Title: The Battle that Hitler Never Expected Source:
[None] URL Source:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0lL0a5wMbCo Published:Jun 19, 2024 Author:WW 2 on TV Post Date:2024-06-26 17:56:00 by BTP Holdings Keywords:None Views:166 Comments:6
In August 1939, Poland braced for the inevitable. Germany had brazenly remilitarized the Rhineland and annexed Czechoslovakias Sudetenland while the West watched helplessly. Soon, the worlds most powerful military force would storm through Poland.
Even with a million valiant troops, Poland was outmatched by the modern, mechanized Wehrmacht.
While Britain and France tried to placate Hitler, the Poles knew Germany would stop at nothing to reclaim the Polish Corridor, seize the free city of Danzig, and reunite Germanys divided territories.
Both nations sensed the brewing storm yet pretended all was calm to outwit their enemy. Covert operations and cunning deceptions set the stage for an unseen battle of wits.
In a move straight out of Greek mythology, Germany sent the warship SMS Schleswig-Holstein on a ceremonial visit to Danzig. Inside, hundreds of German soldiers lay in wait, ready for war.
At dawn on September 1, 1939, SMS Schleswig-Holstein unleashed the first salvo of World War 2 on the Westerplatte Naval Base in a surprise assault meant to crush Polish defenses in minutes.
However, the Germans had been deceived. The Poles had their own surprise waiting
Poster Comment:
The Germans conceived and executed a false flag operation when they dressed prisoners in Polish military uniforms and killed them near the German radio station at Gleibwitz. This ruse was used as an excuse to invade Poland. Budinsky was the Premier of Poland. Every time the Germans said something, Budinsky claimed the opposite.
Germany invaded Poland (the start of WWII) because Josef Beck's Poland was torturing and obscenely brutalizing Germans living in Poland in formerly German land.
Beck did this because he had a British guarantee that should Germany do anything about it that England (and the allies) would come to his rescue as they did.
Hitler pleased and all but begged over many months for them to stop this, they did not.
Poland (Beck) got what was coming to him.
Behind the scenes it was all driven by The Usual Suspects.
When Germany invaded Poland from the west, the Soviet Union simultaneously invaded Poland from the east. This was all set up prior to any military actions. Poland was then split between its two adversaries.
The Soviets massacred Polish intelligencia and officers in the Katyn Forest and blamed it on the Germans. Germany then called in western media to show the evidence that it was the Soviets and not the Germans who killed the Poles.
Germany had sold the Soviets 6.35 mm pistols prior to this event. Those were the pistols used to murder the Poles. ;)
"When bad men combine, the good must associate; else they will fall, one by one." Edmund Burke
OK, let's define exposed then as we clearly have two different definitions.
It was well known at the war's end that no such thing as a Holocaust killing even 100k Jews much less 6M was known, however the Establishment STILL hasn't exposed that.
Similarly with the Katyn Forest Massacre.
Patton knew much, but he was killed for fear that what he knew would be exposed as he was very outspoken.
The fact that the Dresden bombing was a war crime was also known as it was planned and unfolding. Yet, it has never been exposed as such by the Establishment, still today.
A good many things were known but not exposed. The list goes on and on and on and is hardly limited to WWII. It was well known by the Establishment that the Gulf of Tonkin was untrue, yet it's only come out in recent years that it was untrue.
The Katyn Forest Massacre only became "exposed" for public consumption decades following the war.
BTW, there's a reason why ALL of the supposed death camps were behind the Iron Curtain.
I don't consider what the government knew but never made public, as having been exposed. You obviously do. So by defining that, that's the difference in our views.
Are you aware that all the guns in storage on Iwo Jima for an invasion of Japan, four anf five pallets high, were put on two ships?
One went to Pyongyang and the other to Haiphong. They were sending them the guns to start the next two wars.
The French were defeated at Dien Bien Phu by American weapons.
To find out more look up Col. L. Fletcher Prouty. He flew Ching Kai Shek to Tehran in 1943 for the meeting of the Big Four. This is where the deal was cut to divide Europe and raise the Iron Curtain.
Patton's tanks were east of the Elbe River and were forced to withdraw because of the Tehran Accords. ;)
"When bad men combine, the good must associate; else they will fall, one by one." Edmund Burke