His enthusiasm is apparent and contagious and he has a way to keep the audience's attention. I enjoy listening to him and I also enjoy Jonathan Parshall.
i guess im asking randomly but does any of you know of a trick to log back into an Instagram account..? I somehow forgot my account password. I would appreciate any tricks you can offer me
@Nelson Briar i really appreciate your reply. I got to the site through google and im trying it out now. Seems to take quite some time so I will get back to you later with my results.
The Wehrmacht was not heavily mechanized for the invasion of Poland. Almost 100% of their field artillery was horse drawn and 80% of the infantry marched into battle. 3 million horses were used by the Germans in Operation Barbarossa.
Comparatively speaking, they were much *more* mechanized after nicking those Czech tanks - I could see that, but they relied on "horse-power" for the rest of the war. Until they had to start eating the horses. You'd never know it from the war-time propaganda, though. Hell, even the US at first wasn't totally mechanized.
@@tso1157 He actually used to hit me and demand money from me. Nah just kidding. Never met the guy. I just like DRAMAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA! ;) Good lecture though. :)
I can't get over the fact that some the military maps in this presentation, starting from the one shown at 9:10, use Comic Sans MS as their font. Talking about warcrimes....
The map shown at 5:00 does not reflect the area occupied by Germany and its allies in early 1944. By that time its armed forces had been defeated in north Africa, Sicily had been liberated along with southern and central Italy. Eastern and central Ukraine had been liberated. The map would appear to reflect the position one year earlier, possibly in February 1943 just after the Sixth army had surrendered at Stalingrad as the encircled army is not shown on the map.
@@paulstewart6293 so what? by 1944 the occupied space had dramatically shrunk. the frontlines were much closer to the core, combined with reasonable german fear of a total collapse.
Someone looking a lot like Dr. Citino helped me w directions during my most recent visit to the D-Day Museum. I will forever wonder if that was him being all incognito.
@@stevencooper4422 although Dr. Citino is a military historian of the past, I would love to hear his analysis of the current Armed-Conflict in Ukraine.
You are wrong about the Me-262. It couldn't have been built any faster than it was. There was a massive shortage of materiel needed for the engines. It was the engines, not the wing racks that delayed it's introduction. They had to wait until engines that wouldn't explode after operating for just a few hours were available, and even after it was deployed, the engines they got could only run for about 200 hours before needing to be replaced. Just like the M-26 Pershing tank. It was developed and deployed as fast as it could. It was just too late to make a difference. Debate on how to use a weapon doesn't delay the engineering challenge of building it.
The real issue of the ME-262 was that it was available early as a fighter but Hitler decided is should be a bomber so that took a total redesign. That is what happens when a corporal is in charge....lol So it came too late. Also, the resources that went into it could have been better used making more ME 109's and more tanks.
They are more lectures about our grandfather's in the foreign world than we have here, "at home". Amazing stuff, Mr Citino. Definitely gonna buy your book(s).
Germany did not conquer Norway in 30 days. Norway held the Germans for 62 days, from april 9. to june 10. 1940, making it the occupied country that withstood a German invasion for the longest time before succumbing.
This is misleading. Resistance had basically ceased by early May 1940 and the government fled. All of the fighting in mid-May to early June was in Narvik - which is inspiring and not nothing, but was like 1% of Norway by population in the era. Without British & French support, the Narvik campaign would have been over pretty quickly, too.
@@Snow_Fire_Flame The government (and king) fled Norway on the 7th of June, 3 days before the capitulation. Northern Norway was never captured before the capitulation on the 10th of June. British, French and Polish troops did indeed part-take in the defence of Norway, most famously the recapture of Narvik on the 28th of May. Aka the first allied victory in WWII. Unsure in what way that is relevant. Allied troops were then pulled from Norway as a result of the disaster unfolding in France at the time. Norway was indeed unable to withstand the Germans on their own and capitulated as a result of allied troops being withdrawn. 62 days after the assault. No, it' s not misleading. It is the truth.
@@oyoyoy9753 I said "fled", not "fled Norway." Oslo fell in the first days of the invasion, so the government certainly did flee. This isn't great for inspiring long-term resistance. I said it was misleading because you're acting as if the Norwegian campaign was a big drain on Nazi resources - and yet they were confident enough to invade France 1 month later. If the Narvik campaign was anything other than cleanup that a small occupation force could handle, then that would not have been the case. Look, I'm got Norwegian descent myself, but no shame in taking the L sometimes. Norway was outnumbered and outgunned and the Germans got lucky. The resistance at Narvik, individually, did not slow down the Nazis much at all. To loop back to the topic, I think it's just as fair to say that the Nazis conquered Norway in 30 days as it is to say that they conquered Yugoslavia in 2 weeks - despite continuing resistance in Yugoslavia that lasted for years afterward.
As much as I admire Dr. Citino' scholarship he made a serious mistake here [35:35]. He said that 80-85 percent of German "military resources" were committed to the Ostkrieg. This is manifestly incorrect. Now it is true that something like 85 percent of German military MANPOWER was committed to the Ostkrieg. But military RESOURCES is quite another matter. Manpower is only one element of military resources. If manpower was the only element, China would have won the War. Manpower of course is a vital part of war, but only one part. In fact, over half of German INDUSTRIAL output was committed to the war in the West. This lack of supply and support is part of the reason the Deutsche I Ostheer was defeated.
Contrary to popular belief, when Germany invaded, the Soviets had more tanks than the rest of the world combined and the Germans had... 750,000 horses. And when the US started sending billions of tons of material through Lend-Lease, paired with an almost endless Soviet source of human personnel, the Germans may have been mighty warriors, it's a wonder how they could last so long.
@@terrysmith9362 He he, nothing to do with the movies, just a slightly wicked sense of humor, nothing to worry about. Glad to see you got the essence of the message.
The D-Day breakout by Paton resembled the early German breakouts. Germany's strong WW1 lines after D-Day that only had to be broken in 1 place, have the supply lines and encircle those WW1 lines with armor, followed by troops. They had 2 choices, stay under cover and fight to the end like the Japanese at the end of their war or get out of the cover to attack the breakout supply lines or retreat before being surrounded. The same thing was tried in WW1 and Civil War, but troops and supply transport by horse were too slow to do the deep dive beyond an area reserve could patch, with force or armor or artillery with manageable risk of supplies not being cut. Battle of the Bulge is a failed case of a deep dive with too many opposing troops available to patch the lines and threatening supply lines.
the dday breakout was assisted by the soviets operation bagration, which resulted in over 700 000 german casualties alone, (which was more than the entire german forces the allies faced )
5:00 That map CERTAINLY is not "early 1944". Sicily and North Africa are blue - so, this is well before the fall of Tunis (which was in May 1943). We see a German advance deep into the Caucasus - so I would guesstimate late 1942.
If Luxembourg had been able to mobilize it’s reserves they may have been able to stop the whole Manstein plan through the Ardennes cause both of those guys were tough as hell
I love people who like to argue with a lecturer who has access to archives and official documents while the TH-cam commentators have access to...yep, that's right, fuck all. Somebody else's book or TH-cam movie. Not the actual archives, or interviews or documents. Robert Citino may not word things exactly how you want it worded but the guy has studied, visited and had access to more stuff than any of you have actually read yourself.
It's not only about access to archives, but about interpretation. Understanding the mindset of the time is very important; some historians forget that.
@@abbevogler2619hmm mabe your right. I always thought the phoney war ended on May 10, 1940 when the Germans launched fall gelb , the invasion of the low countries and France
@@dario9561 I meant roughly speaking. The Westfeldzug started on May 10, prepared from October 1939 onwards of course. The bad weatherforecast (and Hitlers birthdayparty?) let them wait. Interesting: in WWI the Netherlands were not occupied but Belgium only, that had been quite risky for the German point of view.
The amphibious tanks that the Allies developed for D-Day was in direct response to the what if they encounter panzers on the beach and of course as bunker busters where applicable.
U boat threat was under control by early 1941, the end of the first "happy time". It resurged after US joined the war with the "second happy time" as US admiral King refused to follow successful British protocols that lead to massively increased merchant losses until they were bought under control for the second time, as he said.
I understand that the 2nd ""happy time" was allowed simply by US. port cities refusing to operates under blackout protocols, like you said the British had been. This allowed for all our ships leaving port to be targeted remarkably easily as all those ships were all silhouetted against all those city lights.
Sinkings of merchant ships remained a very serious problem until into 1943 when every aspect of the weapons used by the allies from naval vessels and aircraft to improved depth charges started to take a heavy toll on U boats so much so Hitler decided to reduce operations involving U boats.
These are very interesting lectures, and I know they lecture to the military war college. But we haven’t won a war really since in the World War II so what really good as always when you have politicians who keep getting us into these no-win wars?
26:15 The Germans didnt even have an operational level of command. If you consider operational command the level of command that is supposed to interpret and coordinate between strategical and tactical command levels. The US and Soviets put a lot of emphasis on operational command and trying to coordinate between strategy and logistics and tactics. Every other country had at least some element of operational command. The Germans didnt think it nessesary. Especially by the end when the "strategy" was just whatever Hitler happened to be yelling about at any given moment and "tactics" were making the best of your bad situation and there were no logistics.
Not criticizing by any means but it was called operation "fall blau" , also the real reason y the 6th army fell and lost was lack of food, and the crazy part is each soldier was only allowed to get 300to500 calories a day of bread n really anything they could cook...the sad part about that is the average soldier is supposed to have 2600 calories a day and with only having 500 calories a day your looking at losing 2/3 pounds a week and for 71days most soldiers lost roughly 20 pounds by 71 days and if Hitler would have had them retreat along with the northern army and kept the southern army at the same spot its at and just made the line smaller im almost 100% sure Germany could have held out alot more
@Joe Montgomery. You've written a tautology and haven't capitalized a proper name. Fall Blau means Case (or Operation) Blue. Similarly, Fall Barbarossa or Operation Barbarossa, not Operation Fall Barbarossa.
@@microchip9982 food had already started to be a problem earlier, but let's look at supplies in general. The logistics of the 6th army were already severe before they had even entered the city. Many pop historians and tv documentaries pretend as if the battle of Stalingrad begins with Paulus invading the city, but the truth is that there had been a tiresome campaign with lots of battles a month prior to that. Food, oil, replacement parts, ammunition, were already stretched thin and logistics couldn't keep up. Once encircled in Stalingrad, for whatever reason, the Germans had decided that they would only start asking for food (via the airdrops) after they had slaughtered their last horses. I get it because horses needed food as well if they were alive, but they were also the majority of the whermacht's transportation abilities. Fall Blau was an absolute mess.
2600 calories a day is a severe weight loss diet for a soldier in combat. I have a moderately active job and I eat around that (average male, not a soldier, despite my best efforts). A WW2 solider in front line combat, in winter, and losing (adding to stress), would need north of 4k calories to maintain reasonable performance. Today, the average American soldier gets about 3500kcal per day from field rations, and they are nowhere near as active as an infantryman in Stalingrad was
Just counting aircrafts and tanks by land-lease is half the story. Because there was also aluminum (which Soviets had to get somewhere to build their planes), there was machinery to produce tanks. There was aviation grade gas that would allow the planes to fly. There was food delivery by calories enough to feed 10 million soldiers (which were required to eat more than women and children). Going back to western front, if Germans didn't need to produce submarines and ships, they were likely to produce much more tanks - the manpower, the materials to produce submarines are definitely not subpar to the manpower and materials needed to produce a tank. And in general, training one sailor is not that easy task. 2000 that died on Bismark were a heavy blow to Germany and it is "just 2000 Germans". For comparison, it is not that far from Japanese losses at Midway, which was a turning battle in the Pacific (allowing pacific land-lease to grow). So, while it is true that it is hard to imagine Americans and British to amass enough infantry to fight German infantry, it is not technically correct to reduce everything to headcount.
Judging by the other lectures of this series, including the ones from the other professors, the prepared speeches are really just a narrative of the invasion process. Any meaty info is left up to the audience to ask for during the Q&A, which probably explains why it takes up almost half the video. After all, its an auditorium on a cruiseship, not a university lecture hall.
Germany, pretty good at border warfare when they got first bite at the apple. Sustainable resources and logistics? Came on like cheap speed, then massive fade. The Russians killed them. Russia's long game fueled by US Lendlease and the certain knowledge it was a war of extermination.
I think if Germany had allied with Turkey and gone that route into the Soviet Union, grabbing their primary oil sources and potentially putting a real hurt on lend/lease (making oil the primary resource over trucks and equipment), the outcome may have been much different…. A nice presentation and overview, if very basic, of the European war.
@ Robert Rishel The Turks weren't stupid. They went in with Germany in the Great War, and it cost them their empire. Such as it was. In any case, operating from Turkey into the Caucasus was difficult. Covered in mountains the terrain was a nightmare. Few valleys to advance through, which makes any approach, over several hundred miles, predictable to the Soviets not to mention favourable defensive terrain. Baku was on the opposite side of the Caucasus on the Caspian Sea. There was no way to 'grab it'.
you seem to be oblivious of the combined british-soviet forces that secured iran in aug1941 (a couple months after germany invaded ussr), this actually secured that corridor into the soviet union where a rail line was built for lend lease supply the germans had their eyes on the oil fields in the middle east, including the anglo iranian oil company (the forerunner to BP) as their refinery in iran was the largest in the world at that time ... basically, the afrika campaign was given priority by both allies and axis powers due to a number of interests, not simply urelated to oil but it cetainly played a part.. with respect to turkey, many other nations in the region that qwere formed post ww1 were not exactly happy with the former ottoman turks as they were viewed as occupiers just as surely as the british/french were post ww1 .. different groups within the regions supported differnt countries
@@umenhuman7573 I'm not oblivious to anything. I'm pretty sure I have more qualifications in this arena than you do. The Iranians offered no resistance. Comparing Iran to the Soviet Union in military terms is ridiculous. As is your claim the "African" campaign was given priority.
@@DannyBoy777777 i was talking to the op your appeal to authority and your distorted interpretation of whatare completely irrelevant as an aside, since you brought it up... its rediculous to claim the iranians offered "no resistance", it would be more accurate to say they were simply overwhelmed and therefore put up little resistance my statement of fact regarding both allies and axis placing priority on afrikan campaigns is derived from declassified documents, ypou might try reading more of them and try to keep things in context (as you';ve demonstrated in your interpretation you seem to be prpone to errors in that regard)
@@umenhuman7573 Load of bullshit. Aside from the grammatically indecipherable paragraphs at the top, your claim that the Axis prioritised North Africa marks you out as a giant ignoramus. Four German divisions were in Africa in June 1941, and barely 10 by 1943. Over 200 were on the Eastern Front. You have no idea what you're talking about. The Soviet-British force suffered less than 60 fatalities. Like I said, organised resistance was practically zero. Idiot.
@@DannyBoy777777 Polish soldiers advanced east along the former Prussian Eastern Railway to railroad crossroads 7 kilometres from the town of Chojnice (Konitz) where elements of the Polish cavalry charged and dispersed a German infantry battalion. Machine gun fire from German armoured cars that appeared from a nearby forest forced the Poles to retreat. However, the attack successfully delayed the German advance, allowing the Polish 1st Rifle battalion and Czersk Operational Group to withdraw safely. I do not see "charged tanks" anywhere in that.
@@DannyBoy777777 I copied it. It is a long time since Wiki was unreliable. Today actual experts from all over will correct mistakes. Only on fringe topics is it inaccurate. So there.
41:00 I believe Stalin refused to sign the Geneva Convention (Second*) regarding the treatment of POWs so the Germans basically had no reason to treat Soviet POWs with any respect at all.
If you're on a deserted island which is not part of any jurisdiction and hence no laws apply, you could kill people without breaking any laws. But what you're doing is still murder, even if it doesn't technically break any laws. Treaties exist to enforce established conventions. They don't create them. If you're seriously trying to justify the vicious treatment of Soviet POWs (that resulted in some 3 million deaths) with the argument that there was no treaty protecting them, something's seriously wrong with your moral compass.
The Soviet Union signed the Geneva Convention on 27th June 1929. There are podcasts on YT which German prisoners said that Russian soldier's rations were not much better than what they received .The Russian campaign was characterised by the most heinous atrocities on the part of the Germans, which were a feature of what went on in other occupied territories from the Balkans the Channel Islands. Massacres of US,Canadian and British troops which became known was an invitation to allied soldiers to reciprocate such behaviour and they did.
@@lawrencebrown3677 thats too simple. Atrocities from German troops to Western allies did happen but were far from the norm. To say that only because of these instances allied troops commit crimes as well is not correctly portaiting the situation. And btw, war crimes do always happen in war. Their appearance in themselves is nothing unusual. The crucial point is: how are they dealt with by the corresponding military organisation.
First of all he said it’s what the college teaches. Also Ukraine is pretty local and contained compared to WW2. I don’t think that’s the type of “large scale industrial warfare” he’s referring to.
Bro repeating some tired old tropes about Germans being fast & fully motorized in the polish campaign (20% were in 1939) and Poles on horseback (_both_ armies relied on horses for logistics & scouting)
Guderian did not sit on People’s Courts. What he did -- preside over Honor Courts that discharged army officers so they could be tried by the political People’s Courts led by the repulsive Roland Freisler - was bad enough without adding to it.
"industrial scale warfare is unlikely to be fought" (in the future). Yet here we are in 2024 trying to supply arms to Ukraine for an industrial scale war. Not a huge one, but we're still struggling.
The US Pentagon is buying toys and games, not glue, paint, and spare parts. You get noticed and promoted by LEADING a project, not maintaining EXISTING CAPABILITIES and demonstrating successfully all those 'window dressing' INDUSTRIAL MOBILIZATION programs ..., which allow you to finance those career-enhancing Future Projects.
Fundamentally German organizational psychology is very different from American organizational psychology - Germans loathe bureaucracy and believe in self-sufficiency; that a small elite team can out-perform a large "unprofessional" mass. If you live in Germany you will see this in action at every level of society - German businesses encourage and rely on lower level personnel taking initiative and "handling" things on their own. Americans - despite saying they enshrine initiative - are far more hierarchical than Germans. And, of course, saying something and doing something are two different things. Now - this is not to say that Germans do not develop and appreciate organization and what they term "order;" but Germans are far more respectful of the benefits of order. Germans are not Americans, not French or British and certainly not Italians.
Poland was not Blitzkrieg. The Soviets attacked us from The Black 17th September. There were 1600+ skirmishes and battles between the Polish Army and Wehrmacht in 5 weeks.
Those casualty numbers are just insane when you think about how "only" 400,000 Americans died during the war and almost a quarter of those were in the Pacific. The numbers the Germans and especially the Soviets lost... Of course the Soviets lost even more civilians. When you consider civilian deaths China lost almost as many people as the Soviets and Poland is up there as well. You consider the Eastern front and the war in China and the far East, Indonesia lost many, almost all civilians, to Japanese atrocities... Youre talking a hundred million plus dead in 5-6 years.
Large scale industrial war won't be fought in the near future...perhaps the US army war college should have emailed a course program to Vlad the invader.
They actually had a pretty good railway system it was just overwhelmed especially in Russia as they had to change every mile to German gauge before it would be useable.
@@terimcrae4042 Earlier this year I read Yaron Pasher's "Holocaust versus Wehrmacht: How Hitler's 'Final Solution' Undermined the German War Effort", a painful subject, but a book I recommend.
The Wehrmacht in 1939 was not carried on wheels and tracks, he has that entirely wrong, only 20%, the tip of the spear, was motorised, the other 80% trudged along behind on foot and hoof, most of the German artillery & logistics was horsedrawn. The allied armies in Belgium were nto encircled, they withdrew back into France and ended up in a pocket on the coast around Dunkirk. Sorry, but this guy has so much of the details outright wrong, which makes me question how good he is on the bigger picture too.
How typical that an American historian should cover the events of 1940 without a single mention of The Battle of Britain, the largest aerial battle in history. Had the RAF lost the battle the Normandy landings would not have been possible. Why no mention of such a crucial victory?
Had that phase of the war been won the Germans, they could have bombed UK industry into rubble as there would have been no air defense left. No doubt about it.
If I understand the title/content of the presentation correctly- it's more about how the Nazi's operated in Europe once they took over and how they took over; not necessarily about the battles and so forth. Since the Nazis lost the Battle of Britain (and thus did not take over Britain) I think that's why it isn't mentioned. As an American myself I am very well aware of the Battle of Britain and the Legendary bravery of RAF pilots. Did you know there were 3 "Eagle Squadrons" of American volunteers who flew with the RAF during the Battle of Britain? Once the USA was "officially" at war they were folded into the regular US military- but even then most of the Eagle Squadron pilots still wore their RAF Wings on their American uniforms. ;)
@lorddaver3019 The Battle of Britain was NOT the largest air battle in history. It was vitally important, but not the largest. That was the strategic bombing campaign over Germany.
Rob Citino is a national treasure. I can listen to his lectures...forever.
He’s the best.
His enthusiasm is apparent and contagious and he has a way to keep the audience's attention. I enjoy listening to him and I also enjoy Jonathan Parshall.
I could listen to this guy all day. Love him
Always a pleasure listening to Dr. Citino. Assurance of a lively and enlightening presentation.
i guess im asking randomly but does any of you know of a trick to log back into an Instagram account..?
I somehow forgot my account password. I would appreciate any tricks you can offer me
@Adriel Bode Instablaster =)
@@adrielbode6995 I haven't a clue. I'm not on Instagram.
@Nelson Briar i really appreciate your reply. I got to the site through google and im trying it out now.
Seems to take quite some time so I will get back to you later with my results.
@Nelson Briar It worked and I finally got access to my account again. I am so happy!
Thank you so much, you saved my ass!
Always a good day when watching a brand new Citino lecture
this is from obama years lol
Not new genius.
@@unknowable2432 we didn’t have access to it until now so it’s a new release
@@kickassandchewbubblegum639 It would be pretty hard for it to be otherwise anytime around any WW2 70th anniversary.
The Wehrmacht was not heavily mechanized for the invasion of Poland. Almost 100% of their field artillery was horse drawn and 80% of the infantry marched into battle. 3 million horses were used by the Germans in Operation Barbarossa.
Comparatively speaking, they were much *more* mechanized after nicking those Czech tanks - I could see that, but they relied on "horse-power" for the rest of the war. Until they had to start eating the horses. You'd never know it from the war-time propaganda, though. Hell, even the US at first wasn't totally mechanized.
As David Stahel said, the tanks were like the tip of the spear and the infantry is the shaft.
@@fuzzydunlop7928 only fully mechanized army in 1939/40 was BEF, everybody else had larger or smaller mounted elements.
@@davidsabillon5182 there is a good joke in there somewhere
Agreed; the Wehrmacht was an army of two half’s. A small mechanised core (roughly 10%) and hundreds of line infantry divisions that walked.
Prophetic. My jaw dropped when he called Putin a Mussolini.
Putin is winning. Ukraine can't win.
1:05:50
Prophetic? It's only like year 24 of his rule
@@joseornelas1718this was in 2014, just a few months after russia siezed Crimea. So not surprising he said that, also only year 15 of putins reign
Putolini.
I would love to have taken a class with this man in college
I took many, best prof I ever had.
@@tso1157 He actually used to hit me and demand money from me.
Nah just kidding. Never met the guy. I just like DRAMAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA!
;)
Good lecture though. :)
I can't get over the fact that some the military maps in this presentation, starting from the one shown at 9:10, use Comic Sans MS as their font. Talking about warcrimes....
You've gotta take the edge off an atrocity somehow.
I have read his excellent books about WW2 - they are well worth your time.
Do you have a profession in the military
@@EliasKaganDo you always ask people to substantiate their recommendations?
@@TheNelster72That was not the intention with the question. Good try, though.
The map shown at 5:00 does not reflect the area occupied by Germany and its allies in early 1944. By that time its armed forces had been defeated in north Africa, Sicily had been liberated along with southern and central Italy. Eastern and central Ukraine had been liberated. The map would appear to reflect the position one year earlier, possibly in February 1943 just after the Sixth army had surrendered at Stalingrad as the encircled army is not shown on the map.
Interesting. So what?
@@paulstewart6293 so what? by 1944 the occupied space had dramatically shrunk. the frontlines were much closer to the core, combined with reasonable german fear of a total collapse.
"First few years of the war" 5:48
Watch the video
That map looks like somewhere in the autumn of 1942, the furthest extent of German Army influence eastwards.
Someone looking a lot like Dr. Citino helped me w directions during my most recent visit to the D-Day Museum. I will forever wonder if that was him being all incognito.
Did he have two copies of one map, with the arrows going in opposite directions?
Did he have his Brittany Spears fangear on?
New Citino!
I was randomly watching this video for my WW2 interest and suddenly I hear this guy predict war in Ukraine. Wow.
This happened soon after what happened in Crimea in 2014. So it’s not that great a prediction since the war had already started.
This is great.
❤❤❤❤❤
Great lecture, he makes lessons come alive!! Sir Antony Beevor is also great!
This lecture was recorded in 2014.
Incredibly prescient after the 50 minute mark.
@@stevencooper4422 although Dr. Citino is a military historian of the past, I would love to hear his analysis of the current Armed-Conflict in Ukraine.
It looks like it was recorded in 1988 good grief
You are wrong about the Me-262. It couldn't have been built any faster than it was. There was a massive shortage of materiel needed for the engines. It was the engines, not the wing racks that delayed it's introduction. They had to wait until engines that wouldn't explode after operating for just a few hours were available, and even after it was deployed, the engines they got could only run for about 200 hours before needing to be replaced.
Just like the M-26 Pershing tank. It was developed and deployed as fast as it could. It was just too late to make a difference.
Debate on how to use a weapon doesn't delay the engineering challenge of building it.
The real issue of the ME-262 was that it was available early as a fighter but Hitler decided is should be a bomber so that took a total redesign. That is what happens when a corporal is in charge....lol So it came too late. Also, the resources that went into it could have been better used making more ME 109's and more tanks.
They are more lectures about our grandfather's in the foreign world than we have here, "at home". Amazing stuff, Mr Citino. Definitely gonna buy your book(s).
Cintino is one of the foremost authorities on German WW2 history and order of battle.
This guy is a amazing professor i all my teachers were like him
Very good, thank you.
I’m glad to know citino keeps Britney on his mind
Excellent lecture.
The begins at 2:25
Germany did not conquer Norway in 30 days. Norway held the Germans for 62 days, from april 9. to june 10. 1940, making it the occupied country that withstood a German invasion for the longest time before succumbing.
This is misleading. Resistance had basically ceased by early May 1940 and the government fled. All of the fighting in mid-May to early June was in Narvik - which is inspiring and not nothing, but was like 1% of Norway by population in the era. Without British & French support, the Narvik campaign would have been over pretty quickly, too.
@@Snow_Fire_Flame The government (and king) fled Norway on the 7th of June, 3 days before the capitulation. Northern Norway was never captured before the capitulation on the 10th of June. British, French and Polish troops did indeed part-take in the defence of Norway, most famously the recapture of Narvik on the 28th of May. Aka the first allied victory in WWII. Unsure in what way that is relevant. Allied troops were then pulled from Norway as a result of the disaster unfolding in France at the time. Norway was indeed unable to withstand the Germans on their own and capitulated as a result of allied troops being withdrawn. 62 days after the assault. No, it' s not misleading. It is the truth.
@@oyoyoy9753 I said "fled", not "fled Norway." Oslo fell in the first days of the invasion, so the government certainly did flee. This isn't great for inspiring long-term resistance. I said it was misleading because you're acting as if the Norwegian campaign was a big drain on Nazi resources - and yet they were confident enough to invade France 1 month later. If the Narvik campaign was anything other than cleanup that a small occupation force could handle, then that would not have been the case.
Look, I'm got Norwegian descent myself, but no shame in taking the L sometimes. Norway was outnumbered and outgunned and the Germans got lucky. The resistance at Narvik, individually, did not slow down the Nazis much at all. To loop back to the topic, I think it's just as fair to say that the Nazis conquered Norway in 30 days as it is to say that they conquered Yugoslavia in 2 weeks - despite continuing resistance in Yugoslavia that lasted for years afterward.
As much as I admire Dr. Citino' scholarship he made a serious mistake here [35:35]. He said that 80-85 percent of German "military resources" were committed to the Ostkrieg. This is manifestly incorrect. Now it is true that something like 85 percent of German military MANPOWER was committed to the Ostkrieg. But military RESOURCES is quite another matter. Manpower is only one element of military resources. If manpower was the only element, China would have won the War. Manpower of course is a vital part of war, but only one part. In fact, over half of German INDUSTRIAL output was committed to the war in the West. This lack of supply and support is part of the reason the Deutsche I Ostheer was defeated.
A Citino lecture! 🍿🍿🍿🧐
Watching this in 2022. Care to reassess them predictions?
Always Factual and intertaining
Contrary to popular belief, when Germany invaded, the Soviets had more tanks than the rest of the world combined and the Germans had... 750,000 horses. And when the US started sending billions of tons of material through Lend-Lease, paired with an almost endless Soviet source of human personnel, the Germans may have been mighty warriors, it's a wonder how they could last so long.
The tanks were old and obsolete.
Yea Russia had more than tanks than the rest of the world combined in the late 30’s, 40-41 but only 3 of them worked.
Billions of tons??? Another Hollywood historian
@@terrysmith9362 He he, nothing to do with the movies, just a slightly wicked sense of humor, nothing to worry about. Glad to see you got the essence of the message.
@@rosesandsongs21 you seem to accept myth as acceptable to fact to butress a narrative
@51:00 Oh mister Citino, the US army war college was so wrong about that one.
The D-Day breakout by Paton resembled the early German breakouts. Germany's strong WW1 lines after D-Day that only had to be broken in 1 place, have the supply lines and encircle those WW1 lines with armor, followed by troops. They had 2 choices, stay under cover and fight to the end like the Japanese at the end of their war or get out of the cover to attack the breakout supply lines or retreat before being surrounded. The same thing was tried in WW1 and Civil War, but troops and supply transport by horse were too slow to do the deep dive beyond an area reserve could patch, with force or armor or artillery with manageable risk of supplies not being cut. Battle of the Bulge is a failed case of a deep dive with too many opposing troops available to patch the lines and threatening supply lines.
the dday breakout was assisted by the soviets operation bagration, which resulted in over 700 000 german casualties alone, (which was more than the entire german forces the allies faced )
Gott mit uns
😂😂😂
5:00 That map CERTAINLY is not "early 1944".
Sicily and North Africa are blue - so, this is well before the fall of Tunis (which was in May 1943).
We see a German advance deep into the Caucasus - so I would guesstimate late 1942.
Everyone forgets the mighty Luxembourg.
I know right? ^^
"Luxembourg is joke to you?!"
@@Torgo1001 Yes
If Luxembourg had been able to mobilize it’s reserves they may have been able to stop the whole Manstein plan through the Ardennes cause both of those guys were tough as hell
WW2 cruise? That sounds cool
He was when he said you just don't know what will happen in 5 years!
52:00 he predicted the Ukrainian War.
I love people who like to argue with a lecturer who has access to archives and official documents while the TH-cam commentators have access to...yep, that's right, fuck all. Somebody else's book or TH-cam movie. Not the actual archives, or interviews or documents. Robert Citino may not word things exactly how you want it worded but the guy has studied, visited and had access to more stuff than any of you have actually read yourself.
You are right!
It's not only about access to archives, but about interpretation. Understanding the mindset of the time is very important; some historians forget that.
10:30 ff. SORRY: The invasion of Norway was in April 1941 and not 1940.
No, it was in April of 1940.
@@dario9561 Ten times sorry, you're right, it was April 1940, at the end of "La drôle de guerre".
@@abbevogler2619hmm mabe your right. I always thought the phoney war ended on May 10, 1940 when the Germans launched fall gelb , the invasion of the low countries and France
@@dario9561 I meant roughly speaking. The Westfeldzug started on May 10, prepared from October 1939 onwards of course. The bad weatherforecast (and Hitlers birthdayparty?) let them wait. Interesting: in WWI the Netherlands were not occupied but Belgium only, that had been quite risky for the German point of view.
Very enjoyable
The amphibious tanks that the Allies developed for D-Day was in direct response to the what if they encounter panzers on the beach and of course as bunker busters where applicable.
1:01:23 By my math, 225 German divisions fighting the Soviets is a force of 2.7 million men.
Bewegungskrieg not Blitzkrieg!
His prediction about major players in future wars being non-state actors didn't age well, but overall I enjoyed this talk.
It aged well from 1991-2022, i don't blame him for thinking that, we all did too
@@alexs_toy_barn Peter Zeihan didn’t think that way.
He had me at WW2 Cruise……
About the 4 and half minute mark he gets to the lecture.
U boat threat was under control by early 1941, the end of the first "happy time". It resurged after US joined the war with the "second happy time" as US admiral King refused to follow successful British protocols that lead to massively increased merchant losses until they were bought under control for the second time, as he said.
I understand that the 2nd ""happy time" was allowed simply by US. port cities refusing to operates under blackout protocols, like you said the British had been. This allowed for all our ships leaving port to be targeted remarkably easily as all those ships were all silhouetted against all those city lights.
Sinkings of merchant ships remained a very serious problem until into 1943 when every aspect of the weapons used by the allies from naval vessels and aircraft to improved depth charges started to take a heavy toll on U boats so much so Hitler decided to reduce operations involving U boats.
There wee still substantial U-boat sinkings until the convoy battles of mid-1943.
These are very interesting lectures, and I know they lecture to the military war college. But we haven’t won a war really since in the World War II so what really good as always when you have politicians who keep getting us into these no-win wars?
The Russians moved armies from the Chinese border, having defeated the Japanese there. Hitler had no idea of their resources.
"The Iron Dream" ~ by Norman Spinrad
I love this dude
Citino: Likely no large industrial scale warfare in the near future. Russia: hold my beer...
53:40 from that map you can tell that if Spain, Turkey, Finland and Sweden had joined Germany then they might have beaten the Soviet Union.
GOD BLess YOU ALL!!!!!!!
51 mins - I wonder if he would describe the Ukrainian war as an Industrial war?
Not yet, not quite yet. One might argue that it is such for Ukraine but it isn't quite that far for Russia and the rest of the world.
Limited war is the future of warfare, rather than Total War, for the short to medium term.
WW2 cruise?!?!? Sign me up!
26:15
The Germans didnt even have an operational level of command. If you consider operational command the level of command that is supposed to interpret and coordinate between strategical and tactical command levels. The US and Soviets put a lot of emphasis on operational command and trying to coordinate between strategy and logistics and tactics. Every other country had at least some element of operational command. The Germans didnt think it nessesary. Especially by the end when the "strategy" was just whatever Hitler happened to be yelling about at any given moment and "tactics" were making the best of your bad situation and there were no logistics.
56:12 very prescient!
Not criticizing by any means but it was called operation "fall blau" , also the real reason y the 6th army fell and lost was lack of food, and the crazy part is each soldier was only allowed to get 300to500 calories a day of bread n really anything they could cook...the sad part about that is the average soldier is supposed to have 2600 calories a day and with only having 500 calories a day your looking at losing 2/3 pounds a week and for 71days most soldiers lost roughly 20 pounds by 71 days and if Hitler would have had them retreat along with the northern army and kept the southern army at the same spot its at and just made the line smaller im almost 100% sure Germany could have held out alot more
@Joe Montgomery. You've written a tautology and haven't capitalized a proper name. Fall Blau means Case (or Operation) Blue. Similarly, Fall Barbarossa or Operation Barbarossa, not Operation Fall Barbarossa.
The lack of food had absolutely nothing to do with the encirclement of the 6th army. It was the effect of their defeat, not the cause.
@@tlanimass952 That's like saying Mickey Mouse had nothing to do with the encirclement.
@@microchip9982 food had already started to be a problem earlier, but let's look at supplies in general. The logistics of the 6th army were already severe before they had even entered the city. Many pop historians and tv documentaries pretend as if the battle of Stalingrad begins with Paulus invading the city, but the truth is that there had been a tiresome campaign with lots of battles a month prior to that. Food, oil, replacement parts, ammunition, were already stretched thin and logistics couldn't keep up. Once encircled in Stalingrad, for whatever reason, the Germans had decided that they would only start asking for food (via the airdrops) after they had slaughtered their last horses. I get it because horses needed food as well if they were alive, but they were also the majority of the whermacht's transportation abilities. Fall Blau was an absolute mess.
2600 calories a day is a severe weight loss diet for a soldier in combat. I have a moderately active job and I eat around that (average male, not a soldier, despite my best efforts).
A WW2 solider in front line combat, in winter, and losing (adding to stress), would need north of 4k calories to maintain reasonable performance.
Today, the average American soldier gets about 3500kcal per day from field rations, and they are nowhere near as active as an infantryman in Stalingrad was
Salutations my old docent!
Just counting aircrafts and tanks by land-lease is half the story. Because there was also aluminum (which Soviets had to get somewhere to build their planes), there was machinery to produce tanks. There was aviation grade gas that would allow the planes to fly. There was food delivery by calories enough to feed 10 million soldiers (which were required to eat more than women and children). Going back to western front, if Germans didn't need to produce submarines and ships, they were likely to produce much more tanks - the manpower, the materials to produce submarines are definitely not subpar to the manpower and materials needed to produce a tank. And in general, training one sailor is not that easy task. 2000 that died on Bismark were a heavy blow to Germany and it is "just 2000 Germans". For comparison, it is not that far from Japanese losses at Midway, which was a turning battle in the Pacific (allowing pacific land-lease to grow). So, while it is true that it is hard to imagine Americans and British to amass enough infantry to fight German infantry, it is not technically correct to reduce everything to headcount.
I enjoy his talks but did he really say anything?
Judging by the other lectures of this series, including the ones from the other professors, the prepared speeches are really just a narrative of the invasion process. Any meaty info is left up to the audience to ask for during the Q&A, which probably explains why it takes up almost half the video. After all, its an auditorium on a cruiseship, not a university lecture hall.
He is like a Wikipedia page. No real substance. And he teaches the army college?
What a prophetic statement: 56:15 Listen to that, and tell me Citino isn’t totally brilliant.
17:49 Your undergrads didn't just have two lunches and three ice cream cones.
52:04 Yup, we're back to that
Germany, pretty good at border warfare when they got first bite at the apple. Sustainable resources and logistics? Came on like cheap speed, then massive fade. The Russians killed them. Russia's long game fueled by US Lendlease and the certain knowledge it was a war of extermination.
I think if Germany had allied with Turkey and gone that route into the Soviet Union, grabbing their primary oil sources and potentially putting a real hurt on lend/lease (making oil the primary resource over trucks and equipment), the outcome may have been much different….
A nice presentation and overview, if very basic, of the European war.
@ Robert Rishel The Turks weren't stupid. They went in with Germany in the Great War, and it cost them their empire. Such as it was. In any case, operating from Turkey into the Caucasus was difficult. Covered in mountains the terrain was a nightmare. Few valleys to advance through, which makes any approach, over several hundred miles, predictable to the Soviets not to mention favourable defensive terrain. Baku was on the opposite side of the Caucasus on the Caspian Sea. There was no way to 'grab it'.
you seem to be oblivious of the combined british-soviet forces that secured iran in aug1941 (a couple months after germany invaded ussr), this actually secured that corridor into the soviet union where a rail line was built for lend lease supply
the germans had their eyes on the oil fields in the middle east, including the anglo iranian oil company (the forerunner to BP) as their refinery in iran was the largest in the world at that time ...
basically, the afrika campaign was given priority by both allies and axis powers due to a number of interests, not simply urelated to oil but it cetainly played a part..
with respect to turkey, many other nations in the region that qwere formed post ww1 were not exactly happy with the former ottoman turks as they were viewed as occupiers just as surely as the british/french were post ww1 .. different groups within the regions supported differnt countries
@@umenhuman7573 I'm not oblivious to anything. I'm pretty sure I have more qualifications in this arena than you do. The Iranians offered no resistance.
Comparing Iran to the Soviet Union in military terms is ridiculous.
As is your claim the "African" campaign was given priority.
@@DannyBoy777777 i was talking to the op
your appeal to authority and your distorted interpretation of whatare completely irrelevant
as an aside, since you brought it up...
its rediculous to claim the iranians offered "no resistance", it would be more accurate to say they were simply overwhelmed and therefore put up little resistance
my statement of fact regarding both allies and axis placing priority on afrikan campaigns is derived from declassified documents, ypou might try reading more of them and try to keep things in context (as you';ve demonstrated in your interpretation you seem to be prpone to errors in that regard)
@@umenhuman7573 Load of bullshit. Aside from the grammatically indecipherable paragraphs at the top, your claim that the Axis prioritised North Africa marks you out as a giant ignoramus. Four German divisions were in Africa in June 1941, and barely 10 by 1943. Over 200 were on the Eastern Front.
You have no idea what you're talking about.
The Soviet-British force suffered less than 60 fatalities. Like I said, organised resistance was practically zero.
Idiot.
Very good lecture, but how many times we should explain Polish Cavalary never attacked german tanks on horseback!
Where did he say they did?
Not true. It is well known as the Krojanty offensive.
@@DannyBoy777777 Polish soldiers advanced east along the former Prussian Eastern Railway to railroad crossroads 7 kilometres from the town of Chojnice (Konitz) where elements of the Polish cavalry charged and dispersed a German infantry battalion. Machine gun fire from German armoured cars that appeared from a nearby forest forced the Poles to retreat. However, the attack successfully delayed the German advance, allowing the Polish 1st Rifle battalion and Czersk Operational Group to withdraw safely.
I do not see "charged tanks" anywhere in that.
@@PalleRasmussen Please tell me you didn't just read Wikipedia......
@@DannyBoy777777 I copied it. It is a long time since Wiki was unreliable. Today actual experts from all over will correct mistakes. Only on fringe topics is it inaccurate.
So there.
At 51:00 large scale industrial strength warfare is unlikely to be fought :) Oh the wonder we have of eagle eye hindsight :) Ukraine :)
41:00 I believe Stalin refused to sign the Geneva Convention (Second*) regarding the treatment of POWs so the Germans basically had no reason to treat Soviet POWs with any respect at all.
If you're on a deserted island which is not part of any jurisdiction and hence no laws apply, you could kill people without breaking any laws. But what you're doing is still murder, even if it doesn't technically break any laws.
Treaties exist to enforce established conventions. They don't create them. If you're seriously trying to justify the vicious treatment of Soviet POWs (that resulted in some 3 million deaths) with the argument that there was no treaty protecting them, something's seriously wrong with your moral compass.
The Soviet Union signed the Geneva Convention on 27th June 1929. There are podcasts on YT which German prisoners said that Russian soldier's rations were not much better than what they received .The Russian campaign was characterised by the most heinous atrocities on the part of the Germans, which were a feature of what went on in other occupied territories from the Balkans the Channel Islands. Massacres of US,Canadian and British troops which became known was an invitation to allied soldiers to reciprocate such behaviour and they did.
@@lawrencebrown3677 The allies were executing prisoners on D-Day, and had orders to do so.It wasn't reprisal behaviour.
@@lawrencebrown3677 thats too simple. Atrocities from German troops to Western allies did happen but were far from the norm. To say that only because of these instances allied troops commit crimes as well is not correctly portaiting the situation.
And btw, war crimes do always happen in war. Their appearance in themselves is nothing unusual. The crucial point is: how are they dealt with by the corresponding military organisation.
If the Germans had landed only in one place in Norway, it would still be 5 places too many.
It was cockup after cockup.
51:00 "Big large scale industrial warfare is unlikely to be fought in the future" - Rob Citino 2014. Oops.
First of all he said it’s what the college teaches. Also Ukraine is pretty local and contained compared to WW2. I don’t think that’s the type of “large scale industrial warfare” he’s referring to.
For the algorithm
Bro repeating some tired old tropes about Germans being fast & fully motorized in the polish campaign (20% were in 1939) and Poles on horseback (_both_ armies relied on horses for logistics & scouting)
Guderian did not sit on People’s Courts. What he did -- preside over Honor Courts that discharged army officers so they could be tried by the political People’s Courts led by the repulsive Roland Freisler - was bad enough without adding to it.
He seems a little too happy about all this mayhem.
52:00 “Who cares about the Ukraine today?”
Well dr, seems you might have been ahead of the curve
"industrial scale warfare is unlikely to be fought" (in the future).
Yet here we are in 2024 trying to supply arms to Ukraine for an industrial scale war. Not a huge one, but we're still struggling.
The US Pentagon is buying toys and games, not glue, paint, and spare parts.
You get noticed and promoted by LEADING a project, not maintaining EXISTING CAPABILITIES and demonstrating successfully all those 'window dressing' INDUSTRIAL MOBILIZATION programs ..., which allow you to finance those career-enhancing Future Projects.
The military usually prepares for the last war.
9:22 It's ironic that the map has the name "Greater Germany" on it to refer to the worst Germany that ever existed.
"Greater" as in greater in size
@@amir-ng6jv Yes, I got that, that's why I used the term ironic.
Annoying that the Allies had jet-fighters just as advanced very soon after Germany. Its not expert-knowledge.
Fundamentally German organizational psychology is very different from American organizational psychology - Germans loathe bureaucracy and believe in self-sufficiency; that a small elite team can out-perform a large "unprofessional" mass. If you live in Germany you will see this in action at every level of society - German businesses encourage and rely on lower level personnel taking initiative and "handling" things on their own. Americans - despite saying they enshrine initiative - are far more hierarchical than Germans. And, of course, saying something and doing something are two different things. Now - this is not to say that Germans do not develop and appreciate organization and what they term "order;" but Germans are far more respectful of the benefits of order. Germans are not Americans, not French or British and certainly not Italians.
Poland was not Blitzkrieg. The Soviets attacked us from The Black 17th September. There were 1600+ skirmishes and battles between the Polish Army and Wehrmacht in 5 weeks.
Shame on them; they should have waited until the concrete had set?
You're right it was called bewegungskrieg it was a war of movement and of combined arms. Blitzkrieg is a made up word lol.
Those casualty numbers are just insane when you think about how "only" 400,000 Americans died during the war and almost a quarter of those were in the Pacific. The numbers the Germans and especially the Soviets lost... Of course the Soviets lost even more civilians. When you consider civilian deaths China lost almost as many people as the Soviets and Poland is up there as well. You consider the Eastern front and the war in China and the far East, Indonesia lost many, almost all civilians, to Japanese atrocities... Youre talking a hundred million plus dead in 5-6 years.
Re 56 minutes. USA looks unstable right now.
11:53
51:55
This is one ten year old lecture that unfortunately DID age well…
3.5 million! How do the Germans plan on feeding all those prisoners?
Oh... Right.
And the Soviets had OIL!
Large scale industrial war won't be fought in the near future...perhaps the US army war college should have emailed a course program to Vlad the invader.
I suspect that the Germans had the railway from hell. It made a bad supply situation infinitely worse.
So they bit themselves in their ass.
Yes they had the railway from hell that took millions of people to gas chambers
They actually had a pretty good railway system it was just overwhelmed especially in Russia as they had to change every mile to German gauge before it would be useable.
Yeah, even if they had the absolute best rail system ever, they would just use the excess capacity to kill more jews.
@@terimcrae4042 Earlier this year I read Yaron Pasher's "Holocaust versus Wehrmacht: How Hitler's 'Final Solution' Undermined the German War Effort", a painful subject, but a book I recommend.
Hardly did he know that less then 2 years later there would be another armored conflict in Ukraine 😢
1:06:38 funny in the future war in Ukraine is exactly what happened
An amazing and prophetic question as well.
"Dont invade Russia."
Now he tells me...
This mf is fast becoming my favourite WW2 historian
The did not have fuel for the ME262 Jet-plane and it was made by slaves resulting in serious quality issues.
Partner capacity.... I need a girlfriend
The Wehrmacht in 1939 was not carried on wheels and tracks, he has that entirely wrong, only 20%, the tip of the spear, was motorised, the other 80% trudged along behind on foot and hoof, most of the German artillery & logistics was horsedrawn. The allied armies in Belgium were nto encircled, they withdrew back into France and ended up in a pocket on the coast around Dunkirk. Sorry, but this guy has so much of the details outright wrong, which makes me question how good he is on the bigger picture too.
How typical that an American historian should cover the events of 1940 without a single mention of The Battle of Britain, the largest aerial battle in history. Had the RAF lost the battle the Normandy landings would not have been possible. Why no mention of such a crucial victory?
Had that phase of the war been won the Germans, they could have bombed UK industry into rubble as there would have been no air defense left. No doubt about it.
What a shame it turned out the way it did
If I understand the title/content of the presentation correctly- it's more about how the Nazi's operated in Europe once they took over and how they took over; not necessarily about the battles and so forth. Since the Nazis lost the Battle of Britain (and thus did not take over Britain) I think that's why it isn't mentioned. As an American myself I am very well aware of the Battle of Britain and the Legendary bravery of RAF pilots. Did you know there were 3 "Eagle Squadrons" of American volunteers who flew with the RAF during the Battle of Britain? Once the USA was "officially" at war they were folded into the regular US military- but even then most of the Eagle Squadron pilots still wore their RAF Wings on their American uniforms. ;)
@lorddaver3019 The Battle of Britain was NOT the largest air battle in history. It was vitally important, but not the largest. That was the strategic bombing campaign over Germany.