The History Channel, original podcast.
When I was a kid, every adult I knew shared one thing in common.
βA gap in their lives, when everything appeared uncertain,β
and time itself seemed to stand still. When they talked about it, they simply called it "the war." For six dark years, the world was on fire. Cities were demolished and whole populations threatened. When would the war end? No one knew.
How would it end? No one knew. Life was in stasis. The war is now a part of our culture, portrayed in movies and on television and novels and history books. The Allies usually defeat the enemy and save the war.
βBut the grim reality of the war is almost impossible to comprehend.β
Over 65 million people are killed.
The majority civilians. Everyone fought some version of the war, beginning with the mothers and fathers who sent their children overseas, not knowing when or if they would ever see them again. And of course, the soldier sailors, airmen and marines often just a bunch of kids,
who served with honor and bravery to liberate enslaved peoples, and preserve human dignity. In doing so, they saved that which is most precious and valued by us all.
Freedom. The Second World War is the largest event in human history.
No part of the globe is unaffected.
βWorld War II changed everything for all of us.β
This is World War II with Tom Hanks. At the so-to-one, the beginning. Sometimes, the most monumental events begin without fanfare, before the world wakes. And so it is, on the first of September 1939,
as Dawn breaks over a sleeping city on the Baltic Sea, that the bloodiest conflict in all history begins. This is the National Program from that. Germany has invaded Poland. Happy outbreaks of fighting along the German Polish frontier.
As a German soldier, I entered this war with a strong heart. From now on, bombs will be met by bombs. Adolf Hitler.
In just a matter of hours, a million and a half men.
1,300 planes and 2,750 tanks across the Polish border at lightning speed. September 1, 1939, a storm breaks over Poland. The Germans are racing through with tanks than with artillery falling up with the infantry and accompanied by the Luftwaffe. And all of a sudden, people were waking up to the sound of tanks rumbling through the town,
not really knowing what was happening. You're going to see waves of trucks and mechanized and motorized vehicles. It looks a bit like a science fiction novel, like all those novels written in the 20s and 30s about what the war of the future would look like. And suddenly in 1939, the future is now.
At 11am, Hitler arrives at a Berlin Opera House, where he's gathered the Reichstag. There are three of the people who have just arrived to the Reichstag, but you've then followed an extraordinary session. This is the moment Hitler's been waiting for all his life. He's been the leader of the Nazi Party since 1921.
He came to power in 33, he rearms the country in 35, and since then it's been prepared, prepared, prepared, but Hitler wants a war. My entire life belongs from this moment on to my people.
I want nothing else now than to be the first soldier of the German Reich.
The invasion follows months of diplomatic tension over a strip of land,
βknown as the Polish corridor, land that had once been part of Germany.β
But it was seeded to Poland to give her access to the sea after the first world war.
20 years earlier, global leaders gathered in the French city of Ersi to sign the historic treaty ending that war. After four years of brutal fighting, an alliance led by Britain and France, and supported by the United States, emerged victorious. Germany, its military exhausted, and its people in their starvation, had lost. And now they would pay the price of defeat.
The Treaty of Ersiife takes territories away from Germany, it strips Germany of populations and raw materials, turns the entire German merchant
βmarine over to the Allies, it imposes reparations on the Germans.β
The Allies were attempting to limit the future power of Germany. The effects of the First World War were so grave, they were so catastrophic that no one wanted to see a repeat of that. One young Austrian corporal fighting for the German army is Adolf Hitler. Like many, he is shocked by the way the war ends. Your average German was surprised by the news of the armistice because it happened so suddenly.
The army was still in the field and there was a sense that we haven't been invaded and thoroughly beaten. It was personally a tragedy for Hitler. He heard the news of the armistice when he was still ill from injuries sustained in battle. He did not process the end of the war well.
βHe did not accept the defeat of Germany. Surviving soldiers come home angry and confused.β
Frankly, the response of many of them is disillusionment. Four years at the front, I managed to dodge all those bullets and now I came home and this is what I fought for. When Hitler comes back from the war, he learns to talk to former soldiers who are now disgruntled and begins to feel the fact that he's actually quite a good speaker. He attends a meeting of a small group which will become the National Socialist German Workers
or Nazi Party. He finds something attractive. This is a party of grievance. So I came about
how Germany could be transformed and Germany could be made powerful again. In 1921, Hitler's
talent for public speaking makes him the leader of this tiny party. Hitler's first move is an attempted coup against the Bavarian State Government in Munich. But it fails and he's arrested for treason. At his trial, the judge allows Hitler to publicly share his movements grievances against war guilt, reparation, and communism. In jail, he publishes his memoir, "Mine Kampf" or "My Struggle." With Hitler's notoriety, Nazi Party membership grows as Germany's
Vymar Republic moves through the unstable 20s. The economy is burdened by heavy war reparations.
In 1923, the cause of one loaf of bread rockets from three marks to 80 billion.
The years that follow are unstable, chaotic. Hitler's Nazi Party fuels racial hatred against Jews and fears about communism. Then, just as the economy is recovering, the Great Depression throws six million Germans out of work. People in Germany are confused, bewildered, unhappy, and so there's a real opening for a leader who will speak all these lines perfectly and talk about how I'm going to bring the Germans back together. In the 1932 elections, Germany is deeply
divided. But President von Hindenburg, backed by Conservative Businessman, a points Hitler chancellor to run the government at the beginning of 1933. In 1934, Hitler declares that he will now continue to be chancellor and take over the role of the president as well. He's transformed what was a democracy in Germany into a one-party and a one-man dictatorship. He's become the German leader, the FΓΌhrer. His first promise as FΓΌhrer is to reclaim the land
Germany lost at their side. He ceases the Rheinland, Austria, and the Sudetenland, German speaking parts
Of Czechoslovakia.
Desperate to avoid another war, Britain and France allow Hitler to expand his empire.
βIn 1938 at Munich, Neville Chamber in the British Prime Minister and the Frenchβ
actually made a deal with Hitler. What he wanted was the Sudetenland of Czechoslovakia. The British had said fine, we'll just dismantle until our country to keep you happy.
But when Hitler turns to Poland, the West finally takes a stand.
The Poles have already endured centuries of foreign rule. The country regains its independence as part of the Versailles Treaty. But its new borders now include 20,000 square miles of what had been German land. In summer 1939, the British and the French signed a guarantee with the Poles promising military assistance if the Germans invade. Hitler speaking to his officers. They're asking questions. What was the attitude of the West
βgoing to be if you attack Poland? And he snorted to or he said, "I've seen my opponents at Munich.β
They're little worms." Hitler doesn't believe the West has the will to go to war. So he moves across the border, ready to invade with the full force of the Nazi vermacht.
In the first 24 hours of the invasion, the Germans take out railroads, bridges, and airfields.
The destruction paves the way for their army to advance deep into Poland. The Poles have a modern army. It's a fifth largest army in the world. And it's equipped with modern tanks with all sorts of artillery and armor trains. But Hitler has been putting almost all his resources into equipping the military. Poles were outgunned by the Germans who had three to one tanks and five to one airplanes.
So there's no question that the Germans were a superior force. Despite those odds, the Poles are determined to defend their country. Everyone had to help, and soldiers conscripted civilians on the street, putting them to work. I saw one man who stopped six times on his way home with a loaf of bread. The Poles remain resilient.
βBut the question is what will Britain and France do?β
Here, as ever, in critical days, you've seen the coming and going of the leaders of the country.
The British and French had an alliance with the Poles. They have to defend Poland. But they're not militarily prepared to do so, and they're not mentally prepared to do so. The home fronts in Britain and France are dead set against war. British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain tells Parliament he's considering issuing an ultimatum. But many feel he's backtracking on his promise to Poland.
This is a profound injury to British honour that if we don't act and declare war, no other country will ever trust a treaty with Britain ever again. Britain delivers an ultimatum to Berlin on the morning of September 3rd, 1939. Hitler hasn't till 11am to withdraw his forces. It's ignored. This morning, the British ambassador in Berlin,
handed the German government a final note and consequently his country is at war with Germany. In cities across Britain, air raid sirens signal a strange new era. And millions of gas masks are sent to British homes. Across the Atlantic, America is just emerging from the Great Depression and not prepared for war. The peace time army is small and neutrality laws make it nearly impossible to aid the allies.
In the White House, the press gathers for one of President Roosevelt's fireside chats. I have said not once but many times that I have seen war and that I hate war. I say that again and again. I hope the United States will keep out of this and I give you
Assurance and reassurance.
Most Americans, when they're asked should the United States get involved 90% of Americans
βsay absolutely not. But Franklin Donor Roosevelt is watching what's happening in Europe very closely.β
The question is about freedom and democracy. He understands what is at stake. In Germany, Hitler is surprised when Britain and France declare war. When the British Declaration of War is made, Hitler receives it in silence and for a couple of moments he stares at his foreign minister, Ribbentrop, and then with a quite vicious tone to his voice, he says, "What now?"
Despite the British and French Declaration, Hitler continues his master plan for Poland and
βsends in the Luftwaffe. Hitler's Air Force is led by a trusted member of his inner circle,β
Field Marshal Herman Gourry. Gary is a German celebrity. World War I, he was the head of the flying circus, the fleeting and circus, this elite group of fighter pilots, and so he's well known in Germany. He's very handsome, very charismatic guy, but there's also very dark side to Gary. He feels deeply and bitter by the way the war ended and he falls
under Hitler's spell and he's able to get huge appropriations from Hitler for Luftwaffe procurement.
Gary's elite pilots are young and have spent thousands of hours in training. From the cockpits of
βheavy bombers, they drop explosives, but it's the precision dive bombers that wreak the most terror.β
The Sturts Cup fluked soy, the Stuka as it's usually abbreviated. You know, it's not a particularly swift craft, but they dive in an almost 90 degree angle, and literally drop a bomb, in your lap. And there's even a bit of siren here as well. As they're coming down on you, there's a siren screaming. In Poland, there are pilots flying at low altitude who can see women and children fleeing the roads who actually target them deliberately. Polish civilians experience modern
war in an unbelievably horrifying way. They see people kill, they see bodies all around them. It's a nightmare. Poland is being destroyed. It is not clear when, or even if Britain and France can send forces to help. On day three, Adolf Hitler boards his heavily armored private train, the America. He named it after his admiration for the way America settled, a vast continent. Now traveling towards Poland, he looks out on the territory he needs to conquer.
Land stretching deep into eastern Europe, leaving Sram, living space for his new German empire. This is his enderman east destiny. Hitler talks about a thousand-year right. Its borders would stretch from the Atlantic and the west to Scandinavian the north and the Mediterranean and south, Poland and the lands to the east play a special role in Hitler's foreign policy plans. There are wide open spaces, farmland, as far as the
eye could see. In order to achieve this vast empire, Germans must clear out the people living there, and a remorseless race war. Adolf Hitler's whole world view is based on kind of neo-darwinism in which every single act as a biological struggle warfare between different races. He believes that the Aryan race, the Germans, is the superior race on the planet. It's destined to rule Europe and indeed the world.
Until now, Hitler's main target has been Germany's Jewish population.
Under his orders, they lost their status as citizens.
and many were forced into exile.
Hitler believes that humanity has looked in this existential battle between Aryans as he describes them and Jews and Jews as supposedly responsible for all of society's
βand the world's hills. So who is responsible for the German loss in World War I? Jewish people?β
Who is responsible for economic inequality? Jewish people? They control media, newspapers, all the businesses. The reason you are poor is because they are hoarding money. What the Nazis seeking to do at this stage is to make life so unpleasant, so difficult for Jewish people within the right that they want to leave. Hitler also wants to remove the slabs of Eastern Europe, including the people of Poland.
Day four, Hitler reaches the Polish front lines, where he holds a photo opportunity with his troops. He makes himself very visible, goes to the front, and he's greeted by these thousands and thousands of people, while vying with one another to get close to
βadult Hitler. He's fought in World War I. He's a battle test of the leader. He's taken backβ
historic German territory. He's built a armed forces, but they listen to him. These German soldiers marching on Poland believe in Germany's destiny. That they will be the creators of the Great New Germany. This is the first action they've had militarily since the black day of the German army in 1918, and it is an average infantryman from the First World War who's leading it.
So this is redemption 20 years after what never should have happened happened.
Shadowing his invading forces is another wing of the Nazi regime. The protection squadron. In German, the Schutztoffel, or SS,
βthey were Hitler's personal bodyguards as he rose to power.β
But under the leadership of Heinrich Himmler, they become a paramilitary outfit at the heart of the regime. Himla is somebody who has a sadistic streak. He's quite me, he's not particularly assuming he's certainly not very physically impressive, but he's somebody who's got a burning desire to achieve things. He gets drawn into the Nazi leap, and then over a period of time he eventually takes control of the SS. Himmler has developed the SS from a small kind of a bodyguard unit
that's supposed to really protect Hitler into a vast militarized force. In Poland, the SS units fan out across the newly occupied territory. As does a special wing of the SS, the Einsatzgruppen. Mobile death squads. In September 1939, during the invasion of Poland, the Nazi Einsatzgruppen are under orders to neutralize any opposition. The Einsatzgruppen are specifically set up to go into towns,
villages, and other areas of Poland to kill civilians. That's their only job. Professors, landowners, politicians, newspaper editors, these sorts of people, they were targeted and killed because these were the people who identified as possibly leading some sort of resistance against the German forces. And this is something that the Pauls could not have known yet
on those first days of the invasion that this wasn't just going to be a military invasion,
but this was also going to be a war of annihilation. For Hitler, this is a chance not just a destroy Poland, but a clear Poland to crush the Polish people who are Slaves and Slaves in the Nazi ideology are unto mention under humans. But it's more than that they're also Jews and Poland. For centuries, Poland has been home to millions of Europe's Jews who fled there to avoid religious persecution. And the Jews originally settled that because
it was the freest kingdom in Europe. Now they found themselves in a terrifying murderous trap. The SS drag orthodox Jewish men out into the streets and they desecrate their clothes and their hair. They smash up synagogues. They are seeking to amplify the terror that they've sought to develop within the Reich towards Jews within Poland.
These acts of brutality escalate into public executions.
German troops order local Jews to the town square to dig the grave of the German soldier.
βThis rather humiliating forced grave digging exercise, quickly descends into a pogrom.β
Jews are shot, now they try and run away from the scene, they're quickly apprehended. An in total 22 Jews are killed on that day. This was happening across Poland. The brutal mass murder of innocent civilians. Nine days into the invasion, Britain and France continue to mobilize their forces. Civilians are being killed in the streets, but the army is indifated.
With their capital city Warsaw, now the target. Two Polish armies stage a counter attack to the west
βof the city. Polish cavalry and reconnaissance tanks drive German forces back 12 and a half milesβ
in the battle of the Bezure River. In all too often the Polish campaign is talked about as some kind of pushover, but the Poles fought hard. The classic stereotype of the Poles is that they're all in their horses with sabers drawn riding toward tanks who are just shooting them down. This is absurd. The Poles were very sophisticated. Very finely trained soldiers extremely brave. As Poles fight under German bombardment, Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain and French Premier Edward
Daladier, meet for a Supreme War Council and reach a grave decision.
βDaladier and Chamberlain agree to leave Poland to its fate. They also adopt formally with aβ
called a long war strategy. The idea that they have superior resources to Germany and that over time those resources will come to bear in the Allies' favor. Although the statement that is given to the world's press is one of whole-hearted support, Poland is essentially cast to the full winds.
There is one British politician who has always wanted to take a more aggressive position
against the Nazis. Appointed to the new war cabinet is Hitler's most vocal critic in the west. First Lord of the Admiralty, Winston Churchill. Throughout the 1930s Churchill, Ed spoken up with concern about German rearmament about the failure to take effective measures to enforce the Versailles Treaty. It's clear now that Germany couldn't be trusted as a diplomatic partner. Two weeks into the invasion. The polls seem abandoned and their counter-offensive is collapsing.
The German third, eighth and tenth armies in circle Warsaw.
The capital is a city of palaces, churches, and opera houses, the heart of the Polish nation. But now Warsaw is in ruins and under siege. Bombs were falling and everybody was trying to help get people out of the rubble when your roof is burning, when your children are in hospital because they've been bombed, even these are shocking moments. American photographer and cameraman Julian Bryan is in Poland's
capital, filming suffering and defiance. He pleads for Poland. As help is called for, there is an army preparing to sweep in. They're not coming from the west, but from the east. On the 17th of September, Joseph Stalin calls the German ambassador to the Cremden, and says, "We're going to invade Eastern Poland." Poland's fate isn't sealed just by the Nazis. The communists of Soviet Russia also sense opportunity,
and so does their all-powerful master. Stalin is one of the most extraordinary figures
in the history of the 20th century. From the very beginning of the Russian Revolution in 1917,
He's been part of the tiny clique that's been running Russia, and is emerged ...
of the whole Soviet Union. The inner circle called him Hazain, the master, the boss, but in public,
βhe was divorced, the leader. But he was a tough man, a morbid man, a mysterious man.β
He learned the hard way in the Russian Civil War that you operate ruthlessly. You sacrifice you attack, you show no quarter to your enemies. Stalin saw the world in geopolitical terms. He recognized that the Soviet Union couldn't survive, isolated, surrounded by adversaries. He had to play the poker game of diplomacy and war, and the players with Western democracies led by England at France, and his dictatorships. His great fear was that the two sides would gang up,
against him, and destroyed the Soviet Union, and all of his decisions came from this fear. In August 1939, just one week before Germany invades Poland. Joseph Stalin shocked the world
βwhen he signed a non-aggression pact with Edolf Hitler.β
The revelation of the Molotov Rippentrop pact causes mayhem in the Western capitals. It changes everything. It's a complete shock. For the last sort of five years, the two dictatorships, Nazi Germany and Stalinist Russia had been pouring excrement over each other in the media. They had been calling each other every name under the sun, and for each the other, was the quintessential enemy of everything they believed. And now suddenly, there's thawing,
and the next thing you know, Rippentrop is flying to Moscow.
In August 1939, by signing a pact with Hitler, Stalin helps to ensure that the second world war
will break out. In fact, it makes it virtually a certainty that such a war will break out. The pact promises a decade of non-aggression between the two regimes.
βBut there's another secret protocol, which carves up Eastern Europe, sharing the land between them.β
First up is Poland. Neither the Germans nor the Soviets wanted Poland to exist. They both sawed as an affront. Poland had historically been a province of the Russian Empire and the Soviets want that back. As a buffer against this stronger Germany, this emerging. The division of Polish territory favored the Soviets, who got more territory than Germans did. So it's actually the Soviet invasion of Eastern Poland that decides the fate of Poland.
The Red Army pours into Poland's eastern provinces. They too carry orders to eradicate Polish leaders and culture. When the Red Army goes into eastern Poland, they are accompanied inevitably by the secretaries of the NKVD and they arrest all these people. Rites, diplomats, aristocrats, army officers, some of them are killed instantly, some of them are deported and a large number of them between 2030,000 are stowed in camps near the Katin woods. All of these people are to be secretly
executed, shot in the back of the head. On September 22, 1939, in the town of Bresla Tofsk, Nazi and Soviet generals gathered to watch a parade of both armies. There's this free mingling of German and Soviet forces. The two sides are sort of mixing, sharing cigarettes, sharing anecdotes, and they even develop almost a slang between them. Germanski Bolsheviky together strong.
If you're a Polish person, to see these two people that have always been dangerous on both sides
of you, working together to see that Poland once again disappears, you had to feel like there's no help close by. As Poland burns, and her enemies celebrate, one city resists, Warsaw. Despite weeks of assault, Warsaw has not yet surrendered. Surviving Polish troops rushed to the capital,
Where 300,000 soldiers and civilians hold the city.
guring orders the largest air raid ever seen.
βGaring levels, Warsaw would no regard for civilian casualties. They screw thousands of pounds ofβ
high explosive and incendiary bombs fire bombs over Warsaw, and they reduce it to rubble. It is the largest incendiary bombing that the world has ever seen. Air raids last for the entirety of the day, people are trapped in their basements, they're trapped in court yards, they're trapped in stairwells. Those who crawl out when the
bombardment is over, there's no water, there's nothing to feed them.
20% of the city is destroyed one way or another, and about 18,000 people are injured or killed
βin these bombardments, and the city finally has to surrender. Hello, hello, can you hear us?β
We are broadcasting the last Polish radio communication. German troops have entered Warsaw, long live Poland. In London, Winston Churchill warns his country that this is just the beginning. But Churchill has received a signal of hope. A few weeks earlier, President Roosevelt sent him a note, congratulated him on his new role in the war cabinet.
But Churchill has received a signal of hope. A few weeks earlier, President Roosevelt sent him a note,
βcongratulated him on his new role in the war cabinet, and opening up the secret line ofβ
communication. Once Germany invades Poland, Roosevelt refers that this war is going to be sizable in its scope, and that the United States is probably going to need to intervene at some point. Churchill has this reputation of being a fighter. It's really telling that Roosevelt
seeks him out, rather than Chamberlain, at this critical juncture at the beginning of the
Second World War. So this relationship that develops between Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Winston Churchill, there's an understanding on the part of Roosevelt that there is someone in the leadership of Great Britain who understands what's at stake and just how dangerous this moment is. It's not simply about the German invasion of Poland. There are two men who are united in their belief that Adolf Hitler is perhaps the most dangerous man on the planet.
After the surrender, Hitler travels to Warsaw to survey the ruins. He points at the utter destruction and tells the officers who are with him. This is the real meaning of war. In less than a month, a major European nation has been removed from the map. It will be engulfed in darkness for most of the next six years, and it's only the beginning. As Hitler looks to the west.
World War II, with Tom Hanks, is produced by Netopia Limited, A&E Factual Studios, Playton 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 Live Fiddler. For Playton, executive producers are Tom Hanks
and Gary Getsman. For Back Pocket Studios, our executive producer is Ben Dixing.


