihilation.
20:02The originators of barbaric Asiatic methods of fighting are the political commissars.
20:08Thus, action must be taken against them at once and with the utmost ferocity.
20:13Therefore, if they are captured in battle or in resistance, they are on principle to be shot immediately.
20:24Before the attack, the retreat into the forests of East Prussia.
20:29Hitler had always administered himself to the Germans like a drug.
20:33Now he dug into his wolf's lair, the Wolfschanze, ready for the assault.
20:48Barbarossa was a deadly gamble, a race against time.
20:52The battle had to be decided before winter set in or the war was lost.
21:04At first, the plan worked.
21:06After 20 days, the flag of the SS was hanging in white Russian Minsk.
21:14Whole divisions of the Soviet army were taken prisoner.
21:23The Germans were forced to retreat.
21:27Leningrad was in their sights.
21:29The commander wanted to starve out the Jerusalem of communism,
21:33to annihilate it and raze it to the ground.
21:43In September, German tanks were already outside Kiev.
21:48Entire Soviet armies were destroyed in mammoth battles of encirclement.
21:58Hitler's army was forced to retreat.
22:01The Germans were forced to retreat.
22:04The Germans were forced to retreat.
22:07The Germans were forced to retreat.
22:10The Germans were forced to retreat.
22:13Hitler's soldiers still believed in their own invincibility.
22:43I wrote to my mother in September,
22:48that the war would be over in a few weeks.
23:13It was impossible to take place outside Moscow.
23:16My generals understand nothing of a war economy,
23:19raged Hitler and insisted on his plan.
23:26When the offensive against Moscow finally got underway in October,
23:29it was too late.
23:31Stalin had put the time to use.
23:44The end of the war
23:49Blinded by the brilliance of his victories,
23:52the commander believed he could get anything he wanted on the spot,
23:55which was far from the hard reality.
24:00Then, in October, winter came.
24:04Suddenly, within a few days, the temperatures dropped to minus 25 degrees.
24:10The troops were not prepared for this.
24:13I wrote to my mother,
24:16that it would take some time.
24:29Against fresh troops from Siberia, the Germans were in a hopeless position.
24:34But Hitler ordered the line to be held at all costs,
24:37without regard for casualties.
24:57In December, when it came to holding the front,
25:04I wrote to my mother,
25:07that the war would not be over before three years.
25:10You have to imagine,
25:13what it means for a young officer,
25:16from September, with the feeling,
25:19that it will take a few more weeks,
25:22to December of the same year,
25:25who says, it will take three more years.
25:29In the unreal world of the Wolfschanze,
25:32Hitler drew his own conclusions from the debacle.
25:35He escaped into the idea of attack.
25:41Just as his whole concept of war threatened to collapse,
25:44he needlessly declared war on the whole world.
25:47The war on the whole world.
25:50The war on the whole world.
25:53The war on the whole world.
25:56Just as his whole concept of war threatened to collapse,
25:59he needlessly declared war on the United States.
26:27And the Germans were to fight with even more determination.
26:31For him, and with him, without hope of peace.
26:35Nobody wanted to make peace with him,
26:38so his people had to carry on fighting.
26:41If necessary, to the bitter end.
26:57Hitler made a clean sweep through his generals.
27:00Anyone who didn't toe the line was dismissed.
27:03In place of the unnerved Field Marshal von Brauchitsch,
27:06Hitler himself assumed command of the army.
27:09An affront, yet the army remained loyal to their new commander-in-chief.
27:13The war on the whole world
27:20One must not forget that I myself,
27:23including Rommel,
27:26have experienced outstanding Field Marshals and personalities
27:32who say goodbye to Hitler on the way,
27:36and say, I'm going there now and tell the man the truth,
27:39and so on,
27:42and who come back after two days
27:45and say, it's an incredibly impressive man,
27:49and he has now described the whole concept to me,
27:53and so on, and there is still hope, and so on.
27:57That was then, after 24 hours, gone again.
28:01But whether you take that as a kind of hypnosis,
28:05or otherwise an impression
28:08that he exerted on many people,
28:12you can't deny that.
28:18First of all, the high commanders on the front,
28:23also the commanders of the army groups,
28:26were not sufficiently informed.
28:29There was the famous Führer's Order No. 1,
28:35which said that everyone was only allowed to know
28:40what he had to know in order to fulfill his mission,
28:45and that he was not allowed to know that earlier than it was necessary.
28:50Secondly, Manstein spoke to Hitler,
28:54Leib spoke to Hitler, Kluge spoke to Hitler,
28:58and here it becomes somewhat clear,
29:01what I experienced at the end of the war,
29:04that this man had an indescribable,
29:09demonic, personal effect,
29:15which only very few people were able to escape,
29:21and which you can't understand
29:24if you haven't experienced it yourself.
29:30With this power of suggestion, he waged war,
29:33for war's sake.
29:34He had long since buried the illusion of a quick victory.
29:43In public, he appeared confident.
29:47He only showed doubt in private.
29:50In a secretly recorded conversation with Finland's Marshal Mannerheim,
29:54he admitted he had underestimated the Soviets.
29:57If someone had told me that a state could attack with 35,000 tanks,
30:03I would have said they were crazy.
30:0635,000 tanks.
30:09We have destroyed over 34,000 tanks so far.
30:14I hadn't foreseen it beforehand,
30:16if I had foreseen it, it would have been hard enough for me,
30:20but I would have taken the decision right,
30:23because there was no other option.
30:27This obstinacy made the commander take one further wrong decision.
30:31In spite of the long supply lines,
30:33he sent one part of the army to the Caucasus,
30:36and another to Stalingrad.
30:38In the summer of 1942, the Wehrmacht had to hold a European front
30:4230,000 kilometres long.
30:45A hopeless task.
30:48Hitler was not put off by the reality of war.
30:51Instead of the Russian capital,
30:53he wanted to capture the city which bore the name of his adversary.
30:57Instead of a victory, a symbolic triumph.
31:05The Battle of Stalingrad.
31:09Stalingrad
31:15In October, soldiers of the 6th Army occupied nearly all of the city.
31:21But the Soviets were still doggedly defending 300 metres of the Volga.
31:26They were getting supplies, and the Germans were not.
31:30Stalingrad
31:48So, he ignored the reality of the second winter of war.
32:00His operative goals and decisions became more and more unreal.
32:09They became less realistic.
32:14The reality in Stalingrad.
32:17The defenders attacked, the attackers defended themselves.
32:21Hitler personally intervened in the battle of the houses.
32:27They had a map of 1 to 10,000.
32:32And exactly how the company should proceed,
32:37and which factory should be taken, and so on,
32:40was decided by Hitler from the Führer's headquarters 1,000 kilometres away.
32:48Decisions with dire consequences.
32:51When the Soviets encircled Stalingrad in November,
32:54300,000 Germans were trapped.
32:56Their generals wanted to break out, but Hitler dug in his heels.
33:02To the 6th Army, decree from the Führer.
33:05Present Volga front and present North front to be held under all circumstances.
33:11Air supply by deployment of further 100 Junkers being set up.
33:17He had an unyielding will.
33:21And if he had an opinion for himself,
33:26even an operative opinion,
33:28he had a lot of preconceived opinions,
33:31and he had formed an opinion,
33:33then it was impossible to get rid of him if he didn't want to.
33:46And so it happened.
34:00Abandoned in the ruins of Stalingrad,
34:02the German soldiers didn't stand a chance.
34:16When he left, not only I doubted that the Führer would kick us out,
34:23and that he still knew what he was doing.
34:26The whole atmosphere was in doubt.
34:31Or let's say, one was in doubt whether this was right.
34:35Such doubts were justified.
34:37Human life meant nothing to a commander who had only his own goals in mind.
34:42The whole of Germany once laid down its arms at three quarters past twelve.
34:48I basically only stopped five minutes after twelve.
34:56There was nothing to laugh about for the men betrayed at Stalingrad.
35:01Hitler was a man of his word.
35:10For me, any respect for Hitler as a commander,
35:16but also as a human being, or as a Führer, is broken.
35:20Hitler was for us, one could say, at that time, the grave-digger for us.
35:37Stalingrad, the definitive turning point.
35:43For the commander, it was the beginning of the end.
35:46For the commander, it was the beginning of the end.
35:49He escaped into a convoluted fantasy world, cutting himself off totally from reality,
35:56from which there was no escape for his people.
36:09For Hitler, in the imaginary world of his military maps,
36:12all that mattered was putting off the end, with the familiar remedy, a new battle.
36:21The greatest tank deployment of all time.
36:23Seventeen panzer divisions, half a million men.
36:27A pointless display of power.
36:31The tank battle of Kursk in the summer of 1943 lasted only eight days.
36:35It ended indecisively.
36:37Hitler had played his last card.
36:42The delusion of Lebensraum in the east was shattered.
36:45He applied himself all the more doggedly to a second insane idea.
36:53The Jews had no divisions.
37:05By the summer of 1943, mass murder had been perfected.
37:10Cattle trucks to Auschwitz.
37:12In the official jargon of the executioners, the final solution of the Jewish question.
37:20He had a sinister vision for his own people, too.
37:40Fate came to Germany from the skies.
37:43Like the vengeance of God.
37:46The Allied firestorm fell on everyone indiscriminately.
37:50Supporters and opponents.
38:00That Germany's cities were perishing was of no interest to the commander.
38:04He never visited the bomb sites.
38:06He could sense that his previously enthusiastic people were beginning to have doubts.
38:36The painful recognition of just whom they got involved with came too late.
38:41This man had aroused the opposition of the world,
38:44which was now united in one goal.
38:47His elimination.
39:07On June the 6th, 1944, Allied troops landed on the European mainland.
39:12The war on two fronts had arrived.
39:20This desperate situation forced the German resistance into action.
39:24Brave conspirators from the officer corps wanted to kill the dictator
39:28to save their fatherland.
39:30They carried out what many only dared think of.
39:37In some evening hours, we sat together in the barracks
39:43with a glass of beer in our little officer's house
39:48and discussed what we could do.
39:51Could we depose Hitler?
39:53Could we make a man the Commander-in-Chief of the Eastern Front?
39:57Should we put Hitler before a court?
40:00The search for a way out drove many officers
40:03into conflict between military obedience and moral responsibility.
40:34The attempt on his life came to nothing.
40:37The commander survived.
40:45He construed blind chance as a gift of providence.
40:49Nothing was meant to happen to him, he told his Axis partner euphorically.
40:56His real condition gave the lie to his self-delusions.
41:01I had never seen Hitler up close.
41:04When I saw him for the first time on July 23, 1944,
41:08I was horrified.
41:11I saw a wreck in front of me.
41:14A bent man,
41:18who was already dragging one leg,
41:21had a trembling hand.
41:24He could only move it in a trembling manner.
41:28The right hand was useless because of the bruise.
41:36I didn't see any shining eyes that could fascinate me.
41:40They were faint.
41:43And a naked figure was standing opposite me.
41:47I couldn't believe that he was the vital leader
41:51that we had all imagined.
41:54The battalions of the Volkssturm are ready for action.
41:58Most of the people from the First World War
42:01will tell you what you need to know about the warrior's craft.
42:05The last reserves.
42:08Old men who had to stick their necks out once again.
42:12And half-grown lads who now had to play the hero.
42:16One was the desire to become such a hero.
42:20And the second was to contribute to saving Germany,
42:24as I felt it at that time.
42:27To save it from what was coming at it from the outside.
42:31From the east, the Soviets were advancing on Germany.
42:35As they marched into East Prussia,
42:38the hour had come for retaliation.
42:44The heavy artillery was firing.
42:48The hate Hitler had sown was now revisited on his own people.
42:57The war he had unleashed, he now waged against the Germans as well.
43:02He wanted to rob them of any hope that in the west, at least,
43:06the end would be swift.
43:08So he drew up a crazy plan.
43:11THE FUHRER
43:16His delusion that reality should submit to the Führer remained intact.
43:21For one last gamble in the west,
43:23without scruple, he left the endangered eastern front exposed.
43:28THE FUHRER
43:34I myself experienced this, in my opinion,
43:39not only idiotic but also criminal Ardennes offensive.
43:46Where Hitler, in the west, instead of packing these fabulous,
43:50even more fabulous tank divisions into the east,
43:54into the Eifel, into the Ardennes, with tank divisions,
43:58to believe that one could break through there,
44:01all the way to the sea, Antwerp, was madness.
44:07The madness had a quick end.
44:09Superior Allied strength gained the upper hand.
44:12Reality defeated delusion.
44:19While the exhausted soldiers surrendered,
44:21the commander kept repeating the old slogans.
44:42To which the Soviets replied with a decisive blow in the east.
44:52Fear of the Red Army drove millions of people to flight.
45:02Flight on frozen roads.
45:11Across the frozen lagoons of the Baltic.
45:15To the ports offering rescue by sea.
45:34The commander fled too.
45:36He now commanded from Berlin.
45:38In an hour, he could be at the front.
45:45From his people, he demanded still more sacrifice.
46:02Every sacrifice was pointless.
46:07With their superior strength,
46:09the Red Army blasted their way into Hitler's capital.
46:15At the end, he waged the war on his own doorstep.
46:19The commander was finished.
46:21What remained was blind destruction.
46:24All military transport, communications,
46:27industrial and supply facilities within the Reich
46:31that may be useful to the enemy are to be destroyed.
46:39The order came too late.
46:42The order came too late.
46:44As did the directive to turn all civilians at the front out of their homes
46:48and have them try their luck in the open.
47:00On these streets in Berlin, the people once acclaimed him.
47:04He had betrayed them.
47:07But he could not annihilate them.
47:17A last roll call in his own backyard.
47:20Medals for boy soldiers.
47:25They are Hitler's last victims.
47:36Brought up to believe in him, they are now to die for him.
48:06He laid his hands on his trousers.
48:11Made himself a tool.
48:20That is what I blame Hitler for the most.
48:23That he seduced the youth.
48:26And that he betrayed them for their youth.
48:29And that he took many lives.
48:32It was a very painful experience.
48:35It came about through many conversations.
48:38And also because one began to think,
48:41what kind of madness is this, this whole war?
48:56In the end, you got so tired of war
49:00and were glad that you had survived it so far.
49:03That you now wished that the war should be over.
49:06And it can only be over
49:09if the one who called him out, Hitler, is gone.
49:14Without their obedience, Hitler could not have waged his war.
49:30The generals failed lamentably.
49:33The ordinary soldiers were deceived twice over.
50:00My knowledge, which only referred to the last weeks of the war,
50:07was that Hitler was mentally ill.
50:13That he lived in a hypertrophic self-identification with the German people.
50:22He was subjectively convinced
50:25that with his death,
50:28at the end of his ideology,
50:31the German people would no longer be able to survive.
50:58We rushed into thin air like a ghost,
51:01a nightmare which haunts us still.
51:13The final account, an ocean of blood and tears.
51:19From Stalingrad to Brest,
51:22from Dachau to Auschwitz,
51:2540 million dead.
51:55To be continued...

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