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00:00To be continued...
00:30Berlin, 1945.
00:45Europe has been freed from the Nazi reign of terror.
00:48The Red Army is waging its final battles.
01:00Captain Yosef Pravutov, a Russian officer.
01:09The hate ran so deep, we wanted to end the war, annihilate that force that wanted to kill us.
01:16Finish it off, once and for all.
01:24Hitler's days are numbered.
01:26He leaves his bunker for one final bit of showmanship.
01:29As seen in this propaganda film.
01:32Is there still a soldier or a child willing to die for him?
01:55The war left some 50 million dead.
01:59Most of them innocent civilians.
02:02For the women of Germany, the ordeal would continue even after the cannons had gone silent.
02:07The book, A Woman in Berlin, is a deeply disturbing account of the Russians' rape of German women in 1945.
02:16They grab me and throw me down.
02:26I'm lying with my head on the steps.
02:29I see one of the soldiers keeping watch, while the other rips off my underclothes and brutally forces himself on me.
02:36But then we'd say, better to have a Russian on your belly than an American over your head.
02:49This German woman was referring to the Allied bombers that pounded her city into ruins.
02:54The Kürfüsten Dam, Berlin's most fashionable avenue.
03:06Thirteen years earlier, the showcase of Germany, a nation still plagued by crises.
03:13A monument commemorating the millions of victims of the First World War.
03:18Marlene Dietrich is singing The Blue Angel in Berlin.
03:31Alexanderplatz.
03:32Thomas Mann is savouring his Nobel Prize for Literature in the shade of the linden trees of Avenue Unter den Linden.
03:40Berlin is a major cultural centre of Europe, one of the most open and tolerant cities in the world.
03:48Then in 1933, all that changes.
04:03Through intimidation, demagoguery and exploiting the bitterness of the German veterans,
04:09Hitler and his armed militias, like the SA with their hymn, The Horst Vessel Lied, seize control of Germany.
04:18The Nazis take advantage of the fact that the German left is splintered.
04:31And it even seems like Hitler, with his raised fist, revolutionary salute, wants to get on their good side.
04:38German communists take their orders from Moscow, which views the Social Democrats as the true enemy.
04:48No alliance is possible between them.
04:51So for the last time, German communists sing the Internationale.
04:55The Internationale.
05:03Hitler comes to power legally on January 30th, 1933.
05:08Within a few months, his dictatorship is firmly in place.
05:13He becomes die Führer, the leader.
05:16His supporters rise and chant, Heil Hitler.
05:24However, not all Germans are totally convinced.
05:26So again and again, Hitler hammers home his simplistic nationalist slogans.
05:32And he eventually wins more and more people over, for he has a remarkable power of persuasion over the masses.
05:51But what does Hitler want?
05:53In his book, Mein Kampf, My Struggle, he clearly states what he calls his missions.
06:02Being one of the embittered veterans of the First World War, his first mission will be to destroy France.
06:08To wipe out the humiliation of the Versailles Treaty of 1919 that stripped Germany of its army and part of its territory.
06:16Then he wants to conquer what he calls Lebensraum, living space.
06:31Germany has a population of 80 million, twice that of France.
06:35He wants to make Germany the world power that it deserves to be.
06:41A pathological anti-Semite, Hitler has also taken on the mission of asserting the superiority of the Germanic Aryan race, menaced by the Jews.
06:57For him, the Jews were the cause of the Great War.
07:00Germany's defeat, inflation, unemployment.
07:04The next war will be a war on the Jews.
07:08They will be sent to Dachau, the first concentration camp, where Hitler locks up the anti-Nazis, the Communists, Social Democrats, and all those opposed to the Nazi regime.
07:25Lastly, Hitler takes on the mission of bringing all German-speaking peoples into the Reich's fold, beginning with those of his homeland.
07:33The Anschluss.
07:36Austria is annexed and immediately submitted to the same reign of terror as Germany, with the opening of one of the most infamous concentration camps at Mauthausen, near Linz.
07:47Which country will be his next victim?
07:51Neighboring Czechoslovakia, where there is a German population, the Sudeten Germans.
07:56But the country is recognized as an independent state by England and France.
08:02The clouds of war gather.
08:04In Munich, Temple of Nazism, an eleventh-hour peace conference is organized.
08:11On one side, Adolf Hitler, who is becoming more and more frightening.
08:15And his ally, the Italian dictator Benito Mussolini.
08:22Mussolini, the founder of fascism, an indoctrination of an entire nation, from childhood on.
08:29On the other side, the Western democracies.
08:43Victorious, but exhausted from the Great War.
08:46Neville Chamberlain, the conservative British Prime Minister.
08:50And the radical socialist French Premier, Édouard Deladier.
08:54Want to save the peace.
08:56They end up accepting the unacceptable.
09:01They give up the Czech province of Sudetenland to Hitler,
09:07in exchange for his solemn promise to make no more claims on another European territory.
09:17But what is Hitler's promise worth?
09:21Just six months later, he invades the rest of Czechoslovakia,
09:25and enters Prague, accompanied by Marshal Hermann Göring.
09:32Göring, a former First World War fighter pilot, one of the founders of the Nazi Party,
09:36is now the air minister.
09:38And an ogre, trying to charm the Czech children.
09:43Hitler no longer needs the excuse of reuniting German-speaking people.
09:47The powerful Czech industry will be working for him.
09:52Why shouldn't he take advantage of it?
09:54The Allies let him get away with it.
09:57The USSR is the last major neighbouring power left to counter Hitler.
10:06It has signed a mutual assistance treaty with France.
10:09The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics is the official name of Communist Russia and its satellite republics.
10:16Manipulation of the masses in Red Square masks the iron-fisted dictatorship of Stalin,
10:25who has also thrown millions of poor wretches into his labour camps, the Gulag.
10:30Industrialisation and forced militarisation have made the USSR a major power.
10:43Despite their fear of communism, the Western powers rely on the USSR.
10:55Hitler is going to beat them to the punch.
10:58In the summer of 1939, in his Berchtesgaden chalet,
11:02with his Minister of Foreign Affairs Joachim von Ribbentrop,
11:05he prepares a blocking manoeuvre.
11:11Hitler, who swore to destroy communism, sends von Ribbentrop, the Nazi, to Moscow,
11:16to sign a history-making treaty with his worst enemy.
11:20When Stalin's Foreign Affairs Minister Molotov signs the Germano-Soviet Pact,
11:30communists are totally taken aback, like these French party members.
11:36It's August 1939, and people in France are enjoying their first paid holidays,
11:41one of the major victories of the Socialist Popular Front.
11:46What are the reasons behind this non-aggression pact?
11:50The Soviets answer that Stalin is playing for time,
11:53letting Hitler and the Western powers kill each other off.
11:57Perhaps Stalin, who intends to grab the Baltic countries and part of Poland,
12:00even has the illusion that he could share Europe with Hitler on a permanent basis.
12:10In 1936, the US Congress had passed the Neutrality Act,
12:14to avoid being dragged into a European war once again.
12:17So, with nothing to fear, either from the United States or from Russia,
12:25Hitler decides to wipe out what he calls the worst monstrosity of the Versailles Treaty,
12:31the Danzig Corridor.
12:36In 1919, German territory was cut in two,
12:40in order to give Poland access to the sea.
12:43Hitler decides to launch his invasion of Poland
12:45and recover Danzig on the 1st of September 1939,
12:50at 5.35am.
13:00The first cannon shot of the Second World War is fired on Danzig.
13:15Hitler is convinced that the French and the British will not take action.
13:26Yet the two governments meet immediately and sent him an ultimatum,
13:30demanding that he halt all military action against Poland.
13:33Hitler declares,
13:39Our enemies are little worms.
13:41And he adds,
13:43Who wants to get bogged down in a world war for Danzig?
13:48September 3rd, 1939.
13:50At 11am, the Ambassador of Great Britain in Berlin delivers a declaration of war.
13:55At 5pm, France declares war on Germany.
14:00Hitler can hardly believe it.
14:03German generals find themselves facing their worst-case scenario,
14:08war on two fronts.
14:10But the die is cast.
14:12Hitler unleashes the Wehrmacht,
14:13the armed forces of Nazi Germany,
14:18onto Poland.
14:28Entering battle as if in a bygone age,
14:32the Polish cavalry charges the German tanks
14:35and is slaughtered.
14:36Paris.
14:54The Gare de l'Est train station.
14:57Many of these men had shipped out from these same platforms 25 years ago,
15:02in a totally different atmosphere.
15:03In August 1914, they marched off to war in high spirits,
15:09with flowers in their rifles.
15:11But there are no flowers this time.
15:14And no rifles.
15:23Nobody wants to fight this war.
15:28Four million men are mobilised.
15:30Many of them are farmers.
15:33France is still a largely rural country.
15:36They head for the German border on foot,
15:39with their officers following on horseback.
15:42Armies still rely heavily on horses,
15:46and these are requisitioned throughout the country.
15:49Motorisation has not kept up.
15:50Gaston Sirac, a driver of one of these outdated trucks,
16:00with solid rubber tyres, recalls,
16:03There was such a shortage of equipment.
16:06We had one rifle for two per truck.
16:09We had one box of ten bullets,
16:12which we weren't allowed to open.
16:14It was pathetic.
16:16If we'd had what we needed,
16:18we'd have fought,
16:20because we're no great friend of the Bosch.
16:21The Bosch was a pejorative term for the German soldiers during the previous war.
16:31They were also called verdigris,
16:34which in French means field grey,
16:36the colour of their uniform,
16:38which enabled them to blend in with their surroundings.
16:40But just who are these soldiers?
16:47Let's take, for example, one of these young Germans,
16:51marching as he sings,
16:53Our flag is waving before us.
16:55Our flag is a new age.
16:57Our flag is stronger than death.
17:05His name is August von Kagenek.
17:07He writes,
17:09I thought that a military career was the right choice.
17:12My parents thought so as well.
17:14My father would tell me,
17:16At least there you can still open your mouth and say what you like,
17:20and you don't have to do that Nazi salute.
17:23In September 1939,
17:26August von Kagenek is still training to become a tank commander.
17:30He writes,
17:32My father, who was a general, was telling me,
17:34the French have 40 divisions on the border.
17:37We have 15.
17:39All the rest are in Poland.
17:41500,000 men against 200,000.
17:44They outnumber us two to one.
17:52French forces attack on September the 7th, 1939,
17:56four days after declaring war.
17:59This offensive, launched to show public opinion that Poland has not been abandoned,
18:04advances eight kilometers into the Saar region.
18:12The French army's cinema department shows off the spoils of war.
18:17Bicycles.
18:18The Saar offensive stops there,
18:20and degenerates into a series of skirmishes,
18:24raids by elite commandos,
18:26led by the hero Josef Darnon,
18:28who receives the citation of premier soldier of France.
18:31The Tsar offensive stops there and degenerates into a series of skirmishes,
18:36raids by elite commandos, led by the hero Josef d'Arnaud,
18:40who receives the citation of Premier Soldier of France.
18:51Later, he will become one of the most rabid collaborators with the Germans,
18:55and eventually he will be executed after the war.
19:01The French army, in spite of its heroes and its superiority in numbers,
19:06takes no further action.
19:09General Maurice Gamelin, 67 years old,
19:12is commander-in-chief of the Allied Franco-British land forces.
19:16For the French outnumber the British,
19:19who also think that this war isn't for real and that it'll all be settled soon.
19:31Gamelin himself has no desire to re-fight the war of 1914.
19:37He wants to avoid another bloodbath at any cost.
19:41He considers that he needs two years safe behind the Maginot Line
19:46in order to re-arm the country.
19:48The Maginot Line is the work of a former Minister of War, André Maginot.
19:54This complex of fortifications was meant to stop the German enemy once and for all.
20:01It took nearly ten years to construct,
20:03and swallowed up one and a half million cubic metres of concrete
20:07and 150,000 tonnes of steel.
20:10All these gun turrets are linked together by a labyrinth of tunnels,
20:15100 kilometres of them.
20:17The line itself stretched for 720 kilometres,
20:21from the Swiss to the Belgian borders.
20:25The Maginot Line ends at the foot of the Ardennes forest.
20:29The French military command thought that German tanks
20:31could never cross this extremely rough terrain.
20:34The French didn't extend the line all the way to the sea,
20:38because Belgium, before declaring its neutrality,
20:41was an ally of France and opposed it.
20:44This northern part of the front is manned by a French army
20:47and the British Expeditionary Forces,
20:50later reinforced by Canadians
20:52and troops from the far-flung British Empire.
21:08In Britain, a popular song of the day was the washing on the Siegfried Line.
21:13We're gonna hang out the washing on the Siegfried Line,
21:17How do any dirty washing, Mother dear?
21:21We're gonna hang out the washing on the Siegfried Line,
21:26The Siegfried Line is the string of fortifications constructed by Hitler facing the Maginot Line.
21:39The Germans don't attack.
21:41They're still trying to avoid a second front.
21:47The French nevertheless take some precautions.
21:49They evacuate the population of Alsace and Lorraine
21:53to the regions of Perigord and Charente in the southwest.
22:01Strasbourg, a ghost town.
22:06Abandoned by its population.
22:08Emptied of its soul.
22:10Especially that of the synagogues.
22:29On the 25th of September, Hitler orders the bombing of Warsaw.
22:35The city is surrounded, but still holding out.
22:38The Führer wants to strike terror into the hearts and minds not only of the Poles,
23:07but of the French and British as well.
23:10This is what is in store for you.
23:19The world is horrified.
23:22In New York, the bombing of Warsaw is up in lights in Times Square.
23:26And on the front page of all the newspapers.
23:28Franklin Roosevelt, the President of the United States, addresses the nation.
23:36This nation will remain a neutral nation.
23:40But I cannot ask that every American remain neutral in thought as well.
23:48Even a neutral has a right to take account of facts.
23:53Even a neutral cannot be asked to close his mind or to close his conscience.
24:02The bombing of Warsaw shows how vulnerable the cities are.
24:07Paris sets about protecting its monuments and hides its museum's masterpieces out in the provinces.
24:13The Champs-de-Mar at the foot of the Eiffel Tower is dug full of bomb shelters.
24:21And there are frequent air raid drills.
24:23Gas masks are compulsory.
24:35Gas masks are compulsory.
24:38The
25:02Poison gasses
25:04Poison gases were used in the First World War and now everyone is afraid of them.
25:12Even the horses.
25:22Meanwhile, Poland is being ruthlessly carved up.
25:34As previously agreed with Hitler, the Soviets have invaded the eastern half of Poland.
25:53Here, German and Soviet soldiers are fraternizing. An incongruous sight, to say the least.
25:59The Nazis hand out flyers that read,
26:03The German army salutes the Red Army of workers and farmers,
26:06which it has always held in the highest respect.
26:13The Polish army surrenders to the Germans and in the east to the Soviets.
26:23Stalin then orders the execution of 20,000 Polish prisoners.
26:29He wants to eliminate the elite of this country he intends to annex.
26:404,500 Polish officers are executed with a bullet in the head,
26:46in the Kachin forest, near Smolensk in Russia.
26:49Two years later, at the Kremlin, Stalin meets with the head of the Polish government in exile,
26:58General Sikorsky, who delivers a list of missing Polish officers.
27:02The Soviets deny any wrongdoing.
27:03The Soviets deny any wrongdoing.
27:09In 1992, the president of post-Soviet Russia, Boris Yeltsin, will present the Polish president, Lech Walesa,
27:24with the original order of execution, signed by Stalin himself.
27:39Stalin, by occupying half of Poland, is in fact playing into the hands of Hitler,
27:43who needs a common border with the USSR to facilitate his plans to invade Russia.
27:53Hitler and Himmler, the head of the SS, will now take care of Poland,
27:58by naming the Nazi Hans Frank, Governor-General of the occupied Polish provinces,
28:03who proclaims,
28:06I have the power of life and death over the Polish people.
28:14After the war, he will be tried at Nuremberg and hanged for crimes against humanity.
28:19These gypsies, held in a pen, are filmed by a German.
28:34For the Nazis, they are non-persons.
28:37The women will be forced to undergo sterilization,
28:41because they do not deserve to reproduce.
28:43The Nazis declare open season on gypsies.
28:50Hundreds of thousands will be interned in concentration camps.
29:04The ordeal of the Jewish people begins.
29:07The Nazis now have three million Polish Jews at their mercy.
29:22Hitler is still uncertain about what to do with them.
29:26As long as the war is going well for him,
29:28he considers deporting them to the east,
29:31or even shipping them to Madagascar.
29:33It is only when the outcome of the war becomes less certain,
29:39that Hitler and his accomplices unleash a frenzy of hate and murder.
29:44The final solution.
29:51For the time being, the Jews have to be identified,
29:55marked with a yellow star,
29:57and herded into ghettos,
29:59some of which are completely walled off.
30:01From the diary of one of these unfortunate souls.
30:09It's heart-rending to see the shameful scenes of violence that take place before our eyes.
30:15Women and the elderly, beaten right out in the streets by petty thugs.
30:20Tears come to my eyes.
30:22All our powerlessness, all our isolation is there to see right in the open where not a single person takes our defence.
30:32We are so weak.
30:33All the major cities of Poland will have their ghetto prisons,
30:43where German, Austrian and Czech Jews will also be interned.
30:46The Jews here still feel confident that perhaps someday they will be able to return to their homes.
30:57They don't know that they will die of hunger and cold.
31:00They don't know that the Shoah is about to begin.
31:19Warsaw is in ruins.
31:20Hitler comes to be filmed by a propaganda crew, seen here travelling in a car in the background.
31:27These victorious German soldiers marched their goose-step to the sound of the Grenadiers' march,
31:42but they weren't too efficient during the Polish campaign.
31:45Poor preparation, a lack of fighting spirit and even cases of indiscipline,
31:52are the points that the Commander-in-Chief, General von Brauchisch, dares report to the Fuhrer.
32:05Hitler is furious, but he is immune to doubt and orders the attack on the West to be prepared.
32:10An attack on the Netherlands, Belgium and France.
32:16Some of his generals think it's madness.
32:19Some of them begin plotting to overthrow the Fuhrer.
32:23This is a crucial moment.
32:25The course of history lies in the balance.
32:30November 8th, 1939.
32:33Hitler narrowly escapes an assassination attempt.
32:36It seems as if he enjoys some kind of divine protection.
32:40When he attends the funeral for the victims, he's no longer the same man.
32:45His power over the army and the German people has grown even stronger.
32:51He tells his generals,
32:54My decision is irrevocable.
32:56I will attack France when the time is right.
32:59I will be victorious or die in the attempt.
33:02Yet Hitler is still uncertain about attacking the West,
33:06for he also says,
33:07War is like opening the door on a dark room.
33:11You never know what will happen.
33:18Eventually, he postpones the order to attack and goes back to his chalet in the Alps
33:24to join his mistress, Eva Braun.
33:25She shot this footage of Hitler's entourage, of the Reich's architect Albert Speer,
33:38who goes for long walks with Hitler.
33:40Speer recalls,
33:42Hitler wanted to rechristen Berlin Germania.
33:46We already had a mock-up of the future Adolf Hitler Square,
33:50with a dome inspired by St. Peter's in Rome,
33:54but 17 times bigger.
33:56I said to him,
33:58My Führer, wouldn't that make an ideal target for bombers?
34:00He answered,
34:02Not at all.
34:04Goering has assured me that no enemy aircraft will ever fly over the Reich.
34:13From his barracks, the future German officer August von Kagenek writes to his mother,
34:19We are all eager to fight.
34:21We are ready for battle.
34:23His mother answers,
34:25This war is a crime,
34:27and we are going to have to pay for it.
34:35The war then enters a new bizarre phase.
34:38The Germans call it the Sitzkrieg,
34:40the sitting war.
34:45The British call it the phony war.
34:48And for the French, it's the drôle de guerre, the funny war.
35:00A long, strange waiting period, especially hard on the women.
35:06For them, there's not only the anguish of war,
35:09but also the survival of their families to worry about.
35:11As in the last war, the soldiers dig in and try to make the best of things.
35:32The French soldier Gaston Sirek writes to his wife,
35:36It's 30 degrees below zero.
35:38The bread is frozen.
35:40I'm one of the lucky ones.
35:42They gave us some straw.
35:44And with that, we can sleep better.
35:45The French soldier пам Geralt
35:48Oh, my God.
36:18Oh, my God.
36:481840 is indeed one of the coldest of the century.
36:51To make a bad situation worse, all the winters of this war will be brutally cold.
37:18The commander-in-chief, General Gamelin, is expecting the Germans to attack through Belgium
37:36and move towards Paris across this open plain, like in 1914.
37:43Gamelin plans to make his stand against the Germans on Belgian soil.
37:47In France, Colonel de Gaulle, a tank officer who's beginning to make a name for himself, criticises this strategy.
37:57He calls it the Maginot Line mentality, which consists in waiting for the other side to make a move.
38:03In his book, Towards a Professional Army, he argues in favour of taking the offensive, making massive use of tanks.
38:13France is producing 300 tanks a month, but they're being dispersed in all the sections to back up the infantry.
38:20French aviation has also fallen behind.
38:33France ordered 4,000 planes from the United States.
38:36In spite of the ever-growing isolationist trend, championed by Charles Lindbergh,
38:42the hero who made the first transatlantic solo flight,
38:45are now a leading proponent of the America First movement.
38:50If you believe in an independent destiny for America,
38:55if you believe that this country should not enter the war in Europe,
39:00we ask you to join the America First Committee in its stand.
39:04It's the isolationist voice of America,
39:08and of public personalities like Henry Ford, the anti-Semitic carmaker.
39:16Or like Joseph Kennedy, America's ambassador in London, who is anti-war.
39:22Whereas his son, John, the future President Kennedy, supports European democracies.
39:27Nazi sympathisers in America also contribute to the impassioned climate that reigns at the beginning of 1940.
39:41In Europe, the British Union of Fascists are also quite active.
39:45Up to the moment, they're banned.
39:48Oswald Mosley, the English Führer, challenges the government right in the centre of London.
39:53He'll spend the next several years in prison.
40:07Mosley's speeches urge people to get out on the streets and stop the war.
40:12But Winston Churchill has taken the reins of the British government.
40:20Here we see him with the French General Gamla and Admiral Darlan,
40:24who were on an official visit to London.
40:29A Franco-British expeditionary corps is formed to help Finland,
40:34which has been invaded by the Soviet Union.
40:36France is preparing to send its elite soldiers, the French Foreign Legion.
40:46The Foreign Legion.
40:48For a century, it has been taking in the world's reprobates,
40:51no matter what their past.
40:53As long as it's not too shady.
40:55Their headquarters in Sidi Bel-Abbès in Algeria
41:03now signs up a good number of Spanish Republicans,
41:06having fled from their country after Franco's fascist victory.
41:10They're now eager to fight the Nazis who supported Franco.
41:18They'll all make the long trip to France.
41:20The Legionnaires embark at Brest,
41:31along with the well-equipped Chasseur Alpin,
41:34a mountain corps trained for action in the snow.
41:39But Finland and the Soviet Union sign a peace treaty.
41:44A few days later,
41:45Hitler launches an offensive against Denmark and Norway.
41:48Hitler is seeking to protect the iron route.
42:03Iron is indispensable to the German war effort,
42:06and 50% of its Swedish iron ore
42:08is shipped out of the Norwegian port of Narvik.
42:11The Franco-British expeditionary corps
42:21lands in the fjord of Narvik.
42:27After a month of fighting,
42:29the Allies take Narvik.
42:31The iron route is temporarily cut.
42:33This victory is good for French morale,
42:42and adds credence to their motto,
42:45we will win because we are the strongest.
42:48But the expeditionary corps will have to abandon Narvik,
42:51and for the rest of the war,
42:53trainload after trainload of Swedish iron ore
42:56will feed the German war machine.
42:58The French are brought back home,
43:01for the Germans have just launched their offensive in the west.
43:09The 9th of May, 1940.
43:11Hitler left Berlin on his private train,
43:14codenamed America,
43:16heading west towards new headquarters near the French border.
43:20Hitler announces,
43:22gentlemen, the offensive has just begun.
43:25His generals had submitted him their battle plan during the winter.
43:36It looked similar to that of 1914.
43:40Attack through Belgium.
43:42But Hitler preferred General von Manstein's idea.
43:46Cutting straight through the Ardennes forest,
43:49then swinging up and driving towards the sea,
43:51encircling the Allies with a sickle-cut movement.
43:56But this sickle-cut movement is in fact a huge gamble,
44:00because the Allies could turn back and counter-attack.
44:03However, Hitler is confident.
44:06He notes,
44:07the main thing is to have good weather.
44:09Lieutenant August von Kagenek claims,
44:19we are the Wehrmacht,
44:21the armed forces of Greater Germany.
44:24Victory is certain.
44:25For the German soldiers,
44:50their homeland is in danger.
44:52After all,
44:54it was the French who declared war on Germany.
44:58The 10th of May, 1940.
45:01At dawn,
45:02German parachutists make a jump over Holland.
45:06Their mission is to capture the airfields and bridges around Rotterdam.
45:11At the same time,
45:12Hitler unleashes his war machine on Belgium.
45:15Hitler waits.
45:25Will the Allies fall into the trap?
45:29He can never Triple be on his way.
45:31He can never kill the Nazis.
45:42fight.
45:51Hit him Nie Gospel.
45:52He gets hurt.
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