Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated:
1
00:00:01,000 --> 00:00:04,000
[suspenseful music playing]
2
00:00:04,120 --> 00:00:07,680
[people chanting] Sieg Heil! Sieg Heil!
Sieg Heil! Sieg Heil!
3
00:00:11,000 --> 00:00:15,640
{\an8}[narrator] What happens when you put
a delusional lance corporal
4
00:00:15,720 --> 00:00:18,720
{\an8}in charge of a massive military machine?
5
00:00:18,800 --> 00:00:21,880
When you talk about Hitler's
strategic errors during World War II,
6
00:00:21,960 --> 00:00:23,720
where does one begin?
7
00:00:23,800 --> 00:00:28,600
[narrator] Early victories over woefully
underprepared adversaries, however,
8
00:00:28,680 --> 00:00:32,680
gave Hitler a massive superiority complex.
9
00:00:32,759 --> 00:00:35,999
The problem with this arrogance, though,
is that Hitler started to feel
10
00:00:36,080 --> 00:00:37,640
like he truly was, you know,
11
00:00:37,720 --> 00:00:41,000
this supreme general of the Third Reich.
12
00:00:41,080 --> 00:00:45,280
[narrator] But when the mistakes started,
they came thick and fast.
13
00:00:45,360 --> 00:00:47,360
[Dr. Geoffrey] They would surround them,
14
00:00:47,440 --> 00:00:49,040
they would destroy them.
15
00:00:49,120 --> 00:00:55,120
Everything Hitler touched militarily
after 1940, you know, turned to dust.
16
00:00:55,800 --> 00:01:00,200
[narrator] And in the end,
hubris and self-interest
17
00:01:00,280 --> 00:01:04,360
led to catastrophic defeat
at the hands of the Allies.
18
00:01:04,440 --> 00:01:08,840
The command and control in Normandy
was a mess.
19
00:01:08,920 --> 00:01:12,280
And that was a massive failure
on their part.
20
00:01:17,280 --> 00:01:20,960
[people chanting] Sieg heil!
Sieg heil! Sieg heil!
21
00:01:21,800 --> 00:01:24,520
[tense music playing]
22
00:01:24,600 --> 00:01:29,880
[narrator] Hitler's plans were big,
yet relatively straightforward:
23
00:01:29,960 --> 00:01:33,320
Expand his borders by reclaiming lands
24
00:01:33,400 --> 00:01:37,400
stripped from Germany
after defeat in World War I,
25
00:01:37,480 --> 00:01:40,880
obliterate the population
of Russia and Poland,
26
00:01:40,960 --> 00:01:43,840
and open up Lebensraum in the east,
27
00:01:45,200 --> 00:01:47,400
new lands for the Aryan race
28
00:01:47,480 --> 00:01:51,600
to settle and prosper
for the next thousand years,
29
00:01:51,680 --> 00:01:56,320
and along the way, settle some old scores.
30
00:01:56,400 --> 00:02:02,400
Hitler started his reimagining
of Germany with typical bombast.
31
00:02:03,160 --> 00:02:05,680
[Dr. Geoffrey] Early on,
he's a bit of a hero, you know,
32
00:02:05,760 --> 00:02:07,960
he's the one who argues
for the remilitarization
33
00:02:08,039 --> 00:02:09,719
of the Rhineland in 1936.
34
00:02:09,800 --> 00:02:12,040
{\an8}And his generals say,
this is not prudent, you know,
35
00:02:12,120 --> 00:02:13,200
{\an8}the French are too strong.
36
00:02:13,280 --> 00:02:15,120
{\an8}If we go in there,
they're gonna fling us out.
37
00:02:15,200 --> 00:02:17,880
{\an8}It'll be humiliating.
We'll suffer an early defeat.
38
00:02:17,960 --> 00:02:21,120
Hitler thinks that he can bluff the French
into going along.
39
00:02:21,200 --> 00:02:22,280
He does.
40
00:02:22,360 --> 00:02:26,440
He's counseled not to undertake
the Anschluss of Austria in 1938.
41
00:02:26,520 --> 00:02:28,120
He does, he gets away with it.
42
00:02:28,200 --> 00:02:30,360
He's counseled not to threaten
Czechoslovakia
43
00:02:30,440 --> 00:02:32,840
against Allied resistance.
44
00:02:32,920 --> 00:02:34,480
He does and gets away with it.
45
00:02:34,560 --> 00:02:39,360
This gives Hitler a feeling
of almost messianic superiority.
46
00:02:39,440 --> 00:02:44,160
[narrator] But was Hitler and Germany
equipped with a bulletproof strategy
47
00:02:44,240 --> 00:02:48,440
to withstand the war of attrition
and deliver ultimate victory?
48
00:02:49,480 --> 00:02:55,480
The answer came the day Hitler
invaded Poland in September 1939.
49
00:02:56,120 --> 00:03:02,120
As with Austria and Czechoslovakia,
military confrontation was swift,
50
00:03:02,840 --> 00:03:06,480
the brutal German war machine
quickly and easily
51
00:03:06,560 --> 00:03:09,000
overwhelming Polish forces
52
00:03:09,080 --> 00:03:14,200
in its latest demonstrating
of blitzkrieg, or lightning war.
53
00:03:16,360 --> 00:03:22,360
Aircraft, tanks, shock infantry,
and punishing mobile artillery
54
00:03:22,760 --> 00:03:27,360
combined to bring Poland to its knees
in a matter of weeks.
55
00:03:27,440 --> 00:03:31,600
But the longer-term consequences
of Hitler's folly
56
00:03:31,680 --> 00:03:35,280
would be played out
over the next few years.
57
00:03:35,360 --> 00:03:38,120
I mean, the whole idea of war
for Nazi Germany is a bad choice,
58
00:03:38,200 --> 00:03:42,640
and it's particularly a bad idea, Poland,
because it's going to bring them
59
00:03:42,720 --> 00:03:44,720
into conflict with France and Britain.
60
00:03:44,800 --> 00:03:48,400
And it's not just France and Britain.
It's France and Britain and their empires.
61
00:03:48,480 --> 00:03:51,480
{\an8}You're already at that point
fighting a very global war.
62
00:03:51,560 --> 00:03:54,600
{\an8}And what is the pathway to success there?
63
00:03:54,680 --> 00:03:56,280
What is the long-term planning?
64
00:03:56,360 --> 00:04:00,000
Did you really think
how we're gonna end this war?
65
00:04:00,080 --> 00:04:03,360
[narrator]
Hitler was a smash-and-grab merchant
66
00:04:03,440 --> 00:04:06,000
who was banking on a quick war.
67
00:04:06,080 --> 00:04:10,680
And for a while,
it seemed he might just get one.
68
00:04:10,760 --> 00:04:12,400
[speaking German]
69
00:04:12,480 --> 00:04:16,880
{\an8}Hitler was a great opportunist
and somebody that would very much
70
00:04:16,959 --> 00:04:20,559
{\an8}want to ride the wave of success.
71
00:04:20,640 --> 00:04:22,560
{\an8}He was a man in a hurry.
72
00:04:22,640 --> 00:04:26,880
And everything about the way
that he led in the Nazi regime
73
00:04:26,960 --> 00:04:32,960
gives that sense of not wanting to see
how events pan out.
74
00:04:33,200 --> 00:04:37,760
Not wanting to develop a strong
military machine.
75
00:04:37,840 --> 00:04:41,080
Not wanting to embrace total war.
76
00:04:41,160 --> 00:04:43,880
Wanting to get things done
very, very quickly.
77
00:04:43,960 --> 00:04:46,000
[suspenseful music playing]
78
00:04:46,080 --> 00:04:50,080
[narrator] Hitler was perhaps right
to go hard and go early
79
00:04:50,160 --> 00:04:55,120
in the sense that many were taken
by surprise at his naked aggression.
80
00:04:55,200 --> 00:04:58,200
And it took some time for the world
to figure out
81
00:04:58,280 --> 00:05:02,200
how serious this Hitler guy was.
82
00:05:02,280 --> 00:05:05,560
But if it was a mistake to attack Poland,
83
00:05:05,640 --> 00:05:10,480
then greater mistakes were to follow,
and quickly.
84
00:05:10,560 --> 00:05:13,480
When you talk about Hitler's
strategic errors during World War II,
85
00:05:13,560 --> 00:05:15,160
where does one begin?
86
00:05:15,240 --> 00:05:18,120
Maybe one has to proceed chronologically
87
00:05:18,200 --> 00:05:22,960
in order to capture the full richness
of Hitler's strategic bungling.
88
00:05:23,040 --> 00:05:27,360
Start with the, uh, decision spring
of 1940 to invade Norway
89
00:05:27,440 --> 00:05:30,800
to convey the iron ore deposits of Sweden
90
00:05:30,880 --> 00:05:33,240
more easily to German factories.
91
00:05:33,320 --> 00:05:35,160
Well, it works.
92
00:05:35,240 --> 00:05:38,200
He beats the British and French,
takes the Norwegian Coast.
93
00:05:38,280 --> 00:05:39,720
But why?
94
00:05:39,800 --> 00:05:43,400
I mean, he basically loses half
of his destroyer fleet.
95
00:05:43,480 --> 00:05:46,520
He loses a light cruiser
and a heavy cruiser,
96
00:05:46,600 --> 00:05:48,560
loses a lot of aircraft.
97
00:05:48,640 --> 00:05:53,560
And so he's not in a position to,
uh, you know, use his navy
98
00:05:53,640 --> 00:05:57,840
from these Norwegian ports
that he took in part to harass
99
00:05:57,920 --> 00:06:00,840
British shipping and to cut off supplies
to Great Britain.
100
00:06:00,920 --> 00:06:02,480
[suspenseful music playing]
101
00:06:02,560 --> 00:06:03,800
[explosion]
102
00:06:03,880 --> 00:06:07,840
[narrator] Holland, Belgium,
and the big one, France,
103
00:06:07,920 --> 00:06:10,440
were next on Hitler's hit list.
104
00:06:10,520 --> 00:06:16,520
And the French, like everyone else,
would succumb surprisingly fast.
105
00:06:17,880 --> 00:06:22,160
Ostensibly,
a brilliant strategic victory for Hitler,
106
00:06:22,240 --> 00:06:26,520
yet in the bigger picture,
the relative ease of victory
107
00:06:26,600 --> 00:06:31,720
merely served to further inflate
the German sense of overconfidence,
108
00:06:31,800 --> 00:06:37,000
and to extend their already heavily
stretched resources and supply lines.
109
00:06:37,080 --> 00:06:41,360
{\an8}It did make him even more arrogant
in terms of thinking,
110
00:06:41,440 --> 00:06:44,040
{\an8}you know,
we are truly an invincible power.
111
00:06:44,120 --> 00:06:46,360
And surely, you know, that's the end.
112
00:06:46,440 --> 00:06:47,880
We won't have to continue in Europe,
113
00:06:47,960 --> 00:06:50,400
because who else would dare oppose us?
114
00:06:50,480 --> 00:06:53,960
The problem with this arrogance, though,
is that Hitler started to feel like
115
00:06:54,040 --> 00:06:58,200
he truly was, you know,
this supreme general of the Third Reich.
116
00:06:58,280 --> 00:07:01,760
Despite the fact that he'd only had
combat experience as a corporal,
117
00:07:01,840 --> 00:07:05,640
he was suddenly in control of the army,
and the navy, and the air force,
118
00:07:05,720 --> 00:07:08,480
and was trying to apply tactics
and technology
119
00:07:08,560 --> 00:07:10,600
that really he didn't understand.
120
00:07:10,680 --> 00:07:14,320
He often didn't listen to the people
that were telling him
121
00:07:14,400 --> 00:07:16,920
about all of these strategies
and technology,
122
00:07:17,000 --> 00:07:19,680
because he was just interested
in the end result.
123
00:07:19,760 --> 00:07:24,200
[narrator] In the euphoria of their quick
defeat of France,
124
00:07:24,280 --> 00:07:28,000
Hitler and his generals
made one of their greatest
125
00:07:28,080 --> 00:07:30,600
strategic blunders of the war.
126
00:07:30,680 --> 00:07:33,480
[suspenseful music playing]
127
00:07:36,800 --> 00:07:41,000
[narrator] In May 1940,
Nazi tanks were heading steadily
128
00:07:41,080 --> 00:07:43,080
towards the French Coast.
129
00:07:43,160 --> 00:07:46,160
It had taken less than two weeks
for the German army
130
00:07:46,240 --> 00:07:49,560
to steamroll across Europe
and into France,
131
00:07:49,640 --> 00:07:54,000
forcing the French and Allied troops
into desperate retreat.
132
00:07:54,080 --> 00:07:57,800
The Allied troops were surrounded
and about to be trapped
133
00:07:57,880 --> 00:08:00,840
in a coastal pocket at Dunkirk.
134
00:08:00,920 --> 00:08:02,560
The question was,
135
00:08:02,640 --> 00:08:07,320
how could nearly 400,000
British and French troops
136
00:08:07,400 --> 00:08:11,480
be safely evacuated
through a moderate-sized port
137
00:08:11,560 --> 00:08:15,560
whose docks were being destroyed
by bombs and shells,
138
00:08:15,640 --> 00:08:19,760
and which would shortly be overrun
by German troops?
139
00:08:19,840 --> 00:08:23,440
It was shaping up to be a massacre.
140
00:08:23,520 --> 00:08:27,360
Then, inexplicably,
just as they were on the verge
141
00:08:27,440 --> 00:08:30,160
of routing the British and French
armies for good,
142
00:08:30,240 --> 00:08:34,160
Hitler and the High Command
hit the pause button.
143
00:08:34,240 --> 00:08:37,560
[Dr. Geoffrey] Dunkirk is another one
of Hitler's missteps.
144
00:08:37,640 --> 00:08:43,080
He's got German Panzers in 1940
18 miles from Dunkirk,
145
00:08:43,159 --> 00:08:45,599
the only really serviceable port available
146
00:08:45,680 --> 00:08:49,120
to much of the British army
on the Western Front.
147
00:08:49,200 --> 00:08:54,600
And he halts the Panzers
and he gives the "honor"
148
00:08:54,680 --> 00:08:59,400
of destroying the British Army in France
to Goering's Luftwaffe,
149
00:08:59,480 --> 00:09:02,480
which is not equipped to carry out
this kind of mission.
150
00:09:02,560 --> 00:09:05,960
And by the time Hitler allows
the Panzers to resume their advance,
151
00:09:06,040 --> 00:09:08,480
the British, who were further away
from Dunkirk
152
00:09:08,560 --> 00:09:11,640
than the German Panzers were
when Hitler gave the halt order,
153
00:09:11,720 --> 00:09:14,080
have built a defensive perimeter
around the port
154
00:09:14,160 --> 00:09:17,920
and are able to hold it long enough
to get over 300,000 troops
155
00:09:18,000 --> 00:09:19,800
away to the United Kingdom.
156
00:09:19,880 --> 00:09:21,720
[suspenseful music playing]
157
00:09:21,800 --> 00:09:24,920
[narrator] This was a catastrophic
mistake by Hitler.
158
00:09:25,000 --> 00:09:30,040
One theory says he was actually giving
Britain a chance to surrender.
159
00:09:30,120 --> 00:09:34,840
He was showing them mercy
but expected something in return,
160
00:09:34,920 --> 00:09:39,720
or maybe Hitler,
the ultimate high-rolling gambler,
161
00:09:39,800 --> 00:09:43,360
was worried that with so much
success so quickly,
162
00:09:43,440 --> 00:09:47,480
he had pushed his luck,
and wanted to conserve his energies
163
00:09:47,560 --> 00:09:50,600
for the coming battle in the east.
164
00:09:50,680 --> 00:09:53,880
Whatever the reason,
while the Germans dithered,
165
00:09:53,960 --> 00:09:57,480
the British seized their chance to escape.
166
00:09:57,560 --> 00:10:03,560
Hitler had let slip his biggest
opportunity to crush the British spirit.
167
00:10:04,120 --> 00:10:08,160
This was an utterly fateful decision
for Hitler because if he had destroyed
168
00:10:08,240 --> 00:10:12,040
what remained of the British army
at Dunkirk
169
00:10:12,120 --> 00:10:14,800
and destroyed the 100,000
or so French troops that he--
170
00:10:14,880 --> 00:10:18,360
they took away at Dunkirk,
he would have completely lamed
171
00:10:18,440 --> 00:10:21,280
the British war effort going forward.
172
00:10:21,360 --> 00:10:26,680
[Lloyd] What that would have done
for British and French morale
173
00:10:26,760 --> 00:10:28,000
can only be imagined.
174
00:10:28,080 --> 00:10:29,680
It would have plummeted.
175
00:10:29,760 --> 00:10:33,280
What would have happened therefore
to Winston Churchill?
176
00:10:33,360 --> 00:10:35,440
Probably he would have been ousted
from power.
177
00:10:35,520 --> 00:10:38,840
And the what ifs, therefore,
are absolutely fascinating.
178
00:10:40,400 --> 00:10:44,240
So this British escape at Dunkirk
was absolutely momentous
179
00:10:44,320 --> 00:10:46,480
because it meant that the British
could stay in the war
180
00:10:46,560 --> 00:10:49,240
and fight alone
until the Americans intervened.
181
00:10:49,320 --> 00:10:52,440
[narrator] In fact, as the war went on,
182
00:10:52,880 --> 00:10:58,080
the idea of the Dunkirk spirit
was often used as a rally cry
183
00:10:58,160 --> 00:11:01,800
to inspire the nation to fight on
until victory.
184
00:11:01,880 --> 00:11:07,040
The near-disaster for the Allies
turned out to be a strategic catastrophe
185
00:11:07,120 --> 00:11:11,920
for Germany that echoed long
after the war was lost.
186
00:11:12,000 --> 00:11:15,000
[suspenseful music playing]
187
00:11:18,000 --> 00:11:20,960
[narrator] But even as he allowed
the British army
188
00:11:21,040 --> 00:11:26,560
to slip through his fingers,
it seems Hitler just did not get it.
189
00:11:26,640 --> 00:11:30,320
He was still hoping the British
would simply give up.
190
00:11:30,400 --> 00:11:34,840
To make very clear to Churchill
that Hitler meant business,
191
00:11:34,920 --> 00:11:40,320
barges and equipment began gathering
ominously at the French Coast
192
00:11:40,400 --> 00:11:43,680
in preparation for a planned invasion
of Britain,
193
00:11:43,760 --> 00:11:47,920
codenamed "Operation Sea Lion".
194
00:11:48,000 --> 00:11:49,440
Before they disembarked,
195
00:11:49,520 --> 00:11:52,840
Hitler ordered Hermann Goering's Luftwaffe
196
00:11:52,920 --> 00:11:55,440
to destroy Britain's coastal defenses.
197
00:11:56,320 --> 00:12:01,200
Goering had boasted that his Luftwaffe
could destroy British Fighter Command
198
00:12:01,280 --> 00:12:06,920
in four days,
thus clearing the way for the invasion.
199
00:12:07,560 --> 00:12:10,400
When Britain refused to capitulate,
200
00:12:10,480 --> 00:12:13,960
encouraged by Goering's
bloated confidence,
201
00:12:14,040 --> 00:12:16,920
the Luftwaffe was given orders to attack
202
00:12:17,000 --> 00:12:20,480
and quickly overwhelmed the RAF
as promised.
203
00:12:22,560 --> 00:12:25,560
Just to keep up, they had to shoot down
204
00:12:25,640 --> 00:12:30,160
three German fighters for every one
of theirs they lost.
205
00:12:31,120 --> 00:12:35,520
Yet as they cultivated their famous
swashbuckling hero image,
206
00:12:36,040 --> 00:12:39,800
the British, Polish, Canadian,
Czech, Aussie,
207
00:12:39,880 --> 00:12:44,040
and Kiwi pilots managed to do just that,
208
00:12:44,120 --> 00:12:47,600
and they kept Britain in the race.
209
00:12:47,680 --> 00:12:51,960
This was another chance to knock Britain
out of the war early,
210
00:12:52,040 --> 00:12:55,200
and they were about to blow it.
211
00:12:55,280 --> 00:13:00,200
For a start, Goering stupidly pitted
his big, long-range
212
00:13:00,280 --> 00:13:03,440
Messerschmitt Bf 110 fighter bombers
213
00:13:03,520 --> 00:13:06,400
against the more nimble
Spitfires and Hurricanes.
214
00:13:06,480 --> 00:13:08,520
The matchup was a disaster.
215
00:13:08,600 --> 00:13:13,440
The Bf 110 Zerstorer often
gets this sort of bad rep
216
00:13:13,520 --> 00:13:17,640
because of the fact that it got absolutely
massacred in the Battle of Britain.
217
00:13:17,720 --> 00:13:22,120
It was a very powerful twin-engined,
you know, sort of heavy fighter,
218
00:13:22,200 --> 00:13:23,760
and it could be very effective.
219
00:13:23,840 --> 00:13:26,400
But as was often the case
with the Luftwaffe, you know,
220
00:13:26,480 --> 00:13:30,520
the Bf 110 was forced into a role
it shouldn't have really been in,
221
00:13:30,600 --> 00:13:32,600
it shouldn't have been a bomber escort.
222
00:13:32,680 --> 00:13:36,240
And indeed, it was so slow
that it was often joked that really,
223
00:13:36,320 --> 00:13:38,800
the escort needed an escort.
224
00:13:38,880 --> 00:13:41,680
[tense music playing]
225
00:13:44,240 --> 00:13:47,200
[narrator] Meanwhile,
squabbling and one-upmanship
226
00:13:47,280 --> 00:13:51,840
by the air commanders was eating away
at Germany's success.
227
00:13:51,920 --> 00:13:54,760
Despite all of this,
the Luftwaffe came close
228
00:13:54,840 --> 00:13:58,000
to overwhelming the RAF several times,
229
00:13:58,080 --> 00:14:04,080
not least by targeting and destroying
radar installations at key airfields.
230
00:14:04,520 --> 00:14:06,280
The tactic was working
231
00:14:06,360 --> 00:14:09,120
and they had the Royal Air Force
on the ropes,
232
00:14:09,200 --> 00:14:13,440
but Goering failed to stick
to a winning strategy.
233
00:14:13,520 --> 00:14:15,440
What the Germans don't have,
234
00:14:15,520 --> 00:14:18,600
and we see this particularly early
in the war,
235
00:14:18,680 --> 00:14:23,200
is the tenacity and the patience
to see the development
236
00:14:23,280 --> 00:14:26,800
of a campaign through to its fruition.
237
00:14:26,880 --> 00:14:32,880
Thus, although it was quite
militarily sound to target the RAF,
238
00:14:33,760 --> 00:14:39,040
to target its anti-aircraft defenses
and its radar,
239
00:14:39,120 --> 00:14:43,200
just when they were on the cusp
of succeeding in that aim,
240
00:14:43,280 --> 00:14:46,520
they feel as though time
has overtaken them
241
00:14:46,600 --> 00:14:52,000
and they switch their targets
more on to the bombing of urban centers
242
00:14:52,080 --> 00:14:55,280
to move on to that psychological part
of the campaign
243
00:14:55,360 --> 00:14:57,280
that they hope would speed victory,
244
00:14:57,360 --> 00:15:00,360
and that was a massive failure
on their part.
245
00:15:00,440 --> 00:15:04,840
They took their eye off the prize
and had moved to an area
246
00:15:04,920 --> 00:15:09,400
that was going to be far less
militarily successful.
247
00:15:09,480 --> 00:15:10,640
[suspenseful music playing]
248
00:15:10,720 --> 00:15:13,960
[narrator] The switching of focus
of Luftwaffe attacks
249
00:15:14,040 --> 00:15:18,000
from RAF airfields, radar stations,
and aircraft
250
00:15:18,080 --> 00:15:22,200
to industrial targets and cities
was the turning point.
251
00:15:22,280 --> 00:15:24,560
Germany would lose the battle,
252
00:15:24,640 --> 00:15:29,320
and with it any chance
of launching its invasion.
253
00:15:29,400 --> 00:15:34,520
The myth of German invincibility
had been shattered.
254
00:15:34,600 --> 00:15:37,200
Hitler is left in a war, a long-term war
255
00:15:37,280 --> 00:15:39,320
that he cannot solve
against Great Britain.
256
00:15:39,400 --> 00:15:40,480
Battle of Britain has failed,
257
00:15:40,560 --> 00:15:42,600
there's not gonna be
an Operation Sea Lion.
258
00:15:42,680 --> 00:15:48,000
And he believes that the one reason
that Churchill is holding out in this war
259
00:15:48,080 --> 00:15:52,360
is he has a hope that the final
continental power, the Soviet Union,
260
00:15:52,440 --> 00:15:54,560
will ultimately come in on his side.
261
00:15:54,640 --> 00:15:58,440
And so Hitler thinks if I wanted
to negotiate any kind of peace deal,
262
00:15:58,520 --> 00:16:01,280
if I can remove the Soviet Union,
263
00:16:01,360 --> 00:16:06,320
I've removed Churchill's last hope
in this war.
264
00:16:06,400 --> 00:16:09,400
[suspenseful music playing]
265
00:16:11,720 --> 00:16:15,400
[narrator] If the strategic failings
during the Battle of Britain
266
00:16:15,480 --> 00:16:19,120
exposed the chinks in Germany's
military armor,
267
00:16:19,200 --> 00:16:23,720
the devastating failings of Germany's
invasion of the Soviet Union
268
00:16:23,800 --> 00:16:26,560
split those cracks asunder.
269
00:16:26,640 --> 00:16:31,560
Hitler's overconfidence in his political
and military abilities
270
00:16:31,640 --> 00:16:34,720
were about to be magnified as he attempted
271
00:16:34,800 --> 00:16:37,880
the invasion of Soviet Russia.
272
00:16:37,960 --> 00:16:41,640
He and his generals
were about to badly underestimate
273
00:16:41,720 --> 00:16:44,880
the size and scale of the Soviet Union
274
00:16:44,960 --> 00:16:50,400
and the capacity of its people
to endure extreme suffering.
275
00:16:50,480 --> 00:16:53,160
One of the most important studies
that's produced at this time
276
00:16:53,240 --> 00:16:55,880
is the military geography study,
which starts to look
277
00:16:55,960 --> 00:16:58,960
at where are Soviet assets organized,
and it identifies
278
00:16:59,040 --> 00:17:02,800
that some 14 million people
live beyond the Urals,
279
00:17:02,880 --> 00:17:07,240
that there is a significant amount
of Soviet heavy industry
280
00:17:07,319 --> 00:17:10,719
that's built in Central Asia
and in the very Far East,
281
00:17:10,800 --> 00:17:12,520
enough to sustain high-intensity warfare,
282
00:17:12,599 --> 00:17:16,279
and that this is well beyond the reach
not only of the German army,
283
00:17:16,359 --> 00:17:18,279
but even of German bombers.
284
00:17:18,359 --> 00:17:21,439
And therefore the ability
to actually end this war,
285
00:17:21,520 --> 00:17:23,680
not just on the blitzkrieg timetable
that they're setting,
286
00:17:23,760 --> 00:17:26,320
but in the war at all,
is already in question.
287
00:17:26,400 --> 00:17:28,520
And that is clear from 1940.
288
00:17:28,600 --> 00:17:34,600
And yet, this never manages to stop
this idea that we might invade.
289
00:17:34,760 --> 00:17:38,200
[Lloyd] The Russia problem
was one that would eventually see
290
00:17:38,280 --> 00:17:40,160
the Germans lose the war.
291
00:17:40,240 --> 00:17:44,040
But as soon as the Germans
had invaded France
292
00:17:44,120 --> 00:17:47,960
and utterly altered the balance
of power in Europe,
293
00:17:48,040 --> 00:17:51,320
there was no way that in fact
the Germans could not afford
294
00:17:51,400 --> 00:17:53,960
to invade the Soviet Union,
because the Soviets
295
00:17:54,040 --> 00:17:56,200
would have invaded Germany.
296
00:17:56,280 --> 00:18:00,200
So Hitler was forced to attack
perhaps more quickly
297
00:18:00,280 --> 00:18:03,480
than his generals, certainly,
would have liked.
298
00:18:03,560 --> 00:18:08,040
And it led him into a campaign
that he couldn't win.
299
00:18:08,120 --> 00:18:11,360
[tense music playing]
300
00:18:11,440 --> 00:18:15,240
[narrator] Even before he ordered
his troops into Russia,
301
00:18:15,320 --> 00:18:20,720
Hitler was having to deal
with unexpected problems.
302
00:18:20,800 --> 00:18:26,040
In October 1940,
Germany's new Axis partner, Italy,
303
00:18:26,120 --> 00:18:29,920
had unilaterally decided to invade Greece,
304
00:18:30,000 --> 00:18:34,680
but suffered a humiliating defeat
at the hands of a far inferior force.
305
00:18:34,760 --> 00:18:37,600
[man] Forty-eight thousand Italians
are prisoners of war.
306
00:18:37,680 --> 00:18:41,960
[narrator] This military blunder
was to have a devastating impact
307
00:18:42,040 --> 00:18:46,640
on the Nazi plans for the invasion
of Soviet Russia.
308
00:18:46,720 --> 00:18:49,360
Hitler had wanted to leave the Balkans,
including Greece,
309
00:18:49,440 --> 00:18:52,760
as a neutral space
that he'd control economically.
310
00:18:52,840 --> 00:18:55,400
He didn't wanna start a war there
because then the British
311
00:18:55,480 --> 00:18:57,920
might try to expand their presence
in Greece,
312
00:18:58,000 --> 00:19:01,320
imperiling the southern flank
of his advance into the Soviet Union.
313
00:19:01,400 --> 00:19:04,600
And then without telling him,
Mussolini lunges into Greece,
314
00:19:04,680 --> 00:19:09,760
forcing Hitler to delay his invasion
of Soviet Union by 38 days
315
00:19:09,840 --> 00:19:13,160
so that he can, like,
send forces into Yugoslavia and Greece
316
00:19:13,240 --> 00:19:17,360
to kind of prevent the British
from establishing themselves there.
317
00:19:17,440 --> 00:19:20,040
And of course,
the six weeks that Hitler loses
318
00:19:20,120 --> 00:19:24,080
end up being really consequential,
because it means that Hitler
319
00:19:24,160 --> 00:19:27,440
will not get to Moscow
before the roads turn to mud
320
00:19:27,520 --> 00:19:29,880
and the snows come
and the reserve divisions
321
00:19:29,960 --> 00:19:33,040
come out of Siberia to drive him back.
322
00:19:33,120 --> 00:19:36,480
[narrator] Anticipating a swift victory
in Russia,
323
00:19:36,560 --> 00:19:38,520
Hitler committed his troops
324
00:19:38,600 --> 00:19:42,000
without long term supply
and logistics consideration,
325
00:19:42,080 --> 00:19:45,000
and even a lack of winter equipment.
326
00:19:45,080 --> 00:19:49,640
The result was one of the biggest
and costliest failed campaigns
327
00:19:49,720 --> 00:19:51,520
in military history.
328
00:19:51,600 --> 00:19:53,360
One of the problems
with Operation Barbarossa
329
00:19:53,440 --> 00:19:56,200
{\an8}and understanding why the Germans
aren't successful there
330
00:19:56,280 --> 00:20:00,120
{\an8}is that there are actually
two German armies, in essence.
331
00:20:00,200 --> 00:20:03,280
There's one German army that
is largely built of infantry divisions.
332
00:20:03,360 --> 00:20:07,000
They have all of their material
being moved
333
00:20:07,080 --> 00:20:11,840
largely by horses and wagons,
and they're invading at one speed.
334
00:20:11,920 --> 00:20:16,320
And then in parallel, there are separate,
not armies but Panzer groups
335
00:20:16,400 --> 00:20:20,160
that are built with everything
being motorized and mechanized.
336
00:20:20,240 --> 00:20:23,240
And they move at a very, very
different speed.
337
00:20:23,320 --> 00:20:25,480
And what that means
is we start to see a gap.
338
00:20:25,560 --> 00:20:27,720
There is a gap between the Panzer groups,
339
00:20:27,800 --> 00:20:30,920
which are way out in front,
and the infantry divisions,
340
00:20:31,000 --> 00:20:34,080
which are marching at the speed
that a man can march
341
00:20:34,160 --> 00:20:35,320
into the Soviet Union.
342
00:20:36,160 --> 00:20:41,240
[narrator] As the Germans move deeper
into the forbidding vastness of Russia,
343
00:20:41,320 --> 00:20:45,640
they left a trail of broken-down tanks
and abandoned trucks
344
00:20:45,720 --> 00:20:49,280
wrecked by the insidious dust
and appalling roads.
345
00:20:49,360 --> 00:20:51,560
To give you an illustration
of just how bad it is,
346
00:20:51,640 --> 00:20:54,760
Mark IV tanks in the 7th Panzer Division
347
00:20:54,840 --> 00:20:58,520
are 75 percent out of action
by the end of June.
348
00:20:58,600 --> 00:21:03,240
And all they've done is basically
drive through, uh, Belarus.
349
00:21:03,320 --> 00:21:05,040
The one conclusion you can always make
350
00:21:05,120 --> 00:21:09,640
is Barbarossa is predicated
on a timetable of success.
351
00:21:09,720 --> 00:21:12,360
And if it's not able to meet
that timetable,
352
00:21:12,440 --> 00:21:16,040
then you have to question to what extent
is there a contingency plan
353
00:21:16,120 --> 00:21:20,640
for not achieving success
in what is a very high-intensity war.
354
00:21:20,720 --> 00:21:22,480
What does that mean for the German army?
355
00:21:22,560 --> 00:21:24,960
What does that mean
for the German war economy?
356
00:21:25,040 --> 00:21:27,640
And you discover there is no plan
for this.
357
00:21:27,720 --> 00:21:30,960
[narrator] As supply lines
shrank into the distance,
358
00:21:31,040 --> 00:21:34,120
logistics began to collapse,
leaving the troops
359
00:21:34,200 --> 00:21:37,360
short of food, ammunition, and fuel.
360
00:21:37,440 --> 00:21:39,840
Although the Red Army was in retreat,
361
00:21:39,920 --> 00:21:43,800
they were at least able to fall back
on their supply bases,
362
00:21:43,880 --> 00:21:47,000
and they had massive numerical advantage,
363
00:21:47,080 --> 00:21:51,760
and were prepared to send an endless
stream of troops to their deaths
364
00:21:51,840 --> 00:21:54,560
in a bid to repel the invaders.
365
00:21:54,640 --> 00:21:57,920
Remarkably, despite their hardships,
366
00:21:58,000 --> 00:22:01,080
victory was still in sight for the Germans
367
00:22:01,160 --> 00:22:05,000
when Hitler makes yet another
strategic blunder.
368
00:22:05,080 --> 00:22:09,000
{\an8}In August, when they're, like,
punching their way toward Moscow,
369
00:22:09,080 --> 00:22:10,560
{\an8}where they can win the war-- Why?
370
00:22:10,640 --> 00:22:12,480
{\an8}Because the political leadership is there,
371
00:22:12,560 --> 00:22:13,800
industry is there,
372
00:22:13,880 --> 00:22:16,960
all the roads and railroads
are centered there.
373
00:22:17,040 --> 00:22:20,400
Hitler makes the decision
to take a Panzer Army
374
00:22:20,480 --> 00:22:23,760
out of Army Group Center
and send it south to participate
375
00:22:23,840 --> 00:22:25,880
in the big battle for the Kiev pocket,
376
00:22:25,960 --> 00:22:29,200
where they take 600,000 Soviet prisoners.
377
00:22:29,280 --> 00:22:32,040
But they lose like a whole month
doing this,
378
00:22:32,120 --> 00:22:33,960
to take Kiev, because he says,
379
00:22:34,040 --> 00:22:36,440
"Oh, we need the--
we need the food of Ukraine
380
00:22:36,520 --> 00:22:38,160
and we need the oil of the Caucasus."
381
00:22:38,240 --> 00:22:41,440
And his generals say, "No, no, Führer,
we need to take Moscow.
382
00:22:41,520 --> 00:22:43,720
We need to win this war with one punch."
383
00:22:43,800 --> 00:22:47,360
And Hitler goes, [scoffs] "My generals,
they know nothing of economics."
384
00:22:47,440 --> 00:22:49,720
[narrator] Then to make matters worse,
385
00:22:49,800 --> 00:22:53,960
just as the Germans once again
set their sights on Moscow,
386
00:22:54,040 --> 00:22:56,040
the mud began to freeze.
387
00:22:56,120 --> 00:23:00,360
It signaled a far bigger threat,
the Russian winter.
388
00:23:00,440 --> 00:23:03,120
Hitler had bet on a quick victory.
389
00:23:03,200 --> 00:23:05,040
Who needed winter clothing
390
00:23:05,120 --> 00:23:08,120
if Moscow was already captured?
391
00:23:08,200 --> 00:23:10,400
And it was a bad one.
392
00:23:10,480 --> 00:23:11,600
Temperatures dropped
393
00:23:11,680 --> 00:23:14,280
to minus 40 degrees centigrade,
394
00:23:14,360 --> 00:23:16,000
machine guns froze solid,
395
00:23:16,080 --> 00:23:17,560
with soldiers resorting
396
00:23:17,640 --> 00:23:20,200
to urinating on them to warm them up.
397
00:23:20,280 --> 00:23:23,400
Soldiers froze to their guns.
398
00:23:23,480 --> 00:23:26,400
Sometimes, they just froze to death
399
00:23:26,480 --> 00:23:27,960
where they stood.
400
00:23:28,040 --> 00:23:31,000
There's a lot of self-belief
in the German army.
401
00:23:31,080 --> 00:23:34,560
And the idea of not planning
for contingents
402
00:23:34,640 --> 00:23:35,880
is because they believe
403
00:23:35,960 --> 00:23:38,520
we're not gonna be in that scenario.
404
00:23:38,600 --> 00:23:40,440
We are not going to be there
for the winter,
405
00:23:40,520 --> 00:23:42,360
that's inconceivable to us,
406
00:23:42,440 --> 00:23:44,680
to the point
of we're not planning for this.
407
00:23:44,760 --> 00:23:46,960
And the Germans
are also deluded by the idea that
408
00:23:47,040 --> 00:23:49,680
even if we are here for the winter,
409
00:23:49,760 --> 00:23:51,840
well, we'll just stop the operations,
410
00:23:51,920 --> 00:23:53,000
we'll bunker down,
411
00:23:53,080 --> 00:23:54,680
we'll survive the winter.
412
00:23:54,760 --> 00:23:56,480
There's very little understanding,
413
00:23:56,560 --> 00:23:58,360
and they should have known this,
414
00:23:58,440 --> 00:24:01,080
that the Soviets
might have the force generation
415
00:24:01,160 --> 00:24:03,200
to continue the war against them
416
00:24:03,280 --> 00:24:05,640
even through the winter.
417
00:24:05,720 --> 00:24:09,160
[narrator] Debilitated
by the bitter Russian winter,
418
00:24:09,240 --> 00:24:12,360
the Nazi forces were completely unprepared
419
00:24:12,440 --> 00:24:15,800
for a massive Soviet counteroffensive.
420
00:24:15,880 --> 00:24:17,600
Warm and cozy
421
00:24:17,680 --> 00:24:20,080
in fur-lined jackets, boots,
422
00:24:20,160 --> 00:24:22,400
and white camouflage snowsuits,
423
00:24:22,480 --> 00:24:24,400
the Soviet troops smashed
424
00:24:24,480 --> 00:24:26,960
into the pitiful German lines
425
00:24:27,040 --> 00:24:30,960
like ghosts emerging from the mists.
426
00:24:31,040 --> 00:24:32,840
The German survivors,
427
00:24:32,920 --> 00:24:35,240
somehow still an intact army,
428
00:24:35,320 --> 00:24:36,960
were forced to retreat,
429
00:24:37,040 --> 00:24:39,720
and Moscow was lost.
430
00:24:39,800 --> 00:24:43,080
[Lloyd] And of course the Germans
hadn't taken St. Petersburg.
431
00:24:43,160 --> 00:24:45,120
They hadn't taken Moscow.
432
00:24:45,200 --> 00:24:47,360
They hadn't taken Rostov,
433
00:24:47,440 --> 00:24:49,440
and they were fast running out
434
00:24:49,520 --> 00:24:52,600
of the resources that they needed
to continue the war.
435
00:24:52,680 --> 00:24:55,280
{\an8}And so Hitler therefore began to think
436
00:24:55,360 --> 00:24:58,920
{\an8}about a campaign in 1942
437
00:24:59,000 --> 00:25:02,160
that would raise the morale of Germany,
438
00:25:02,240 --> 00:25:05,480
raise the morale of the troops
and gain resources,
439
00:25:05,560 --> 00:25:08,560
taking the city of Stalingrad.
440
00:25:08,640 --> 00:25:11,360
The city that bore the name
of the Soviet leader
441
00:25:11,440 --> 00:25:13,400
would be a great boost to morale.
442
00:25:15,200 --> 00:25:18,920
[narrator] And so
Hitler rolled the dice again.
443
00:25:19,000 --> 00:25:21,200
The Battle of Stalingrad
444
00:25:21,280 --> 00:25:23,240
was to prove the worst defeat
445
00:25:23,320 --> 00:25:26,280
in the history of the German army.
446
00:25:26,360 --> 00:25:30,040
It was like the entire World War II
in miniature,
447
00:25:30,120 --> 00:25:32,600
shrank down and encapsulated
448
00:25:32,680 --> 00:25:35,240
into one bloody battle.
449
00:25:35,320 --> 00:25:39,360
Hitler decides, you know, he's gonna
launch this campaign in late '42
450
00:25:39,440 --> 00:25:43,160
to kind of bend south into the Caucasus,
take the oilfields.
451
00:25:43,240 --> 00:25:46,720
But on the way, he decides
as a sort of political operation,
452
00:25:46,800 --> 00:25:48,880
he's gonna take the city of Stalingrad
453
00:25:48,960 --> 00:25:51,800
to kind of give Stalin a black eye.
454
00:25:51,880 --> 00:25:54,560
And then when it turns out
this is gonna become a battle of attrition
455
00:25:54,640 --> 00:25:56,880
that doesn't really serve
German interests in any way
456
00:25:56,960 --> 00:25:59,840
because the Soviets can afford
attrition a lot more than the Germans
457
00:25:59,920 --> 00:26:01,080
because they have more men
458
00:26:01,160 --> 00:26:03,440
and they have a pipeline
from the United States,
459
00:26:03,520 --> 00:26:05,360
replacing all the tanks, and trucks,
460
00:26:05,440 --> 00:26:07,200
and everything else they lose.
461
00:26:07,280 --> 00:26:09,520
Stalingrad is a trap.
462
00:26:09,600 --> 00:26:12,920
They are soaking the Germans
into that city.
463
00:26:13,000 --> 00:26:15,680
They would surround them,
464
00:26:15,760 --> 00:26:17,160
they would destroy them,
465
00:26:17,240 --> 00:26:20,240
and then they would launch
their own counterattacks,
466
00:26:20,320 --> 00:26:23,080
and those counterattacks
would gain momentum
467
00:26:23,160 --> 00:26:25,760
that the Germans just can't cope with.
468
00:26:27,040 --> 00:26:28,120
[narrator] Trapped,
469
00:26:28,200 --> 00:26:31,080
demoralized, starving,
470
00:26:31,160 --> 00:26:33,800
the once-feared German 6th Army
471
00:26:33,880 --> 00:26:36,120
was utterly dismantled.
472
00:26:36,200 --> 00:26:38,920
Three hundred thousand German soldiers
473
00:26:39,000 --> 00:26:42,480
were lost in the rubble and ruins
of Stalingrad.
474
00:26:42,560 --> 00:26:44,400
In 1943,
475
00:26:44,480 --> 00:26:48,280
the half-dead survivors
began to surrender.
476
00:26:48,360 --> 00:26:50,120
Hitler's initial errors
477
00:26:50,200 --> 00:26:53,640
and his latest micromanagement
and meddling
478
00:26:53,720 --> 00:26:57,120
had sowed the seeds
for catastrophic failure.
479
00:26:57,200 --> 00:27:00,960
It was a massive strategic, political,
480
00:27:01,040 --> 00:27:02,920
and psychological loss.
481
00:27:03,000 --> 00:27:04,680
From that moment,
482
00:27:04,760 --> 00:27:07,520
Germany was just forestalling defeat,
483
00:27:07,600 --> 00:27:10,720
and the Allies smelled blood.
484
00:27:12,400 --> 00:27:15,400
[intense music playing]
485
00:27:18,240 --> 00:27:21,960
[narrator] The Allies already
controlled the skies.
486
00:27:22,040 --> 00:27:25,960
What was left of Goering's
much-vaunted Luftwaffe
487
00:27:26,040 --> 00:27:29,200
was left in smoking ruins in the east.
488
00:27:29,280 --> 00:27:32,280
Now, the Allies turned their attention
489
00:27:32,360 --> 00:27:34,320
to the seas.
490
00:27:34,400 --> 00:27:36,280
{\an8}The Battle of the Atlantic,
which took place
491
00:27:36,360 --> 00:27:38,000
{\an8}from the beginning of the war to the end,
492
00:27:38,080 --> 00:27:40,440
{\an8}was quite possibly the most crucial front
493
00:27:40,520 --> 00:27:41,880
{\an8}of the entire war.
494
00:27:41,960 --> 00:27:44,640
The Atlantic Ocean was the highway
495
00:27:44,720 --> 00:27:47,400
by which the Allies
were able to supply Britain
496
00:27:47,480 --> 00:27:49,360
with munitions and supplies
497
00:27:49,440 --> 00:27:51,680
from North America.
498
00:27:51,760 --> 00:27:53,320
The only way those supplies
could be stopped
499
00:27:53,400 --> 00:27:57,080
was through the Kriegsmarine efforts
with the U-boats.
500
00:27:57,160 --> 00:27:59,200
They needed to strangle those supplies
501
00:27:59,280 --> 00:28:00,280
and sink those merchantmen
502
00:28:00,360 --> 00:28:03,320
before they could reach their ports
in England.
503
00:28:04,400 --> 00:28:06,040
[narrator] The German navy
504
00:28:06,120 --> 00:28:09,920
could never confront
the combined Allied navies head-on.
505
00:28:10,000 --> 00:28:13,080
Instead, the German Naval Command
506
00:28:13,160 --> 00:28:16,400
opted for a campaign of commerce raiding.
507
00:28:16,480 --> 00:28:18,480
This allowed the less powerful
508
00:28:18,560 --> 00:28:21,680
but more mobile German U-boat wolf packs
509
00:28:21,760 --> 00:28:24,240
to pick off targets of opportunity,
510
00:28:24,320 --> 00:28:26,200
mostly merchant ships,
511
00:28:26,280 --> 00:28:29,880
while eluding
the larger Allied naval units.
512
00:28:29,960 --> 00:28:32,200
To combat the threat of attack,
513
00:28:32,280 --> 00:28:35,720
the merchant ships
were grouped into convoys,
514
00:28:35,800 --> 00:28:37,360
escorted by warships,
515
00:28:37,440 --> 00:28:40,080
and if possible, aircraft.
516
00:28:40,160 --> 00:28:42,680
[Dr. Geoffrey] You know, the Germans
were successful in the early days
517
00:28:42,760 --> 00:28:46,480
because there were all these ships
just kind of crossing the Atlantic
518
00:28:46,560 --> 00:28:48,240
and there were just targets everywhere,
519
00:28:48,320 --> 00:28:51,160
you know, oilers, freight ships,
this and that.
520
00:28:51,240 --> 00:28:54,680
And so the-- by putting them in convoys,
521
00:28:54,760 --> 00:28:56,360
you create a smaller target.
522
00:28:56,440 --> 00:28:58,600
Yes, you've got 60 ships assembled,
523
00:28:58,680 --> 00:29:01,960
but they're all moving as quickly
as they can across.
524
00:29:02,040 --> 00:29:04,240
So a U-boat looking for a target
525
00:29:04,320 --> 00:29:06,960
has to be on the surface looking around
526
00:29:07,040 --> 00:29:08,760
when that convoy comes steaming past
527
00:29:08,840 --> 00:29:09,920
or you're gonna miss it.
528
00:29:10,000 --> 00:29:11,480
Before, they could just kind of loiter
529
00:29:11,560 --> 00:29:13,920
and there was always gonna be a ship
or two nearby.
530
00:29:14,000 --> 00:29:17,000
[intense music playing]
531
00:29:19,040 --> 00:29:21,280
[narrator] The Germans had arguably
532
00:29:21,360 --> 00:29:23,720
the best submarines of the war.
533
00:29:23,800 --> 00:29:25,120
As well, they were crewed
534
00:29:25,200 --> 00:29:28,160
by battle-hardened submariners,
535
00:29:28,240 --> 00:29:31,920
who had learned hard lessons
from World War I.
536
00:29:32,000 --> 00:29:34,320
Protected by their seemingly
537
00:29:34,400 --> 00:29:37,200
unbreakable Enigma codes,
538
00:29:37,280 --> 00:29:40,320
the U-boat fleets were attacking at will
539
00:29:40,400 --> 00:29:42,840
and enjoying rich pickings.
540
00:29:42,920 --> 00:29:46,960
Would they be allowed
to continue their campaign unchecked
541
00:29:47,040 --> 00:29:49,040
or would they too be thwarted
542
00:29:49,120 --> 00:29:51,040
by poor leadership
543
00:29:51,120 --> 00:29:54,560
or forces beyond their control?
544
00:29:54,640 --> 00:29:56,800
[Colin] At many points during the war,
545
00:29:56,880 --> 00:29:59,720
these U-boats almost
succeeded in their mission.
546
00:29:59,800 --> 00:30:02,080
However, more than any other front,
547
00:30:02,160 --> 00:30:05,200
the Battle of the Atlantic
was a war of technology.
548
00:30:05,280 --> 00:30:09,080
Superior technology meant that
the U-boats would have an advantage
549
00:30:09,160 --> 00:30:11,400
with better weapons or better technology
550
00:30:11,480 --> 00:30:13,360
in order to evade detection
551
00:30:13,440 --> 00:30:16,560
or coordinate their attack efforts.
552
00:30:16,640 --> 00:30:18,520
Conversely, the Allies
were developing technology
553
00:30:18,600 --> 00:30:19,880
of their own at an alarming rate,
554
00:30:19,960 --> 00:30:23,400
better radar, better sonar,
better weapons.
555
00:30:23,480 --> 00:30:25,520
This was a war of technology that needed
556
00:30:25,600 --> 00:30:28,080
every ounce of industrial might
557
00:30:28,160 --> 00:30:30,920
and funding in order to win.
558
00:30:31,000 --> 00:30:33,120
Unfortunately, because submarines
559
00:30:33,200 --> 00:30:35,840
were not as glamorous as jet aircraft
560
00:30:35,920 --> 00:30:37,600
or large impressive tanks,
561
00:30:37,680 --> 00:30:40,480
Donitz did not get the funding he required
562
00:30:40,560 --> 00:30:43,440
in order to outfit his U-boats
563
00:30:43,520 --> 00:30:45,560
with sufficient numbers
and sufficient technology
564
00:30:45,640 --> 00:30:48,840
in order to maintain the edge
against the Allies.
565
00:30:48,920 --> 00:30:51,440
[intense music playing]
566
00:30:51,520 --> 00:30:52,960
[narrator] Once again,
567
00:30:53,040 --> 00:30:55,120
by throwing money at his air force
568
00:30:55,200 --> 00:30:57,120
at the expense of his navy,
569
00:30:57,200 --> 00:31:00,040
Hitler had made a critical mistake.
570
00:31:00,120 --> 00:31:02,080
The German U-boat fleet
571
00:31:02,160 --> 00:31:05,080
was potentially the Nazis' ticket
to victory
572
00:31:05,160 --> 00:31:07,080
in World War II.
573
00:31:07,160 --> 00:31:08,640
But Hitler overlooked
574
00:31:08,720 --> 00:31:12,600
and undervalued
their strategic importance.
575
00:31:12,680 --> 00:31:15,320
The question is, why?
576
00:31:15,400 --> 00:31:18,120
[Dr. Geoffrey] Hitler was no different
from most leaders
577
00:31:18,200 --> 00:31:19,440
of great powers at the time.
578
00:31:19,520 --> 00:31:23,160
They wanted a big and showy surface fleet
579
00:31:23,240 --> 00:31:25,440
to show the flag around the world.
580
00:31:25,520 --> 00:31:27,840
They wanted cruisers,
they wanted battleships,
581
00:31:27,920 --> 00:31:29,200
they wanted destroyers
582
00:31:29,280 --> 00:31:30,560
painted in the German colors,
583
00:31:30,640 --> 00:31:32,280
flying the German flag.
584
00:31:32,360 --> 00:31:35,480
Submarines were invisible.
They didn't confer any prestige.
585
00:31:35,560 --> 00:31:39,200
So Hitler, no less than
the Kaiser before him,
586
00:31:39,280 --> 00:31:42,240
you know, was averse to submarines,
587
00:31:42,320 --> 00:31:45,200
and in favor of big surface ships.
588
00:31:45,280 --> 00:31:46,880
But that doesn't excuse him for the fact
589
00:31:46,960 --> 00:31:48,920
that he should have been thinking
along these ways.
590
00:31:49,000 --> 00:31:50,560
But again, Hitler was an old infantryman,
591
00:31:50,640 --> 00:31:52,200
he was a corporal in the German army,
592
00:31:52,280 --> 00:31:54,240
he didn't know anything about sea power,
593
00:31:54,320 --> 00:31:56,360
about naval affairs.
594
00:31:56,440 --> 00:31:57,920
[man] The U-boat surfaces
595
00:31:58,000 --> 00:32:00,280
and automatic wing cameras
photograph the kill.
596
00:32:00,360 --> 00:32:02,200
[gunshots]
597
00:32:02,280 --> 00:32:05,960
[narrator] This critical lack
of strategic foresight
598
00:32:06,040 --> 00:32:09,440
led to Germany losing control
of the oceans,
599
00:32:09,520 --> 00:32:10,600
and with it
600
00:32:10,680 --> 00:32:13,800
any chance of preventing
an Allied invasion of Nazi
601
00:32:13,880 --> 00:32:15,640
occupied Europe.
602
00:32:15,720 --> 00:32:18,680
The final, bloody battle of the war
603
00:32:18,760 --> 00:32:20,680
was about to begin.
604
00:32:25,040 --> 00:32:28,320
[intense music playing]
605
00:32:28,400 --> 00:32:32,080
[narrator] It was the day
that marked the beginning of the end
606
00:32:32,160 --> 00:32:34,400
for the German war effort.
607
00:32:34,480 --> 00:32:36,600
And it brought into sharp focus
608
00:32:36,680 --> 00:32:39,000
the massive gap in intelligence
609
00:32:39,080 --> 00:32:40,800
and strategic capability
610
00:32:40,880 --> 00:32:42,400
which had now built up
611
00:32:42,480 --> 00:32:45,320
between the two sides.
612
00:32:45,400 --> 00:32:49,000
The invasion had been a long time coming.
613
00:32:49,080 --> 00:32:51,080
The Germans were expecting it.
614
00:32:52,160 --> 00:32:55,720
So how did the Allies manage to disguise
615
00:32:55,800 --> 00:32:57,080
such a gigantic buildup
616
00:32:57,160 --> 00:33:00,880
of arms, navy, aircraft, and troops
617
00:33:00,960 --> 00:33:03,720
almost within sight
of German-occupied France,
618
00:33:03,800 --> 00:33:07,120
and then wage such an effective campaign
619
00:33:07,200 --> 00:33:10,160
of disinformation and misdirection
620
00:33:10,240 --> 00:33:12,960
that the Germans were duped into believing
621
00:33:13,040 --> 00:33:15,720
the invasion would come through Calais?
622
00:33:15,800 --> 00:33:18,840
The Germans were also fighting blind
623
00:33:18,920 --> 00:33:21,760
and they had poor intelligence
624
00:33:21,840 --> 00:33:23,640
on what the Allies were going to do,
625
00:33:23,720 --> 00:33:26,840
and of course Allied deception techniques
626
00:33:26,920 --> 00:33:28,880
were really successful.
627
00:33:28,960 --> 00:33:30,920
Operation Fortitude, for example,
628
00:33:31,000 --> 00:33:33,320
gave the Germans the impression
629
00:33:33,400 --> 00:33:35,520
that the Allies were going to lead
630
00:33:35,600 --> 00:33:37,960
with an attack by Patton
631
00:33:38,040 --> 00:33:39,760
{\an8}into the Pas-de-Calais area,
632
00:33:39,840 --> 00:33:40,960
{\an8}when, of course,
633
00:33:41,040 --> 00:33:44,280
{\an8}we all know that they eventually landed
in Normandy.
634
00:33:44,360 --> 00:33:47,480
The Allies also had the Enigma decrypts
635
00:33:47,560 --> 00:33:49,600
provided by Bletchley Park
636
00:33:49,680 --> 00:33:51,200
that gave them a very strong sense
637
00:33:51,280 --> 00:33:53,720
of German capabilities
638
00:33:53,800 --> 00:33:55,720
and German deployments.
639
00:33:55,800 --> 00:33:57,280
And so the Germans were
640
00:33:57,360 --> 00:34:00,960
strategically finding it very difficult
641
00:34:01,040 --> 00:34:04,000
to produce what they needed
642
00:34:04,080 --> 00:34:07,600
to develop a coherent defense
643
00:34:07,680 --> 00:34:10,640
against the new Second Front onslaught.
644
00:34:11,760 --> 00:34:15,360
[narrator] That Germans swallowed
everything they were fed,
645
00:34:15,440 --> 00:34:18,120
hook, line, and sinker.
646
00:34:18,199 --> 00:34:21,079
Apart from creating an entire fake army,
647
00:34:21,159 --> 00:34:24,479
featuring their rock star
General George Patton,
648
00:34:24,560 --> 00:34:27,360
there were fraudulent radio transmissions,
649
00:34:27,440 --> 00:34:29,760
as well as a legion of double agents
650
00:34:29,840 --> 00:34:33,560
feeding the Germans all the fake news
they could lap up.
651
00:34:33,639 --> 00:34:37,799
But that wasn't the Germans only problem.
652
00:34:37,880 --> 00:34:39,440
Ultimately,
653
00:34:39,520 --> 00:34:42,800
preparation for the Allied landings
in 1944
654
00:34:42,880 --> 00:34:44,400
is complicated for the Germans
655
00:34:44,480 --> 00:34:48,240
by the absence
of a very clear strategic reaction.
656
00:34:48,320 --> 00:34:51,200
The debate is always between
do we hold our forces back,
657
00:34:51,280 --> 00:34:52,400
allow them to land
658
00:34:52,480 --> 00:34:54,600
and then use one big concentrated blow
659
00:34:54,679 --> 00:34:56,119
to push them back off,
660
00:34:56,199 --> 00:34:58,199
or do we oppose the landings
661
00:34:58,280 --> 00:35:00,640
on the beaches forward?
662
00:35:00,720 --> 00:35:02,800
And there was a real debate
in the German High Command
663
00:35:02,880 --> 00:35:06,600
between which one of these policies
should we pursue?
664
00:35:06,680 --> 00:35:09,440
And Hitler, typically unsure
of which one is the best
665
00:35:09,520 --> 00:35:12,240
and trying to listen
to all different kinds of advice,
666
00:35:12,320 --> 00:35:15,160
basically, ultimately pursues both
at the same time.
667
00:35:15,240 --> 00:35:19,080
[ominous music playing]
668
00:35:19,160 --> 00:35:23,080
[narrator] The upshot was
the German troops were concentrated
669
00:35:23,160 --> 00:35:26,240
in the wrong place at the wrong time.
670
00:35:26,320 --> 00:35:29,480
And those that were there were second-rate
671
00:35:29,560 --> 00:35:30,800
and lacking heavy tanks
672
00:35:30,880 --> 00:35:34,800
or motorized transport.
673
00:35:34,880 --> 00:35:38,960
{\an8}Meanwhile, Field Marshal
Gerd von Rundstedt
674
00:35:39,040 --> 00:35:41,320
was complaining that too many troops
675
00:35:41,400 --> 00:35:44,800
were wasting their time
at the Italian Front,
676
00:35:44,880 --> 00:35:47,240
which should have been abandoned.
677
00:35:47,320 --> 00:35:48,560
He sorely needed them
678
00:35:48,640 --> 00:35:50,840
where the real action was kicking off
679
00:35:50,920 --> 00:35:54,000
on the French Coast.
680
00:35:54,080 --> 00:35:56,640
Meanwhile, Hitler compounded
681
00:35:56,720 --> 00:35:59,120
his initial mistakes and indecision
682
00:35:59,200 --> 00:36:01,720
by refusing to believe initial reports
683
00:36:01,800 --> 00:36:04,720
that Allied troops were storming
the beaches
684
00:36:04,800 --> 00:36:06,080
at Normandy.
685
00:36:06,160 --> 00:36:09,200
Reinforcements, stationed nearby,
686
00:36:09,280 --> 00:36:10,960
were not permitted to move
687
00:36:11,040 --> 00:36:15,040
to support heavily outgunned
German positions in Normandy.
688
00:36:15,120 --> 00:36:18,040
Hitler ordered them kept in reserve
689
00:36:18,120 --> 00:36:20,040
to repel the Allied thrust
690
00:36:20,120 --> 00:36:23,240
he was convinced
would come through Calais.
691
00:36:23,320 --> 00:36:25,440
[Dr. Geoffrey] D-Day in 1944,
692
00:36:25,520 --> 00:36:28,680
you know, Hitler, you know,
holds back six Panzer divisions
693
00:36:28,760 --> 00:36:31,800
and 19 reserve divisions
near the Pas-de-Calais
694
00:36:31,880 --> 00:36:33,480
because he doesn't believe
695
00:36:33,560 --> 00:36:35,960
that the real American and British thrust
696
00:36:36,040 --> 00:36:37,400
is coming through Normandy,
697
00:36:37,480 --> 00:36:39,600
even when it's apparent it is.
698
00:36:39,680 --> 00:36:42,920
And so when he finally releases
these divisions for use
699
00:36:43,000 --> 00:36:44,600
against the British and Americans,
it's too late.
700
00:36:44,680 --> 00:36:46,440
They've got a beachhead, they're ashore,
701
00:36:46,520 --> 00:36:48,120
and they're proceeding inland.
702
00:36:48,200 --> 00:36:51,560
He then compiles the error
by ordering the troops in Normandy
703
00:36:51,640 --> 00:36:53,040
to fight to the last,
704
00:36:53,120 --> 00:36:56,280
guaranteeing that, you know,
thousands of them will be destroyed
705
00:36:56,360 --> 00:36:59,960
by Allied airpower
and Allied, you know, ground thrusts.
706
00:37:00,040 --> 00:37:03,000
[narrator] Once again, the Nazi leadership
707
00:37:03,080 --> 00:37:06,320
had nobody to blame but themselves.
708
00:37:06,400 --> 00:37:10,760
The command and control
in Normandy was a mess.
709
00:37:10,840 --> 00:37:13,800
It was divided
amongst various individuals,
710
00:37:13,880 --> 00:37:17,000
each wanting to see their own
711
00:37:17,080 --> 00:37:20,160
defensive philosophy played out.
712
00:37:20,240 --> 00:37:24,120
And Hitler, of course,
was not quite sure really what he wanted.
713
00:37:24,200 --> 00:37:28,880
It depended upon
who he was talking to and when.
714
00:37:28,960 --> 00:37:30,440
And what we find, therefore,
715
00:37:30,520 --> 00:37:33,880
is no true decision being made
either one way or the other,
716
00:37:33,960 --> 00:37:35,880
and a compromise being made
717
00:37:35,960 --> 00:37:37,680
with some of the tank forces
718
00:37:37,760 --> 00:37:40,400
being held quite close to the coast,
719
00:37:40,480 --> 00:37:43,960
some being held in reserve
as von Rundstedt wanted,
720
00:37:44,040 --> 00:37:47,920
and of course a chaotic command
and control system
721
00:37:48,000 --> 00:37:50,720
that would eventually be exploited
by the Allies.
722
00:37:50,800 --> 00:37:53,680
[dramatic music playing]
723
00:37:53,760 --> 00:37:55,600
[narrator] And for Hitler,
724
00:37:55,680 --> 00:37:59,640
the failure was especially ominous.
725
00:37:59,720 --> 00:38:02,800
The moment boots hit the beach
at Normandy,
726
00:38:02,880 --> 00:38:05,480
he was fighting a war on two fronts,
727
00:38:05,560 --> 00:38:09,160
with sharply diminishing chances
of victory on either.
728
00:38:09,240 --> 00:38:12,240
Rather than accept tactical retreat
729
00:38:12,320 --> 00:38:14,840
and conserve his dwindling forces,
730
00:38:14,920 --> 00:38:17,520
he would ask them to sacrifice themselves
731
00:38:17,600 --> 00:38:19,840
to the last man.
732
00:38:19,920 --> 00:38:21,680
[Dr. Geoffrey] On the other front in 1944,
733
00:38:21,760 --> 00:38:23,560
as he's fighting in Normandy,
734
00:38:23,640 --> 00:38:25,800
the Russians are launching
Operation Bagration
735
00:38:25,880 --> 00:38:28,480
in Belarus.
736
00:38:28,560 --> 00:38:30,520
And Hitler gives
the stand or die order there.
737
00:38:30,600 --> 00:38:33,120
He says, you know, we can't give ground.
738
00:38:33,200 --> 00:38:35,640
His generals, they wanna retreat
back to the Vistula River
739
00:38:35,720 --> 00:38:37,720
and they wanna take up
more defensible positions
740
00:38:37,800 --> 00:38:38,920
along shorter lines
741
00:38:39,000 --> 00:38:41,040
to hinder the Soviet advance,
and Hitler says,
742
00:38:41,120 --> 00:38:43,240
"No, we have to hold every inch of ground.
743
00:38:43,320 --> 00:38:46,440
He loses 20 divisions
in Operation Bagration
744
00:38:46,520 --> 00:38:49,280
because of this stand or die order.
745
00:38:49,360 --> 00:38:53,280
[narrator] Despite the writing
being quite clearly on the wall,
746
00:38:53,360 --> 00:38:55,720
Hitler was to have one last throw
747
00:38:55,800 --> 00:38:57,440
of the dice.
748
00:38:57,520 --> 00:39:00,160
Unable to break the Red Army in the east,
749
00:39:00,240 --> 00:39:03,160
he would make his last desperate bid
750
00:39:03,240 --> 00:39:06,200
to break the vice closing round Germany
751
00:39:06,280 --> 00:39:08,760
by throwing his remaining Panzer divisions
752
00:39:08,840 --> 00:39:10,520
at the Americans and British
753
00:39:10,600 --> 00:39:13,840
in the forests of the Ardennes.
754
00:39:13,920 --> 00:39:16,920
[dramatic music playing]
755
00:39:19,880 --> 00:39:22,920
The Allies wanted to believe the Germans
756
00:39:23,000 --> 00:39:24,720
were a spent force,
757
00:39:24,800 --> 00:39:26,160
but they underestimated
758
00:39:26,240 --> 00:39:29,280
the lengths to which Hitler
was prepared to go
759
00:39:29,360 --> 00:39:32,280
to wreak carnage and destruction.
760
00:39:32,360 --> 00:39:33,760
Even as the Nazi Reich
761
00:39:33,840 --> 00:39:35,840
was in its death throes,
762
00:39:36,920 --> 00:39:40,160
Hitler's aim was to split the Allied force
763
00:39:40,240 --> 00:39:41,800
and halt its progress
764
00:39:41,880 --> 00:39:43,720
in a surprise counterattack
765
00:39:43,800 --> 00:39:45,880
where they would least expect it,
766
00:39:45,960 --> 00:39:49,400
a densely wooded area in the Ardennes,
767
00:39:49,480 --> 00:39:51,280
Northeastern France.
768
00:39:52,480 --> 00:39:53,560
Hitler says,
769
00:39:53,640 --> 00:39:56,120
you know, "I'm gonna commit
the last mobile reserve
770
00:39:56,200 --> 00:39:58,200
of the German Wehrmacht,"
771
00:39:58,280 --> 00:40:02,000
in this, like, harebrained effort to,
like, thrust between
772
00:40:02,080 --> 00:40:04,920
the British and American armies
through the Ardennes,
773
00:40:05,000 --> 00:40:07,480
drive on Antwerp in the winter snows,
774
00:40:07,560 --> 00:40:10,120
take the Allies' best port from them
775
00:40:10,200 --> 00:40:11,880
and make it impossible for them
776
00:40:11,960 --> 00:40:15,200
to supply their advance across Europe.
777
00:40:15,280 --> 00:40:16,880
Well, it's, like, crazy.
778
00:40:16,960 --> 00:40:19,120
He should have been welcoming the Allies,
779
00:40:19,200 --> 00:40:21,600
the Western Allies to advance into Germany
780
00:40:21,680 --> 00:40:24,040
and setting that mobile reserve
to hold up the Soviets
781
00:40:24,120 --> 00:40:27,040
who were gonna treat the Germans
a whole heck of a lot worse
782
00:40:27,120 --> 00:40:28,840
than the Western Allies were.
783
00:40:28,920 --> 00:40:31,400
[narrator] Lasting six brutal weeks
784
00:40:31,480 --> 00:40:33,120
in freezing conditions,
785
00:40:33,200 --> 00:40:35,200
the Germans pushed into a section
786
00:40:35,280 --> 00:40:37,280
of the Allied lines,
787
00:40:37,360 --> 00:40:39,880
creating the infamous Bulge
788
00:40:39,960 --> 00:40:42,680
after which the battle was named.
789
00:40:42,760 --> 00:40:46,720
But eventually, the Germans
became bottlenecked,
790
00:40:46,800 --> 00:40:49,160
and after a brilliant relieving march
791
00:40:49,240 --> 00:40:52,280
by General Patton's Third Army to Bastogne
792
00:40:52,360 --> 00:40:54,880
to reinforce American resistance,
793
00:40:54,960 --> 00:40:57,720
they were outnumbered and surrounded
794
00:40:57,800 --> 00:41:01,320
before the Bulge
could become an outright breach.
795
00:41:01,400 --> 00:41:04,400
Hitler's final gamble had failed.
796
00:41:05,480 --> 00:41:07,160
[Lloyd] Battle of the Bulge
797
00:41:07,240 --> 00:41:10,560
was too little, too late,
798
00:41:10,640 --> 00:41:13,440
but just like Operation Barbarossa,
799
00:41:13,520 --> 00:41:17,440
we see the initial surge
800
00:41:17,520 --> 00:41:21,120
begin to find itself
801
00:41:21,200 --> 00:41:24,680
stuck in enemy defenses
802
00:41:24,760 --> 00:41:26,880
in the terrain,
803
00:41:26,960 --> 00:41:28,720
problems with logistics.
804
00:41:28,800 --> 00:41:31,080
And that lack of momentum
805
00:41:31,160 --> 00:41:35,040
allows the Allies to understand
806
00:41:35,120 --> 00:41:37,800
that they could catch the Germans
807
00:41:37,880 --> 00:41:39,360
before the River Meuse,
808
00:41:39,440 --> 00:41:42,880
they could counterattack
using Patton's forces,
809
00:41:42,960 --> 00:41:45,720
and they could do it in a calm
810
00:41:45,800 --> 00:41:48,920
and considered way.
811
00:41:49,000 --> 00:41:50,840
They weren't going to be panicked.
812
00:41:50,920 --> 00:41:54,880
So the Battle the Bulge
was really the last-gasp effort
813
00:41:54,960 --> 00:41:57,720
of a desperate army.
814
00:41:57,800 --> 00:42:00,840
[narrator] Personal ambition
and amateur planning
815
00:42:00,920 --> 00:42:02,960
doomed the attack.
816
00:42:03,040 --> 00:42:04,560
The plan had hinged on capturing
817
00:42:04,640 --> 00:42:07,080
the Allied fuel depots.
818
00:42:07,160 --> 00:42:08,480
When that didn't happen,
819
00:42:08,560 --> 00:42:12,520
the German Panzers just ran out of fuel,
820
00:42:12,600 --> 00:42:14,200
a perfect illustration
821
00:42:14,280 --> 00:42:16,760
of the Nazi war effort.
822
00:42:16,840 --> 00:42:18,400
They displayed everything
823
00:42:18,480 --> 00:42:20,760
but basic common sense.
824
00:42:23,000 --> 00:42:24,960
Hitler's overall strategy
825
00:42:25,040 --> 00:42:27,360
was apocalyptic,
826
00:42:27,440 --> 00:42:31,160
the policy of limitless violence.
827
00:42:31,240 --> 00:42:33,840
His goals were extreme
828
00:42:33,920 --> 00:42:36,560
and often unachievable.
829
00:42:36,640 --> 00:42:38,160
They were rarely based
830
00:42:38,240 --> 00:42:41,040
on objective analysis.
831
00:42:41,120 --> 00:42:44,480
Ultimately, Hitler's warmongering
832
00:42:44,560 --> 00:42:47,160
was really just Nazi ideology
833
00:42:47,240 --> 00:42:50,480
dressed up as military strategy,
834
00:42:50,560 --> 00:42:53,080
all corrupted by fixations
835
00:42:53,160 --> 00:42:55,480
of racial purity,
836
00:42:55,560 --> 00:42:57,880
destruction of entire races,
837
00:42:57,960 --> 00:43:00,800
and unremitting brutality.
838
00:43:00,880 --> 00:43:04,040
[speaking German]
839
00:43:04,120 --> 00:43:07,000
[narrator in English]
Hitler was as inflexible
840
00:43:07,080 --> 00:43:09,280
as he was indecisive,
841
00:43:09,360 --> 00:43:12,120
incapable of rational thought
842
00:43:12,200 --> 00:43:13,680
or taking into account
843
00:43:13,760 --> 00:43:17,680
the dynamically changing
situations he faced.
844
00:43:17,760 --> 00:43:20,960
He was blind to geography,
available resources,
845
00:43:21,040 --> 00:43:24,120
and reasons for enemy resistance.
846
00:43:25,240 --> 00:43:29,000
The Third Reich's flawed
ideological approach
847
00:43:29,080 --> 00:43:31,880
led it to declare war on the Soviet Union
848
00:43:31,960 --> 00:43:35,080
and the United States at the same time,
849
00:43:35,160 --> 00:43:37,360
both with powerful industries,
850
00:43:37,440 --> 00:43:39,240
larger populations,
851
00:43:39,320 --> 00:43:41,520
and reasons to stick together
852
00:43:41,600 --> 00:43:43,600
in a common cause.
853
00:43:43,680 --> 00:43:46,720
[Dr. David] I think it's clear that
the Nazi personalities
854
00:43:46,800 --> 00:43:47,880
are delusional.
855
00:43:47,960 --> 00:43:50,520
But we also have to ask the question,
why is that the case?
856
00:43:50,600 --> 00:43:54,200
And I think it's partly because
their ultimate goal
857
00:43:54,280 --> 00:43:55,800
is self-aggrandizement.
858
00:43:55,880 --> 00:43:59,640
This has seemed to be a theme
through all of their decision-making.
859
00:43:59,720 --> 00:44:01,000
They're always out for themselves,
860
00:44:01,080 --> 00:44:03,000
they're not necessarily out
for the war effort,
861
00:44:03,080 --> 00:44:07,040
and they are always informing
their decisions on this basis.
862
00:44:07,120 --> 00:44:09,840
[narrator] Hitler's geopolitical gambits
863
00:44:09,920 --> 00:44:12,440
were fueled by a fatal cocktail
864
00:44:12,520 --> 00:44:15,040
of hubris, fanaticism,
865
00:44:15,120 --> 00:44:16,720
and paranoia.
866
00:44:16,800 --> 00:44:19,560
He saw ultimate German victory
867
00:44:19,640 --> 00:44:22,240
as a divine right,
868
00:44:22,320 --> 00:44:23,480
although deep down,
869
00:44:23,560 --> 00:44:27,280
he must have been increasingly
terrified and despondent
870
00:44:27,360 --> 00:44:29,920
with each catastrophic defeat.
871
00:44:30,000 --> 00:44:33,920
His much-vaunted strategies,
little more than a series
872
00:44:34,000 --> 00:44:36,920
of wild, opportunistic gambles,
873
00:44:37,000 --> 00:44:38,360
take him on the run.
874
00:44:38,440 --> 00:44:40,720
For nearly a decade,
875
00:44:40,800 --> 00:44:44,280
Hitler rolled the dice
right across Europe,
876
00:44:44,360 --> 00:44:45,800
and in the end,
877
00:44:45,880 --> 00:44:47,760
the house won.
878
00:44:50,200 --> 00:44:53,200
[ominous music playing]
67928
Can't find what you're looking for?
Get subtitles in any language from opensubtitles.com, and translate them here.