Ante Pavelić - Hitler's Forgotten Ally

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  • čas přidán 24. 06. 2021
  • Special thanks to subscriber Antoni Vrkic for suggesting this topic.
    Not many people know that part of the German 6th Army that was destroyed at Stalingrad was actually Croatian, sent east by that nation's sinister dictator, Ante Pavelić, Hitler's forgotten ally. Find out the full story here.
    Dr. Mark Felton is a well-known British historian, the author of 22 non-fiction books, including bestsellers 'Zero Night' and 'Castle of the Eagles', both currently being developed into movies in Hollywood. In addition to writing, Mark also appears regularly in television documentaries around the world, including on The History Channel, Netflix, National Geographic, Quest, American Heroes Channel and RMC Decouverte. His books have formed the background to several TV and radio documentaries. More information about Mark can be found at: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_Fe...
    Visit my audio book channel 'War Stories with Mark Felton': • One Thousand Miles to ...
    Help support my channel:
    www.paypal.me/markfeltonprodu...
    / markfeltonproductions
    Disclaimer: All opinions and comments expressed in the 'Comments' section do not reflect the opinions of Mark Felton Productions. All opinions and comments should contribute to the dialogue. Mark Felton Productions does not condone written attacks, insults, racism, sexism, extremism, violence or otherwise questionable comments or material in the 'Comments' section, and reserves the right to delete any comment violating this rule or to block any poster from the channel.
    Credits: US National Archives; Peter Fitzgerald

Komentáře • 8K

  • @RFranklinCarter
    @RFranklinCarter Před 3 lety +3391

    Ante Pavelić: forgotten by North Americans, perhaps, but not by Yugoslavs.

    • @cohenworrior898
      @cohenworrior898 Před 3 lety +556

      Certainly not by the Serbs.

    • @IvorMektin1701
      @IvorMektin1701 Před 3 lety +171

      I knew who he was but I grew around Yugoslavian immigrants, learning very quickly about the different ethnic groups.
      And staggeringly beautiful women. I dunno what you guys put in the water but keep doing it.

    • @hughjass1044
      @hughjass1044 Před 3 lety +186

      Indeed not!
      I served 2 tours in the former Yugoslavia during the 90s; 1 UN in Croatia, the other NATO in Bosnia, and I can tell you all of that stuff is still very much top of mind there.
      In fact, what went on in WW2 animated much of what went on in the 90s.

    • @sarlaton1483
      @sarlaton1483 Před 3 lety +181

      Yugoslavs dont exist no more and never will again.. croatian people never call them yugoslavs, we always called ourselves Croatians.. ante pavelic is father of todays Croatia

    • @andrejapaunic4761
      @andrejapaunic4761 Před 3 lety +84

      @@sarlaton1483 and thats why yugoslavia was what it was
      a beautiful dream and nothing more

  • @AlexanderBogdanow
    @AlexanderBogdanow Před 3 lety +2632

    "Forgotten?!" The Yugos I know, especially the Croatians & Serbs, remember him quite well. Albeit for complete different reasons...

    • @DaSniper406
      @DaSniper406 Před 3 lety +190

      Yeah but the other parts of the world many people forget that Croatia was part of ww2 and thus many would forget the leader of Croatia at the time. People on the other parts of the world won’t remember him unlike Ion Antonescu in Romania, Miklós Horthy of Hungary and Philippe Pétain of France.

    • @glupiholandjanin2058
      @glupiholandjanin2058 Před 3 lety +382

      Check Jasenovac , Serbs will never forget , Croatians would love to forget.

    • @LukaK031
      @LukaK031 Před 3 lety +172

      @@glupiholandjanin2058 Jasenovac is a communist myth that was created to denigrate the idea of an independent Croatian state of the Croatian people. Jasenovac was actually just a prison (working camp) where most of the prisoners were actually Croats who were communist terorists. Also the number of killed there was extremely exaggerated more and more ( all the way up to 700 000) and those numbers were made up by the communist for their political uses, real number is somewhere between 1200 and 2500 deaths.

    • @MM1300R
      @MM1300R Před 3 lety +91

      @@glupiholandjanin2058 with all your exaggerations and lies that you brought to light, I wonder if so many Serbs were killed as you claim 700,000 who could then bury 570 people a day (the incinerator did not exist) and others who after the surrender in 1945 continued to work in Jasenovac because in books ex Yu writes that he worked until 7/1949 are they and then the Ustashas worked? At the trial, Artukovic asked nicely to dig everything up and show where his army disappeared, which the allies handed over to Tito after Blaiburg ...

    • @jean6872
      @jean6872 Před 3 lety +13

      It is good that you qualified your criticism of Mark Felton's title by confining your knowledgeable people who live in the former Jugoslavia. Mark was generous in that people in the rest of the world have not forgotten Ante Pavelić since they never knew about him in order to forget him.

  • @filipmmaksic
    @filipmmaksic Před rokem +21

    Blagoje Jovovic, the man who wounded Ante Pavelica. He was a member of the Yugoslav army.

  • @lagankokesa4815
    @lagankokesa4815 Před 2 lety +6

    Man who shot ante pavelic was Blagoje Jovović, 10.04.1957. Los Palamos, Buenos Aeres, Argentina. Blagoje was Serb from Montenegro and he wad not hotel owner, he worke as recepcionist.

  • @VaterOrlaag
    @VaterOrlaag Před 3 lety +1241

    "(Croatia) is a place that few people could find on the map" - I think you're confusing the term "people" with "americans".

  • @benjaminzera2731
    @benjaminzera2731 Před 3 lety +656

    You know stuffs going down when mark pulls out the “however”

    • @discovaria9507
      @discovaria9507 Před 3 lety +28

      And "as well as"

    • @narancauk
      @narancauk Před 2 lety +3

      WHAT do you mean????

    • @whack172846
      @whack172846 Před 2 lety +4

      P

    • @user-lj5mx2nm2q
      @user-lj5mx2nm2q Před 2 lety +1

      Independent State of Croatia during ww2, committed the biggest genocide in entire history of southeastern Europe.

  • @Nyg5618
    @Nyg5618 Před 2 lety +28

    “He had a card life in the city. He had to work as a brick layer. Later he owned his own building company “. Lol, I feel like me kissed a step there. Or maybe South American capitalism is just that packed with upward mobility.

    • @MLGPRO-dx8fg
      @MLGPRO-dx8fg Před 2 lety +12

      No, that is how it generally works for some people. They either move up in their jobs or find new ones.

    • @mladenmatosevic4591
      @mladenmatosevic4591 Před 2 lety +6

      Sack of used golden dental fillings might help too.

  • @___Kelli___
    @___Kelli___ Před 2 lety +9

    I look for videos to listen to whilst falling asleep and I must admit I cannot fall asleep to your narrations because they’re riveting! Thank you for making these videos Dr. Felton. (I hope I got your name correct)

  • @fakshen1973
    @fakshen1973 Před 3 lety +375

    It's now easy to see how the area known as Yugoslavia exploded in the 90's. Those wounds were still fresh.

    • @at6686
      @at6686 Před 3 lety +141

      More proof that multiculturalism really doesn’t and hasn’t worked anywhere.

    • @user-ci7fz5kp8e
      @user-ci7fz5kp8e Před 3 lety +137

      Yugoslavia shouldn’t have been created in the first place. It was a multiethnic and multi religious state carved out of two multi religious and multiethnic empires (Austro-Hungary and Ottoman Empire). The wounds of that mistake haven’t been healed yet. Bosnia is a mini Yugoslavia destined to explode again.

    • @milanradic9800
      @milanradic9800 Před 3 lety +35

      @@user-ci7fz5kp8e lets hope it will not 🇷🇸

    • @demonprinces17
      @demonprinces17 Před 3 lety +1

      They were quoting stuff from hundreds years ago

    • @chaptermasterpedrokantor1623
      @chaptermasterpedrokantor1623 Před 3 lety +13

      The wounds were of course ruthlessly exploited by both Croat and Serb nationalist politicians after Tito's death.

  • @TheMannihilator
    @TheMannihilator Před 3 lety +687

    3:56 "a coup was staged"
    Maybe you could make a seperate video about that coup and the role of british secret servcie activity in Yugoslavia.

    • @willym9484
      @willym9484 Před 3 lety +32

      ▼Incidentally, the official BSC history acknowledges the role of Donovan in a little known but important chapter of World War II history. On March 25, 1941, Yugoslavia joined the Axis alliance with Germany, Italy and other European countries. Two days later, a group of Serbian officers led by General Dusan Simovic, carried out a putsch in Belgrade, the Yugoslav capital, that violently overthrew the country’s legal government. Ten days later the new regime signed a treaty of friendship with the Soviet Union.
      ▲▼How did this sudden “regime change” come about? Several months earlier, during a visit to Belgrade in January 1941, William Donovan was in the Yugoslav capital as an agent of President Roosevelt and of the British government. During a crucial meeting and conversation with General Simovic, he set the stage for the “regime change” overthrow of the country’s government. The official BSC history puts it this way: “In Yugoslavia, Donovan paved the way for the coup d’état which resulted at the eleventh hour in Yugoslav resistance to, instead of acquiescence in, German aggression. He interviewed General Simovic, who asked him whether Britain could hold out against the Nazis and whether the United States would enter the war … He answered both questions in the affirmative; and at his persuasion Simovic agreed to organize the revolution which a few months later overthrew the pro-German government of Prince Paul.”

    • @willym9484
      @willym9484 Před 3 lety +13

      Put the below into Google and you can read the whole article. Very interesting history.
      Collusion: Franklin Roosevelt, British Intelligence, and the Secret Campaign to Push the US Into War

    • @TheLittledikkins
      @TheLittledikkins Před 3 lety +6

      @@willym9484 As it turned out it wasn't needed, Pearl Harbor happened. Had Japan not pulled that boneheaded move and Hitler not been stupid enough to open the Russian Front, History books would read very differently today. And once Europe and Asia had fallen to the Axis Powers, it would have been the turn of both North and South America.

    • @jakovjovovic7359
      @jakovjovovic7359 Před 3 lety

      Не

    • @willym9484
      @willym9484 Před 3 lety +20

      @@TheLittledikkins Read 'Germany's War' by John Wear..Pearl Harbor was much of the same manipulation to get the US involved. It was a forgone conclusion to Roosevelt and his buddies that the US would join WW2, while he preached nothing but isolationism to the American people. All they needed was an excuse. Strong evidence also shows Hitler didn't have much choice but to strike first in Russia. Had it not been for the Balkan campaign, which delayed reaching Moscow by 5 weeks, the war could've and most likely would've been over in 1941. Read Leon Degrelle's books as well..Lots of different things could've happened in a million different ways and everyone has their angle. Good to have open debates using accurate historical resources as opposed to just swallowing "the Allies were hero's" narrative. Thanks for the input 👍

  • @stefanmilicevic6440
    @stefanmilicevic6440 Před rokem +62

    Thank you Mark, another piece of true historical facts, keep doing these videos, i really enjoyed watching every video that you documented so far. By far the best documentaries about WW2. Greetings and best wishes from Serbia!

  • @handsomegeorgianbankrobber3779

    Im pretty sure most of your viewers can locate Croatia on a map.

    • @MrKakibuy
      @MrKakibuy Před 3 lety +232

      I think you have not met enough Americans

    • @Dimapur
      @Dimapur Před 3 lety +74

      Chuckled at your username

    • @ssuuppeerrbbooyy
      @ssuuppeerrbbooyy Před 3 lety +39

      @@MrKakibuy im guessing most would point somewhere near ukraine, since apparently all slavs live in eastern europe

    • @igorsmihailovs52
      @igorsmihailovs52 Před 3 lety +4

      @@Dimapur and especially profile picture

    • @Lovric_F
      @Lovric_F Před 3 lety +26

      Yeah, he caught me off guard there. I imagine most of his viewers are an educated bunch

  • @blackpowderuser373
    @blackpowderuser373 Před 3 lety +870

    It's good to see more about the Axis minor countries like Ante Pavelic's Croatia, Dr. Felton.
    Would love to learn about them here.

    • @randomargument972
      @randomargument972 Před 3 lety +36

      Watch movie *Dara from Jasenovac* it's based on true story.

    • @stantory1822
      @stantory1822 Před 3 lety +129

      Do not watch Dara from Jasenovac that is just Serbian propaganda.

    • @DBSTH0R
      @DBSTH0R Před 3 lety +57

      @@stantory1822 Agreed. Goebbels would be proud how they falsified historical facts in that one lol. Steer clear from that fiction if interested in historical non-coloured facts.

    • @randomargument972
      @randomargument972 Před 3 lety +88

      ​@@stantory1822 You can go ahead and call *Schindler's list* a propaganda movie as well. Or *The Pianist* . Fact is: Croatia did worse atrocious massacre crimes than Germany in ww2. Inhumane crimes. And that isn't any propaganda, that is a historical fact.

    • @stantory1822
      @stantory1822 Před 3 lety +53

      @@randomargument972 you are full of it Everybody was doing crimes,Germans,Italians,British,USA,Japan,Serbia,Croatia,everybody does crimes in war not only one side.

  • @karlthorsten9118
    @karlthorsten9118 Před rokem +8

    I hope you do a very long video series much like Time Ghost Army did with their WW1, Between Two Wars and WW2 series, though not as extreme with details, but more condensed.
    Having more people covering all sides of these eras can only bring more of history into the light, and having more channels cover it allows for some more variation of videos to watch and/or listen to.

  • @RasVoja
    @RasVoja Před 2 lety +131

    While alliance with Hitler is well explained, policies and atrocities of Ustase deserve more time and focus

    • @zvonimirsarcevic7928
      @zvonimirsarcevic7928 Před 2 lety +1

      369 was not part of Ustase army..od Domobrans..They were drafted from homes..and who didnt wanted to go....well..didnt lived long..

    • @RasVoja
      @RasVoja Před 2 lety +1

      ​@@zvonimirsarcevic7928 Domobrani, Domobranci in Slovenia were forced draft, Ustase militia and members of 369 were more Ustase ideological, where I live space there was a forced draft too

    • @bozidarbubas2287
      @bozidarbubas2287 Před 2 lety

      Most focus deserves Smrdija. The chetniks like you are.

    • @ErminDedicNT
      @ErminDedicNT Před 2 lety +8

      @@bozidarbubas2287 doesn't make Ustashe any better :)

    • @vincentdimitri169
      @vincentdimitri169 Před 2 lety +11

      @@bozidarbubas2287 the chetniks were day care workers compared to the Ustashe

  • @comradevladan
    @comradevladan Před 3 lety +181

    Not the entire royal family was put under house arrest, only prince Paul alongside some politicians. The young king Peter was in London with his mother Mary during the almost entire war.

  • @prasanthalpha
    @prasanthalpha Před 3 lety +695

    Can you do one about Roland Friesler who was Hitler's chief judge.

    • @wolfmauler
      @wolfmauler Před 3 lety +70

      A hysterical, homicidal cartoon villain who handed out death sentences for sneezing during one of Hitler's speeches 😂

    • @efone3553
      @efone3553 Před 3 lety +26

      yes he is one of hitlers most interesting and forgotten characters

    • @RsRj-qd2cg
      @RsRj-qd2cg Před 3 lety +61

      And killed by a bomb from a B-17 or B-24 rolling into his courtroom. Everyone else had gone into a bomb shelter, but he stayed behind to grab his paperwork.

    • @commandingjudgedredd1841
      @commandingjudgedredd1841 Před 3 lety +5

      The "Beefsteak Nazi".

    • @wolfmauler
      @wolfmauler Před 3 lety +13

      I can't remember offhand which dvd it is, but I have some film of his courtroom antics. Everybody looks a bit shellshocked as he rants and curses in this high pitched voice, hurling abuse at the poor souls held in the dock. It almost resembles pantomime!

  • @Waldemarvonanhalt
    @Waldemarvonanhalt Před 2 lety +7

    Croatians be like, "Hello, my name is Ante Semetic."

  • @schvabek
    @schvabek Před 9 měsíci +9

    Me: “Oh, look, Mark did a program on my country!”
    Mark: “It‘s a place few people could find on a map”
    Me: :(
    Very interesting and important story, thank you!

  • @arjenh7214
    @arjenh7214 Před 3 lety +814

    "Belgians, Walloons..."
    I found that funny.

    • @yagrul
      @yagrul Před 3 lety +40

      Yes, and very correct. He knows his stuff (obviously).

    • @blank557
      @blank557 Před 3 lety +16

      Did he say Belgian Waffles?

    • @shutup2751
      @shutup2751 Před 3 lety +119

      walloons are real, belgians are just made up

    • @5.7moy
      @5.7moy Před 3 lety +84

      @@shutup2751 Belgians are French Dutchmen

    • @CatnamedMittens
      @CatnamedMittens Před 3 lety +45

      Belgium should've been partitioned in the early 2000s.

  • @polyglot8
    @polyglot8 Před 3 lety +421

    I wonder if Pavelic, Skorzeny and Degrelle ever got together in Spain to reminisce!

    • @GermanConquistador08
      @GermanConquistador08 Před 3 lety +14

      With Sivitri Devtri and Miguel Serrano probs

    • @orpheonkatakrosmortarchoft4332
      @orpheonkatakrosmortarchoft4332 Před 3 lety +109

      @Ryan Michael Don't cut yourself on that edge.

    • @scutumfidelis1436
      @scutumfidelis1436 Před 3 lety +65

      @@orpheonkatakrosmortarchoft4332 Its funny how you dismiss him like that but there were guys like Julius Caesar that the west revere as heroes just because you happen to come from that tradition.
      To Croats he's a hero.

    • @orpheonkatakrosmortarchoft4332
      @orpheonkatakrosmortarchoft4332 Před 3 lety +54

      @@scutumfidelis1436 Nobody reveres Jules Caesar anymore my guy, beside it's much easier to forget about something that happens 2000 years ago when most people's actual cultures didn't exist than some modern genocidal maniac whose crimes may have costed one's grandparents.

    • @pagodebregaeforro2803
      @pagodebregaeforro2803 Před 3 lety +8

      @@scutumfidelis1436 ok but Ryan Michael doenst seen like a croat name, a nazi name maybe.

  • @Ephexify
    @Ephexify Před 2 lety

    Recently found this channel. Gonna show it to my dad, he'd love it as much as I do

  • @Petreski447
    @Petreski447 Před rokem +29

    Am from North Macedonia, this guy might not be known in the west but everybody in the Balkans knowns of him even today.

    • @ruzicarudan7877
      @ruzicarudan7877 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Петровићу, ти си Србин из Старе Србије. Ако се Бога бојиш, пронађи чињенице о својим прецима. Можеш бити и еским ако хоћеш, али претке не можеш брисати гумицом. Цвет Српске војске је изгинуо да се ослободи Стара Србија( више пута). То нико не може избрисати гумицом...мисли о томе

    • @Hsbgg
      @Hsbgg Před 5 měsíci

      Zivio ante pavelic

    • @ruzicarudan7877
      @ruzicarudan7877 Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@Hsbgg zivite i ti i on u paklu. Prvi kazan sa leve strane, vecno

    • @CzarLazar1389
      @CzarLazar1389 Před 4 měsíci

      ​@@HsbggСлава Господа није Живео Грих.

    • @Hsbgg
      @Hsbgg Před 4 měsíci

      @@CzarLazar1389I confused

  • @vladblagojevic
    @vladblagojevic Před rokem +5

    Some people don't wear capes- Blagoje Jovovic

    • @warlok007
      @warlok007 Před rokem

      ☠️☠️☠️☠️☠️

  • @sreckocuvalo8110
    @sreckocuvalo8110 Před 3 lety +152

    I know a guy in my home village, I was told he fought in Stalingrad but I found it unlikely. Guess they were telling me the truth after all.

    • @sarlaton1483
      @sarlaton1483 Před 3 lety +46

      Tito was no one in 1940, and after the war he became a war criminal.. he killed more people after the war that Ustase during the war

    • @SuckerFreeGear
      @SuckerFreeGear Před 3 lety +31

      Most of Coatia's history was rewritten by Communists around this time. The "real" Tito was a blacksmith and was missing a few fingers due to his trade. The "fake" or replacement Tito was a educated Russian communist who was a well versed linguist and familiar with the culture in "Yugoslavia" that is why he was used as a replacement and the real Tito killed shortly after the war. Ask anyone from this era living in Croatia who was alive and they will not deny it.

    • @NoYouAreNotDreaming
      @NoYouAreNotDreaming Před 3 lety +9

      i know few guys that fought in Stalingrad and on other battlefields with germans...including my greatgrandfather and grandfather who were both in SS

    • @josephcro2138
      @josephcro2138 Před 3 lety +19

      @@kosovoisserbia8937 he also let Serbian chetniks to stay, which were on the similar level of monstrosity as ustashe

    • @SuckerFreeGear
      @SuckerFreeGear Před 3 lety +12

      @@kosovoisserbia8937 No there was two Tito's one was a Croatian Nationalist and blacksmith by trade, second was his post 1945 Commie replacement who was an KGB/NKVD educated Soviet doppelganger who was sympathetic to the Serbs.

  • @kj134
    @kj134 Před 3 lety +478

    I would very much like to hear your neutral historical interpretation of the Slovenian domobranci (Slowenische Landeswehr or the Slovene home guard) as this topic is still very divisive in Slovenia. I also find it very interesting that Slovenia, a relatively small country, was divided between 4 occupying countries; Germany, Italy, Hungary and NDH (Independent State of Croatia, that occupied only one Slovenian village, but still). Thank you for your content, I appreciate it greatly.

    • @user-xj3ve7wt8k
      @user-xj3ve7wt8k Před 3 lety +28

      Everyone took piece of Slovenia :)

    • @anaperkovic4820
      @anaperkovic4820 Před 3 lety +31

      Ne morem verjet da ima nekdo sliko Preserna kot profilko 🤣🤣

    • @rokradosavljevic5879
      @rokradosavljevic5879 Před 3 lety +25

      @@anaperkovic4820 ne morm vrjet da smo se trije slovenci tukaj našli :D 🤣🤣

    • @MrSvarun77
      @MrSvarun77 Před 3 lety +14

      @@rokradosavljevic5879 Štirje:)

    • @milanpracek2931
      @milanpracek2931 Před 3 lety +9

      @@rokradosavljevic5879 Pet.

  • @ljutiajvarko80
    @ljutiajvarko80 Před 2 lety +6

    You need to make a video about the Jasenovac camp, in addition to this clip and the atrocities of the Croatian state. To create a clearer picture of that bloodthirsty state.

    • @northernstar4811
      @northernstar4811 Před 2 lety +4

      He can also explain why so many Serbian Chetnik combat groups fought for Ante Pavelic and the Ustasha during WW2.

    • @balsabozovic4510
      @balsabozovic4510 Před 2 lety +2

      @@northernstar4811 he can also explain 800000 serbian victims in jasenovac of which most were women children and eldery and singular even in history where weapon was made and named for one purpose only to kill sernbian people literally named serbian slasher

    • @northernstar4811
      @northernstar4811 Před 2 lety +2

      @@balsabozovic4510 Yugoslav population census of the Serb minority living in Croatia :
      1931: 633,000
      1948: 543,795
      So where are you getting you stats from?

    • @balsabozovic4510
      @balsabozovic4510 Před 2 lety

      @@northernstar4811 stats? From official allied report on jasenovac, and those are just low estimates

    • @northernstar4811
      @northernstar4811 Před 2 lety +1

      @@balsabozovic4510 No that isn`t correct. Where are you getting your stats from and who put his name on the report?

  • @Keviin1977
    @Keviin1977 Před 2 lety +8

    I listen to this guy all the time. Brilliant stories about WW2

  • @andrewxiao4560
    @andrewxiao4560 Před 3 lety +364

    Mark Felton always comes up with a new topic.

    • @ghkk9941
      @ghkk9941 Před 3 lety +3

      He came with communist propaganda from the time, communist in Vietnam , Cambodia, North Korea, San Salvador, Honduras, China, Russia, everywhere committed terable crime but when communist did execution Croatian women and children then this is ok.

    • @dulersk1050
      @dulersk1050 Před 3 lety +4

      @@ghkk9941 ne seri

    • @Akcija1930
      @Akcija1930 Před 2 lety +1

      @@ghkk9941 Biggest genocide denier.. Shame on you, fool!

    • @healed7364
      @healed7364 Před rokem

      @@ghkk9941 Zamisli pokusavas da okrivis druge drzave za ubistvo koje je pocineno od tvoje drzave. Pateticno.

    • @ghkk9941
      @ghkk9941 Před rokem

      @healed7364 Cista propaganda! Vi imate samo price! Mi imamo Hudo jame, Jazovke. A vase su jame prazne. Nema nista u njima! Vi cetnici imate same laži! A mi rupe pune kostiju i kose od dijevojaka, znaci dokazi i kosti Titovih zlocina, a vi nemate nista! Ciste laži i pričice! Gdje su vam dokazi, kosti nesto realno sto svijedoce Imas titovog generala koji priznaje kake je sve pocelo nakon uspostave NDH. Poceli ste napadat Hrvatska sela i muslimanska koja su pruzala otpore. Strasan genocid pocinjen je od srbske cetnicke i partizanske gerile protiv civila zena i djece! Kad vam su Ustase uzvratile, poglavito Crna legija uz Drinu, i potisnula preko Drine cetnicke formacije,. Otad su vam za sve krive Ustase. Jednako ste sva zvijerstva opet kao i 1941, otpoceli na isti nacit 1991. Ali niste uspjeli! Propao vam je plan u cijelosti vase srbske akademije narodnih umjetnosti! Propali planovi u cijelosti! Cak ni vasa propaganda nije uspjela, a rezultat je da imate najvise zapovijednika i vojnika po zatvorima zbog pocinjenih kaznenih dijela! Britanske arhive ce otkrit istinu prije ili kasnije!

  • @fortis3686
    @fortis3686 Před 3 lety +295

    To quote potential history from his minor axis powers tanks videos:
    "Croatia's contribution to the axis was (War crimes) anti-partisan duty"

    • @CatnamedMittens
      @CatnamedMittens Před 3 lety +4

      Always some classic banter

    • @Lovric_F
      @Lovric_F Před 3 lety +11

      But also first partisan movement in SE Europe

    • @PeoplecallmeLucifer
      @PeoplecallmeLucifer Před 3 lety +6

      @@Lovric_F that was Croatian people not the state
      But yeah sisački odred

    • @Lovric_F
      @Lovric_F Před 3 lety +14

      @@PeoplecallmeLucifer Pavelić and the Ustaše were not voted in power, so they dont have the legitimacy to be "the state"

    • @paveantelic7876
      @paveantelic7876 Před 3 lety +3

      @@Lovric_F first anti-fascist movement in the whole of europe to be correct

  • @LEEOC
    @LEEOC Před 2 lety +10

    A lot of information to take in on this one. I shall need several watches!

  • @jesperbecker6982
    @jesperbecker6982 Před 8 měsíci +3

    This laid some of the foundation of what would become the Balkan wars in the 1990 and the hate between Croats and Serbs.

    • @user-pc2jp2yr3c
      @user-pc2jp2yr3c Před 7 měsíci

      Problems already started in 1918 when the new state was formed by the Allies.

  • @paulroberts3639
    @paulroberts3639 Před 3 lety +165

    Fascinating. Watching this, I just learned something important about my family. My maternal grandfather was born in Croatia to German parents. When he was 17 in 1942/3 he was drafted (so I am told) into the ‘Free Will Battalion, Prinz Eugene’. This is where men of German blood were expected to serve. He was part of an anti aircraft gun crew. The Battalion subsequently was used as the ‘seed’ for the 7SS Mountain Division, Prinz Eugene. This much I knew. From the little I know about my grandfather, he spend the war within the borders of former Yugoslavia until surrendering in Austria to the Americans. Then emigrated to Australia in 1953. However what this video just taught me was that had he been slightly older, eligible for service in 1941, it is possible that he may have been in Stalingrad with the Croatian Legion (something I knew nothing about until now) probably dying. I honestly don’t know whether my grandfather was an honourable man. He died a long time ago. I know that he was wounded at least once, ( I have his military service ID book) and was just a basic ‘Soldat’. Given his age and German ‘blood’, he was always going to be an axis soldier. He would have been ‘used’ by the nazis somewhere. And it just happened that the SS formed a unit out of the locally raised unit that he was already in. But just now I have discovered that had he been a year or two older, or the age requirement slightly lower, I wouldn’t exist. He would have gone to Stalingrad and, that would have been it, just one more dead out of 60 million. Thank you, another piece of my families story has been coloured in a little.

    • @igorsmihailovs52
      @igorsmihailovs52 Před 3 lety +19

      Thank You for sharing this amazing story!

    • @lornestein7248
      @lornestein7248 Před 3 lety +6

      Again.. Thanks for sharing. I also have similar sentiments.. being a Jew.

    • @DaveSCameron
      @DaveSCameron Před 3 lety +3

      Franjo Tudzman?

    • @AndrejaKostic
      @AndrejaKostic Před 3 lety +20

      Your grandfather was very lucky since he managed to reach the Americans.
      At that time in Yugoslavia, there was a very concentrated effort to prevent axis forces from reaching Austria and surrendering to the western allies. In late 1944 and early 1945 experienced units were pulled from the front, and replaced with freshly conscripted ones, in order to free them up to chase the axis troops retreating into Austria. The Prinz Eugen division was especially hated, and pretty much all members which were captured by Yugoslavian forces, or which were handed over to Yugoslavian forces by the western allies, were immediately short as traitors, since they were considered to have Yugoslavian citizenship.
      The period was also bad for German population in general, as Soviet troops were allowed to rampage. In the end, some 90% of German population living in Yugoslavia was deported, and those that were left were expected to have a proof of affiliation with the communist party. Additionally, Prinz Eugen, as a historical person, remains contaminated in this region.

    • @dariozanze4929
      @dariozanze4929 Před 3 lety +8

      Most of the 7SS Mountain Division soldiers were drafted. The core of the unit surrendered in Slovenia, partisans summarily executed them immediately after the capture because they killed a bunch of civilians during the war. Soldiers from other units were usually imprisoned and after some hard labor returned to Germany.
      Your grandfather was a lucky man.

  • @andrewsmith1655
    @andrewsmith1655 Před 3 lety +367

    Love the history on lesser known Axis nations in Eastern Europe. It would be nice to have a deep dive on Hungary in WWII. Somewhat advanced tanks, Air force, and Army that joined Germany before the war with the USSR.

    • @Charles_Anthony
      @Charles_Anthony Před 3 lety +12

      Horty didn't really have a choice plus the Allies screwed Hungary over heavily in WW1.

    • @northernstar4811
      @northernstar4811 Před 2 lety +3

      Croatia wasn`t offcially an ally of Germany as it had been invaded by Nazi Germany in April 1941 ( Banovina of Croatia was an autonomous part of Yugoslavia) therefore it was an occupied country.

    • @radomirratkovic9014
      @radomirratkovic9014 Před 2 lety +1

      @@northernstar4811 Technically maybe

    • @AngPur
      @AngPur Před 2 lety +2

      Hungary was a much more competent ally of the nazis than Italy in many ways.

    • @TheDeepState2001
      @TheDeepState2001 Před 2 lety

      @@Charles_Anthony The allies didnt screw them over in ww1

  • @renataheiberg7534
    @renataheiberg7534 Před 2 lety

    Great as always. Comments down below are superb. I learn even more.
    Great audiences follow great creators!

  • @bournettanmapping8762
    @bournettanmapping8762 Před 2 lety

    This has to be best history channel on YT.

  • @Chris-Theodore
    @Chris-Theodore Před 3 lety +78

    Yet another amazing video on forgotten history

    • @avnrulz8587
      @avnrulz8587 Před 3 lety +3

      Wait, that's The History Guy's line...lol.

    • @franknezevic4385
      @franknezevic4385 Před 3 lety +5

      Croatian people like me watching this video be like: :(

    • @kidmohair8151
      @kidmohair8151 Před 3 lety +5

      not forgotten, just not in your history books...
      for the people that lived through that time and their descendants,
      it is all very much still alive, and in the breakup of Yugoslavia, in the 1990s,
      played a major part in the ferocity of those events.
      Revenge for Ustase crimes during WW2, was very much on the minds of many a Serb,
      Slovenian, Albanian, Muslim Croation, Bosnian and Macedonian.
      Croats, to this day are tarred with the brush of the Ustase.

    • @franknezevic4385
      @franknezevic4385 Před 3 lety +1

      @@kidmohair8151 there are books about this person

    • @antesosic1600
      @antesosic1600 Před 3 lety +2

      Certantly not forgotten here in Croatia. People still fighst and argue who's father/grandfather was an Ustaša or Partisan.

  • @pedertf2471
    @pedertf2471 Před 3 lety +201

    Savage Continent: Europe in the Aftermath of World War II by Keith Lowe is an amazing book if anyone wants to read about these smaller countries and what happened there during and after WW2. Stories of factions, political parties and different nationalities working with or against the german occupants, and then turn on each other after the war. Or they just fought all sides at the same time. After i read it I felt like the germans were just a lesser part of a long and huge conflict of many skirmishes and slaughter of civilians by different factions. Very good book!

    • @snazzysailor
      @snazzysailor Před 3 lety +6

      Thanks brother, just purchased it from bookdepository.

    • @bugsygoo
      @bugsygoo Před 3 lety +6

      So setting up factories to murder 6 million men, women and children makes the Germans a 'lesser part' of the slaughter of civilians. I think you should give up reading history. It's wasted on you.

    • @pedertf2471
      @pedertf2471 Před 3 lety +40

      @@bugsygoo The point was that THEIR war never ended and the germans were just a part of larger conflict that continued after WW2. I don't understand how you got this out of my comment, thats absolutely insane.

    • @DaveSCameron
      @DaveSCameron Před 3 lety +1

      Thanks I'm going to seek it out.

    • @stefanodadamo6809
      @stefanodadamo6809 Před 3 lety +6

      but the Germans (and in the case of Yugoslavia and Greece, the Italians) were the catalyzer that made all the slaughter unavoidable. And so they were guilty by default even of what they didn't, for having pushed the "war" button in the first place.

  • @MHijikata
    @MHijikata Před rokem +3

    Thank you Mark for this remarkable work

  • @nevenagrue3023
    @nevenagrue3023 Před 2 lety +12

    HIs definitely not forgotten in ex Yugoslavia :( And by the way, I think your documentaries are genius! I watched every single one of them maybe even twice.

    • @antovolic5101
      @antovolic5101 Před rokem +2

      Pavelic je legenda bio

    • @sal6695
      @sal6695 Před rokem +2

      ​@@antovolic5101i gori u paklu sada i za sva vremena

    • @antovolic5101
      @antovolic5101 Před rokem

      @@sal6695 tito gori u paklu

    • @sal6695
      @sal6695 Před rokem

      @@antovolic5101 najverovatnije da

    • @healed7364
      @healed7364 Před rokem

      @@antovolic5101 Sta smo rekli za internet pre cetrnaeste?

  • @etlef4724
    @etlef4724 Před 3 lety +85

    You're truly evil if the Nazis tell you to chill out. THE NAZIS
    Edit: why do I have Balkan ppl arguing in my replies I don't like this help

    • @marcoAKAjoe
      @marcoAKAjoe Před 3 lety

      Lol

    • @ipadair7345
      @ipadair7345 Před 3 lety +4

      The holy words of ObamaPrism

    • @MrLeovdmeer
      @MrLeovdmeer Před 3 lety +1

      Or your very motivated

    • @Paciat
      @Paciat Před 3 lety

      No. Your goals just need to be different. NAZIs killed for profit, ant they saw no profit there.

    • @MrLeovdmeer
      @MrLeovdmeer Před 3 lety +2

      @@Paciat LOL you idiot. They killed for ideals. NAZI`s had the idea that they where supreme.

  • @nc6379
    @nc6379 Před 3 lety +222

    As a Croat I can't believe someone covered this topic. Thank you.

    • @vladtheimpaler2930
      @vladtheimpaler2930 Před 3 lety +10

      It's 2021

    • @unknownname6519
      @unknownname6519 Před 3 lety +75

      @@vladtheimpaler2930 but not for many croatians.. they still think its 1943

    • @unknownname6519
      @unknownname6519 Před 3 lety +28

      @T K kako nije?? Cak moja tetka(sestra od majke) je ustasa.. a na kraju kad treba pare da kupi drvo pita nas.. bio sam u sibeniku..zbog toga ..nisam glup da ne vidim..

    • @unknownname6519
      @unknownname6519 Před 3 lety +9

      @Toni keep denying it..

    • @unknownname6519
      @unknownname6519 Před 3 lety +8

      @Andrija Garovic to ne menja istinu da hrvati se vidu tako ..

  • @PYRO-ON
    @PYRO-ON Před rokem +3

    Dr. Felton never disappoints….been here since he was a few 100 subs

  • @SwineBuster
    @SwineBuster Před 2 lety +8

    Felton makes CZcams to be such a wonderful and thorough historical source to study!

  • @ITIsFunnyDamnIT
    @ITIsFunnyDamnIT Před 3 lety +98

    Never fail to impress me with all these little known details. Thank You.

    • @carlevans5760
      @carlevans5760 Před 3 lety +3

      ;-)) Not so little known for those who are very serious about the war on the Eastern Front. I'm not knocking Felton, as he does do a good job, but there's just so much yet to still learn about Stalingrad, that will make your head spin. I'd love to see someone do a book about Pavlov's House. That was just one of many of the small battles that made up the Battle of Stalingrad.

    • @sly4462
      @sly4462 Před 3 lety

      I think there is a German movie about Pavlovs house made few months ago

  • @gordy3714
    @gordy3714 Před 3 lety +248

    Jason Mark's Croatian Legion book is a excellent further read on the subject. Great video Mark

    • @carlevans5760
      @carlevans5760 Před 3 lety +4

      His books: Death of the Leaping Horsemen, and Island of Fire, are excellent books. Also, it was my suggestion that he write a book about the Pioneer Battalions at Stalingrad.

    • @brada2354
      @brada2354 Před 3 lety +1

      @@carlevans5760 fantastic books and he is Australian to boot, grew up in the same area as myself.

    • @sly4462
      @sly4462 Před 3 lety +1

      Watch Tik channel about the battle of Stalingrad! He goes into detail his documentary is huge on that city alone! It has more info on the Cro Legion also.

    • @gordy3714
      @gordy3714 Před 3 lety

      @@sly4462 He will be 65 years old by the time he finishes it. 😂😂

    • @sly4462
      @sly4462 Před 3 lety

      @@gordy3714 i know lol i watched alot of the vids but there is alot

  • @simapark
    @simapark Před 2 lety +58

    After Hitler himself Pavelic was the biggest monster of WW2 by far. He didn't even have the balls to stay in his beloved Croatia but fled like a coward to the Vatican where he was sheltered before running to South America . A Monenengrin Serb patriot Blagoje Jovovic found him and mortally wounded him. He died very slowly which may be some sort of justice to his many victims .

    • @northernstar4811
      @northernstar4811 Před 2 lety +3

      Ante Pavelic used to work in Belgrade, Serbia during the 1920`s as a Yugoslav MP at the Yugoslav parliament so he got to know the Serbs very well as they tried to kill him.

    • @simapark
      @simapark Před 2 lety +14

      @Alejandro Brunner
      He was a coward and abandoned his men to be slaughtered by the communists. The communists also slaughtered the Royalists but at least their leader General Mihailovic stayed with his people in his Homeland

    • @simapark
      @simapark Před 2 lety +10

      @Alejandro Brunner
      Just to be clear do you agree Pavelic was the head of a movement that slaughtered thousands of men women and children in concentration camps and deserved to have been tried and executed as a war criminal ? I get the impression you may be am admirer of this monster so you can set the record straight if I've got the wrong impression.

    • @comradesam3382
      @comradesam3382 Před 2 lety +2

      @@northernstar4811 I dont think thats the same Pavelič, there were 2 Ante Pavelič politicians at that time iirc

    • @northernstar4811
      @northernstar4811 Před 2 lety

      @@comradesam3382 Ante Pavelic was a lawyer and also a Yugoslav MP who worked in Belgrade, Serbia. I suggest you look it up.

  • @deibama
    @deibama Před 2 lety

    Thank you for your work.

  • @TenOrbital
    @TenOrbital Před 3 lety +165

    I’ll never forget reading that Hitler phoned Pavelic to ask him to tone it down, he was giving Nazis a bad name.
    In fact the appalled German envoy Glaise-Horstenau (a former Austro-Hungarian staff officer who in the 1920s wrote the ‘official’ war history ‘Austria-Hungary’s Last War’) got involved in an attempted coup against Pavelic and was recalled in disgrace. Rather unfairly after the war he was interned for being associated with Croatian and German atrocities in the Balkans and committed suicide.

    • @bodycount00
      @bodycount00 Před 3 lety +18

      yeah right..its a myth..do you have concrete proof for that?

    • @niccolobattistoni6733
      @niccolobattistoni6733 Před 3 lety +1

      Not so fun fact: Hitler was born seven years after horstenau in the same town, braunau am inn

    • @jax17.43
      @jax17.43 Před 3 lety +4

      @@jasonheightreck7335 yep

    • @chicagotypewriter2094
      @chicagotypewriter2094 Před 3 lety +29

      @@jasonheightreck7335 they had a children only concentration camp for fucks sake

    • @TenOrbital
      @TenOrbital Před 3 lety +22

      @@bodycount00 - lol you're upset for Pavelic's reputation? No further questions, your honour.

  • @pagansbasin6657
    @pagansbasin6657 Před 3 lety +65

    The atrocities committed in Yugoslavia were among the worst in an already horrid war

    • @thegunslinger1363
      @thegunslinger1363 Před 3 lety +16

      The Japanese in China and South East Asia. Are in that league aswell.

    • @overlord4404
      @overlord4404 Před 3 lety +25

      @@thegunslinger1363 yep, Ustashe were on the level of japanese, some say that even ss was disgusted

    • @enriconicolafasciani9151
      @enriconicolafasciani9151 Před 3 lety +3

      @@overlord4404 both sides. Partisans too.

    • @KitchenFSink
      @KitchenFSink Před 3 lety +3

      @@overlord4404 only nation that ever built extermination camps for children was Croatia, so they are up there with Japanese

    • @matejhromin2925
      @matejhromin2925 Před 3 lety +1

      @Erwin Rommel Italians really supported chetniks? Didnt they install Pavelić in the first place...

  • @brianivey73
    @brianivey73 Před rokem +1

    Great work again...what fabulous videos...love every one of these

  • @MrAgj200
    @MrAgj200 Před 2 lety +1

    your episodes are so informative

  • @DBSTH0R
    @DBSTH0R Před 3 lety +15

    For a short video on such a complex topic, really well done. Thank you.

  • @wildlifebybrianhoule
    @wildlifebybrianhoule Před 3 lety +216

    Mark, I wasn't aware of this situation. Thank you for documenting it. I sure wish my father was alive because he was always reading WWII non-fiction books. I would usually pick those up and read them right after. He would have loved your channel.

    • @LocalNoob_2
      @LocalNoob_2 Před 2 lety +8

      God bless your father my man

    • @getmeoutofsanfrancisco9917
      @getmeoutofsanfrancisco9917 Před rokem +2

      My grandfather was a WW2 (Africa and Italy) and Korean War Vet. I unfortunately never got to meet him but was left with many stories my mother told me as a kid. And objects like a B17 horizon indicator. As well as an entire airplane propellor, lol. Allegedly he brought back a crate of artillery shells as well which according to my mother was confiscated after a fire in their Michigan home.
      Unfortunately he got too caught up chasing young hippie girls and cheating on my grandma while doing all sorts of drugs during the 60's, and died of endocarditis from IV heroin addiction.
      To be fair from what I hear of the 60's, if I didn't know better I would have taken that route too. Sounds too fun. Except for the heroin addiction part.

    • @markospremo6244
      @markospremo6244 Před rokem +2

      Kingdom Serbia Is Yugoslavia

    • @markospremo6244
      @markospremo6244 Před rokem

      Milion Srba dva Hrvata ubiše Ante i Tito ostalo za Kralja

    • @medved4030
      @medved4030 Před rokem +2

      A few things have been left out. The actual number murdered by the Ustaše is around 600,000 and this is mainly in Jasenovac, the worst concentration camp in the world where Serbs, Jews and Gypsies were systemically murdered. What the Croats did in Jasenovac even the Germans were horrified at the scenes they saw. They even created a special sleeve knife to wrap around the wrist like a glove with a blade for faster killing. This was known as the Srbosjek ("Srbo" means Serb, "sjek" means to cut). The concentration camp was run by the worst human kind called Maks Luburić who the Germans characterised as "notorious sadist" and "psychopath". After the war he fled to Spain where he changed his name. The Yugoslav intelligence agency UDBA was particularly interested in finding and killing him. An agent Ilija Stanić infiltrated the HNO (Hrvatski Narodni Odbor) and located Luburić in a villa in Spain. His head was smashed in with a hammer. Another Croatian war criminal in ww2 was Miroslav Filipović who was a catholic priest. He was directly involved in mass murders and executions, In one instance he entered a school and murdered 52 children which he admitted to on his trial. He was known as "fra Sotona", "brother Satan" in English.

  • @anitaharris9909
    @anitaharris9909 Před 2 lety +1

    Excellent programs keep up the great work!

  • @cwallcw
    @cwallcw Před 2 lety +3

    Out of hundreds, Dr. Felton’s is the only channel I’m 100% convinced when he releases that I’ll enjoy….and the only one I’ve ever hit the like button before actually watching the video.

  • @AndyCigars
    @AndyCigars Před 3 lety +28

    Quisling...I remember hearing that name in cartoons when I was a kid. It was used in a context of a collaborator, but I never knew why till now. Thanks, Mark! I miss it when cartoons would teach you things.

    • @milferdjones2573
      @milferdjones2573 Před 3 lety +6

      Norway restored the death penalty to execute him then eliminated the death penalty again. Worthless spineless stupid henchmen forever after are known as Quislings in both fiction and non fiction.

    • @Tjalve70
      @Tjalve70 Před 3 lety +5

      It's one of Norway's few contributions to the international vocabulary.
      And one of which we're not terribly proud.

    • @Eastbridge2100
      @Eastbridge2100 Před 3 lety +13

      Most of the EU politicians are Quislings today. The support the invasion of Islam into Europe.

    • @georgepopescu1327
      @georgepopescu1327 Před 3 lety +1

      @@milferdjones2573 but that was against international laws principles. You can't give someone a heavier punishment than what was actually written in law when he commitet the crimes he was accused of. For example if you steal a car this year and the maximum sentence for theft is 5 years, if , when they catch you, the maximum sentence is 10 years, you will still get maximum 5 years.

    • @kaewakoyangi8071
      @kaewakoyangi8071 Před 3 lety +1

      @@georgepopescu1327
      That defiance of universal legal principles is the real shame in Norway's recent history.
      Equal to the conquest of Iceland.

  • @360Nomad
    @360Nomad Před 3 lety +57

    I actually met a survivor of Jasenovac at an American Civil War reenactment of all places. He was a Serb toddler in modern Croatia whose entire family was deported there in 1941. His father died there and his mother only managed to escape with him by hiding him in a canvas bag when she was transferred to a German-run labor camp. Pretty shocking thing to hear when you went expecting a carefree weekend of running around in a Confederate uniform, drinking beer, and smoking dope.

    • @duka1461
      @duka1461 Před 3 lety +24

      He told you about children, didn't he? A camp for children... We Serbs still cry blood for them.

    • @lornestein7248
      @lornestein7248 Před 3 lety +18

      @Cletus Poirier If that was a joke.. It was in very poor taste!

    • @Sturminfantrist
      @Sturminfantrist Před 3 lety

      omg, running around in a Confed Uniform ................and smoking dope :D

    • @360Nomad
      @360Nomad Před 3 lety +13

      @@duka1461 Yeah, he was in the children's camp I think. As I said, his mother smuggled him out and that's why he's still alive.

    • @eeeertoo2597
      @eeeertoo2597 Před 3 lety +4

      @Cletus Poirier ah get a life

  • @garycooper3066
    @garycooper3066 Před 2 lety +1

    Bravo for video! Keep on👍🏻

  • @waynelittle646
    @waynelittle646 Před 2 lety

    Absolutely brilliant again Mark 👏 thank you

  • @alansimmons9621
    @alansimmons9621 Před 3 lety +94

    It's easy to pass judgement on some who fought with the Germans, however a good friend of mine had a grandad from Latvia who had most of his family killed by Stalin. He was only to happy to fight the Russians in revenge for this families slaughter.

    • @ColinH1973
      @ColinH1973 Před 3 lety +28

      Agreed. A friend of mine was from Estonia and fought for the Wehrmacht on the Eastern Front. He hated the Germans, but hated the Russians more. His logic was that he didn't care what uniform he wore, as long as he was fighting Russia.

    • @wonderfalg
      @wonderfalg Před 3 lety +1

      @@ColinH1973 Very logical from german perspective, also 🤤

    • @enterthevoidIi
      @enterthevoidIi Před 3 lety +11

      what is the point of your comment? Are you nazi apologist?

    • @TheBorg01
      @TheBorg01 Před 3 lety +2

      Hey Latvia you had 100 000 SS soldiers !! im sure some people did the revenge , i never liked baltic states too much fascists , you are not slavs !...Altrough Baltic states wore part of Russian Empire since 18th century ! In the treaty of Treaty of Brest-Litovsk, Soviets ceded hegemony over the Baltic states to Germany; they were meant to become German vassal states under German princelings. it should had remained that way... but soviets wore threatened by nazi germany and part of their doctrine is to make longer buffer zone so Moscow is as far as possible from the border !!

    • @tahiro9589
      @tahiro9589 Před 3 lety +15

      @@enterthevoidIi how tf does that make him a nazi apologist?

  • @mattd5147
    @mattd5147 Před 2 lety +90

    I'm sure I'm speaking on behalf of most of (if not all) of your viewers when I say thank you, Dr. Felton. As a history fanatic myself, your videos are always intriguing and I find myself learning something new almost every time I come to your channel. This is without a doubt the best history channel out there today.

    • @vukovichvo604
      @vukovichvo604 Před rokem

      You believe in yugo-serbian lies. Where are bones from Jasenovac? They do not exist. You cant understand us and our history because u cant understand politics.

  • @emilkukec4890
    @emilkukec4890 Před 2 lety +11

    A gem of history.

  • @tommo9176
    @tommo9176 Před 2 lety +14

    Most people wouldn't be able to find this place on the map. I'm expecting you to name some microstate in Africa - Croatia?! Hu dafaq doesn't know where croatia is? I'm an Aussie who grew up in Japan and I think most people (especially in Australia) know where and what Croatia is lol. Regardless, great info as always Mark! You're a legend!

    • @castorchua
      @castorchua Před 2 lety +3

      I'm an Aussie that has travelled from France to Hungary and I didn't really know where Croatia is. Apparently just missed it.

    • @gordoncarter7344
      @gordoncarter7344 Před rokem +1

      @@castorchua Then you are a very uneducated Aussie! Gordon Carter. Adelaide.

    • @studiomanager688
      @studiomanager688 Před 5 měsíci

      @@castorchua literally on the border with hungary, maps are very confusing to some. LOL

    • @castorchua
      @castorchua Před 5 měsíci

      @@studiomanager688 Maps? I only ended up in Hungary because I got drunk in Krakow and was hitchhiking

    • @studiomanager688
      @studiomanager688 Před 5 měsíci

      @@castorchua well i guess that makes you an expert in geography. Thanks for the amazing input.

  • @alinharagus
    @alinharagus Před 3 lety +34

    Thank you for this episode. Maybe you can do one on Ion Antonescu and Romania in those years .

  • @ToMbA_La_BoMbA
    @ToMbA_La_BoMbA Před 3 lety +142

    My grandfather (on my mother’s side) was on the Eastern Front in Russia (survived everything) died in 1989. He was asked several times how he ended up in the 'Home Guard'/ Domobrani of the Croatian Army, and not in the Yugoslav Army/Partizani. He says that they went to the army that came to the village first. And that's it. And 99% people had no idea what WWII was a like.

    • @narancauk
      @narancauk Před 3 lety +14

      Yes nobody knew anything....Maybe eating German SPAM and killing fellow citizens could give them a hint on which side they were.

    • @so_zemlji
      @so_zemlji Před 2 lety +19

      Right...

    • @jelovoimevazece
      @jelovoimevazece Před 2 lety +8

      Similar story with my grandfathers' brothers, one was in the bloody SS and the other a yugoslav partisan.

    • @narancauk
      @narancauk Před 2 lety +5

      @@jelovoimevazece He could not been i SS. That was for Germans only!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    • @jelovoimevazece
      @jelovoimevazece Před 2 lety +20

      @@narancauk not true.

  • @Holland41
    @Holland41 Před 2 lety +53

    Congratulations on your great work. On the subject of Pavelic and Croatia it might be interesting to explore the role of the Roman Catholic Church in the Fascist regime of Croatia. A sensitive topic perhaps, but it should be much better known.

    • @northernstar4811
      @northernstar4811 Před 2 lety +1

      The Vatican didn`t recognise the "Independent State of Croatia" as it was an occupied country. Therefore the govt was a puppet govt that never was elected.

    • @tomislavpekovic9310
      @tomislavpekovic9310 Před 2 lety +1

      Croatia was not fascist, they were Nazis. And the role of Catholic Church was huge…. Catholic priests took part in Genocide over Serbs, Jewish… personally took part… if you know what I mean… Catholic priests have blood on their hands… crimes more disturbing and disgusting than in treblinka or Dahau…..

    • @fabreezethefaintinggoat5484
      @fabreezethefaintinggoat5484 Před 2 lety

      Catholics were the biggest opponents to Hitler,even moreso than Jewish Organizations,and both paid dearly

    • @fabreezethefaintinggoat5484
      @fabreezethefaintinggoat5484 Před 2 lety

      his ""contacts"where infiltrators probably,the same that loved VATICAN II

    • @jovicatrpcevski209
      @jovicatrpcevski209 Před 2 lety +2

      How about a couple of books? One would be "A Woman Rides the Beast : The Roman Catholic Church & the Last Days" by Dave Hunt & "Hitler's Pope: The Secret History Of Pius XII" by John Cornwell. These 2 works should suffice as a primer on the subject.

  • @MrGiorgioud
    @MrGiorgioud Před 2 lety +4

    Have you read "Kaputt" by the great Italian-German writer Curzio Malaparte? A series of diaries of war, observations and interviews. There is a great interview to.Ante Pavelic. Next to him there is a basket full of dozens of jelly-like round objects. So Curzio asks Pavelic: "are they Croatian mussels? ". And he answers, "with that good -natured, tired smile of his": "That is a present from my loyal Ustashe. 40 pounds of Serbian eyes"....

    • @user-xj3ve7wt8k
      @user-xj3ve7wt8k Před 2 lety

      Cool.

    • @MrGiorgioud
      @MrGiorgioud Před 2 lety

      @@user-xj3ve7wt8k you should read also Malaparte’s followi-up, “The skin”. A portrayal of Southern Italy on the cusp between the German retreat and the Anglo-American conquest. It is full of comical and tragic scenes. For example, after the Allies have entered in Naples, the dignitaries of the city organise a meal for the high command, and being hospitable Italians, they ask them what they would like to eat. Now, having always had heard of Naples’ fishing industry, they all ask for fish. Naples’ dignitaries acquiesce, but there is only one problem: it is impossible to find fish in the whole area. The only place where one could find it, the public Zoo, had been ransacked by the starving population. So they serve the only specimen still alive, a baby manatee. They kill it, cook it and serve it with mayonnaise. The only inconvenient is that thus presented, the poor manatee really looks like a little infant girl....the Anglo-American militaries are dumbfounded and horrified, wondering what kind of place Naples is, where they eat little children....in other places it is not that hilarious, but rather dark: it talks about Naples being a place so ravaged by famine, that everything is for sale, even the children. Naturally he is alluding to the plague of Anglo-American pedophile soldiers, all too eager to buy a child for the night from the starving parents....truly horrific.....

    • @northernstar4811
      @northernstar4811 Před 2 lety

      He also wrote a British general served a cooked Italian baby at an Allied dinner party in Italy to delighted Allied officers. He goes into a lot of detail. If you believe one B.S story then you have to believe the other.

    • @user-xj3ve7wt8k
      @user-xj3ve7wt8k Před 2 lety

      @@MrGiorgioud I will. it seems that Croats are real Europeans. God bless them.

    • @MantraX049
      @MantraX049 Před rokem

      "Kaputt" is a fiction novel, not a historical work.

  • @TheRealAnte
    @TheRealAnte Před 2 lety +167

    You forgot to mention how Italy really "took control" of Dalmacija... the London Pact. English gave Italy the right to take Dalmacija in exchange for their services as allies

    • @narancauk
      @narancauk Před 2 lety +21

      Dalmatia (province )is an old word from ROMAN EMPIRE !!!!!Dalmatia historically belongs to ITALY !!!!!

    • @diktrejsi8214
      @diktrejsi8214 Před 2 lety +24

      All buildings in Dalmatia Italians built, Croatian build nothing

    • @narancauk
      @narancauk Před 2 lety +12

      @@diktrejsi8214 They were busy killing the Serbs together with current foreign occupiers

    • @XnarozX
      @XnarozX Před 2 lety +54

      @@narancauk this is false, infact italy is a fake country made out of many smaller countrys. italy shouldnet exist

    • @brckoustasa7966
      @brckoustasa7966 Před 2 lety +26

      @@XnarozX monkey fascist italians and chetniks-still fascist allies even long time after the fascisms
      still, italian tourist come to croatia and toast to our flag-mussolini ideology not alive in italy but alive in fascist serbia

  • @MijZmij
    @MijZmij Před 3 lety +52

    Благоје Јововић ❤️❤️❤️

    • @predragilic214
      @predragilic214 Před 2 lety +11

      Рука му се позлатила ☦️🇷🇸

    • @Lipanj92
      @Lipanj92 Před 2 lety +5

      @@predragilic214 U paklu gorio.

    • @predragilic214
      @predragilic214 Před 2 lety +9

      @@Lipanj92 Da Ante Pavelić gori u devetom krugu pakla sa svojim usašama satanistima.I sa svojim Nadbiskupom Vatikanske(Vavilonske) crkve satanističke Stepincem. Pavelić se kračka sa Irodom i Neronom u istom kazanu.Dok Srpska deca mladenci koje je njegova zločinačka ruka pobila u logorima Siska,Jasenovca, Jastrebarskog,pevaju u andjeoskim horovima ,gde su sva deca mučenici ubijena i silovana od zločinačke katoličke crkve kroz istoriju .

    • @vendetta4033
      @vendetta4033 Před 2 lety +3

      @@predragilic214 vi ste najveci falsifikatori povijesti ikada. Sto ocekivati od naroda koji svoje poraze slavi i velica kao pobjede

    • @predragilic214
      @predragilic214 Před 2 lety +6

      Hrvat se javio da mi kaže da mi nešto falsifikuje i😄😂😅Idite bre miševe vi nemate vojničku pobedu u istoriji osim te ,,Oluje,,a i to nije nikakva vojnička pobeda jer nije ni jedna bitka vodjena!Nego se Sloba dogovorio sa Franjom i naredio Mrkšiću da raspusti vojsku !Gde vam je Kolubara,Cer, Mačkov Kamen,Kajmakčalan,Dobro Polje,Kumanovo,Bakarno gumno ,Oblakovo,Bregalnica, gde vam je vama Crni Djordje ,Hajduk Veljko ,Stevan Sindjelić!Imate samo nekakve koljače ,psihopate Luburiće,Francetiće i slične.

  • @gerhard6105
    @gerhard6105 Před 2 lety +1

    Well done, again. I think we would like to see video's about Mussert, Quisling and all the other collaborating leaders. And one about the uprising on the isle of Texel, in 1945.

  • @geemeff
    @geemeff Před 2 lety +1

    Another great video bud!!!👍

  • @martinhogg5337
    @martinhogg5337 Před 3 lety +21

    Extremely interesting, just as we have come to expect !

  • @kabadahija
    @kabadahija Před 3 lety +172

    "The Royal family was detained in Kenya" - only Prince Paul and his family were under house arrest (he was perceived as an Axis sympathiser). King Peter II was recognised as the head of the Yugoslav Government in Exile in London.
    "The surrendered Axis soldiers perished in the gulags" - mostly true, but about 3000 Croatian legionaries changed side and were allowed to form a Yugoslav Brigade that fought with the Partisans in Yugoslavia, most notaby during the operation of liberation of the city of Čačak.

    • @mightisright4959
      @mightisright4959 Před 2 lety +28

      I can think what that liberation looked like

    • @Intreductor
      @Intreductor Před 2 lety +22

      I feel bad for Prince Paul. He had no other choice than to sign the Tripartite Pact as he was surrounded and under threat of war if he didn't. He was in fact pro British (being raised and educated there, and King George VI being his best man). He was a classic victim of circumstance and had to go against everything he believed in an attempt to save his country from war.

    • @manjelos
      @manjelos Před 2 lety +4

      True, and mostly forgotten, there was after the war election where people could choose between monarchy or Tito. Well, don't want to comment how far this elections war fair but on the other side Tito has gain popularity as liberator of the country...

    • @radomirratkovic9014
      @radomirratkovic9014 Před 2 lety +10

      @@Intreductor Prince Paul was very cultured man ...somebody pulled Yugoslav Kingdom into war..all that Axis asked from our country was to stay neutral but really neutral(we were breaching our neutrality by sending food,weapons and raw materials to Britain) and from Sept.1939. till the occupation by Axis nothing had changed..Yugoslav merchant fleet was supplying British and many ships have been sunk by Kriegs Marine

    • @radomirratkovic9014
      @radomirratkovic9014 Před 2 lety +5

      True and Prince Paul s son volunteered to RAF and was fighter pilot during the world war 2..young king escaped with government and some parts of the Royal Yugoslav Army to Kairo and from there to London...Royal Navy stayed in Kairo and was active through out the war on Allied side,same was with Army and air force...There are many photos of young king inspecting individual ships and talking to the crew

  • @Articulate99
    @Articulate99 Před 2 lety

    Always interesting, thank you.

  • @quattroanelli3558
    @quattroanelli3558 Před rokem +3

    Forgotten ? Blagoje Jovovic definitely did not forget about Ante, even though Buenos Aires is pretty far away from Balkans

  • @williammerkel1410
    @williammerkel1410 Před 3 lety +28

    As a geography and history enthusiast I was taken aback to hear thar Croatia is hard for most people to find on the map, or at least that is the stereotype.

    • @letoubib21
      @letoubib21 Před 3 lety +2

      But Belgium is a beautiful city, isn't it? *;-)*

    • @Liamthewaldo
      @Liamthewaldo Před 3 lety

      I have no idea where that is on a map, or Germany I know where england and america are that's it

    • @aceul1894
      @aceul1894 Před 3 lety +4

      @@Liamthewaldo thats sad

    • @ilovepresidentxi
      @ilovepresidentxi Před 3 lety +1

      I just pointed at the balkan peninsula and said “Somewhere there”

    • @Superintendent8814
      @Superintendent8814 Před 3 lety +1

      @@aceul1894 Indeed it is, I'm American and don't even know where every state is on a map. I even met someone once who didn't even know where Italy was, and that was during High School might I add. You can thank our glorious and most well established education for that. Truly a marvel in the making.

  • @mikebellis5713
    @mikebellis5713 Před 3 lety +44

    A podcast about how Churchill threw Yugoslavia's Royalists under the bus in favour of Tito's Communists would be interesting

    • @devilsadvocate7389
      @devilsadvocate7389 Před 2 lety +2

      They threw themselves under the bus… Croatians were Nazi alias, and Serbian Chetniks pretty much ignored English and Americans… other than Partisans there were no one on board with taking the Germans down.

    • @pp-bb6jj
      @pp-bb6jj Před 2 lety +1

      More like throwing away one Balkan butcher for another Balkan butcher.

    • @mladenmatosevic4591
      @mladenmatosevic4591 Před 2 lety +4

      Bottom line, Royalists never once fought against occupation and were collaborators to occupiers in fighting partisans. Elections in '46 showed what people think of them, since they lost by 90% of votes.

    • @blastimir
      @blastimir Před 2 lety +8

      FYI Operation "Halyard" the biggest rescue mission saving 514 US combat airman was carried out by the Draža Mihajlovoć's Chetniks. But please continue to make blanket statements.

    • @mladenmatosevic4591
      @mladenmatosevic4591 Před 2 lety +1

      @@blastimir Where they got 500 airmen in one go? I know for fact that partisans helped return any airman which fell near their zone of operation. It was routine easy task after fall of Italy, without need to boast about it.

  • @johnbrown9542
    @johnbrown9542 Před 2 lety +16

    Could you do Peter II, the forgotten Ally?
    Most don’t remember Yugoslavia signed the Axis pact but the next day there was a coup by the high ranking generals that installed Peter II as King and took them out of the Axis

    • @northernstar4811
      @northernstar4811 Před 2 lety +2

      The trouble was the British were involved in that coup. So silence is golden.

    • @CagedBoy
      @CagedBoy Před 2 lety +2

      Peter II was viewed as a traitor by most in Yugoslavia for running away with the treasury and leaving his people to fight alone. While his father and grandfather did the opposite during WWI.

    • @johnbrown9542
      @johnbrown9542 Před 2 lety +1

      @@CagedBoy that is an interesting point of view. Other monarchs of Europe did that and are views as hero’s by their peoples such as the King of Norway who they made a whole movie about for escaping the country with the treasury to set up a government in exile

    • @johnbrown9542
      @johnbrown9542 Před 2 lety

      @@CagedBoy the queen of the Netherlands and King of Belgium did the same thing so interesting that the Yugoslavians thought Peter was a traitor

    • @VersusARCH
      @VersusARCH Před 6 měsíci

      ​@@johnbrown9542State propaganda creates the narrative for the masses and in postwar Yugoslavia the anti-royalist communists were calling the shots. Unlike in the countries you mentioned.

  • @AP-qr8en
    @AP-qr8en Před 2 lety +11

    Ante Pavolic to the US command: hello, I am ante pavolic, dictator of Croatia
    US command: ….who?

  • @thenoobgameplays
    @thenoobgameplays Před 3 lety +36

    Dr. Felton is one of my favorites historians. You inspire me to be a future military historian. Keep going with the great job.

    • @murilofurlan3479
      @murilofurlan3479 Před 3 lety +4

      "You inspire me to be a future military historian." I have an impression that many of us can say the same.

    • @markopace974
      @markopace974 Před 3 lety +3

      @@murilofurlan3479 You are disrespecting a future US Army soldier

    • @murilofurlan3479
      @murilofurlan3479 Před 3 lety +2

      @@markopace974 Sorry I didn't get it, my comment was not intended to disrespect anyone, the purpose was only to state that, I believe, many of us share a common interest.

    • @eeeertoo2597
      @eeeertoo2597 Před 3 lety +3

      @@murilofurlan3479 don’t worry about it, its a meme

  • @hoselui
    @hoselui Před 2 lety +39

    3:24 Hitler trying to keep up with Mussolini, hahaha I love it

  • @dominiquecharriere1285
    @dominiquecharriere1285 Před rokem +18

    I didn't know Pavelic managed to escape, I thought he died in some combat action at the end of the war. Thanks once more for teaching us History!

  • @eddyredmond7758
    @eddyredmond7758 Před 2 lety

    Great video Mark.

  • @philiplarocca8246
    @philiplarocca8246 Před 3 lety +9

    I look forward to listening to that music in the beginning, Thanks for your hard work.

  • @terrywrist4189
    @terrywrist4189 Před 3 lety +51

    I'd be very interested to see a video on Leon Degrelle if you can make one. His involvement in the Mexican Civil War as a journalist, political career, service on the Eastern Front, and escape at the end of the war are all fascinating to read up on.

  • @andrewpitt9994
    @andrewpitt9994 Před rokem +1

    How do you manage to find and put out such fascinating and largely unknown content? I thought I knew a fair amount about the second world war. I clearly do not and very happy to learn. Outstanding work.

    • @cosmicreaverkassadin827
      @cosmicreaverkassadin827 Před rokem

      I think it is pretty easy to find a lot of hidden informations if you just know where to look and then look for it but most people simply dont care enough to do their own research.
      If you are interested in World War Two and politics I recommend looking for real official sources about the ideology of Nazi Germany because that sure is an interesting topic and most likely much different from what you would expect since teachers are forced to teach a lot about it in very short time so most of it gets lost especially since they also have to make you hate and fear it while it obviously has good parts since otherwise there wouldnt have been half of earth liking and supporting it.

    • @LjubaKovalovski-qe8nv
      @LjubaKovalovski-qe8nv Před 9 měsíci +1

      Ja ovdje cec ga nauciti sigurno hoces.

    • @romic8427
      @romic8427 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Antenna pavelic is not unknown content, it's pretty simple WW2 stuff. People sre just very uneducated

  • @St.Pa-al
    @St.Pa-al Před 2 lety +1

    Hey Mark, you're amazing. I love your presentations and I've written to you via email requesting to work for Mark Felton Productions...

  • @wurkinjowurka9026
    @wurkinjowurka9026 Před 2 lety +206

    Mark, you should look at Croatian devils brigade (369 regimen) that fought in Stalingrad. The last plane that took of from Stalingrad before Russians took it back had few of the devils brigade members. The captain of the brigade even forced the captain of the plane to wait on the tarmac(or the place they cleaned in the city for plane to land), and went back to theirs last stronghold to take the brigades loog book back to Germany.
    Fascinating story...

    • @mladenmatosevic4591
      @mladenmatosevic4591 Před 2 lety +3

      Ultimately, captured soldiers were reorganized and put to good work fighting Germans soon after.

    • @jamesfordham251
      @jamesfordham251 Před 2 lety +5

      My distant cousin was one of them. He then became a partisan lol

    • @wurkinjowurka9026
      @wurkinjowurka9026 Před 2 lety +6

      @@jamesfordham251 lots of them fought either for Russians or partizan after they got caught...

    • @ks0434
      @ks0434 Před 2 lety +24

      SO what Croatians fought Bolshevik's or Communist's Nothing wrong with that

    • @joksimradovic4040
      @joksimradovic4040 Před 2 lety +17

      @@jamesfordham251 Ne cudi me od Hrvata :)

  • @meyac4706
    @meyac4706 Před 3 lety +13

    0:54 norway is in the video and i feel appreciated! thanks for bringing the quisling quisling forward.

  • @seba.d
    @seba.d Před 8 měsíci

    Never knew the story of Pavelić in this detail so thank you for really good video. 👍👍

  • @pavlova122
    @pavlova122 Před 2 lety +3

    Dear Mark, make a video about March 27 and the role of Great Britain in pushing Yugoslavia into World War II.

  • @VersusARCH
    @VersusARCH Před 3 lety +54

    2:10 Wrong map. The "Yugoslavia" created in 1918. (actual name was Kingdom of Serbs Croats and Slovenes - the country was renamed Yugoslavia only in 1929.) did not have Istria and Zadar (Zara) which were given to Italy after WW1 and only given to Yugoslavia after WW2.
    The map is showing post 1954. Yugoslavia that included Zadar, Istria and also the "Zone B" of the former Free Territory of Trieste. Also the various internal subdivisions of the SCS Kingdom (which varied over time) and the depicted subdivision of the Socialist Yugoslavia (6 republics with Serbia having 2 autonomous regions) were quite different.

  • @Everett-xe3eg
    @Everett-xe3eg Před 3 lety +7

    Felton Fridays! Thanks for teaching me so much. Its great!

    • @slavisajekic2837
      @slavisajekic2837 Před 3 lety

      pavelic was a Jew of Sephardic descent, was a Jesuit and a Vatican agent

  • @nikoladrca5324
    @nikoladrca5324 Před 2 lety +3

    Awesome video! Glad that Pavelić is somewhat known outside of the countries I live in/near in the Balkans and I've learned a lot of new info about him in your video

  • @dongately2817
    @dongately2817 Před 2 lety +35

    My maternal grandfather was Croatian and served during the war. His term of endearment for a his half-brother and a couple close friends was “stashe”.
    After I learned of Croatian collaboration I always wondered if this was a casual reference to the Ustashe.

    • @blatonik403
      @blatonik403 Před rokem +22

      Yes, it is.

    • @regnorum
      @regnorum Před rokem +8

      Damn mate did you just figured out your granddad was ustasha and a nazi? That also served in Hitlers army? Fak dude sorry to hear that 😞

    • @dongately2817
      @dongately2817 Před rokem +7

      @@regnorum Meh, if we were all judged by the poor decisions of our families life would never move on. I guess the best anyone can do is learn from others mistakes so you don’t make any new ones.

    • @regnorum
      @regnorum Před rokem

      @Don Gately yeah for sure man, I didn't plan at all to put some blame on you or your family don't get me wrong. It's just fascinating revelation that's all.

    • @Cristiano-kb8gu
      @Cristiano-kb8gu Před rokem +2

      Your grandfather was a good man

  • @aleksandarnikolic7757
    @aleksandarnikolic7757 Před 3 lety +15

    Dr. Felton, thank you for this video!

  • @Chrisamos412
    @Chrisamos412 Před 3 lety +36

    This was fantastic Mark, thank you! This history is often overlooked, I appreciate the education.

    • @karenprescott5518
      @karenprescott5518 Před 2 lety

      A lot of misinformation in this video. Historical revisionism to suit current political agendas.

  • @TwinkleToesLorna
    @TwinkleToesLorna Před 2 lety +34

    good coverage, sir. another interesting part of this story is the internal croatian situation. there were axial croats and opposing croats. I remember my grandparents telling me ustashas were actively searching for men to either imprison/kill them for having anything with partisan movement, or to draft them. my great grandfather was one of the partisan allies (not actively fighting). he worked as a chauffeur for the . one day he was ordered to transport some kind of load in a truck to the east of croatia. he was never asked to drive long distances or to do any transports so he looked at the cargo. it was crates of munition and food for ustasha army. he simply drove the truck into a river and got back home on foot.

    • @matangox
      @matangox Před 2 lety +6

      The interesting thing about the Ustaše was that they had the support of the majority of their people. That they were much more brutal than the Nazis is also a known fact.
      But the really interesting fact was that during the 90s they were considered as heroes. Even the Croatian president Franjo Tuđman said multiple times that they were heroes and people were wearing their simbols everywhere. What is crazy is that the propaganda worked so well that even today a lot of people honor them as heroes. At soccer games fans chant their slogans and wear their symbols. It's crazy. Can you imagine if Angela Merkel one day declares Hitler as a hero? Can you imagine the reactions of people and leaders around the world?

    • @LegendaryKazooMann1936
      @LegendaryKazooMann1936 Před 2 lety +1

      @@matangox Exactly why videos like this one should be more widely available. So that people are aware of the horrendous atrocities of those false "heros"

    • @fishcereal9940
      @fishcereal9940 Před 2 lety +2

      @@matangox In the time that the Ustaše was in power they didn't have majority support. More croats where in the partisans than in Pavelić's army. However when the 1990s rolled around Croats became very patriotic and saw the Ustaše as a precursor to their fight against the Serbs (they compared the Serbian seperatists to the Chetniks who did warcrimes against Croats in ww2).

    • @ks0434
      @ks0434 Před 2 lety +1

      Long live Croatia Albania and Kosovo

    • @tincaktas2745
      @tincaktas2745 Před 2 lety +3

      @@matangox If you knew history you would know why Ustaše were greeted as liberators in the beginning of the WW2. Just go simplify it, Croatia was under brutal dictatorship under Kingdom of Yugoslavia when they decided to join. ( The brutality of dictatorship was in slow progress and not instant). Ustaše were in beginning greeted as liberators ad majority saluted them for creation of "free" Croatia. With time their popularity started to decline due to persecution of minorities and harsh standards put on population.
      Hos is a mixture of Domobrani which is regular army and Ustaše who were the facist fanatics. Completely understandable why people say that they are related. But, in beginning of the war in Yugoslavia the police of Croatia was the defensive force since Croatia had no military brigades. The Hos brigade was created later in war as response to Serbian propaganda which called all of Croatia and Croats Ustaše.
      Today using any kind of facist insignia or war cry is punishable with prison.

  • @sanitater7639
    @sanitater7639 Před rokem +2

    Not one of our brightest moments, that's for damn sure