All language subtitles for The Dark Charisma Of Adolf Hitler - EP-02

af Afrikaans
ak Akan
sq Albanian
am Amharic
ar Arabic
hy Armenian
az Azerbaijani
eu Basque
be Belarusian
bem Bemba
bn Bengali
bh Bihari
bs Bosnian
br Breton
bg Bulgarian
km Cambodian
ca Catalan
ceb Cebuano
chr Cherokee
ny Chichewa
zh-CN Chinese (Simplified)
zh-TW Chinese (Traditional)
co Corsican
hr Croatian
cs Czech
da Danish
nl Dutch
en English
eo Esperanto
et Estonian
ee Ewe
fo Faroese
tl Filipino
fi Finnish
fr French
fy Frisian
gaa Ga
gl Galician
ka Georgian
de German
el Greek
gn Guarani
gu Gujarati
ht Haitian Creole
ha Hausa
haw Hawaiian
iw Hebrew
hi Hindi
hmn Hmong
hu Hungarian
is Icelandic
ig Igbo
id Indonesian
ia Interlingua
ga Irish
it Italian
ja Japanese
jw Javanese
kn Kannada
kk Kazakh
rw Kinyarwanda
rn Kirundi
kg Kongo
ko Korean
kri Krio (Sierra Leone)
ku Kurdish
ckb Kurdish (Soranî)
ky Kyrgyz
lo Laothian
la Latin
lv Latvian
ln Lingala
lt Lithuanian
loz Lozi
lg Luganda
ach Luo
lb Luxembourgish
mk Macedonian
mg Malagasy
ms Malay
ml Malayalam
mt Maltese
mi Maori
mr Marathi
mfe Mauritian Creole
mo Moldavian
mn Mongolian
my Myanmar (Burmese)
sr-ME Montenegrin
ne Nepali
pcm Nigerian Pidgin
nso Northern Sotho
no Norwegian
nn Norwegian (Nynorsk)
oc Occitan
or Oriya
om Oromo
ps Pashto
fa Persian
pl Polish
pt-BR Portuguese (Brazil)
pt Portuguese (Portugal)
pa Punjabi
qu Quechua
ro Romanian
rm Romansh
nyn Runyakitara
ru Russian
sm Samoan
gd Scots Gaelic
sr Serbian
sh Serbo-Croatian
st Sesotho
tn Setswana
crs Seychellois Creole
sn Shona
sd Sindhi
si Sinhalese
sk Slovak
sl Slovenian
so Somali
es Spanish
es-419 Spanish (Latin American)
su Sundanese
sw Swahili
sv Swedish
tg Tajik
ta Tamil
tt Tatar
te Telugu
ti Tigrinya
to Tonga
lua Tshiluba
tum Tumbuka
tr Turkish
tk Turkmen
tw Twi
ug Uighur
uk Ukrainian
ur Urdu
uz Uzbek
vi Vietnamese
cy Welsh
wo Wolof
xh Xhosa
yi Yiddish
yo Yoruba
zu Zulu
Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:18,020 --> 00:00:20,660 In the 1930s, here in Nuremberg, 2 00:00:20,660 --> 00:00:23,940 hundreds of thousands of Germans gathered 3 00:00:23,940 --> 00:00:26,220 to pay homage to Adolf Hitler. 4 00:00:33,580 --> 00:00:35,900 Everybody wanted to be close to him. 5 00:00:35,900 --> 00:00:38,460 Just to live in his favour, to be in his presence, 6 00:00:38,460 --> 00:00:41,220 to be near him just once, 7 00:00:41,220 --> 00:00:43,740 that was the big event for the individual. 8 00:00:48,140 --> 00:00:52,820 Hitler hadn't hypnotised these Germans into supporting him. 9 00:00:52,820 --> 00:00:57,700 They believed in him because of what he'd done and what he'd said. 10 00:00:59,700 --> 00:01:01,700 Not least that he'd told them 11 00:01:01,700 --> 00:01:05,420 they were a superior race who would accomplish great things. 12 00:01:18,740 --> 00:01:21,460 But Hitler now faced the greatest test yet 13 00:01:21,460 --> 00:01:24,020 to his charismatic leadership. 14 00:01:24,020 --> 00:01:29,060 He wanted to take these people into a war of racial conquest, 15 00:01:29,060 --> 00:01:31,620 to gain a vast new empire. 16 00:01:31,620 --> 00:01:34,620 But there was no evidence most of them wanted war. 17 00:01:36,020 --> 00:01:39,180 With insights from those who lived through these times, 18 00:01:39,180 --> 00:01:43,180 most of whom were interviewed by the BBC over the last 20 years, 19 00:01:43,180 --> 00:01:47,740 this film reveals how Hitler tried to persuade his followers 20 00:01:47,740 --> 00:01:49,300 to embrace conflict. 21 00:02:16,980 --> 00:02:18,500 Berlin. 22 00:02:21,060 --> 00:02:23,020 Capital of Germany today, 23 00:02:23,020 --> 00:02:26,020 just as it was capital of Germany in the 1930s, 24 00:02:26,020 --> 00:02:28,620 when Adolf Hitler was Chancellor. 25 00:02:35,740 --> 00:02:40,500 In 1937, Hitler lived and worked at a building on this site. 26 00:02:47,220 --> 00:02:50,420 This was the Old Reich Chancellery. 27 00:02:53,180 --> 00:02:57,620 And here, Hitler spent much of his time alone in his bedroom 28 00:02:57,620 --> 00:03:01,260 where he would listen to what he called his "inner conviction". 29 00:03:03,340 --> 00:03:07,300 Often, Hitler would not emerge from his bedroom until lunchtime. 30 00:03:07,300 --> 00:03:11,540 For central to his charismatic leadership, was the idea 31 00:03:11,540 --> 00:03:14,820 that he made all the big decisions entirely on his own. 32 00:03:19,660 --> 00:03:23,140 Hitler was always certain that he was right. 33 00:03:23,140 --> 00:03:26,180 He didn't even like to read other people's advice. 34 00:03:26,180 --> 00:03:30,860 In 1935, a leading Nazi sent Hitler a paper on youth issues 35 00:03:30,860 --> 00:03:34,500 and received this reply from Hitler's adjutant. 36 00:03:36,740 --> 00:03:38,100 "The Fuehrer received it, 37 00:03:38,100 --> 00:03:42,060 "but immediately gave it back to me unread. 38 00:03:42,060 --> 00:03:46,020 "He intends to give a major speech on this issue at the next Party rally 39 00:03:46,020 --> 00:03:48,100 "and therefore, does not want his thinking 40 00:03:48,100 --> 00:03:50,420 "to be influenced by anybody in any way." 41 00:03:52,860 --> 00:03:55,780 Hitler was thought infallible. 42 00:03:55,780 --> 00:03:57,740 "When a decision has to be taken, 43 00:03:57,740 --> 00:04:01,260 "none of us count more than the stones on which we are standing. 44 00:04:01,260 --> 00:04:04,500 "It is the Fuehrer alone who decides." 45 00:04:05,940 --> 00:04:09,660 And in late 1937, in the isolation of his bedroom, 46 00:04:09,660 --> 00:04:12,020 the Fuehrer was thinking about this. 47 00:04:19,500 --> 00:04:20,740 Austria. 48 00:04:23,860 --> 00:04:26,780 This place would be the first test of Hitler's desire 49 00:04:26,780 --> 00:04:31,420 to occupy land that was not part of Germany. 50 00:04:31,420 --> 00:04:35,140 The first test of how others would react to his willingness 51 00:04:35,140 --> 00:04:39,020 to use brute force to subjugate another country. 52 00:04:42,900 --> 00:04:44,420 Hitler had been born in Austria 53 00:04:44,420 --> 00:04:47,180 and passionately wanted this German-speaking country 54 00:04:47,180 --> 00:04:49,420 to be under his control. 55 00:04:54,100 --> 00:04:56,540 On 5th November 1937, 56 00:04:56,540 --> 00:05:01,140 Hitler told his military leaders that he'd decided to occupy Austria, 57 00:05:01,140 --> 00:05:05,380 and then wanted later to eliminate Czechoslovakia. 58 00:05:05,380 --> 00:05:08,780 But his generals were worried that Hitler would start another war. 59 00:05:10,140 --> 00:05:12,660 It wasn't the reaction Hitler had expected. 60 00:05:12,660 --> 00:05:14,700 He wanted his generals to be like this. 61 00:05:35,700 --> 00:05:38,700 "My generals should be like bull terriers on chains, 62 00:05:38,700 --> 00:05:42,940 "and they should want war, war, war. 63 00:05:42,940 --> 00:05:45,540 "But what happens now? 64 00:05:48,860 --> 00:05:51,420 "I want to go ahead with strong policies 65 00:05:51,420 --> 00:05:53,300 "and the generals try to stop me!" 66 00:05:57,620 --> 00:06:01,500 Within just a few months, three of those who'd been unenthusiastic 67 00:06:01,500 --> 00:06:04,980 about Hitler's plans at the meeting were no longer in office. 68 00:06:06,620 --> 00:06:09,500 But still, Hitler didn't feel able to be as ruthless 69 00:06:09,500 --> 00:06:13,860 with his military leaders as his fellow dictator Stalin did. 70 00:06:13,860 --> 00:06:17,300 Hitler needed the support of the German officer corps. 71 00:06:20,060 --> 00:06:22,780 The Chief Of Staff of the German army, Ludwig Beck, 72 00:06:22,780 --> 00:06:25,420 had welcomed Hitler as Chancellor. 73 00:06:25,420 --> 00:06:26,660 Like many generals, 74 00:06:26,660 --> 00:06:29,180 he wasn't against the idea of German expansion, 75 00:06:29,180 --> 00:06:33,140 he was just anxious that the German army wasn't strong enough yet 76 00:06:33,140 --> 00:06:35,420 to accomplish the task. 77 00:06:35,420 --> 00:06:39,020 But in the end, Hitler's sheer determination won him over. 78 00:06:48,580 --> 00:06:51,460 On the morning of 12th March 1938, 79 00:06:51,460 --> 00:06:55,700 German soldiers crossed the border into neighbouring Austria. 80 00:06:55,700 --> 00:06:57,820 They were greeted not with bullets and guns, 81 00:06:57,820 --> 00:07:01,020 but with roses and carnations. 82 00:07:07,180 --> 00:07:10,780 So much so that the action became known as the Blumenkrieg - 83 00:07:10,780 --> 00:07:13,180 the war of flowers. 84 00:07:17,460 --> 00:07:20,020 "During my ten years at party conferences 85 00:07:20,020 --> 00:07:21,940 "or at rallies with Adolf Hitler, 86 00:07:21,940 --> 00:07:24,980 "I had certainly witnessed my share of enthusiasm, 87 00:07:24,980 --> 00:07:26,540 "but the degree of enthusiasm 88 00:07:26,540 --> 00:07:28,420 "that was prevalent in Austria at that time 89 00:07:28,420 --> 00:07:31,460 "was not only surprising to us, but also quite unbelievable." 90 00:07:35,860 --> 00:07:40,020 The Austrian government, destabilised by the Nazis for years, 91 00:07:40,020 --> 00:07:42,940 had finally succumbed to Hitler's bullying 92 00:07:42,940 --> 00:07:44,540 and offered no resistance. 93 00:07:48,060 --> 00:07:49,820 Most of the Austrian people, 94 00:07:49,820 --> 00:07:52,860 envying what they saw as the economic success 95 00:07:52,860 --> 00:07:56,260 and prestige that Hitler had brought to Germany, 96 00:07:56,260 --> 00:07:59,340 now welcomed their German neighbours. 97 00:08:01,140 --> 00:08:05,260 Hitler's first great gamble of expansion had paid off. 98 00:08:24,900 --> 00:08:29,700 At just before four o'clock in the afternoon of 12th March 1938, 99 00:08:29,700 --> 00:08:32,020 Adolf Hitler drove down this road 100 00:08:32,020 --> 00:08:36,300 and crossed over the River Inn, into Austria. 101 00:08:36,300 --> 00:08:37,740 He was coming home. 102 00:08:43,860 --> 00:08:48,940 This town, Braunau am Inn was his birthplace. 103 00:08:50,740 --> 00:08:54,020 And it was in this house that Hitler had first entered the world 104 00:08:54,020 --> 00:08:55,740 49 years before. 105 00:09:02,980 --> 00:09:04,980 The crowds were so ecstatic 106 00:09:04,980 --> 00:09:09,260 that Hitler's motorcade took several hours to reach the city of Linz, 107 00:09:09,260 --> 00:09:13,540 the place Hitler had gone to school and lived for much of his youth. 108 00:09:17,700 --> 00:09:21,340 The welcome here was the most tumultuous yet. 109 00:09:29,020 --> 00:09:32,260 "I think we cried, most of us, at that time. 110 00:09:32,260 --> 00:09:34,620 "Tears were running down our cheeks, 111 00:09:34,620 --> 00:09:37,340 "and when we looked at the neighbours, it was the same. 112 00:09:37,340 --> 00:09:39,140 " 'You all,' and he said that to us, 113 00:09:39,140 --> 00:09:43,100 " 'You all shall help me build up my empire to be a good empire 114 00:09:43,100 --> 00:09:47,740 " 'with happy people who are thinking and promising to be good people.' " 115 00:09:53,700 --> 00:09:57,420 Something extraordinary happened to Hitler that night in Linz. 116 00:09:57,420 --> 00:10:00,380 Something that demonstrates how charismatic leadership 117 00:10:00,380 --> 00:10:03,140 is about a connection between the leader and the led. 118 00:10:04,380 --> 00:10:06,700 For Hitler only decided NOW, 119 00:10:06,700 --> 00:10:09,860 once he'd witnessed the joyous reaction of the people of Linz, 120 00:10:09,860 --> 00:10:13,340 that Austria should formally become a part of Germany, 121 00:10:13,340 --> 00:10:16,420 rather than remain a separate country within the Nazi empire, 122 00:10:16,420 --> 00:10:18,620 as he'd originally planned. 123 00:10:18,620 --> 00:10:22,260 It was as if the people had changed his mind for him. 124 00:10:35,780 --> 00:10:37,820 Hitler moved on to Vienna. 125 00:10:37,820 --> 00:10:42,020 And his emotional state would have been heightened even more 126 00:10:42,020 --> 00:10:43,420 by what happened next. 127 00:10:48,020 --> 00:10:50,100 It was here, as an unknown young man, 128 00:10:50,100 --> 00:10:53,860 struggling to survive before the First World War, 129 00:10:53,860 --> 00:10:56,660 that he had dreamt dreams of greatness. 130 00:10:58,820 --> 00:11:03,220 At the Vienna opera, he'd seen Wagner's heroic opera Lohengrin 131 00:11:03,220 --> 00:11:04,660 over and over again. 132 00:11:10,140 --> 00:11:14,220 And now, 25 years later, here on the Heldenplatz, 133 00:11:14,220 --> 00:11:17,380 the Heroes' Square in front of the Hofburg Palace, 134 00:11:17,380 --> 00:11:20,900 more than 200,000 people gathered to see Hitler. 135 00:11:31,060 --> 00:11:34,460 In this city, Hitler had once longed to be a hero. 136 00:11:34,460 --> 00:11:38,700 And now, to the cheering crowd in front of him, he was one. 137 00:12:13,340 --> 00:12:17,260 All the most important elements of Hitler's charismatic attraction 138 00:12:17,260 --> 00:12:19,500 were on show here in Austria. 139 00:12:19,500 --> 00:12:23,380 His mission to unite all Germans under his rule. 140 00:12:23,380 --> 00:12:26,660 His ability to establish a connection 141 00:12:26,660 --> 00:12:29,620 and express what his audience were wanting and feeling. 142 00:12:29,620 --> 00:12:32,380 His vision of a racist state, 143 00:12:32,380 --> 00:12:35,340 filled only with those he thought "true" Germans. 144 00:12:35,340 --> 00:12:37,780 The hope he offered these people 145 00:12:37,780 --> 00:12:40,020 in their economic crisis. 146 00:12:40,020 --> 00:12:42,820 His certainty that all would come well... 147 00:12:45,220 --> 00:12:48,100 ..now that Germany and Austria were united. 148 00:12:48,100 --> 00:12:51,860 A final part of Hitler's charisma was also on show - 149 00:12:51,860 --> 00:12:54,500 one that appealed to people's prejudice. 150 00:12:54,500 --> 00:12:56,380 His capacity to hate. 151 00:13:07,660 --> 00:13:12,420 Tens of thousands of Hitler's political opponents in Austria were arrested, 152 00:13:12,420 --> 00:13:14,900 with many sent to concentration camps. 153 00:13:14,900 --> 00:13:18,300 In particular, Austrian Jews suffered, 154 00:13:18,300 --> 00:13:21,940 many violently attacked, robbed and humiliated. 155 00:13:21,940 --> 00:13:24,220 Some forced to scrub the streets clean. 156 00:13:26,540 --> 00:13:28,500 "There was no protection from anywhere. 157 00:13:28,500 --> 00:13:31,420 "I remember I once had to scrub the streets as well. 158 00:13:31,420 --> 00:13:34,620 "I saw in the crowd a well-dressed woman 159 00:13:34,620 --> 00:13:36,900 "and she was holding up a little girl 160 00:13:36,900 --> 00:13:39,020 "so that this girl could see better." 161 00:13:41,540 --> 00:13:44,340 Hitler blamed the Jews for Germany's and Austria's defeat 162 00:13:44,340 --> 00:13:46,820 in the First World War, for Communism, 163 00:13:46,820 --> 00:13:48,740 and for much else besides. 164 00:13:48,740 --> 00:13:51,620 And many believed these anti-Semitic fantasies. 165 00:13:56,220 --> 00:13:59,940 Around ten per cent of the population of Vienna was Jewish, 166 00:13:59,940 --> 00:14:03,660 with many Jews concentrated in this area in the north of the city. 167 00:14:05,580 --> 00:14:09,300 Few of their fellow Austrians helped the Jews, 168 00:14:09,300 --> 00:14:11,140 some were glad to see them go. 169 00:14:28,980 --> 00:14:33,420 The Nazis now organised a plebiscite, a vote of approval, 170 00:14:33,420 --> 00:14:35,980 not just in the unification of Austria and Germany, 171 00:14:35,980 --> 00:14:38,100 but, crucially, in Hitler himself. 172 00:14:50,180 --> 00:14:54,340 The Nazi propaganda campaign was focused on Hitler, 173 00:14:54,340 --> 00:15:00,060 and Austrians were taught the three united values of their new state - 174 00:15:00,060 --> 00:15:02,540 one people, one reich, one leader. 175 00:15:07,540 --> 00:15:12,580 In a demonstration of how central he was personally to this whole system, 176 00:15:12,580 --> 00:15:15,380 Hitler travelled across Austria on a campaign tour. 177 00:15:34,620 --> 00:15:39,380 Heil! Heil! Heil! 178 00:15:39,380 --> 00:15:43,900 Heil! Heil! Heil! 179 00:15:56,740 --> 00:16:01,980 Heil! Heil! Heil! 180 00:16:01,980 --> 00:16:05,020 Heil! Heil! Heil! 181 00:16:05,020 --> 00:16:09,060 The vote was held on 10th April 1938 182 00:16:09,060 --> 00:16:11,540 and both Austrians and Germans were asked 183 00:16:11,540 --> 00:16:15,020 if they agreed with the unification of the two countries 184 00:16:15,020 --> 00:16:16,780 and with Adolf Hitler. 185 00:16:16,780 --> 00:16:19,540 Several hundred thousand Austrians, 186 00:16:19,540 --> 00:16:22,020 mostly Jews and the Nazis' political opponents, 187 00:16:22,020 --> 00:16:23,860 were denied the right to vote. 188 00:16:23,860 --> 00:16:27,140 And for those who did vote, there was a hint on the ballot paper 189 00:16:27,140 --> 00:16:29,260 of what their choice should be, 190 00:16:29,260 --> 00:16:34,380 with the space for "Yes" much bigger than the space for "No". 191 00:16:34,380 --> 00:16:38,140 More than 99% of Austrians voted for Hitler. 192 00:16:43,940 --> 00:16:46,740 Hitler emerged from his Austrian adventure 193 00:16:46,740 --> 00:16:48,660 stronger than he had ever been. 194 00:16:48,660 --> 00:16:51,620 And now he wanted to take over Czechoslovakia. 195 00:16:53,500 --> 00:16:56,380 General Ludwig Beck wrote a warning memo 196 00:16:56,380 --> 00:17:00,180 and read it in May 1938 to the head of the army. 197 00:17:40,220 --> 00:17:44,300 Those who worked closely with Hitler were now split into two camps - 198 00:17:44,300 --> 00:17:46,540 those who believed in Hitler's charisma, 199 00:17:46,540 --> 00:17:49,660 like Hermann Goering who had absolutely faith in his judgment, 200 00:17:49,660 --> 00:17:53,260 and the more pragmatic supporters, like Ludwig Beck. 201 00:17:53,260 --> 00:17:55,780 He liked a great deal of what Hitler was doing, 202 00:17:55,780 --> 00:17:58,220 particularly the strengthening of the armed forces 203 00:17:58,220 --> 00:17:59,820 with more planes and more armaments, 204 00:17:59,820 --> 00:18:04,660 but feared he was leading the Germans into a war they would lose. 205 00:18:05,940 --> 00:18:09,580 What wasn't clear was just how many in the military might be prepared 206 00:18:09,580 --> 00:18:11,780 to try and restrain Hitler, 207 00:18:11,780 --> 00:18:16,020 and how many simply trusted him and would follow where he led. 208 00:18:19,980 --> 00:18:23,500 A clue to the prevailing mood came in June 1938 209 00:18:23,500 --> 00:18:26,940 when a number of officers gathered to discuss Beck's views, 210 00:18:26,940 --> 00:18:31,060 their words later recalled by one of those who heard them speak. 211 00:19:08,340 --> 00:19:11,940 Hitler had now been in power for more than five years. 212 00:19:11,940 --> 00:19:14,500 Years in which the Nazis had sought to influence 213 00:19:14,500 --> 00:19:17,500 every aspect of German life. 214 00:19:17,500 --> 00:19:21,180 This traditional festival, held in Muehleberg in central Germany, 215 00:19:21,180 --> 00:19:24,180 shows just how successful the Nazis had been. 216 00:19:34,740 --> 00:19:37,980 In particular, Hitler targeted the young. 217 00:19:45,700 --> 00:19:49,300 He wanted them to be indoctrinated with Nazi beliefs 218 00:19:49,300 --> 00:19:51,900 almost as soon as they could walk. 219 00:21:02,060 --> 00:21:06,100 "There was God himself, we young people believed all of that." 220 00:21:14,780 --> 00:21:16,940 Young people weren't just being taught 221 00:21:16,940 --> 00:21:18,740 to all but worship Adolf Hitler. 222 00:21:18,740 --> 00:21:22,020 They learnt his racist, hate-filled values as well - 223 00:21:22,020 --> 00:21:24,620 that they were better than everyone else, 224 00:21:24,620 --> 00:21:27,060 and that they should despise the weak. 225 00:21:29,500 --> 00:21:32,500 What mattered in life was to be strong. 226 00:21:32,500 --> 00:21:36,380 Es Zittern Die Morschen Knochen by Hans Baumann 227 00:22:25,180 --> 00:22:29,100 Hitler made big decisions in isolation. 228 00:22:29,100 --> 00:22:32,420 And when he had the biggest decisions of all to make, 229 00:22:32,420 --> 00:22:35,340 he liked to come here - to the mountains of Southern Bavaria 230 00:22:35,340 --> 00:22:36,900 near the border with Austria. 231 00:22:41,700 --> 00:22:43,980 In the summer of 1938, 232 00:22:43,980 --> 00:22:47,700 he was asking himself if he was prepared to risk war 233 00:22:47,700 --> 00:22:51,540 with Britain, France, maybe even the Soviet Union as well. 234 00:22:51,540 --> 00:22:54,300 All over the question of Czechoslovakia. 235 00:22:57,220 --> 00:22:58,980 Almost every day, 236 00:22:58,980 --> 00:23:02,100 Hitler would take an afternoon walk down the slopes of the Obersalzberg 237 00:23:02,100 --> 00:23:04,900 and then, be driven back to his house - the Berghof. 238 00:23:04,900 --> 00:23:09,180 And almost every day, the tension grew greater and greater. 239 00:23:16,580 --> 00:23:18,980 Hitler said openly in the 1930s 240 00:23:18,980 --> 00:23:21,940 that he wanted to gain back for Germany the land lost 241 00:23:21,940 --> 00:23:24,580 as a result of defeat in the First World War 242 00:23:24,580 --> 00:23:29,060 and gather all ethnic Germans under his rule. 243 00:23:29,060 --> 00:23:32,900 And the border region of Czechoslovakia, the Sudetenland, 244 00:23:32,900 --> 00:23:36,060 contained several million ethnic Germans. 245 00:23:36,060 --> 00:23:40,900 But, in reality, as he'd written in his book Mein Kampf back in 1924, 246 00:23:40,900 --> 00:23:43,620 his ambitions were much greater. 247 00:23:43,620 --> 00:23:46,540 He wanted to gain a huge new empire for Germany 248 00:23:46,540 --> 00:23:48,580 in the west of the Soviet Union. 249 00:23:50,620 --> 00:23:53,260 But he knew that, whilst millions of Germans 250 00:23:53,260 --> 00:23:55,620 wanted to get back the land they'd lost, 251 00:23:55,620 --> 00:23:58,460 they didn't want to fight a massive war of conquest. 252 00:23:58,460 --> 00:24:00,100 And, as a charismatic leader, 253 00:24:00,100 --> 00:24:02,220 he wanted the majority to support him. 254 00:24:07,660 --> 00:24:12,860 So he hid his grand ambitions behind the smoke screen of simply saying 255 00:24:12,860 --> 00:24:15,900 he wanted to right the wrongs of the territorial settlement 256 00:24:15,900 --> 00:24:17,580 at the end of the First World War. 257 00:24:29,660 --> 00:24:31,260 Most in the adoring crowds 258 00:24:31,260 --> 00:24:34,340 who attended the national Nazi Party rally in Nuremberg 259 00:24:34,340 --> 00:24:39,620 were unaware that, soon, Hitler wanted to try and create 260 00:24:39,620 --> 00:24:41,860 a vast new German empire. 261 00:24:43,860 --> 00:24:46,700 Even though in a few of his speeches in the 1930s, 262 00:24:46,700 --> 00:24:49,300 Hitler dropped hints that Germany's problem was 263 00:24:49,300 --> 00:24:52,140 that it just wasn't big enough. 264 00:24:52,140 --> 00:24:56,100 Heil, Hitler! Heil, Hitler! 265 00:25:19,900 --> 00:25:22,500 God Save The King 266 00:25:22,500 --> 00:25:24,380 In the autumn of 1938, 267 00:25:24,380 --> 00:25:27,140 Neville Chamberlain, the British Prime Minister, 268 00:25:27,140 --> 00:25:30,060 flew to Germany to meet Hitler. 269 00:25:30,060 --> 00:25:32,220 When I come back, 270 00:25:32,220 --> 00:25:35,620 I hope I may be able to say 271 00:25:35,620 --> 00:25:38,700 as Hotspur says in Henry IV, 272 00:25:38,700 --> 00:25:42,180 "Out of this little danger, 273 00:25:42,180 --> 00:25:44,700 "we plucked this flower, safety." 274 00:25:47,300 --> 00:25:51,020 Chamberlain made three separate trips to Germany 275 00:25:51,020 --> 00:25:53,580 in order to discuss Hitler's claims on Czechoslovakia. 276 00:25:58,340 --> 00:26:00,780 And the dominant thought in Chamberlain's mind 277 00:26:00,780 --> 00:26:03,940 was the memory of this - 278 00:26:03,940 --> 00:26:05,900 the First World War. 279 00:26:11,660 --> 00:26:14,820 The bloodiest war in British history. 280 00:26:23,100 --> 00:26:25,460 And the worst killing fields were here, 281 00:26:25,460 --> 00:26:27,460 in the valley of the River Somme. 282 00:26:33,380 --> 00:26:36,420 On 1st July 1916, 283 00:26:36,420 --> 00:26:39,300 the first day of the Battle of the Somme, 284 00:26:39,300 --> 00:26:42,540 nearly 20,000 British soldiers lost their lives, 285 00:26:42,540 --> 00:26:46,580 more than on any other single day in the history of the British Army. 286 00:26:48,100 --> 00:26:52,500 "Surely," thought Chamberlain, "no leader of a major European state 287 00:26:52,500 --> 00:26:55,140 "wanted something like this to happen again." 288 00:27:04,500 --> 00:27:07,700 But British leaders already had an idea of Hitler's true character, 289 00:27:07,700 --> 00:27:11,460 because Lord Halifax had met Hitler the year before, 290 00:27:11,460 --> 00:27:14,820 in November 1937, at Berchtesgaden. 291 00:27:16,300 --> 00:27:17,980 During the meeting, Hitler had said 292 00:27:17,980 --> 00:27:20,900 the British could solve any problems they had in India 293 00:27:20,900 --> 00:27:23,820 by shooting the Indian leader Mahatma Gandhi. 294 00:27:25,420 --> 00:27:26,860 And, if that didn't work, 295 00:27:26,860 --> 00:27:29,900 they should shoot a dozen members of his Congress party, 296 00:27:29,900 --> 00:27:33,540 and if there were still problems, shoot 200 more and so on 297 00:27:33,540 --> 00:27:35,900 until order was established. 298 00:27:35,900 --> 00:27:39,060 Lord Halifax was not impressed. 299 00:27:39,060 --> 00:27:42,220 He certainly didn't succumb to Hitler's charisma. 300 00:27:46,500 --> 00:27:48,020 Nor did Chamberlain. 301 00:27:48,020 --> 00:27:51,340 In September 1938, he travelled to Munich 302 00:27:51,340 --> 00:27:54,100 and Hitler's office on the Koenigsplatz. 303 00:27:54,100 --> 00:27:55,540 for one final meeting. 304 00:27:59,780 --> 00:28:02,540 Chamberlain didn't think Hitler was a gentleman. 305 00:28:02,540 --> 00:28:07,500 In fact, he remarked that Hitler was the commonest little dog he'd ever seen, 306 00:28:07,500 --> 00:28:11,060 so undistinguished that you would never notice him in a crowd. 307 00:28:13,100 --> 00:28:15,300 But Chamberlain did have sympathy with the view 308 00:28:15,300 --> 00:28:17,780 that the peace treaty at the end of the First World War 309 00:28:17,780 --> 00:28:19,900 had been too hard on Germany. 310 00:28:19,900 --> 00:28:22,380 And he signed an agreement on 29th September 311 00:28:22,380 --> 00:28:24,900 that gave Hitler the Sudetenland, 312 00:28:24,900 --> 00:28:27,940 the German-speaking area of Czechoslovakia. 313 00:28:34,340 --> 00:28:36,220 Just as they had been in Austria, 314 00:28:36,220 --> 00:28:38,700 soldiers of the German army were greeted with flowers 315 00:28:38,700 --> 00:28:42,740 when they entered the Sudetenland in October 1938. 316 00:28:42,740 --> 00:28:46,540 "The joy of our redemption was very great and it was welcomed by all. 317 00:28:49,780 --> 00:28:52,860 "People said, 'Thank God, times are changing for us now.' 318 00:29:04,100 --> 00:29:06,620 "Everyone was delighted about it." 319 00:29:19,300 --> 00:29:21,740 But events that would take place here in Munich, 320 00:29:21,740 --> 00:29:24,660 just a few weeks later in November 1938, 321 00:29:24,660 --> 00:29:28,460 would demonstrate Hitler's true world view. 322 00:29:28,460 --> 00:29:30,180 They would also give an insight 323 00:29:30,180 --> 00:29:32,700 into how his charismatic leadership worked. 324 00:29:34,700 --> 00:29:38,220 Leading Nazis had gathered here to celebrate the 15th anniversary 325 00:29:38,220 --> 00:29:40,580 of the Munich Beer Hall Putsch - 326 00:29:40,580 --> 00:29:43,940 a sacred date for the Nazi party. 327 00:29:43,940 --> 00:29:46,020 On the evening of 9th November, 328 00:29:46,020 --> 00:29:49,940 they learnt that a German diplomat in Paris had been shot 329 00:29:49,940 --> 00:29:52,500 by a German-Polish Jew. 330 00:29:52,500 --> 00:29:55,940 Joseph Goebbels, the propaganda minister, 331 00:29:55,940 --> 00:29:58,300 a vicious anti-Semite himself, 332 00:29:58,300 --> 00:30:01,660 suggested to Hitler that Nazi Stormtroopers be let loose 333 00:30:01,660 --> 00:30:03,780 against the Jews of Germany. 334 00:30:03,780 --> 00:30:07,500 This was how Hitler's charismatic leadership could work - 335 00:30:07,500 --> 00:30:11,900 he had a vision, he hated the Jews and wanted to get rid of them, 336 00:30:11,900 --> 00:30:15,740 but others suggested the ways in which this could be implemented. 337 00:30:18,660 --> 00:30:20,940 Hitler agreed with Goebbels' idea 338 00:30:20,940 --> 00:30:25,660 and so, Nazi Stormtroopers ran wild on the night of 9th November, 339 00:30:25,660 --> 00:30:27,740 attacking Jews and their property. 340 00:30:27,740 --> 00:30:31,220 Around 25,000 Jews were imprisoned in concentration camps 341 00:30:31,220 --> 00:30:33,660 and more than 100 were murdered. 342 00:30:33,660 --> 00:30:38,780 Shortly afterwards, the SS newspaper warned of terrible consequences 343 00:30:38,780 --> 00:30:41,460 if a Jew assassinated another leading German. 344 00:30:43,100 --> 00:30:45,900 "There will be no more Jews in Germany. 345 00:30:45,900 --> 00:30:48,300 "We hope we make ourselves clear!" 346 00:30:52,900 --> 00:30:54,660 They also threatened... 347 00:30:54,660 --> 00:30:57,380 "Because no power on Earth can stop us, 348 00:30:57,380 --> 00:31:01,260 "we will bring the Jewish question to its total solution. 349 00:31:01,260 --> 00:31:07,420 "The programme is clear - total expulsion, complete separation." 350 00:31:21,540 --> 00:31:24,940 Many Germans were certainly anti-Semitic at the time, 351 00:31:24,940 --> 00:31:28,780 but there was no evidence that the majority of ordinary people, 352 00:31:28,780 --> 00:31:33,300 like these holidaymakers, approved of murderous attacks on German Jews. 353 00:31:33,300 --> 00:31:37,260 Nor that they had any desire to fight another European war. 354 00:31:40,580 --> 00:31:44,540 But large numbers of them did certainly have faith in Hitler. 355 00:31:44,540 --> 00:31:46,620 They called him General Bloodless - 356 00:31:46,620 --> 00:31:49,860 someone who had achieved great things for them and their country 357 00:31:49,860 --> 00:31:52,020 without the need to spill any blood. 358 00:31:54,900 --> 00:31:56,620 "We had adopted an attitude 359 00:31:56,620 --> 00:31:59,060 "whereby one said that the Fuehrer would manage. 360 00:31:59,060 --> 00:32:02,260 "The Fuehrer would do the right thing." 361 00:32:04,140 --> 00:32:06,260 Hitler knew that this attitude of trust, 362 00:32:06,260 --> 00:32:08,340 that he would "do the right thing", 363 00:32:08,340 --> 00:32:12,100 was based on these people's faith in his charismatic leadership. 364 00:32:13,180 --> 00:32:17,700 So he faced the difficult task of trying to get ordinary Germans 365 00:32:17,700 --> 00:32:21,660 to accept military conflict, without them losing their faith in him. 366 00:32:28,380 --> 00:32:31,620 We can get an idea of just how Hitler had been working 367 00:32:31,620 --> 00:32:33,860 at turning around public opinion 368 00:32:33,860 --> 00:32:37,140 from a secret speech he gave here in Munich 369 00:32:37,140 --> 00:32:39,020 to leading German journalists. 370 00:32:40,420 --> 00:32:44,420 On 10th November 1938, Hitler said... 371 00:32:44,420 --> 00:32:50,700 "For decades, circumstances forced me to talk almost exclusively of peace." 372 00:32:50,700 --> 00:32:54,340 But now, he told the journalists, the news had to be presented 373 00:32:54,340 --> 00:32:56,780 so as to create the impression that... 374 00:32:56,780 --> 00:33:00,060 "There are matters which, if they cannot be achieved by peaceful means, 375 00:33:00,060 --> 00:33:02,820 "must be enforced by means of violence." 376 00:33:09,420 --> 00:33:13,260 What was crucial was to say to the people... 377 00:33:16,940 --> 00:33:19,460 This was now important, said Hitler, 378 00:33:19,460 --> 00:33:23,380 in order to free the German people from the bondage of doubt. 379 00:33:39,300 --> 00:33:43,820 These were the scenes in Munich, in July 1939, 380 00:33:43,820 --> 00:33:45,700 for a celebration of German art. 381 00:33:48,860 --> 00:33:50,740 By the time these pictures were taken, 382 00:33:50,740 --> 00:33:53,700 Hitler had orchestrated the dismemberment of Czechoslovakia, 383 00:33:53,700 --> 00:33:56,740 and the British and French governments had warned Hitler 384 00:33:56,740 --> 00:34:00,620 that if the Germans moved on Poland, then there would be war. 385 00:34:03,420 --> 00:34:06,260 The German press saw things very differently 386 00:34:06,260 --> 00:34:08,580 and with one voice had been telling the people 387 00:34:08,580 --> 00:34:12,100 that Germany was being treated unjustly. 388 00:34:12,100 --> 00:34:17,260 That their Fuehrer's legitimate demands were simply not being met. 389 00:34:24,260 --> 00:34:28,020 Secretly, Hitler had already told his military leaders 390 00:34:28,020 --> 00:34:29,660 to be ready for war. 391 00:34:29,660 --> 00:34:33,380 And just a month after his trip to the Munich Art Festival, 392 00:34:33,380 --> 00:34:37,420 Hitler announced to his generals that they should harden their hearts against the enemy. 393 00:34:40,740 --> 00:34:45,220 One general who wasn't part of Hitler's plans was Ludwig Beck. 394 00:34:45,220 --> 00:34:48,140 He'd resigned as Chief Of Staff of the German army, 395 00:34:48,140 --> 00:34:50,420 believing now, as he said to a friend, 396 00:34:50,420 --> 00:34:53,700 that Hitler was "a psychopath through and through". 397 00:34:53,700 --> 00:34:55,300 He was more certain than ever 398 00:34:55,300 --> 00:34:58,060 that Hitler was leading Germany to catastrophe. 399 00:34:58,060 --> 00:35:01,580 "I warned and warned," he said, "and at last I stood alone." 400 00:35:13,660 --> 00:35:18,740 On 1st September 1939, the German army invaded Poland. 401 00:35:18,740 --> 00:35:22,580 Two days later, Britain and France declared war on Germany. 402 00:35:25,580 --> 00:35:28,540 The Polish army stood little chance. 403 00:35:28,540 --> 00:35:31,780 Not only was this ideal country for the German tanks, 404 00:35:31,780 --> 00:35:35,100 but under a secret part of a non-aggression agreement with Stalin, 405 00:35:35,100 --> 00:35:37,540 signed just days before, 406 00:35:37,540 --> 00:35:41,460 Germany and the Soviet Union split up Poland between them. 407 00:35:44,540 --> 00:35:47,580 The Germans invaded Poland from the west. 408 00:35:47,580 --> 00:35:51,300 Two weeks later, the Red Army invaded Poland from the east. 409 00:35:53,780 --> 00:35:56,380 Less than six weeks after it began, the war was over. 410 00:35:56,380 --> 00:35:58,060 Poland was crushed. 411 00:36:09,820 --> 00:36:14,460 For the German officers and their men, it was a time for celebration. 412 00:36:23,420 --> 00:36:25,460 For the Poles, it was the beginning 413 00:36:25,460 --> 00:36:28,620 of one of the most brutal occupations in history. 414 00:36:30,900 --> 00:36:33,060 Poland would suffer proportionately 415 00:36:33,060 --> 00:36:35,340 more than any other country in this war - 416 00:36:35,340 --> 00:36:38,780 nearly six million Poles would die. 417 00:36:38,780 --> 00:36:41,100 More than 16% of the population. 418 00:36:42,460 --> 00:36:44,380 For Hitler and the Nazis, 419 00:36:44,380 --> 00:36:48,220 this was an ideological war from the very beginning. 420 00:36:48,220 --> 00:36:50,580 Hitler told Joseph Goebbels that autumn 421 00:36:50,580 --> 00:36:54,620 that he thought the Poles were "more animals than human beings" 422 00:36:54,620 --> 00:36:58,020 and that "the filth of the Poles was unimaginable". 423 00:37:00,820 --> 00:37:05,140 Hitler's "judgment" on the Poles, said Goebbels, was "annihilatory". 424 00:37:07,900 --> 00:37:13,180 Two million Polish Jews came under Nazi control in the autumn of 1939. 425 00:37:13,180 --> 00:37:16,540 Thousands were shot and the Nazis began to mark the rest, 426 00:37:16,540 --> 00:37:22,100 with Polish Jews made to wear special symbols on their clothes. 427 00:37:22,100 --> 00:37:24,940 They would shortly be imprisoned in ghettos. 428 00:37:24,940 --> 00:37:29,260 Later in the war, they would be sent to death camps. 429 00:37:29,260 --> 00:37:32,380 The likelihood is that not one of these Polish Jews 430 00:37:32,380 --> 00:37:34,220 would have survived the war. 431 00:37:43,940 --> 00:37:48,420 Back in Berlin, Hitler prepared to speak to the German Reichstag. 432 00:37:48,420 --> 00:37:51,620 And, on 6th October, he gave a speech 433 00:37:51,620 --> 00:37:54,220 which exuded confidence about the way ahead. 434 00:38:57,780 --> 00:39:02,420 Senior German army offices knew that Hitler was not planning on peace. 435 00:39:02,420 --> 00:39:05,220 Just days before he spoke to the Reichstag, 436 00:39:05,220 --> 00:39:08,060 Hitler had told them to prepare immediate plans 437 00:39:08,060 --> 00:39:10,260 for an attack in Western Europe, 438 00:39:10,260 --> 00:39:13,700 which would mean invading France. 439 00:39:13,700 --> 00:39:17,900 It's almost impossible to overestimate how reckless, almost crazy, 440 00:39:17,900 --> 00:39:22,500 the idea of attacking France seemed to many of Hitler's generals. 441 00:39:22,500 --> 00:39:26,180 Not only did the British and French possess more tanks than the Germans, 442 00:39:26,180 --> 00:39:28,380 their tanks were better. 443 00:39:28,380 --> 00:39:32,940 The consensus was that the Germans could not possibly succeed. 444 00:39:32,940 --> 00:39:36,900 There was even talk in the autumn of 1939 of a mutiny. 445 00:39:40,020 --> 00:39:42,980 General Halder, Chief Of Staff of the German army 446 00:39:42,980 --> 00:39:46,020 and General Brauchitsch, the head of the army, 447 00:39:46,020 --> 00:39:48,900 discussed trying to enforce a change in leadership. 448 00:39:54,420 --> 00:39:56,740 What they almost certainly had in mind was something 449 00:39:56,740 --> 00:39:59,700 that had happened little more than 20 years ago. 450 00:40:01,420 --> 00:40:03,900 In the First World War, the head of state, the Kaiser, 451 00:40:03,900 --> 00:40:05,700 had been pushed into the background, 452 00:40:05,700 --> 00:40:08,980 whilst leading generals like Hindenburg took control. 453 00:40:10,460 --> 00:40:13,500 This is what they wanted to see happen to Hitler. 454 00:40:18,940 --> 00:40:21,140 General Wilhelm Ritter von Leeb 455 00:40:21,140 --> 00:40:24,860 also tried to rally support for a coup against Hitler. 456 00:40:24,860 --> 00:40:28,500 He called the planned attack in the west simply mad. 457 00:40:28,500 --> 00:40:31,380 And he also thought the atrocities that were being committed 458 00:40:31,380 --> 00:40:34,860 by the Nazis in Poland were unworthy of a civilised nation. 459 00:40:40,060 --> 00:40:43,260 But von Leeb's was a rare voice of protest. 460 00:40:45,500 --> 00:40:48,020 It was one of von Leeb's own officers, 461 00:40:48,020 --> 00:40:50,980 Corps Commander General Geyr von Schweppenburg, 462 00:40:50,980 --> 00:40:54,100 who identified the problem the conspirators faced. 463 00:40:57,020 --> 00:41:00,140 He came to the view, after consulting his colleagues, 464 00:41:00,140 --> 00:41:03,380 that their soldiers would refuse to turn against Hitler 465 00:41:03,380 --> 00:41:08,700 because respect and faith in Hitler was entrenched too deeply in them. 466 00:41:13,220 --> 00:41:15,660 Hitler's charismatic leadership, 467 00:41:15,660 --> 00:41:18,780 one built on the education of the young in Nazi ideology 468 00:41:18,780 --> 00:41:22,180 and on successes like Austria, the Sudetenland and now Poland, 469 00:41:22,180 --> 00:41:26,460 was simply too powerful for them to overcome. 470 00:41:32,060 --> 00:41:34,740 Then, there was another aspect of Hitler's leadership 471 00:41:34,740 --> 00:41:37,820 which was to prove crucial - his absolute certainty 472 00:41:37,820 --> 00:41:40,900 that Germany would win this war against the French. 473 00:41:40,900 --> 00:41:43,140 Despite all the objections of his generals, 474 00:41:43,140 --> 00:41:46,020 HE remained sure of victory. 475 00:41:46,020 --> 00:41:50,700 And this certainty, this complete confidence, began to have an effect. 476 00:41:58,940 --> 00:42:03,620 'Der Fuehrer mit seinen Generaelen in Hauptquartier...' 477 00:42:03,620 --> 00:42:09,020 Once again, Hitler set a vision, this time, invade Western Europe, 478 00:42:09,020 --> 00:42:12,260 and others came up with ways of implementing it. 479 00:42:12,260 --> 00:42:16,100 And they all knew that Hitler admired radical plans, 480 00:42:16,100 --> 00:42:18,100 was prepared to take fantastic risks 481 00:42:18,100 --> 00:42:20,740 to gamble on the chance of success. 482 00:42:23,820 --> 00:42:27,660 And in early 1940, a new version of the invasion plan, 483 00:42:27,660 --> 00:42:30,660 this one proposed by General von Manstein, 484 00:42:30,660 --> 00:42:33,420 was certainly both radical and risky. 485 00:42:58,740 --> 00:43:00,580 The idea was simple. 486 00:43:00,580 --> 00:43:04,100 The main armoured thrust of the German invasion of France 487 00:43:04,100 --> 00:43:06,380 should go through this. 488 00:43:10,100 --> 00:43:11,900 The forest of the Ardennes - 489 00:43:11,900 --> 00:43:15,620 one of the last natural wildernesses in Western Europe. 490 00:43:19,660 --> 00:43:22,860 If the Germans could get through here undetected by the Allies 491 00:43:22,860 --> 00:43:25,020 and then dash for the Channel coast, 492 00:43:25,020 --> 00:43:27,820 then they stood a chance of a swift and dramatic victory. 493 00:43:30,020 --> 00:43:34,620 If they were detected as they drove down the forest roads and attacked, 494 00:43:34,620 --> 00:43:37,860 then, almost certainly, Germany would lose the whole war. 495 00:43:40,060 --> 00:43:44,100 It was to be one of the greatest gambles in military history. 496 00:43:44,100 --> 00:43:45,820 All or nothing. 497 00:43:53,060 --> 00:43:54,660 And Hitler loved the idea. 498 00:43:59,780 --> 00:44:03,300 The plan was that Army Group B would invade Belgium and Holland 499 00:44:03,300 --> 00:44:05,620 and engage the Allies in battle, 500 00:44:05,620 --> 00:44:08,940 whilst Army Group A made its dash through the Ardennes 501 00:44:08,940 --> 00:44:10,860 and tried to reach the coast. 502 00:44:10,860 --> 00:44:14,060 As a result, Allied armies would be trapped. 503 00:44:16,300 --> 00:44:20,500 What was vital was that the Germans were able to cross the River Meuse 504 00:44:20,500 --> 00:44:21,980 in north east France 505 00:44:21,980 --> 00:44:24,900 before Allied reinforcements arrived. 506 00:44:24,900 --> 00:44:27,580 If they could do it, and the risks were huge, 507 00:44:27,580 --> 00:44:30,780 then there was no other major natural obstacle in their way 508 00:44:30,780 --> 00:44:32,660 until the English Channel. 509 00:44:41,620 --> 00:44:43,500 On the 10th May 1940, 510 00:44:43,500 --> 00:44:46,980 one section of the German army did what the Allies expected 511 00:44:46,980 --> 00:44:49,380 and invaded Belgium. 512 00:44:55,020 --> 00:44:58,260 British and French forces moved forward to engage them. 513 00:45:00,180 --> 00:45:02,260 It looked like this would all develop 514 00:45:02,260 --> 00:45:04,500 into a series of conventional battles. 515 00:45:04,500 --> 00:45:07,940 Most probably, it would lead to stalemate. 516 00:45:07,940 --> 00:45:09,940 Not unlike the First World War. 517 00:45:29,860 --> 00:45:32,380 Waiting in the forest far south of them, 518 00:45:32,380 --> 00:45:36,460 undetected by the Allies, were 1,200 Panzers of Army Group A. 519 00:45:41,220 --> 00:45:45,420 The Germans had concentrated their mechanised forces here. 520 00:45:45,420 --> 00:45:48,060 Though they had fewer tanks than the Allies, 521 00:45:48,060 --> 00:45:50,820 they were gambling on the Allied tanks being north of them, 522 00:45:50,820 --> 00:45:53,500 in the wrong place to stop their advance. 523 00:46:00,260 --> 00:46:03,660 But the roads were so narrow that one German general was worried 524 00:46:03,660 --> 00:46:07,300 that the advance could turn into an enormous traffic jam. 525 00:46:13,660 --> 00:46:16,500 The whole essence of the attack was speed. 526 00:46:16,500 --> 00:46:21,780 So much so that the drivers of the Panzers were issued with amphetamine tablets 527 00:46:21,780 --> 00:46:25,020 so that they wouldn't need to sleep for several days, 528 00:46:25,020 --> 00:46:28,220 tablets known as Panzer Chocolates. 529 00:46:36,980 --> 00:46:40,540 Units of 7th Panzer were some of the first to reach the River Meuse, 530 00:46:40,540 --> 00:46:43,540 here, near the town of Dinant. 531 00:46:45,300 --> 00:46:48,820 The commander of 7th Panzer was a 48-year-old, 532 00:46:48,820 --> 00:46:52,060 then relatively unknown general, called Erwin Rommel. 533 00:46:54,980 --> 00:46:59,540 On 13th May, Rommel crossed the River Meuse at this weir. 534 00:46:59,540 --> 00:47:02,900 A day later, more Panzers crossed the river further south. 535 00:47:11,460 --> 00:47:14,940 For the Germans, all this was a triumph. 536 00:47:16,780 --> 00:47:19,620 "It was hard to believe - we had broken through 537 00:47:19,620 --> 00:47:22,780 "and were advancing deep into enemy territory. 538 00:47:22,780 --> 00:47:24,980 "It was not just a beautiful dream. 539 00:47:24,980 --> 00:47:26,540 "It was reality." 540 00:47:44,380 --> 00:47:46,180 But in the midst of all this success, 541 00:47:46,180 --> 00:47:49,380 something strange was happening behind the scenes. 542 00:47:49,380 --> 00:47:53,940 On 17th May, Hitler ordered Army Group A to stop its advance. 543 00:48:00,540 --> 00:48:02,660 He was, thought General Halder, 544 00:48:02,660 --> 00:48:05,820 "Terribly nervous and frightened by his own success." 545 00:48:07,420 --> 00:48:10,180 The generals couldn't understand how Hitler could be 546 00:48:10,180 --> 00:48:13,620 both the great gambler and yet be so fearful during the battle. 547 00:48:16,260 --> 00:48:19,620 But Hitler was proving to be an unreliable battlefield commander 548 00:48:19,620 --> 00:48:21,900 because of how his leadership worked. 549 00:48:21,900 --> 00:48:24,260 For Hitler believed... 550 00:48:24,260 --> 00:48:27,380 "Decision-making means not hesitating to do 551 00:48:27,380 --> 00:48:30,260 "what inner conviction commands you to do." 552 00:48:32,580 --> 00:48:35,500 Hitler had previously listened to this inner conviction 553 00:48:35,500 --> 00:48:40,340 in places like his bedroom or walking amongst the mountains of Southern Bavaria. 554 00:48:45,540 --> 00:48:49,420 Now, constrained in endless military meetings about detail, 555 00:48:49,420 --> 00:48:52,380 rather than thinking of grand visions, 556 00:48:52,380 --> 00:48:56,340 Hitler's inner conviction was proving to be an unreliable guide. 557 00:48:59,500 --> 00:49:02,980 Here, in the battle for France, Hitler overcame his fears 558 00:49:02,980 --> 00:49:05,660 and, within a day, the advance was continuing. 559 00:49:05,660 --> 00:49:07,980 But it was a sign of things to come - 560 00:49:07,980 --> 00:49:11,460 the clearest example yet of how Hitler as a military leader 561 00:49:11,460 --> 00:49:13,860 could be as much a liability as an asset. 562 00:49:20,740 --> 00:49:23,420 Army Group A reached the Channel coast, 563 00:49:23,420 --> 00:49:28,500 here, where the River Somme meets the sea, on 20th May 1940. 564 00:49:28,500 --> 00:49:31,780 Just ten days after the attack had been launched. 565 00:49:37,820 --> 00:49:40,940 Refugees had tried to run from the Germans. 566 00:49:43,340 --> 00:49:45,580 But the advance had been so swift 567 00:49:45,580 --> 00:49:48,420 that there was nowhere for them to run to. 568 00:49:58,660 --> 00:50:01,340 The shock of what had just happened, 569 00:50:01,340 --> 00:50:03,900 almost impossible for us to conceive of today. 570 00:50:14,500 --> 00:50:16,060 In this single campaign, 571 00:50:16,060 --> 00:50:19,540 the Germans took more than one and a half million prisoners. 572 00:50:24,820 --> 00:50:28,300 The Germans lost about 30,000 dead. 573 00:50:29,540 --> 00:50:33,100 The Allied death toll was three times that. 574 00:50:36,420 --> 00:50:38,660 The defeat of the Allies was made all the worse 575 00:50:38,660 --> 00:50:43,020 because they'd been confident they could hold back the Germans. 576 00:50:43,020 --> 00:50:45,580 Hitler had said before the campaign 577 00:50:45,580 --> 00:50:48,100 that reacting quickly to events was... 578 00:50:48,100 --> 00:50:51,740 "Not in the nature of either the systematic French 579 00:50:51,740 --> 00:50:53,820 "or the ponderous Englishmen." 580 00:50:53,820 --> 00:50:57,220 And events had proved that he was right. 581 00:51:05,220 --> 00:51:07,340 Here, on the beaches of Dunkirk, 582 00:51:07,340 --> 00:51:11,260 the British had managed to fashion a kind of victory from defeat. 583 00:51:17,460 --> 00:51:21,860 Around 340,000 soldiers had been rescued from here, 584 00:51:21,860 --> 00:51:25,380 and in the city itself, before the Germans took control. 585 00:51:30,700 --> 00:51:33,700 But the heavy equipment had been left behind - 586 00:51:33,700 --> 00:51:36,780 almost 2,500 pieces of artillery 587 00:51:36,780 --> 00:51:40,460 and more than 60,000 vehicles were lost in this campaign. 588 00:51:50,980 --> 00:51:53,980 As for Hitler, General Keitel now announced 589 00:51:53,980 --> 00:51:57,620 that he was the greatest military leader of all time. 590 00:52:14,460 --> 00:52:20,460 The Germans and the French signed an armistice on 22nd June 1940. 591 00:52:20,460 --> 00:52:23,460 The Germans had won in little more than six weeks 592 00:52:23,460 --> 00:52:26,300 and, in truth, the key battles of this campaign 593 00:52:26,300 --> 00:52:28,980 had been won in just four days. 594 00:52:32,460 --> 00:52:36,660 Now it was time for German soldiers to enjoy themselves. 595 00:52:54,940 --> 00:52:57,500 For these Germans, who were all well-aware 596 00:52:57,500 --> 00:53:00,580 of the stalemate of the trenches of the First World War, 597 00:53:00,580 --> 00:53:02,380 with the German Army stuck for years 598 00:53:02,380 --> 00:53:05,060 in trenches 100 miles north-east of Paris, 599 00:53:05,060 --> 00:53:09,060 this victory seemed all but miraculous. 600 00:53:12,860 --> 00:53:16,780 "German soldiers were obviously unstoppable. 601 00:53:16,780 --> 00:53:21,700 "And given the situation, we all, we all were, to be honest, enthusiastic. 602 00:53:21,700 --> 00:53:24,180 "Even those who'd previously held a different attitude 603 00:53:24,180 --> 00:53:26,780 "towards the entire regime. 604 00:53:26,780 --> 00:53:29,820 "All of a sudden, considering everything worked so well 605 00:53:29,820 --> 00:53:32,020 "and nobody had been able to stop us, 606 00:53:32,020 --> 00:53:35,500 "we were suddenly all nationalists. 607 00:53:35,500 --> 00:53:39,620 "Wherever German soldiers were, nobody else could get a foothold. 608 00:53:39,620 --> 00:53:42,260 "It was really like that." 609 00:53:49,460 --> 00:53:52,140 And it all appeared to be part of a pattern, 610 00:53:52,140 --> 00:53:54,940 one created by Adolf Hitler. 611 00:53:59,980 --> 00:54:04,060 Faith in charismatic leadership is fed by success. 612 00:54:04,060 --> 00:54:08,460 And Hitler had gained success after success. 613 00:54:08,460 --> 00:54:13,540 Austria, the Sudetenland, Poland, and now, the greatest of all, 614 00:54:13,540 --> 00:54:16,620 the humiliation of the old enemy - the French. 615 00:54:22,140 --> 00:54:26,500 Hitler's victory parade in Berlin, on 6th July 1940, 616 00:54:26,500 --> 00:54:30,740 marked the high point in faith in his charismatic leadership. 617 00:54:38,420 --> 00:54:40,980 Never again would he be so triumphant. 618 00:54:45,420 --> 00:54:48,460 These people hadn't somehow been hypnotised 619 00:54:48,460 --> 00:54:49,860 into believing in Hitler. 620 00:54:49,860 --> 00:54:52,100 They'd chosen to support him 621 00:54:52,100 --> 00:54:55,140 because they loved what he'd brought them - victory. 622 00:55:01,540 --> 00:55:03,220 Shortly after this parade, 623 00:55:03,220 --> 00:55:05,500 Hitler would announce to his military commanders 624 00:55:05,500 --> 00:55:07,940 that since Britain's position was hopeless, 625 00:55:07,940 --> 00:55:10,740 then Germany had won the war. 626 00:55:10,740 --> 00:55:14,300 It was just a question of the British realising 627 00:55:14,300 --> 00:55:15,660 that they had lost. 628 00:55:20,100 --> 00:55:23,580 It was a moment that captured both the strength and weakness 629 00:55:23,580 --> 00:55:25,260 of Hitler's charismatic rule. 630 00:55:27,900 --> 00:55:30,540 Because, despite the faith these people had in him, 631 00:55:30,540 --> 00:55:33,860 Hitler knew that he was not in control of events, 632 00:55:33,860 --> 00:55:35,220 as he pretended to be. 633 00:55:40,620 --> 00:55:42,540 Back in the New Reich Chancellery, 634 00:55:42,540 --> 00:55:46,860 he could shut himself up to wait for guidance from his inner conviction, 635 00:55:46,860 --> 00:55:49,700 but he didn't seem able to make his enemy, the British, 636 00:55:49,700 --> 00:55:52,940 act as he thought they were supposed to, and just give up. 637 00:55:59,260 --> 00:56:01,620 What he decided to do next would lead both 638 00:56:01,620 --> 00:56:04,620 to the shattering of the Germans' faith in his charisma 639 00:56:04,620 --> 00:56:07,220 and the death of millions of innocent people. 640 00:56:26,220 --> 00:56:30,060 Hitler orders his army to advance into the Soviet Union. 641 00:56:32,580 --> 00:56:36,660 "We were all inspired by the belief that we succeed in whatever we do. 642 00:56:36,660 --> 00:56:39,740 "And that, for us, nothing is impossible." 643 00:56:45,740 --> 00:56:49,740 Hitler said that he wanted this to be a racist war of annihilation. 644 00:56:49,740 --> 00:56:53,260 And, within weeks, the Germans said they'd won. 645 00:57:03,340 --> 00:57:04,740 But they hadn't. 646 00:57:04,740 --> 00:57:08,940 And so this becomes the story of what happens to a charismatic leader 647 00:57:08,940 --> 00:57:10,860 when the victories stop coming. 648 00:57:15,420 --> 00:57:17,540 "I experienced examples of it - 649 00:57:17,540 --> 00:57:20,980 "of men who came to tell him it could not go on any longer, 650 00:57:20,980 --> 00:57:23,420 "and even said that to him. 651 00:57:23,420 --> 00:57:25,340 "And then, he talked for an hour 652 00:57:25,340 --> 00:57:28,100 "and then, they went and said, 653 00:57:28,100 --> 00:57:30,460 " 'I want to give it another try.' " 654 00:57:40,700 --> 00:57:44,820 The history of Hitler's charismatic leadership finally ends here, 655 00:57:44,820 --> 00:57:46,860 in a bunker in Berlin, 656 00:57:46,860 --> 00:57:50,660 with Hitler ever more deluded and living in fantasy. 657 00:57:50,660 --> 00:57:54,820 Claiming he'd done the right thing all along. 658 00:58:23,140 --> 00:58:26,260 Subtitles by Red Bee Media Ltd 56526

Can't find what you're looking for?
Get subtitles in any language from opensubtitles.com, and translate them here.