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  • At 7:50 a.m.. On the morning of August the 9th 1945

  • air-raid sirens began to ring out in the Japanese city of Nagasaki

  • However a short while later the sirens rang out again

  • Indicating that there was no danger and people began to climb out of their shelters to carry on about their daily business

  • Japanese spotters had only cited two us AAF b-29 bombers

  • Not enough for an air raid on a major city and presumed, they were merely on a reconnaissance mission.

  • At 1101 hours a single bomb was dropped into the city's industrial area

  • the bomb detonated with the equivalent force of 22,000 sticks of TNT

  • Which resulted in a blast so bright that was seen by observers over a hundred miles away.

  • the fireball generated temperatures in excess of three thousand nine hundred degrees centigrade and

  • Generated winds of up to six hundred miles per hour that added to the destruction

  • exact figures are unclear, but at least

  • 129 thousand people were either killed on the day, or would die in the weeks and even years that followed

  • six days after this attack

  • Japan surrendered to the Allies

  • Bringing to a close the most destructive conflict ever recorded

  • that ended with the first two and so far only nuclear attacks in history

  • It was the Second World War

  • It's impossible to disect the causes of the second world war

  • without discussing the rise of the Nazi Party in Germany and its leader, Adolf Hitler

  • Hitler was himself of Austrian birth, but he fought in the German army during the first world war

  • When the war ended with Germany's humiliation Hitler felt especially bitter about it

  • unlike many in Europe he feared communism spreading beyond the borders of

  • post-revolutionary Russia

  • In 1919 a year after the end of the war he joined a new and little-known political group

  • called the German Workers Party and used his great ability as a speaker to stir up crowds and gain support a

  • Year later the party was renamed the National Socialist, German Workers Party

  • more commonly known by its English abbreviation Nazi

  • In 1921 Hitler rose to become leader of the party and again using his magnetic personality he continued to garner more and more support

  • Until 1923 the Nazis were confident enough to attempt a coup in Munich and seize power

  • Known as the Beer Hall Putsch the effort failed and Hitler was arrested before being put on trial, but this only furthered the Nazi cause

  • Hitler used the trial to gain even more supporters and despite him spending a year in prison in which he wrote his autobiography Mein Kampf

  • The Nazis continued to establish themselves in German politics

  • Mein Kampf not only outlined his own story, but it also set about establishing his vision for the future of the German people and

  • how he believed subversive groups were holding them back from achieving their destiny through measures such as the Treaty of Versailles

  • Which outlined Germany's surrender terms

  • He specifically identified Jews and communists as being leaders of this great international

  • Conspiracy to keep the German people down after the war

  • Highlighting the harsh conditions imposed on the country by the victorious Allies

  • Such as the dissolution of Germany's Empire and armed forces

  • The loss of territory to newly created countries in the East and France in the West and having to pray crippling war reparations

  • the book effectively became the Nazi Bible

  • by

  • 1933 the Nazi Party had secured enough political support, but Hitler legally became Chancellor of Germany

  • He quickly began passing legislation that would transform Germany into Nazi Germany and the swastika would symbolize this

  • reinvigorated country

  • the prosecution of Jews Gypsies and political opponents soon became government policy as

  • Hitler began preparing Nazi Germany to attain what he saw as his destiny cantered around the concept of the Aryan race

  • With himself as the undisputed leader the Fuehrer

  • History records that the Second World War began in 1939

  • However some historians now argue that it began in 1931 with the Japanese invasion of Manchuria in China

  • The Japanese deliberately detonated a bomb by Chinese railway line used by Japanese

  • citizens in order to blame it on Chinese dissidents

  • This was then used as a pretext to invade the country and Japan would occupy the land there until liberated by the Allies in 1945

  • Japanese occupation of Chinese territory was extraordinarily harsh

  • Rape and murder were widespread and often encouraged by the Japanese leadership

  • While at Pingfang in northeast China a military research unit was set up with a special mission

  • designated unit 731

  • thousands of Chinese civilians were used in nightmarish medical experiments to develop biological and chemical weapons

  • As well as carry out experimental surgeries often without anesthesia for fear of corrupting the data

  • In 1922 Benito Mussolini and his national fascist party rose to power in Italy

  • Very soon he began reshaping the Democratic political landscape of the country, into a dictatorship counted around himself

  • Mussolini like Hitler in Germany

  • Believed his country had a destiny and wanted to build a new Roman Empire

  • beginning with a massive buildup of his armed forces

  • he was not afraid to use them and prove this when he sent his forces into Abyssinia modern-day Ethiopia in

  • 1935 to start the construction of his new empire in Africa

  • If Manchuria can be considered the first battle friend of World War two then Abyssinia was the second

  • As the 1930s grew on Hitler's Nazi Party became firmly embedded

  • Not just in German politics but into German society on a whole

  • The German people had much to thank the Nazi Party for since they had pulled the country after the disparate feat and reinvigorated it

  • Promising that Germany would soon be attaining its destiny of becoming a great power again

  • Hitler's appeal and influence was not lost on foreign observers

  • Many of whom admired him and even began to sympathize with the Treaty of Germany after the war

  • Proof of this was given when Hitler became Time Magazine's Man of the Year

  • This played perfectly into Hitler's hands as he began making notions of regaining lost territory in the east and west of the country

  • The first test of how the Allied powers of Britain and France would respond to his new Germany came in 1935

  • When Hitler introduced military conscription which saw the German armed forces swell many times beyond the number permitted by the Treaty of Versailles

  • But the Allies did nothing

  • Encouraged by this he then ordered his troops into the Rhineland in 1936

  • the Rhineland had been demilitarized in

  • 1925

  • In order to create a safety zone for France

  • Who along with Belgium had occupied it for a time due to Germany's inability to pay war reparations

  • Hitler had given secret orders to his men that should they encounter French military resistance

  • They were to retreat because Germany was still in no condition to fight a war

  • Despite protests by France had the Legion of Nations the precursor to modern-day UN again. They did nothing

  • In 1937 British Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin stood down and was succeeded by Neville Chamberlain

  • Meanwhile Germany continued to rearm and now set their sights on reclaiming the German state land

  • Which had been absorbed into Czechoslovakia after the war at

  • The same time Hitler looked to his own birth country of Austria to become a part of his new Germany

  • Although this was again forbidden by the Versailles Treaty

  • Austria and Germany had long had an almost symbiotic relationship and both countries people view the other as cousins

  • Austria even had its own Nazi Party and in January 1938

  • they attempted their own purge much like Hitler had tried in 1923 the

  • purge failed and many leading Austrian Nazis were imprisoned

  • Hitler's propaganda machine went to work creating a false impression that Austrians were rising up in support of their imprisoned Nazis and

  • so on March the 12th

  • 1938

  • German troops entered Austrian territory on the pretense of restoring order

  • Within weeks the Austrian government was gone, and the country was absorbed into Germany as the province of Ostmark

  • a vote on joining Germany claims that 99% of the population

  • Supported the move which was known as Anschluss

  • Having secured his home nation under greater Germany

  • Hitler declared himself as the advocate of all ethnic Germans in Europe and

  • primarily of those in sedate inland

  • making clear his intention to absorb the region into Germany a

  • Diplomatic crisis was sparked when just like in Austria a sedate inland Nazi Party rose armed and began demanding autonomy from

  • Czechoslovakia

  • the Czech government tried to negotiate with the sedating Germans while a series of meetings were held between Germany Britain and France to

  • reach an agreement on the crisis

  • Culminating in the Munich Agreement, which effectively gave a free hand to Germany's ambitions

  • No Czech, representative was present

  • First Hitler took the Sudetenland and then in January 1939

  • He invaded and captured the rest of Czechoslovakia in his first act of truly open aggression towards a neighbor

  • The conquest of Czechoslovakia raised concerns with the mighty Soviet Union which was in the grip of the paranoid Joseph Stalin

  • Hitler had written in Mein Kampf that having to fight a war on two fronts was one of the reasons the Kaiser's Germany was defeated

  • And so having already antagonized London and Paris

  • He was far more careful with Moscow and began a diplomatic effort with the Soviet Union to keep them out of events in the West

  • in

  • August 1939

  • German foreign minister Joachim von Ribbentrop met with his German counterpart

  • Vyacheslav Molotov in Moscow

  • Where the two of them effectively divided up Eastern Europe into two on

  • The promise that neither would interfere with the other in those areas

  • The Soviet Union had its own interests in Poland and Finland and so was happy to abide by this agreement

  • even though Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union were ideological enemies

  • Despite this period of cooperation many fouled that it wouldn't last

  • But with Russia at bay Hitler ordered his troops into Poland on September the 1st

  • 1939

  • The invasion of Poland was the final straw for Britain and France

  • there was no justification for the invasion other than to simply capture territory from a foreign land and

  • so Britain and France delivered an ultimatum to Hitler

  • Withdraw his troops, or there would be war

  • The demand was refused and on September the 3rd Neville Chamberlain told the British people they were at war with Germany

  • unless we heard from them by

  • 11 o'clock

  • That they were prepared at once to withdraw their troops from Poland a state of war

  • Would exist between us I?

  • Have to tell you now that no such undertaking has been received and that

  • Consequently this country is at war with Germany

  • Some of Germany's more cautious generals had warned Hitler that the country was not yet ready for a second massive European confrontation

  • Germany's rearmament plans predicted war with Britain and France breaking out in 1945

  • By which time they would have their own aircraft carrier large u-boat fleets and powerful tank forces

  • the generals therefore concocted their blitzkrieg style of war

  • Blitzkrieg meant lightning war and called for the widespread use of tanks and aircraft to break through enemy

  • Formations to capture a key strategic areas and divide enemy forces up to make them easy to destroy

  • Above all it was intended to achieve a quick victory rather than a drawn-out war of attrition which Germany could not afford it

  • Was first used in Poland and the Polish army proved totally inadequate for this new form of warfare in

  • Less than a month the Polish army was annihilated and the German army the viewmarq

  • Began consolidating their positions in western Poland as the Soviet Union invaded the east of the country on

  • September the 17th as von Ribbentrop had agreed to and was something that was all but ignored by Britain and France who?

  • concentrated on Germany

  • Poland ceased to exist as a free country on October the 6th 1939 and

  • Nazi Germany now shared a land border with the Communist Soviet Union

  • Britain and Frances declaration of war on Germany sends shockwaves across Europe that were felt politically but appear to do very little ounce

  • Belgium Holland and Norway joined a chorus of European voices declaring themselves neutral in the fighting

  • But in fact this seemed to be very little fighting at all in

  • Terms of helping defend Poland Britain and France could do very little and instead they prepared for when Hitler would charge West

  • This was the start of the phoney war a period with both sides seemed to be doing everything

  • They would normally do in a war except all-out warfare

  • the French mobilized their armed forces and sent them to the border while Britain created the British Expeditionary Force or

  • BEF to be sent to France to support them

  • Mirroring how the country went to war in 1914

  • at sea German u-boats and surface Raiders did sink unprotected merchant ships

  • While in the air British aircraft made attacks on German shipping or conducted leaflet drops over the Ruhr region

  • During one such leaflet dropping mission on September the 9th a formation of RAF Whitley bombers

  • Strayed into Belgian airspace and were attacked by Belgian Fighters

  • This forced one of them to land and they lost two aircrafts to British defensive fire

  • However in the South Atlantic a drama was about to unfold that would become a naval legend

  • The German pocket battleship Graf Spee was attacking British merchant ships capturing their cruise and then sinking them

  • The crews were then put on the Graf Spee support ship the Altmark for returning to Germany

  • three British cruisers met German ship in the battle and

  • Managed to inflict enough damage to force the German battleship to put into neutral, Montevideo

  • modern-day Uruguay for repairs

  • while there the British began flooding local media sources

  • That a huge British Armada was assembling to destroy the pocket battleship when it left port

  • The German captain learned of this and believing the situation was hopeless he scuttled his mighty warship

  • in reality there was no Armada, but the deception meant potentially thousands of sailors lives were saved a

  • Few weeks later British special forces raided the Altmark and rescued a number of captured merchant crews

  • Everyone knew the phony war couldn't last forever, and it would only be a matter of time before Hitler struck west of France

  • In the meantime Britain and France decided to embark on a campaign in Norway then a neutral country

  • but one that along with Sweden helped supply Germany with vital iron all the

  • eyes mined

  • Norwegian harbors from where German ships operated which provoked Hitler to send his forces in on April the 9th to secure them

  • The battle for Norway would last until June a 10th by which time France and Britain had long retreated

  • Leaving the country to its feint

  • The disaster in Norway forced Chamberlain to stand down as Prime Minister on May the 10th and

  • After Lord Halifax refused the post it was offered to Winston Churchill

  • Who as a First Lord of the Admiralty was still basking in the success of the Graf Spee operatiom

  • Churchill was something of a surprise having more friends than enemies in the establishment Bert was a popular figure amongst the people

  • He would eventually form a new government made up of members of the main political parties

  • But in doing so effectively suspended British democracy for the foreseeable future

  • He told the British people rather bluntly that he had nothing to offer them but blood toil tears and sweat

  • Across the channel the French had been preparing for another war against Germany for over a decade

  • By constructing the Maginot Line a series of turf fortifications along the border with Germany

  • It was designed and constructed in the belief that the war would be reminiscent of the static nature of World War one

  • But it was fundamentally flawed

  • It only went as far as north of the Belgian border and despite popular belief at the time

  • It was not a continuous fortification

  • Having several gaps where it was believed that nature obstacles such as forests and Hills would provide protection

  • It consumed huge amounts of men and resources

  • Leaving some to worry the French were putting all their eggs into one basket as far as defence was concerned

  • Hitler looked at the situation and immediately saw what had to be done

  • He was simply going to bypass it by going through Belgium, Holland

  • Like the Kaiser before him in 1914

  • He paid little interest Belgium's or anyone else's declaration of neutrality if it served his purpose on

  • May the 10th 1940 Germany struck west quickly over running Belgium Luxembourg and the Netherlands and

  • Turning inwards to the heart of France

  • All the Maginot Line had achieved was to swell the fighting in the neighboring countries and effectively hand even more of Europe to Hitler

  • The Germans flooded France making good use of their tanks and air forces despite being outnumbered on paper

  • Indeed Germans tank forces were in many ways

  • technologically inferior to the Allies in 1940 but the Germans had far superior tactics in

  • the end the British and French found themselves heavily outclassed by the vaunted German Messerschmitt Bf 109 fighter and

  • sustained heavy losses but

  • It would be another German plane that would gain notoriety during the Battle of France

  • The Ju 87 Stuka was a famed dive bomber, but could attacked Tanks and Bridges with extraordinary accuracy and potency

  • striking terror into ground units

  • Later the aircraft would be fitted with a siren ears wings that would create a terrifying howl when entered a dive

  • Making it as much as a psychological weapon as a bomber

  • To compound problems for the allies the quick German succession and the failure of the Maginot Line

  • To keep Hitler's forces at bay saw French morale in particular suffer terribly

  • Despite spirited resistance by the French army and the British Expeditionary Force a sense of defeatism quickly overwhelmed them

  • It soon became apparent that France would fall and

  • So in Britain plans began to be drawn up to evacuate the BEF back to the British mainland

  • So they could defend Britain from what now seemed like an inevitable invasion

  • dubbed Operation Dynamo a huge armada of fishing boats pleasure crafts and even row boats were assembled on the southeast coast of England

  • to make the trip across the channel to Dunkirk with the remnants of the BEF and

  • elements of the surviving French and Belgian armies were assembling in

  • This small pocket of French coastline the British and French troops at Dunkirk were surrounded by German troops and waited for either rescue

  • capture or death

  • Hitler wanted to send his troops to wipe them out once and for all but the head of the German Luftwaffe Hermann Goering

  • Convinced him that the air force which had so far proved almost unstoppable could smash them on the beaches with fewer losses to German forces

  • Goering hoped that by doing this he would gain favour with Hitler over some of his rivals within a Nazi High Command

  • The evacuation began on May the 27th

  • 1940 with the fleet of little boats bearing down on the beaches to take men out awaiting British warships the

  • German Luftwaffe launched a fierce aerial bombardment and inflicted painful losses on the British

  • However for the first time in war the superiority of the Luftwaffe was finally challenged

  • Since Dunkirk was in range of Fighters flying from Britain itself

  • The sea and sky thus became a brutal killing field until the evacuation ended nearly a week later on June the 4th

  • By which time a staggering three hundred and thirty-eight thousand men had been rescued

  • The evacuation was seen as a victory for Britain, but those in the offices of power knew the truth

  • The defeat in France had not only cost the relatively small British Army sixty-eight thousand men

  • But it had lost huge amounts of equipment such as artillery tanks and other assorted vehicles. That would be vital in repelling a German invasion

  • Churchill warned against the optimistic mood after Dunkirk noting that Wars were not won by evacuations in

  • The wake of the success of the evacuation a tragedy would occur that has been largely glossed over by history

  • When the British ocean liner the RMS Lancastrian attempted to escape the French port of San Nazaire

  • The liner was taking part in operation Arial, which aimed to evacuate British nationals from France

  • When a 10 Minister for on June the 17th it was bombed by German aircraft

  • Exact numbers of how many men women and children were on board is unknown because in the chaos of the evacuation

  • People were crammed into every available space

  • But it's estimated that between 3 and 6 thousand people were killed making it the worst maritime disaster in British history

  • To put this into perspective the most conservative estimates put the death toll as being twice that of the Titanic the

  • disaster was quickly covered up for fear of damaging national morale On

  • June the 10th 1940 Mussolini waded in on the side of Nazi Germany declaring war on Britain and France

  • although Italian forces would play only a token part in the fight for France On June 25th 1940

  • After just 46 days of fighting Hitler's troops achieved. What the Kaiser had failed to do in four years by defeating and occupying France

  • France was not wholly occupied by Germany, but instead the country was split in two

  • With Germany occupying the northern half and the South being ruled by the Vichy French government who were essentially German puppets

  • the French surrender also gave Churchill concerns that France's fleet would be absorbed into Germans Navy and

  • Used to try and blockade Britain in one of the most controversial acts during the war on July the 3rd

  • He ordered the Royal Navy to demand the French warships atmail Kerber in french algeria to surrender to them

  • And when they refused the Royal Navy bombarded them with shall fire killing

  • 1297 French soldiers and sinking or damaging 8 ships

  • With France dully suppressed Hitler was now concerned with what to do with Britain

  • It wasn't in his favor to destroy them as he believed that would only hand her Empire to the Americans who were becoming increasingly

  • Hostile to him after Poland

  • Believing Britain was spent after the fall of France he sued for peace

  • But Churchill refused even though. He knew Britain's chances of repelling a full German invasion was slim at best

  • Hitler therefore ordered his generals to draw up plans for operation sea lion the invasion of Britain

  • At the same time Germany along with Mussolini's Italy met with representatives of Japan to begin negotiations

  • For an alliance that was meant to counter the United States

  • this ultimately culminated in the tripod pact signed on September the 27th 1940 and

  • Saw the birth of WOD history now remembers as the Axis forces

  • Unlike Germany's previous military endeavours the invasion of Britain had a serious obstacle in the way namely the English Channel

  • Hitler's military leadership agreed that it would only be possible to cross the channel in the summer

  • Since the weather during the autumn and winter months would be too poor to cross safely

  • First however you would have to destroy Britain's air force

  • Otherwise his troops would be sitting ducks to British aircraft as they sat in their invasion barges during the crossings

  • As Germany made their invasion preparations Churchill readied the country to do what to be done to defend themselves

  • Declassified documents

  • Show just how far he was prepared to go to repeal Hitler's forces should they land in Britain

  • He ordered that British forces would use chemical and even biological weapons at any German landing zone in Britain

  • Frequently saying that is our country and we can do what we want to defend it on

  • July the 10th 1940 the German Luftwaffe began their offensive to destroy the RAF

  • It was the start of the Battle of Britain and German confidence was still high after their swift defeat of Poland and Western Europe

  • However unlike much of the fighting in Europe the Luftwaffe now had to be content with a well-organized and highly integrated air defense Network

  • Centered around the re s fighting command led by Sir Hugh Dowding

  • They were equipped with two of the best fighter aircraft in the world at the time

  • Namely the Hawker hurricane and the more advanced Supermarine Spitfire

  • Fighter commands ranks also swelled with an influx of British Commonwealth French Dutch polish and even American pilots

  • volunteering to fight with them

  • Many of whom already had combat experience during the battles for their own countries

  • Over the coming weeks the RAF would rise to face the overwhelming German aircraft

  • But they were suffering for it as the Luftwaffe blasted their airfields in an effort to destroy their support infrastructure

  • on August 13 to 1940 so many German aircraft attacked Britain

  • But Churchill was warned that the invasion was finally under way

  • but despite a great deal of damage being done the RAF was still holding out against the Germans who were joined by the

  • contingents of Italian aircraft

  • By September Fighter Command was at its weakest point in terms of men and machines

  • But then British fighter production ramped up to the point where it outstripped Lawson's a newly trained pilots began to join the fight

  • However the damage to the airfields was proving more problematic

  • Hitler on the other hand was unaware that the RAF was once again growing in strength and

  • Was taught by Goering that it was barely able to put any aircraft into the air

  • after British bombers hit targets in Berlin in response to an accidental bombing by German aircrafts of London

  • Hitler decided to order his bombers to turn their attention away from the airfields in order to devastate London and other British cities

  • His belief was that British morale would be so shaken by these terror attacks, that the country would collapse

  • Forcing Churchill to surrender thus making an armed invasion

  • unnecessary

  • It was a colossal mistake

  • Fighter Command effectively rebuilt and reorganized itself and by the time Hitler realized his mistake the summer was coming to an end

  • The weather was worsening RAF Fighter Command was still a potent threat

  • And the country's defenses had been built up to where it was no longer practical to invade

  • While the Germans had successfully captured the British Channel Islands Britain herself was spared

  • Just as it had been in the first world war

  • The outbreak of war in Europe again saw the fighting spill over into the territories

  • But European imperial powers held control of elsewhere around the world

  • Britain and France held territory across Africa, which Italy's Mussolini eyed jealously and

  • When Italy declared war on Britain and France in support of Germany it

  • Gave him the opportunity to invade those territories from Italian possessions

  • Such as Ethiopia Somaliland and most significantly Libya which bordered British Egypt

  • Egypt was vital to British interests because of the Suez Canal

  • Which linked Britain to its Far East possessions such as Hong Kong and India as well as the oil-rich Middle?

  • East which both sides desperately needed access to on

  • September 13th

  • 1948 a lien forces launched an invasion in Egypt

  • with Britain herself still preparing for an invasion it was left to the small contingent of British and Commonwealth troops stationed there to

  • Defend the large border against the numerically superior Italians

  • At first the Italians made good progress eventually capturing the important airfield at Sidi Bharani

  • However when Hitler forced to cancel the invasion of Britain fresh troops and equipment

  • Began to be mobilized for North Africa under the command of Lieutenant General Sir Richard, O'Connor

  • firstly however

  • They would have to make the Paradis sea voyage down the North Atlantic and into the Mediterranean

  • Where the Italian fleet was still the dominant air force after Frances surrender

  • Heavily outnumbered the British concocted a daring plan to attack the Italian fleet while it was still moored in Port Toronto

  • Using obsolete Fairey swordfish biplane bombers on the night of November the 11th

  • 1940 the force of swordfish bombers took off from HMS Illustrious and caught the Italians completely by surprise

  • the attack inflicted severe damage on a large number of the Italians capital ships

  • taking them out of the war for several months in order to be repaired and

  • their severely hampering Italy's efforts to disrupt supplies to North Africa

  • Unfortunately the British still had to contend with air and submarine attacks

  • the task of expelling Italian forces from Egypt seemed immense in the late 1914 and

  • Yet, the newly arrived British forces managed to achieve just that

  • the British retook Sidi Bahrani and by January the 3rd 1941 were already pushing forward into Libya in

  • Two months a British force comprising of just two whole divisions had advanced 500 miles

  • destroyed 10 Italian divisions and taken

  • 130,000 prisoners as well as capturing over a thousand tanks and artillery pieces

  • Operating from Italy the German Luftwaffe began supporting the Italian operations from the air

  • But things on the ground continue to go badly for the Italians with British forces

  • capturing the strategic port of Tobruk on January the 22nd

  • Confident of Italian defeat Churchill began his plans for helping to defend Greece and the Balkans from a joint German and Italian invasion

  • However Germany decided to send two of its own divisions to help shore up Italian forces in North Africa

  • Which would form the nucleus of its Africa core under the command of Aaron Rommel

  • Rommel was a gifted leader and tactician who understood tank warfare better than most generals in 1941

  • The plans of North Africa were ideal for tank combat and Rommel"s influence was almost immediately felt

  • He attacked El Agheila on March 24, and then pushed east across Libya back towards Egypt

  • However, he failed to retake Tobruk and instead laid siege to British garrison there, which held out for a staggering 240 days

  • Providing a severe thorn in the side of the Axis forces and tying up resources

  • on

  • April the 14th British and Commonwealth forces had been pushed back to the border and had even captured General Connor and his replacement

  • General Neem

  • but Rommels forces were struggling with the logistic problems, which Hitler feared the British could take advantage of

  • Fuel was such a concern for the Germans that they began efforts to steal it from the British

  • Which resulted in British troops referring to their fuel cans as jerrycans

  • By May Rommel was forced to halt his advance at hellfire pass in egypt while he resupplied his forces under

  • General Wavell the british did indeed counterattack in June hoping to cut off Rommel's supplies and force him to surrender

  • but Rommel outmaneuvered him and the attack failed as

  • the year went on the British became obsessed with killing Rommel had earned the nickname desert fox and

  • Even send a commando raid to assassinate him which ultimately failed

  • For the next few months the battle lines fluctuated

  • But Rommel's logistical problems continued to hold him back and worsened when Hitler began to focus more on other fronts

  • With Hitler being forced to call off operation Sea Lion in 1940

  • The Germans recognized that their window to invade Britain had closed, and it would now be impractical to attempt another invasion

  • Britain was becoming fortress Britain and so Hitler turned to a medieval method of warfare the siege

  • Hitler knew that Britain relied extremely heavily on war supplies material and even food coming from her empire and North America

  • Therefore he turned to his navy the creeks marina and tasked them to cut off this vital supply

  • The Royal Navy was still the most powerful surface fleet in the world in

  • 1940 and while Germany had advanced warships like the Tirpitz and Bismarck

  • They couldn't hope to meet the Royal Navy in a pitched battle like the Kaiser's fleet had in World War one

  • without being overwhelmed by British numbers

  • Therefore the German Navy used their new boat to besiege Britain the kaisers u-boats had proved how vulnerable

  • Britain was to such a weapon, but it seems Britain had learned very little from this during the interwar years

  • Tactics to combat the u-boats had changed very little and new technologies such as ASDIC an early form of sonar

  • Had yet to take prevalence in the fleet meaning the main method to detect a u-boat was to spot it on the surface

  • Recharging its batteries or when using its periscope

  • Aircraft was seen as ideal platforms for this, but RAF Coastal Command had aircraft inadequate for the job at the start of the war

  • Lacking range and weaponry, but also having to rely solely on the air crews eyes for detection

  • meanwhile the Royal Navy began organizing merchant ships into convoys in order to provide them protection and

  • Also began taking on trawlers from Britain's fishing fleets and arming them to hunt u-boats

  • Nevertheless the u-boats began to inflict painful losses on Britain while efforts to destroy them at sea met with mixed success

  • as did RAF Bomber commands efforts to bomb the u-boats yards in France and Norway

  • Churchill would later admit that the u-boats were the only thing that truly scared him during the war

  • However the u-boats needed help in locating the convoys and so the Luftwaffe used long-range Condor patrol aircraft

  • to organize the u-boat attacks

  • Realizing this Britain began looking of ways of destroying these aircraft

  • they weren't enough aircraft carriers in the Royal Navy during the early years to protect every convoy and

  • So they came up with a novel solution

  • catapult merchantman or cam ships

  • These were merchant ships equipped with a catapult to launch a single Hawker hurricane or ferry form a fighter

  • To attack the Condors when they were sighted it was a one-way mission there being no way to recover the aircraft

  • Which had to ditch alongside the convoy with the pilot hoping to be picked up by a passing ship

  • Which made it one of the most dangerous jobs in the war

  • The urgency to combat the new bones saw the rapid development of technology particularly in the field of radar

  • The u-boats had to ride on the surface to charge their batteries that powered them

  • And this was often carried out under the safety of night

  • However radar had been used to combat night bomber raids and was now being trialed against u-boats on

  • December the 22nd 1941 a u-boat was sunk by a Royal Navy plane on the surface under the cover of darkness

  • From that point on you boats could be attacked anytime anywhere

  • The situation was made worse for the u-boats by the addition of new

  • longer-ranged aircraft equipment with radar which left fewer and fewer places for them to hide

  • At the same time Mussolini's Italy opened the North African campaign

  • His troops also opened up another front this time against Greece

  • Mussolini felt he was playing second fiddle to Hitler in Europe and wanted to establish himself as an equal

  • He viewed Greece as an easy target and began putting pressure on the country's own facet like dictator

  • Ioannis Metaxas on August 15th 1940 an Italian submarine sank the Greek warship Elli

  • Italian troops finally attacked on October the 28th 1914 but like in North Africa they were beaten back despite the odds

  • seemingly being in their favor

  • the Italian attack pushed Greece closer to Britain who had desperate for allies after the fall of Western Europe

  • This in turn made Hitler take an interest in Greece

  • And he had his General Staff start drawing up plans for his own troops to once again come to the aid of the Italians

  • The problem was that Germany had no land border with Greece it being blocked by Yugoslavia and Bulgaria

  • Hitler demanded cooperation from both nations to allow his forces to pass through

  • Bulgaria greed and so too Did Yugoslavia both of whom joined the Axis forces

  • But public opinion in the latter was strongly anti German leading to a coup against the government and the rejection of any alliance

  • outraged Hitler ordered that when his troops invaded Greece from Bulgaria on April the 6th 1941

  • But they were to concurrently invade Yugoslavia

  • despite stiff resistance

  • Yugoslavia was overrun in just over a week and a half

  • Two weeks later the Greek surrendered having been overwhelmed by the combined might of the German and Italians

  • British assistance could do little to repel the invaders and along with the Greek forces. They retreated to the island of Crete

  • consolidating his position on the Greek mainland

  • Hitler ordered the invasion of Crete to begin on May the 20th and was opened with a massive attack by German paratroopers

  • after nearly two weeks of fierce fighting the island fell

  • But while British and observers in Washington were impressed with the effectiveness of a paratrooper invasion launched against them

  • Hitler was appalled at the cost of his forces and never again ordered a large-scale airborne invasion

  • Nazi Germany's army seemed unstoppable by mid 1941 and no-one became more convinced of this than Hitler himself

  • Who after defeating the British on mainland Europe in France and Greece and while Rommel continued pushing them back in North Africa

  • Decided that it was time to achieve his ultimate goal

  • the destruction of the Soviet Union

  • Hitler view the Soviet Union as a way of not only eradicating communism

  • But of feeding his thousand-year Reich by providing vast areas of agricultural land and vital resources such as oil and metals

  • However, Germany's generals warned thehrer against invading the Soviet Union unless Moscow attacked first

  • Britain herself remained unconquered and worse still was now sending fleets of oh bombers into Europe to attack German industry

  • Also, the job of defending British and British Commonwealth forces in Africa

  • Required the resources Hitler wanted to commit to fighting the Soviet Union they believed

  • It was better to send those forces to destroy British resistance in Africa and then seize British possessions in the Middle East

  • Which would afford them oil which would starve Britain offer supplies, and eventually helped force London to surrender

  • But Hitler was impatient

  • He argued that the German people would not be as supportive for a war on Russia after a few more years of fighting

  • also, he believed the Soviet Army was incompetent after his poor showing against Finland in the winter war of 1939 if

  • He waited then the Soviet leadership might learn from their mistakes and become a more credible threat

  • Hitler would say we only have to kick in the front door and the whole rotten Russian air defense will come tumbling down

  • He defied his generals and gave the order to attack the Soviet Union

  • dubbed Operation Barbarossa

  • Germany committed a huge force of troops that included Romanian Finnish and Hungarian units who were by now signed up members of the Axis forces

  • The attack was launched from occupy polish territory at 0:00 300 hours on Sunday the 22nd of June

  • 1941 and

  • involved a staggering 3.8 million personnel launched across a 2,900 kilometre front

  • The German forces were arranged in three key army groups north center and south

  • The Soviet Army had warnings that the Germans were massing for an invasion

  • But Stalin refused to believe it in the days after the invasion Stalin retreated into his own mind

  • He being unable to comprehend. Just what was happening which left his government

  • That was terrified to act against him following his brutal purges unsure what to do

  • The Soviet army sustained incredible losses in the early years of the war while the Soviet Air Force was largely smashed on the ground

  • The aircraft that did get airborne who often obsolete types or their pilots poorly trained

  • making them easy targets for skilled and experienced German fighter pilots

  • The Soviets also had to contend with anti-communist forces conducting sabotage and intelligence-gathering operations from the Germans

  • the fighting in the east was particularly brutal

  • Hitler had told his forces that a war against the Soviet Union could not be fought along civilised lines and

  • As such he promised no German would ever be held accountable for his conduct against the enemy in

  • A sense they were given a free hand to rape plunder and murder

  • When Soviet units were overwhelmed many of them surrendered as their command structure collapsed and these soldiers were led into captivity

  • Where there was an actual plan in place to starve them to death

  • behind the German troops advanced German death squads began murdering so-called undesirables such as Jews

  • The speed of the German advance took everyone by surprise including the Germans themselves

  • The vast areas of land Germany's forces took proved a logistical nightmare and on several occasions

  • They lost the initiative as they waited for supplies of food fuel and re armaments to catch up with them

  • the Germans advanced across eastern Poland Belarus Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania Ukraine and into Russia itself

  • proving almost unstoppable

  • But everyone knew that the biggest obstacle the Germans would have to face was rapidly approaching the Russian winter

  • By December 1941 the snow was setting in but German troops were on the verge of taking Moscow itself

  • However, they failed to take the embattled city and their advanced ground to a halt

  • The soviet union's leadership meanwhile had relocated their major weapons production

  • Facilities further east out at the range of German bombers which allowed them to build tanks and aircraft unmolested

  • They were also getting supplies from Britain. Thanks to the efforts of the men on the perilous Arctic convoys

  • The German army leadership knew the truth even if Hitler remained convinced of Germany's superiority

  • They had lost their window of opportunity to destroy the Soviet Union quickly

  • Now the Soviets were engaged committed and far more prepared for the coming war of attrition than Germany was in

  • Mein Kampf Hitler had outlined that Germany could not fight a prolonged war on two fronts

  • Yet at the end of 1941 he was effectively committed to three fronts

  • Britain in the West British Commonwealth forces in North Africa and now the Soviet Union in the East and

  • while the snow fell on German soldiers in Russia ill-equipped for winter warfare they whirled away in the tropical climate of Hawaii a

  • Fleet of Japanese ships were closing in on the American naval base at Pearl Harbor

At 7:50 a.m.. On the morning of August the 9th 1945

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