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Since the death of Lenin in 1924, Joseph Stalin
“has maintained an iron grip on all aspects of life”
in the Soviet Union. As a Soviet premiere, Stalin agrees to the 1939 non-aggression pact with the Nazis, extending his western border and precluding any chance of going to war
with Hitler's Germany. Stalin could not have been more mistaken. This is World War II, with Tom Hanks. Episode III, Baba Rosa. As war between Great Britain and Germany continues,
from his offices deep within the Kremlin, Soviet leader Joseph Stalin. His confident, the non-aggression pact he made with the Germans will hold, and that he will soon have even more influence
around the world.
“Stalin's ideal plan was that the British and French”
would fight off the Germans, and that those two sides could fight it out as much as they light, whilst Stalin watched from the sidelines as they exalted themselves.
Since he was a young revolutionary,
Stalin hoped that conflict in the West would ultimately provide an opportunity for communism to spread throughout Europe. - Vizhariyana Vitsch, Jugas Vili, the man that we know is Stalin,
is Georgian by birth and origin. He comes from a particular milieu marked by among other things, feuding and banditry and a certain code of honor, code of vengeance and then data. - In the 1920s, Stalin became the leader of the Soviet Union,
“and quickly suppressed any opposition to his rule.”
In 1936, he launched a purge that became known as the Great Terror,
targeting political opponents,
then expanding it to high-level army officers. - Stalin supervised through the NKVDC police, the killing of millions of people that are stroing of families. Millions were deported and sent to concentration camps, known as the Gulags.
He turned the country into a totalitarian police state. - A few years later, in 1939, Stalin makes a deal with Adolf Hitler. Even though Germany and the Soviet Union are hostile, Stalin signs an agreement known as the Molotov-Ribbentrop
packed with the Nazis. As a result of the pact, Hitler and Stalin not only carve up Eastern Europe, and together invade Poland. - Stalin also commits to supply
vast quantities of around materials to the German Reich. - The Soviet Union is providing Adolf Hitler massive amounts of natural resources, which is funding the economic engine to build the military machine that Adolf Hitler is using around the rest of the world.
- By 1940, it looks as if the pact is paid off certainly for Stalin. He's got this agreement with the Nazis that he doesn't have to worry about a war on their Western front. - Then, in late September, Germany, Italy and Japan
signed a military alliance called the Tripartite pact. - In Berlin, Hitler welcomes Japan to his gang. The three-power treaty, Germany, Italy, Japan. Dictator nations falling in step for world domination. - It was not clear what the role of the Soviet Union
might be in this new pact. Would it become a quadruple pact instead of simply a tripartite pact? Would the Soviet Union become a full partner? - These were all still open questions in the fall of 1940.
- In November, Stalin sends one of the few people he trusts to Berlin. His foreign minister, Vyacheslav Molotov. Molotov means hammer in Russian. - His nickname was Einars,
because he could sit for so long doing work. He was intelligent, he was ruthless,
Stalin trusted him.
- Hitler receives Molotov in the chant story.
“His amazing scene as the enters, huge, blown giant SS men”
in their gleaming black, deathheads uniform salute. In walks, this little Russian diplomat and Hitler greets him warmly and they have two big sessions of chance. - Hitler's at an impasse in this war.
It's conquered everything within a reach. He's trying to talk to the Soviets about some tighter level of cooperation. Hitler wants to get the Soviets on board for some kind of global war against the British Empire.
- The Germans proposed that the Soviets joined the Tripartite pact and offer India
as a prize for when the British are defeated.
Molotov doesn't take this seriously. - Einars is not impressed with Hitler
“and the conversations becoming increasingly awkward.”
- German Foreign Minister von Ribbentrop is hosting a reception for Molotov. When the Royal Air Force begins a raid on Berlin. - In the middle of the banquet. The air raid siren starts sound
and they have to go down into Ribbentrop's area shelter. And during the air raid, Ribbentrop starts to boast that Britain is defeated and is only a matter of time before Britain surrenders and the war is won. - Ribbentrop trying to make the best
of an obviously embarrassing situation.
Jokes at the British are complaining that they have not been invited to the party. Molotov, however, is not charmed by the Germans attempted humor. He says, "Well, if the war is over,
"then why are we in this bomb shelter "and whose bombs are falling on us?"
“- The next morning, Foreign Minister Molotov returns to Moscow.”
Unaware that Hitler and his military leaders are planning a secret operation. - Hitler is capable of shaking your hand and looking you in the eye and saying everything is okay while planning to stab you in the back.
And that is clearly what's going on between Molotov and Hitler. - One month after Molotov's Berlin visit on December 18th. Hitler signs off on Führer Directive Number 21,
a plan for a massive invasion of the Soviet Union the following year. The invasion is given a code name after a red-bearded medieval German emperor. The stage is now set for the biggest military invasion
in history. Operation Barbara Rossa. In the last weeks of 1940, Aedolf Hitler tours German weapons factories as preparations progress for Operation Barbara Rossa.
His plan is to attack and conquer the Soviet Union to establish more leaving strong, living space for the new German Empire in the East. - The munitions work as gather in a huge assembly hole where a huge steel podium has been erected.
- The operation is top secret. But within days, sources have fed the information to the Soviet intelligence services. - Stalin is receiving information from nearly every quarter right from the belly of the beast in Berlin
from the American military attache, from the British and from his spine and Tokyo. - But Stalin doesn't believe what he's hearing. - Stalin is paranoid that what is happening here is a very high-level game on the part of the Western powers.
They're trying to maneuver him into a one-on-one war with the previously undefeated vermacht that he does not believe he's ready for at the moment and he is bound and determined to avoid being maneuvered. You can get all the intelligence in the world,
but if you are predisposed not to believe it, it doesn't really make that much difference. - And when he receives a report from his master agent in the Germanophels that Hitler is planning an imminent invasion of Russia,
he says Hitler would not be so stupid
Because he doesn't even realize
what he's dealing with, the scale of the Soviet Union.
“- Both Stalin and Hitler have read deeply into history.”
- Stalin has studied the great German Prussian statesman Bismarck. Bismarck thought that a war in two fronts was an extremely bad idea. - Germany remains at war with Great Britain and Stalin doesn't believe Hitler would open
a second front. - Stalin thinks it very unlikely that Hitler will invade because he thinks Hitler is a sort of rational Bismarck in player. And in that sense, he misread Hitler. - But Hitler believes that he is destined
to lead Germany to greatness. - Hitler is nothing if not arrogant. He believes he's better than Bismarck, better than just about anybody else who's ever lived before him. - Hitler finalizes the details
“of Operation Barbara Russell, proposed date of invasion,”
May 1941. The plan is to overwhelm the Red Army and top of the regime within two months. Well before, the Russian winters said sin. - A lightning blow against the Russians
that will prove once and for all that he, Hitler and Germany are unconscribable. - The offensive is divided into three giant army groups, each with a specific objective.
- Going from north to south, the first army group
is Army Group North, which moves along the Baltic and its final operational goal is Lenin Grapp. The center of the invasion is Army Group Center, it's the largest force by far and it is going toward Moscow.
- Army Group South is moving through
“what we would now call Ukraine to secure resources.”
And eventually, the historic Ukrainian capital of Kiev. - But in the spring of 1941, the Nazis face a challenge in the Balkans in Southeast and Europe. - Hitler is forced to send an army into Yugoslavia, to crush an anti-Nazi coup.
His infantry then marches into neighboring Greece to help his Italian ally, Benito Mussolini. - Hitler has been cleaning up this mess in the Balkans, and so it's now five week delay in the start of Operation Barbarossa.
- The Kremlin receives more intelligence that the Germans are preparing and invasion. - Stalin dismisses at all, and it doesn't stop sending Soviet grain, oil, and steel into Germany. - June 22nd, 1941, as dawn breaks.
Over three million German soldiers
poured across the border into Soviet territory. Operation Barbarossa is launched. - It's the biggest invasion force in the history of human warfare. It's just so vast, it's difficult to get one's mind around it.
If you just take the eastern front, it's like trying to obey the United States from San Diego to Seattle. It is by itself the largest war that's ever happened. That's crazy.
- It's 3,000 tanks, 2700 aircraft, another 7,000 artillery pieces, 600,000 vehicles. It is massive on a scale no one else has ever seen before. - This is a largest political army that's ever been organized in modern European terms.
This is a 3 million men spread across a couple of thousand miles
of front, 300 divisions, including a 19-panzer divisions. This is a big force. This is German manpower, moving east. This is the culmination of all the dreams, the hopes that Hitler has put into his leadership.
This is going to be the future of Germany in the east. - Hitler thinks that the Soviet system is so rotten
That he just has to kick in the bar and door
and the whole structure is going to collapse. - Revere marked moves fast.
“In just a few hours, miles of Soviet territory is overrun.”
- The invasion seems to be going according to plan. - On the morning of the invasion, Stalin is awoken by his chief of staff. - The phone rings in Stalin's bedroom and Stalin wants to sit, and he just says the war started.
- And the silence, and he can just hear Stalin breathing as he can awake up and absorbs this information. - The German advance is fast, it's furious, it's efficient, it's brutal. - I don't get alert today, launch his fast, mobile cancer divisions against what may be the largest mass army
“of the world, the red army of communist Russia.”
- The red army and the Soviet Air Force are caught unprepared.
On the very first day, the German Luftwaffe report
that they've destroyed nearly 2,000 Soviet aircraft, both in the air and on the ground. - Russian airfields were bombed, Russian cities were bombed. All hell was Latin news. - The Soviets do resist bravely,
but they are constantly outmaneuvered, captured, almost immediately, the vast Soviet army is already in freefall. - The opening days of Barbarossa are Hitler's dream, it goes incredibly well.
“The forces are racing through former Poland,”
they go across Belarus, they get through the Baltic States.
It's just amazing, it's like a hot knife cutting through butter.
- In just the first week, the vermark pushed 300 miles into Soviet territory, capturing over 400,000 troops. - The Russians are simply being stampeded by a much more savvy German force. - During the Great Terror, Stalin dismantled the leadership of the army, executing thousands of experienced military officers.
- It is on a colossal scale, three of five field marshals, 13 of 15 army commanders, 50 of 57 core commanders, 45% of all Brigadier generals, 50% of all kernels have been executed. The leadership of the Soviet armed forces is not in place. - Stalin had to capitated his own army.
He put younger men in their place, but they weren't experienced, and sometimes they were little more than Stalin loyalists or party hacks. - They're rookies. This is an army that has suddenly been reduced to kind of the teething level. - Some Soviets initially welcomed the Germans.
They even tear down Communist statues raised in Stalin's honor. On June 28th, Hitler's Army Group Center reaches Minsk, the capital of Belarusia, just over 400 miles from Moscow. - The Germans keep coming. Those three million Nazi troops keep advancing ruthlessly,
and Stalin is ordering counter-tax that never happened.
It's just chaos out there. There was now a very palpable sense of paranoia and fear that the Germans now might be able to advance as far as Moscow. - At the Kremlin, the news reaches Stalin. Stalin suddenly realizes that he's lost control of the Soviet Union,
he's lost control of the invasion. He turns to Molotov, and he just says, "Everything's lost." So many lands have been lost. - He's not simply talking about the army,
He's talking about the revolution he's talking about,
the first proletarian dictatorship, the birthplace of communism.
All this, he says, has been flushed down the toilet. You'll at the press rally, he says. - Stalin retreats to his dacha, his country home outside Moscow, and shuts himself off completely.
“At this crucial moment, the Soviet Union has no leader.”
- As the vermarked terrorist through Soviet territory, Stalin has not left his country house. Some of his closest AIDS fear, he's suffering a nervous breakdown. - Back in the Kremlin, there's total panic. So finally Molotov says,
"We've all got to go out to see Stalin and to tell him to come back."
So they drive out and Stalin is sitting in a chair, pale, thinner, exhausted. He says, "What have you come for?" They say, "Come back, leaders, we can't do this without you." Molotov persuades Stalin to return to the Kremlin, where he speaks directly to the Soviet people.
But instead of talking about communism,
“he evokes their sense of history, honor and national pride.”
The attack by Hitlerite Germany on our motherland, begun on June 22nd, is continuing. - Stalin appeals to mother Russia, he appeals to the sorts of attitudes and spirit of the people. He could have been the Tsar in the way that the Tsar might have appealed to the people.
- This is a really smart, canny move. This is a wonderful way to unite society in a way that brings people together. We have the same enemy, and mother Russia is at stake here, so rally to the cause. - 10s of millions of Soviet people in the world, in a way that brings people together.
We have the same enemy, and mother Russia is at stake here, so rally to the cause. - 10s of millions of Soviet peoples are moved by Stalin's words. - He appoints himself supreme commander in chief, and he takes complete control of the war effort. - The Soviets also begin to receive unexpected support from the West.
- The Soviet Union is now acquiring sympathy from Winston Churchill in London, from President Roosevelt in Washington. These countries will offer Stalin aid. - Roosevelt sends to Moscow, his closest advisor, Harry Hopkins, to find out how America can support the Soviet Union. - At the airport on Canada filmed the arrival of the Harry Hopkins,
who confirmed with Stalin on Russia's immediate knee. - But it will be sometime before Western aid will arrive. - All resistance is pointless. All resistance is pointless. - By mid-July, the Red Army has lost nearly 4,000 tanks and over 6,000 aircraft.
Two million soldiers have been captured or killed.
Troops taken prisoner are sent to German work camps or left to starve.
“It becomes the most pitifulest campaign ever launched, I think, in modern history.”
They were rounded up in their thousands. It had hardly given any food. In fact, they were just throw loads over the barbed wire and laugh when the prisoners fought amongst themselves because they were starving. - The Nazis also target civilians. Both the Army and the SS are ordered to eradicate all resistance.
Hitler's guidelines for the conduct of his troops issued a head of Barbarossa, demand ruthless and energetic measures against political agitators, saboteurs, and Jews. - They give the Army car blanche to do exactly what they want to the populations as they swarm over the borderlands. This is where we start to talk about the idea of total war. We are now going to literally target civilians on purpose.
- But the Soviets begin to fight back. Partisans raid German outposts and Stalin demands a scorched earth policy.
People are told to burn everything as they flee, depriving the Nazis of food ...
As the German Army marches into the immensity of the Soviet Union.
“- The terrain in this part of Russia is like the Great Plains of the United States,”
it's like being in Nebraska or Iowa, flats, seas of grass. When you start with a front of a thousand miles long and as they advance, it gets to two thousand miles. They don't know how to deal with an area where the armies are operating with ships at sea. There is no running out of territory when you're fighting the Soviets.
There's always more territory to retreat too.
- By the end of July, the German Army has progressed over 400 miles, but their advance is slowing, and supply lines are being stretched. - Every army has to understand that if it advances rapidly, it can outrun its supplies. They always say, you know, amateurs talk tactics, professional talk logistics. Tank repair, replenishment of ammunition, food, uniforms, it just consumed the German Armed Forces.
“Eventually, every force will reach what's called a culminating point where you've simply”
exhausted the men outrun the supplies, hit something you can't overcome. Your combat power has been expended.
- As German commanders and their men confront the magnitude of their task,
Hitler faces perhaps the greatest test of his leadership. It's been six weeks since German troops stormed into Soviet territory. Hitler visits his men on the front. He needs with his commanders to discuss strategy. The army groups are no longer moving at the same pace.
Army Group Center has pushed too far ahead. It is only about 200 miles outside Moscow. But its supply lines are perilously thin. That's a real problem if you're an operational planner. You have one thrust that's hanging out there on a limb.
The German high command is divided about what to do next. Some of Hitler's generals want to continue pushing towards Moscow and capture the capital before winter sets in. Hitler believes if he and the German armies can overrun Ukraine, it'll undercut the economic basis of Stalin's dictatorship and
undercut the economic basis of the Soviets continuing the war. And so the decision is made to hold the tanks from their thrust against Moscow and send a fast force into the Ukraine. On September 18th the city of Kiev is encircled by the Nazis. Kiev is enormously important because Kiev in and of itself is the control of Ukraine
and what's Ukraine. Ukraine is the breadbasket of Europe. So there's a huge encirclement battle at Kiev. One of the biggest battles thus far in the war.
“Where's the Panzer Groups coming from the north from the central axis and also in the south?”
They capture 600,000 troops.
It's staggering once never emergent a battle like that in the past.
Hitler keeps on saying they can't go on providing more troops for us to surround in this particular way. They're going to collapse at any moment. With over half of his forces re-supply, Hitler turns to Moscow. The Fremont forces progress very, very rapidly.
They get so close to the city of Moscow, can actually see the towers of the city center. People, obviously it's scared that the prospect of what was likely to happen, but at the same time, by now, the war's a determination to fight back. They are preparing the defenses of the city, men and women are out digging ditches.
Everything is ready for a last ditch defense of Moscow. That is Moscow will be defended to the last drop of blood.
Stalin considers evacuating the Soviet government to a city on the river Volga,
over 500 miles away.
“Stalin's staff begin to prepare his own library, his own houses,”
to be evacuated, and to abandon Moscow, but Stalin is very aware of appearance.
He's always thinking about history.
He knows if Stalin leaves Moscow, Moscow will fall. Many people think that the regime is about to collapse. For the first time it looks like the Communist Party is actually about to be toppled. At the last moment, Stalin decides to stay. The German army is poised to capture Moscow.
But Stalin has an ally. General Winter. (explosions)
“For months, into the invasion of the Soviet Union,”
the German army faces a new enemy.
It was always said that Russia's greatest general was General Winter.
So the Russians were much better prepared for Winter than the Germans. So what happens in the Soviet Union if you're on the path toward Moscow, is invaders have found over the centuries. The weather turns bad, it rains, and a very inadequate road network now gets turned into mud. The Russians call it, "Respot pizza, the roadless time."
This is not like normal mud, you can't move, and you can't bring supplies forward. General mud slows the German advance at a time when they're trying to beat the clock here.
“Then when it gets really cold, you see an entirely different situation.”
The soldiers start freezing. By November, temperatures are plummeting to as low as minus 40 degrees Fahrenheit. These German soldiers fighting with frozen steel, with their bare hands, unable to service their weapons to the weapons jam. The lubricants freeze on the tanks.
They have to build fires under the tanks at night to keep the oil loose enough. Everything degrades their combat performance. Hitler told them they were going to revie all conquering master race of Europe. They're cold and they're tired and they probably haven't had a square meal in two weeks. An invading army has been here before.
Napoleon Bonaparte had tried to seize Russia in 1812. Napoleon invades Russia takes Moscow, but as winter comes, is defeated by the unconquerable vastness of Russia and the cold. And in the end, the retreat from Moscow really destroys Napoleon's empire. But Hitler ignores the lessons of history.
He orders his troops forward to take Moscow.
Stalin still has a fear that there'll be some breakthrough into the heart of Moscow itself.
But you know, something happens in this period. A piece of intelligence comes across his desk that, for once, he's willing to listen to. And it comes from his agent in Japan. The intelligence from Stalin's agent in Tokyo suggests that Japan will not attack the Soviets Eastern border. Instead, Japan is planning to move south against British, French, and Dutch colonies in Asia. And perhaps against the United States in the Philippines.
So Stalin transfers 400,000 troops that were stationed in the Soviet far east. Damasco. And whole new army, fresh, untouched, fully-maned tanks, how it's as planes. This is the Siberian reserve. These are troops dressed in heavy white parka's ski troops. They're used to operating in the cold. In November, with some German units just 21 miles from Moscow.
Stalin celebrates the anniversary of the Russian Revolution in Red Square.
Comrades, men of the Red Army, commanders and political instructors, men, wom...
the whole world is looking to you as a force capable of destroying the plungering hold on German invaders.
“Marching in the parade are Stalin's Siberian divisions. They were not raw recruits being sent to”
the front. They were trained and experienced hard-line soldiers. The defensive Moscow is largely in their hands. For the complete destruction of the German invaders, long live our glorious motherland,
her glory and her independence, forward to victory.
On December 5, Stalin launches his counter-offensive. It catches the Germans at their worst possible moment.
“They're tired, they're hungry, they're sick, they're freezing to death.”
They're out of supplies.
And the Soviet offensive sweeps all before it.
The Germans are completely stunned and they are thrown back over a hundred miles. It's astonishingly successful counter-offensive and Moscow is safe. Over the next weeks, Soviet troops halt the vermarked and begin to push the Germans back. Stalin has stemmed the tide.
“The defeat of the German drive on Moscow and the near destruction of the Germans”
is a sea change for both Hitler and Stalin. Hitler now has to look at a scene of desperation and trying to rebuild his army in the Soviet Union. Stalin now not only knows that he's going to survive, he also knows that he's going to be able to launch one hammer blow after the other against the Germans. Designed to be another victorious Blitzkrieg Operation Barbarossa,
descends into a deadly stalemate for the Germans. In the free West President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill provides support to the Red Army to wear down the Nazi invaders. Across the Pacific, a new power has been building its own empire, one that will attempt to destroy American forces in a single day of infamy.
[Music] World War II with Tom Hanks is produced by Nytopia Limited, A&E Factual Studios, Play-Tone Productions and Back-Pocket Studios in association with Motion Entertainment for the History Channel. This episode was narrated by Tom Hanks and mixed by John Lloyd, additional voicing provided by me, Jeremy Reagan. From the History Channel,
our Executive producers are Eli Lera and Liv Fiddler. For Play-Tone, Executive producers are Tom Hanks and Gary Getsman. For Back-Pocket Studios, our Executive producer is Ben Dixing.


