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As the final British and French troops were
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evacuated from the beaches of Dunkirk in June
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1940, the outlook for the Allies appeared grim
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in the early stages of the Second World War.
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Shortly after, Hitler's Nazi forces marched into Paris
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and France fell under German occupation.
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For the German Führer, the United Kingdom, separated
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from continental Europe only by the narrow English
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Channel, became his next target.
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Yet, despite the defeat at Dunkirk, the miraculous
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rescue of thousands of Allied soldiers revealed a critical truth.
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Hitler was not as invincible as he had seemed.
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When the Battle of Britain commenced, a German
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victory was far from certain, despite the Luftwaffe's apparent superiority.
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The brave pilots of the Royal Air Force,
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RAF, defended their island nation with unwavering determination.
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But just as the tides of war seemed
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focused on Britain, Hitler made an unexpected move.
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Turning his attention eastward, he launched a surprise
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attack on the Soviet Union, violating the non
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aggression pact he had established with Joseph Stalin at the war's outset.
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Across the vast, frozen plains of Russia, the
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German army quickly discovered that swift victory was
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far more elusive than anticipated.
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Meanwhile, in December 1941, Hitler's Axis partner, Japan,
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bombed Pearl Harbour.
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This act of aggression dragged the United States
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into the conflict, transforming the war into a truly global struggle by 1942.
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As the world descended into chaos, it became
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clear that Hitler had gravely underestimated the strength
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and resilience of his enemies.
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With America, the Soviet Union and Great Britain
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now united against him, the Allies were poised to strike back.
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From the scorching deserts of North Africa to
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the dense jungles of the Far East, wherever
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Hitler and his Axis of Evil sought to
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oppress, the Allies stood ready to confront them.
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In 1940, the people of occupied Europe were forced to bow to the iron fist of
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Nazi rule.
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A brutal police state followed swiftly behind the invading armies.
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Private transport was banned, independent newspapers were either
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shut down or transformed into pro-German propaganda
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outlets, and entire populations lived under the constant shadow of fear.
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Most horrifying of all, Jewish families vanished from their homes overnight.
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Many, like the family of young diarist Anne
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Frank in Amsterdam, were driven into hiding.
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Concentration camps began to appear across Europe.
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Initially used to imprison Hitler's political opponents in
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the early 1930s, these camps evolved into centres of unspeakable horror.
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Hitler's vision of an Aryan master race demanded
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the extermination of anyone he deemed undesirable.
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Jews, communists, homosexuals, disabled individuals and ethnic minorities
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were systematically rounded up, imprisoned and murdered as
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the Nazis tightened their grip on occupied territories.
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Governments across Europe fell under Nazi control.
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Pro-German leaders were installed in positions of
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power, none more infamous than Henri Petain in
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France, who led the Vichy government under direct German influence.
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Yet, amid the terror and oppression, a flicker of hope remained.
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Hitler's failure to conquer Britain and the resilience
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shown during the Blitz bolstered the resolve of
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the British people to resist Nazi tyranny.
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By 1941, Britain had endured the worst of
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the Luftwaffe's attacks and was beginning to fight back.
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Prime Minister Winston Churchill's stirring speeches echoed across
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the continent via BBC broadcasts, rallying the spirit
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of resistance with the symbol of V for
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Victory, accompanied by the iconic opening notes of Beethoven's Fifth Symphony.
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Across occupied Europe, people tapped out the victory
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rhythm in defiance of their captors.
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In London, exiled politicians and military leaders began
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to organise and inspire their nations from afar.
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Among them was General Charles de Gaulle, who
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broadcast messages to the French people, urging them
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to hold on to hope and rise against Nazi occupation.
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Though resistance movements were still in their infancy
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and unlikely to dislodge the Nazis on their
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own, Hitler was about to make a catastrophic strategic blunder.
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Blinded by his hatred of communism, Hitler launched
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Operation Barbarossa on 22 June 1941, amassing a
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vast army along the Eastern Front to confront Stalin's formidable Red Army.
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Having secured alliances with Hungary, Romania and Bulgaria,
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millions of German soldiers marched onto Soviet soil.
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The invasion sparked the largest land battle in
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history, and in the initial months, German forces
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made rapid gains, capturing key cities like Minsk,
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Kiev and Odessa and pushing towards Moscow.
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However, while Nazi generals planned their next moves,
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events unfolding on the other side of the
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world would dramatically shift the balance of power
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in what had, until then, been Hitler's war.
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In the Pacific, tensions had escalated between Japan
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and the United States, leading to an American oil embargo.
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In response, Japan targeted Allied territories for their resources.
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With Japan preparing to move its forces south,
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Stalin was able to redeploy his troops from
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the border with Japanese-occupied northeastern China.
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Elite Siberian divisions poured into Moscow and halted the German advance.
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By 5 December 1941, the German offensive on
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Moscow was abandoned, and the Soviets launched a fierce counterattack.
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Meanwhile, Japanese fleets were quietly assembling in the Pacific.
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On 7 December 1941, they changed the course of history.
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In the early morning hours, waves of Japanese
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aircraft descended upon Pearl Harbour, devastating the US Pacific fleet.
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Battleships were bombarded, airfields destroyed, and over 2
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,000 American lives were lost in just 90
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minutes as the skies filled with smoke and fire.
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The attack didn't end there.
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Japanese forces launched assaults across Allied territories in the Pacific.
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The following day, on 8 December, President Franklin D.
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Roosevelt declared war on Japan.
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The United States, long adhering to an isolationist
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stance, was now fully engaged in the global conflict.
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Not only were the Americans prepared to confront
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Japan, but they also turned their focus towards Adolf Hitler and Nazi Germany.
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The German nation now faced an adversary far
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greater than anything Hitler or his supporters had ever anticipated.
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Having signed the Tripartite Pact with Japan and
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Italy the previous year, Hitler was now obligated to honour the agreement.
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The United States, with its vast resources and
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enormous population ready for war, presented a formidable challenge.
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Yet, from his Wolf's Lair headquarters in Eastern
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Europe, Hitler remained jubilant.
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With Japan locked in conflict with America, he
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believed victory was within his grasp.
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On 11 November 1941, in a move that
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surprised few, he declared war on the United States.
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It was precisely the response President Franklin D.
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Roosevelt had anticipated and, to some extent, welcomed.
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Hitler's declaration provided the justification Roosevelt needed to
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send American troops into the European theatre of
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war, offering critical support to Winston Churchill and
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the British in their fight against the Third Reich.
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Roosevelt and Churchill had forged a strong bond
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since Churchill assumed office in 1940, but by
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entering the war against Hitler, Roosevelt found himself
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allied with an unexpected partner, the Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin.
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This alliance was extraordinary, given the stark political
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differences between Roosevelt and Stalin.
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While Roosevelt placed a degree of trust in
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the Soviets, Churchill remained cautious, willing to leverage
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Soviet strength, but ever wary of Stalin's intentions.
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As the war progressed towards its conclusion, tensions
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between the United States and the Soviet Union would begin to surface.
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But for now, the combined military power of
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the so-called Big Three rendered Hitler's dreams
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of conquest increasingly unattainable.
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On the Russian front, as battles raged around
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Moscow and the tide turned against Germany, Hitler's
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decisions grew more erratic.
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Refusing to accept defeat, he declared himself commander
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in-chief of the German army, assuming full control over military strategy.
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He ordered that there would be no retreat
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from Moscow or the broader Eastern Front.
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This stubbornness frustrated his generals, who began to
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lose faith in their Fuhrer's leadership as the situation deteriorated.
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While the Soviets held firm in the East,
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Japan was making rapid advances in the Pacific.
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The Japanese military had seized a string of territories rich in resources.
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Guam, the Philippines, Malaya, Hong Kong and Singapore all fell swiftly.
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Japanese forces pushed as far south as the
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Solomon Islands, threatening Australian territory.
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Confident in their momentum, they set their sights
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on the small but strategically critical Midway Atoll.
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However, the Battle of Midway in June 1942
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marked a turning point.
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After six months of unbroken victories, Japan suffered
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a devastating defeat, forcing them onto the defensive.
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As American forces surged into the Pacific, the
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United States prepared for its first major offensive,
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the Battle of Guadalcanal in the Solomon Islands.
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For many American servicemen, the horrors of jungle
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warfare were a rude awakening.
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The dense, disease-infested forests of Guadalcanal presented
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brutal challenges, and the fighting was fierce and unforgiving.
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Meanwhile, 800 miles to the west, Australian soldiers
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faced their own gruelling battle.
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General Douglas MacArthur had mobilised Australian troops to
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defend the vital stronghold of Port Moresby in Papua New Guinea.
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He feared that if the port fell, Northern
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Australia would be vulnerable to invasion.
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The Japanese had previously attempted to capture Port
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Moresby in May 1942, but were repelled in the Battle of the Coral Sea.
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This time, rather than launching a seaborne assault,
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Japanese commanders opted for a land invasion, sending
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Imperial troops over the treacherous Owen Stanley Mountain Range.
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Australian and American forces responded, embarking on one
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of the most arduous campaigns of the war along the Kokoda Track.
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Battling through unforgiving jungles and over towering ridges,
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the soldiers faced extreme conditions.
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By the time they completed the trail, the
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survivors were so exhausted they could barely continue the fight.
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Meanwhile, at Milne Bay, on the eastern tip
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of New Guinea, the Allies confronted yet another Japanese assault.
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As reinforcements flooded into the Pacific theatre, another
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front of the war was drawing attention.
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The barren expanses of North Africa.
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In the subterranean war rooms beneath Whitehall, Winston
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Churchill watched events in Africa with mounting concern.
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The famed Nazi commander Erwin Rommel, known as
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the Desert Fox, had seized Tobruk, a critical
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port in Libya, from Allied forces.
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Tobruk was a key strategic asset in the
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North African campaign, and its proximity to Egypt
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posed a dire threat to the Suez Canal,
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a lifeline for British supply routes and control over the Middle East.
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The fall of British-held Singapore to the
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Japanese in February, coupled with a humiliating defeat
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in North Africa, left Churchill deeply concerned about
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the future of the British Empire and the free world.
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He feared that Cairo would be the next target.
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Determined to turn the tide, he sent General
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Bernard Montgomery to North Africa to revitalise the
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Eighth Army and prepare for a counter-offensive.
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At the same time, Churchill sought support from his allies.
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He pushed for a large-scale Anglo-American
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landing in North West Africa, but he knew
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that Stalin had been demanding a second front
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against Germany since mid-1941, while Roosevelt was
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eager to strike directly at occupied Europe.
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In August 1942, Churchill travelled to Moscow to
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meet Stalin in person and justify his strategy.
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If the Allies could, as he put it,
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end the year in possession of North Africa,
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Hitler's so-called soft underbelly would be exposed.
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This would pave the way for an invasion
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of Italy, and Churchill reassured Stalin that a landing in France would follow.
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Stalin, though sceptical, agreed.
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He pledged that Soviet forces could hold out
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against Hitler's army through the winter.
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Yet even as Churchill flew home, the German
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advance on Stalingrad was reaching a critical point.
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Over a million Axis troops were just 50
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miles from the city, but this was no ordinary battle.
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Stalingrad held symbolic and strategic importance.
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Hitler, consumed by his hatred for the Soviets,
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saw its capture as a personal victory.
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For Stalin, it was equally significant.
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Positioned on the Volga River, Stalingrad was a
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key transport hub linking the Caspian Sea to northern Russia.
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If it fell, the Germans would have a
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direct route into the oil-rich Caucasus, cutting
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off vital fuel supplies to the Soviet war effort.
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While Churchill and Roosevelt finalised plans for North
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Africa, Stalin prepared for a desperate defence.
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Civilians, including women and children, were forced to
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dig trenches and fortifications, while Stalin decreed that no one was to flee.
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Retreat, he feared, would demoralise his troops.
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On 23rd August 1942, the Luftwaffe unleashed a
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devastating aerial assault on the city.
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Thousands perished in the firestorm as entire districts were reduced to rubble.
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00:22:04,760 --> 00:22:07,420
Despite the Soviet air force outnumbering the Germans,
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00:22:07,800 --> 00:22:13,100
the Luftwaffe dominated the skies, relentlessly bombing Stalingrad for weeks.
254
00:22:13,800 --> 00:22:17,494
By 13th September, General Friedrich Paulus and the
255
00:22:17,560 --> 00:22:20,854
German 6th Army launched their ground assault, marking
256
00:22:20,920 --> 00:22:23,620
the start of one of the war's most brutal battles.
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00:22:24,280 --> 00:22:27,174
As the fight raged on, Stalingrad itself became
258
00:22:27,240 --> 00:22:31,054
the battlefield, soldiers engaged in savage, street-by
259
00:22:31,120 --> 00:22:33,860
street, hand-to-hand combat amid the ruins.
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Civilians fought alongside the Red Army, determined to defend their city.
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00:22:39,000 --> 00:22:41,894
By mid-September, the Germans had seized 90
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% of Stalingrad, splitting Soviet forces into two
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isolated pockets along the Volga.
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Hitler was on the brink of a long -coveted victory.
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But as the Russian winter set in, the tide began to turn.
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00:23:01,600 --> 00:23:04,214
Bitter winds froze the Volga, and thick fog
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crippled the Luftwaffe's ability to supply German troops on the ground.
268
00:23:08,160 --> 00:23:10,414
While Hitler waited for better weather in his
269
00:23:10,480 --> 00:23:14,900
Ukrainian headquarters, his forces in Africa were suffering a similar reversal.
270
00:23:15,920 --> 00:23:18,734
In the blistering desert, Montgomery's 8th Army was
271
00:23:18,800 --> 00:23:21,540
pushing back Rommel's forces at El Alamein.
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Hitler had ordered his troops to stand and
273
00:23:23,920 --> 00:23:26,494
fight to the death, but Rommel, unwilling to
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00:23:26,560 --> 00:23:30,014
sacrifice his men needlessly, made the decision to withdraw.
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00:24:08,800 --> 00:24:12,020
Rommel's forces retreated to Tunisia, and for Churchill,
276
00:24:12,320 --> 00:24:13,740
it was a decisive victory.
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00:24:14,520 --> 00:24:20,260
Reflecting on the moment, he famously wrote, Before Alamein, we had no victory.
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00:24:20,880 --> 00:24:22,940
After it, we had no defeats.
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00:24:24,160 --> 00:24:26,974
Determined to capitalize on this success, the Allies
280
00:24:27,040 --> 00:24:30,260
pressed forward with the long-planned invasion of North Africa.
281
00:24:33,160 --> 00:24:36,374
Under the careful command of American General Dwight D.
282
00:24:36,440 --> 00:24:39,054
Eisenhower, the plan was to seize key ports
283
00:24:39,120 --> 00:24:41,734
and airfields in Morocco and Algeria in a
284
00:24:41,800 --> 00:24:45,374
simultaneous assault on Casablanca, Oran and Algiers before
285
00:24:45,440 --> 00:24:46,820
advancing into Tunisia.
286
00:24:47,480 --> 00:24:50,014
The operation was codenamed Operation Torch.
287
00:24:57,720 --> 00:25:00,020
With the French still dominant in North Africa,
288
00:25:00,280 --> 00:25:02,980
the Allies hoped for cooperation from Vichy France.
289
00:25:03,680 --> 00:25:06,774
However, Roosevelt was wary of British involvement in
290
00:25:06,840 --> 00:25:10,060
the initial invasion, fearing it would reignite tensions.
291
00:25:11,040 --> 00:25:13,254
Just two years earlier, after the fall of
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00:25:13,320 --> 00:25:15,974
France, Churchill had ordered the destruction of the
293
00:25:16,040 --> 00:25:19,940
French fleet at Oran to prevent it from falling into German hands.
294
00:25:20,440 --> 00:25:23,860
The resulting bitterness between the two nations was still raw.
295
00:25:28,200 --> 00:25:31,854
To navigate this delicate situation, Roosevelt decided that
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00:25:31,920 --> 00:25:34,334
British forces would delay their involvement by a
297
00:25:34,400 --> 00:25:38,460
week, giving the Americans time to negotiate with Vichy commanders.
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00:25:39,640 --> 00:25:42,574
Roosevelt sought to sideline Charles de Gaulle, presenting
299
00:25:42,640 --> 00:25:46,340
General Henri Giraud as an alternative leader for the French forces.
300
00:25:47,320 --> 00:25:50,174
Giraud, though aligned with Vichy, had refused to
301
00:25:50,240 --> 00:25:54,060
cooperate with the Nazis and had spent two years as a prisoner of war.
302
00:25:54,920 --> 00:25:57,374
While Roosevelt reached out to Marshal Pétain, the
303
00:25:57,440 --> 00:26:00,014
leader of Vichy France, in October, he also
304
00:26:00,080 --> 00:26:03,574
dispatched General Mark Clark, America's youngest three-star
305
00:26:03,640 --> 00:26:05,500
general, on a covert mission.
306
00:26:06,560 --> 00:26:09,454
Smuggled into Algeria by submarine, Clark met with
307
00:26:09,520 --> 00:26:12,454
Vichy officials in Churchill, attempting to secure their
308
00:26:12,520 --> 00:26:14,380
cooperation ahead of the invasion.
309
00:26:15,160 --> 00:26:16,260
The stakes were high.
310
00:26:16,640 --> 00:26:18,894
French forces in the region far outnumbered the
311
00:26:18,960 --> 00:26:20,860
combined British and American troops.
312
00:26:21,240 --> 00:26:24,974
Clark's negotiations made progress, with senior French commanders
313
00:26:25,040 --> 00:26:26,580
agreeing to work with Giraud.
314
00:26:27,120 --> 00:26:30,420
But Roosevelt's plan faced an unexpected complication.
315
00:26:31,280 --> 00:26:34,894
Admiral François Darlan, the second highest-ranking officer
316
00:26:34,960 --> 00:26:38,580
in Vichy France, was in Algiers at the time of the landings.
317
00:26:39,480 --> 00:26:43,920
Moreover, Pétain had flatly rejected Roosevelt's appeal for support.
318
00:26:44,760 --> 00:26:47,980
Despite the uncertainties, the operation moved ahead.
319
00:26:48,680 --> 00:26:51,980
The invasion was set for November 8th, 1942.
320
00:26:52,760 --> 00:26:56,254
The Western Naval Task Force, comprising 102 ships
321
00:26:56,320 --> 00:26:59,214
and over 24,000 American troops under the
322
00:26:59,280 --> 00:27:01,974
command of the fiercely determined General George S.
323
00:27:02,040 --> 00:27:06,260
Pétain, set sail across the treacherous, U-boat -infested Atlantic.
324
00:27:07,440 --> 00:27:10,694
Pétain's forces targeted Casablanca, while a central force
325
00:27:10,760 --> 00:27:14,520
of 18,500 American troops was bound for Oran.
326
00:27:15,160 --> 00:27:18,374
Meanwhile, the Eastern Task Force, consisting of British
327
00:27:18,440 --> 00:27:21,300
and American troops under Major General Charles Ryder,
328
00:27:21,600 --> 00:27:23,460
prepared to land in Algiers.
329
00:27:24,520 --> 00:27:27,054
As the largest amphibious assault since the war
330
00:27:27,120 --> 00:27:31,260
began, Operation Torch was about to reshape the course of the conflict.
331
00:27:34,720 --> 00:27:37,974
Following the successful landings, British General Kenneth Anderson
332
00:27:38,040 --> 00:27:41,294
took command, while American ex-stunt pilot Jimmy
333
00:27:41,360 --> 00:27:43,934
Doolittle oversaw air operations for Pétain.
334
00:27:54,840 --> 00:27:58,174
Just days after Montgomery's victory at El Alamein
335
00:27:58,240 --> 00:28:00,654
on the eve of the invasion, Giraud was
336
00:28:00,720 --> 00:28:04,020
taken by submarine to Eisenhower's headquarters in Gibraltar,
337
00:28:04,360 --> 00:28:06,020
buried deep within the rock's base.
338
00:28:07,120 --> 00:28:08,934
Under the impression that he would be leading
339
00:28:09,000 --> 00:28:12,980
the invasion, Giraud was momentarily confused as Eisenhower,
340
00:28:13,160 --> 00:28:16,240
through an interpreter, outlined the true nature of the mission.
341
00:28:17,120 --> 00:28:20,614
Eventually, Giraud accepted a more passive role, preparing
342
00:28:20,680 --> 00:28:24,260
to step in later as the administrator of French North Africa.
343
00:28:30,640 --> 00:28:33,014
In the early hours of 8th November, Allied
344
00:28:33,080 --> 00:28:36,980
ships approached the African coast, but the operation was far from seamless.
345
00:28:37,720 --> 00:28:39,694
A coup to overthrow the Pro-Vichy commander
346
00:28:39,760 --> 00:28:43,014
in Casablanca had failed, leaving French defences fully
347
00:28:43,080 --> 00:28:44,534
prepared for Pétain's forces.
348
00:29:08,920 --> 00:29:11,740
American troops and destroyers came under intense fire,
349
00:29:12,120 --> 00:29:14,974
but despite the resistance, Pétain's men secured the
350
00:29:15,040 --> 00:29:19,174
beachhead, and within two days, US troops entered Casablanca.
351
00:29:28,520 --> 00:29:31,894
Meanwhile, the Central Attack Force faced difficulties landing
352
00:29:31,960 --> 00:29:33,894
near Oran due to shallow waters.
353
00:29:47,440 --> 00:29:49,774
But after some damage to the landing crafts and
354
00:29:49,840 --> 00:29:52,574
a brief skirmish with French defenders, Allied troops
355
00:29:52,640 --> 00:29:54,014
pushed inland through the desert.
356
00:30:05,240 --> 00:30:08,180
In contrast, Algiers saw a more successful coup,
357
00:30:08,560 --> 00:30:11,534
with some French generals even welcoming the invading forces.
358
00:30:24,480 --> 00:30:27,974
With swift victories secured in Casablanca, Oran and
359
00:30:28,040 --> 00:30:32,280
Algiers, Eisenhower emerged as a highly capable military leader.
360
00:30:35,680 --> 00:30:38,494
Despite these triumphs, political tensions remained.
361
00:30:54,680 --> 00:30:57,574
Upon entering Algiers, the Allies discovered that Admiral
362
00:30:57,640 --> 00:31:01,900
Darlan, a senior Vichy figure, was in the city on a private visit.
363
00:31:03,000 --> 00:31:07,140
Recognising an opportunity, Eisenhower opened negotiations with Darlan,
364
00:31:07,520 --> 00:31:11,254
offering him continued command of French forces if he sided with the Allies.
365
00:31:24,680 --> 00:31:28,180
This move sparked outrage among free French supporters,
366
00:31:28,600 --> 00:31:30,894
particularly Charles de Gaulle, who was incensed at
367
00:31:30,960 --> 00:31:33,694
the idea of maintaining Vichy rule, complete with
368
00:31:33,760 --> 00:31:36,100
its oppressive policies and concentration camps.
369
00:31:37,520 --> 00:31:40,414
Hitler and Mussolini were equally furious when they
370
00:31:40,480 --> 00:31:43,654
learned of Darlan's betrayal, prompting the immediate occupation
371
00:31:43,720 --> 00:31:45,020
of Vichy France.
372
00:31:49,760 --> 00:31:53,374
Meanwhile, in North Africa, Rommel realised the threat
373
00:31:53,440 --> 00:31:56,534
posed by advancing American forces which could trap
374
00:31:56,600 --> 00:32:00,020
him between Montgomery's Eighth Army and the new Allied front.
375
00:32:02,960 --> 00:32:06,054
In response, Hitler dispatched thousands of troops and
376
00:32:06,120 --> 00:32:08,580
Tiger tanks to reinforce Axis positions.
377
00:32:13,160 --> 00:32:16,574
Uncertainty in Tunisia allowed German battalions to flood
378
00:32:16,640 --> 00:32:18,180
the region by air and sea.
379
00:32:18,680 --> 00:32:21,700
Planes from Italian bases bombarded the advancing Allies,
380
00:32:22,000 --> 00:32:24,374
while the onset of torrential December rains turned
381
00:32:24,440 --> 00:32:28,580
the terrain into a muddy quagmire, significantly slowing their progress.
382
00:33:07,600 --> 00:33:10,614
By Christmas Eve, another unexpected event added to
383
00:33:10,680 --> 00:33:12,540
the political chaos in Algiers.
384
00:33:13,160 --> 00:33:15,694
A young French student, enraged by the Nazi
385
00:33:15,760 --> 00:33:17,894
occupation of Paris and a supporter of the
386
00:33:17,960 --> 00:33:21,100
free French, assassinated Darlan at his headquarters.
387
00:33:23,840 --> 00:33:28,174
The assassin was swiftly executed, but few mourn the fallen Vichy commander.
388
00:33:36,080 --> 00:33:40,254
With Darlan gone, Giraud finally took charge, yet he immediately
389
00:33:40,320 --> 00:33:44,454
caused further discord by imprisoning leaders of the Algerian resistance.
390
00:33:54,160 --> 00:33:57,880
At the Casablanca conference in January, tensions came to a head.
391
00:33:58,440 --> 00:34:01,374
De Gaulle, initially refusing to attend, was forced
392
00:34:01,440 --> 00:34:03,974
by Churchill to cooperate under the threat of
393
00:34:04,040 --> 00:34:07,540
Giraud being officially recognised as the leader of the free French.
394
00:34:09,080 --> 00:34:12,214
Their meeting was tense and awkward, but ultimately
395
00:34:12,280 --> 00:34:16,774
they agreed to share command, with Giraud overseeing military operations.
396
00:34:29,800 --> 00:34:33,254
Although Giraud maintained Vichy policies initially, he gradually
397
00:34:33,320 --> 00:34:36,814
shifted towards the Allied cause, eventually releasing prisoners
398
00:34:36,880 --> 00:34:38,254
from the concentration camps.
399
00:34:46,160 --> 00:34:49,734
However, the ongoing instability among the French leadership
400
00:34:49,800 --> 00:34:52,254
would contribute to the eventual loss of their
401
00:34:52,320 --> 00:34:56,534
North African empire, setting the stage for Algerian resistance in the future.
402
00:35:03,320 --> 00:35:06,294
While General Anderson pressed forward through the treacherous
403
00:35:06,360 --> 00:35:09,934
mud towards Rommel's forces, events in Stalingrad took
404
00:35:10,000 --> 00:35:11,374
a dire turn for the Germans.
405
00:35:21,480 --> 00:35:24,574
With the Volga frozen, Soviet supply lines remained
406
00:35:24,640 --> 00:35:27,934
intact and Marshal Zhukov encircled the city with
407
00:35:28,000 --> 00:35:30,374
a formidable force of one million troops.
408
00:35:42,600 --> 00:35:45,374
The German 6th Army found itself trapped with
409
00:35:45,440 --> 00:35:47,980
little food, fuel or medical supplies.
410
00:35:48,720 --> 00:35:52,140
As thousands succumbed to frostbite, malnutrition and disease,
411
00:35:52,480 --> 00:35:55,294
the Soviets offered General Friedrich Paulus the opportunity
412
00:35:55,360 --> 00:35:58,340
to surrender on 8th January 1943.
413
00:36:02,320 --> 00:36:05,854
However, Hitler promoted Paulus to Field Marshal, making
414
00:36:05,920 --> 00:36:09,100
it clear that he expected him to fight to the last man.
415
00:36:09,560 --> 00:36:12,094
Realising that their commander had chosen personal honour
416
00:36:12,160 --> 00:36:16,700
over their survival, the German troops continued to suffer devastating losses.
417
00:36:19,760 --> 00:36:22,894
As Soviet forces reclaimed more territory, another surrender
418
00:36:22,960 --> 00:36:25,620
offer was made, but Hitler refused once again.
419
00:36:30,080 --> 00:36:32,654
Unlike Rommel, who prioritised the welfare of his
420
00:36:32,720 --> 00:36:37,940
men, Paulus felt bound by Hitler's orders, even as the battle became hopeless.
421
00:36:39,720 --> 00:36:42,414
Soviet forces finally crushed the last remnants of
422
00:36:42,480 --> 00:36:46,174
German resistance, and on February 2nd, over 90
423
00:36:46,240 --> 00:36:47,740
,000 survivors surrendered.
424
00:36:48,480 --> 00:36:53,140
These were all that remained of the original 220,000-strong 6th Army.
425
00:36:53,680 --> 00:36:57,254
Many had perished in combat, from starvation or by suicide.
426
00:37:05,160 --> 00:37:07,814
Of the captured soldiers, only 5,000 would
427
00:37:07,880 --> 00:37:12,014
survive the brutal conditions of Soviet captivity to see their homeland again.
428
00:37:19,520 --> 00:37:22,214
The loss of the men of Stalingrad, senselessly
429
00:37:22,280 --> 00:37:25,214
and irresponsibly driven to death, has shaken our
430
00:37:25,280 --> 00:37:28,260
people, read a statement from the White Rose,
431
00:37:28,760 --> 00:37:32,094
a student-led resistance group opposing the Nazi regime.
432
00:37:38,880 --> 00:37:41,614
The defeat at Stalingrad marked a crucial turning
433
00:37:41,680 --> 00:37:45,654
point in the war, dealing an enormous psychological blow to German morale.
434
00:37:54,880 --> 00:37:58,174
As resistance against Hitler intensified, his physical and
435
00:37:58,240 --> 00:37:59,900
mental health deteriorated.
436
00:38:00,960 --> 00:38:03,934
Some historians suggest that he exhibited early signs
437
00:38:04,000 --> 00:38:07,414
of Parkinson's disease, evident in his declining handwriting
438
00:38:07,480 --> 00:38:08,860
and impaired speech.
439
00:38:09,760 --> 00:38:12,534
This growing frailty led the Fuhrer to retreat
440
00:38:12,600 --> 00:38:15,534
further from public view, while his once unstoppable
441
00:38:15,600 --> 00:38:17,420
war machine began to crumble.
442
00:38:20,840 --> 00:38:23,214
While Hitler refused to accept the defeat at
443
00:38:23,280 --> 00:38:27,520
Stalingrad, resistance to German occupation was growing across Europe.
444
00:38:31,880 --> 00:38:33,974
One of his generals had been assassinated in
445
00:38:34,040 --> 00:38:38,094
Prague, Yugoslav partisans had united under Tito, and
446
00:38:38,160 --> 00:38:40,494
resistance movements in France were merging into de
447
00:38:40,560 --> 00:38:41,934
Gaulle's Free French Forces.
448
00:38:50,040 --> 00:38:53,454
Meanwhile, the Japanese were also feeling the strain of war.
449
00:38:59,560 --> 00:39:03,214
On 9 February 1943, after months of brutal
450
00:39:03,280 --> 00:39:07,374
fighting, US troops claimed victory in Guadalcanal, inflicting
451
00:39:07,440 --> 00:39:08,894
heavy casualties on Japan.
452
00:39:15,680 --> 00:39:17,894
Just two months later, the Allies dealt another
453
00:39:17,960 --> 00:39:22,460
blow by taking down Admiral Yamamoto, the mastermind behind Pearl Harbor.
454
00:39:25,080 --> 00:39:26,814
His plane was shot down over the Solomon
455
00:39:26,880 --> 00:39:29,054
Islands, crashing into the jungle below.
456
00:39:39,480 --> 00:39:42,694
As the Imperial Army lost ground, General Douglas
457
00:39:42,760 --> 00:39:45,814
MacArthur and Admiral Chester Nimitz launched invasions across
458
00:39:45,880 --> 00:39:48,174
the Pacific, edging closer to Japan.
459
00:39:53,400 --> 00:39:55,814
Yet, with every soldier bound by duty to
460
00:39:55,880 --> 00:39:58,174
the Emperor, the fight was far from over.
461
00:40:04,400 --> 00:40:07,054
In North Africa, Patton faced his first battle
462
00:40:07,120 --> 00:40:09,980
against German forces, suffering heavy casualties.
463
00:40:11,000 --> 00:40:13,014
Fresh from the US, his troops lacked the
464
00:40:13,080 --> 00:40:15,734
experience of Montgomery's men, but once they joined
465
00:40:15,800 --> 00:40:17,860
the forces, progress was swift.
466
00:40:22,440 --> 00:40:25,134
The final push for Tunisia began on 19
467
00:40:25,200 --> 00:40:29,860
April, and by 7 May, Tunis had been seized from Hitler's control.
468
00:40:32,160 --> 00:40:35,174
Just six days later, the last Axis resistance
469
00:40:35,240 --> 00:40:37,414
in Africa crumbled, with a quarter of a
470
00:40:37,480 --> 00:40:39,454
million German and Italian troops captured.
471
00:40:45,640 --> 00:40:49,454
Eisenhower celebrated alongside Giraud as triumphant troops paraded
472
00:40:49,520 --> 00:40:56,454
through the streets, knew the fight was far from over.
473
00:41:04,160 --> 00:41:07,094
At the Casablanca Conference, following the success of
474
00:41:07,160 --> 00:41:11,254
Operation Torch, the Allies agreed that their next target would be Sicily.
475
00:41:18,400 --> 00:41:20,294
Seizing the island would grant them naval and
476
00:41:20,360 --> 00:41:22,614
air dominance in the Mediterranean and put pressure
477
00:41:22,680 --> 00:41:24,414
on Mussolini's weakening regime.
478
00:41:36,560 --> 00:41:39,500
By summer 1943, Italy was struggling.
479
00:41:40,120 --> 00:41:43,094
The defeat in Tunisia had been devastating, and
480
00:41:43,160 --> 00:41:45,534
Italian troops were faltering on the Eastern Front.
481
00:41:52,520 --> 00:41:55,774
At home, Allied bombings were relentless, food was
482
00:41:55,840 --> 00:41:58,580
scarce, and strikes had erupted in the north.
483
00:42:04,440 --> 00:42:06,534
With factories grinding to a halt and public
484
00:42:06,600 --> 00:42:10,574
trust in fascist propaganda fading, Mussolini realised his
485
00:42:10,640 --> 00:42:14,734
alliance with Hitler had brought Italy neither glory nor victory.
486
00:42:21,680 --> 00:42:24,134
The Allies began their assault by targeting the
487
00:42:24,200 --> 00:42:27,894
small but strategically vital island of Pantelleria, which
488
00:42:27,960 --> 00:42:30,494
disrupted British sea and air routes in the Mediterranean.
489
00:42:56,520 --> 00:42:59,174
Over May and June, Allied bombers dropped more
490
00:42:59,240 --> 00:43:02,414
than 6,000 tons of explosives, weakening defences.
491
00:43:16,280 --> 00:43:19,534
On 10th June, Italian forces, overwhelmed by the
492
00:43:19,600 --> 00:43:22,820
relentless bombardment, surrendered without a ground invasion.
493
00:43:25,320 --> 00:43:28,294
The first time in history such a feat had been achieved.
494
00:43:33,880 --> 00:43:36,734
With the island secured, Eisenhower turned his attention
495
00:43:36,800 --> 00:43:38,174
to the Sicilian invasion.
496
00:43:38,240 --> 00:43:42,494
To mislead the Germans, the Allies staged an elaborate deception.
497
00:43:54,920 --> 00:43:57,174
They planted fake invasion plans on a corpse
498
00:43:57,240 --> 00:44:00,780
dressed as a British officer, which washed up on the Spanish coast.
499
00:44:05,320 --> 00:44:08,414
Nazi generals fell for the ruse, diverting defences
500
00:44:08,480 --> 00:44:10,374
to Sardinia instead of Sicily.
501
00:44:19,720 --> 00:44:22,460
On 9th July, Operation Husky began.
502
00:44:27,640 --> 00:44:32,020
Fierce winds made the landings perilous, with many aircraft blown off course.
503
00:44:35,200 --> 00:44:38,174
However, the unexpected storm worked in the Allies'
504
00:44:38,240 --> 00:44:40,294
favour, catching the enemy off guard.
505
00:45:25,720 --> 00:45:28,414
By the first day, Syracuse had fallen, and
506
00:45:28,480 --> 00:45:30,774
within two weeks, the Allies entered Palermo.
507
00:45:40,400 --> 00:45:43,654
Italian civilians largely welcomed the invaders, hoping for
508
00:45:43,720 --> 00:45:44,694
an end to their suffering.
509
00:45:52,080 --> 00:45:55,374
By mid-July, Montgomery's 8th Army had taken
510
00:45:55,440 --> 00:45:58,134
Catania, pressing north towards Mount Etna.
511
00:46:14,920 --> 00:46:17,694
Patton, advancing from the west, was furious when
512
00:46:17,760 --> 00:46:19,780
Montgomery's forces cut off his route.
513
00:46:22,600 --> 00:46:25,334
Determined to reach Messina first, Patton drove his
514
00:46:25,400 --> 00:46:27,894
troops hard, seeing the invasion as a competition
515
00:46:27,960 --> 00:46:29,940
between British and American forces.
516
00:46:33,760 --> 00:46:36,614
In the end, Patton won the race, entering
517
00:46:36,680 --> 00:46:41,374
Messina just hours before the last Axis forces escaped to mainland Italy.
518
00:46:50,720 --> 00:46:53,700
The fall of Sicily had a profound effect.
519
00:46:54,480 --> 00:46:56,300
Italians knew their country was next.
520
00:47:02,960 --> 00:47:06,180
With pressure mounting, Mussolini was overthrown and imprisoned,
521
00:47:06,560 --> 00:47:10,120
while an armistice was secretly negotiated with the Allies.
522
00:47:13,040 --> 00:47:15,734
Bombing raids on Italy ceased, offering civilians a
523
00:47:15,800 --> 00:47:19,620
brief respite, yet Hitler was not ready to abandon his ally.
524
00:47:20,760 --> 00:47:23,654
Furious at Italy's betrayal, he ordered troops from
525
00:47:23,720 --> 00:47:25,980
the Eastern Front to reinforce the country.
526
00:47:26,680 --> 00:47:29,780
The Luftwaffe targeted Italian ships fleeing to Malta,
527
00:47:30,040 --> 00:47:32,174
while German soldiers marched into Rome.
528
00:47:41,800 --> 00:47:44,614
In a dramatic operation, Mussolini was freed from
529
00:47:44,680 --> 00:47:47,174
captivity and installed as the leader of a
530
00:47:47,240 --> 00:47:49,540
German-controlled puppet state in the north.
531
00:47:50,480 --> 00:47:53,894
Despite these complications, the Allies pushed forward with
532
00:47:53,960 --> 00:47:55,494
plans to invade mainland Italy.
533
00:48:07,680 --> 00:48:10,500
Roosevelt, eager to launch a campaign in France,
534
00:48:10,600 --> 00:48:14,854
hesitated, but the swift success in Sicily convinced him to proceed.
535
00:48:40,000 --> 00:48:43,014
The mission, codenamed Operation Baytown, was led by
536
00:48:43,080 --> 00:48:46,374
Montgomery, whose troops gathered in Messina, poised to
537
00:48:46,440 --> 00:48:48,820
cross the narrow strait of Messina to Calabria,
538
00:48:49,280 --> 00:48:50,734
the toe of Italy's boot.
539
00:48:59,400 --> 00:49:02,174
On 3rd September, the first Allied troops landed
540
00:49:02,240 --> 00:49:05,534
unopposed, with Rommel reassigned to Northern Italy and
541
00:49:05,600 --> 00:49:08,720
General Kesselring commanding the German forces in the south.
542
00:49:08,840 --> 00:49:09,654
The tension grew.
543
00:49:14,600 --> 00:49:17,894
Meanwhile, British and American forces assembled in North
544
00:49:17,960 --> 00:49:21,094
Africa, ready for a second, larger invasion at
545
00:49:21,160 --> 00:49:23,814
Salerno, 35 miles south of Naples.
546
00:49:33,960 --> 00:49:36,854
On 9th September, the main attack force, led
547
00:49:36,920 --> 00:49:39,454
by General Mark Clark, landed under the cover
548
00:49:39,520 --> 00:49:42,774
of darkness, setting the stage for a gruelling battle ahead.
549
00:50:45,440 --> 00:50:48,534
The invasion of the Italian mainland had begun, and the
550
00:50:48,600 --> 00:50:52,900
beaches of Salerno erupted into chaos as the Allies came under heavy fire.
551
00:50:53,880 --> 00:50:56,500
German artillery rained down upon the landing troops,
552
00:50:56,720 --> 00:51:00,260
and fierce counterattacks turned the coastline into a brutal battlefield.
553
00:51:00,880 --> 00:51:02,974
But as the Allies fought desperately to hold
554
00:51:03,040 --> 00:51:06,014
their positions, resistance against the Germans was also
555
00:51:06,080 --> 00:51:07,700
growing within Italy itself.
556
00:51:08,280 --> 00:51:12,254
In Naples, a spontaneous uprising saw ordinary citizens
557
00:51:12,320 --> 00:51:15,620
take to the streets, determined to drive out their oppressors.
558
00:51:16,320 --> 00:51:18,654
For three days, the people of Naples battled
559
00:51:18,720 --> 00:51:22,254
against the occupying forces, facing brutal reprisals as
560
00:51:22,320 --> 00:51:24,660
the Germans sought to crush their defiance.
561
00:51:25,400 --> 00:51:27,980
Yet against all odds, they succeeded.
562
00:51:28,800 --> 00:51:31,380
When the Allies finally entered the ancient city,
563
00:51:31,680 --> 00:51:33,740
they found a scene of utter devastation.
564
00:51:34,440 --> 00:51:37,334
In a scorched earth retreat, Kesselring had ordered
565
00:51:37,400 --> 00:51:39,260
the destruction of all infrastructure.
566
00:51:39,880 --> 00:51:42,734
Bridges were bombed, railway tracks torn up, and
567
00:51:42,800 --> 00:51:47,100
the port left in ruins, its waters filled with the wreckage of sunken ships.
568
00:51:48,120 --> 00:51:50,534
Even Naples' water and power supplies had been
569
00:51:50,600 --> 00:51:54,320
obliterated, leaving its people in desperate need of aid.
570
00:51:54,920 --> 00:51:57,774
To the credit of the Allies, despite persistent
571
00:51:57,840 --> 00:52:00,494
German air raids, the port was reopened within
572
00:52:00,560 --> 00:52:03,980
a week, though rebuilding the city would take far longer.
573
00:52:04,800 --> 00:52:08,094
With nearly 800,000 Neapolitans now dependent on
574
00:52:08,160 --> 00:52:12,534
Allied support, soldiers worked tirelessly alongside civilians to
575
00:52:12,600 --> 00:52:13,460
restore order.
576
00:52:13,920 --> 00:52:18,334
But there was no time to pause, and as soon as Naples was secure, the troops
577
00:52:18,400 --> 00:52:19,420
pressed north.
578
00:52:20,440 --> 00:52:22,454
By mid-October, the battle lines had been
579
00:52:22,520 --> 00:52:24,860
drawn along the Volturno and Trigno rivers.
580
00:52:25,440 --> 00:52:28,300
The Volturno itself was a formidable natural barrier,
581
00:52:28,640 --> 00:52:30,820
stretching up to 200 feet across in places,
582
00:52:31,200 --> 00:52:33,820
with floodwaters swelling to depths of 15 feet.
583
00:52:34,800 --> 00:52:37,494
The Allies struggled through torrential rain and fierce
584
00:52:37,560 --> 00:52:41,574
winds, desperately trying to build pontoon bridges while under enemy fire.
585
00:52:57,120 --> 00:53:00,334
Progress was painfully slow, and as one frustrated
586
00:53:00,400 --> 00:53:04,014
soldier remarked, every river in this crazy country
587
00:53:04,080 --> 00:53:06,140
seems to be called Volturno.
588
00:53:07,280 --> 00:53:09,734
The swift victory the Allies had achieved in
589
00:53:09,800 --> 00:53:12,494
Sicily now seemed a distant memory, and And
590
00:53:12,560 --> 00:53:14,974
with every passing day, the struggle for Italy
591
00:53:15,040 --> 00:53:17,060
became an exhausting war of attrition.
592
00:53:17,680 --> 00:53:20,494
The dream of capturing Rome slipped further from reach.
593
00:53:25,640 --> 00:53:27,614
The month-long battle to push from the
594
00:53:27,680 --> 00:53:30,574
Volturno to the Bernhardt Line stretched both the
595
00:53:30,640 --> 00:53:32,454
Fifth and Eighth Armies to their limits.
596
00:53:39,640 --> 00:53:42,694
Meanwhile, on the Eastern Front, Stalin continued to
597
00:53:42,760 --> 00:53:46,900
drive the Germans south, bringing the war to the doorstep of the Balkans.
598
00:53:47,360 --> 00:53:49,974
Winston Churchill, though satisfied with the progress in
599
00:53:50,040 --> 00:53:53,014
Africa, Russia and the Pacific, was growing frustrated
600
00:53:53,080 --> 00:53:54,700
by the stalemate in Italy.
601
00:53:58,440 --> 00:54:00,214
Yet as the battle for the mainland raged
602
00:54:00,280 --> 00:54:04,100
on, the Allied leaders prepared for a more decisive confrontation.
603
00:54:07,400 --> 00:54:12,214
On November 28th, 1943, Roosevelt, Stalin and Churchill
604
00:54:12,280 --> 00:54:16,860
met in Tehran, determined to chart the course of the war's final phase.
605
00:54:19,160 --> 00:54:21,934
Stalin was adamant that an Anglo-American invasion
606
00:54:22,000 --> 00:54:24,214
of France was the key to victory, and
607
00:54:24,280 --> 00:54:27,560
Roosevelt was ready to commit, pressing Churchill to agree.
608
00:54:30,160 --> 00:54:32,980
A reluctant to divert British forces from Italy,
609
00:54:33,400 --> 00:54:36,214
Churchill argued for continued pressure on Rome, but
610
00:54:36,280 --> 00:54:38,300
in the end, he accepted the inevitable.
611
00:54:39,200 --> 00:54:41,574
The Allies set their sights on the Normandy
612
00:54:41,640 --> 00:54:46,100
landings, promising a full-scale assault by the spring of 1944.
613
00:54:47,040 --> 00:54:49,134
With Italy's capital still locked in a bitter
614
00:54:49,200 --> 00:54:52,454
struggle, Churchill vowed to commit all available forces
615
00:54:52,520 --> 00:54:54,174
to France once Rome had fallen.
616
00:54:54,240 --> 00:54:56,854
But the battle for Italy continued to drain
617
00:54:56,920 --> 00:55:01,220
resources, and casualties mounted as the Allies inched their way north.
618
00:55:02,240 --> 00:55:05,094
By December, Eisenhower was recalled from the Italian
619
00:55:05,160 --> 00:55:08,240
front, summoned to America for a brief family visit.
620
00:55:09,040 --> 00:55:13,020
It was there, in Massachusetts, that he received news of his next assignment.
621
00:55:13,480 --> 00:55:15,060
He would not be returning to Italy.
622
00:55:15,920 --> 00:55:17,774
Instead, he was to take up the role
623
00:55:17,840 --> 00:55:20,934
of Supreme Allied Commander in Europe, tasked with
624
00:55:21,000 --> 00:55:23,460
leading the most ambitious invasion of the war.
625
00:55:24,040 --> 00:55:28,174
The fate of the conflict now rested on his shoulders, and he was not the only
626
00:55:28,240 --> 00:55:29,260
leader to leave.
627
00:55:34,600 --> 00:55:37,374
Just two days after Christmas, Montgomery was also
628
00:55:37,440 --> 00:55:40,960
recalled to Britain, ordered to begin preparations for D-Day.
629
00:55:44,880 --> 00:55:49,780
As the new year of 1944 dawned, fresh victories buoyed the Allied cause.
630
00:55:50,280 --> 00:55:53,134
The siege of Leningrad was finally broken, and
631
00:55:53,200 --> 00:55:56,334
across the continent, from Crimea to Italy, German
632
00:55:56,400 --> 00:55:58,094
forces were beginning to surrender.
633
00:55:58,160 --> 00:56:02,020
The once unshakable grip of the Third Reich was faltering.
634
00:56:02,960 --> 00:56:05,854
Then, on June 5th, the moment Churchill had
635
00:56:05,920 --> 00:56:09,220
been waiting for arrived, the Allies entered Rome.
636
00:56:09,760 --> 00:56:12,054
The Eternal City, once the heart of an
637
00:56:12,120 --> 00:56:14,660
empire, now witnessed the fall of another.
638
00:56:15,800 --> 00:56:19,340
Jubilant crowds filled the streets as the Nazi occupation crumbled.
639
00:56:19,760 --> 00:56:22,020
The path to victory was finally opening.
640
00:56:22,720 --> 00:56:25,374
And just across the Channel, the greatest invasion
641
00:56:25,440 --> 00:56:27,300
in history was about to begin.
642
00:56:27,880 --> 00:56:30,894
British, American, and Commonwealth forces had gathered in
643
00:56:30,960 --> 00:56:35,334
their hundreds of thousands, ready to storm the beaches of Normandy.
644
00:56:48,800 --> 00:56:50,774
As the Allies took their first steps into
645
00:56:50,840 --> 00:56:53,460
Rome, France stood on the brink of liberation.
646
00:56:54,240 --> 00:56:56,294
The final battle for Europe had begun.
58518
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