Erich Raeder - Hitler's Admiral who for his Crimes was Sentenced to Life Imprisonment - World War 2

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  • čas přidán 10. 07. 2024
  • Erich Raeder was born on 24 April 1876 in Wandsbek, then part of the German Empire. The First World War began on 28 July 1914. Two years later, in May 1916, Erich Raeder participated in the Battle of Jutland, the largest naval battle of World War I, fought between the British Grand Fleet and the German High Seas Fleet. Although the British lost more ships and sailors, they maintained naval dominance.
    The First World War, which ended on 11 November 1918, had a profound impact on Raeder's personal life, as he lost his two younger brothers, who were killed in action. The Second World War began on 1 September 1939 when Germany invaded Poland. When Britain and France declared war on Germany on 3 September 1939, Raeder was shocked and shattered. For the German Navy, which surface fleet of which was inadequate to fight the British Royal Navy, this war came at least five years too early, and Hitler had previously assured Raeder that they would not have to confront a war until 1944. In October 1939, Raeder proposed to Hitler the invasion of Norway. The primary motivation for Raeder's push was to use it as a base for naval attacks on Britain. It was only in early 1940 that Raeder first mentioned protecting the sea lanes for Swedish iron ore as a secondary reason for the Norwegian occupation.
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Komentáře • 103

  • @paulcorrigan3753
    @paulcorrigan3753 Před 20 dny +20

    This is a bit one-sided. The Kriegsmarine was the least 'Nazi' service of the Wehrmacht.
    There were significant acts of humanity by German naval captains during WW2. E.g., the battleships Scharnhorst and Gneisenau hove to in an Arctic gale and heavy seas and rescued survivors of the auxiliary cruiser Rawalpindi - while HMS Renown was believed to be close by.
    Hans Langsdorff, captain of the panzerschiff/cruiser Graf Spee, went to great lengths to preserve the lives of crews of merchant ships he sank. So did Kapt zur See (later Admiral) Theodor Krancke, of the Admiral Scheer, during its six-month long raiding sortie that took it into the Indian Ocean.
    Captain Helmuth Heye, of the cruiser Admiral Hipper, went to a great deal of effort to rescue the crew of the destroyer HMS Glowworm, which had just rammed his ship.
    I could go on.
    Despite the success of sinking HMS Glorious Norway was catastrophic for the Kriegsmarine. The surface fleet never recovered from the losses. It could not cover the proposed invasion of England, for example.
    Germany reverted to submarine warfare, as it had begun to during the Kaiser's time, because it could not compete with the Royal Navy.
    They attacked convoys. All the belligerents attacked their enemies' convoys.
    What saved Raeder and his successor, Karl Doenitz, from the dubious attentions of the Allies' hangmen were the American and British admirals who wrote to the Nuremburg trial.
    They said that if Raeder and Doenitz were to be hanged then they should be, too. Their conduct of the war had been not much different, they wrote.
    They also praised the conduct of the Kriegsmarine during the war. It was war but the Kriegsmarine still managed to inject some humanity into its actions where it could.
    The doom-laden narrator's voice intoned that no-one shed a tear at Admiral Raeder's death.
    Theatrical bollocks, I say.

    • @funkfamily4165
      @funkfamily4165 Před 19 dny

      Good comment. Now I want to read some more of the Kriegsmarine's history...

  • @ladycplum
    @ladycplum Před 20 dny +8

    And he asked to be shot rather than serve a prison sentence!

  • @TonyDonnelly64
    @TonyDonnelly64 Před 21 dnem +9

    Wasn't he serving on the same ship as Heydrich before Heydrich was kicked out ? What a bad day that was when he got dismissed, leaving him in the position to join Himmler's notorious SS

    • @michaelyounke6924
      @michaelyounke6924 Před 20 dny +2

      One look at Heydrich and you tell he’s a sociopath! When Hitler called him the man with the iron heart he did so for a REASON

    • @shanemills3879
      @shanemills3879 Před 20 dny

      I think that was Admiral Canaris, as Heydrich was one of his officers?

  • @pji4994
    @pji4994 Před 20 dny +14

    Reader was an intelligent officer who distanced himself from the Nazi hierarchy, but was still culpable of crimes. Think he probably should have gotten the same sentence as Doenitz.

    • @Howard_Hunter_
      @Howard_Hunter_ Před 20 dny

      If he had pled guilty like Doenitz, he may have gotten a sentence like Doenitz.

    • @RoyJNg
      @RoyJNg Před 20 dny +2

      @@Howard_Hunter_ I don't see any information that Doenitz pleaded guilty, they all pleaded not guilty, only thing special about Doenitz was his lawyer was able to get Nimitz to also said the US Silent Service did not picked up enemy survivors too.

  • @cracoviancrusader6184
    @cracoviancrusader6184 Před 20 dny +4

    Admiral Nimitz of the USN declared the same in a letter to the victors' court defending Grand Admiral Doenitz.

  • @drmarkintexas-400
    @drmarkintexas-400 Před 21 dnem +6

    🎖️🏆⭐🙏
    Thank you for sharing this

  • @kingofsnakes1000
    @kingofsnakes1000 Před 21 dnem +7

    Where did you find that photo? I've never seen Raeder's interim baton before.

  • @brianferris8668
    @brianferris8668 Před 20 dny +5

    "There were no tears shed for Eric Raeder". How do you know there weren't?

    • @JuleyC
      @JuleyC Před 20 dny +3

      Because this channel thinks no one ever cried at the death of a loved one if they were "bad guys"

    • @funkfamily4165
      @funkfamily4165 Před 19 dny +3

      And it's a cool finishing statement...

    • @okapmeinkap7311
      @okapmeinkap7311 Před 7 dny

      Like whipcream on top choco pudding? ​Lame closing worts. @@funkfamily4165

  • @roaropgard8575
    @roaropgard8575 Před 21 dnem +16

    Rest in peace for the victims of Norway😢😢

  • @joeasthope2064
    @joeasthope2064 Před 21 dnem +13

    Wasn't that just normal warfare that any country would do
    I don't understand why he was on trial
    Did any other country go to court for doing the same

    • @muhammadabdulsalam602
      @muhammadabdulsalam602 Před 21 dnem +5

      Even I myself didn't find him guilty

    • @donclowers7666
      @donclowers7666 Před 20 dny +5

      To the victor go the spoils I guess.

    • @roymartin500
      @roymartin500 Před 20 dny +2

      Slight miscarriage of justice as Grand Admiral Dönitz only received 10 years and he was in charge of the wolfpack u-boat attacks that sunk not only warships but merchant ships as well. I do know that Dönitz's lawyer saved his life as he proved Allied ships did the same thing. I'm sure someone more qualified in Criminal Justice can explain it better. But, yes US Supreme Court Justice Jackson' goal was to set presidents so if WW3 were today we'd have an example to draw from for swift and immediate action on the perpetrators.EDIT: As why Raeder got 20years & Dönitz got 10 either came down to Dönitz's strong attorney help or The Soviets wanting Raeder as a Prestige prisoner.

    • @johnfleet235
      @johnfleet235 Před 20 dny +3

      Donitz knew more about what was going on in the camps then came out in the trial. Who built and repaired the U-Boats? My guess is slave labor especially after 1942. You are right about Donitz having a good lawyer, but he and Reader were sent to prison mostly because of a push by the Royal Navy.

    • @donclowers7666
      @donclowers7666 Před 20 dny +1

      @@johnfleet235 I read somewhere that allied naval officers came to his defense to some degree as far as how he waged the naval part of the war. I have mixed feelings on the war trials overall and not sure the manner in which they were conducted is any example of how to do things after future wars.

  • @janlindtner305
    @janlindtner305 Před 20 dny +2

    Always good lectures👍👍👍

  • @user-bv7py2px1w
    @user-bv7py2px1w Před 19 dny +6

    The truth is " There is no war crime when u win the war " .. Dont you think there are US ,UK and Soviet army commanders who are worse war criminals than Germans ?? Ask how many Women were r@ped by US forces in France and Belgium . How many unarmed civilians died in Dresden bombing ?? Let's not ask how Soviet killed innocent unarmed civilians in Estonia , Finland , Poland etc. Do u think the civilians in Hiroshima n Nagasaki were criminals ?? Think about it
    Conclusion : War is hell

    • @okapmeinkap7311
      @okapmeinkap7311 Před 7 dny

      *They were fanatical supporters of their little emp who empowered "emperor soldiers" to commit unspeakable war crimes any and everywhere the japanese touched. Collectively they were and still are war criminals YES.*

    • @user-bv7py2px1w
      @user-bv7py2px1w Před 7 dny

      @@okapmeinkap7311 You didn't prove my points wrong . The things I mentioned about Allied n Soviet army's crime is 100% true. "There is no war crimes when u win the war " this statement is the truth .

    • @okapmeinkap7311
      @okapmeinkap7311 Před 7 dny

      @@user-bv7py2px1w I don't have to. Statements can prove themselves wrong. BTW, I did respond to Naga and Hiro but someone deleted it. Yes collectively the japanese were and still are war criminals.

  • @richardsimms251
    @richardsimms251 Před 18 dny +1

    Good video

  • @margarita8442
    @margarita8442 Před 21 dnem +7

    no tears shed darlinks !!!!

  • @BrianHayter-zl2uc
    @BrianHayter-zl2uc Před 20 dny +1

    Very interesting doco, great stuff. 👍👍👍😁😁😁🇦🇺🇦🇺🇦🇺

  • @peter455sd
    @peter455sd Před 20 dny +7

    You win the war you're a hero.
    You lose the war you're a criminal...

    • @robertomeneghetti6215
      @robertomeneghetti6215 Před 20 dny

      With an exception, the nazis: criminals anyway,
      even when they were winning...

    • @georgebrown8312
      @georgebrown8312 Před 20 dny

      Not necessarily. The Germans lost the war because Adolf Hitler made a series of military blunders, such as Operation Barbarossa, where Hitler sent his Wehrmacht into the former Soviet Union, and he declared war on the United States after Japan attacked Pearl Harbor. Those are why Nazi Germany lost the war.

  • @mariolasanda8116
    @mariolasanda8116 Před 21 dnem +25

    Thank you for this upload. He was not as evil as the other Nazis but he was responsible for a lot of atrocities committed by the Kriegsmarine.

    • @anthonycruciani939
      @anthonycruciani939 Před 20 dny

      What? You've been brainwashed.

    • @cracoviancrusader6184
      @cracoviancrusader6184 Před 20 dny +4

      Can you mention one? So far no one did. I am open-minded and willing to hear.

    • @anthonycruciani939
      @anthonycruciani939 Před 20 dny +1

      @@cracoviancrusader6184 No but he can contrive one.

    • @funkfamily4165
      @funkfamily4165 Před 19 dny +2

      Victories in battle by the loser are labeled war crimes by the winner....

    • @timfool
      @timfool Před 11 dny +1

      He was a soldier. If you never were one I don't expect you to understand.

  • @curiousuranus810
    @curiousuranus810 Před 20 dny +1

    Another classic.

  • @davidcarter6715
    @davidcarter6715 Před 20 dny +1

    Abril 24, 1876 tears of joy.

  • @14rnr
    @14rnr Před 18 dny

    You're the first English person I've ever heard pronounce Jutland correctly

  • @brendasg155
    @brendasg155 Před 20 dny +4

    Tears were shed for him

  • @jmcb8440
    @jmcb8440 Před 20 dny

    What is this wand he has in his hand in the cover photo? I have seen Herman Goering with this thing also.

    • @petervonstamer7859
      @petervonstamer7859 Před 18 dny +2

      That his is a marshals baton all German grand admirals & field marshal received two baton a interm baton for daily use and a ceremony baton for important / official events

    • @lewdecker1442
      @lewdecker1442 Před 14 dny

      Baton

  • @toddreaker2298
    @toddreaker2298 Před 16 dny

    Didn’t Nimitz support unrestrained warfare? He sent a letter to the court in support of Doenitz.

  • @richardsimms251
    @richardsimms251 Před 18 dny +1

    Interesting video and very interesting VOICE of the narrator.

  • @RedLanternFrank
    @RedLanternFrank Před 18 dny

    He had a family. So yes there where tears,

  • @RodneyAllanPoe
    @RodneyAllanPoe Před 20 dny

    He almost got demoted to navy archives again by Hitler! 😅

  • @crownprincesebastianjohano7069

    "No one shed a tear?" Nonsense. Raeder was highly respected by naval men of all nations and US and British admirals spoke up in his defense at Nuremberg. Raeder's funeral was attended by many of his comrades. It is actually comical that he got convicted on all counts when Donitz didn't. Raeder was no Nazi and acted no differently than any other naval leader of the time. Perhaps with the exception of Soviet admirals.

  • @haeuptlingaberja4927
    @haeuptlingaberja4927 Před 20 dny +4

    One of the oldest Nazi criminals, a boy when Bismarck still strutted across the world stage.

  • @astralclub5964
    @astralclub5964 Před 19 dny

    The French were given a choice. Take the fleet to the Caribbean or turn over the ships to Britain. The French chose to fight!

  • @WadeRaney-vv5oi
    @WadeRaney-vv5oi Před 19 dny

    A Good Presentation as usual👋

  • @margarita8442
    @margarita8442 Před 21 dnem +1

    I love dis channy darlinks

  • @liviabaggio1543
    @liviabaggio1543 Před 14 dny

    He seems like a naval of Rommel, who was forced to commit suicide, by his masters

  • @davidsigalow7349
    @davidsigalow7349 Před 20 dny +1

    "Mein Fuhrer, Steiner and Raeder failed to stop the British convoy."
    Hitler removes glasses slowly, takes a deep breath, and prepares to rant...

    • @Karl-nv5ok
      @Karl-nv5ok Před 19 dny +1

      Seiner had nothing to do with Kriegsmarine,he was a Waffen-SS general.

    • @davidsigalow7349
      @davidsigalow7349 Před 18 dny

      ​@Karl-nv5ok The reference to Steiner was a "Downfall" in-joke, as it was Steiner's failed counterattack that causes the Fuhrer 's 1000- meme rant.
      See, eg, the Hitler Rants Parodies (HRP) YT channel, which has been making "Downfall" Parodies for 15 years.

  • @bujmoose3992
    @bujmoose3992 Před 20 dny +5

    Right after Pearl Harbor, The US submarine fleet was ordered to do the same thing that the U-Boats were charged with. I guess war crimes only matter if you lose.

  • @tomcotton8800
    @tomcotton8800 Před 9 dny

    This man was a naval commander who did what all naval commanders would be expected to do during times of war.
    Was he parading up and down Sobibor throwing bricks at the heads of inmates? No.
    Was he lashing people for not moving quickly enough during the death marches? No.
    Was he rounding up people with Down’s Syndrome and herding them into the back of a van to be gassed? No.
    Get some perspective please. Not all Germans were unapologetic Nazis. Not all Germans were psychopathic killers.

  • @popcornhead3479
    @popcornhead3479 Před 16 dny +1

    Excellent videos but this narrator is horrible!

  • @anemarie2984
    @anemarie2984 Před 20 dny

    Ou etait l OCCIDENT en 1933 ?

    • @djquinn11
      @djquinn11 Před 20 dny +1

      Preparing to bail out the French Army again.

    • @funkfamily4165
      @funkfamily4165 Před 19 dny

      The businessmen, like Ford, were courting the Nazis.

  • @funkfamily4165
    @funkfamily4165 Před 19 dny

    Love this channel. Even if the voice is AI, it's a really good one.

  • @user-qf5dh1ld2i
    @user-qf5dh1ld2i Před 14 dny

    very one sided

  • @RobertJonesWightpaint
    @RobertJonesWightpaint Před 21 dnem +3

    This "no tears shed" stuff really is daft - OF COURSE there were tears shed for many of these people; some deserved them more than others, but it's just a silly add-on to your otherwise very good documentaries. In Raeder's case - his was a career devoted to the Seemachtideologie, which you don't mention specifically; the need he perceived to at least be able to counter the domination of the Royal Navy - and not in itself a wicked ambition. For the rest - in war, he served his country according to his lights: he was a rigid political reactionary, and he accepted the Golden Party badge, which enrolled him automatically in the Nazi Party; of course, he could not deny the evil of the regime he had served, and as I remember didn't particularly try to. But I find it difficult to accept the concept of criminality so far as he was concerned. He was no Keitel, Jodl, or Göring.

    • @renskeconnell8038
      @renskeconnell8038 Před 20 dny

      That's why he

    • @gareththomas6714
      @gareththomas6714 Před 20 dny

      why are you sticking up for this nazi? very odd indeed

    • @JuleyC
      @JuleyC Před 20 dny +2

      But but but Nazi/s ya this channel seems to think that if the creator thinks they were evil then everyone in the world did. Never mind most had families and even kids. In the new video for the night of his release his whole family was there to happily greet him.

    • @funkfamily4165
      @funkfamily4165 Před 19 dny

      So basically, it's "no tears shed" by the victims of Nazi aggression. I think that's where the channel is coming from.

    • @JuleyC
      @JuleyC Před 19 dny

      @@funkfamily4165 Then perhaps the maker should extend it to say "no tears shed by the victims". On every one of their vids I keep seeing people taking issue with the tag line, and tbh it is just frustrating to hear teh line every time when it's clear it's not true in the way its said.

  • @muhammadabdulsalam602
    @muhammadabdulsalam602 Před 21 dnem +2

    Actually I didn't find hin guilty!!

    • @renskeconnell8038
      @renskeconnell8038 Před 20 dny

      You must live under a rock. Killing thousands of unprotected seamen????

  • @goodoldbubba6620
    @goodoldbubba6620 Před 20 dny +6

    He had family. I'm sure they shed tears. He was a naval commander, not some officer at Auschwitz. He was not a war criminal, except that he was in the armed forces of his own country during war. That was his only crime, and was not a crime at all. Find another catch phrase besides "no tears shed"!!

    • @danij5055
      @danij5055 Před 20 dny

      "No tears shed" is a legitimate figure of speech, and not an uncommon one. It's usage here and in other videos very much catches and emphasizes a sentiment. If you don't understand that it's not meant literally, I don't know what more to tell you. Other than maybe don't be such a word police, or in other words a "word/grammar N@zi" 🤔 especially on a video about N@zis.

    • @danij5055
      @danij5055 Před 20 dny

      And yes, he was a war criminal. He gunned down survivors of ships. Or ordered it. 🤔

    • @funkfamily4165
      @funkfamily4165 Před 19 dny +1

      It's "no tears shed" by the victims of the Reich.

    • @goodoldbubba6620
      @goodoldbubba6620 Před 19 dny

      @@danij5055 I don't need an English lesson from something such as you. Do not presume to "correct" me as you're not my instructor, and certainly not my superior. None of you are.
      I meant what I said. Time he found a new catch phrase. Period.

    • @goodoldbubba6620
      @goodoldbubba6620 Před 19 dny

      @@funkfamily4165 IDGAF

  • @johanneabelsen1644
    @johanneabelsen1644 Před 20 dny

    Why did they let him out?! Too many got away alive..

  • @Howard_Hunter_
    @Howard_Hunter_ Před 20 dny +1

    Why is the narrator speaking so weird? Sounds AI.

  • @DonMeaker
    @DonMeaker Před 20 dny +2

    The Nuremburg trials were necessary because Germany didn't fulfill the terms of the Versailles treaty that required them to identify and punish German war criminals.

    • @robertomeneghetti6215
      @robertomeneghetti6215 Před 20 dny

      They, the Germans, only felt themselves victims.. 🤔🤔🙄🙄

    • @Karl-nv5ok
      @Karl-nv5ok Před 19 dny +1

      The Versailles Treaty was one of the causes of war.

  • @Patrick_Cooper
    @Patrick_Cooper Před 20 dny +1

    Try to imagine that this narrator is your father, and he is scolding you for some infraction. Just give up and do the punishment...