World War Eleven? I guess I’ve lost count.
Methinks the Krauts priority was to make sure they surrendered to the Americans, not the Soviets.
World War 11?
What about footage from World War 10?
(Just giving you a hard time...)
;)
Picture is distorted.
Rare footage From World War 11
Eleven? Must be because Skynet became self-aware.
5.56mm
Amazing. In color too. I like the Kraut General smiling like it is all fun...
That was in case the surrender wasn't accepted.
I missed 9 world wars? I have got to stop drinking.
Thank you for the posting.
My ancestry lies somewhere in that area, Bohunk power :-!
Well, part of it anyway.
I hear ya on the music.
The victory at sea and world at war series have some very moving music..
Altho, I think I hear some more brewing in the distance..
A little hip hop punk
Thanks for posting. Impressive.
Thanks Ken... amazing film.....it’s like being able to see into the past...good show .`/%/%/%/~
Because Hitler was a strategic idiot, as well as a murdering thug, he did more to advance Communism than anyone in history (mainly because he gave the Communists the one thing they've never had before or since-the moral high ground).
Given the subject, I wonder if we could dispense with the overused jokes.
The Germans are so happy to be surrendering to Americans. The alternative was unthinkable.
I did not get the footage in context before I watched. I should have, but it had an interesting effect on my perception. As I watched, I thought...this army looks pretty happy. There are women in some of the vehicles...and I was looking for some arrogance in the German troops, but...I didn't see much. They looked...happy.
No, that wasn't it. Then I came back and saw some posts and got the location in context and it hit me. They WERE happy...and relieved.
They DID have visible relief.
I am guessing it might have been something about this (from Wikipedia)
"The Battle of Slivice was the last large World War II battle in the area of the Czech lands. During 1112 May 1945, German troops, trying to surrender to nearby American troops, defended themselves against local partisans and the Soviet Army. The Germans eventually capitulated during early hours of May 12. About 6,000 men were captured by the Soviet troops. On 7 May 1945, all German forces were ordered to remain in their positions and surrender. Field Marshal Ferdinand Schörner, however, the commander of the Army Group Centre deployed in Bohemia, ordered his units to force their way westwards in order to surrender to American forces. The units reached the agreed demarcation line in western Bohemia and stopped there. Since the Soviet Army was still days away from the demarcation line, the partisans tried, mostly unsuccessfully, to stop the Germans, who responded with reprisals against the local population. On several occasions, Russian Liberation Army units also trying to reach the Americans skirmished with the Germans.
On 9 May, a large formation of German troops reached the area between villages Milín, Slivice and Čimelice, near the demarcation line. Among them were parts of Kampfgruppe Wallenstein[3] and the 2nd SS Panzer Division's 4th SS Panzergrenadier Regiment; the formation was commanded by SS-Gruppenführer and General-Leutnant of the Waffen-SS Karl Friedrich von Pückler-Burghauß. The soldiers were accompanied by fleeing German civilians. Because the road toward the Americans was blocked by local resistance units, von Pückler-Burghauß ordered the establishment of defensive lines. After May 8, the Americans returned any soldiers attempting to surrender to the Soviet side.
On 11 May, partisan groups led by Soviet officer Yevgeniy Antonovich Olesenski attempted to storm the Germans and were decimated. Soviet Army units arrived that afternoon and attacked the Germans.
The attack started with a heavy artillery and rocket bombardment. The Soviet bombardment was supported by 4th Armored Division of the U.S. Third Army's XII Corps. Later, troops from the 1st, 2nd and 4th Ukrainian Fronts attacked the German positions. During the night, the defense collapsed and, at around 03:00, General von Pückler-Burghauß signed the capitulation. The American negotiators refused to take the General and his family, so, fearing revenge from the Russians for military crimes executed by himself while he served as Waffen-SS commander in occupied USSR, von Pückler-Burghauß shot himself. About 6,000 soldiers and a large number of vehicles were captured."
Not a kubelwagen to be seen. :-(