字幕表 動画を再生する 英語字幕をプリント "Upon this battle depends the survival of Christian civilization. Upon it depends our own British life, and the long continuity of our institutions and our empire. The whole fury and might of the enemy must very soon be turned on us. Hitler knows that he will have to break us in this island or lose the war. If we can stand up to him, all [of] Europe may be free, and the life of the world may move forward into broad sunlit uplands, but if we fail, then the whole world, including the United States, including all that we have known and cared for, will sink into the abyss of a new dark age made more sinister and perhaps more protracted by the lights of perverted science. Let us therefore brace ourselves to our duties and so bear ourselves that if the British Empire and it's commonwealth lasts for a thousand years, men will still say this was their finest hour." Winston Churchill uttered those words on June 18, 1940. 3 weeks later the Battle of Britain would begin, and it truly was their finest hour. One small Island stood together against the greatest military force the world had ever known. One last light of democracy stood burning against the fascist darkness and as the darkness closed in they fought to keep it burning with a resolve a tenacity that No one in the world expected and though the heroism of those exhausted Air crews that day and night served as the steel wall of england deserve all the credit we can give them this was a Battle won by a nation it was not only one in the sky over the English channel [it] was one in the radar stations that dotted the coast it was one in the munitions Factories and on the Tarmacs it was one in the research labs and in the code breaking facilities It was one by a people not just a military and everybody thought that those people would break someday I would love to dig into the full story of the battle of britain as it is one of the most powerful stories of Modern history but today we want to tell it [from] a point at which it turned from the point at which it stopped being a battle between two military forces a battle which the fascist might have been able to win - a battle of a military against a people a battle the Nazis never had a chance at it's the night of August 25th nineteen [forty] a German bomber Crew is flying over the English Countryside They've been tasked with taking out oil tanks at Rochester and at thames Haven, but something's wrong They've been flying too long their fuel is low And they still haven't seen their target should they press on they've already passed the terrifying cordon of British air defense They can't turn back now, but still they see nothing. No no wait there There's something buildings an urban area this must be it they opened their bomb Bay doors and their bombs drop But it wasn't the fuel reserves at Rochester and thames haven [that] bomber crew was flying over those bombs fell on London they had bombed the biggest Civilian Centre in the uk there was outrage Winston Churchill assuming it was a deliberate attack ordered a retaliatory strike on Berlin these raf bombers were supposed to Target Commercial and industrial targets, but they too missed their targets at the cost of German civilian lives and like that the gloves were off Hitler who had previously ordered the luftwaffe not to intentionally target Civilians now Rescinded that command and on september 7th one of the largest coordinated bombing raids with nearly a thousand bombers spread out over 32 kilometres commenced their target London the heart of the British Empire The idea was that if they could break the people of London maybe they could break the empire itself? the Battle of Britain raged for months German losses were mounting But the raf was also on the ropes the hope of the german side was that this would be the knockout blow That without enough [airpower] to defend their major cities the average citizen would lose faith in the government's ability to protect them and break under the constant threat The truth though was that if the luftwaffe ever had a real chance of winning the battle of britain it was right there on the week of the [7th] by not attacking the Populace the Raf was exhausted and worn down to the point where another week of concerted attack might might have broken them But instead this massive diversion of [resources] to attack targets that didn't really reduce the raf capacity to fight gave them Just the space they needed to come [back] and then smash the raids on London on September 15th Germany made one last push to break London and instead was herself broken in the massive Air battle that ensued with nearly Thousand planes in the Air over London the Germans were repelled and reeling from recent defeats canceled their planned invasion of Britain They came up with a new plan one which doubled down [on] the strategy of breaking the civilian Populace They would abandon the struggle for control of the air and focus on a campaign of terror that every night when British air defenses were far less effective sent waves of German bombers to deliver a payload of destruction to the Streets of London but in the end this massive diversion of resources Took more away from the Nazi war effort than it ever did from the allies which historically is actually almost always what happens with [air-based] Campaigns since the Dawn of aviation it's been the dream of military strategists to win wars without ever putting troops on the [ground] but short of the use of Nuclear arms it's practically never worked Whether it be the early attempts with zeppelin's and world war one the axis blitz or the allied bombings of places like Dresden during world? war two the [napalm] campaigns of Vietnam or the modern conflict in the middle East and the Blitz makes this fact clear as The Germans pursued this strategy further and further it became increasingly evident that the cost and men and Materiel to the German forces exceeded the actual economic damage they were inflicting even when their goal was primarily to just grind the British economy to a halt as Soon as the goal shifted Toward breaking the will of the populace the effect on wartime production became marginal at best month after month British War production Rose and enlistment never slackened and although nothing is as simple or as clear-cut as myth making tends to make it this also brought together the British people as German bombs fell on London and Casualties mounted those with parents siblings and friends whose lives were cut short by the attacks didn't lose the will to fight Quite the opposite they instead became determined to never surrender They threw themselves into the defense of britain with a resolve that only comes from the deepest loss and were prepared to make sacrifices That an unscarred population might never accept you see that's the thing about Strategic bombing even when the objective is [to] strike industry or leadership targets each civilian casualty each incident of collateral damage Rather than breaking the enemy just creates new groups who will forever oppose surrender and the blitz also created a sense of national unity through shared Struggle Everybody who lived through the blitz rich and poor shared a commonality that crossed many previous divides and whether it was spending nights? Huddled together in a shelter manning a civil defense gun or working together on a volunteer fire crew the blitz literally brought people together [it] made them understand each other and rely on each other as they'd never done before and again although nothing's ever as rosy as we remember in the end the blitz did more to unify britain than to divide it and I think that concludes this look back at world war two for now anyway. I hope you folks enjoyed it We'll see you all on Saturday for the regular extra history episodes and thanks again to Paradox for making these bonus episodes possible we wish them the best with hearts of iron for
B1 中級 米 WW2: The Resource War - Strategic Bombing - Extra History - #4 8 0 香蕉先生 に公開 2022 年 06 月 25 日 シェア シェア 保存 報告 動画の中の単語