French and Russian Nazis Defend the Reich - ϟϟ Foreign Fighters Part 3

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  • čas přidán 18. 04. 2024
  • As the war turns ever more against Germany, Reichsführer-SS Heinrich Himmler keeps loosening the racial standards of his Waffen SS. More and more non-Germans fill the ranks of his forces. Some of these non-German fighters will be among the last defenders of the Third Reich.
    Click here for parts one and two: • ϟϟ Foreign Fighters
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    A TimeGhost chronological documentary produced by OnLion Entertainment GmbH.

Komentáře • 820

  • @WorldWarTwo
    @WorldWarTwo  Před 12 dny +81

    We talked some more about Himmler’s racial theories and general fusion of paganism, German nationalism, and the occult in a an earlier video czcams.com/video/_JNGuCwHiBs/video.html.

    • @nickmacarius3012
      @nickmacarius3012 Před 12 dny +5

      Thank you for all of this wonderful content, Spartacus! 😁👍

    • @spartacus-olsson
      @spartacus-olsson Před 12 dny +5

      @@nickmacarius3012 Thank you for watching

    • @nickdanger3802
      @nickdanger3802 Před 12 dny

      As I understand it Soviets who died in German service were counted as both enemy killed and Soviet losses, is that correct ?

    • @ciprianflorin2615
      @ciprianflorin2615 Před 12 dny

      A power that invades,occupies, exploited, their own contries you mean Soviet Union, The British Empire. The French Dutch colonial empyres ???

    • @spartacus-olsson
      @spartacus-olsson Před 12 dny +3

      @@nickdanger3802 the official Soviet casualty figures included all kinds of nonsense and double counting, that was one of them.

  • @ternel
    @ternel Před 12 dny +581

    The foreign fighters became some of the most fanatical of the fighters, especially late in the war when it became apparent that they had nothing left to lose.

    • @GSXK4
      @GSXK4 Před 12 dny +91

      It's not like you're ever going back home again

    • @yobama9880
      @yobama9880 Před 12 dny +49

      Yeah, they probably thought they would be severally punished if Germany lost the war. But except those who found themselves in Russian captivity, most actually got away without heavy punishment after the war

    • @rickglorie
      @rickglorie Před 12 dny +33

      @@yobama9880 it was a social mark, outside of Germany or Spain non ever rose to prominense again. Even a shadow of a doubt of collaboration was a social death sentence.

    • @Talyrion
      @Talyrion Před 12 dny +69

      @@yobama9880 There's at least one case of members of the Légion Charlemagne that got captured by Americans, given to the French, and shot dead the next day.

    • @caryblack5985
      @caryblack5985 Před 12 dny +15

      I believe that in the Netherlands some were imprisoned and some chose not to return to the Netherlands because of penalties they might have faced.

  • @Jargolf86
    @Jargolf86 Před 12 dny +327

    Kaminski... imagine beeing so brutal and evil that even the SS is disgusted and fed up with you.

    • @cpj93070
      @cpj93070 Před 12 dny

      Oskar Dirlewanger and his Brigade were if you can believe it even worse, some of the, no exaggeration, evil and sadistic scum in human history, just reading on some of there crimes will make you sick.

    • @reallyidrathernot.134
      @reallyidrathernot.134 Před 12 dny +15

      You're giving Nazis way, way too much credit here. This wasn't the outcome of some rational calculation, this was just their clownshow business as usual.

    • @Jargolf86
      @Jargolf86 Před 12 dny +18

      @@reallyidrathernot.134 I dont give any Credit for Murderers, nor for Trolls like you.

    • @heno02
      @heno02 Před 11 dny +11

      The Norwegian nazi goons that co-signed with Quisling and his ilk where many was tasked with guarding POW slave labor camps in Norway (mostly POW's from the balkans) where so brutal and sadistic, that the SS had to confiscate their weapons (even their knives) or the Germans would have been out of slave labor in the northern Norwegian tundra to build railways and roads.
      After the war, one of those surviving Yugoslavian POW's where hired as the prosecutor for the war crimes tribunal in Norway.

    • @literallypochiyama
      @literallypochiyama Před 11 dny +2

      Kaminski was viewed more as a bandit than an a actually ally for his attitude after Lokot Republic, Himmler was finding more and more useless the POHA/Russian SS. If you look at Kaminski's Lokot, there are few traces of actual "nazi ideology implementation" (they still were judeophobic ofc) and more a generic anti-communist regime, supported mainly by Rosenberg while Himmler hardly was recognizing the Russian People's Liberation Army as a foreign SS division (even if they were doing the same job as the others: cleaning certain areas from partisan activity). Honestly, actual russian nazis who fought together with the germans were people like Mikhail Oktan, with his regime in Oryol which was antagonistic to Kaminski's territory

  • @IanBerg
    @IanBerg Před 12 dny +331

    In Canada we were reminded in 2023 of this history when Parliament invited and gave a standing ovation to a Ukrainian WWII veteran for fighting the Russian invaders of his homeland. It was during President Zelensky’s visit. Everyone involved was embarrassed when it soon turned out Yaroslav Hunka had been fighting the Russians as a member of a Galician (Ukrainian) Waffen-SS division.

    • @solarisengineering15
      @solarisengineering15 Před 12 dny +1

      Fucking idiots, every one of them who invited a Nazi into parliament. It was just free propaganda points for the Russians who constantly bitch about “Ukronazis” while committing atrocities against the Ukrainian people left and right.

    • @MisterOcclusion
      @MisterOcclusion Před 12 dny

      That was a shame and a disgrace, and about what I'd expect from that moron Trudeau and his lackeys

    • @davidw.2791
      @davidw.2791 Před 12 dny +13

      I need to look up details, but while the Baltic Three were absolutely dragooned/annexed into being SSRs, and the likes of Azerbaijan was invaded at least a little and had pro-socialist coups that then make them part of the USSR, i *think* Ukraine had at least much support of Going Red as Russia did. But I could be wrong.

    • @davidw.2791
      @davidw.2791 Před 12 dny

      But yes, what a fucking farce. So many people pointed out online, that as unpopular as Stalin’s shitty Ukrainian policies were, there were NO actual Ukrainian uprisings until the Nazis came in; just the YEAR on the guy’s records should have raised red flags.

    • @jeramysamarawickrama7633
      @jeramysamarawickrama7633 Před 12 dny +30

      So what ? Just because hes SS dosent mean he personaly commited crimes. Foriegners were only allowed into the SS so that was the only way to fight russians

  • @Lonovavir
    @Lonovavir Před 12 dny +252

    At least they showed up for the series finale, unlike Steiner and Wenck.

    • @petergray2712
      @petergray2712 Před 12 dny +42

      Steiner was one of the most capable SS officers in existence. But the German Army was so low on manpower that he was relegated to a rear echelon command in February 1945 in the Hartz Mountains because there were no men left for him to command. When Hitler ordered him to take command of a Kampfgruppe he would personally gather from stragglers to lead his counterattack, the only men he could find was a rear echelon battalion of the 4th Panzergrenadier Division that possessed exactly zero weapons for combat. Thus, Steiner's counterattack ended in a farce of "much too little, much too late."
      Edit: Corrected the Panzergrenadier Division.

    • @wildbikerbill6530
      @wildbikerbill6530 Před 12 dny +7

      For them, there was no going home. And the Germans weren't telling them about getting out to South America.

    • @vh1775
      @vh1775 Před 11 dny +3

      Where is Wenck!!!!!!!

    • @deleted_215
      @deleted_215 Před 11 dny +3

      honestly, we gotta give Steiner some credit for not attacking tbh. He knew damn well his forces couldn't win atp and didnt send them to their meaningless slaughter

    • @vh1775
      @vh1775 Před 11 dny +3

      @@deleted_215 agreed. It shows they at least had some shred of humanity.

  • @ONI_002
    @ONI_002 Před 12 dny +36

    ill never forget the picture of the charlemagne remnants defending the government district. i saw it a few years ago with a caption that had the division name, i had never heard of the french ss before, so i looked it up and slowly realised how fanatical the foreign ss really was and how ironic that last stand ended up being. great video as always and an amazing closing speech to such an overlooked topic

    • @stevekaczynski3793
      @stevekaczynski3793 Před 12 dny +8

      How fanatical some of them were. As a general rule foreign Waffen-SS recruited from Western Europe fought better than the Easterners, though the Latvians and Estonians in the Waffen-SS were often considered impressive. Even so, the vast bulk of the French SS had either become casualties earlier or had deserted, and it was only a tiny remnant that made it to Berlin. Moreover, they were free of the impulse to try to escape westwards that gripped a lot of Germans. Going west for them meant being arrested for collaboration and possible lynching. That some ended up fighting in Berlin is not so surprising.

    • @stevekaczynski3793
      @stevekaczynski3793 Před 9 dny +3

      I read a French graphic novel, possibly one of a series, about the last weeks of the Charlemagne "division" (closer to a company in size, when it got to Berlin). While it did not exactly heroize them, even describing them would have been a taboo subject decades ago.

    • @Jeff-ub4lr
      @Jeff-ub4lr Před 2 dny

      ​@@stevekaczynski3793 French books about Charlemagne division and the last days of it in Berlin were published long time ago, back in the sixties and seventies.

  • @cammobunker
    @cammobunker Před 9 dny +10

    'Never Forget"...that the vast majority of the Latvian and Estonian Waffen SS units were conscripts who were offered the choice of being forced laborers or soldiers fighting the Soviets. Having recently been occupied by the Soviets in 1939 and being severely mistreated by them, many having had family members deported never to be seen again, there was absolutely no love for the Soviets among these men and many eagerly volunteered for the armed services, and they had no idea they were joining the SS until they actually got to the training camps. The Nuremberg Tribunal even recognized this and declared them exempt from the blanket declaration of the SS being a Nazi organization and not valid POWs. Former Estonian SS soldiers even stood guard at Spandau prison. And yes, many of the Belgian, French and especially the Dutch SS fought to the bitter end.

    • @evryatis9231
      @evryatis9231 Před 5 dny +2

      boo-oh.
      its clear as hell, particularily looking at baltic rhetoric now, that they took up arms in support of hitler's ideals of exterminating the slavic population, that they were so gracely exempted out of.
      if you hate bolcheviks you fight them as partisans, as said above
      you don't need to join the SS. you have other ways.

  • @cassandrayorke583
    @cassandrayorke583 Před 12 dny +42

    Sometimes I wonder how much Himmler believed his own bullshit.
    Sparty, you're a force of nature. You bring a dignity and hypnotic intensity to these horrible topics. You're a joy to watch, even with the darkest subject matter. ❤

    • @EdMcF1
      @EdMcF1 Před 10 dny +4

      How could he have believed in his own theories if he looked in a mirror?

    • @dogukan127
      @dogukan127 Před 9 dny

      I think some of these prominent Nazis were mentally ill or were under a cultist mindset. Himmler was one of those on the psychotic end imo

    • @stevekaczynski3793
      @stevekaczynski3793 Před 9 dny +1

      He was trying to seek contact with the Western Allies as early as 1943, though he may have been trying to make separate deals with them so as to be allowed to continue fighting the USSR. He definitely had his "pragmatic" side.

  • @randomchannel-px6ho
    @randomchannel-px6ho Před 12 dny +14

    It's kind of hard to believe this series is fast approaching an end. Thank you so much

    • @WorldWarTwo
      @WorldWarTwo  Před 12 dny +14

      We've still got a lot to cover, but we are definitely approaching the end now....
      Thanks for watching.

  • @skiteufr
    @skiteufr Před 6 dny +4

    There have been a few TV interviews here in France of some former French SS of the Charlemagne. The common pattern is that none of them expressed regrets. They never thought, even after many years, to have betrayed.
    I remember watching a documentary with Christian de la Maziere, who was captured by the soviets after being wounded. The journalist, at the end of the interview, asked him "do you have any regret now ?", hoping to hear a sorry or some remorse. He said "Yes, I do have one. To not have joined the Charlemagne earlier" 😅

  • @fredyellowsnow7492
    @fredyellowsnow7492 Před 12 dny +65

    I swear, by the end of this series, Spartacus's head will explode on his final 'Never Forget'.

    • @TukozAki
      @TukozAki Před 11 dny +6

      Let's hope not. This is *history telling at its finest* by Sparty and the @WorldWarTwo team.
      With such episodes, that one who "forgets" misses either their ears, eyes, or something in between (Hello Canada's government btw).

  • @zaxxxppe
    @zaxxxppe Před 8 dny +3

    The Handschar part needs some revising.
    1) The war crimes committed by the Division are generally low and not in comparison to anything happening in the Balkans at the time; the Division was quite literally preoccupied with constant anti-partisan warfare
    2) The desertions, besides the reasons you mentioned, also largely occur due to the fact that the Germans insisted on collaborating with the Serbian Chetniks, the formation which was the very motivation to join the Waffen-SS for the Bosniaks, believing they would be in combat against them
    3) The Division did not really become a Kampfgruppe with "little Bosniaks". The numbers dwindled, sure, although you fail to mention the 23rd Waffen-SS Division "Kama", also a Bosniak formation. It never saw deployment and its couple of thousand soldiers eventually went to the Handschar.

  • @remenir97
    @remenir97 Před 12 dny +112

    What about Leon Degrelle? The Rexist collaborator who was dubbed ‘Hitler’s son’ who managed to escape to Spain.

    • @minirock000
      @minirock000 Před 12 dny +3

      Oh do tell. Is that what this episode was about or was it about TCN's defending the Reich?

    • @differentboy9697
      @differentboy9697 Před 12 dny +2

      And who never had any regrets for his collaboration. In fact he was close to neo-nazi groups and holocaust denialism. One of the scum of the earth who, sadly, thanks to the protection of Franco, died peacefully.

    • @connorm4145
      @connorm4145 Před 12 dny +13

      The man behind the worst talk I’ve ever witnessed, sent to me by a former friend who was convinced I had the SS “all wrong”

    • @spartacus-olsson
      @spartacus-olsson Před 12 dny +65

      I've covered Degrelle somewhat in the regular episodes. The recruitment of the Wallonian SS was covered in part one of the foreign fighters videos. His escape might be covered in my episodes this summer... who knows.

    • @LosRikos
      @LosRikos Před 12 dny +4

      That'd be awesome. ​@@spartacus-olsson
      Love your content and the WAH series. No other channel goes into detail like you and Indy and the girls

  • @danielnavarro537
    @danielnavarro537 Před 12 dny +114

    Interesting to note is during the Battle of Berlin, Hitler was deeply disappointed with the defenders of the Reichstag and the parliamentary building. He wanted German SS units to defend but upon hearing French and foreign SS units, he was disgusted by this. He wanted German units to defend a German building.

    • @MM22966
      @MM22966 Před 12 dny +93

      What an odd complaint for an Austrian.

    • @antoniofernandesmarchetti1097
      @antoniofernandesmarchetti1097 Před 12 dny +9

      Karma!

    • @pezhetairosnikephoros931
      @pezhetairosnikephoros931 Před 12 dny +13

      And where you get this info from?

    • @Sierra026
      @Sierra026 Před 12 dny

      Wow, how narcissistic can he be? All the German SS men are either dead or stuck in a gulag, he should be thankful that ANY men, regardless of their "Aryan Purity" are even available to defend anything.
      World's sulkiest dictator.

    • @johnye4433
      @johnye4433 Před 12 dny

      Foreign troops are only good for anti partisans, he is not mistaken because he originally intended to use them as disposable

  • @OnionChoppingNinja
    @OnionChoppingNinja Před 12 dny +86

    you got a window open? I swear I can hear birds chirping in the background

    • @spartacus-olsson
      @spartacus-olsson Před 12 dny +106

      It was a very beautiful and warm spring day, and here in the Bavarian countryside that means very loud bird song.

    • @PumaTwoU
      @PumaTwoU Před 12 dny +17

      @@spartacus-olsson Love it.

    • @davesthrowawayacc1162
      @davesthrowawayacc1162 Před 12 dny +11

      Hearing birds singing in a video of this subject matter is like the sounds of the Flanders fields 100 years after ww1

    • @hopfinatorischerkuchenkrieger
      @hopfinatorischerkuchenkrieger Před 12 dny +3

      @@PumaTwoU I live directly next to a big Bavarian forest and after enough time, you'll start to get sick of birds waking you up at 6 A.M. in the morning, but perhaps that's just me.

    • @ramonribascasasayas7877
      @ramonribascasasayas7877 Před 12 dny +2

      So I am not the only one...

  • @jamesbodnarchuk3322
    @jamesbodnarchuk3322 Před 12 dny +7

    As always looking sharp Sparti and very well researched and complete explained!

  • @huguesblondeau2849
    @huguesblondeau2849 Před 12 dny +17

    In the opposite side, "Tovaritch Kapitane Foch-Fournier", former french officer in the red army as tankist, was collecting a numerous number of prisonners of the Division Charlemagne, in his road to the final victory. He finished the War as "Podpolkovnik" (the highest rank as foreigner in the red army i think in the time). ✌️

  • @obsidianjane4413
    @obsidianjane4413 Před 12 dny +23

    The Game of Poor Life Choices; Epic edition.

    • @stevekaczynski3793
      @stevekaczynski3793 Před 9 dny

      If Nazi Germany had won the war, which looked probable until 1942 and still possible until 1943, they would have been in a good position.

  • @millipedic
    @millipedic Před 12 dny +44

    The father of a close friend was Latvian and fought against both the Soviets and the Germans, at various times during the war, as a partisan and as a member of the Wehrmacht. He ended up in a camp for displaced persons in Germany and managed to end up in Canada.
    An amazing story and I wish I had more details.

    • @dusk6159
      @dusk6159 Před 12 dny +7

      The fate of many partisans in the east was to fight a great struggle with no help against both the soviets and the nazis sadly for those people and occupied nations

    • @haha-ui3fp
      @haha-ui3fp Před 12 dny

      Yes, of course, a member of Wehrmacht who fought against Germans... This Nazi white washing is just... Sigh.

  • @semkoops
    @semkoops Před 8 dny +1

    Just want to put a comment here giving a shout-out to Spartacus for reading and replying respectfully to people here, both when people agree or disagree with his words. On just only a few occasions I don't fully agree with something that is said in the conclusions of WAH episodes, but I learned so much from this series and this channel in general. I really appreciate you guys and your work! Greetings from Utrecht

  • @Celtopia
    @Celtopia Před 11 dny +2

    Thank you Spartacus.....brilliant information as per usual.

  • @owenlindkvist5355
    @owenlindkvist5355 Před 12 dny +6

    His rhetoric at the end can and should be applied to the Soviet Union. Never forget.

    • @WorldWarTwo
      @WorldWarTwo  Před 12 dny +1

      The crimes of the USSR have been regularly discussed and denounced, including their industrial scale rape and murder of German civilians. There is no reason to "what about the USSR?" on an SS episode.
      -TimeGhost Ambassador

    • @owenlindkvist5355
      @owenlindkvist5355 Před 12 dny +2

      @@WorldWarTwo Incorrect, and it isn't a whataboutism, it's pointing out that it equally applies and should be so in order to avoid the widespread issue of trying to gloss over that the USSR was as equally horrible, and have their own evils beyond that. So, take your weak attempt at handwaving and shove it up your ass. Judging by how you handle yourself, this great channel really needs to reconsider hiring activists with a nasty habit of using fallacies and cliches.

    • @owenlindkvist5355
      @owenlindkvist5355 Před 12 dny +2

      @@WorldWarTwo "The crimes of the USSR have been regularly discussed and denounced, including their industrial scale rape and murder of German civilians." And this somehow removes the validity of my statement? Fuck off. And in spite of all the efforts to point out the heinous body and the acts of the Soviet Union, you still have a vast array of idiots trying to glorify them. In addition, citing said Union is not an attempt to deride any mention of the SS (Which would be a whataboutism, you cuck), rather said body is mentioned in the context of the video, and this point deserves highlighting. Particularly reinforced when you look at your responses.

  • @markmierzejewski9534
    @markmierzejewski9534 Před 12 dny +54

    As I am prepping and cooking French Onion soup.
    Perfect timing ( Chefs Kiss )

    • @mrlodwick
      @mrlodwick Před 12 dny

      Hope you got a good bread with that bro ?

    • @minirock000
      @minirock000 Před 12 dny

      I can hear the can opener motor now.

    • @dryalga4000
      @dryalga4000 Před 12 dny

      are you going to feed that to your mother in law in her bed (hope you get the reference)

    • @kleinweichkleinweich
      @kleinweichkleinweich Před 12 dny

      J'aime l'oignon

  • @miluntube
    @miluntube Před 12 dny +2

    Spectacular! Bravo. Great episode.
    Mr. Sparty would You be so kind to send me a link of Your glasses? They look great.

  • @millipedic
    @millipedic Před 12 dny +13

    Good stuff, Sparty!

  • @tomeknowakowski7051
    @tomeknowakowski7051 Před 10 dny +1

    wow- absolutely amazing Spartacus ! Love your end speeches !

  • @Hindenburg521
    @Hindenburg521 Před 12 dny

    Great delivery Spartacus!

  • @CARL_093
    @CARL_093 Před 12 dny +4

    thanks Spartacus and crew i love your works

  • @KMac329
    @KMac329 Před 10 dny +1

    Academically precise research combined with moral compassion and outrage. The very complex ethnic and nationalistic and selfish motivations of these various leaders and groups to join the heinous SS are brilliantly boiled down to their frightful essence by Sparticus and his team. You do a great service to humanity by helping all of us to "never forget."

  • @keithcooper6715
    @keithcooper6715 Před 8 dny +1

    Great Delivery Sparky !!!

  • @RubberToeYT
    @RubberToeYT Před 12 dny +8

    Really interesting video on an often overlooked subject

  • @annehersey9895
    @annehersey9895 Před 11 dny +1

    Fantastic writing Sparta, especially your powerful ending. You never fail to portray the injustice done and the pure evil that permeates the Nazi regime! Often after I’ve watched a War Against Humanity episode, I have to take a shower because your delivery was so powerful, I feel the Nazi stench on myself! I promise you that since I first learned of this Evil, I’ve studied it intensely in a quest to discover the kinds of people drawn to their ideology and brutality but I promise that I have never forgotten all the victims!

  • @rancidblock5615
    @rancidblock5615 Před 12 dny +8

    Wow, the final words were something else, what a gripping narration by Spartacus!!

    • @WorldWarTwo
      @WorldWarTwo  Před 12 dny +1

      Thank you for watching.

    • @HiekerMJ
      @HiekerMJ Před 12 dny +2

      Yes, nowhere to hide emotionally, ethically or politically. It seemed Spartacus lifted every rock-of-excuse they were hiding under - and slammed it back down squashing whatever was there.

    • @vanHeldring
      @vanHeldring Před 11 dny +1

      lol it was cringe as fuck.

  • @tonyjones1560
    @tonyjones1560 Před 11 dny

    Outstanding, informative video and the coolest mustache on CZcams!

    • @WorldWarTwo
      @WorldWarTwo  Před 11 dny +1

      Thank you for your kind words! I envy that moustache as well...
      -TimeGhost Ambassador

  • @JLAvey
    @JLAvey Před 12 dny +75

    Really like to know how any of these non-Germans explain why they were captured in SS uniforms. Given what that organization did, I would be far less inclined to accept their surrender.

    • @ahorsewithnoname773
      @ahorsewithnoname773 Před 12 dny +33

      At times that did become an unofficial policy though it didn't distinguish between German and foreign-born members of the SS. The Canadians were less inclined to take SS men prisoner after a good number of their own PoWs were summarily executed by the SS in massacres during the Normandy campaign, and accounts by American veterans of the Battle of the Bulge often state that after the news of Malmedy broke, they stopped taking SS men prisoner and simply shot them even if their hands were raised.
      Aside from all the moral arguments against brutality to enemy PoWs, a practical one is that is counter-productive in that you stoke intense hatred in your enemies who are now far more inclined to treat your own captured men brutally as a form of eye-for-an-eye retaliation.

    • @CytotoxinK
      @CytotoxinK Před 12 dny

      Remember, the Nazis actively hid their crimes from the broader general public during WW2.
      (That's why most of the concentration camps and mass graves were in remote forested locations, and why the Gestapo kidnappings happened at night.)
      That way if anyone brought up Nazi brutality, people could just say, "Pfffft!!! _I never saw any of that!_ That's just a bunch of Allied propaganda!"

    • @omahadreaming5432
      @omahadreaming5432 Před 12 dny +8

      "He's telling me they're Polish"

    • @stevekaczynski3793
      @stevekaczynski3793 Před 12 dny +7

      Those who could changed into army or at least non-SS uniforms. SPOILER
      Even Himmler will attempt this...

    • @kleinweichkleinweich
      @kleinweichkleinweich Před 12 dny

      @@omahadreaming5432 exactly what I thought, Galicia was part of Poland before ww2

  • @shlomomark2275
    @shlomomark2275 Před 11 dny +2

    Among the SS Frenchmen were also several Spanish soldiers, former members of the Blue division, sent by Franco to help the Germans in the Eastern front. In 1943, Franco recalled the unit back to Spain, but several hundreds remained in Germany and became part of the Charlemagne division

    • @scottanos9981
      @scottanos9981 Před 3 dny

      I assume they were falangist back in Spain? I know many of that faction were less than satisfied with Franco's style of nationalism.

  • @ericfuchs123
    @ericfuchs123 Před 12 dny +6

    Liked the little birdie singing in this episode.

  • @tysonmcconnell7112
    @tysonmcconnell7112 Před 12 dny +6

    Should have mentioned at 17:20 that one of the people sent to Canada, Yaroslav Hunka, was given a standing ovation by the Canadian parliament for “fighting against Russia in WW2”… great job to whoever called up a Nazi soldier

    • @Karl-nv5ok
      @Karl-nv5ok Před 12 dny +1

      You're dumb.Bolshevism was a big threat for Europe.Ever heard of Holodomor,mass deportations to Siberia,executions,the invasion of Poland,Finland,the annexations of the Baltic states,Bessarabia,Northern Bucovina and Herța Region?

    • @WorldWarTwo
      @WorldWarTwo  Před 12 dny +2

      You don't fight one genocidal dictator by joining up with another genocidal dictator, swearing allegiance to him, and then helping with his own genocide. You may recall the Nazis and the SS did atrocities and mass murder as well. Many people managed to resist without working for Himmler and Hitler.
      -TimeGhost Ambassador

    • @owenlindkvist5355
      @owenlindkvist5355 Před 12 dny +1

      @@WorldWarTwo "You don't fight one genocidal dictator by joining up with another genocidal dictator," Shouldn't, you mean. You're also taking a removed stance as well as obviously never have been in a dire situation.

    • @WorldWarTwo
      @WorldWarTwo  Před 12 dny

      I said what I said and I meant what I meant. Applying logical fallacies to try and forgive wearing an SS uniform and swearing a loyalty oath to Hitler does not change the fact millions of people and many nations hated the Soviets and SS membership was an outlier situation with them, which further drives home the point.
      -TimeGhost Ambassador

    • @Kevc00
      @Kevc00 Před 12 dny

      ​@@WorldWarTwo I do absolutely agree with you there, but I would just note that in the Ukrainian case it was either Soviets who had commited a genocide against the Ukrainians, the Nazis currently committing a genocide, and the UPA who were also committing ethnic cleansing. So for a Galician the only way to fight both was to join the UPA. Again I still agree with your point, I sympathise with those Baltic conscripts but not with the Ukrainian men who joined up knowing what the Nazis were doing, but given that the only force between Soviet and Nazi for a Galician was the UPA its still not a great choice.

  • @NickRatnieks
    @NickRatnieks Před 12 dny +6

    Ron Jeffery's book of his experiences as an escaped POW of the Germans in Poland and his time as an agent- "Red Runs the Vistula" recounts his close dealings with the Russians in the Vlasov Army who he maintains were going to switch sides and he states his efforts were destroyed by Kim Philby. It;s a fascinating book and there is a Wiki entry for him.

  • @bomberfox5232
    @bomberfox5232 Před 12 dny

    Sparty really put on a great performance here. This series is much appreciated.

  • @shawnr771
    @shawnr771 Před 12 dny +67

    Thank you for the lesson.
    The impassioned ending is one of your best.
    Thank you for all you have done.

  • @differentboy9697
    @differentboy9697 Před 12 dny +12

    Will you do a video about what happened to collaborators in the inmediate aftermath of the war and in the future? Can't believe how many of these scumbags managed to return to their countries without any major punishment or just lived peacefully in Spain or Argentina.

    • @romsebrell710
      @romsebrell710 Před 12 dny +1

      Different. Sempre pronto ad impugnare le armi per difendere Berlino da quelli come Te e per riportare quei quei Valori di allora.

    • @petergray2712
      @petergray2712 Před 12 dny +3

      They escaped because the Allies had other priorities such as preventing famine in Germany and adjoining countries, and processing a million plus German POWs with limited resources.

    • @extrahistory8956
      @extrahistory8956 Před 12 dny

      More Nazis would go on to live in the US than they did in countries like Spain or Argentina.

    • @theotherohlourdespadua1131
      @theotherohlourdespadua1131 Před 12 dny +1

      You can't dispense Justice when 90% of your country is in ruins and everyone is hungry. Also, you can't dispense Justice when the number of accused run in the millions. No justice system can process all of them...

    • @stevekaczynski3793
      @stevekaczynski3793 Před 9 dny +1

      @@petergray2712 The Cold War also gave them some cover.

  • @wyvernmorgan1717
    @wyvernmorgan1717 Před 10 dny

    There is a stark contrast between the chirping of birds in the background and the story you tell, it's kind of poetic, like, maybe there is hope, even in the darkest times

  • @wadejustanamerican1201
    @wadejustanamerican1201 Před 12 dny +51

    What a closing statement! Honestly, fantastic.

    • @spartacus-olsson
      @spartacus-olsson Před 12 dny +8

      Thank you

    • @owenlindkvist5355
      @owenlindkvist5355 Před 12 dny +1

      @@spartacus-olsson Passionate, but full of holes.

    • @pvdoug
      @pvdoug Před 12 dny +1

      And biased and wrong.

    • @spartacus-olsson
      @spartacus-olsson Před 11 dny

      @@pvdoug well, since you seem to be the blessed owner of the truth, why don’t you be a chum and share it with us!

    • @spartacus-olsson
      @spartacus-olsson Před 11 dny

      @@owenlindkvist5355 and since you seem to know a fuller story, be a good chap and plug those holes for us!

  • @johnbruce4004
    @johnbruce4004 Před 11 dny +4

    I really value the quality of journalism found in the WaH series but usually dip out of the last 5 mins as Spartacus gets more and more worked up. After 4 years of this we know they were unspeakable but honestly his summaries gets a bit much. Sorry. Cos the work is important but that message can be lost in froth.

    • @spartacus-olsson
      @spartacus-olsson Před 10 dny +3

      That’s a reasonable choice since you’re a regular viewer, and somebody who clearly understands what all of this means… the conclusions are not written for you, they’re written to counter the narrative of those who still espouse the ideas I document the results of here.
      If you followed the comments that came in under this video alone (some of them are gone now) you’d see why it’s needed. An astonishing number of clowns came in and either said exactly the opposite of what I said, or attacked my closing statement as inaccurate in other words; they did it for good reasons. While we won’t change their mind, we have to make sure that those who have yet to understand the scope of all of this are provided with the clear message. To let stand without comment the rhetoric supporting, justifying, or explaining away the atrocities of this war would be highly irresponsible.
      Since not everyone watches this as a series, I have to do it again, and again, and again. Trust me when I say that I too wish it wasn’t so, if nothing else since it would mean that people have understood, but also for personal reasons. It’s not something I do with great pleasure, and if you think it’s tedious to listen to, imagine writing it for six years…

    • @spartacus-olsson
      @spartacus-olsson Před 10 dny +3

      Or as I put it to Indy just yesterday when discussing future programming: “[sure, we should cover other genocides], but I’m also sick and [expletive] tired of being the moral outrage guy.”

    • @johnbruce4004
      @johnbruce4004 Před 8 dny

      @@spartacus-olsson fair go, it must be hard work. But as we agree, important.

  • @marcneef795
    @marcneef795 Před 12 dny +14

    As a German, I takes some time to adjust to the runes in the video title. 😮 (We are of course allowed to show them within educational materials, but not in the title.)

    • @spartacus-olsson
      @spartacus-olsson Před 12 dny +4

      Actually we are, if the title is for educational material...

    • @phillip5245
      @phillip5245 Před 12 dny +9

      Those aren't runes, they are just Adidas jersey numbers.

    • @spartacus-olsson
      @spartacus-olsson Před 12 dny +6

      @@phillip5245 I see what you did there...

    • @marcneef795
      @marcneef795 Před 12 dny +2

      @@spartacus-olsson In principle it is allowed, but we just would not do it

    • @marcneef795
      @marcneef795 Před 12 dny

      @@phillip5245 Now I can see it. It is just the logo of the 44th division 😅

  • @manuvanhaeskolo
    @manuvanhaeskolo Před 12 dny +7

    You said in your previous video on the SS that non-German SS men weren't allowed to wear the Sig-runes on their uniform. Yet in the same video you have a picture of SS-sturmbannführer handing out medals to the Latvians, with sig-runes on their right collar. Same is true for volunteers from Finland, which I'm more familiar with. Pictures of them allways include the runes on their collar.

    • @tancreddehauteville764
      @tancreddehauteville764 Před 12 dny +1

      The truth is that non-Germanic SS men who had proved their worth in battle were allowed to wear the runes on their collars. Only raw recruits, guard units and below par fighting units were not granted that right.

    • @vascotank2143
      @vascotank2143 Před 12 dny

      Also the Germans were just lazy with it

    • @manuvanhaeskolo
      @manuvanhaeskolo Před 12 dny +1

      @@tancreddehauteville764 Allright, I don't know could be. People shouldn't claim non-Germanics weren't allowed to wear the runes if some are allowed, some not. They should state that ones that proved themselves in battle were allowed, others not. If that is actually true. Yeah I was a little surprised Spartacus made that claim when literally 15 seconds later in the video there's a picture of latvians wearing runes on their collar. Also I'm Finnish and I've been intrested in the Finnish SS-men and in the pictures of them, you can allways see them sporting the same runes on their right collar.

  • @joerussell9574
    @joerussell9574 Před 6 dny +1

    I don't know if Spartie writes his own lines or what but he sure can deliver a powerful end speech. I love this series and all the presenters who make up this presentation. Thank You truly guys and gal!

    • @spartacus-olsson
      @spartacus-olsson Před 6 dny +2

      I wrote most of my stuff myself, I always write the conclusions. In this case the script was written by James Newman, and the conclusion by me.

    • @joerussell9574
      @joerussell9574 Před 6 dny

      @@spartacus-olsson It was truly awesome Spartacus! It gave me the tingles when You were reciting it. Thanks again!

  • @zico739
    @zico739 Před 12 dny +80

    Imagine being a Slav and fighting for the Nazis.

    • @Shelbovsky
      @Shelbovsky Před 12 dny +14

      *cough-cough* -raine=)))

    • @Eterealgames
      @Eterealgames Před 12 dny +8

      The croats and slovaks be like

    • @roo72
      @roo72 Před 12 dny +12

      Imagine being a Russian and supporting Putin.

    • @Shelbovsky
      @Shelbovsky Před 12 dny +8

      @@sonnyb7612 ЗА РОДИНУ! УРА!

    • @manuvanhaeskolo
      @manuvanhaeskolo Před 12 dny

      ​@@ShelbovskyYou are such a weirdo. I've seen Russians on the internet leaving behind comments that read like yours. You aren't a soldier, you are not at war and Soviet Union collapsed 33 years ago because socialism doesn't work. And yet here you are commenting some stupid battlecry's.

  • @AntiActionFox
    @AntiActionFox Před 12 dny +2

    I appreciate Sparty and the team for allowing comments that are loaded or dissenting from the information provided
    Rather than just ban or delete arguments that are problematic. For me, free speech is a make or break and i appreciate it. Trolls and blatent hate speech should be banned of course, but everyone else should be permitted to express thoughts regarding mankind's most significant event.
    We must remember that limiting free speech has no ending when it is allowed to begin.

  • @ikkyusojun7996
    @ikkyusojun7996 Před 12 dny

    I always like your closing reminders of why this war is fought Spartacus. Bird song at the end was a also a reminder, a beautiful spring day in Europe.

  • @overlord165
    @overlord165 Před 12 dny +2

    I think it's fitting to hear the birds chipring in the background. It signals the end of storm that was the war. Hope and all that

  • @klassehkhornate9636
    @klassehkhornate9636 Před 12 dny +39

    "As the Soviet Union preached increasingly Nationalistic Revanchist rhetoric as the war dragged on, National Socialism took on a decidely international tone."

    • @antasosam8486
      @antasosam8486 Před 12 dny +4

      True, so true!

    • @ottovonbismarck1352
      @ottovonbismarck1352 Před 12 dny +4

      Though not a perfect application, this fact demonstrates the meaning of the quote “war makes strange bed fellows of us all.”

    • @Lonovavir
      @Lonovavir Před 12 dny +5

      The Third Reich had no choice, it was running out of Germans by 1942 and would've collapsed sooner absent Finnish/Romanian/Hungarian/Italian support. More attention needs to be paid to the non-Germans who fought on the Ostfront.

  • @markalton2809
    @markalton2809 Před 12 dny +6

    The birdsong adds a certain counter to the tension.

    • @davesthrowawayacc1162
      @davesthrowawayacc1162 Před 12 dny +1

      Its like the final shot of Blackadder's series finale

    • @WorldWarTwo
      @WorldWarTwo  Před 12 dny +1

      Ah yeah, Sparty replied to someone asking above, the lovely weather lead to some very loud birds!

  • @briceoka5623
    @briceoka5623 Před 12 dny +32

    A very old former member of the ukranian galicia division was honoured by the canadian parliament a few months ago. This episode makes it look even worse than it already did.

    • @AlexC-ou4ju
      @AlexC-ou4ju Před 12 dny +11

      you should check out Dmitry Utkin's (cofounder of wagner-incidentally a group named after AH's favourite composer) tattoos. Also Rogozin another notsee was leader of Roskosmos until very recently, I don't know why there's so much admiration in the former soviet empire for ideologies that called for terrible things to happen to them

    • @petergray2712
      @petergray2712 Před 12 dny

      ​@@AlexC-ou4juRussia has always had a fatal fixation with Utopian fantasies. It's a mix of survivors guilt (which can give people the mistaken belief that their divinely chosen to survive according to the Almighty's plan) following major wars and other mass casualty calamities, combined with a tendency for the Russian elite to proactively turn the immense suffering of they inflicted on the enslaved lower ranking Russians into a messianic project of attaining the New Jerusalem (trading suffering in this life in return for promised divine emancipation in the next life).

    • @apilolomi4354
      @apilolomi4354 Před 12 dny +2

      Wow, as if that hasn't been mentioned in this comments section a dozen times already.

    • @JoeSmith-sl9bq
      @JoeSmith-sl9bq Před 10 dny

      So? You dont like it?

    • @hilariousname6826
      @hilariousname6826 Před 8 dny

      Not really.

  • @kiowhatta1
    @kiowhatta1 Před 8 dny +2

    The irony is truly staggering when one imagines if the Wehrmacht and SS had undertaken such recruitment drives in the East in 1941 and ‘42 when they still had a chance to achieve a war winning position.
    They could have had enough manpower for an entire Army Group equipped with captured Russian equipment if they had been not so short sighted and full of hubris.
    Given the manpower shortages in 1942 in Southern Russia, they might have made a difference in the outcome in those campaigns had they been treated better.
    If the Red Army could utilise Poles, Romanians, and others then what might have been?
    Vlasov’s 2nd shock army was surrounded south of Leningrad in mid to late ‘42.
    It could have been refitted, retrained in time for spring ‘43.
    An estimated 1.5 million ostlegion were recruited but largely sidelined, treated with suspicion or sent to theates away from where they wanted to fight…like the XV Cossack Corps posted to Northern Italy.
    Their own race policies cost them a possible victory or pro longing of the war in the East.

  • @jackcade68
    @jackcade68 Před 11 dny

    Great closing Spartacus!

  • @jeeperscreepersballs1107
    @jeeperscreepersballs1107 Před 12 dny +4

    Great Job Sparty!!

  • @thilgu
    @thilgu Před 12 dny +10

    Excellent episode. For my taste the ending was a bit dramatic if you actually have studied the topic. Enlisting as a foreignerer had as many reasons as there were volunteers. Some evil, some noble and some grey in between. I knew a man when I was younger who was a Dutch volunteer in the Waffen-SS. He was 18 and his parents basically forced him to join.

    • @spartacus-olsson
      @spartacus-olsson Před 12 dny +10

      My point remains - whatever reasons they had, they fought for Naziism and thus for their wars of aggression and genocide. Individual fates are complicated and nuanced, collective fates not as much. By choice, misfortune, or chance they joined a collective that led them down a dark path where there are no longer and nuances of grey.

  • @george217
    @george217 Před 12 dny +3

    I didn't hear you mention the 101st SS Spanish Volunteer Company that served with the Walloon Legion who were some of the last defenders of the Führerbunker.

  • @jefffoutz4024
    @jefffoutz4024 Před 12 dny +1

    Best summary of the last days I've ever heard. 😮

  • @dragosstanciu9866
    @dragosstanciu9866 Před 12 dny +4

    There were also two Romanian regiments in Germany under the command of general Platon Chirnoaga. They fought on the Oder Front. Those regiments were formed by volunteers recruited from Romanian POWs in Germany.

    • @stevekaczynski3793
      @stevekaczynski3793 Před 12 dny +2

      By this time there were large numbers of Romanians fighting the Germans in Hungary and Slovakia. WW2 was confusing...

  • @sokratesz
    @sokratesz Před 10 dny +1

    Dear Spartacus.
    Would it be possible to dedicate a future episode to the meaning if the words 'never forget', that you utter at the end of every WaH video, especially in the context of current sociopolitical developments? I have a feeling that the message is lost on many people who watch the WW2 IRT and WaH series mainly due to a fascination with history and armed conflict, but fail to understand how the modern world reflects many of the developments from close to a century ago that gave rise to the events that your videos cover.

  • @XH13
    @XH13 Před 12 dny +46

    Having both my grand fathers being Alsatian and incorporated against their will in the Wehrmacht, I cannot despise enough the traitors that joined the Charlemagne division. For years there was confusion in part of France between the two groups which pretty unjust.

    • @spartacus-olsson
      @spartacus-olsson Před 12 dny +2

      Amen

    • @lahire4943
      @lahire4943 Před 12 dny +10

      Had the American GIs known what Europe and their own country would become as a result of the allied victory in 1945, they would have never landed in Normandy.

    • @spartacus-olsson
      @spartacus-olsson Před 12 dny +21

      @@lahire4943 care to elaborate on what it is that "we have become" Monsieur fleur-de-lys...

    • @AlexC-ou4ju
      @AlexC-ou4ju Před 12 dny +4

      @@lahire4943 oh t'as pas honte?

    • @lahire4943
      @lahire4943 Před 12 dny

      @@spartacus-olsson
      A morally degenerate society, disfigured by mass immigration, that any pre-1945 sane person would have despised with all his soul. Tell a 1944 GI that same-sex marriage is legal in the US and that the American white people will soon be a minority, among other things, and see his reaction, LOL.

  • @florinivan6907
    @florinivan6907 Před 12 dny +5

    Hitler:What kind of proper aryans have been brought to defend the last government buildings in Berlin?
    General:French.
    Hitler:Oh.

    • @Lonovavir
      @Lonovavir Před 12 dny

      Terms and conditions apply my failure.

  • @M26E4SuperPershing
    @M26E4SuperPershing Před 12 dny +6

    The father of my uncle was one of the duce guards that was captured when mussolini was caugth. He survived and give to my uncle a Charlemagne patch and he gifted to me whe dont know how he got it

  • @pathutchison7688
    @pathutchison7688 Před 12 dny

    Great series

  • @RoboticDragon
    @RoboticDragon Před 11 dny

    You guys and gals do amazing with pronunciation of names of people, places, things.

  • @shaider1982
    @shaider1982 Před 12 dny +2

    Himmler becoming more "diverse" in his hiring practicrs definitley wrecks his so called "master race" belief.

    • @NothusDeusVagus
      @NothusDeusVagus Před 12 dny

      I find it rather amusing that the SS's strict entry or admittance criteria as dictated by Himmler himself would've denied Himmler membership to his own organisation.

  • @nev707
    @nev707 Před 12 dny

    There were men from the Baltic area who fought for either Germany or the USSR.
    A friends dad who was Lithuanian served in the Luftwaffe and was stationed in Germany at the end.
    He never returned home but emigrated to Australia.

  • @lucem.glorifico
    @lucem.glorifico Před 8 dny +2

    You're wrong about Wlassow's role in Prague uprising - he was strictly against it, it was a pure initiative of the 1st KONR's ID (600 ID in the Wehrmacht's list) Maj. Gen. Sergei Bunjachenko. Bunjachenko issued the order for his troops to take part in the uprising, while Lt. Gen. Wlassow wanted them to reunite with his personal staff as soon as possible.
    Btw. did you know, that Andrei Wlassow (and his staff's members) received his salary from the SS-Hauptamt as SS-Gruppenfueher? One Russian historian found in German archives and published a payroll sheet of March'45, where Wlassow was named "SS-Gruppenfuehrer" and other officers as SS-leaders according to their army ranks as well. I probably have pdf of this book in my computer.

  • @rdleahey
    @rdleahey Před 12 dny +3

    Superb history lesson and great presentation. Thank you!

  • @italyball2166
    @italyball2166 Před 12 dny

    I know this is unrelated to the video, but there's a channel on yt called Escape to Rural France which shows the undertaking of a single man rebuilding Château du Chaumont, which during the Vichy regime was home to many Jewish children who were in hiding in there until their location was revealed by nearby residents. I'd love to see you guys have a talk with Dan, the guy who's rebuilding the château, as it is an immense pleasure to watch him research the past life of the building and even talk with some of the surviving children.

  • @etemenanki2190
    @etemenanki2190 Před 8 dny

    Were the birds near the end accidental or added? Either way it kind of plays like a Spring time for humanity coming after a long winter ending.

  • @adammanning8882
    @adammanning8882 Před 12 dny +8

    A great first hand account of this is Twilight of the Gods, written by a Swedish soldier who joined the SS. He fought against the Russians on the Eastern front all the way to the Battle of Berlin. Truly one of the most fascinating books about the war I’ve read

    • @ahorsewithnoname773
      @ahorsewithnoname773 Před 12 dny +7

      I have not read the book but considering he was a citizen of a neutral nation, and yet voluntarily joined the SS, it's probably safe to assume he was an ideologue that probably omitted some details from his account.

    • @adammanning8882
      @adammanning8882 Před 12 dny +2

      @@ahorsewithnoname773 then read it before you form an opinion

    • @ahorsewithnoname773
      @ahorsewithnoname773 Před 12 dny +5

      @@adammanning8882 I'm just saying people should take the account with a grain of salt. A lot of SS men put pen to paper in the post war claiming to have only fought "honorably" against the Soviets or what have you, despite belonging to an organization that had an atrocious record of brutality against both civilians and enemy PoWs.

    • @theotherohlourdespadua1131
      @theotherohlourdespadua1131 Před 12 dny +1

      ​​@@adammanning8882What do you think about Halder's memoirs of the war that led to the Clean Wehrmacht Myth? He put his version of that part of history, people read it and then believe the Wehrmacht is innocent of war crimes for over 50 years. Just because you told people to read it first before judging doesn't negate the fact that what he wrote isn't the whole truth and people are incapable of knowing where the truth ends and the lie begins...

    • @adammanning8882
      @adammanning8882 Před 12 dny +1

      @@theotherohlourdespadua1131 I said to read a book written by a combat veteran, I’ve never read Halder’s memoirs. You’re going way out on a limb making a lot of assumptions. Read the book or don’t, I’m not making any money off of it

  • @wildcolonialman
    @wildcolonialman Před 12 dny +1

    Excellent.

    • @WorldWarTwo
      @WorldWarTwo  Před 12 dny +1

      Thanks for the comment and thanks for watching.

  • @Falkriim
    @Falkriim Před 11 dny +1

    I’ve always found the foreign SS divisions interesting, ironic how diverse the SS was

  • @linders2000
    @linders2000 Před 12 dny

    Q: Will the Dutch SS-Landstorm division also be covered?

  • @El_Presidente_5337
    @El_Presidente_5337 Před 11 dny +1

    My German ancestors and the ghosts of the SS watching me base and eat Pide while watching this episode:

  • @matthewarsenault463
    @matthewarsenault463 Před 11 dny

    I absolutely love your last words

  • @Jarod-vg9wq
    @Jarod-vg9wq Před 11 dny

    19:37 woah 😮 you can feel the rage 😡 disgust 🤢🤮 and sadness 😢 in sparty voice, couldn’t have said it better myself sir NEVER FORGET!

  • @anlemeinthegame1637
    @anlemeinthegame1637 Před 12 dny +3

    Spartacus' "Never forget" at the episode end brings me to tears every time. Keep up the great work.

  • @paulklee5790
    @paulklee5790 Před 12 dny

    What a fine and beautiful piece of rhetoric Spartacus; that closing speech is worth thinking through carefully… in days to come there will be many self serving fools who need their lies and self deception called out…

  • @konstancemakjaveli
    @konstancemakjaveli Před 12 dny +1

    I think it is important to distinguish between those that did indeed volunteer, and those that were coerced and forced to join, if not the SS, than the many auxiliary units.

    • @NothusDeusVagus
      @NothusDeusVagus Před 12 dny

      Indeed. It seems, or so I've read, that some of those Baltic people who served in SS units were after investigation, officially exonerated by the Allies, particularly by the U.S. and ended up serving as Guard Companies for the Allies during the Nuremburg war crimes trials.

  • @FrazzP
    @FrazzP Před 12 dny

    @spartacus-olsson There were even Swedish Waffen-SS volunteers defending Berlin. Very few that can be counted with your fingers. I remember reading about an encounter where a Swedish SS-officer went to get grenades from the Tempelhof airport, and was surprised to find another one still alive distributing them.

  • @ristobenjie
    @ristobenjie Před 12 dny +1

    Thank you Spartacus!!!!!

  • @Rendell001
    @Rendell001 Před 12 dny

    Is that a Ralph Lauren "Skull and Bones" tie Sparty...?

  • @garyfasso6223
    @garyfasso6223 Před 7 dny +1

    The notion of a German/Ukranian population is not farfetched. In the US, the region from the Great Lakes to Washington State was settled largely by "Volga Germans" in the later 1800's. German being the "official" language of many towns. My maternal grandmother, Wilhemina Bolger, was one, born near Odessa in about 1885 and raised in Butte, MT.

    • @spartacus-olsson
      @spartacus-olsson Před 6 dny +2

      The notion of racial distinction is indeed scientific nonsense. The divisions along language, customs, religion, and social order are however very real and documentable. The Volga Germans were in that respect very different from the Ukrainians, who carried forward a distinct language and culture.

    • @garyfasso6223
      @garyfasso6223 Před 6 dny +1

      @spartacus-olsson Thank you for the response, I enjoy your work very much.

  • @Rocdog
    @Rocdog Před 12 dny +1

    In July of 44, my Grandfather was promoted to 1st Lieutenant and transferred to the 87th Infantry Division from the 29th after landing at Omaha Beach. He commanded a company and liberated Buchenwald.

  • @dragospeta3812
    @dragospeta3812 Před 10 dny +1

    No Roumainians but Ethnic Germans / Folksdeutshe from Roumania in the SS (Saxons from Ardeal, Brasov / Koenigsberg and Swabians from the Danube, Banat Swabians, Satu Mare Swabians).
    Roumanians have been second large invasion group in USSR under their own flag, around 500k large.

  • @karoltakisobie6638
    @karoltakisobie6638 Před 12 dny +9

    Some French SS units were fighting Polish units in Pomerania . Polish command decided to keep captured Frenchman and not hand them over to Soviet NKVD. After the war those POWs created a bit of diplomatic problem but in the end they were sent to France for trials.
    Also if I can recall correctly Gen Anders refused to have anything with Ukrainian SS POWs. He had more than enough Polish survivors and witnesses of SS Galitzen and OUN atrocities.

  • @Damorann
    @Damorann Před 12 dny +11

    7:14 The "Iberation" Army is out to turn you into Spanish people !
    Must be the same guy who created the 5th Shark Army.

  • @luffegasen7711
    @luffegasen7711 Před 2 dny

    I recall seeing a recruitment poster for the Waffen SS in Denmark from January , 1945? Here we have Death dressed as an Soviet soldier, sitting on the caboose of a train (heading for Siberia?). looking at the viewer and just one word across the poster's top "ALDRIG!" ("NEVER!").
    I saw it in the book, "Under Hagekors Og Dannebrog" ("Under the Swastika and Dannebrog") about the Danish volunteers to the Waffen SS!

  • @AleRees
    @AleRees Před 12 dny +1

    I guess we will learn about the incident between some Charlemagne's prisoners and general Leclerc at the end of the war.

  • @CrimsonTemplar2
    @CrimsonTemplar2 Před 11 dny

    Powerful closing Sparty. It’s important to speak to what those men actually did rather than the excuses & prevarications.

  • @whtghst8105
    @whtghst8105 Před 12 dny

    Ww2 was truly a World War all the miner wars that every part of the earth it is fascinating. How cruel humans can be. Thank you for bringing most of these wars in-between the major wars to our attention.
    Never forget!

  • @iwantcrawfish6110
    @iwantcrawfish6110 Před 12 dny +4

    that ending was THE MIC DROP of all times in history.....along with many others the team created. this entire series ought to be used in high schools across the board. there is still far too many young people that aren't truly being taught the details and uter destruction inhumanity and genocide this war created all because of the manifestations of a few truly evil individuals and the control and grip they had on the people and land with means to make war.
    never forget and NEVER cede to evil

  • @n00bswillruleall
    @n00bswillruleall Před 12 dny +1

    As always, fantastic, and thematic tie Sparty.

  • @notidentifieduser6533
    @notidentifieduser6533 Před 8 dny +1

    Where can i learn more about the 4 way civill war in Poland?

  • @Jarod-vg9wq
    @Jarod-vg9wq Před 11 dny +2

    Is it true manny allied soldiers killed ss soldiers instead of taken prisoner?