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Stalingrad Christmas - The German Rescue Operation 

Mark Felton Productions
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The story of Operation 'Winter Storm', the desperate attempt to relief the trapped German Sixth Army at Stalingrad in December 1942.
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...
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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: US National Archives; Library of Congress; ShadeOfGrey

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21 дек 2021

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Комментарии : 2,2 тыс.   
@HistoryTeacherSteve
@HistoryTeacherSteve 2 года назад
My wife's great uncle, Karl Müller, was a mortarman with the 79th Infantry Division. He fought at the famous Red October tank factory. I have letters from him that continued to be delivered even after the encirclement, the last was dated Christmas Eve. In that letter he said they ate horse meat for the holiday, which was a treat due to the dire food situation. Throughout his time in the city, Karl described intense fighting. He never stopped using positive language, but he did stop talking about his dream of returning home soon. Perhaps the writing was on the wall. After that final letter, he was never heard from again. It is unknown if he died in Stalingrad, or later on in some Soviet labor camp. I can only hope the first. He was an avid photographer, and I have many photos from his campaign across southwestern Russia in 1942. He was just a kid, always smiling and being silly for the camera. He would have been 21 when the 6th Army surrendered. War is a crime. edit: Mail service out of Stalingrad continued by air until January, 1943. Literally the last plane out of the city had at least seven mail bags. Checkout 'Last Letters From Stalingrad' by Franz Schneider which looks into the topic.
@occidentadvocate.9759
@occidentadvocate.9759 2 года назад
God Bless him!
@viz12345
@viz12345 2 года назад
was he a nazi?
@HistoryTeacherSteve
@HistoryTeacherSteve 2 года назад
@@viz12345 I cannot say, but I doubt it. His parents were not Nazis, although it is entirely possible that Karl felt differently. I do doubt it, however. His letters never once mentioned politics, Hitler, or the supposed purposes of the war. He only talked about his desire to come home, his concern for his brothers (serving in France and North Africa), and his love of photography.
@zxbzxbzxb1
@zxbzxbzxb1 2 года назад
German soldier starving in Stalingrad "I had to eat Horsemeat today due to the dire food situation" Frenchman "Luxury"
@NunyaBizznaz
@NunyaBizznaz 2 года назад
@@viz12345 does it matter? Does that make his suffering any less heartbreaking?
@lookthroughhistory2176
@lookthroughhistory2176 2 года назад
Above all, Stalingrad is a battle that fills me full of absolute dread. The sheer numbers of individuals caught in the cogs of war here in the depths of winter is unfathomable.
@brucestorey3400
@brucestorey3400 2 года назад
In addition to Mark's excellent coverage, you should also read Antony Beevor's bestselling book, "Stalingrad". It confirms your very apt description. A frozen hell on earth.
@GazB85
@GazB85 2 года назад
@@brucestorey3400 Great book with only 2 or 3 mistakes. It's absolutely horrific, rat's eating men as they slept.
@zxbzxbzxb1
@zxbzxbzxb1 2 года назад
@@brucestorey3400 TIK History's Battlestorm and related videos are well advised too. The book is a little outdated now, very engaging but perpetuates a few of the German and Soviet myths surrounding the battle (it's still very good though).
@Strawhalo
@Strawhalo 2 года назад
The battle at budapest between waffen ss and soviets was a goos one as well
@MrSabram07
@MrSabram07 2 года назад
@@brucestorey3400 I just bought the audio book I'm going to give it a try
@OldMcHorny
@OldMcHorny 2 года назад
My Grandma had six brothers fighting in Stalingrad, three of them died and three them got captured and survived (with lost toes and fingers), but none of them was ever married and none of them had a normal life. I am named after one of the dead brothers. I am not even 30, still I think about this battle for pretty much all my life and often think about how lucky I am being born 70 years later... Edit: since this got so much more attention than I expected some clarifications: I am german and I am not at all proud of them fighting, it was completely crazy and a useless waste of young lifes. Also I am not sure all six brothers fought in Stalingrad, I only know they all fought in Ukraine/Russia and some of them did fight in Stalingrad (and also died there). I know some more details I remember from what my grandfather told me when I was a teenager. The one I am named after drove on a land mine, lost both legs, apparently survived for a couple of days but then died. He was the favourite brother of my grandma, he used to drag her along on a sled when they were cildren. One other brother was shot by a russian sniper in the head. The fate of the third one I don't know. I think all the brothers fighting on the front line died. The ones who survived were, as far as I am aware, mostly respsonsible for operation radio equipment and transfering messages (I think they were Pioneers), so more of a task behind the front line. The surviving brothers actually spent the rest of their lifes living together in what is now poland (and used to be german before ww2) in one tiny house, while my family moved to west-germany after ww2. One of these brothers visited my family for a while for medical treatment in west germany at the beginning of the 90s when I was an infant (I dont remember). This guy said he never experienced anything like that in his life: good treatment, warm housing, running water, unlimited food. He stayed for a couple of month, went back to poland and died at the beginning of 00s. A story that apparently happened to this guy my grandfather told me many times as a teenager. Its a very horrifying, disgusting story, so don't read it if youre sensitive to these things. Also, obviusly, I cant gurantee that it is a true story, so maybe take it with a grain of salt. On their way to the east they made lots of russian prisoners and they didnt know what to do with them. Once apparently they (that is a small group of german soldiers) made like 10-15 russian prisoners, but also had the task to lay cables or something (some pioneer like task) and had to leave their occupied house the whole day. But one guy had to stay behind and take care of the prisoners. And handling 10 people alone is difficult, one wrong moment and they will overwhelm you. So when my great uncle came back in the evening, they were weary of what happened, because there was no noise around the house. So they slowly approached it, fearing an ambush. But they just found the one german soldier peacefully sleeping. When they asked him where are the prisoners, he just answered "oh you dumps, you went all day to work outside. The moment you left the door, I just shot them all and had a whole day of sleep". This story sticks with me and will my whole life. I am sorry and ashamed for all the pain also my family brought upon the russian people. If you want to know something specific, I can ask my dad, I'll see him this christmas and he knows much more about these storys than I do. EDIT ONE YEAR LATER: OK its christmas again and I asked my dad some more questions about on what he remembered. I dont care if people believe me or not, I dont have proof for any of the stories, the people involved are all dead by now. All the papers were left in Silesia and are long gone by now, so I cannot figure out any details. I would like to figure out things like the company thery served in, but I dont know how to. The people involved have different surname from me, since these are brothers of my grandma and she took my granddads name. They were actually 7 brothers, 6 of them fought (one was too young), 3 died, 3 returned. The ones who died called were Paul, Franz and Josef, the ones who survived were called Viktor, Richard and Conrad. Paul and Franz apparently died in near Kharkiv, Josef died in Stalingrad. Two other brothers (Richard and Viktor) were in Stalingrad as well, they both survived. Viktor was at the artillery and took pride that he was the only one who managed to bring back his gun and his horses out of the encircelement. I dont know how he did it, anyway, later he got captured, but managed to escape (with some polish people by train towards Warsaw) and survived. Richard (he was the oldest one) got captured in Stalingrad and survived as well (several years of imprisonment), he actually founded a family later on when he returned to Silesia. Conrad managed to slip away somehow and was only imprisoned shortly. Anyway, he lost nearly all his toes. Paul was at the field communication (german "Fernmeldeeinheit"), he drove onto a land mine with his motorbike, lost his legs and one arm and died 14 days after this. He was 19 when he died. He was my grandmas favorite brother (the one who would drag her on the slide). Franz was a machine gunner, he got shot in the head by a russian sniper and died at 21. Josef was shot as well, but noone remembers what he served as. He was like 25. What Viktor later told (survivor) was that because of their polish sounding name, they were not in high regard within the german army. So they frequently were sent to do the most dangerous tasks. Viktor was the one who visited our family for an elongated amount of time mid 90s in germany. He did not have health insurance, however, our family doctor treated him for free. However, my granddad from my mothers side (completely different family tree) was among the front line to invade poland (which he barely survived; only through quick acting and thinking. Different story and just as hard to believe) and then he was among the first ones to invade france. However, there he got lucky because he got shot py a partisan while marching. He lost a fraction of his leg and henceforward had a shortened leg and was limping (anyway he was more sportive than 99% of people with functioning legs. He was still climbing trees in his 70s). His luck was that after he got wounded, he left the army. His whole company was later shifted to invade the soviet union, noone returned. His brother was stationed in Norway and returned unharmed. What everyone had in common who fought in the war was, that the rarely spoke about it. They rarely told stories about it, they just wanted to forget. Viktor only mentioned some stories, when he met my other granddad from my mother side, among veterans they apparently opened up a bit. He was the one who told the story about the killed russian prisoners. Its everything just horrible, horrible, horrible. Even more so, when I think about that right now people die again in the region of Kharkiv.
@scockery
@scockery 2 года назад
I didn't know OldMcHorny was a German name.
@rickreese5794
@rickreese5794 2 года назад
God Bless You.... All free men are brothers...
@mstcrow5429
@mstcrow5429 2 года назад
National Socialist or Soviet?
@joeowenstalkingsense4439
@joeowenstalkingsense4439 2 года назад
All Brave Men!
@hyrondongle2473
@hyrondongle2473 2 года назад
My cat was also at Stalingrad…. Now, his name is Stalincat….
@Penekamp11
@Penekamp11 2 года назад
One of my best friend’s father was in the 6th army at Stalingrad. His first son was a baby in an incubator in Dusseldorf when an air raid cut the electricity causing him to freeze to death. My friend’s father was given hardship leave to return home for the funeral. By the time he shipped back out to the front all was lost. My friend often said that if his brother hadn’t died, he wouldn’t be here. He lives in Krefeld just outside Dusseldorf.
@aristedecomgmailcom
@aristedecomgmailcom 2 года назад
So before there were incubators babies died?How did the human race survive?
@Rowarst
@Rowarst 2 года назад
@@aristedecomgmailcom We may easily imagine that the child was born prematurely. And, yes, before incubators, most "premies" did indeed die.
@NYG5
@NYG5 7 месяцев назад
Very interesting that leave was granted during sections of the front that were dire offensive zones. I've never seen a video describing how leave worked during WW2.
@woodenseagull1899
@woodenseagull1899 6 месяцев назад
Germans are so Complex . There is something missing in the Genes!.
@sketchye5943
@sketchye5943 2 года назад
Can’t imagine what it must feel like to be instead of celebrating Christmas with your family but instead being stuck in Stalingrad fighting to the death in frigid weathers and dwindling supplies
@DANO-4899
@DANO-4899 2 года назад
Worst Christmas ever!
@mralexlex
@mralexlex 2 года назад
Nobody invited them to Stalingrad so it was their choice.
@DANO-4899
@DANO-4899 2 года назад
Young soldiers in any army rarely get to choose where they go. They go where they are ordered to.
@PROVOCATEURSK
@PROVOCATEURSK 2 года назад
Why would you celebrate a birth of child born from infidelity? Also the date doesn´t match the bible description of the season.
@sh3tpostsgamertime204
@sh3tpostsgamertime204 2 года назад
@@PROVOCATEURSK you get the most backwards people when talking about ww2.
@Roller_Ghoster
@Roller_Ghoster 2 года назад
Merry Christmas to Dr Felton and his legion of history followers. Looking forward to more quality content in 2022.
@Niek1001
@Niek1001 2 года назад
Merry Christmas to you as well!
@Foxee1000
@Foxee1000 2 года назад
Many happy returns, best wishes to all for Christmas and New Year.. Hopefully a peaceful and healthy one
@barrydysert2974
@barrydysert2974 2 года назад
This has been up for an hour and has 10,000 views. That does quality us for legion status! Merry Christmas friend!:-)
@azkrouzreimertz9784
@azkrouzreimertz9784 2 года назад
Happy holidays♡
@madhie-kun8614
@madhie-kun8614 2 года назад
Oh my, what a pleasure... And merry Christmas mate
@kjragg1099
@kjragg1099 2 года назад
1:43 that has to be one of the most haunting pieces of imagery from WW2. The statue of the girls playing while holding hands with the shattered buildings engulfed in flames in the background just speaks a thousand words about the type of war that was raging on the eastern front.
@RandomDudeOne
@RandomDudeOne 2 года назад
A very famous shot since Kubrick used it in his film A Clockwork Orange during the scene where Alex was being "cured".
@markrozenberg7959
@markrozenberg7959 2 года назад
Yes, a recreation of this statue was used in the film Enemy at the Gates, set in the battle of Stalingrad.
@williamwilliam5066
@williamwilliam5066 2 года назад
"just speaks a thousand words about the type of war that was raging on the eastern front." What are you talking about? Little girls weren't fighting.
@kjragg1099
@kjragg1099 2 года назад
@@williamwilliam5066 thanks, that was very insightful.
@RR18475
@RR18475 2 года назад
I can think of much more haunting images than a statue with flames in the background.
@waynedoo7442
@waynedoo7442 2 года назад
one of my great grandpas died 5 days before his birthday (died on 14.12.1942) in northafrika. we still have the death certificate. im grateful i can celebrate my birthday every year in peace. i can not imagine how all these men felt fightin at the christmas day. greetings from germany.
@dylanrompel4186
@dylanrompel4186 9 месяцев назад
Especially when their Christmas Gift was the loss of any hope of rescue.
@user-cu1yd4zp4q
@user-cu1yd4zp4q 6 месяцев назад
@@dylanrompel4186 They didn't deserve hope ... they were invaders!!!
@roymartin2453
@roymartin2453 2 года назад
Many years ago I had the (mis)fortune to meet a German veteran, who took part in Operation Wintergewitter (Winterstorm) in the ranks of Hoth’s army. He told me, he never celebrated Christmas again. The peaceful and cheerful spirit of Christmas had been diminished forever the moment the order to cease the rescue attempt had been given on Christmas Eve. In my mind I still see his sad fear-filled eyes which clearly showed, the inability to rescue the trapped men, his comrades, of the 6th Army, haunted him to this very day. Merry Christmas Dr. Felton, keep up the tremendously amazing work! 😄👍
@danieleziaco7092
@danieleziaco7092 2 года назад
Why you consider a "misfortune" meeting him?
@fatdaddyeddiejr
@fatdaddyeddiejr 2 года назад
In the early 90's. I was in the US Army stationed in Germany. I was able to talk to German veteran that fought in the USSR. He fought in the Soviet Union from 1941 to 1944. He was transferred to the western front three weeks before Operation Bagration.
@rogerkay8603
@rogerkay8603 2 года назад
@@mcs699 Seconded!
@Gruntilda-Winkybunion
@Gruntilda-Winkybunion 2 года назад
why misfortune
@BaranZenon
@BaranZenon 2 года назад
@@Gruntilda-Winkybunion I think becouse its like telling someone "Santa isnt real" times 100.
@colinmartin2921
@colinmartin2921 2 года назад
The sheer misery of the men who fought this battle is almost unbearable to think of. Human endurance is amazing.
@thunderbolt2145
@thunderbolt2145 2 года назад
I was thinking the same thing. The sheer courage and determination on both sides was admirable. The majority more than likely drafted into service.
@stephenrickstrew7237
@stephenrickstrew7237 2 года назад
This episode really points out, how fortunate we are to be living in this time of relative peace … Merry Christmas 🎁🎄 to All and of course to Dr Felton …!
@adamevert1618
@adamevert1618 2 года назад
You live in peace other do not...many lived in peace during WW2..so yes, peace is relative in the constant of war
@vidguy007
@vidguy007 2 года назад
. . . and not yet under authoritarian rule
@newbichote7178
@newbichote7178 2 года назад
For now
@dougthebuilder1
@dougthebuilder1 2 года назад
try living in eastern Ukraine right now
@davidbaker7246
@davidbaker7246 2 года назад
Said people in 1938
@Toujoursentrain
@Toujoursentrain 2 года назад
I've read Anthony Beever's book on Stalingrad and it's an absolute horror story. War is hell.
@Thyndarious
@Thyndarious 2 года назад
excellent book!!!
@buffoonustroglodytus4688
@buffoonustroglodytus4688 2 года назад
Nah war is pretty cozy affair actually. Suck on your chickin nuggets boy
@biserkasertic1208
@biserkasertic1208 2 года назад
The politic is horror.Every war is final effect of the politic.
@aristedecomgmailcom
@aristedecomgmailcom 2 года назад
I am glad the Nazi Sixth Army was destroyed。
@SuperSladjo
@SuperSladjo 2 года назад
great book
@pseudonym745
@pseudonym745 6 месяцев назад
My grandfather was one of the few who came back. I only discovered late in life, why he, after Christmas eve when all were at sleep, he was still sitting alone in the kitchen and crying... May all who lost their life or soul in this nightmare rest in peace. Marry Christmas to everyone!
@Ramzi1944
@Ramzi1944 2 года назад
I really want to thank him for uploading this, it makes me feel fortunate for not having to experience any of this suffering. May all the souls that suffer or have suffered in this world find peace and heaven.
@kenbaumann597
@kenbaumann597 2 года назад
My Dad was on the trains traveling east to his very first posting, Stalingrad, when the Soviet pincers closed and made my Dad's new first posting; operation Winterstorm. My Dad fought on a halftrack with a 20mm anti-aircraft gun mounted on it. He spent 2 years on the Russian front with many horrible stories. One time, my Dad was the only survivor of his platoon after a 6 hour Russian artillery barrage. He spent the next few days burying his friends. Can't say ANY 18 year olds today have to live that horror.
@krisfrederick5001
@krisfrederick5001 2 года назад
Anytime I think I'm cold or hungry I have to remind myself..."I'm not in Stalingrad."
@robertjstrupp288
@robertjstrupp288 2 года назад
That’s appreciation and perspective rolled into one.
@AdSd100
@AdSd100 2 года назад
Thanks for the video. TIKhistory has a series of videos on Stalingrad campaign in which he rather convincingly argues against many of the narratives about the battle of Stalingrad. 1-Hitler was not obsessed with Stalingrad, Stalingrad was not even emphasized in any way in the original case blue plan. 2-Paulus could not just "go around" the city. His flanks would have been badly exposed. A large city like Stalingrad could provide safe defensive opportunities for the extended German front in an otherwise featureless steppe. 3- Paulus could not simply "break out" of Stalingrad. He did not have enough fuel for vehicles or even enough horses to tow away heavy equipment and supplies. Paulus had to send back tens of thousands of horses before getting encircled simply because he had logistical issues and could not feed them. So most of the Germans could only attempt to break out on foot with light weapons. They would have gotten mowed down by Russian forces on the featureless steppe outside the city.
@haviiithelegogunner907
@haviiithelegogunner907 2 года назад
The word „Stalingrad“ has a specific tone to it in modern German language. It is hard to explain to none native speakers - it is like the unspeakable horror and the brutality of the Landser’s combat are mixed with the grief about millions of lifes lost. The last POWs that returned in 1955 were the Stalingradkämpfer (Stalingrad fighter).
@user-nf5bt3hd1p
@user-nf5bt3hd1p 2 года назад
in French it will be "Berezina total")
@jamesbinns8528
@jamesbinns8528 2 года назад
I have read an account of an American who was in a camp in Siberia. Slavery and hardship.
@bnipmnaa
@bnipmnaa 2 года назад
@@jamesbinns8528 it's always got to be about 'murica, hasn't it? Just stop.
@davidpowell3347
@davidpowell3347 2 года назад
The way the word was pronounced in the beginning lead in to the great Vilsmaier movie : "Stalingrad" ?
@obi-wankenobi1750
@obi-wankenobi1750 6 месяцев назад
I wonder if it is the same as the words “September Eleventh” to an American?
@bixby9797
@bixby9797 5 месяцев назад
I spent a Christmas Eve with a man who was a German Soldier at Stalingrad. The stories he told under the light of a traditional tree with candles on the branches were horrifying. He managed to master both English and Russian so served as an interpreter between the Armies then made it to the US for which he was forever grateful. I asked him how he believed all that Nazi stuff and he said that the propaganda was all they heard in the schools growing up so they knew nothing else. Words for thought
@4exgold
@4exgold 2 года назад
imagine how thankful you'd be as a German soldier being shot in the arm or leg and then getting out on one of the last flights before Pitomnik airfield was overrun.
@gerryhouska2859
@gerryhouska2859 2 года назад
My conscripted Austrian uncle was one of those. Unfortunately he didn't live long enough for me to get to know him.
@ingloriousbastard9829
@ingloriousbastard9829 2 года назад
Nazi’s are animals
@jrosenthal7111
@jrosenthal7111 2 года назад
@@ingloriousbastard9829 Animals as in primates like all humans? Sure. But apart from that, I'm afraid they were like you and me, just misguided and exploited by propaganda and all of us are closer to this than we might think.
@DrJones20
@DrJones20 2 года назад
@@jrosenthal7111 I don't burn children alive like the Nazis did against Jews and Slavs, so no we are not the same.
@DrJones20
@DrJones20 2 года назад
@@jrosenthal7111 I don't assault women and rip them up with a bayonett. ENOUGH with your whitewashing relativist nonsense.
@seppeopdenakker7749
@seppeopdenakker7749 2 года назад
I have been reading and watching everything about the eastern front for years now and everytime the numbers killed and wounded,the distances and brutal conditions shock me. Merry,peaceful christmas and thank you for another excellent story
@ddm_gamer
@ddm_gamer 2 года назад
The entirety of the eastern front shocks me to no end aswel. It truly was hell on earth
@hetty43
@hetty43 2 года назад
Great video. As a German language student I recall some of my German students talking about this. They never spoke much about ww2. It was sort of a tabu subject. However I remember being told that after the war many Germans kept a lit candle in the window of their home. This was for the many German pows still held by the soviets after Stalingrad.
@aleksazunjic9672
@aleksazunjic9672 2 года назад
On the other hand, Germans had around 30 000 Soviet POWs with 6th Army. Only around 30 survived to be liberated.
@hetty43
@hetty43 2 года назад
@@aleksazunjic9672 yes very sad. In no way am I defending or justifying the Germans. This was just my recollection from speaking with Germans in 1980s. I was always interested in asking about the war but found a reluctance to make any reference to the war.
@daviddoran3673
@daviddoran3673 2 года назад
Aleksa...is that true? 30k red army prisoners? I've been reading about the Ostfront for many years now...that's new to me...yet the Soviets actually took Germans prisoner instead of machinegunning them on the spot....
@aleksazunjic9672
@aleksazunjic9672 2 года назад
@@hetty43 There is no need to defend or accuse anyone, just to tell whole truth.
@hetty43
@hetty43 2 года назад
@@aleksazunjic9672 true. I agree with you. The truth is often hard to find. Depends who writes the news and the history books.
@alexbowman7582
@alexbowman7582 2 года назад
Whilst Stalingrad was a German disaster it’s holding out allowed one million German soldiers fighting in the Caucasus to escape with their equipment. A rapid defeat of Stalingrad and a Russian advance to take Rostov would have partly trapped army group south who would have only had the Crimea left to escape through.
@CraigerAce
@CraigerAce 2 года назад
If.
@freppie_
@freppie_ 2 года назад
@Francisco Aldana the whole war was staged, for some who knows what sinister reasons.
@kevinkelly2207
@kevinkelly2207 2 года назад
@@freppie_ Staged? How was WW2 staged? Must have been alot of devoted actors in the 1940's. Idiotic comment
@freppie_
@freppie_ 2 года назад
@@kevinkelly2207 do some investigation on the subject, i will give you a few 'odd' facts the gold stolen from the jews was sold in Basel, switserland to the Americans. Hitler when in prison got a visit from someone who is unknown, after which he wrote mein kampf. Lot's of the investment in the Nsdap and the reichs arms industry. was done by American banker families. like the J.P Morgans. the truth is out there mate, but i can tell you it's not in our regular historybooks or schoolbooks.
@rscott2247
@rscott2247 2 года назад
@@freppie_ I think you are on to something that very rarely gets any consideration. The stupidity of the Battle of Bitain in 1940 when the German navy was at an all time low to protect its transports in case the Luftwaffe did gain air superoirity. It still had the great Royal Navy to contend with.
@Alaninbroomfield
@Alaninbroomfield 2 года назад
Len Deighton pointed out something I always thought repeating, which is that Germany got far more from the Soviet Union with peaceful trade (oil, rare earth metals, wheat, and other vital commodities) than he ever got from invasion & conquest. This was to the point of the UK & France considering bombing the RUSSIAN oil fields in the Caucasus in 1940 in order to deprive Germany of their fresh supply of Russian-sourced oil. Ironic, isn't it?
@attilamolnar7555
@attilamolnar7555 2 года назад
The alliance between Nazi Germany and Soviet Union would have never lasted. There would have been a clash of "the titans" sooner than later.
@mattilatvala4164
@mattilatvala4164 2 года назад
Plus the joint skunk works in USSR of fighter planes and tanks. Among others, Guderian graduated from the Russian tank school of Kama. The trade continued to AMAZINGLY late.
@shanewilson199
@shanewilson199 2 года назад
In beevor’s book on the fall of Berlin he paraphrases Russian soldiers’ amazement upon seeing German farms. They couldn’t believe a country so rich would want to invade a country so poor. They couldn’t see the sense in attacking Russia.
@andrewisotope8146
@andrewisotope8146 2 года назад
True, especially during those two years after they'd signed that pact of steel, the Soviets always delivered lots of oil & other raw materials with loads of grain and foodstuffs, but all the while old Adolf was stockpiling the stuff to invade them, I'm surprised old Stalin didn't excile all East Germany to Siberia come 1945 really?
@lindaterrell5535
@lindaterrell5535 2 года назад
@@shanewilson199 The Germans spent some years leaking their sanity.
@zazzyboy8592
@zazzyboy8592 2 года назад
Honestly knowing about this battle got me through so much in life. Just makes me so grateful to have what I have.
@alexbowman7582
@alexbowman7582 2 года назад
The Germans accused the Romanians and Hungarians of not putting up a sufficient fight to hold their flanks to which the Hungarians pointed out that of three senior Hungarian officers killed in the fighting two were killed in hand to hand combat.
@richardstephens5570
@richardstephens5570 2 года назад
The Axis troops holding the flanks were spread too thin, and had a shortage of anti-tank guns to deal with Soviet armor.
@alexbowman7582
@alexbowman7582 2 года назад
@@richardstephens5570 most of the attacks were conventional soldiers largely without armour by this time the Russians had learnt the German scwherepunkt.
@seanwalker6460
@seanwalker6460 2 года назад
I feel sorry for the Romanians in this war as they were fighting with outdated kit. Their 'Tank division' at Stalingrad was 127 Panzer 35(T) Pile of crap to fight a T34 with. Little support weapons and no communication equipment. Germans blamed them for not fighting however they did not - could not - as they had lost the industrial war by this stage - supply them with any modern german equipment.
@tad27612
@tad27612 2 года назад
Merry Christmas to everyone, especially to the great Dr. Mark Felton and his family. May 2022 bring many more great, informative videos - that will be the greatest gift of all.
@als1023
@als1023 2 года назад
Always been grateful being born in Canada after the war, growing up in a small town with many immigrants from all sides of the war, kept it's memory close at hand. I always turn to this topic at this time of year, must be the wonderful hospitality shown by many eastern European families over the Christmas season, their delicious food and drink they shared with the friends of their children. Always generous and kind, rarely were the war years mentioned in my presence. Very Best of the Season to Mark Felton and his incredible group of followers who add so much to his channels. Thank you all for your excellent posts and anecdotes.
@IrishManJT
@IrishManJT 2 года назад
My Grandfather who was an officer in the British Indian Army and who served in the 10th Baluch regiment and Royal Indian Army Service Corps before and during the Second World War had a close German friend of his who served as a Panzer officer in the relief column that attempted to break through to Stalingrad. Somehow, this man survived the war and came to visit my Grandfather in his house in Dublin in the late 1950’s. Apparently, whilst he was bending over to put some logs on the fire, my Mother came into the room and couldn’t resist kicking him in the backside with my grandparents looking on. That was the 2nd time in his life he had his ass kicked.😀
@BloxEzio3
@BloxEzio3 2 года назад
It would have been good to mention, that a big reason as to why so many Stalingrad prisoners died in Soviet captivity, was because of the malnourishment they had been affected by, once the supplies in the cauldron ran out. They had been going with less and less food ever since the pocket closed, not to even mention the battle fatigue they had suffered even before that. By the time they germans were captured, they were dying in droves every day and while soviet mistreatment surely added to the list of casualties, it was not the chief reason as to why just 5000 returned
@user-nf5bt3hd1p
@user-nf5bt3hd1p 2 года назад
sincerely sorry for all these innocent boys(( unfortunately we do not have precise statistics about Russian victims of starvation in 1942
@obi-wankenobi1750
@obi-wankenobi1750 6 месяцев назад
Yes, but how many of them were already dying before capture (either mortally wounded, starved to the point of no return, or frozen beyond help)? 1,000? 5,000? 10,000? It’s impossible to know. What we do know however, is that the Soviets rarely took wounded Germans into captivity and usually executed them on the spot. So we will never know how many of the sick and injured would/ wouldn’t have survived considering they were all just plain murdered anyways. Also, a death march to Siberia in the winter is just plain not feasible for anyone in suboptimal condition, so any of the wounded who weren’t executed would have certainly died on that trip regardless. I think it’s a pretty safe bet that the overwhelming majority of those 90,000 who were taken into custody would have made it home had they been given proper treatment and living conditions. The USSR murdered those people, plain and simple. I can’t blame them too much, because those Germans had left a trail of death and destruction behind them on the way to Stalingrad, so I don’t have much sympathy for them but they were still murdered.
@kennethkloby2726
@kennethkloby2726 2 года назад
I think Hitler's fixation on Stalingrad because it bore his enemy's name has been shown to be debatable, at minimum, as it dismisses the strategic importance of the city to both sides. (It also dismisses Hitler's awareness there would never be a second chance after 1942.) Also several comments were made in the video which more or less rely on the popular wisdom Hitler was so power hungry and mentally unstable he dismissed the advice of his knowledgeable/experienced generals. This too is debatable, at minimum. It was Halder who derailed Barbarossa in 1941 by changing Hitler's plan to capture the Ukrainian breadbasket and the oilfields in the Caucasus by late 1941 to capturing Moscow, which the Russians were willing to give up anyway. Halder's betrayal put Hitler's strategic plans behind by a full year, after 1941 Hitler had an excellent reason for dismissing his generals' advice when it did not further his strategic plan. As far as the operation to relieve Stalingrad the video is good but the introduction is not.
@musicmann6812
@musicmann6812 2 года назад
No that was just a bonus, if they had won. No the reason was they had to cut the supply of weapons ect down the river volgor and the tractor factory was now a tank factory
@lloydchristmas1086
@lloydchristmas1086 2 года назад
Its absolutely mind boggling how Halder was not court martialed and shot for that.
@michaelmccabe3079
@michaelmccabe3079 2 года назад
Furthermore, Halder had a lot to do with the Stalingrad campaign's failure. He was not very good at heading staff work, and Paulus' army didn't receive sufficient reinforcements to maintain its strength before the encirclement. There was no concerted attempt to improve rail infrastructure (even if the armies had linked up, land resupply with horse carts would've still sucked) by a corps of engineers, and the Germans put alpine divisions (both theirs and allied) into urban combat rather than sending them to the Caucasus. The air resupply also had worked in 1941, but in 1942 the Soviets had vastly superior AA defenses, and so many more German planes were shot down than before. And finally, Halder never actually gave Paulus an order to attempt a breakout- it was implied in their radio traffic but was nonspecific enough to cause coordination problems had Paulus just assumed it was an order and attacked straightaway. The German Army's biggest weakness was its overreliance on improvisation, and its lack of staff work that could slow down the tempo of operations but would preserve its fighting strength for longer.
@declancotter722
@declancotter722 2 года назад
@@michaelmccabe3079 not to mention that by the time the relieve effort got going the 6th army had been encircled for a month already and couldn't move anymore since they had eaten or sent the horses away. If they broke out towards the relieve effort they would have been slaughtered by the red army and airforce. The only thing that changes if the 6th is slaughtered in a breakout is the battle ends earlier and frees up the red army to cut off group south in the Caucasus.
@aristedecomgmailcom
@aristedecomgmailcom 2 года назад
@@michaelmccabe3079 Hitler sacked Halder in September 1942。Paulus was surrounded in November 1942。So it wasn't up to Halder what Paulus did after the Sixth Army was surrounded。
@lou36heron87
@lou36heron87 2 года назад
I've been a student of WWII history for 57 yrs and this site is really good, thank you for sharing with us. Stalingrad is one of my favorite areas of reading and watching.
@ComissarYarrick
@ComissarYarrick 2 года назад
To be honest, even if 6th army would manage to make contact with Mannsthain forces, how much would it change the overall strategic situation ? Long retreat in middle of russian winter would be insanenly costly in casualties and hardware anyway. Surrounded or not, 6th was doomed as fighing force either way.
@bruhism173
@bruhism173 2 года назад
You get 6 more men at the battle of Berlin to teach children how to fire panzerfausts.
@fxzeedits5456
@fxzeedits5456 2 года назад
yeah no fighting force anymore but still i‘d say even if they can escape with high casualties the men would be „saved“ in comparison to the 6000 surviving the pocket + prison camps out of idk 250k or sum, so same tactical result but lives saved
@fishyc150
@fishyc150 2 года назад
There has been a great deal of research and "guessing" done and it's considered better that the army remain surrounded. The german line was all but broken. If you added the 6th army back in the October (so still operational after a withdrawal) you would also have to add the 1.5 million russians used at stalingrad against them. Better strategically that the germans lose 350k men to tie up 1.5 million.
@kerder8660
@kerder8660 2 года назад
We ignore history.. Hehehe Napoléon Russia fiasco..
@roybaldit9319
@roybaldit9319 2 года назад
It may have given them a chance to break out and regroup.
@YukariAkiyamaTanks
@YukariAkiyamaTanks 2 года назад
Merry Christmas and Happy New Year Dr. Felton! Thank you so much for all the very interesting history, I cant wait for more next year!
@junkyarddog9799
@junkyarddog9799 2 года назад
I was fortunate in meeting a Stalingrad survivor on a Chevrolet assembly line back in 1973. After spending 10 years in Siberian captivity he returned home outside of Munchen. He collected his overjoyed wife and together journeyed to America to work initially on a farm in Georgia and eventually to Michigan at the truck factory in Flint. An 'Obergefreiter' (corporal) he was a very humble man, who set high standards for his work ethic on that line. He was amused at my pedestrian attempts at speaking German, but one day blurted out "..God did not intend for us to win that war"...I replied "ganz richtig"!(yes indeed).
@quintrankid8045
@quintrankid8045 2 года назад
What did he think that god intended?
@junkyarddog9799
@junkyarddog9799 2 года назад
@@quintrankid8045 he was not highly educated but the belt buckle on standard Wehrmacht uniforms featured the words 'Gott mit Uns' (God is with Us')..took the hint
@600wheel
@600wheel 2 года назад
Merry Christmas Mark and thank you for saying it it’s something you just don’t hear on RU-vid anymore and thank you for your videos this horrible knowledge should not be lost and forgotten or swept under the rug because people are too sensitive to hear it we cannot forget the horrors or we will relive the horrors
@TCK71
@TCK71 2 года назад
Brilliant narration covering an interesting and truly horrific battle.
@JD-re3cj
@JD-re3cj 2 года назад
Yeah but is your VPN safe
@Dr.KarlowTheOctoling
@Dr.KarlowTheOctoling 2 года назад
@@JD-re3cj Too late to ask, the Germans have already invaded it.
@wolfu597
@wolfu597 2 года назад
When the Red Army overran the Italian 8th army, they decimated 5 of it's divisions in just two days and left a 90 mile gap between Army Group B and Don(Manstein). And with the russians moving further and further westward towards Rostov, there's no way Manstein could have rescued the 6th army in time.
@awitcher5303
@awitcher5303 2 года назад
Even had he linked up there was little chance for them to get out given the general weakness of the 6th army
@declancotter722
@declancotter722 2 года назад
@@awitcher5303 they would have had to leave most of their equipment behind given how few horses and trucks they had left to move the stuff.
@awitcher5303
@awitcher5303 2 года назад
@@declancotter722 yeah horses were a problem since they slaughtered so many for food, but its also a matter of they couldnt just pack up and leave when a link up was made since the soviets would just rush in from all sides and they wouldnt have defenses ready to repel them and even then given that the entire front was collapsing they would have to escape all the way to the Ukraine which I doubt they could...
@zdenekjevicky1143
@zdenekjevicky1143 2 года назад
Mr Felton I have a great respect for your work, I love history and I appreciate people like you creating these educational shorts. Thank you
@vinnyg1763
@vinnyg1763 2 года назад
Merry Christmas Mark Felton and thank you for your great stories this year. Looking forward to more in 2022.
@alecfromminnenowhere2089
@alecfromminnenowhere2089 2 года назад
These numbers are staggering. Can you imagine the utter hopelessness of a captured German solider? After the war these 20 some year Olds were used to clean up and rebuild the USSR at the expense of their young lives. I don't sympathize with what the Germans did, in fact it was horrific. But, like the comment below, to be " Caught up in the cogs of war" the suffering and the thoughts that they would never see their families again.
@jobvanhetkaar8848
@jobvanhetkaar8848 2 года назад
Well said. And let’s not forget that the sovjets were at least as bad, if not worse than the Germans.
@occidentadvocate.9759
@occidentadvocate.9759 2 года назад
Opperation Barbarosa was a pre-emptive strike. The Soviet Union was planning invade Western Europe in July 1941. A Soviet agent leaked this fact years ago.
@jobvanhetkaar8848
@jobvanhetkaar8848 2 года назад
@@occidentadvocate.9759 really already in July 1941? Even with the dire state the Sovjet army was in at the time?
@carrickrichards2457
@carrickrichards2457 2 года назад
Prisoners of each side on the Eastern front had very poor survival.
@TheGreatest1974
@TheGreatest1974 2 года назад
@Job van het Kaar definitely.
@marshaldillon4387
@marshaldillon4387 2 года назад
What a brutal Winter. Thank You Sir Mark and a Marry Christmas to you and your family. 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🇬🇧🇺🇸
@paulpowell4871
@paulpowell4871 2 года назад
happy Yule! This past year and a half You helped me through my fight with cancer and my days of Chemo. I want to thank you for being one if the reasons I was entertained and survived and am so far clear, Battles won we move along with hope and caution. I wish I could give you money this holiday but all i have is hope and blessings for you which I hope hold some value to you. Thank You from the depths of my soul
@BanksRolls
@BanksRolls 2 года назад
I’ve been researching Stalingrad lately, perfect timing! Thanks for the content Dr.Felton. Much appreciated!
@utcnc7mm
@utcnc7mm 2 года назад
TIKhistory is doing a long series on this battle that differs some from what Mr. Felton has shown here. It is a long series as he hasn't finished it yet but it is very informative.
@daveyboy_
@daveyboy_ 2 года назад
Get the book by Anthony Beevor . Stalingrad , easy read - very human , doesn't bog u down with maps & the like . Almost like a novel. I highly recommend it . You'll know Stalingrad back to front.
@snaggalfrash9013
@snaggalfrash9013 2 года назад
Research Pol Pot The Killing Fields.
@r3djar
@r3djar 2 года назад
Great way to wake up! Thanks for all the amazing videos Dr. Felton and Merry Christmas to you and yours!!!
@theclandestinewitness
@theclandestinewitness 2 года назад
That would have been the worst Christmas ever. Hope you and your family are well Dr. Felton. Happy holidays and thank you for the insightful content.
@robertandrews6915
@robertandrews6915 2 года назад
1.5 million subs now! Remember the first video I seen from your channel, German U boats in Argentina u530 think you had around 30k. I usually don't subscribe at first but something about the thoroughness and detail convinced me. Through the next 3 years, you haven't disappointed. Cheers to another 3 years of great content.
@deonmurphy6383
@deonmurphy6383 2 года назад
Merry Christmas Dr. Felton, thank you for a year of great videos on both of your channels.
@robvandeschepop8595
@robvandeschepop8595 2 года назад
Thanks for the great content every time, and Merry Christmas to you too.
@davidburke8682
@davidburke8682 2 года назад
Dr.Felton i just want you to know i learned more from you about military history than any history teacher i ever had. And I really appreciate the effort you put in
@rh5563
@rh5563 2 года назад
Merry Christmas Dr. Felton. Thank you for giving us years of ‘hidden’ history, especially in regards to WWII. 👍👍👍
@hardnox6655
@hardnox6655 2 года назад
I lost 6 great uncles in Stalingrad. All were my grandmother's brothers who were in the Wehrmacht. Four died in combat, two as POWs.
@ingloriousbastard9829
@ingloriousbastard9829 2 года назад
Being Nazi it’s bad
@Primal-Weed
@Primal-Weed 2 года назад
Sure you did.
@sweettendercharles1556
@sweettendercharles1556 2 года назад
@@ingloriousbastard9829 better than being a communist, by far
@jupprheinland4805
@jupprheinland4805 2 года назад
@@ingloriousbastard9829 Sorry, not everyone is in your position and can choose which nationality the parents have and in which country they’ll be born. You are right, Nazis are cruel people and what was done happened in a dimension never seen before and it should never happen again. But isn’t stereotyping a whole nation and it’s people some kind of the same thing which Nazis did with Jews, most Slavic groups and minorities like gypsies? Not every german was a Nazi and not every nazi was German. Maybe you should do some research about the torture cellars from the SA shortly before the Nazis gained power or the background of the first inmates of the CCs in the early - mid 30s, when Jews were a minority in these camps (which changed drastically in the first years of the war). Also about german resistance after the political opposition was annihilated in the early 30s, which made it way harder. No, this shouldn’t depict Germany as a victim but thousands of Germans were the first victims due to their religion, political affiliation, their health or their sexuality. Sure, other countries suffered far more but its nonsense to depict everyone as a Nazi - especially if you don’t know anything about the People or their families.
@illerac84
@illerac84 2 года назад
@@sweettendercharles1556 Ooooh, true believer. Based.
@dk2428
@dk2428 2 года назад
This channel is such a gem! Keep up the great work, Mr Felton! Merry Christmas!
@briannicholas2757
@briannicholas2757 2 года назад
Dr. Felton, thank you for another great video at the end of a year full of other great videos from you. I just finished your book, Never Surrender, which was fascinating. Your books are always very informative yet they are a treat to read. Not the stuffy history texts I grew up with, or studied in college. This is my 5th book of yours, and to your viewers here, I say pick up any of Dr. Felton's books and you wont be disappointed. I hop you and your family have a very Merry Christmas and all the best in the new year.
@federico02072
@federico02072 2 года назад
Mr Felton please have a very Merry Christmas thank you for all these videos. I've learned more about wwII then ever, and the way you tell the story keeps my complete attention. Again thank you.
@Alex-bm4vp
@Alex-bm4vp 2 года назад
My grandfather fight in Russia he came 1948 back as a poor broken men .rip stalingrad soldiers .happy holidays for everyone
@recondrone6826
@recondrone6826 2 года назад
Merry Christmas Mark! I'm looking forward to more remarkable historic videos in the future!
@SGBlackstar
@SGBlackstar 2 года назад
Always a pleasure to watch your excellent videos , much time spent to produce such fine work both accurate and educational. And happy Christmas to you too
@jjeherrera
@jjeherrera 2 года назад
Merry Christmas Dr. Felton! Thanks for yet another year of smashing videos.
@vincnetjones3037
@vincnetjones3037 6 месяцев назад
A good friend of mine's Grandfather fought in Stalingrad with the 100th Division. He was an MG34 gunner and was badly wounded and lost a leg. He was from Silesia and therefore technically Polish. The German Government after the war ended still continued to pay him a disability pension until he passed away in his late 70s. He used some of this money to pay for my friend to go to University and be given further advanced lessons in English. My friend has been able to have a much better life because of this generous man. :)
@alexamerling79
@alexamerling79 2 года назад
"The officers today told the soldiers to be prepared for action. General Manstein is approaching Stalingrad from the south with strong forces. This news brought hope to the soldiers' hearts. God, let it be!" - Wilhelm Hoffman, December 18, 1942.
@immortal4942
@immortal4942 2 года назад
quality content as usual, thank you.
@momoney11b
@momoney11b 2 года назад
Merry Christmas Mark, and RIP to the brave souls of the 6th Army
@jem_lucinamain3777
@jem_lucinamain3777 2 года назад
Thank you for this present Dr. Felton. Have a Merry Christmas as well.
@bobg6638
@bobg6638 2 года назад
Another great lesson-always informative and enlightening.
@johnbockelie3899
@johnbockelie3899 2 года назад
Both Napoleon , and Hitler learned a valuable cold lesson about Russia, Mother Russia is a cruel mistress.
@snaggalfrash9013
@snaggalfrash9013 2 года назад
@@johnbockelie3899 Mao & Pol Pot Agrees With You Comrade.
@odonovan
@odonovan 2 года назад
4:51 - Not true. Paulus openly felt 6th Army was too beaten down, and too short of supplies and transportation, to stage an effective breakout. Göring claimed he could keep them supplied by air if they remained in "the cauldron" (the Stalingrad pocket). AND, Manstein personally advised Hitler (on November 24th) that 6th Army should NOT attempt to break out, but should be reached by a German counterattack. 5:39 - That shortage of supplies was not beginning JUST then. It had been building since the encirclement of the 6th Army, on November 23rd. By mid December, the situation was critical. 6:37 - Manstein mounted "Operation Winter Storm" to reach 6th Army from the southwest. Starting from Kotelnikovo, 13 divisions, commanded by Hermann Hoth, were to break through the Soviet 51st Army, and link up with the 6th Army. 7:21 - Stavka (Russian: Ставка) is pronounced STAV-ka (not STAV-kee). 8:04 - Tatsinskaya was only ONE of the fields used for the supply flights. The others being Morozovskaya, Sverovo, Salsk, Stalino-nord, Novotsherkassk, Lugunsk, Gorlokova, Makejevka, Konstantinovka, and Rostov. The loss of Tatsinskaya WAS a serious blow to the relief efforts however, as a large number of German aircraft had to be destroyed and abandoned, including 72 of the vital Ju 52 transports. 8:30 to 8:50 - UNTRUE! From the beginning, Paulus felt a breakout attempt would be suicide without more resources. Most of their supplies and big guns were normally towed behind horses. 70% of the horses had been evacuated from the area for the winter (because they ate too much) and many others had been killed during the fighting. They would have to attempt a breakout with almost no supplies or ammunition, which would be suicide Paulus was well aware of that. In addition, 6th Army had only enough fuel for its tanks to travel PERHAPS 30 km (fewer than 19 miles), WELL short of the distance they would need to reach to link up with a relief force, at ANY point in time. 9:24 - NO! "A few dozen vehicles" would have been slaughtered, wholesale, by the Soviets, who were laying in wait for JUST such an attempt. Paulus KNEW that. 10:25 - To the SOUTHWEST
@joeycarpenter3773
@joeycarpenter3773 2 года назад
Merry Christmas to you, Mr. Felton! You are amazing, with the prolific knowledge of military history, is so facinating to me. Be well and safe.
@johnhalley974
@johnhalley974 2 года назад
Nothing in this video has not already been known about for years…anyone can find out.
@antoniof9756
@antoniof9756 2 года назад
Merry Christmas for you too, Dr. Felton, and to everyone watching this channel.
@thegodofhellfire
@thegodofhellfire 2 года назад
Great way to start the morning. Merry Christmas all!
@J.d.J
@J.d.J 2 года назад
Ik wil u hartelijk danken voor alle tijd die u in uw mini documentaireserie steekt. Hulde voor al uw werk en ga vooral door. Fijne feestdagen en een gezond 2022
@pk6990
@pk6990 2 года назад
Thank you Dr Felton for another great historical video. Wishing you a very Merry Christmas and a happy new year. Best wishes from Australia 🇦🇺
@edkrzywdzinski9121
@edkrzywdzinski9121 2 года назад
A Merry Christmas to you Dr. Felton. Wishing you all the best for a safe and joyous new year. Thank you for another entertaining year, looking forward for more to come in 2022.
@youngthaiarfssoldier8732
@youngthaiarfssoldier8732 2 года назад
Merry Christmas!
@MarkFeltonProductions
@MarkFeltonProductions 2 года назад
Same to you!
@beanhavok2287
@beanhavok2287 2 года назад
The classic notion that Stalingrad had no strategic significance outside of it's name has been challenged by TiK East of the city was a main railroad leading north. Taking the city would have effectively cut the oil flow north to the Soviet Armies, not to mention supplies flowing north on the Volga itself.
@williamwilliam5066
@williamwilliam5066 2 года назад
I think we can ignore any challenge from TikTok!
@beanhavok2287
@beanhavok2287 2 года назад
@@williamwilliam5066 TiK isnt challenging Dr. Felton per say. This notion of reality of the battle Of Stalingrad has been around since the war ended. TiK has done amazing work.
@conor3361
@conor3361 2 года назад
@@beanhavok2287 I think he misunderstood that it was from Tik Tok not Tik the RU-vidr
@williamwilliam5066
@williamwilliam5066 2 года назад
@@beanhavok2287 Especially the dancing nurses!
@williamwilliam5066
@williamwilliam5066 2 года назад
@@conor3361 I think not!
@dutchman7216
@dutchman7216 2 года назад
Thank you again Mark Felton and Merry Christmas to you and your family.
@DDay-vv9ec
@DDay-vv9ec 2 года назад
Good video merry Christmas.thank you much, I've learned more from Felton videos than my last three years in high school.
@Cryptic141
@Cryptic141 2 года назад
This is interesting, Merry Christmas!
@erzierzi9132
@erzierzi9132 2 года назад
The brother of my grandmother died in Stalingrad at the age of 19. The last letter she received from him was sent on december 24 I think. Such a useless fight. Merry Christmas guys!
@shrikantjoshi4010
@shrikantjoshi4010 2 года назад
Merry Christmas, Mark! So many enlightening videos! Always looking forward to your new episodes!!
@richardtherrien7627
@richardtherrien7627 2 года назад
When I subscribed to this man, I think he had 250K followers - so great to see where you are now Dr. Felton! Continued success!
@reddirtroots5992
@reddirtroots5992 2 года назад
Merry Christmas to too Mark. Thank you for another great year. Always the best!
@mitchmatthews6713
@mitchmatthews6713 2 года назад
More interesting history, thanks so much, Mark! Have a wonderful and safe Christmas!
@Mjdeben
@Mjdeben 2 года назад
Merry Christmas to Dr. Felton and his men. Compared to what these guys suffered through we should all be grateful.
@Administrator_O-5
@Administrator_O-5 2 года назад
Merry Belated Christmas Dr. Mark! Your endless work is greatly appreciated Sir!
@nickbutler7935
@nickbutler7935 2 года назад
Seasons greetings Sir. Another great video to add to this years haul. Looking forward to 2022 with more excellent glimpses into history.
@dogecho8441
@dogecho8441 2 года назад
Beautiful gift for Christmas, Mark Thank you!
@rayvestrayvene5376
@rayvestrayvene5376 2 года назад
Merry Christmas to u too Mark Felton. Thank you for efforts to provide us with ur amazing content.
@brucelowe3391
@brucelowe3391 2 года назад
Thank you Dr. Felton for another year of great history.
@TheDancingHyena
@TheDancingHyena 2 года назад
I think it's disingenuous to bring up the name of the city as something significant - there were many good strategic reasons for the Germans to want to capture the city and the Soviets to defend it. Stalingrad was the linchpin of the German flank on the Volga. You say it was possible to "bypass and let it wither," but bypass where? Across the Volga? The plan was to anchor the flank on the Volga in Stalingrad. They could surround the city instead of attempting to take it, but that leaves a sizeable Soviet bridgehead behind their lines that would take many forces to secure. The Soviets, for their part, want to maintain that bridgehead and control of an important industrial center, the factories of which still churned out tanks even with battle raging just outside the factory gates. As for why Hitler would refuse retreat, we need to look no further than the fact that he *always* refused retreat and wanted to hang on to every inch of ground they had gained, regardless of the name of the place.
@juliantheapostate8295
@juliantheapostate8295 2 года назад
He refused retreat in this case because he knew he lacked the forces to retake Stalingrad. Fall Blau was the last throw of the dice. Germany was out of oil. I agree with everything else you said
@ohgosh5892
@ohgosh5892 2 года назад
"As for why Hitler would refuse retreat, we need to look no further than the fact that he always refused retreat and wanted to hang on to every inch of ground they had gained, regardless of the name of the place." That does not answer 'why'. It reduces to "he did it because he always did it", which is politely, a tautology, or more directly, a load of tosh. Why did Hitler never want to give ground? Stupidity is rife, just look at Brexit, even when it is blindingly clear that Brexit is a total disaster, those driving it refuse to change their strategy, just like Hitler. Stupidity. Brexit is now well inside the "gambler's dilemma". An intelligent person stops betting when they are losing, stupid people do not.
@stsk1061
@stsk1061 2 года назад
The Volga could have been crossed anywhere, Stalingrad wasn't needed for that. There were reasons for the capture of the city, but not enough to sacrifice an entire army for.
@olwens1368
@olwens1368 2 года назад
My respect for the courage and staying power of the 6th Army is huge. I can't begin to imagine how they kept going so long, against the enemy, the weather, the supply incompetence of their High Command. (Even allowing for their fear of Russian capture). Years ago I read an article about something called 'the frozen heart of Stalingrad' which claimed that doctors noticed that the heart muscle of men who had been so cold and so short of food for so long never recovered, and that post mortems carried out on men who died 30 years later revealed that their hearts were still undersized. I can't remember the provenance of the article and have no idea how true it is, but it sounded horribly plausible.
@brittainhard1363
@brittainhard1363 2 года назад
Why would you have respect for an army whose purpose was annihilation and genocide?
@brittainhard1363
@brittainhard1363 2 года назад
@Messer Schmidt Oh, so you're okay with genocide then. Good to know.
@brittainhard1363
@brittainhard1363 2 года назад
@Messer Schmidt I'm not in favor of genocide. You just admitted that genocide is justifiable because "the soviets" "tried to plunge Germany into a Soviet republic". That's your problem, not mine.
@brittainhard1363
@brittainhard1363 2 года назад
@Messer Schmidt Are you saying that Lebensraum was not genocidal? That's why they were there, because of Hitler's idea of Lebensraum. Therefore, the 6th Army, and the German Army, was genocidal. It's not difficult to understand, you just don't want to understand it.
@olwens1368
@olwens1368 2 года назад
@@brittainhard1363 Perhaps i should have been pedantic and said that I respect the MEN of the 6th Army. I'm very very glad their side lost, but I believe that most of them were just like our troops and those of other nations- doing a job because they'd been told it needed doing. And they did it amazingly. History is chock full of examples of armies that did very nasty things- including we Brits, the US in Vietnam, the Russians and probably most others, including those in the British and American civil wars. It doesn't mean that you can't respect the courage of your enemy. For instance Churchill commented on the courage and seamanship of Gunther Prien who sank the Royal Oak. On a less exalted level, both my parents served as teenagers in the Royal Navy/WRNS and the Army during WW2. Both joined up rather than wait for conscription, neither hated the ordinary Germans, and after the war my father had several German friends who stayed here after having been POWs.
@TheRedDevil_NC
@TheRedDevil_NC 2 года назад
Merry Christmas Mark. So appreciative of all this content.
@glennboyd7049
@glennboyd7049 2 года назад
Have a very merry Christmas Dr Felton. Yet another great production, fact-filled and informative.
@niallmcdonagh1093
@niallmcdonagh1093 2 года назад
I visited Volgograd in November for a week's historical tour. The bleakness of the German positions on the outskirts of Stalingrad still haunt me. It showed here in Toronto today and all I could think of was the poor doomed 6th Army.....
@DrJones20
@DrJones20 2 года назад
Weep for the Soviets. 26 million died, mostly civillians.
@maxanderring
@maxanderring 2 года назад
How about weep for all the unfortunate souls caught up in the brutality?
@DrJones20
@DrJones20 2 года назад
@@maxanderring No weeping for the Nazis (yes many of the soldiers in the 6th army were Nazis as seen in their letters sent home) - Anthony Beevor
@maxanderring
@maxanderring 2 года назад
@@DrJones20 why are you so sure you wouldn't have been a Nazi if you were living in that time and place?
@DrJones20
@DrJones20 2 года назад
@@maxanderring Not every German were Nazis. Nazis committed mass genocide against Jews and Slavs, burned women and children alive while laughing about it. Assaulting them, if you think every person can be like that you have an extremely low opinion of humanity.
@Hutchza123
@Hutchza123 2 года назад
Heartbreaking for men of the 6th army
@conveyor2
@conveyor2 2 года назад
@JZ's Best Friend Yes commissar!
@Macdunne
@Macdunne 2 года назад
Merry Christmas Dr. Felton. Always appreciate the content you put forth for us.
@fuyu5979
@fuyu5979 2 года назад
Happy Holidays Mark Felton ! Thanks for all ur uploads during 2021. Looking forward to more in 2022. Peace 🎅🤶🌲
@markusz4447
@markusz4447 2 года назад
It can be argued that Paulus' decision to stay and fight saved Army group south from encirclement. The Russians wanted to push to Rostow and cut them off, however they couldn't as the Stalingrad pocket tied up so many troops for so long.
@hwvanzant3007
@hwvanzant3007 2 года назад
imagine being a German soldier a thousand miles from home fighting in a frozen hell with no way out.I feel sorry from them.
@britvroman
@britvroman 2 года назад
No need to feel sorry for those nazis.
@lev3432
@lev3432 2 года назад
@@britvroman I feel sorry for those nazis.
@conveyor2
@conveyor2 2 года назад
@@britvroman
@rjgiddings
@rjgiddings 2 года назад
How Mark finds all this footage and photographs is beyond a simple google search...well done ! Merry Christmas to you and yours.
@ProspectFilmRoom
@ProspectFilmRoom 2 года назад
One thing that has to be mentioned -- The 6th Army/Army Group B continued fight while trapped and Operation Winter Storm definitely played a role in Army Group A escaping northwestwards from the Caucasus, albeit by the narrowest of margins. Their escape stabilized the southern wing and set the conditions for "Manstein's Miracle" at Kharkov in March, and subsequently Operation Citadel in July. The defeat at Stalingrad did NOT rob the Germans of the initiative on the Eastern Front.
@irasanders9207
@irasanders9207 7 месяцев назад
The German defeat at Stalingrad significantly weakened their forces in the Soviet Union. Manstein's victory at Kharkov in March may be attributed both to Manstein's generalship and Stalin's stupidity in not allowing a strategic retreat. The Battle of Kursk (Citadel) in the July 1943 resulted in a German defeat. You are right that Germany remained able to launch major offensives in the Soviet Union up to the point they abandoned Operation Citadel, five months after the disaster at Stalingrad. When the tide turned against Nazi Germany in WW2 is a matter still being debated.
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