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فسيلة - transplant
هي مكتبة رقمية تحتوي علي آلاف الفيديوهات العربية في جميع المجالات

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Transcript
00:01Good, Priya
00:03Good for you
00:04Our evidence confirms that there is an assassination plot against you.
00:07Against light?
00:08Yes, technician
00:13Are you making a big deal out of this, Priya?
00:15All reports remove your old clothes
00:20I don't know where you get this information from.
00:23Then there's a little bit of everything in the pen.
00:25He deliberately restrained him
00:35But the benefit is that there are many reports.
00:37Even if it's a thousand reports
00:39I don't care
00:41What is the actual number of reports they received?
00:43Even if
00:44if
00:47There is no tangible religion
00:49What is this shaking?
00:55Listen to what I'm saying
00:57Listen to what I'm saying
01:05Dear viewers, peace and blessings be upon you. Welcome to a new episode of Al-Daheeh program.
01:08Hey beautiful viewers, let me take you to Russia in 2018
01:10I want to get a twist and wear underwear
01:12The revolution has only just begun, it's only been a few months.
01:14The revolution succeeded in ending the rule of the Romanov dynasty.
01:17The Caesarean family
01:18And the establishment of the first communist state in the world
01:20Unfortunately, my dear, the new state has not started with stability.
01:23But it began with a civil war
01:25Between the Red Army, which represents the Surya Berber government
01:27Led by Vladimir Lenin
01:29And opposite the Red Army was the White Army.
01:31This union in Atfad includes different forces
01:33A force opposed to the new government
01:35We want to bring back the old regime.
01:37One of the most important battles will be the Battle of Zara Sen
01:39My dear, it's a city overlooking a river called the Volga River.
01:42A city in southwestern Russia
01:44My dear, my dear, the strategic city is a force to be reckoned with.
01:47The Red Army's loss of the Sen
01:49This will cut off grain and fuel supplies to Moscow.
01:52This gives the White Army an advantage: it can mobilize its forces and begin moving around the center.
01:58Therefore, it is extremely important for the Red Army to control this city at any cost.
02:02But my dear, the situation is difficult; the city is under siege.
02:04And all the conflict is tilting in favor of the White Army.
02:06And all the conflict is tilting in favor of the White Army.
02:08But on June 6, 1918
02:10A majestic, forty-year-old leader arrived in the city
02:13He combines strength of character with genius for military planning.
02:16A man who organized the soldiers and laid out the plans
02:18The death of the will had brought control of the city and purged it of White Army spies.
02:22And here, over the course of months, 5000 Qatari trucks loaded with grain were sent
02:26For the workers in Moscow and central Russia
02:29This man's favor deprived the enemies of the opportunity to defeat the revolution.
02:34Who is this legendary leader, Bu Hamad, who did all these things?
02:36Come on, my dear legendary leader who did all these things
02:39Joseph Stalin
02:40Oh river of Rosha, this is Bouhamad
02:41We're going to talk about this man.
02:42I'm helping him
02:43Did Nia, my dear, surprise you and your words?
02:44The novel you need
02:45It is a Soviet propaganda novel
02:48Which emerged after Lenin's death
02:501924
02:52Why did she appear?
02:53So that our uncle Stalin could take all the credit for breaking the siege of Zart Sin
02:58Greetings, there's something about this novel.
03:00Another novel
03:01A narrative suggests that Stalin made terrible strategic mistakes.
03:04Mistakes that made Lenin want to bring him back to Moscow
03:06Had it not been for the intervention of the Southern Front forces
03:08In order to break this siege
03:10The revolution could have been defeated
03:11Stalin is considered one of the most incompetent men of the revolution.
03:14According to the story as well
03:16Stalin was not the flawed leader
03:18Not a single need
03:19He is a criminal and a chaotic man.
03:21He himself heard military sounds
03:23He stole approximately 10 million rubles from military groups in the Shabihah.
03:26Still
03:27The city is almost entirely undergoing a cleansing process.
03:30His death cost approximately 1700 people
03:32In this novel, Stalin also sent collaborators
03:34But to do that, he emptied the grain stores in southern Russia.
03:37By 2019, the city had recovered in a short time.
03:40The city suffered from famine or an environment
03:42By the grace of God, I ignore you
03:44I'm not in the mood to tell you which of these two novels is correct.
03:46The historian Ais Al-Duwaisha blamed the account.
03:48In his book Stalin: A Political Biography
03:50The slander surrounding the two novels is a slanderous and worthless endeavor.
03:53Because anyway, in the year 1925
03:55The name of the city of Zara changed to Stalingrad.
03:58And so this city became forever linked to Stalin's name.
04:02This is the city that will create his legend as the savior of the Bolshevik image.
04:06And the future savior of Soviet adversity from our uncle Hitler
04:10But according to Deutsche Welle
04:11This legend is a transformation after years into what is called the Zara complex.
04:14Because our uncle Stalin was surprised in 1942
04:17With the Nazi attack on his city, the city that made you, Majd
04:21I, Nazis, couldn't find any other city but the one that became my name?
04:23The Nazis were determined that it would be a place of humiliation.
04:26Stalin here isn't just about defending the Soviet Union.
04:28But rather about the birthplace of his personal legend, Stalingrad.
04:31You want to conquer Moscow, but why the city that became my name?
04:34Of course, dear, if you are a loyal follower of this program
04:36So you remained an expert in salvation.
04:37And you know all the details of World War II from our last episode
04:40May God bring it back to us with goodness, blessings, and prosperity.
04:42So, you know what a spear is?
04:43We don't know about World War III.
04:45We can, but only because you are dear to me and I love you.
04:47And I also love hearing her say it again and again and again.
04:49That's the passenger
04:50So we took you with us, we rode the thieves
04:51In mid-1941
04:53The necessity of World War II
04:54Let's look at a map of Europe
04:55The red color represents the influence of Nazi Germany.
04:58From Poland in the east to the Pyrenees Mountains in the west
05:01The green color in the east is the color of the sublime sky.
05:03This, of course, as we know, is Stalin's doing.
05:05The Nazis had signed a non-aggression pact.
05:09The world is fine, no one expects anyone to leave.
05:11In 1939, this treaty was made to divide Poland between them.
05:15Ebo Habayeb, a year on honey
05:17Historian Edward Erickson in his book in De Germain Aigle
05:19He considered the strong trade relations with the Soviets
05:22Did they think the Nazis could expand in such an extraordinary way?
05:26So, my friend, on our map, all that's left is Britain, in purple.
05:30You will find Unity Island on your left
05:32This great nation is healing its wounds after the infamous Dunkirk withdrawal.
05:36Colonel Christopher Nolan's Battle
05:38In short, my friend, the map in front of you shows that you will find that at that time, the most successful European conqueror of our time was Lyon.
05:43But on July 22, 1941, the world was surprised by the start of Operation Barbarossa.
05:49You'll find him saying, "I feel like I don't want to respect the treaties."
05:53Will you find it? Will you find it? I'm crazy.
05:54I don't know, I don't feel like it. I feel like if I want to challenge, challenge, challenge, the Soviet limit.
05:57Yes, I want to conquer the Soviet Union.
05:59Hitler is creating the biggest front line in the history of warfare.
06:033.3 out of 10 million Germans
06:05They move on three attempts
06:07First, we will occupy Leningrad in the north.
06:09And Kyiv in the south
06:10And in the middle, the occupation of the capital, Moscow.
06:12And arrest him, my dear.
06:13I'm surprised
06:13What is Hitler doing?
06:15You're not just keeping him busy; he hasn't conquered Europe.
06:16And he controls Britain's airspace.
06:18Why are you making the same mistake Napoleon made?
06:20Even my dear Staley himself
06:21He had received intelligence information
06:23Hitler wanted to take over the Soviet Union.
06:25Because he ignored it
06:26Because, guys
06:27There's no one as generous and capable as this man.
06:30He entered the Soviet Union
06:31This is the invaders' informant
06:32Staly, my dear
06:33Hitler would not have expected this cooperation
06:35No, my dear
06:36If we studied history well
06:38We'll find out that the matter wasn't a surprise.
06:40Oh, Muhammad, I didn't see her during the Second World War.
06:41By using your content
06:42No, my dear, I'm talking about something else.
06:44If anyone sees the book Mein Kampf in 1925
06:47You will find Hitler declaring a genuine hatred and contempt for communists.
06:52By touch, Hitler declared explicitly in the book
06:54That a future invasion of the Soviet Union was inevitable
06:57Because of what is called lebenstron
06:59Oh God, protect us, Abu Ahmad
07:00The eye
07:01"Di ya dhimi" is a German word meaning living space
07:04So, if we were to build an Aryan empire
07:06Its area is enormous in Europe
07:08We must end up on the East
07:09Because its resources are self-sufficient
07:11Many Morkins consider Hitler's decision to be the stupidest decision in history.
07:15Because instead of Hitler hacking the map and fighting on one front
07:18Now he's fighting on two fronts
07:20Abu Ahmed's decision was indeed stupid
07:21Someone destroys his empire
07:22Because tomorrow is the granary
07:23What Miaakhi can tolerate
07:24And you know, my dear, that Hitler was indeed reckless, but he wasn't foolish.
07:27In this episode, let's try to understand Hitler's point of view.
07:31All the space that is available to you is in front of you on this thread.
07:33It would take a huge amount of resources for his army to be able to control it.
07:37Controlling the sub-relationship means
07:39I dominated Ukraine
07:41Ukraine is the breadbasket of Europe.
07:43Not only that
07:43You also have oil fields in the south.
07:46Caucasus region
07:47You also have an area rich in minerals.
07:50You have food, minerals, and oil; all of that is important for your army.
07:53If these resources were necessary to maintain dominance in Europe
07:57It became a necessity after December 41
07:59What happened at that time?
08:00America entered what they called World War II
08:03After, of course, the famous Curly Harbor attack
08:05Hitler, my dear, conquered all of Europe with a technique known as the Blitzkrieg.
08:08Blitz warfare technique
08:09He launches a sweeping attack on Telegram
08:11And the tanks
08:12Finally, the viewers
08:13The enemy will always surrender, and the tiger will come in time.
08:16Don't tell me it's a war on the ground.
08:17Trench warfare type 80 years
08:19no!
08:20There's no talk of World War I.
08:21This is a spear they call Win Ba Nat Fighting
08:23A spear you win without fighting
08:25Tetter, my dear, set a deadline for Operation Barbarossa.
08:27You'll finish the six-week journey with Blitzkrek
08:30Teter believed that the Soviets would collapse quickly, or in his words
08:32Hafto Kiko Andador tells me
08:34The emergence of Rotten Stratoshor
08:35And Krashik did it for Daman
08:36No, we just need to knock on the door.
08:37And this rotten structure will collapse
08:39Of course, Aziz, I don't need to tell you.
08:40The Soviets had built their army completely in a state of disarray.
08:43Stalin himself was destroying his army's leadership before the war.
08:46In what is called the Terrifying Run
08:48He got between 34 and 39
08:50At that time, Stalin needed to destroy any rival or opponent.
08:54Let me tell you that Stalin killed 93 out of 139 muscle men.
08:58In the Central Committee of the Party, 81 out of 103 generals and admirals were executed.
09:03The massacre of 750,000 people without trial
09:07Therefore, the army's staff were sufficient.
09:09So what you think was a foolish decision
09:10It could have been a very smart decision.
09:12Hitler needed to exploit the fact that the army was weak and demoralized.
09:16And now, maybe this is a good opportunity for us to hit him.
09:18Dear Nazis, after the invasion
09:20They occupied large areas and spread spaciousness
09:22Hundreds of thousands of Soviets were captured
09:28Neither Belgium nor France has a 2500-kilometer front.
09:34The blitzkrieg will start to get tired and labored
09:36There aren't enough supplies to allow the Germans to withstand this cardio process.
09:41You have vast areas that require a long war.
09:44You might have noticed that time was also the worst factor
09:46Because if Blitz Creek doesn't defeat the enemy and make them kneel quickly
09:49The urban warfare begins
09:50This is of course hell for an army whose operations were swift and decisive, like the Nazi army.
09:53And indeed, my dear, after the failure of Blitz Creek, the Battle of Moscow will last not 6 weeks, not 8 weeks, not months, but years.
10:00And also the siege of Leningrad
10:02And you know, my dear, winter is coming
10:04We were going out into John and the Nazis, who had planned for a blitzkrieg that would last 8 weeks
10:09They didn't know they'd be stuck there until December
10:11And the Nazis were going out to fight without winter clothes
10:14I should have told you that the engines of the tanks and armored vehicles froze from the extreme cold.
10:17And the soldiers' fodder died from the frost.
10:19The Soviets, of course, were criticized on their own soil in this regard.
10:21They were able to move their war factories from the front.
10:24And the Ural Mountains
10:25They also summoned special forces from the east, on the borders of Japan.
10:28Siberian-trained teams
10:30They are very well prepared for the cold and know how to maintain their equipment.
10:33And indeed, in December the Soviets worked and gathered against the Dhād
10:36They were able to stop Operation Barbarossa
10:38After they singled out the remains of a soldier, my dear
10:40three million soldiers
10:41Stalin knew very well that the meat was now winter.
10:44It's that people don't know how to navigate the rain.
10:46A new attack on Moscow is expected after winter.
10:48And indeed, on June 28, 42
10:50Hitler began Operation Kiss Blue
10:52Hitler cunningly decided that he would target the oil fields in the south.
10:56Without oil we won't be able to continue the war
10:58And that, my dear, was a very smart decision.
11:00Why? Because Stalin had fortified Moscow, but
11:03The South was not adequately fortified
11:05The Germans advanced rapidly.
11:06And they took cities like Voronezh
11:08During the summer they enriched more than 600,000 Soviets
11:11They destroyed 7,000 tanks
11:13and 6000 artillery pieces
11:14and 400 planes
11:16If you had just been patient with that guy a little longer, we would all be speaking German by now.
11:19But Stellar just like that and they look at the map
11:20Hila'i is a bright name
11:22A city called Stalingrad
11:24This, my dear
11:25As I say, an industrial city on the Volga River
11:27Occupying it will do something very important
11:28He will cut off supply lines
11:30Between the capital and the south
11:32As I told you, what happened in 2018
11:34When it wasn't called Stalingrad
11:35But according to history professor Rena Pellimton
11:38The Nesiyin could have obtained supplies from the Volga from any point
11:41They didn't even need to enter the city and occupy it.
11:43According to some sources
11:45The decision to occupy the city was due to the ego of the launch
11:48The man knew very well the importance of the city to Stalingrad.
11:51I hear it in his name
11:52Its occupation means the greatest humiliation of his enemy.
11:54A very important psychological victory
11:56On July 9th, Hitler actually decides to invade Stalingrad.
11:59That, my dear, is a decision that some people see
12:01Hitler's stupidest decision
12:02There were many of them in his army
12:05Those who displayed it pulled their hair out in the war.
12:07You women do that
12:08Abu Ahmed, I see that it's a city on the railway.
12:10What he's doing is over.
12:11And then you said that it has strategic importance
12:13No, Hussein, let me tell you that Hitler, in order to get his
12:15He will divide the southern armies
12:16Those who are stationed there are now reaching the oil fields.
12:19He will divide it from the summer
12:20Half goes to the fields and half goes to Stalingrad
12:22This obviously put a lot of pressure on him
12:24Why? Because you have a low self-esteem.
12:25We will divide Haley into two teams, each going in a different direction.
12:28This was also a minor mistake that the Soviets exploited.
12:31Especially when the Nazliyin were retreating to the east
12:33Hitler, because of what some people describe as a whim
12:35Other than the war
12:37And with it, the course of all history changed.
12:39The Battle of Stalingrad will be like the Battle of the Two Worlds
12:42History will suddenly change from this moment
12:44The world becomes different after that.
12:46Abla first
12:46Just like Hitler was driven by ego
12:47Stalin's ego also flared up
12:50Stalin had been working for months, retreating, retreating
12:53Until the Nazis were already ringing the bell at the gates of Moscow
12:56But as you say, Stalingrad is his city.
12:58He decided that he was going to draw a line
12:59Decision No. 227 is issued
13:01The one who confirms a single sentence
13:03No step back
13:04There's no going back.
13:05Stalin found it difficult to go to exhausted soldiers.
13:07And civilians are being killed by the Nazi advance.
13:09He tells them to defend his city for the sake of his name and legacy, may God bless them.
13:12At that time, the player will take the turn.
13:14Soviet propaganda
13:16They decided to erase the words "communism" and "Soviet states."
13:19All the propaganda will focus on the word Russia.
13:21Love of Madderland
13:22Stalin, my dear, be careful, he was a hated dictator.
13:24As I told you, he killed millions and created famines.
13:27Millions were killed too.
13:28If you remember the Ukrainian famine in the 1930s
13:29People are eating each other alive
13:31Holodomor famine
13:32This famine killed between 3 and 7 million people.
13:34This couldn't stop.
13:35Facing an existential threat like the Nazis
13:37And the group said to them, "Never mind, protect what you are doing."
13:38On the eloquent words of the historian Sergei Kent, see
13:40The people of Stalingrad saw their enemy as Nazis
13:43The reinforcements will enter and burn it down
13:44Imagine your enemy killing your family and people and seizing your land.
13:47You won't need a logo to defeat them
13:49But you just want to defend the ones you love.
13:51And about your house
13:52And that's just what they said about Stalingrad.
13:53And they also displayed sadism
13:54When he refused to let civilians kill Stalingrad
13:57Because he wants the Russians to see the Nazis
13:59And they kill them
14:01They are terrified of them
14:02The biggest thing is that the forces see mothers
14:04Elderly people and children are in danger
14:06So that they will be encouraged and fight with all their might
14:09To protect them
14:09Edward Jackson described the policy
14:11With these words, Stalin committed himself
14:13The Soviet Army and the people
14:14In one of the most terrible battles in history
14:16Everyone in Stalingrad is besieged
14:18Everyone must fight
14:19Civilians and soldiers built local defenses
14:21They dug anti-tank trenches
14:23The city was now fully prepared for a land invasion.
14:26And we improve the Soviets' luck
14:27The Nazi general
14:28The one who carries out the attack
14:29Frederick Paulus
14:30Hitler loved him because he was obedient.
14:31But he did not have enough experience.
14:34He never led a field army
14:36In a crucial battle and with a beer of this size
14:38Sorry, but Abu Hamid isn't he either?
14:40He's not playing games, his statement is his own emptiness
14:41This is a Nazi general
14:42The cross-legged Blitz Grimm
14:43Paulus tells you
14:44You prepared the city by land
14:45Okay?
14:45Well, look up at the sky then.
14:46Look up at the sky
14:47Pray to our Lord
14:48From August 23, 42
14:50The limit is August 26
14:51The sky over Stalingrad turned black.
14:53Thousands of tons of shells
14:56Aziz was not yet in international law
14:57600 killer planes
14:59Stalingrad, my dear
15:00All its houses were made of wood.
15:01This caused the whole city to burn to the ground.
15:04It lasted for months, not days.
15:05This was the most violent attack on the eastern Jaba'a in the war.
15:08A goal-scoring attack, and he's slipping away from Stalin.
15:11The city was wiped out, even to the point of holding a stick and erasing.
15:13More than 40,000 Soviets died
15:15All this and what?
15:16Nazi equipment and tanks still exist.
15:18It didn't arrive at all.
15:19We're just chilling
15:20Why, my dear?
15:21The Nazis are entering the city
15:22They are surprised by the strangest sight possible
15:24The Soviets are still at war
15:25And also next to the Soviet soldiers
15:27There are thousands of women fighting
15:29According to Professor Joki Bhilbit
15:31Innocence in Nazi ideology
15:32She was revered as a mother
15:34She gives birth to strong Aryan soldiers
15:36But it's not working
15:38Never a fighter
15:39Soviet, my dear, they'll take the field to a completely different place.
15:41They'll bring a million six
15:43Stop on the battlefields
15:44One million artillery and tank crews
15:46Snipers and aircraft
15:48Even the nurse is entering the battle with her weapon.
15:50And the injured are being evacuated
15:51This was the first sign that identified the Nazis
15:53They will meet in Stalingrad
15:55People and army in despair
15:56Everyone had nothing to lose.
15:58The brave one is to his enemy, and their backs are to the Volga River.
16:00Fighting is more merciful than running away.
16:02Let me tell you something strange, my dear.
16:03The Soviets executed 14,000 soldiers in their army.
16:07What is equivalent to two armies of the Prophet?
16:08Why?
16:09Something they call
16:10Ansovite Beheviar
16:11It ranges from cowardice and inaction to betrayal.
16:14It means the one who narrated from the Prophet, that's how it is.
16:15If you fought
16:16There is a chance that you will live
16:17But if you fall
16:18We will kill a nation
16:19He fights, he dies
16:20Stalin, my dear, threw away all his cards
16:22And he realized
16:22It is impossible to mobilize the people
16:24And he brought it back again, morally.
16:25Just like he did in Stalingrad
16:26He saw this as his last and only fez
16:28That's why
16:28All Soviet forces admire her
16:30One slogan spread among them
16:31No land beyond the Volga River
16:35Meaning, if Stalingrad fell
16:36He will fall to the challenge of the Soviets
16:38Same here, my dear
16:38The loving spirit was strong
16:40It's not enough that it defeats the sliding machine
16:42The displaced people are occupying the high ground.
16:44Tala's name is Mmayev Korja
16:45And from this height
16:46Artillery dominated the city.
16:48When we reach mid-September 1942
16:50What were the Soviets controlling?
16:52The strip is nine miles long
16:53On the Volga River Mandate
16:54And its width doesn't even reach three miles
16:56The displaced are approximately two years old.
16:57That's where the Soviets would have lost, my dear.
16:59We need new leadership
17:00We need new ideas
17:01And here comes one important role called
17:03Vasily Shikhov
17:04This is the commander of the 62nd Army
17:05This is a different kind of military
17:07The soldiers named him
17:08General Staberns
17:09Brigadier General
17:10And a brigadier general of the soldiers' rank
17:12But of course, he's not a stupid guy.
17:13The soldiers were surprised by him
17:14He places his headquarters in the middle of the front lines.
17:17He sits with soldiers in the middle of the line of fire.
17:19It boosts his morale
17:20Of course, Muhammad
17:20Good morale and efficiency
17:21And the people are workers who are bombing us with planes
17:23My dear, that was too much.
17:25Vasily took the soldiers to the front lines
17:27To get closer to the German lines
17:29for him?
17:29When I get close to the German lines
17:32Her time in the German Air Force
17:34He won't enjoy it
17:34Because he was afraid to strike his soldiers
17:36This is the idea that Vasily will use
17:38One of the most difficult plans in the Second World War
17:41Vasily noticed
17:41The sweeping air attack carried out by the Germans
17:44Turn the city into rubble
17:45This rubble, my dear
17:46He hindered the movement of Nazi tanks and vehicles.
17:49Broken things on the ground
17:50There are no safe routes
17:52I feel like our cars and tanks are moving
17:53Vasily understood very well
17:54The Nazis' strength in the air force
17:56In tanks and in armored vehicles
17:58And all of this needs space to move around.
17:59He devised a strategy to deprive the Germans of space
18:02Gather the soldiers and divide them into commando units
18:04Shock Groups
18:05Each group consists of 50 to 100 fighters.
18:07They burn with complete freedom
18:08And by improvisation
18:10It is the same as the Hash plan
18:11So they wouldn't be expecting anything
18:12But they all maintain the same technique.
18:14Hajj the anime
18:15Embrace the enemy
18:16Each group must get closer to the enemy.
18:17It's as if she's going to hug him.
18:18So that the Nazi soldier
18:19He can't gather them up with a drug bomb.
18:21The closer you were
18:22Everything that was honey to you
18:23Nazin, this is my dear
18:24They are surprised by dozens of groups
18:26They all move randomly
18:28And they approach with frenzied selflessness
18:30There isn't much space for the skylight.
18:31or call in the air
18:33Because they are very close to us
18:34If we hit them
18:35We might hit ourselves
18:36Every tank, my dear
18:38We parked on the street
18:38She's burning up from the distance, row
18:40With bombs or Molotov cocktails
18:42This is where the Germans find themselves
18:43Involved in urban warfare
18:45What is known as Urban Warfare
18:46From house to house
18:47Out of fear, they named it Dah
18:48The war on poverty
18:50The Germans were taking over a building during the day.
18:52And at night, the Soviet soldiers amuse themselves over them.
18:54Like the rats that enter through windows and alleys
18:56They were strengthening the Soviets to finish off the Germans
18:58With knives, machine guns, and flamethrowers
19:00This, my dear, was a universe
19:02But the greatest fear for the Germans was Jay from the snipers.
19:05They called them the Bligh of Salengrad
19:06The shattered city of
19:08The environment was ideal for any sniper.
19:10He hides in his place for hours
19:11So that they could find a way to pass it.
19:12Especially the female snipers
19:14Those who were called the Shot John and Ives
19:16This made the Nazis so terrified that they could walk around Salengrad even during the day.
19:19If you watched a movie called
19:20Elemi led Gates
19:20You'll find it tells the story of a legendary Soviet sniper.
19:23The Nazis sent him the head of the Nazi sniper school.
19:26To filter it
19:27But this sniper also killed him.
19:28Of course, my dear, it's all propaganda.
19:30But that sniper was real
19:31Soviet propaganda relied on it throughout the war.
19:34Propaganda was a powerful weapon for a besieged city.
19:36The Soviets were placing loudspeakers near the front lines.
19:39Every seven minutes they announce the death of a Nazi soldier
19:42And in order to destroy the morale of the Nazi soldiers
19:45They were stripping the letters that were in their pockets
19:47If you looked at the letters of those Nazi soldiers
19:49You will find the despair they were in
19:51No, for example, is the answer to the soldier Wilhelm Hoffman.
19:53He summarizes the situation by saying that he and his colleague
19:55They named Stalingrad Mas Grave Oforma
19:57On the good words of Professor Jokin Helbit
19:59The Nazis described the Soviets as killing machines.
20:02Animals expressed more than humans
20:03He describes them as having tremendous determination.
20:06He ignores the survival instinct.
20:07This is not an exaggeration
20:08All the tactics I told you about killed a lot of Nazis
20:10But in reality, they are suicide operations.
20:12And amidst every single Nazi, there were dozens of Soviets killing
20:15Average age of a soldier in Stalingrad
20:17How old is my ID, dear? 24 hours
20:19But all of this wasn't enough
20:20By October 14
20:22The slow pace of the attack allowed them to control 90% of the city.
20:27Of course, Hitler and his ilk reacted very strongly.
20:29To the teacher's degree in the speech on November 9th
20:31About the fall of Stalingrad
20:3290% Dream Products
20:34But the Russians always have their greatest card, dating back to the days of Napoleon's invasion.
20:38Bigi is a friend of geography
20:40Bigi, my dear, Soviet winter
20:42Does he say, my dear?
20:43The Nazis and anyone else on Earth weren't prepared to face a winter with temperatures 30 degrees below summer.
20:49Muhammad, they don't control the city.
20:51They eat from the city's crops and drink from their river.
20:53normal
20:54Hello, my dear, as the Nazis approach
20:56So far, the invaders have implemented a policy known as the scorched earth policy.
21:00All the land and crops were burned
21:02The Soviets relied on external rivals for their strength.
21:05By constantly bringing them from the Fold River
21:07The Germans, on the other hand, can't find food and don't know where to drink from the river.
21:10According to Sir Anthony Beevor
21:11Soviet snipers were targeting any civilian.
21:16He even offers water to the Nazis
21:18If you find it difficult, we will kill you and him.
21:20Even the beloved Soviet children
21:21The Nazis were using bribes to get water from the river.
21:23The snipers were targeting him
21:25Take, O God, come, O God
21:26A German lieutenant was stabbing Stalingrat in a speech
21:28The city of Pyon was a pressure furnace, its narrowness determined by the reflection of the flame.
21:32The dogs swim desperately to escape across the Volga River.
21:34Meanwhile, the Soviets are enduring a hell that no stone could bear.
21:38Question here
21:39Could this resilience alone have won them the war?
21:41Even if we were to compare Stalin and Hitler, it would be a shame.
21:43We will find that two people made catastrophic mistakes that are easy for us to judge from our position.
21:46Stalin, for example, was confident that Hitler wouldn't take him.
21:48Hitler was confident that Bell's Creek would succeed
21:51And both of them, in all their arrogance, staked their bets on Stalingrad
21:54Stalin ruined a sure plan because of her.
21:56And because of it, thousands of soldiers and civilians are killed daily.
21:59But the difference is that Stalin, at a certain point, will realize that he will not win this war due to sheer stubbornness.
22:03One of the generals that Stalin fought in their purge
22:06His name was Mikhail Suchalchevsky
22:08This was the owner of the Deep Operations Doctrine
22:10This was a military doctrine based on attacking the enemy during the lifespan of its formations.
22:15And crippled its logistical supply chain
22:17And that's exactly what Chekhov did in his tactics.
22:19By the way, my dear, Stalin killed the general who held that doctrine.
22:22But he implemented this doctrine literally.
22:24The Soviets held out and remained in 10% of the city
22:27There was no end
22:28But this is a prelude to a new plan by the generals.
22:31Their names are Georgi Zhukov and Alexander Vaslevsky
22:34These are the countries, my dear, that have been amassing troops all this time.
22:37North and west of Stalingrad
22:45They launched a counter-attack, a counter-offensive with one million Soviet troops, eight hundred tanks, and 1,500 aircraft.
22:51They are led by men and women who will later be known as the Night Witches
22:54It appears that Abu Ahmed is being repelled.
22:55You are calling him Abu Ahmed
22:56How did the Soviets manage to operate with such a size without the troops noticing?
23:00This, my dear, was thanks to a brilliant strategic deception plan.
23:03Her name is Maski Rovka
23:05For a week, my dear Soviet forces maintained radio silence.
23:09The troops were also moving at night, but slowly and deliberately.
23:13Chekhov knew where the elite of the troops were located: on the front lines.
23:17Only the wings and rear of the army remained; the Third and Fourth Roman Armies were there.
23:21The Italian Second Army and the Hungarian Second Army
23:23Do you think these are soldiers who don't fight their wars hard?
23:25Besides, they are soldiers who are not equipped
23:28We are present, completing the number of axis countries, and we will sort some things out.
23:30I will indeed request that he receive intelligence information.
23:33There are suspicious movements taking place within the army's ranks.
23:36But he is being stubborn and refuses to believe the generals.
23:40Here, those descending are surprised by movement around the wings from two sides.
23:43They tightened the noose around them.
23:44Of course, as I told you, the soldiers who were dealing with them
23:46They were less efficient, but the Zovets succeeded.
23:49Move on November 7th
23:50So that on the 23rd the forces will meet and close the pincer movement.
23:54The Hungarian is normal for contemplation. Who was behind this maneuver you're calling for?
23:58The same people who went down
23:59They are the ones who use this pincer movement as a lightning maneuver within the Blazzy Craig.
24:02I note the words of Professor Saul David
24:04The landing party were geniuses in these maneuvers.
24:06But alongside their genius, there was great arrogance.
24:09Arrogance assured them that the people wouldn't know how to carry out these maneuvers.
24:12Especially if this people is a despicable, vile people.
24:16Unter Munch
24:17General Paulus at the time
24:18And three hundred thousand Nazis are besieged, my dear, from every direction.
24:21Paulus, as I told you, may have had little experience, but he wasn't stupid.
24:25Anyone who's fighting knows very well what it's like to be besieged without supplies.
24:28You have two options.
24:29You endure a siege and take risks, or you unite and wait for an external force to come and break the siege.
24:34Paulus would then send a message to Hitler
24:35Help me, Uncle Hitler, I'm surrounded!
24:37Hitler insists that he must stay put and not retreat an inch.
24:41According to Professor Sonke Nitzel
24:43These are decisions that require character, not obedience.
24:45You are a leader with hundreds of thousands of soldiers.
24:47They are dying from hunger, cold, and the siege.
24:50And in this case, you see more than Hitler.
24:52You're the one who needs to take action.
24:54But unfortunately, my dear, Faulos did not have the courage to defy Hitler.
24:58Truly, my dear, Hitler was not one to be trifled with.
25:00He was actually relying on a plan, as we presented it to him, a Nazi leader.
25:03Someone named Hermann Göring
25:04He was suggesting that we, guys, should establish an airlift of supplies.
25:07He supplied the besieged in Stalingrad with food.
25:09We'll drop the food from above.
25:10Of course not, my dear. It's difficult to have an entire army of hundreds of thousands of people.
25:15They rely on an airlift to get their food supplies.
25:17The army at that time in Stalingrad needed approximately 800 tons of food.
25:21What is this? Daily
25:22German aviation has fewer aircraft than it provides in this supply.
25:27This is of course due to the disastrous conditions of winter.
25:31How can we survive in this storm?
25:32And after you've gone through all that, I'd like to remind you that there were approximately 1000 Soviet aircraft.
25:37The aircraft, like the Ktiaodobek, can deliver 10 tons per day.
25:40It's rare that we'll get 100 tons again; we need 800 tons daily.
25:44So the Nazis are left with only the second option.
25:47This is a military operation to break the siege from the outside.
25:49And indeed, Hitler is gone in mid-December.
25:51A well-known winter storm
25:55Manstein insisted that for the operation to succeed, Paulus's army had to move and break the siege.
25:59And God willing, he will meet him in the street.
26:01But unfortunately, there was no point in fearing him until he was besieged
26:03Here Hitler also refuses to allow Paulus's army to move even one step.
26:08Save the Earth
26:09One of the besieged judges pleaded with Paulus to defy Hitler and personally lead the relief force.
26:15This commander saw German soldiers collapsing from hunger and disease
26:18Those who survived were forced to slaughter horses and eat their meat.
26:20But Paulus also refused
26:22And at that time, Manstein failed to implement his plans.
26:24Furthermore, the Soviets began on December 16th
26:26So that they could begin to tighten the siege even more on the Nazis
26:31And they send surrender letters to Paulus
26:32But Hitler's message was also clear.
26:35Giving up is not allowed
26:37Hitler, my dear, knew very well the situation of his army.
26:39But his brilliance prevented him from being in the city where Stalin decided to humiliate himself.
26:44He plots against him and humiliates him, and on January 30th, Hitler decides to make a very strange move.
26:49In Paulus's opinion, Field Marshal's office
26:52Oh Abu Hamid, he did something right
26:53The man is surrounded and the army is being defeated
26:55Darat, my dear, is a hidden message.
26:57Because in the history of the Reichsfeld, no marshal ever surrendered
27:00The message tells Paulus that if he cannot win, he should commit suicide rather than abandon peace.
27:04This, my dear, is what happened to Rommel in the episode "Cough in the Desert."
27:08Field Marshal committed suicide to avoid being exposed for his treason.
27:10Paulus was neither Rommel's military acumen nor his continental pride.
27:14Paulus said, "I am a Christian."
27:15My complex prevents me from believing he committed suicide.
27:16But he looked at his soldiers as they ate horse meat.
27:19And they are chasing away the hope that carries the typhoid bacteria on their bodies.
27:23And they listen with bitter irony to a German radio station.
27:26She's talking about German victories
27:29The illusory victories at Stalingrad
27:31Because on the 31st of January, year 40
27:33Tiko is celebrating his birthday and receiving the greatest gift
27:37General Paulus Gael surrendered with an army of 150,000.
27:42After his Soviet surrender, he was captured by 24 generals.
27:45and 91,000 soldiers
27:46Shall I tell you, my dear, that during the Nazi invasion of Russia
27:49Who is Yakov?
27:51Ibn Stalin for the
27:52In 43 AD, the Germans offered to exchange them for Paulus.
27:56Take your son and bring back our seat.
27:58But they were surprised when Joseph Stalin humiliated them.
28:01I wouldn't trade a field marshal for a lieutenant
28:04Even if he's a lieutenant, that's my son.
28:05Indeed, my dear son Stalin remains in prison.
28:07Until he tries to escape that night and is killed
28:09In an act described by historians as deliberate suicide
28:12Stalin was sending a message to the entire Russian nation.
28:15Not even my son
28:16I am ready to sacrifice my son to humiliate the enemy.
28:18The surrender of the army at Stalingrad was a fatal blow to the Nazis.
28:22But all the security forces hid this information.
28:24They announced their death, not their surrender, with headlines like
28:26Like Did So Germini Codliff
28:28The propaganda will then blame this defeat.
28:30On factors such as harsh winter
28:32Although they suffered a major defeat before winter
28:35My numbers, dear, are terrifying
28:36The Germans lost approximately 800,000 lives at Stalingrad.
28:39The Soviets lost 1.1 million fighters
28:42and more than 40,000 civilians
28:43According to most military analyses
28:45If the Germans had completed their campaign to the southern oil fields
28:48The Soviets destroyed most of it through their scorched-earth policy.
28:51It was possible, at the very least, for them to control the oil.
28:54For the war effort
28:55They then cut off the Volga River's water supply.
28:57And at that time, Stalin Grad would have run out on its own because there was no supply.
29:00But Hitler carried out this maneuver out of arrogance.
29:03He wanted to create his own legend in Stalingrad
29:06He wanted to make a statement
29:07Ironically, if he doesn't go there, he'll find a leader even more stubborn than himself.
29:11He defends his own legend, which he created in the same city.
29:14Dear son of Stalin, the paradox
29:15The Germans played with German strategies
29:17Specifically, according to the principles of the Prussian general Carl von Claudeswitz
29:20General Deh considered defense the strongest form of war.
29:23Because you maintain your supply lines
29:25And it gains moral superiority
29:27Because you will be defending your country and your people.
29:29Therefore, everyone is fighting
29:30We did not present here a victory or death.
29:32And you succeed the moment your enemy cannot withstand a counterattack
29:36This was the catalog of the victory at Stalingrad.
29:39Those who learned Stalin didn't learn Hitler.
29:41His arrogance made him disregard the words of his generals.
29:43or the fundamentals of military science
29:44Secure your supply
29:46Especially since the greatest attention was focused on the Moscow carving.
29:48Of course, my dear, it's easier. We dream from afar and after a long time.
29:51This, my dear, is a catalog of Hitler's defeat.
29:58Hitler could have survived without the Soviet invasion.
30:01They could have occupied them without the Stalingrad maneuver.
30:03But for some reason, he left the solutions simple.
30:06Sometimes the best thing is to do the easy way out.
30:09to imagine
30:09And here's what we need to ask for, for one battle
30:11The course of the war changed completely.
30:12According to Sir Anthony Beevor
30:14Stalingrad was a very important psychological turning point in World War II.
30:18During the Nazi march
30:20A Soviet colonel shouted at them
30:21He is referring to the destroyed buildings of Stalingrad.
30:23This is what Berlin will look like in the future.
30:27What you did in Stalingrad
30:28It will happen to you in your capital.
30:30The same thing General Chikov said in his tribute to the victims of his forces at Stalingrad
30:34Before he left the city
30:35He said goodbye to us, our friends, we are heading west
30:38Our duty is to honor your memory.
30:40This is a prophecy that all the allies believed in and accepted.
30:42Everyone believed that the Nazis were after Stalingrad
30:45They might actually lose
30:45And not just losing
30:46No, that could slip, and it's in the heart of Berlin.
30:48Stalingrad created a legend bigger than Stalin and bigger than Hitler.
30:52And sometimes it's not to glorify or humiliate a dictator
30:54no
30:54Rather, it is a legend of genuine resilience and cunning.
30:57A nation that was crying out for its children to save it
30:59A legend immortalized in the city by a statue
31:01The motherland calls
31:03A statue, my dear, in the shape of a woman, representing the motherland.
31:05A mother who represents the people, the women, and the soldiers who fought
31:09Neither the Soviet leader nor the legitimate ideology
31:11The poet Babel bin Roda in his poem
31:13Song: Love to Stalingrad
31:14The Americans and the British were roused
31:16And also the countries that suffered defeat
31:18He told them, "I touched with my hand the shimmering blue twilight."
31:22Now I have touched the sunrise of life
31:24The monod with the sun of Stalingrad
31:26Stalingrad, my dear, was the beginning of the end
31:28Then the Germans retreated on the Eastern Front
31:31They also began to lose on the western front.
31:33With the liberation of France
31:34Finally, by uniting their efforts, the allies
31:37So that, my dear, they can land in Normandy
31:39The rest is history
31:41In 1961, after the death of Joseph Stalin
31:44The name of the city of Stalingrad appears as Volgagrad
31:47This, my dear, was happening as part of a policy called
31:49Distalization
31:51This was a policy that took place during the era of the Soviet leader.
31:53Nikita Khrushchev condemned Stalin's dictatorship and crimes.
31:57With Salin's death, the city where he created his dubious legend was lost.
32:01The city retained its legend of resilience.
32:03But after 1961
32:05Will the legend of Stalin and his city come to an end?
32:07Let me tell you that on April 29, 2025
32:10During Putin's visit to Volgograd
32:13Suddenly, the regional governor made an advanced request from veterans of the Ukrainian war.
32:18They requested that the city's airport be named Stalingrad.
32:21At that moment, in a scene that seemed to depict Putin's bird being captured
32:25Their requests are orders
32:27The next day Putin will be at the forum
32:29Young women approach him and ask him to rename the entire city Stalingrad.
32:33Putin, at that time, also responded by saying that this name is associated with victory.
32:38The truth is that this is an extension of many of Putin's attempts
32:40He invoked Stalingrad and its symbolism in his war with Ukraine
32:44In 2023, during the 80th anniversary of the battle
32:47Putin describes history as repeating itself and says that the West's collective aggression against him is similar to Nazi aggression.
32:52What happened at Stalingrad
32:53But this time the Germans and Europeans are supporting Ukraine with weapons.
32:57And when the conflict intensified in the same year between Russia and Ukraine
33:00Russian experts have described the city of Dakmot as the new Stalingrad.
33:04And the historical group, my dear, the Ukrainians were a large part of the Soviet resistance.
33:08In front of the Nazis at Stalingrad
33:10The most famous of them is Commander Andrei Yuri Menko
33:13According to the Russian historian Vadim Erlikman
33:15Ukrainians may have suffered casualties in the war.
33:18Their population is larger than the number the Russians provided.
33:21Of course, my dear, you and I know very well.
33:23Putin doesn't make these statements to be accurate.
33:25But rather to create a new myth
33:28According to an article that says
33:29Stalinist manifestations are increasing wildly in Russia.
33:34The appearance of Nasbatskarya
33:36Absolute power of the leader
33:39Stalinist rulers in every city
33:41Half of them represent the Stalinists
33:43He appeared before the public in front of the Panorama Museum
33:45In Volgograd, 23
33:47Because Putin is here, I need to revisit history in the guise of myth.
33:50History in Russia is besieged by everyone
33:52Here, he remains almost like Stalin.
33:54The order code tells everyone
33:56And like the Stalinist promise, grad
33:58Whatever the victims or the situation in Ukraine
34:00He must win in the end
34:02My reinforcement makes us contemplate the idea
34:03A historical event is not necessarily the event that actually happened.
34:07But the legend that is created from it
34:09The legendary savior of Zarah Sin
34:11Stalin created it and used it to seize power.
34:13And despite what I told you, it's a dubious story.
34:15But it created a major ego conflict
34:17Between the two most powerful men in the world at that time
34:20A city with an area of ​​859 square kilometers
34:23It changed human history because it is burdened with myth.
34:27Although the Battle of Stalingrad took place more than 8 years ago
34:33With its historical implications, my dear, it doesn't end in its time.
34:36But it is reinterpreted and explained to the son
34:38Or, in the words of historian Peter Gill
34:40history is indeed an argument without end
34:43That's why, my dear, it's always important when we look at history.
34:45We try as much as possible to read its reality more than its myths
34:49This, my dear, is a humanitarian duty upon us.
34:51And myths, if we gave them enough space
34:53It's very easy to create future victims and killers.
34:56That's it, my dear. It's better, but not necessarily better, than what we'll see from the previous incident.
34:58You'll see the next incident; look at the sources.
35:00If we're on YouTube, we'll subscribe to the channel.

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