The Rest Is History - 622. The Nazis at War: The Fall of France (Part 3)

Episode Date: December 1, 2025

How did the Battle of Dunkirk unfold in 1940? Why was it one of the key turning points of the Second World War for Hitler and his Nazi regime? And, how did the Allies manage to evade the jaws of annih...ilation at this crucial stage of the Second World War…? Join Dominic and Tom as they march further into the Nazis at war, with Hitler’s forces closing in on the Allies at Dunkirk, before wreaking devastation upon the French. Give The Rest Is History Club this Christmas – a year of bonus episodes, ad-free listening, early access, the private chat community hosted on Discord, and an exclusive t-shirt! Just go to https://therestishistory.supportingcast.fm/gifts And of course, you can still join for yourself at any time at therestishistory.com or on apple podcasts. For more Goalhanger Podcasts, head to www.goalhanger.com _______ Hive. Know your power. Visit https://hivehome.com to find out more. _______ Visit auraframes.co.uk and get £35 off Aura’s best-selling Carver Mat frame by using promo code HISTORY at checkout. Terms and conditions apply. _______ Get our exclusive NordVPN deal here ➼ https://nordvpn.com/restishistory It's risk-free with Nord's 30-day money-back guarantee ✅ _______ Twitter: @TheRestHistory @holland_tom @dcsandbrook Video Editor: Jack Meek / Harry Swan Social Producer: Harry Balden Assistant Producer: Aaliyah Akude Producer: Tabby Syrett Senior Producer: Theo Young-Smith Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 If you want more from the show, join The Rest Is History Club. And with Christmas coming, you can also gift a whole year of access to the history lover in your life. Just head to the rest is history.com and click Gifts. Get no frills delivered. Shop the same in-store prices online and enjoy unlimited delivery with PC Express Pass. Get your first year for 250 a month. Learn more at pceexpress.ca. Flying Emirates business class, enjoying a good night's rest in your lie flat seat.
Starting point is 00:00:35 You'll see that your vacation isn't really over until your flight is over. Fly Emirates, fly better. This episode is sponsored by Hive. Britain revolutionized the future with the might of industrial power. But now you can transform your own energy future and take control with the power of, of Hive. Hive makes the most of the sun, with solar panels turning sunlight into greener electricity and enabling you to sell excess back to the grid. And Hive's thermostats make it possible for you to heat your home without lifting anything more than a thumb and an impressed brow.
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Starting point is 00:02:22 From the Act of Triumph, with its tomb of the unknown soldier, we drove on to the Anvalide, where he stood for a long time at the tomb of Napoleon. Finally, Hitler inspected the Pontillon, whose proportions greatly impressed him. The end of our tour was the romantic, insipid imitation of early medieval domed churches, the church of Sacri-Cure on Montmartre, a surprising choice, even given Hitler's taste. Here he stood for a long time surrounded by several powerful men of his escort squad, while many churchgoers recognized him, but ignored him. After a last look at Paris, we drove swiftly back to the airport.
Starting point is 00:03:10 By 9 o'clock in the morning, the sightseeing tour was over. It was the dream of my life to be permitted to see Paris. I cannot say how happy I am to have that dream fulfilled. today. For a moment, I've had something like pity for him. Three hours in Paris, the one and only time he was to see it made him happy when he stood at the height of his triumphs. So that was Adolf Hitler's architect and confidant Albert Speer, the man who Hitler was going to commissioned to redesign Berlin as Germania and put Paris in the shade if he won the war. And Speer there is describing one of the most sinister sightseeing tours in history.
Starting point is 00:04:00 Dominic, we are in Paris in late June 1940. France has fallen. Speer has joined Hitler for a three-hour tour of the conquered French capital. And I guess it must rank as perhaps the single sweetest moment in Hitler's life, do you think? so up to this point. I mean, this was a man who had fought against the French for four years and his generals had said it couldn't be done, this kind of attack on France, and everything has gone right for him. Yeah, I think there were probably two moments. There's the moment of the Anschluss when he was greeted in Austria, his homeland, as the man who had brought the
Starting point is 00:04:38 sort of the fragments of the German nation together. I guess that was a happy moment for him, and this is another one. And that moment when he says to Speer that the dream of his life, has been fulfilled, you know, Hill is a terrible man, but there is a man under there, right, with ideals and ambitions as ghastly as they may be. And actually, when you think back, we've done the Nazi story in, what, four series, over 18 episodes. We went all the way from the late 19th century through the chaos of the First World War to the rise of the Third Reich. And, you know, we've shown how they've swallowed Austria and Czechoslovakia and Poland and whatnot. and crushed Norway and Denmark.
Starting point is 00:05:20 And today's episode is about the apotheosis. It's the victory, as you said, that Hitler has been dreaming about since November 1918. It's revenge at last against the French. So let's remind ourselves when we ended last time. In the last episode, we described it on the 10th of May, which is the day Winston Churchill became Prime Minister of Britain. Hitler's troops had launched their invasion in the west of France and the low countries.
Starting point is 00:05:43 They'd pulled off this extraordinary tactical feat of the sickle cut, where they went through the Ardennes and round and up to the Channel coast and basically trapped the British and French armies against the channel. So that means 400,000 men of the British Expeditionary Force are trapped against the sea in this pocket. And that's pretty much the entirety of the expeditionary force, isn't it, for the British? Yeah, pretty much. And the British, I mean, they've never been a land power.
Starting point is 00:06:07 They don't have loads of other troops to call on if these troops are all captured. They've got Captain Manoring, but that's about it. Exactly. So Hitler is thinking, you know, we pull this off. and it's pretty much game over for the British. That's certainly his mentality. And this scene of them trapped at the channel ports, the panzers advancing and closing in on them,
Starting point is 00:06:27 this is going to be, you know, it's going to be one of the most terrible moments in French history, the fall of France. And yet, counterintuitively, it ends up becoming one of the most stirring and moving moments in Britain's modern history, the subject of Christopher Nolan's film Dunkirk, which lots of our listeners may have seen.
Starting point is 00:06:44 That bit at the beginning, a sense of impending doom and the Tom is sort of running through the streets and they're picking up these leaflets that say, we surround you, German propaganda leaflets. That's exactly how it was. They were surrounded. Yeah, Kenneth Branagh on a long pier.
Starting point is 00:06:59 Exactly. Looking out to sea, thinking no help will ever come, all of that. So let's pick up the story on the evening of the 23rd of May, two weeks into the German invasion. So that night, the first British troops start being evacuated from Boulogne, which is now under immense relation. relentless German attack.
Starting point is 00:07:17 The Germans have also begun the assault on Calais, and both Boulogne and Calais are doomed. They will fall a couple of days later. I mean, Domit, it's been a pretty grim sequence, hasn't it, for us on the rest of history? Because England lost Calais under Mary in the 16th century about two weeks ago. And now the British troops are being about to lose Calais again.
Starting point is 00:07:37 I know. Any mention of Calais brings disaster on this show. So there's really only one major channel port left, the port of Dunkirk. And there, almost half a million British French and Belgian troops have taken refuge. Now, a few days earlier, in fact four days earlier, on the other side of the channel, the British had begun making preparations to get them out. And this is the operation that goes down in history as Operation Dynamo.
Starting point is 00:08:02 So Vice Admiral Bertram Ramsey, who really ought to be a character in PG Woodhouse, he's based in these tunnels underneath Dover Castle. It sounds amazing, actually. His base is there and he has been trying to work out exactly how will we get these troops home. And is this where they come up with the idea of the little ships? The little ships, yeah. They're basically because the big ships can't get in really close. I mean, most people that were rescued were rescued by big ships, spoiler alert.
Starting point is 00:08:29 But the little ships obviously massive propaganda value. I mean, that's the point of the Christopher Nolan film, isn't it, the little ships? Little pleasure cruisers and fishing ships and things, yeah. Exactly. It's such a moving story if you're British. Now, the stakes could not be higher. That evening, going back to the 23rd of May, Churchill told his staff in London. He said, we cannot leave our army to be slaughtered or to surrender.
Starting point is 00:08:53 If we lose the men, then we lose the war. Our men must battle through to Dunkirk. And when they get there, our Navy will get them out. And that night, Churchill goes to see George the 6th, the Buckingham Palace, and he tells him the same thing. We're going to try and get the army back. But, as he knows, Hitler's tanks are now less than 20 miles from Dunk. Kirk and they are closing in all the time. And realistically, it's going to be really difficult
Starting point is 00:09:18 to rescue the troops before the Germans get there. But then, then there is a pause, isn't there? And it is one of the key turning points in the history of the Second World War and also one of the most debated. Yes. Because I suppose the question is, why, with victory over Britain seemingly within Hitler's grasp, why does the order go out to the panzers to stop their advance? So let's dig into this, because this, as you absolutely rightly say, this is one of the crucial turning points in the story of the Second World War, you could argue in the story of the Third Reich, the story of Hitler's regime, right? If things go differently here, the whole story might play out differently. So the very next morning, the 24th of May, Hitler flew to Charleville, which is just
Starting point is 00:10:02 inside the French border, and that's where General Ron Runstedt, who's commanding the army group has established his headquarters. And Hitler arrives at 1130. And Runstadt says, okay, here's the state of play. My advance guard are now just 15 kilometers from the Allied perimeter and the British are doomed. But Runchtet goes on. He says, the question for us now is how do we finish them off?
Starting point is 00:10:27 Personally, I don't want to risk the tanks. There's a lot of canals in Western Flanders. It's kind of boggy. And that's one of the reasons why Dunkirk has been, you know, provides. to a degree in effective kind of perimeter, doesn't it? Because the canals could stop the Panzer advance in that sense. Yes. And don't forget, the Germans have come an enormously long way very quickly.
Starting point is 00:10:50 I mean, anybody who remembers our episodes about the first weeks of the First World War will recall that basically if you have a tremendous advance and a great offensive, the danger is that you're basically just run out of steam because everyone will be just so exhausted. Well, unless you're kind of munching on amphetamins. They'd have gotten through the Ardennes, that they can't do that forever. I suppose. And von Rundstedt says, my men are absolutely exhausted. Ideally, I would like to give them a break, just a little break,
Starting point is 00:11:17 before we turn south towards Paris to finish the job with the French. And Hitler thinks about this, and he says, yeah, I can see that we're, you know, I'd like to take Paris as quickly as possible, just completely knock the French out. So I can see there's some logic in giving your men a little break. But what is more? Herman Goering, the colossal figure of Herman Goering, has assured Hitler that his Luftwaffe, the German Air Force, can easily deal with the British without any need to risk Runstedt's tanks.
Starting point is 00:11:48 So actually, you know, it's win-win. We can give the panzer commanders arrest, we can give the troops arrest, give Gurings flyers a chance to prove their metal, and we'll wipe the floor with the British at Dunkirk. Well, I mean, I suppose that they're coming off the back of the bombing of Rotterdam with the stucas and everything. And that's been a tremendous success. So maybe they think that they can do the same with the British. Yeah, absolutely.
Starting point is 00:12:13 And Gerring is a massive braggart. Gurring will never be honest with you about the limitations of his air force. He makes grand claims, which as we shall see, are not borne out. Hitler then says, okay, fine. And he approves Ranchette's halt order that morning. And the tanks grind to a halt. And it's often said that it is Hitler himself who comes up with the idea, but it clearly isn't, is it? I mean, he's responding in a way that he often doesn't do to suggestions from kind of military heads.
Starting point is 00:12:44 The only other thing, though, is you're absolutely right that Hitler is responding to Runstedt's idea, but lots of other commanders think this is a terrible decision. So the lead tank commander, Heinz Gudirian, who is one of the people who come up with a plan in the first place. Yeah, Akhtung Panzer. Akhton Panzer, exactly. he could see Dunkirk very faintly in the distance. I mean, he could absolutely see it. When he gets the order to stop, he is, by his own admission, quote, speechless.
Starting point is 00:13:08 He says, I couldn't believe it. I thought it was the biggest blunder of the war. The commander of the other big German army group in the West, Fedor von Bok, when he was told they've stopped, he said, what? And he immediately complained to headquarters and said, the order must be changed, quote, otherwise the English will transport whatever they want under our very noses from Dunkirk. And that afternoon, the commander-in-chief of the army, Walter von Browkich,
Starting point is 00:13:34 arrives in Charlville. Now, you'll remember him. He's a man with no spine who's basically massively indebt to Hitler. And even he says, I just can't understand why the tanks aren't advancing on Dunkirk to finish the job. And Hitler and Runcestead say, there is no need. The Luftwaffe are going to finish this off. We'll leave it to Goering and his pilots. And this turns out to be one of the greatest mistakes in military history because Goering has completely misled them. The Luftwaffe are not up to the job. Part of this is because it's very cloudy, but it's also because Gurring consistently underestimates the RAF and he overestimates his own planes and pilots. So in the next 10 days or so, the RAF, the British Air Force, fight manfully
Starting point is 00:14:19 to keep the Luftwaffe at bay. It was often said, and you see this actually, in the Christopher Nolan film. You see this played out at the argument. It is sometimes said, oh, the Air Force didn't help us at Dunkirk. Where were the Air Force? There's a scene in the film when someone shouts, where were the bloody Air Force?
Starting point is 00:14:36 But actually, Christopher Lennon's film shows. The Air Force were there. They flew 3,000 individual sorties. So they did give the troops air support. The British lost almost 180 planes, but the Germans lost far more planes. They lost 250. And as we will see next time, because German factories are much slower to build planes,
Starting point is 00:14:57 these are losses that they can ill afford. And, Dominic, I mean, actually, there's a pretty continuous process of attrition for the Luftwaffe. So in all that, I mean, they end up losing almost 2,000 aircraft during the Battle of France. And as you say, it wins them France, but it loses them Britain in the long run. Yeah, exactly, exactly. So Hiller doesn't rescind the Holt order. until the evening of the 26th of May. And the next morning, the tanks start moving in,
Starting point is 00:15:26 but those three days have been absolutely crucial, and the damage has been done, because that gives the British a chance to finalise their evacuation plans. So on the evening of the 26th May, the same moment that Hitler is changing his mind, Churchill gives the order, start taking men off the beaches,
Starting point is 00:15:43 and in the next few days, the ships keep on coming. And to quote General von Bocke again, he's horrified. At Dunkirk, the English are continuing to live, leave. When we finally get there, they will be gone. The supreme leadership's halting of the tank units has proved to be a serious mistake. And he's right. Because they then do not capture Dunkirk for another 10 days. And by then, 900 allied ships, including the famous little ships, the fishing boats, the pleasure cruisers, all of those, the steamboats, all of that, they have rescued
Starting point is 00:16:16 338,000 men, far more men than Churchill, or even the most optimistic Allied commander had ever thought possible. So that's out of 400,000? Yeah. The rest are killed or taken prisoner. But even so, I mean, it is not exactly a victory, as Churchill goes on to point out. But it is a Philip, isn't it? Oh, it's massive.
Starting point is 00:16:38 It's redemption from seeming disaster. Yeah. It's not just the British who get rescued, by the way. It's sometimes thought the British get rescued, and they leave the French behind. not right. Of those men, about 100,000 of them, a French, Belgian, Senegalese, Moroccan and so on. So they're the kind of colonial troops of the Allied forces. So it's not all British troops. But the rearguard, who defended Dunkirk to the end, were French, and there was a lot of bitterness, because they, of course, had been left behind. Now, as you
Starting point is 00:17:06 say, the funny thing about it is this is an amazing German victory. The British have been driven off the mainland of Europe, just as Hitler wanted. And Churchill says, in his common speech, which is quoted at the end of the film. Wars are not won by evacuations. Our thankfulness that the escape of our army must not blind us to the fact that what has happened in France and Belgium is a colossal military disaster. And he's right, it is a disaster. But then the point of Dunkirk, the importance of it,
Starting point is 00:17:36 is that it allows him to say what he says next, which is, there was a victory inside this deliverance, which should be noted. A miracle of deliverance achieved by valor, by perseverance, by perfect discipline, and so on, blah-di-di-blah. And this is the remarkable thing about it, that Hitler's folly in endorsing the Halt Order and Goering's mad boasting about the Luftwaffe
Starting point is 00:17:57 have combined to turn a total British disaster into weirdly a kind of psychological and moral victory. And I suppose the role played by the Little Ships, the sense that this is properly a national effort, that everyone is rolling up their sleeves and getting stuck in, this will kind of stiffen the sinews of the mass of British people, that this is a war worth fighting. And that is something that Hitler will never properly get a handle on, is it? He never understands that, I think, because he thinks that the British will come to terms
Starting point is 00:18:28 after this, but after Dunkirk, it's clear they never will. And I think there's a couple of elements to it. So one of them is purely practical. As Ian Kershaw says in his biography of Hitler, imagine a world in which, you know, the 230,000 British troops who got away had not got away but had been captured. So a quarter of a million men in a prison camp, that would have made it very difficult, you know, maybe for Churchill not to do a deal with Hitler at some point. You know, they've had to raise an entirely new army that have lost all their equipment. And they'd have all these men on the other side of the channel in a Nazi prison. And their families in Britain?
Starting point is 00:19:06 Of course. Imagine the difference in the public mood. But I think you are totally right that the mystique of the little show. ships, you know, the people's war, the people coming to the rescue of their troops. You know, that symbolized at the end of the Christopher Leland film, when the troops arrive and there are people clapping them and giving them tea and sandwiches and stuff. You know, that really happened. That absolutely happened. There's a wonderful quote.
Starting point is 00:19:29 I think it's in Max Hastings's book from an officer called John Horsful. And he says, basically, it was only when we got home and we're bedraggled and defeated. And there are people giving us cups of tea that we sensed, and I quote, the national mood of defiance which brought down Napoleon and would destroy Hitler too. And you may say, well, this is, of course, romantic, patriotic fantasy after the fact. But we know from people's diaries at the time that they felt like this. The most famous one, there's a woman who wrote one of the longest diaries in history. She's called Nella Last. Her diaries were quite a big publishing sensation a few years ago. She's from Barrow. And she wrote in her diary just the day after
Starting point is 00:20:08 the operation ended. She said, I read the story and I forgot I was a middle-aged house. wife, who sometimes got up tired and had backache. The story made me feel part of something that was undying and never old. Somehow, I felt everything to be worthwhile, and I felt glad I was of the same race, meaning nationality, as the rescuers and the rescued. And that's, you know, that sort of very moving, routing stuff, which is easy to sneer at, was obviously psychologically so important in those weeks in the summer of 1940. And which Hitler will not, I mean, he doesn't appreciate it.
Starting point is 00:20:43 He doesn't appreciate the effect it's had on British morale. So he will find it puzzling that the British decide to fight on. Yeah, can't get his head around it. But this is kind of probably the key explanation. But also, of course, there is a massive contrast with France because Britain and France were both very divided countries in the 30s. But in Britain, the miracle of Dunkirk and the little ships and everything helps to solidify national resolve, whereas in France defeat fractures society there even wider.
Starting point is 00:21:12 I think you're dead right. I think someone would be remiss of me, not to point out that Britain was much more consensual than 1930s France, thanks not least to the wise and gallant leadership of Stanley Baldwin. Stanley Baldwin, yeah. Stanley Baldwin, who presides over a much more settled in a united country than French prime ministers do in the 1930s. But you're right. The obvious contrast is with France.
Starting point is 00:21:35 Now, interestingly, in Britain, most accounts of this, kind of in the popular imagination, they skip from Dunkirk straight to the Battle of Britain. In fact, there's nothing in between. But that's not right. The Germans are now heading south towards Paris. And in the next couple of weeks, the French fight quite hard. So the Germans actually lose more men per day after Dunkirk than they did beforehand because the French are fighting desperately to defend their capital.
Starting point is 00:21:58 Can I just cite one French colonel who leads a counterattack? And this is a colonel called Chal de Gaulle. He's in charge of the French 4th Armoured Division. and he launches a counter-attack at Abbeville on the Channel Coast, and the battle, he fails to dislodge the Germans, but it does succeed in halting the German advance at least for a day or two. And this is actually very important for Dunkirk because it serves to distract German forces
Starting point is 00:22:27 that otherwise might have added to the pressure on the front line at Dunkirk. So let's not forget DeGol. Well, here's the thing, if you're DeGol, right, or if you're somebody at French Patriots looking at this story, You say, it's very nice the way these British podcasters tell the story, which is the way that people always tell us in Britain. From a French perspective, this is a story of the British running away, as they had threatened to do in 1914 when things went badly. And as they had been doing throughout the war, right? I mean, it happened in Norway.
Starting point is 00:22:57 Right. The British have run away, saved their army, they've run away, and we are fighting desperately to defend our capital. And basically, everyone laughs at us and says, you know, the French trophy cabinet is bare. but the truth is we fought very well against overwhelming odds and all the rest of it because actually they are against overwhelming odds. The Germans have more divisions now because the French army is disintegrating. The Germans have better at using their tanks. The Germans have far more air power and of course the Germans have the discipline and morale
Starting point is 00:23:23 that comes with being an advancing army. So by the 6th of June, the Germans have broken the French line and crossed the river Somme. By the 9th, they're in Rouen. By the 10th, they've crossed the river Ayn. So all these places that would have had such. resonance in 1940 because these are all the place names from the First World War and the Germans are just steamrollering past them. Yeah, I remember when I went to Eap, where my grandfather was gassed and they had rows and rows of graves, I think of Canadians, and they were peppered
Starting point is 00:23:57 with bullet holes, you know, that had been fired in 1940. Wow. Yeah. I just thought, oh my God, you know, I mean, just imagine all that, you know, and here we go again. This is, I think what's underappreciated possibly in the English-speaking world, that for the civilians in Belgium and France, this is happening for the second time in a generation. Imagine the sense of crushing misery, you know, as you realize it's happening all over again on a greater scale than ever before. And that is why, you know, as we said last time, people remember 1914. They've read the stories about Poland. They've read about things like Gernica and the sack of Chinese cities by the Japanese in the late 1930s. They're terrified of what will happen to them when the Germans get into their cities.
Starting point is 00:24:41 And that is why these extraordinary stories of places like Leal, Leal, nine-tenths of the population took to the countryside, fled the city. Chartre, with its famous, you know, architecture and stuff. 23,000 people lived in Chart. By the time the Germans get there, there are only 800 left. Everybody else has gone. And this is the biggest refuge. crisis in Western European history. I don't know if some listeners have read the Sweet Francaise books by Irene Nemirovsky. These books capture
Starting point is 00:25:13 this scene of total chaos and terror. Carts and the streets, families rushing to find sanctuary and being pounded from the air by the Luftwaffe. You know, bodies everywhere. Yeah, the kind of Nazgol-esque descent of the Stoekers
Starting point is 00:25:29 with their terrifying wine. Yeah, just horrific. So imagine being the people at the top. So to remind people, the Prime Minister, who's only been there for a matter of months, Paul Reynel, very clever guy, but very, I'm about to say, but very short, very clever and very short, I should say. Yeah, I'm glad you corrected yourself. Now, since the 19th of May, they've had a new military chief who is Maxine Vagant, who we described last time. He's in his early 70s. He's been recalled from retirement.
Starting point is 00:26:00 And another man who Reno has recalled in France's hour of need is the great hero of the First World War. And this is the man who had rallied the troops, French troops at the defence of Verdun in 1916. He is now 84 years old, piercing blue eyes, ramrod straight. And with very much a First World War moustache still, hasn't he? A proper, yeah, in 1910's moustache. He is Le Vieux-Marchelle, the old marshal, Philippe Petin, and they've recalled him because they think he will be a symbol to the people of French defiance. Petin had been serving as ambassador to General Franco's regime in Spain.
Starting point is 00:26:44 And Reno says, I want you to come back to France and be my deputy in our hour of need. Petin went to see Franco and said, I'm off to France. Franco said, don't bother. You've lost no point in going. And Peyton perhaps rather ominously, some listeners may think, said to him, My country has been beaten. They're calling me back to make peace and to sign an armistice. This is the work of 30 years of Marxism. They're calling me back to take charge of the nation.
Starting point is 00:27:11 Now, that might sound a bit ominous to people who are hoping that Peiang is going to stiffen the sinews to stand up to fascism. So as early as the 8th of June, they discuss asking the Germans for terms. Rayneau is against it. He says, we agree with London that we would never seek an armistice, you know, an independent armistice. We promised we wouldn't sign a separate piece. General Vagin says, what? The British, I mean, the British have totally let us down. They've left our rear guard behind. Both Vagont and Peta agree, it's all up. Francis is lost. We've lost the war.
Starting point is 00:27:44 And Vagin says, listen, do you remember what happened when we lost to the Germans before in 1870, 71? Paris was taken over by the revolutionary left-wing commune. There was then, basically, a little civil war. Thousands of people died. as the army turned on the commune and the streets ran with blood. And all the animals in the zoo got eaten. Wow. No one wants that. Will no one think of the animals in the zoo?
Starting point is 00:28:08 Exactly. And the animals in the zoo. And Vagant says, listen, that should be our priority. It's making sure that doesn't happen again. We can't have anarchy. We must keep order. And basically, we need to deal with the Germans, otherwise everything will collapse in chaos. And Paitan says, I agree with Vagin.
Starting point is 00:28:24 I don't think we should ask London. I think basically the British dragged us into this war. And we spent too much time kowtowing to the British. And basically, France should come before anything else. And I would have thought also a consideration is the future of Paris, right? Because bombs have already been dropped on the air ministry and the citron works. Not the citron works. On the citron works. But suppose the fate that was inflicted on Rotterdam is inflicted on the city of light. Yeah. So the French government decide to declare Paris in open city, don't they? And on the 10th of June, the government flees Paris.
Starting point is 00:28:59 And there's this famous description by an American broadcaster, Edward Severade. And he wrote, Paris lay inert, her breathing scarcely audible, her limbs relaxed. And the blood flowed remorselessly from her manifold veins. Paris was dying like a beautiful woman in a coma. Yeah. Now, I'll tell you who's left Paris. Two million people, including the government. so they have fled Paris on the 10th of June.
Starting point is 00:29:26 Reynot and Coe, they head towards the Loire. And Reino establishes himself in the Chateau de Chisay, which is just outside the very beautiful city of Tor. And he's brought not his wife, from whom he is estranged, but in very Gallic style, he's brought his mistress. So actually quite Nelsonian style. I guess so. This is Countess Elene de Porte.
Starting point is 00:29:50 And Elene de Porte has quite a bit of, baleful influence on what happens next. Now, I hate to be seen to be mean about a woman on the show, Tom, as you know. Yet another mistress, the object of Sandbrookie and I. She has had the most terrible press. I think of almost any woman we've ever done on the show. Scholdegor used to call her the turkey. Churchill called her the parrot.
Starting point is 00:30:17 And Churchill's chief diplomatic advisor, Sir Robert Van Sittart, called her, and I quote, a poisonous and promiscuous troll. That's a phrase to remember. Even the American correspondent Vincent Sheehan wrote afterwards, she was not chic, she was not charming, and she was not intelligent, but she behaved as if she had some vested right, whether constitutional or divine, in the government of the French Republic. Now, why does all this matter?
Starting point is 00:30:43 It matters because she's a massive anti-Semite, she's also massively pro-fascist, and she is constantly, you know, by night, she's constantly urging Rayno, sack all your generals, and do a deal with the Germans as quickly as possible. Well, the Germans aren't that bad. So that's a bit of a problem, I think. So what does he see in her? God knows.
Starting point is 00:31:05 I mean, who can say? Remember Napoleon with Josephine, there was something called the zigzags, wasn't there? Yeah, the zigzags. And nobody knows what that was, but it was great fun and involved them going to bed together. Maybe the zigzags have made their reappearance. I don't know. Anyway, so this is a slightly awkward environment. And the next day, the 11th of June, Winston Churchill joins the Merry Party.
Starting point is 00:31:25 Well, it's never a party unless Churchill, sir. Exactly. Loads of champagne and dundee cake. So he flies to a chateau near Orleans, where the French leadership are waiting to meet him. And for the next day and a bit, they try to hammer out a strategy. And Churchill says, I have an excellent idea. Why don't you go to Brittany? Hold out in Brittany, you know, make it a redoubt.
Starting point is 00:31:47 Like asterix. And Vagant says, you're amazing. Mad. That's an insane idea. That will never work. And Churchill says, a campaign of guerrilla resistance. And Petin says, that would destroy France. That can't work either. And Vagin says to Churchill, now is the decisive moment in the war. The British ought not to keep a single fighter in England. They should all be sent to France. And Churchill then says to him, no, this is not the decisive moment. the decisive moment will come when Hitler hurls his Luftwaffe against Britain. If we can keep the command of the air over our island,
Starting point is 00:32:25 then we will win it all back for you. Whatever happens here, we are resolved to fight on forever and ever and ever. And actually Churchill is right. That's actually how Britain wins the war. Like he's not wrong. The trouble is that's really not what a Frenchman wants to hear. Basically, you know, you have to fight on to the end. You'll lose, but eventually we'll win it all back for you, so don't worry.
Starting point is 00:32:47 I don't think any patriotic Frenchman wants to hear that. Does this conversation determine Rayno's decision that, yeah, it's over, do you think? No, because even at this stage, Rayno has not quite given up. Because after he's gone, Churchill goes, and some of them clearly are very pleased to see the back of him. And then Rayneau and co sit around. And Rayno says, you know, clearly we are going to lose, but we could go into exile and continue the fight from London, very much like the Norwegians have done, let's say, or the Dutch. And Vagant says, that's pointless.
Starting point is 00:33:19 That old fool Churchill is talking rubbish. Because once Hitler is finished with us, then he will take Britain. He'll be in London before you know it. There's no point in us hiding in London. The British are doomed. He famously says, doesn't he, that Britain will have her neck rung like a chicken. Yes. To which Churchill later responds, some chicken, some neck.
Starting point is 00:33:39 Exactly, exactly. And Vagon keeps going on. We have to stay here in France and stop the anarchy and revolution. And actually, Vakor is telling Rano things that are not true. So Vagor is telling him at this point, revolution has already broken out in Paris. The specter of a left-wing commune has, you know, re-as awoken from the grave. And that's actually not right. That hasn't happened.
Starting point is 00:34:02 Anyway, the next day, Churchill comes back. They can't get rid of him. He flies back to France. This time he goes to tour. There's been some amusing airfield action in earlier episodes. So I'm glad to have some more. He arrives at the airfield, there's nobody to meet him. They've all gone to lunch, splendidly.
Starting point is 00:34:20 So eventually Churchill and his entourage find two French Air Force officers who agreed to give them a lift. And of course, Churchill being Churchill, they go straight to the Hotel Grande Britannes to have lunch themselves. There are refugees outside staring through the windows and kind of rattling the doors. And Churchill is completely unperturbed by this. And he says, you know, let them stare. It's very good for them to see the Prime Minister of Great Britain having his lunch.
Starting point is 00:34:43 She'll inspire them and all this kind of thing. Whether it does, I'm not sure. Anyway, he goes to the town hall to see Reno. By this point, Vagant and Pater are no longer come into these meetings, which tells its own story, because they basically think it's pointless. And Churchill is very emotional. He says to Reno, we ask you to fight on as long as possible, if not in Paris, at least behind Paris, in the provinces down to the sea. Then if need be in North Africa, the alternative is the destruction of France. And that, of course, is the rhetoric that Churchill is coming out with later about Britain, right?
Starting point is 00:35:17 You know, we're fighting on the landing grounds, all of that. But Peyta has already said that actually that strategy would be the destruction of France because it would see, you know, her cities and her monuments destroyed. Churchill would, of course, said, I'm sure, I know what Churchill would have said to that. He would say nothing will ensure the destruction of France more than the collapse of her spirit and her morale. You can rebuild cathedrals, but the stain of defeat can not. never be wiped away. But he can say that because he has a strip of water between him and the Germans, I guess. But there's another man who agrees with him, who is French, who is there.
Starting point is 00:35:53 And that is then you mentioned him earlier. He's just been appointed the Under Secretary of State for War. And he is an officer called Charles de Gaulle. De Gaulle is the only person who seems to agree with Churchill at these meetings. And Churchill kind of responds to him, doesn't he? and says l'om du destin, the man of destiny. Yeah, he whispers it, the man of destiny to de Gaulle on the way out, and de Gaulle says nothing, he's just impassive, as he always is. I mean, that would make a great film, actually. People have done loads of Churchill films,
Starting point is 00:36:22 but they've never done Churchill and the French as a film. So there's one other amazing bit of high drama at this meeting. I mentioned Countess de Port, the promiscuous troll or whatever said he was described as being. The fascist troll, the worst kind of troll. She bursts into this meeting and she shrieks at the top of voice, Mr Churchill, my country is bleeding to death. And then she launches herself at him and tries to scratch his face. And a French officer shouts, get that woman out of here for the dignity of France.
Starting point is 00:36:53 And basically Churchill's bodyguard, who's called Walter Tommy Thompson, he sort of has to wrestle this woman away from Churchill and drags her out of the room. And then when he searches her, he finds that she has a knife on her person, which is a very low moment, I think, in the history of the Entente Cordial between our two great nations. And Dominic, meanwhile, on the very same day, so the same afternoon, at 3 o'clock, the Germans have reached the River Marne, and people who listened to our series on the First World War will remember that that was the key turning point in the early
Starting point is 00:37:27 campaigns in the First World War, but not on this occasion. And from the River Marne, the Germans can see the Eiffel tower in the distance and Paris has already been declared an open city and at dawn the next day, Friday the 14th of June, 1940, the first German units start entering the center of the French capital. And the fall of Paris is the most emblematic symbol around the world of the catastrophe that has befallen the Allies, right? it is indeed so by the evening the germans have hoisted a swastika over the arc de triumph and they have climbed the french cut the lift cables to try to stop the Germans getting to the top of
Starting point is 00:38:19 the Eiffel tower so do you know what the Germans did they climbed 1,665 steps of the tower to raise the swastika flag over the Eiffel tower very soon that tower would be decorated with a vast banner, the words of which read, Deutschland Siegd out Alan Fronten. Germany is winning on every fronton. So one month and four days after the first German droops crossed the frontier into France, Paris has fallen, and we will find out what happens next after the break. At Capital One, we're more than just a credit card company.
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Starting point is 00:40:29 That's A-U-R-A-U-R-A-C-C-C-O-D-U-K promo code history. This exclusive Black Friday, Cyber Monday deal is their best of the year. So order now before it ends. Support the show by mentioning us at checkout. Terms and conditions apply. Hello, welcome back to The Rest is History. Paris has fallen to the Nazis and Dominic now for the leadership of France, the democratic leadership. The end is just days away, isn't it? Yes. So Paul Reno and his ministers have now
Starting point is 00:41:12 arrived in Bordeaux. They're going further and further south. Bordeaux is a city in total, an utter panic crowded with hundreds of thousands of refugees. Bercreino and his mistress, the Countess de Porte, check-in to the Hotel Splendid. That's a great name for Hote. Yeah. So they're normally in France, so they're not, there's the Splendid, the Bristol and the Grande Britannes. Those are the kind of traditional names for French hotels, aren't they? So on, I don't know why Bristol.
Starting point is 00:41:42 What is it with Bristol? I think that's one of the most famous hotels in Paris. I mean, mad. There's no Hotel Norwich. Bristol's a fine city, though. Yeah, it is. Okay, so on Saturday the 15th of June, the French cabinet again discussed whether to surrender. and Reyno really does want to fight on from abroad.
Starting point is 00:42:00 He does not want to give up, but he is outvoted by his cabinet. Most ministers agree with Vagant and Peta that they should ask Hitler for terms. Rayno at this point wants to quit at once, but he's persuaded out of it. And that night at dinner, he has the most blazing row with Elend de Port. He has found in her bed, she's been hiding secret telegrams from London. She's clearly been reading them. Oh, I see. So it's not secret telegrams.
Starting point is 00:42:26 that have been sent to her from spies in London. No, no. She's going to the stenographer's office and basically grabbing telegrams. Knicking crucial communications. Exactly. They have a massive row and he throws water over her at dinner in front of everybody to sort of punish her. So it's an awkward situation. You know, no one knows where to look.
Starting point is 00:42:46 I suppose it's keeping people's minds off the fall of Paris. It is, I suppose, yeah. So the next day is Sunday, 16th of June, an incredibly dramatic day. 7.30 that morning, Churchill is at checkers in the English countryside, and he is woken by his aide. Churchill hates being woken up early because of his ludicrous hours. And he's told Rayneaux is about to quit as French Prime Minister, and he's going to be replaced by his deputy, Marshal Pater. Churchill eats his breakfast very quickly. I mean, he still has his breakfast, fair play to him. And then he rushes to London. And there, an amazing thing,
Starting point is 00:43:20 actually, which is actually weirdly little known, I think, among the British public, that the British cabinet approve a plan to merge Britain and France into a single country, a Franco-British Union, which would have a common citizenship, common defence, and common foreign and economic policies. And the point of doing this is not because they want to rebuild the empire of, you know, Henry II or something. It's because they think this will give them the legal powers to take the whole French army to Britain and to take control of the French Mediterranean fleet. And they sort of think that it might maybe stiffen some people in France's nerve, you know, that the British are really so committed, they're going to merge
Starting point is 00:44:06 their country with France. Anyway, they put this to de Gaulle, who has flown to London as Rayno's representative. And amazingly, de Gaulle agrees. So you would think that the girl of all people, the man who vetoed Britain's attempt to join the Common Market, would be against this, but he says, fine, you know, an extremist, let's do it. And he rang Rayno that day and dictated it over the phone. And Rayno said, fine. So that evening, Crano puts this plan to his cabinet. It's meant to be a surprise, but actually, Countess Deport has been up to her old tricks. Oh, goodness. She has seen the stenographer's copy of the telegram and she's, and of the sort of document, and she's leaked it to all Reino's ministers. Look at this. This is terrible. Do you know, we've had loads of mystery.
Starting point is 00:44:52 on the rest of history. But I think she's the worst. She's bad, isn't she? She's not great. Rayno's ministers hate this idea. They say, come on. This just makes us an appendage of Britain, will be a British dominion.
Starting point is 00:45:05 And Peyton says, you are asking us to agree fusion with a corpse. You know, they've got it very clear in their heads that Britain is dying. Payton is clearly a bad man, Tom. And it's very clear, I think, that a lot of them, deep down, would rather have an armistice with the Germans.
Starting point is 00:45:21 They would... be a British dominion or anything of that ilk. Yes, because an armistice with the Germans will enable those on the right to come down hard on their compatriots who are on the left. So they're still to a degree thinking in terms of party politics rather than of national survival. And also, of course, they think the Germans are going to win the war at this point. None of them think that Britain can win the war. They just assume the Germans are going to win.
Starting point is 00:45:49 So the next day, the 17th of June, two more very dramatic developments. So overnight, Rayno quits, as had been advertised, and Peyton becomes Prime Minister. And at 11.30 that morning, Peyton broadcasts to the French people, and he says, I'm going to ask Hitler for terms. He says, I've sent a message to the enemy commander to ask him if he would meet with me as one soldier to another after the fight, and honorably seek a way to put an end to hostilities. But you know, what's not honorable is that he basically tells things. the French army to put down their weapons, even before the armistice has been agreed. Yeah. And as soon as people hear that broadcast, they stop fighting, a lot of them.
Starting point is 00:46:26 They're like, well, what's the point? Why carry on if we're going to lose anyway? Now, meanwhile, de Gaulle, who had once been Peyton's protégé, I mean, this is the thing. He had looked up to Peyton as a mentor. He's come back from London. And when he comes back and he hears, we're asking for peace, de Gaulle is totally devastated. You know, he'd wanted to fight on. and de Gaulle knows that basically
Starting point is 00:46:50 Peyton is taking power and that he, de Gaulle, as a hawk, will probably be arrested because that's what happens to Peyton's other critics and opponents within the regime. He goes to see Reynneau, presumably the Hotel Esplandide, and Rayno has not yet handed over
Starting point is 00:47:08 this sort of, I don't know whether there's a briefcase or something, that has the Prime Minister's secret funds in it. And Reino gives de Gaul a hundred thousand francs and says take the money go to london you know do what you can and that's what de goul does even as peyta is speaking to the french people de goul is in a plane going back to london and when he gets to london there he makes the very famous radio appeal to the french people that all french school children are now very familiar with he basically says to them we appear to have lost but it's not final
Starting point is 00:47:45 France is not lost. I, General de Gaulle, appeal to the French people to join me. The flame of French resistance must not be extinguished and will not be extinguished. It's one of the most stirring and defining moments in modern French history and now a huge part of French identity. But almost nobody hears it, right? Yeah, let's reign on that French parade. Nobody's listening is they're all listening to Marshall Payton. I don't think it's raining on their parade because I think it's, you know, it's an acorn from which a mighty oak grows, and it actually makes the story of the free French all the more dramatic than nobody hears it. But it is a single candle that is blowing in an almighty tempest. Yes, I think that's a nice way of putting it.
Starting point is 00:48:32 Because, I mean, an almighty tempest, my God, this is the most traumatic moment in French history, without a doubt. And how it happened has been argued about ever since the French collapse in the face of, you know, the German invasion. And Petin and his allies right from the moment he takes office say, we lost because we were sick, because there was a sickness in French society. And some historians have said that since, you know, that France was fatally divided and demoralized even before the war began. There are others. So there's a great historian Jackson who's written a brilliant book on The Fall of France. And Julian Jackson says, you know, everything that you say of France, you know, you could say it of other countries, too.
Starting point is 00:49:14 The truth is they lose on the battlefield because of bad intelligence and bad tactics. Yeah, I think that's clearly the case, because had they bombed, for instance, the tanks as they were going through the Ardennes, then Germany would have lost, and we'd probably be having these discussions about the sickness in German society. Well, I mean, we do have discussions about the sickness in German society, but you know what I mean? I do know what you mean, exactly. I think it's true that the British and French generally are too cautious and they're too
Starting point is 00:49:40 hesitant throughout the whole war. I mean, that's what a lot of military historians say, that basically the value of human life matters a lot to a British or a French general. You know, they're very conscious of the lessons of the First World War. They don't want to be the butchers who send men, you know, advancing towards, you know, machine guns. The Germans are gamblers, and that comes from the top. And the French and the British are very reluctant to take decisions in 1940.
Starting point is 00:50:05 And I think there's also a sense, though, that the French lack a bit of solidarity when things are going badly. You know, this is a massive question, so any short take on it will be a bit simplistic. But even in the early days of the campaign, General Gamelin, who was Vagorn's predecessor, said, it's clear that some of our soldiers don't really believe in the war. They're not massively fired up. They don't really believe in their leaders. Julian Jackson in his book on the Fall of France quotes, a young sergeant who had been, perhaps tellingly, on the far right in the 1930s,
Starting point is 00:50:38 who said, what will really annoy me in this. this war is if I end up dying for values in which I do not believe. And Dominant, what is the name of that, a young officer? That young officer's name was Francois Mitterrand. So the future socialist president of France. But there are other examples. I mean, Jackson also quotes a philosophical George Friedman who was serving as a lieutenant. And Friedman said, you know, when I look at the people around me, I don't detect a huge
Starting point is 00:51:05 amount of pain at the misfortunes of our country, more a kind of relief that it's all over. Thank God that that's done. I mean, maybe you could say there would have been people in Britain who would have acted similarly had they been defeated. Thank God, that's over. I mean, I'm sure there would have been actually a few. But I think France is much more divided than Britain in the mid-1930s. And that lack of ideological cohesion, I think, does actually play a part, especially when things go badly. You know, they find it harder to fall back on a sort of patriotic solidarity, I would say. Richard Evans, in his books on the Third Reich, points out that there are French
Starting point is 00:51:43 conservatives who had always despised French democracy, much as German conservatives had despised the Weimar Republic. You know, French conservatives had often admired Hitler and Mussolini and spoken of their, you know, the lessons that could be drawn from fascism. And so when they are beaten, they say, well, you know what, actually, this might be quite a good thing. We can rebuild their country. We can purge the left.
Starting point is 00:52:07 You know, this is actually a necessary lesson for us and we can, you know, learn from it. Which suggests that they haven't properly understood what the Nazis are about, right? Yeah. Or that they have and they're just terrible people. I think the former, because I think that the French right are patriotic. I mean, Petin was the great hero of France. He thinks that what he's doing is for the best for France, but it's mad to think. think that the Nazis will cut France any slack at all, because for them, their triumph is
Starting point is 00:52:44 so transcendent. I mean, they're interpreting it in racial and cultural terms, aren't they? Of course they are. Of course they are. Transcendent is the word. I mean, Hitler, when he heard Peyton has broadcast, he was described by people there as literally slapping his thighs with joy. That's not an image anyone wants to see. His tight leather trousers. So Hitler assumes the war is over. The next day he flies to Munich to meet Mussoling. The Italians, the Italians, I mean, I know we've got some Italian listeners actually. I mean, I'm sorry to say this, but the Italians absolutely disgrace themselves in both world wars for different reasons.
Starting point is 00:53:17 So in this World War, they've done their traditional thing of sitting on the sidelines at first. Mussolini's, you know, he's not really interested in the West. His ambitions are in the Adriatic, kind of Yugoslavia and Greece. But Mussolini is a total snake. And he declared war on Britain at France on the 10th of June. I mean, it's literally like, you know, taking part in a football match in the 85th minute or something. Do you know who would agree with you that Mussolini disgraced himself with his Declaration of War?
Starting point is 00:53:46 Oh, don't compare me with some hideous Nazi. Hitler. Right back, I knew that was coming. To quote my brother in War in the West, he thought that Mussolini declaring war was pathetic. As far as the furor was concerned, one didn't make a declaration of war. One just got on and fought it. So Mussolini had really let himself down there. So Mussolini didn't even, I mean, he declared war just before the Germans capture Paris.
Starting point is 00:54:13 And he said to his cronies, he said basically what I'm hoping is that 2,000 Italians will be killed. And that will be enough for me to claim Corsica and Nice for Italy. I mean, he also said Mussolini, what kind of an ally is Mussolini? He said, I hope Britain doesn't surrender too quickly because I'd like to take some of the credit for it somewhere. and Hitler will get all the credit. And he also said, I hope that Hitler does end up attacking Britain and does invade Britain
Starting point is 00:54:41 because I think he'll lose a million men and that will be good for him and it'll mean the Germans aren't too cocky after the war when they've won. Anyway, they meet in Munich. And now this is interesting, think about Britain. Because we know from the Italian Foreign Minister,
Starting point is 00:54:57 Count Gianno, what Hitler thought was going to happen. He said, Hitler really wants to end this quickly now. He's like a gambler. He's better all his job. chips, he's had a big winning, and he wants to scoop everything up. Hitler says to Chiano, I really don't want Britain to fall apart completely and lose its empire. Because Britain losing its empire would be great news for our other rivals, the United States, Japan, and the Soviet Union. They would be the big winners, not Germany. So basically, I want Britain to
Starting point is 00:55:26 keep its empire. Now, we will see how that plays out next time. But for the time being, Hitler's priority is to give the war in France the ending that he feels he deserves. Remember, I mean, you mentioned at the beginning how important the experience of defeat in 1918 had been to Hitler. You know, the scene when he's in the sanatorium in Passavalk, wherever it is, and he's sobbing like a baby when he hears the news. Now he's going to have his revenge. And as soon as the German tanks had reached the Channel Coast, you know, the beginning of the invasion, he'd said to his AIDS. When we win, I want to have the armistice negotiations in the Compienne Forest in the same spot where we surrendered in 1918. And not only that, we surrendered in a railway carriage in
Starting point is 00:56:14 18 to Marshall Foch. I want to get the same railway carriage and then we'll force the French to be on the receiving end this time. And they did. They tracked it down to a museum. A German demolition crew broke down the walls of this museum with a kind of J.C.B. type thing. They dragged out the railway carriage and they took it all the way to this forest and dumped it in the forest. And the ceremony is set for the 21st of June. Three o'clock that afternoon, Hitler turns up with all the gang, Gurring, Ribbentrop, Hess, all these characters. He had a look at the French War Memorial, which was in the forest. Then he went into the carriage. The French had already arrived. They're sitting there in absolutely glum silence. Hitler sat exactly where the
Starting point is 00:57:00 Supreme Allied commander, Marshal Foch, has sat in 1918. And the American reporter William Shirea, who saw Hitler that day, said, I've seen that face many times at the great moments of his life, but today it is a fire with scorn, anger, hate, revenge, triumph. General Keitel read the preamble to the armistice, which said that, basically, the German, people have been suffering and humiliated for 20 years, but that's over now and justice has been restored. And then Hitler just walked out, a gesture of contempt for the French. I will leave the rest to my underlings. That's again what Foch had done to the Germans, isn't it? So again and again, it's treating the French how they had treated the Germans.
Starting point is 00:57:46 Exactly. And I mean, Hitler and his cronies don't disguise how personal this is. Because that evening, Hitler ran Goebbels in Berlin to talk it through, and Goebbels wrote in his diary afterwards, the disgrace is now extinguished. It's a feeling of being born again, this sort of sense of vindication and revenge after the First World War. So what terms are the French able to get? Well, the French don't have a leg to stand on. They just have to take what they're given effectively, much as they sort of beg for better. So they lose Alsatina reign, Germany takes them back, northern and western France becomes a German military occupied zone, and then the southern two-fifths of France will be governed by Marshal Peta from the spa town of Vichy. We know that the Nazis love spa towns.
Starting point is 00:58:35 And Marshall Pater ends up presiding over this very reactionary, repressive, anti-Semitic regime, which is a subject for another day, I guess. And when Hitler heard the news that the French had signed, I mean, again, it's the sign of the sort of almost like the malevolent teenage boy in Hitler, I think. Yeah. He said, turn out all the lights in the headquarters, everything in darkness, and open all the windows. I want nothing to disturb the sound of the trumpeter marking the moment of the French surrender. You know, he just wants to absolutely wallow in that moment of vindication. So the same day, which is the 22nd of June, the Vermacht organized this huge victory parade in Paris. You can see it on YouTube, actually, on German newsreels, troops marching down the Chonseilier, cavalry riding past the Arc de Triumph.
Starting point is 00:59:31 I mean, imagine being a German, you know, a nationalistic German, back in Cologne or Hamburg or Stuttgart or whatever, watching this in the cinema with your compatriots. That sense that Hitler has a vindication and revenge, that's what lots, millions of ordinary Germans thought at that moment. But also presumably they're thinking, Hitler was right. Everything he promised us has come to pass. Of course they are. So the bells ring across the Reich for a week. The flags are hoisted for 10 days. You know, there had been massive celebrations with the reports of things like the fall of Paris.
Starting point is 01:00:09 And we've talked many times in this series about how actually. anxious Germans were about another world war, but all their anxieties, it seems, have been put at rest. I mean, Hitler, you're exactly right, Tom. What they think is even people who doubted Hitler now say, do you know what, he was right? He accomplished everything that he said he would. SS reports, we know from SS Security Service reports that even among people who were skeptical of the regime, who were even perhaps on the more dissident side of things,
Starting point is 01:00:44 now are just full of admiration for what has been achieved in France. There's a brilliant example. Richard Evans in his great books on the Third Reich. He has a number of diarists that he cites again and again. One of them is this woman called Louisa Solmits. I think we mentioned her in previous series. She was a school teacher. She was conservative.
Starting point is 01:01:01 But her husband was Jewish. So she was quite conflicted, as you would expect, about the regime. But now, she writes in her diary, she says, I feel exhilarated by happiness and enthusiasm. It's an unbelievably great national change of fortune, the fulfillment of our long-held dreams. And Dominic, if she is feeling like that, how does Hitler feel? Oh, I mean, like that, but only more so. You know, the way that, again, I compared him rather flippantly to a sort of teenage boy. But, you know, what does Hitler do?
Starting point is 01:01:33 he spends the next couple of days of visiting battlefields in Flanders with old comrades with his old company sergeant from the First World War and a fellow dispatch runner and then that thing of the boyhood dream
Starting point is 01:01:45 visiting Paris so as Speer described in that reading that you did at the beginning he flew in with his favourite architects and his photographer Heinrich Hoffman they went to the opera first
Starting point is 01:01:56 and they were showed around by a caretaker and they offered the caretaker a tip but the caretaker didn't, wouldn't accept it You know, obviously he doesn't want to take German gold. They went to all those places that Speer mentioned the Arc to Triumph, the Avali, the Pontillon, and so on, Tomb of Napoleon.
Starting point is 01:02:12 The interesting thing is Hitler said afterwards to Goebbels, you know, Paris wasn't as good as I thought it would be. I thought it would be more impressive. And then he said to Speer that evening, he said, I'd always thought we'd have to destroy Paris. But now I've realized that basically when we're done in Berlin, Berlin will be much better and Paris will only be a shadow. So we don't need to destroy it. So weirdly, if Paris had been more impressive, Hitler would have destroyed it. And then at last he makes his triumphant return to Germany, choreographed by Goebbels on the afternoon of the 6th of July. And this really, I mean, we were talking at the beginning, weren't we, about what was the happiest moment, was the high point of Hitler's life?
Starting point is 01:02:51 This has got to be up there. Massive crowds, hundreds of thousands of people, they have strewn the streets with flowers. He goes all the way from the station to the Reich Chancellor in the centre, and there General Keitel introduces him as the greatest warlord of all time, and people are screaming and sobbing, and Hitler comes out again and again to salute the crowds, and he is at the summit. He is at the zenith now, because there's only one enemy left, Britain. He is preparing his final peace offer to Britain. If Churchill refuses that, then he will bring the British to their knees.
Starting point is 01:03:32 And as the operations chief of his army general Yodel writes in his diary, the final German victory over England is now just a question of time. Or is it? We will find out in our final episode of this series. It's the great duel between Hitler and and Winston Churchill between the Luftwaffe and the RAF as we look at the Battle of Britain, the Blitz, and the build-up to Operation Barbarossa. And members of the Restis History Club can, of course, hear that episode right now.
Starting point is 01:04:11 And if you would like to join them and hear about Britain's finest hour, then please do sign up at the rest is history.com. Auvoir. Avaluze. Throughout time, celebration has mentioned. giving. So the Romans at Saturnalia handed out all kinds of gifts. The three magi handed out gold, frankincense and myrrh, and the Victorians absolutely loved wrapping things up in paper and then tying it up in string. So on those are lovely gestures, but I wonder if they're a little bit too extravagant
Starting point is 01:04:45 for the typical Christmas morning. So this year, here's my suggestion to our listeners and our viewers, why not give something a little bit more enlightened? Why not give the gift of the rest of It's history club membership. It's the discerning choice for anybody who prefers a Hannibal to a hamper. It's ad-free listening. You get a weekly bonus episode. You get early access to live shows. And you get exclusive deep dive series.
Starting point is 01:05:13 Also, on top of that, this year's special gift edition of Restis History Club membership, comes with a sensational exclusive t-shirt. It will make you the envy of all your neighbours and all the... the cool people in your neighbourhood, if such people exist, will admire you and want to spend more time with you. So just head to therestishistory.com and click on gifts. That is therestishistory.com and please click on gifts. Throughout time, celebration has meant giving. So the Romans at Saturnalia handed out all kinds of gifts. The three magi handed out gold, frankincense and myrrh. And the Victorians absolutely loved
Starting point is 01:06:09 wrapping things up in paper and then tying it up in string. It's on those are lovely gestures, but I wonder if they're a little bit too extravagant for the typical Christmas morning. So this year, here's my suggestion to our listeners and our viewers. Why not give something a little bit more enlightened? Why not give the gifts? of the Restis History Club membership. It's the discerning choice for anybody who prefers a Hannibal to a hamper. It's ad-free listening.
Starting point is 01:06:37 You get a weekly bonus episode. You get early access to live shows and you get exclusive deep dive series. Also, on top of that, this year's special gift edition of Restis History Club membership comes with a sensational exclusive t-shirt. It will make you the envy
Starting point is 01:06:55 of all your neighbours and all the cool people in your neighbourhood, if such people exist, will admire you and want to spend more time with you. So just head to the rest ishistory.com and click on gifts. That is therestishistory.com and please click on gifts. Hello there, it's James Holland and Al Murray, hosts of WW2Pod. We have ways of making you talk. Yes, so Al and I have been on The Rest of History a few times now, haven't we, Al? We've been talking all things World War II with Tom and Dominic.
Starting point is 01:07:31 And if you've been enjoying their recent series on the invasion of Norway, the fall of France and the Battle of Britain, then we have good news for you. That's right, Jim. We have our own show all about the fascinating history of the Second World War. We've been going for longer than the Second World War itself, haven't we, James? And longer than the rest is history. Twice a week. WW2Pod, we have ways to make you talk,
Starting point is 01:07:50 discusses the fascinating people, the incredible innovations, and the terrible tragedy. of this, I think, the most important period of history of all time. Absolutely. The Battle of Hastings. I've got nothing on this. It's 1940, where it's all at. This past year alone now, we've done series, haven't we, on Dunkirk, the Battle of Britain, Hitler's last days in Berlin, the dropping of the atomic bombs. And we've also explored the women of SOE, Auschwitz, and the nerve-wracking siege of Malta. And in a midst of all this, we take our listeners' family stories and give them an airing so that people can tell the story of what happened to their Uncle Albert, where maybe they were involved. for the Siege of Malta.
Starting point is 01:08:25 And we're doing loads of naval chat at the moment on the main show, such as the fight against the U-boat Wolfpacks in the Atlantic War. So now is a really fantastic time to subscribe and get yourself a bit more nautical. So, search, We Have Ways, wherever you get your podcasts, and we look forward to you joining us. Prepare to Board, we have Ways to Make You Talk with me, Al Murray, and James Holland. Thank you. Hello there, I'm William Drimple.
Starting point is 01:08:54 And one of the hosts of Empire, the Global History Podcast from Goalhanger. You may remember my appearances on The Rest is History when we talked about Afghanistan and the East India Company. As The Ashes returned down under, Anita Anna and I have launched a brand new Empire series on the history, politics, and extraordinary cultural power of cricket. In the first episode, we dig into the origin of the ashes, England versus Australia, a rivalry born in the age of empires, and still shaping identity on both. sides of the world. Then we travelled to India where cricket began with an impromptu beach match
Starting point is 01:09:30 and evolved into a sport that mirrored and sometimes magnified the country's communal divides. We also talk about the great Tiger Borti who revolutionised Indian cricket in the 1960s. And for members of the Empire Club, we go still further from the great West Indian players who stood up to racism to the South African cricketers who challenged apartheid at real personal risk. If you want the full sweep of how cricket changed empires and how empire, change cricket, just search for Empire wherever you get your podcasts.

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