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Hitler's Generals in the West German Army 

Mark Felton Productions
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In 1955 a new German Army was created, the Bundeswehr. A number of WW2-era German generals and admirals were enlisted to command and shape this new force, including four Knight's Cross holders.
Dr. Mark Felton is a well-known British historian, the author of 22 non-fiction books, including bestsellers 'Zero Night' and 'Castle of the Eagles', both currently being developed into movies in Hollywood. In addition to writing, Mark also appears regularly in television documentaries around the world, including on The History Channel, Netflix, National Geographic, Quest, American Heroes Channel and RMC Decouverte. His books have formed the background to several TV and radio documentaries. More information about Mark can be found at: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_Fe...
Visit my audio book channel 'War Stories with Mark Felton': • One Thousand Miles to ...
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Disclaimer: All opinions and comments expressed in the 'Comments' section do not reflect the opinions of Mark Felton Productions. All opinions and comments should contribute to the dialogue. Mark Felton Productions does not condone written attacks, insults, racism, sexism, extremism, violence or otherwise questionable comments or material in the 'Comments' section, and reserves the right to delete any comment violating this rule or to block any poster from the channel.
Credits: Bundesarchiv; US National Archives; Bruce Marvin; Killingfreak; PimboliDD.

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29 апр 2021

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Комментарии : 3 тыс.   
@theonlymadmac4771
@theonlymadmac4771 3 года назад
Adenauer‘s famous answer when asked, why he accepted generals with Wehrmacht backgrounds: „well, our allies probably won‘t accept an 18 years old general“
@MrShoic
@MrShoic 3 года назад
maybe they shouldve looked for non nazi officers, that there were many of
@wackadakka3134
@wackadakka3134 3 года назад
@@MrShoic They did .......these Generals werent " nazis " .....they were not party members
@ottovonbismarck2443
@ottovonbismarck2443 3 года назад
Mr. Adenauer was known for several famous quotes and some political maneuvers, though I'd never doubt his integrity.
@connorgolden4
@connorgolden4 3 года назад
@@MrShoic Which they did. These weren’t fanatics, just soldiers. If you’re talking about german military officers that didn’t serve hitler at all...kind of impossible.
@alfredcollins3944
@alfredcollins3944 3 года назад
Not only that. Not all Hitlers generals were even nazis.
@bud9133
@bud9133 3 года назад
"So, do you have experience in repelling the Soviets?" "...well...in a way...yes..." "Excellent, when can you start?"
@IrishCarney
@IrishCarney 3 года назад
"So, HYPOTHETICALLY, if there were a massive onslaught of Soviet armor headed westward towards us, I JUST SO HAPPEN to think that doing such-and-such would work pretty well, while such-and-such would definitely not. ... Oh, just intuition."
@KoteDarasuum
@KoteDarasuum 3 года назад
@typo pit they didnt slaughter wrong pigs, they defienetly slaughtered right pig. The issue on other hand was that there was 2 pigs to butcher, not just 1.
@Fighter-ff5xl
@Fighter-ff5xl 3 года назад
@@danchokonstantinov6735 Don't overrate Red Army.
@dnickaroo3574
@dnickaroo3574 3 года назад
The alliance between the US & SS began in 1945 when the Gehlen network was absorbed into US Intelligence, later becoming the BND. As Michael C Ruppert said: "The Third Reich was not defeated in 1945 -- it just changed venue". The Wehrmacht did not stand trial because the US & Britain needed them for their plans of world domination. Eisenhower stated that the Soviet Union was not a threat, considering the losses they suffered during WW2.
@kylehankins5988
@kylehankins5988 3 года назад
@@dnickaroo3574 It was not an alliance between the United States and the SS. The SS was dissolved, and german intelligence was stripped of its nazi ideology. The west germans merely used the old German intelligence infrastructure in their new government, just as the soviets did.
@dertargor9700
@dertargor9700 3 года назад
“Fun” fact: Erich von Manstein, who was released in 1953, was an unofficial advisor of the army. He was the only German field marshal of ww2 who did this.
@Cherry-sg4zg
@Cherry-sg4zg 2 года назад
Oo ok thanks.
@awc6007
@awc6007 2 года назад
I remember reading somewhere that before his death, Heinz Guderian was also consulted on the creation of the Bundswehr.
@zymelin21
@zymelin21 2 года назад
generalfeldmarschall von Paulus helped form the NVA (east germany)
@edelweiss2971
@edelweiss2971 2 года назад
@@zymelin21 And worked for the folkspolizei hochschule and where not in favour to the citizens but to the communist leaders. Peoples police sounds very similar to Gestapo Geheime startspolizei, wich was against their citizens.
@zymelin21
@zymelin21 2 года назад
If you count the officers of the luftwaffe, generalfeldmarscall Josef Kammhuber ended his career as "generalinspekteur der bundesluftwaffe"
@rtimofei1
@rtimofei1 3 года назад
My father often told me the story of how, during his national service for the Dutch army in 1960, het took part in an exercise which included Dutch, German and Canadian troops. The exercise was that the German army (still wearing WWII style uniforms and helmets) had to take a hill which was defended by a combined Canadian-Dutch force commanded by a Canadian WW2 veteran sergant-major. As the Germans pressed their attack the Canadian SM had a case of PTSD, screamed “the Germans are coming!” fixed his bayonet and launched down the hill with murderous intent. The German troops running away for their lives and my father and other troop running after the SM to tackle and subdue him...
@steffenseitter4791
@steffenseitter4791 2 года назад
WW2 Style Helmets and Uniforms in 1960? Sound like the Bundesgrenzschutz, not the Bundeswehr.
@rtimofei1
@rtimofei1 Год назад
@@steffenseitter4791 Very possible, unfortunately I cannot ask my father for the details anymore ;-)
@arrielradja5522
@arrielradja5522 Год назад
That's kinda funny ngl
@andrewgibbon-williams7974
@andrewgibbon-williams7974 Год назад
We all know about the valor of the Dutch armed forces here in the UK. Pace: Srebrenitsa . The Dutch 'forces' just stood back and allowed thousands of Muslim men and boys to be massacred. NO British armed force would have done this. It's a shame upon the Netherlands. But, typically, that snug little minor European state easily 'writes it off'. The Dutch should be ashamed of its performance, but, typically, it goes down the road of national amnesia. As an Englishman, I'd never trust the Dutch.
@rtimofei1
@rtimofei1 Год назад
@@andrewgibbon-williams7974 Thank you for your views, slightly off-topic but thank you none the less.
@gonkmaster717
@gonkmaster717 3 года назад
Hitler+Western German Army+Mark Felton Productions = Instant click.
@paulbacher8818
@paulbacher8818 3 года назад
Feel you
@marcoAKAjoe
@marcoAKAjoe 3 года назад
Lol
@comradekenobi6908
@comradekenobi6908 3 года назад
Gonk
@diekuhistaufdemdach3923
@diekuhistaufdemdach3923 3 года назад
So gehört sich das!
@michaelmccarthy4615
@michaelmccarthy4615 3 года назад
The story behind the story....
@blueastcoast
@blueastcoast 3 года назад
This is better than the history channel ever was.
@richardb4313
@richardb4313 3 года назад
On the History Channel this would have been an hour long with a false lead before each commercial break to make sure you don't flick the channel.
@realtsarbomba
@realtsarbomba 3 года назад
Are you implying that ancient aliens isn't history?
@matpk
@matpk 3 года назад
@@richardb4313 compare 1930s Nazi Germany vs 2020s Communist China in your next video!!
@larsbundgaard5462
@larsbundgaard5462 3 года назад
@@realtsarbomba Are you implying that the X-Files documentary series got it all wrong?
@larsbundgaard5462
@larsbundgaard5462 3 года назад
@@matpk WAT!?
@lucdeluc6577
@lucdeluc6577 3 года назад
There is a classic photo of Hans Spiedel inspecting a line of RAF Regiment troops at RAF Northolt base in London wearing his WW2 Iron Cross
@jussim.konttinen4981
@jussim.konttinen4981 3 года назад
You are right. I wouldn't have noticed
@manupainkiller
@manupainkiller 3 года назад
But without Svastika or other nazi symbols, right ?
@jussim.konttinen4981
@jussim.konttinen4981 3 года назад
@@manupainkiller That is a good question. I understand he also had a WW1 medal.
@DarthBigBen
@DarthBigBen 3 года назад
@@manupainkiller I don’t think he was even a member of the Nazi Party.
@kylehankins5988
@kylehankins5988 3 года назад
@@manupainkiller yeah they de-natzified all the medals, that has nazi symbolism.
@Payduro
@Payduro 3 года назад
The topic of post-WWII Germany is such an interesting topic and I can’t think of anyone better to present its history. Great work as always Mark!!
@thesteelrodent1796
@thesteelrodent1796 Год назад
much of the post-war history is completely ignored in schools and typically the focus is more on the mess that caused the DDR and the wall than how GDR came to be its own nation. So much stuff happened post-1945 that's just never talked about, by anyone but Dr Felton
@Gillan1220
@Gillan1220 11 месяцев назад
I could say the same for Japan, which the JSDF also employed former IJA and IJN officers that were cleared of any warcrimes.
@gleisbauer25
@gleisbauer25 3 года назад
A NVA-Veteran told me how they went for a training into the sowjet union. When he returned and told from it over a beer in his home town the older man knew all the places he came across… They had taken the same route a few decades earlier…
@scottcharney1091
@scottcharney1091 3 года назад
Edit: Never mind. I was confused.
@gleisbauer25
@gleisbauer25 3 года назад
@@scottcharney1091 NVA is the Nationale Volksarmee of the GDR.
@stevewixom9311
@stevewixom9311 3 года назад
@@gleisbauer25 thanks for clearing that up for me too
@_np7
@_np7 3 года назад
I just realized ... imgaine that XD how... **ironic**
@El_Presidente_5337
@El_Presidente_5337 3 года назад
@@gleisbauer25 I first thaught of the vietnamese lol
@uncleeric3317
@uncleeric3317 3 года назад
Whenever Mark says, “That’s a story for another time”, I get goosebumps.
@jed-henrywitkowski6470
@jed-henrywitkowski6470 3 года назад
GF: He's thinking about that redhead who waited on us at Texas Roadhouse. Me: When is Mark going to release the store for another time?
@abruemmer77
@abruemmer77 3 года назад
It's the ultimate cliffhanger and I like it!
@robertmanfredthurrigl9424
@robertmanfredthurrigl9424 2 года назад
Perfect lime to end it with.
@jonathanliberty
@jonathanliberty Год назад
what a coincidence , so do I
@jorgen1892
@jorgen1892 3 года назад
I'm 21 years old and i love history.. I've learned a lot from this guy
@frutt5k
@frutt5k 3 года назад
And you learn it without (much) bias...
@sararyan1255
@sararyan1255 3 года назад
🇮🇪. 👍👍👍
@tsar389
@tsar389 2 года назад
Situational irony
@kickingmustang
@kickingmustang 3 года назад
Another incredible journey through history... Thank you Mark.
@1joshjosh1
@1joshjosh1 3 года назад
Lots of Nazi stuff with the good Dr. 🧐
@comfee
@comfee 3 года назад
Hefty amount of plagiarism and historical inaccuracies... Thank you Mark.
@natedog1619
@natedog1619 3 года назад
@@comfee where’s your discography of self written historical documentaries?
@DelGTAGrndrs
@DelGTAGrndrs 3 года назад
@@comfee Do you have proof? Time stamps and links to where the inaccuracies are. I’m curious! thanks
@user-zp4xm7ek6y
@user-zp4xm7ek6y 3 года назад
@Derek JacksonThere were Hitler generals in the East germans army too? DDR.
@mustafasahidmahamoud4942
@mustafasahidmahamoud4942 3 года назад
Let’s take a minute to appreciate how much effort Mark puts into these videos. Absolutely impeccable.
@OtaBengaBokongo
@OtaBengaBokongo 3 года назад
@@Somebodythatyouusedtoknow952 infidel!!
@skymaster4743
@skymaster4743 3 года назад
@@Somebodythatyouusedtoknow952 That's a bot you're replying to. Don't bother.
@paulkirkland3263
@paulkirkland3263 3 года назад
Mustafa, well said. You're absolutely right, of course. :)
@OtaBengaBokongo
@OtaBengaBokongo 3 года назад
@@Somebodythatyouusedtoknow952 Mr. Dogg-Eater, you clearly don't know what a bot is.
@OtaBengaBokongo
@OtaBengaBokongo 3 года назад
@@paulkirkland3263 infidel!!!
@gator83261
@gator83261 3 года назад
As a lieutenant in the Army in the 80’s we would always get our clocks cleaned by the Bundeswehr units in any exercises we did. It was difficult for an “up or out” staffed army to compete with German soldiers who knew their job well and were at their job for the past 10-15-etc. years.
@richardm3023
@richardm3023 3 года назад
And who's fathers taught them all they knew.
@MrPh30
@MrPh30 3 года назад
A German friend of me said when he began his Navy service in ca 1980, the first word he heard from officers and nco after they entered there was " Welcome to the Imperial German Navy, calender year and dates are different ,but the rules,regulations ,and dicipline remains the same."
@simonmorris4226
@simonmorris4226 3 года назад
How come they got shellacked in 1918 and 1945. They look good but are shit when faced by people who shoot back!
@kinocorner976
@kinocorner976 3 года назад
@George Prince Yup, losing two world wars, and now having a military that’s using broomsticks as machine guns is a “real” Ingrained culture. Don’t let me continue on. It’ll get real sad.
@Sturminfantrist
@Sturminfantrist 3 года назад
@@MrPh30 i never heard anything like that, i entered Service in the Navy (Glücksstadt/Marineküstendienstschule 76er Training later stationed in Nordholz MFG3 Naval air wing 3) in 1979 and i cant believe it, no Officier or NCO with a bit of brain would call the Bundesmarine the Imperial german Navy, maybe your friend was drunk that 1st day.
@shoutyman9922
@shoutyman9922 3 года назад
Mark Felton is one of the best presenters on U-Tube. He is also one of the reasons I no-longer get to bed at a reasonable time. Felton always manages to inject at least something that I never knew before. My ears perk up as soon as I hear his intro music. Well done Mark and happy May Day.
@henrisivonen7404
@henrisivonen7404 3 года назад
Thank you for another interesting clip! The German heritage carried on in the army uniform design, insignia, badges and the eiserne kreuz/balkenkreuz much longer than many would have thought.
@user-nf4kz3hi4c
@user-nf4kz3hi4c Год назад
Many people do not know West German uniform like M57 and M62 and it makes a lot of people praise NVA. That is very sad.
@abdulmismail
@abdulmismail 3 года назад
Absolutely fascinating. Can't wait for the "Hitler's Generals in the East German Army" episode.
@BrunoSantos-lm1pz
@BrunoSantos-lm1pz 3 года назад
Fascists were proscecuted wayyy more in the east (rightfully so)
@kosmonument2682
@kosmonument2682 3 года назад
It's not likely to happen. The Communists executed most of those.
@Vespasiaan
@Vespasiaan 3 года назад
@@BrunoSantos-lm1pz You forget that the Wehrmacht officer corps was not entirely loyal to the NSDAP, and there are many examples (such as Stauffenberg) of them being outright against the NSDAP. I am certain some ended up in the East.
@herocommand
@herocommand 3 года назад
@@BrunoSantos-lm1pz Except they weren't. East german Highcommand was full of ex SS soldiers. the soviets also did jack shit in terms of denazification hence why the NPD you know the sucessor party to the NSDAP is more prominent in the east .
@deinvater2299
@deinvater2299 3 года назад
There were some officers und NCOs of the NVA, the eastern german army, that served also in the Wehrmacht. The former Wehrmacht officers who got captured at the eastern front formed a organisation called BDO (Bund Deutscher Offiziere - Organization of German Officers) Out of this organization a lot of officers of the NVA were recruited. As example Arthur Brandt, Walter Freytag, Vincenz Müller, Hans von Weech und Hans Wulz. After the creation of the Bundeswehr, that first didnt really looked like a German Army, the NVA was dressed almost like the Wehrmacht to look like a true german army.
@hereLiesThisTroper
@hereLiesThisTroper 3 года назад
Mark is so knowledgeable about history. Maybe he should become a professor of History or something.
@leesaunders1930
@leesaunders1930 3 года назад
he may well be. he has some books out to buy, check them out.
@jacksonkarwoski1884
@jacksonkarwoski1884 3 года назад
if you search him on Reddit you might be disappointed as I was when I found out😫
@clavichord
@clavichord 3 года назад
I'm already a Professor of History or Something.. it's great. I do tend to specialize more on "something" than on "history" though
@penultimateh766
@penultimateh766 3 года назад
@@jacksonkarwoski1884 What, did he get blackballed by Oxford for telling the truth too courageously??
@intoclarke9967
@intoclarke9967 3 года назад
What do you think he is?
@Rustie_za
@Rustie_za 3 года назад
everytime I hear that intro music it feels like some massive announcement is about to be made
@TorToroPorco
@TorToroPorco 3 года назад
I love all these nuggets of history that Mark reveals. There are so many stories of interest beyond just the battles that are significant parts of history.
@Gruntilda-Winkybunion
@Gruntilda-Winkybunion 3 года назад
i learn more about my own country from an English man in the internet, than from my history teacher. Thank you Mr. Felton
@JRobbySh
@JRobbySh 3 года назад
He has enabled me to fill huge gaps in my knowledge of the war with his many short stories. .
@CertifiedForkLiftOperator69420
@CertifiedForkLiftOperator69420 2 года назад
YES CAUSE you know ww2 is the only history subject. if the school system focused on information like this. you would need to start learning in pre school all the way through college.
@user-pj6gw8fu2u
@user-pj6gw8fu2u 2 года назад
I bet there are many pages missed in history book of Deutchland 😆 ...teared up on "no need to know" basis
@FiveNineO
@FiveNineO 2 года назад
As an outsider it seems you're still occupied by American troops and not really a free country through legislation and "psychological warfare". Is Mein Kampf still banned? I can find it in my local library in my country
@subboy4920
@subboy4920 2 года назад
@@FiveNineO Mein Kampf, as far as I know, never was baned, even thouhg many think that, you just weren't allowed to print new coppies because of copyright. And I don't have any idea how it could seem like we are occupied or not free
@Joshua_Finbarr
@Joshua_Finbarr 3 года назад
Dr. Mark felton never failed us all!
@scockery
@scockery 3 года назад
Good, because otherwise he'd be called Dr. Mark Failton.
@micuentaparaforosycosas3484
@micuentaparaforosycosas3484 3 года назад
@@scockery 😁👏👏
@matpk
@matpk 3 года назад
@@scockery compare 1930s Nazi Germany vs 2020s Communist China in your next video!!
@larsbundgaard5462
@larsbundgaard5462 3 года назад
@@matpk WAT!?
@scanida5070
@scanida5070 2 года назад
Funfact: Before 1956 the Bundeswehr was still called the “New Wehrmacht” (“Neue Wehrmacht”) since “Wehrmacht” was still a normal term in German for army.
@CipiRipi-in7df
@CipiRipi-in7df 3 месяца назад
In German "Wehrmacht" simply mean "Defence Force".
@jakobh66
@jakobh66 3 года назад
I would love to see an episode devoted to the military decorations in post war Germany. I am myself German and a history student and did not know about those modified medals. Also thanks for your wonderful episodes!
@twinsonic
@twinsonic 2 года назад
If you call yourself a history student and German, you should have known that. Basic military knowledge.
@alexanderzippel8809
@alexanderzippel8809 Год назад
@@twinsonicKnowing decorations of an army not even 70 years old is anything but basic knowledge
@twinsonic
@twinsonic Год назад
@@alexanderzippel8809 if someone is "devoted" to post war German decorations, one should know about the Ordensgesetz from 1957.
@Southprong59
@Southprong59 4 месяца назад
I am a WWII buff and learned a few things in this video as well.
@imathreat209
@imathreat209 3 года назад
Perfect way to start my Friday
@vexxfulomega9
@vexxfulomega9 3 года назад
Completely agree
@imathreat209
@imathreat209 3 года назад
@adolf hitler you fell or feel?
@rolandberger7493
@rolandberger7493 3 года назад
@@imathreat209 First he felt like starting a war, then he fell in the war.
@rembrandtshadows
@rembrandtshadows 3 года назад
@adolf hitler Adolf, do you have any art work for sale?
@rembrandtshadows
@rembrandtshadows 3 года назад
yes, agreed.
@raphaelcatchpole2685
@raphaelcatchpole2685 3 года назад
Read an article about this once but never heard it mentioned anywhere else. Until now that is! Hats off Mark!
@rembrandtshadows
@rembrandtshadows 3 года назад
I mean, really, its true!
@herocommand
@herocommand 3 года назад
Realy its quite common knowledge in germany and atleats our direct neighbours. Kinda strange to see people that didnt know this. Then again i doubt the quote of our first post war chancelor going '' Nato wouldn't like 17 year old Generals'' is known outside of Germany.
@rembrandtshadows
@rembrandtshadows 3 года назад
@@herocommand I think you indentified the issues in your post . . . . and now it is forgotten history.
@herocommand
@herocommand 3 года назад
@@rembrandtshadows I guess for some nations it is. Certainly not for most of central europe.
@raphaelcatchpole2685
@raphaelcatchpole2685 3 года назад
@@herocommand I'm from Germany, half English, and I went to a German school growing up in Denmark, and I was never educated on this subject. Don't remember anyone mentioning it either in conversation. Might be common knowledge to some but I'm definitely glad Mark decided to take it up still for those that didn't. You'd be surprised what alot of people nowadays haven't heard about, even though you and I might have already. Like I said, I did read about it, so I did know about it already... Then again I am quite interested in history. It's obviously not a secret, just saying it's nothing you hear talked about everyday that's all, and it requires you be interested in the subject to actually find out. Perhaps the previous generations know it more because they read more and also it's closer to their time than mine since I'm relatively young and alot of people my age can't be bothered. My mom who grew up in West Germany also sais that she might have heard about it before, but it's not necessarily something the common man has heard about aswell.
@joshuafarmer3467
@joshuafarmer3467 3 года назад
These videos are so informative and high-quality. I wrote my senior thesis in college on the SS, so I know much of this information but I still learn more each time I watch a Felton production. Thank you.
@Demonsith12345
@Demonsith12345 3 года назад
Your channel is a precious resource for teachers and history buffs everywhere. Rock on, Dr. Felton!
@LordOfCinder85
@LordOfCinder85 3 года назад
I have learned more about WW2 history from your channel and Military History Visualized than i ever did at school.
@Atti19216
@Atti19216 3 года назад
Not hard since they dont really teach anything about ww2 at school
@generalfred9426
@generalfred9426 3 года назад
History classes are supposed to teach you what caused the historical problem, how the problem was caused, and how the problem was solved in order for you as the individual to apply those skills in your life. If schools tried to teach everything about WW2 they wouldn't have enough time to teach you the other critical points in history. It's up to you whether you want to learn more about a specific event or not not the school.
@rembrandtshadows
@rembrandtshadows 3 года назад
@@generalfred9426 actually schools don't teach a lot about what you said.
@generalfred9426
@generalfred9426 3 года назад
@@rembrandtshadows Well schools will be schools and everyone will hate them ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
@nogisonoko5409
@nogisonoko5409 3 года назад
@@generalfred9426 It will be great if they even teach me of what you said but they dont. They only stated what happened during their pre-independence and post- independence moment (in my country at least) not to mention a lot of set of rules and laws i have to remember and understand.
@657449
@657449 3 года назад
After Vietnam, I served on the West German/Czech Border. We would do a day long Jeep patrol or man a border outpost for a while. One day at the border outpost, two border policeman stopped in for coffee. The dog handler was armed with a Walther PPK and the other soldier had an Uzzi. The dog was the biggest German Shepherd I have ever seen.
@emgriffiths1861
@emgriffiths1861 3 года назад
My dad was in the RCAF and stationed in France in the 50s he said it was odd working with Luftwaffe officers who 10 years earlier had been the enemy but they were all professional soldiers and airmen largely without ideology
@florinivan6907
@florinivan6907 2 года назад
They were also probably smart enough to not make hints/jokes about the war. What they really believed about working with former enemies that they were indoctrinated to view as subhuman we can only speculate. Just having a drink with someone and telling jokes doesn't mean you genuinely like that person. Pragmatism wins out 90% of the time. In my view though most former Wehrmacht officers remained commited to nazi ideology in their hearts to the very end. They just knew that it no longer worked postwar to be openly like that. No one can go from being able to order the execution of someone on the spot to living in the liberal world of NATO that easily. The young 17-18 year old privates yes but the mid 20s captains and lieutenants nevermind the 40+ colonels never. By your early 20s you already have your base values that you maintain to the end. Thos former Wehrmacht captains most of them(80%) remained commited to the ideals of the nazis even if they pretended to believe in democracy and the new West Germany and being comrades with the french or british. But in their mind they still wanted the Fuhrer. Because western liberalism doesn't offer power genuine power. It usually offers economic prosperity but it doesn't give you power. These guys loved power and that doesn't go away just because you have a color tv.
@tnesp
@tnesp 3 года назад
Many more were quite influential as advisors. Von Mellenthin's "Panzer Battles" is practically a guidebook on how to fight the Soviet steamroller, and both he and his old CG Balck taught in the U.S. War College. One interesting tale is a Luftwaffe night fighter ace, colonel I think, who got badly burned in a crash late in the war and later made general in the new Luftwaffe. He made do without eyelids from 1945 to 1957 or something...
@woolno2000
@woolno2000 3 года назад
There were others. I had the honor of having dinner with my father and the then-Commanding General of German NATO forces, General Beneke (sp). A professional soldier and an evening I will always remember. We talked soldiering for most of the evening. He had been a Col. in WWII, same as my father.
@Dont_Tread_on_Me448
@Dont_Tread_on_Me448 3 года назад
He was a colonel in the Wehrmacht ???
@anaxagoras2930
@anaxagoras2930 3 года назад
@@Dont_Tread_on_Me448 Probably meant Oberst or Oberstleutnant
@xGoodOldSmurfehx
@xGoodOldSmurfehx 3 года назад
damn, can you imagine if Erwin Rommel was still alive? everyone would have selected him as one of the generals for the Bundeswehr in a heartbeat
@mikeoz4803
@mikeoz4803 3 года назад
Just like the French who poisoned their greatest hero - Napoleon, the Germans killed their greatest hero - Rommel. Strange world indeed.
@NoNoseProduction
@NoNoseProduction 3 года назад
@@mikeoz4803 rommel is overrated.
@sisophon1982
@sisophon1982 3 года назад
@@NoNoseProduction tactically yes
@dwielgosz2011
@dwielgosz2011 3 года назад
They couldve just selected Manstein but then France would panic
@marrqi7wini54
@marrqi7wini54 3 года назад
@@dwielgosz2011 And the soviets would have definitely been enraged.
@michaelnussbaum4197
@michaelnussbaum4197 3 года назад
Hi Mark. An excellent documentation. Thank you very much. I served the Bundeswehr in the early 1980 ths .Some of our commanding high ranked officers were participiants of ww2. However there were no Nazies but very professional soldiers and leaders. While livefiring on ranges they always forced and improved antitank defence with artillery in direct firing mode, firing concentrarion of all weapons etc. Take care. All the best. Michael
@Hebdomad7
@Hebdomad7 2 года назад
6:10 poor guy getting used to the new style of saluting.
@TobyTyler06
@TobyTyler06 3 года назад
The early days of the GDR's Armed Forces would be very interesting! I can only imagine how awkward and tense of a development that must've been.
@ArkadiBolschek
@ArkadiBolschek 3 года назад
Well, for the soviets it must have been business as usual: they built their own Red Army using former tsarist officers and generals.
@doncarlton4858
@doncarlton4858 3 года назад
In 1955 Erich Hartman, Gunter Rall, Mackie Steinhoff and other WW2 Experten were sent to flight school in the USA to learn fly F-86 Sabre Jets the USAF way. They called it a humbling experience because they had little instrument flying training in WW2. In 1955 all Luftwaffe training manuals, tools and equipment came from the USAF and many USAF officers and NCOs staffed training and command positions until German replacements were fully trained.
@zymelin21
@zymelin21 3 года назад
@@doncarlton4858 generalfeldmarschall von Paulus, Stalingrad, was earmarked by the russians to make the NVA!
@user-bo8eq7ki5w
@user-bo8eq7ki5w 3 года назад
For example Friedrich Paulus ))) The Nazis would not have accepted him into the Bundeswehr ))
@scottcharney1091
@scottcharney1091 3 года назад
@@ArkadiBolschek Indeed, they held the families of those officers as hostages. Yes, some came willingly, but in a great many cases they were told that if they didn't help to the best of their abilities, the Cheka would kill their (the officers') families. It was no bluff.
@elihu217qd5150
@elihu217qd5150 3 года назад
The only way this guy knows so much about history is because he is a time traveler
@jed-henrywitkowski6470
@jed-henrywitkowski6470 3 года назад
Agreed! I call dibs, on using him to help me with my genology.
@bernardtaylor7768
@bernardtaylor7768 3 года назад
And how many future events will he chronicle or is he manipulating events for his channel?
@shaunbritton939
@shaunbritton939 3 года назад
Lol he's actually a very respected war historian very intelligent guy I love his work
@MrPhantom453
@MrPhantom453 3 года назад
Was thinking exactly the same thing. Please take me with you.
@cv507
@cv507 3 года назад
zakaröff? #9 ^ ^
@josemoreno3334
@josemoreno3334 2 года назад
Great info Mark. When I was in the US Air Force back in the 1980's , I got a chance to visit West Germany twice. Love going there. Cold War History.
@JaroSlap
@JaroSlap 3 года назад
Much thanks Mr. Felton! I have a great respect for your coverage of these somewhat minute detail, and your usage of primary sources like the film you show in all your videos. Keep up the great work!
@SgtAndrewM
@SgtAndrewM 3 года назад
mark you are legend, please dont stop
@Alistajaupseeri
@Alistajaupseeri 3 года назад
That's what she said
@diekuhistaufdemdach3923
@diekuhistaufdemdach3923 3 года назад
True
@kaykutcher2103
@kaykutcher2103 3 года назад
You know what your profile pic did.
@joeoregan170
@joeoregan170 3 года назад
@@Alistajaupseeri 6667676
@gazg00
@gazg00 3 года назад
@@Alistajaupseeri 🤣🤣
@BBerckdano
@BBerckdano 3 года назад
Started showing these short films to my wife who never had much of an interest in history. This morning she texts me to tell me about the good Doctor’s freshest upload. I do believe the hook is now sufficiently set.
@oldgoat1890
@oldgoat1890 3 года назад
I was stationed over there in the late 70's and most of the high ranking officers I saw were missing an arm, leg, or and eye. As for the French objecting? They marched all over Europe for 100 years.
@Timmorrisjr
@Timmorrisjr 3 года назад
I gotta say, your channel has become my new favorite. I love history, especially WW2 history. I’ve visited the Ardennes Region, Normandy, and various other places in Europe. Little did I know there was a little piece of WW2 history an hour and a half drive away from me at the former Ellwood Oil Fields in Santa Barbara, which I visited (now a golf course with a little memorial) soon after I saw your video about the Japanese “attack” on California. Awesome content. Also, a request: A video detailing the Schnez Truppe.
@rfkwouldvebeenaok1008
@rfkwouldvebeenaok1008 3 года назад
Mark your channel never ceases to amaze me. You describe topics I never even knew about. It's like the golden days of the history channel, but on RU-vid.
@rembrandtshadows
@rembrandtshadows 3 года назад
agreed!
@localbod
@localbod 3 года назад
I was born in a country that technically doesn't exist anymore - West Germany. Another interesting presentation by Mr. Felton.
@lovablesnowman
@lovablesnowman 3 года назад
West Germany does still exist you idiot they just changed the name. East Germany was absorbed into West Germay they didn't form a new country.
@kosikumah7249
@kosikumah7249 3 года назад
Technically, the name wasn't West Germany. It was the Federal Republic of Germany or Bundesrepublik Deutschland (BRD for short). 'West Germany' was an expression utilized by the rest of the world. It was printed on products for export or sale in the then EEC and beyond. I was born there too and witnessed reunification. No German ever called it West Germany. It was always BRD or even just Bundesrepublik (a lot of newscasters spoke that way). And yes the DDR was absorbed into the BRD by re-creation of the federal states that made up the DDR. But there was no need to be insulting about it. A simple correction would have sufficed.
@localbod
@localbod 3 года назад
@@kosikumah7249 I was born in Rinteln because my father was serving in the BAOR at the time and he certainly referred to it as West Germany, perhaps due to the existence of the DDR / East Germany and the mindset of the military. I have two birth certificates; one from the British Consulate in Hannover, which allowed me to leave and enter the UK, and a normal British birth certificate. On the British one it says West Germany. However, I do understand what you are saying, and appreciate your full explanation.
@kosikumah7249
@kosikumah7249 3 года назад
@@localbod precisely what I meant! An English speaker would say West Germany but I never heard any German say West Deutschland. By the way, I attended the British Army School in Cologne, even though I wasn't a British citizen. My parents came from Ghana and wanted me to be fluent in English as well as German so in 1980 I was sent to a German school in my town. BFES Cologne was closed that year due to reductions in troop numbers.
@psychohist
@psychohist 3 года назад
@@kosikumah7249 German speakers still refer to Ossies and Ouessies today, I believe.
@jaybee9269
@jaybee9269 3 года назад
Great professional job as per usual, Dr. Felton! Glad you did some Luftwaffe figures; some impressive pilots like Gunter Rall went on to serve in the West German Luftwaffe. He was one of those guys with an absurd amount of aerial victories. It would be good to see a similar West German Luftwaffe video.
@poklik1
@poklik1 3 года назад
"When I meet Eisenhower, should I give the Nazi salute, or shake his hand?" ©
@knispelwedges427
@knispelwedges427 2 года назад
"Yea, about that, Heinrich ..."
@stoopingfalcon891
@stoopingfalcon891 3 года назад
I remember when I was young, hearing my dad say that he overheard a senior officer saying that 'If Hitler had kept his mouth shut, and left the army to be run by it's generals, they could very well have won the war'
@Blei1986
@Blei1986 3 года назад
nah, not really. it was a logistical nightmare, too low ressources and a Stalin, who threw in so many men as possible without caring about cassualties. and if AH did not attack the soviets, then the soviets would have most likely attacked the germans sooner or later. it was doomed from the beginning.
@stoopingfalcon891
@stoopingfalcon891 3 года назад
@@Blei1986 I would probably say that if AH had waited another six months before attacking the soviets, that would have made a huge difference, since he would have had the manpower to stabilize the western front, and the manpower to kick invasion forces back into the sea, making his European defenses strong enough to stand on their own. Then he could have turned his attention to the soviets. But as we all have learned, we will never know why he did what he did, without listening to the men in charge of his armies that actually knew how to fight a war, Since after all, his experience of war was ww1 as a trench runner delivering messages from one part of the battlefield to another. At the end of the day though. He and his lot were beaten, but the cost of that victory will ring down through history for a very very long time to come. Us toobers passing a few comments amongst each other can't hope to understand the scale of what happened back then. We only see the results.
@danmassaviol8646
@danmassaviol8646 3 года назад
The talk while I was stationed there was if they never bothered with Russia, they very well would have had a different outcome, the eastern front was an unimaginable error.
@stoopingfalcon891
@stoopingfalcon891 3 года назад
Perhaps the timing was an error more than anything? If they had waited for a spring campaign, the outcome would have been so different.That is the point, That error you talk about really screwed it up for the germans. The basic tenet of warfare, do not fight on two fronts, because you can't beat two armies. As I said already, AH thought he was a military genious, and over ruled the people he had in charge of his military forces. How different would it have been if he had listened to them? We will never know.
@civilengineer3349
@civilengineer3349 3 года назад
That's more of a popular myth though. Fact is, the Germans put themselves in a very precarious situation by choosing to ally with the Soviet Union to conquer Poland instead of allowing Poland to be a buffer between Germany and the Soviet Union, so they could focus their war effort against the Western allies more considerably. They would have never conquered the United Kingdom, especially once the United States was fully involved. But they could hold on to France and elsewhere until a treaty could be accepted.
@jstevinik3261
@jstevinik3261 3 года назад
Minor correction: East Germany allowed more.than one party but were allied with the dominant SED. One party dominant would be fairly accurate.
@studinthemaking
@studinthemaking 3 года назад
Really? Did know that. Anymore info on that subject you can link to?
@Tragantar1310
@Tragantar1310 3 года назад
@@studinthemaking google Blockparteien. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bloc_party_(politics)
@theodorkorner1497
@theodorkorner1497 3 года назад
The SED was more than "dominant". It was a one party dictatorship with pseudo opposition parties who where created by the party leadership and their Soviet overlords.
@jstevinik3261
@jstevinik3261 3 года назад
@@theodorkorner1497 Intersring, though at least it is superior than the USSR democratic centralist (that requires all members to follow reaolutionns agreed by the party leadership to prevent factions), sole legal party system. There was were Christian socialist party that challenged the SED on abortion. I heard of this small channel called Socialist Swann that has content on the GDR.
@dickyarya8204
@dickyarya8204 3 года назад
Is it the same things like Prc? They have minor party in the parliament seat sure but they all agree to acknowledge that ccp is the only ruling party. So it's kinda bs honestly 🤷
@medic3993
@medic3993 Год назад
Still the most underrated channel on youtube. Great stuff!
@jonstuart8351
@jonstuart8351 3 года назад
Thank you again for my history lessons, I am always glad to hear your videos pop up and listen to them over and over again
@mr.robinson1982
@mr.robinson1982 3 года назад
History needs to be remembered & retold so as not to repeat the mistakes of the past.....Thanks Mark.
@ThomasHart59
@ThomasHart59 3 года назад
And yet, here we are, collectively heading down a road with many of the same signposts as were passed in those times while almost completely oblivious to them. I think we are doomed to repeat the mistakes of the past over and over again. Such is the nature of power and ego, because “this time, we’ll do it right”..... As if there were anything new under the sun.
@neuxell
@neuxell 3 года назад
yeah, reminds me of a Patton quote
@bigtoelittlefinger6133
@bigtoelittlefinger6133 3 года назад
O aye they sure don't
@mgtowveteran3234
@mgtowveteran3234 3 года назад
Already did. To late.
@bullettube9863
@bullettube9863 3 года назад
I remember when I was in high school my history teacher talking about the controversy regarding using former Nazi Generals, and he as a veteran talked about expedience and what it meant. I was only 16 so it didn't sink in as well as he might have hoped. But after the Iraqi army was abolished and chaos resulted I realized just what he tried to teach us. The same goes for using German scientist to help develop rockets after WW2, you can either adhere to your moral principals or recognize that compromise for the sake of expediency is sometimes the best way to go.
@leviturner3265
@leviturner3265 2 года назад
WWII German does not mean Nazi. Nazis are NSDAP members, it was a political party. The NSDAP was the only political party from 1933 to 1945. Just because you were a scientist in Nazi Germany does not make you nazi, nor a bad person. The same goes with German generals from 1933 to 1945. I have no problem with generals from the wehrmacht being generals in the bundeswehr. It means nothing, except to depolitize WWII. Wehrmacht does not equal Nazi! Nazi equals Nazi.
@dannya1854
@dannya1854 2 года назад
You didn't have to be in the Nazi party to be doing the same things the Nazis were doing. The Wehrmacht and Luftwaffe had their fair share of massacres and genocide, that's why they went under big scrutiny before being allowed to go back to being in a military, although the West generally overlooked some of their crimes especially if they were committed in the East.
@bullettube9863
@bullettube9863 2 года назад
@@dannya1854 Perfect example of what I wrote. The allies were forced to ignore some criminal behavior for the greater good in having competent people in charge. For the people guilty of the worse crimes they were punished either by hanging or long prison sentences. The German people were punished for allowing their government to wage war by having their cities and military destroyed. That the allies did not further punish them is evidence of mercy and just plain common sense. Today Germany, Japan and Italy are strong democracies and valuable allies.
@dannya1854
@dannya1854 2 года назад
@@bullettube9863 I wouldn't say it was done for the "greater good" as much as just NATO trying to expand and threaten the Soviet Union and to crush Socialist uprisings across the world.
@bullettube9863
@bullettube9863 2 года назад
@@dannya1854 Socialist uprisings? Like the ones that occurred in Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Belgium and France? Yes we interfered in South America, but the last time I checked South America has more democracies with socialist governments then they did 20 years ago. While many Americans despise and fear socialism I'm not with that crowd. The fear comes from what we saw happen to Russia and China, which say they have socialistic governments but are really just tyrannies.
@sirchromiumdowns2015
@sirchromiumdowns2015 Год назад
Great video, Mark. You always find the most interesting topics concerning lesser known aspects of WWII. I really enjoy your videos, always impeccably researched and well presented.
@LukeBunyip
@LukeBunyip 3 года назад
14:01 "...but that's a story for another time." Looking at your past offerings, I am in no way complaining, but I for one would be happier if we get Part II sooner rather than later. You're doing good work Mark, ta muchly.
@nathancarlson2282
@nathancarlson2282 3 года назад
When Dr. Felton says “but that’s a story for another time” I can’t wait for that other time! I rarely find something worth supporting with a donation. But supporting these knowledge nuggets was a no brainer for me. Just fascinating!
@justinbradfield1489
@justinbradfield1489 3 года назад
I support with a small monthly donation on Patreon. Best investment i ever made and i really need to increase my monthly investment.
@dunkirchen1940
@dunkirchen1940 3 года назад
Can't wait for the one about former WWII Wehrmacht Generals in the NVA. Great stuff, as always!
@josephbingham1255
@josephbingham1255 3 года назад
Another interesting video. Eric Hartman also commanded a post war fighter unit. I remember a W. German pilot coming to our base wearing a Luftwaffe cuff title. Note 10:29 not wearing the oak leaves it is said he was entitled to wear.
@Jon-Litle
@Jon-Litle 2 года назад
The person in the photo 8:14 - 8:38 is NOT Adolf Heusinger, as suggested by the video, but Generalmajor (later Generaloberst) Adolf Strauß (1879-1973), who had nothing to do with the Bundeswehr.
@fireteammichael1777
@fireteammichael1777 3 года назад
Mark Felton should have the rights to name "History Channel," as history is actually learned from this channel more so than the channel that actually bears the namesake.
@steveroe6771
@steveroe6771 3 года назад
Either Mark Felton or The History Guy. Both are worthy of being the real history channel.
@matthewmartin5763
@matthewmartin5763 3 года назад
@@steveroe6771 I've spent countless hours watching both channels. My History teachers really tried their best, but always having to prepare for standardizing testing got in the way.
@psychohist
@psychohist 3 года назад
@@matthewmartin5763 Maybe if the people who write the standardized history tests would watch some of this too.
@steveroe6771
@steveroe6771 3 года назад
@@matthewmartin5763 standardized testing is not truly indicative of what needs to be taught. It is just another way for the government to exercise control over students. Glad that I went to school in the 1960's and 1970's, graduating in 1979
@AlvaroMF13
@AlvaroMF13 3 года назад
Can't wait for the East Germany version, great work as always
@Paciat
@Paciat 3 года назад
The role of Polish communist forces was to set up many river crossings for the Soviets and then take Denmark while Soviets go towards France. Soviets didnt rely on allies as much as US and UK did.
@thanakonpraepanich4284
@thanakonpraepanich4284 3 года назад
Did Stalin ever become lucid enough to see the need to recruit some after April 1945? Stalin was almost dead by that time with stroke, liver disease and diabetes took their toll, making straight thinking difficult for him.
@Paciat
@Paciat 3 года назад
@@thanakonpraepanich4284 You think you have to be a genius to give a draft order in some puppet state +1500km from Moscow? Stalin didnt have a need anything but strong militia. The topic of German partisans is largely avoided and they were unhappy that Stalin moved the borders of Central Europe 200km west.
@SMGJohn
@SMGJohn 3 года назад
@@thanakonpraepanich4284 I think straight thinking seems to be difficult for you, you seem to have this idea that Stalin somehow ran the entire country himself.
@thanakonpraepanich4284
@thanakonpraepanich4284 3 года назад
@@SMGJohn Fear and paranoid that permeate Soviet government postwar until Stalin's death make it looked like that from the outside. The higher you go, the more you will have to second guess Stalin and prepare to dodge bullets if things don't go according to plan. Then whoever doesn't like you can claim he/she did it on Stalin's behalf and get away with anything. And things got more wacky the more Stalin's' health deteriorates. Stalin after VE Day was a shadow of the man he was when he succeed Lenin, mentality and health wise.
@coldwarsarge7592
@coldwarsarge7592 3 года назад
Your productions are top-notch--thanks so much for sharing your insights with us! 👍
@indianapolisbankruptcy
@indianapolisbankruptcy 3 года назад
This is one of your best yet, Mark, as I haven't seen this material anywhere.
@redrock3109
@redrock3109 3 года назад
We were stationed at Regensberg in 56 - 57'. Dad did border patrol and at the time each side drove up and down a road separated by a single strand of wire.
@useyourbanana405
@useyourbanana405 3 года назад
Im happy seeing this channel grow to get the attention it deserves. Also it's nice to see so many people being interested in learning from history.
@clavichord
@clavichord 3 года назад
You mean learning "about" history. Learning from WWII history is another matter... and I'm not convinced much has been learned, unfortunately.
@useyourbanana405
@useyourbanana405 3 года назад
@@clavichord Every person learns his own lessons from history. Dealing with it alone, does something to you, makes you think about the present and future.
@WirSindVerl0ren
@WirSindVerl0ren 3 года назад
Thank you Mark for your historical videos on topics that seem skewed and unspoken of.
@Andrew.quigley
@Andrew.quigley 3 года назад
You're a legend Mark for the amazing research and effort you put into your videos. Cheers from Australia.
@adammound1982
@adammound1982 3 года назад
Cant beat getting in from work on a Friday crack a beer and listen to Mark Felton
@2ndcomingofFritz
@2ndcomingofFritz 3 года назад
Yes, indeed
@rsixing
@rsixing 3 года назад
Your German pronunciation is spot on. I served in the FRG in the U.S. Army as a White Hat M.P. from 1975-1977 in Mannheim (Co. A 95th M.P. Bn.) and Pirmasens (59th M.P. Co.) and 1983-1985 in Frankfurt (503rd M.P. Co. 3rd Armored Div.). Your informative historical videos are one of my favorite RU-vid channels. Keep up the good work sir! It would be great to see you do a video on SMLM as I spent some time chasing those "authorized" Soviet Military spies. Total fun!
@u.s.1974
@u.s.1974 3 года назад
I seriously doubt that his German pronunciation is always spot on. Sometimes he is right, sometimes he butchers it completely. He should let a German native speaker read the German names read aloud to get the proper pronunciation.
@rsixing
@rsixing 3 года назад
@@u.s.1974 Ouch...not arguing with you and with all due respect you speak German? Asking for a friend :)
@u.s.1974
@u.s.1974 Год назад
@@rsixing Ja, I am a native speaker.
@C00LWhip
@C00LWhip 3 года назад
Absolutely fascinating as always Mark Felton! I love your channel !
@spartains5493
@spartains5493 3 года назад
Great video as always, mark! I'd like to suggest covering the Fulda Gap and its importance during the Cold War, if you could. It's a potential flashpoint that I don't see discussed nearly enough.
@GhostRanger5060
@GhostRanger5060 3 года назад
Incredible men living in extraordinary times. One is tempted to wonder how the post-war West German Army might have developed had Erwin Rommel been allowed to live and had survived the war.
@hdexotic1914
@hdexotic1914 2 года назад
Soviet Germany was incredible times????
@GhostRanger5060
@GhostRanger5060 2 года назад
@@hdexotic1914 No. communism always sucks. West Germany, however, had a remarkable post-WWII history.
@georgelabe-assimo4365
@georgelabe-assimo4365 2 года назад
I mean, the Bundeswehr had the largest European military in NATO at the time, was well-equipped, and arguably superior to their Eastern counterparts until the end of the Cold War. They didn’t fare too badly at least during the Cold War.
@spiritofthetime
@spiritofthetime 3 года назад
Always smile when I see Norwich Cathedral's cloister wall behind Mark in the opening shot. Lovely space.
@Trek001
@Trek001 3 года назад
That isn't Norwich Cathedral It is, in fact, the outer wall of the FeltonBunker - constructed in late 1941 to protect against broadcasts by NatGeoTV and The History Channel
@chandalababa-kwanga9981
@chandalababa-kwanga9981 3 года назад
will be a mosque soon. Rupert
@marlit8443
@marlit8443 5 месяцев назад
I like Adenauer’s answer nobody would accept an 18year old General.
@Tigran-Abazyan
@Tigran-Abazyan 2 месяца назад
Its understandable why he did it. Because theres nobody else germans cant find at that time but former nazi generals and officer. Its just neccesary evil moment. But fortunatly it didnt backfire and the german army is revived.
@smirnoff4208
@smirnoff4208 Год назад
Would love to hear about Heinz Guderians involvement as an advisor. His son also was general in both Wehrmacht and Bundeswehr. Great video!
@debbieverret4033
@debbieverret4033 3 года назад
Thank you Mark, I really appreciate you giving the timelines of these generals ages and when they died, something we'll never get in a history book.
@thomasaustin5378
@thomasaustin5378 2 года назад
Err I think you probably will?
@alih6953
@alih6953 3 года назад
Thank you so Much Dr. Felton this is the way to start a great weekend in the middle of a pandemic. Your channel is a blessing!
@MattLesak
@MattLesak 3 года назад
Bravo Mark! Another well done production. You have this history buff hooked 💪
@filipohman7277
@filipohman7277 3 года назад
Thank you Mark, Awesome Work!!👍 Greetings from Helsinki Finland 🇫🇮
@MrXdmp
@MrXdmp 3 года назад
Thank you Dr. Felton!
@CptChampie
@CptChampie 3 года назад
I got to this video so fast it made the Blitzkrieg look like a snailpace.
@4urluvjones155
@4urluvjones155 3 года назад
Thank you Mr Felton. You've done it again. Another fascinating and interesting topic and well presented.
@htos1av
@htos1av 3 года назад
Thanks for posting!
@schubidubap
@schubidubap 3 года назад
Whenever I hear the intro music I grab my bayonet and await the enemy's charge.
@larsbundgaard5462
@larsbundgaard5462 3 года назад
Did you win?
@richardm3023
@richardm3023 3 года назад
I grab my bayonet, and use it to open a can of peaches.
@ofcr3237
@ofcr3237 3 года назад
Whenever I hear the intro music I feel like I'm in the Eastern Front ready to blow a Pz. IV or a T - 34....
@schubidubap
@schubidubap 3 года назад
@@larsbundgaard5462 Well there was a lot of shouting and cussing... aaand apparently someone raided the wrong trench, aaand... Hans wif ze Flammenwerfer forgot his glasses, aaand... it was a mess. Glad it's friday.
@zzxx33mh
@zzxx33mh 3 года назад
Yes, the intro hits hard,.. It's become unique and have the smell of ww2 Era..
@John.B.Jenkins
@John.B.Jenkins 3 года назад
Good Friday Mark. Your content is appreciated. What a great topic today!
@seanbrazell6147
@seanbrazell6147 3 года назад
This period was a historical blind spot in my knowledge and understanding of history, despite the ungodly number of WW2 and cold war written and video documentaries! No more. Fantastic work.
@alanblanes2876
@alanblanes2876 3 года назад
Thanks for this amazing history, Dr Felton.
@PantherBlitz
@PantherBlitz 3 года назад
Uncanny how questions that I have had in my subconscious get answered by Mark's videos.
@carlbrown9082
@carlbrown9082 3 года назад
Your episodes are so thought-provoking. Thank you for raising these interesting stories and bringing them to our attention.
@Headshot1st
@Headshot1st 3 года назад
Definitely want to hear this “story for another time”. Another good video as always
@sstritmatter2158
@sstritmatter2158 3 года назад
Wonderful video Felton - thanks again
@GiovanniPietro9000
@GiovanniPietro9000 3 года назад
AIN'T NO PRODUCTION LIKE A MARK FELTON PRODUCTION.
@jayandom4237
@jayandom4237 3 года назад
That cliffhanger at the end though, I guess it'll be for another time.
@robertschlesinger1342
@robertschlesinger1342 3 года назад
Excellent video. Very interesting, informative and worthwhile video.
@heffaazul
@heffaazul 3 года назад
Anytime Felton says "that's a story for another time," I get excited.
@PittManGaming
@PittManGaming 3 года назад
Another good one Mark. Thank you.
@Brave_Sir_Robin
@Brave_Sir_Robin 3 года назад
What a lovely birthday present! A video from Mark Felton!
@alanwitton5039
@alanwitton5039 3 года назад
Great video! Very informative! I've learnt something new! Thank you!
@uwekasten716
@uwekasten716 2 года назад
Dr. Felton always brings up interesting Facts and Details. Really worth watching, very informative.
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