Explaining History Podcast

Category: Podcast: Military History

Explaining History Podcast

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Podcast: Military History

September 6, 2022
/ Cold War, European History, Military History, Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: Military History
  • The Croat Spring 1971

    The Croat Spring 1971

    September 6, 2022
    Cold War, European History, Military History, Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: Military History

    Yugoslavia, a state created in 1919 and recreated from the ashes of war once again in 1945 was a federation of balkan nationalities held together after World War Two by the totalitarian Leninist Josep Tito. The fact that Yugoslavia under his leadership had liberated itself and was not dominated like the rest of Eastern Europe by the Red Army, meant that its Cold War years would be fundamentally different. Yugoslavia was affected by the wave of unrest that afflicted Eastern Europe in 1968, follow

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  • Mobilising the Habsburg Empire: Austria-Hungary and war in 1914

    Mobilising the Habsburg Empire: Austria-Hungary and war in 1914

    May 25, 2022
    European History, Military History, Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: Military History, Political History

    Austria Hungary, a patchwork empire of nationalities, saw a surprising enthusiasm for war in the summer of 1914 from non Austrian subjects. Across the empire, subject peoples who still had loyalties to the empire as a whole volunteered to fight, overwhelming the offices of military recruiters. The Habsburg empire was far more suspicious of its own population than was in any way warranted, but succeeded in squandering the opportunities for greater social harmony through the closure of the Austria

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  • SS mentalities and crimes

    SS mentalities and crimes

    March 25, 2022
    Military History, Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: Military History, World War II

    SS killers approached the violence and brutality of their murderous work in the camps during the war as part of the wider racial struggle that the Nazi regime had tasked them with. The camp SS viewed the camps as a battlefield and the murder of prisoners as another arena of warfare, so much so that SS murderers were given medals by Heinrich Himmler. However, not all camp SS could cope with the brutality of what they were tasked with and some tried to avoid becoming complicit with the regime’s cr

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  • August 4th 1914 – the Reichstag votes for war

    August 4th 1914 – the Reichstag votes for war

    January 30, 2022
    European History, Military History, Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: Military History, Political History, World War I

    In August 1914, German leaders of the SPD, including the anti war Hugo Hasse accepted the inevitability of conflict and voted against their principals of internationalism and solidarity. The fear of the Rusian army invading Germany, or of state repression against political parties viewed as treacherous or disloyal created the illusion of unity. Elsewhere, the Kaiser appeaeld to all parties as ‘Germans’ to come together in a spirit of national unity and many Germans adopted a seige mentality, bel

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  • China, the Second World War and historical memory

    China, the Second World War and historical memory

    January 9, 2022
    American History, Asian History, Cold War, European History, Military History, Podcast, Podcast: Military History

    China was the first country to be invaded by an Axis power and historian Rana Mitter has argued that its wartime experience is one of the most obscured and misunderstood in the west, though Chinese losses dwarfed those experienced by European and American combatants. Only the USSR suffered more during the war than China, but the immediate civil war that engulfed China and the victory of the communist party in 1949 meant that the Chinese wartime experience was lost under the complexities of Cold

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  • Eisenhower and the downfall of Joseph McCarthy

    Eisenhower and the downfall of Joseph McCarthy

    November 30, 2021
    American History, Cold War, Military History, Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: Military History, Political History

    Eisenhower found McCarthy distasteful but had not desire to enter into a political fight with him. He thought that this would diminish the presidency and give lie to the idea that America was a harmonious post war society. He hoped that the public mood would change and when McCarthy was finally defeated the evidence suggests that attitudes were transitioning away from hysteria anyway. It was his decision to conduct televised hearings into suspected communist subversion in the army that eventuall

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  • Britain’s War at Sea 1939-45 Part One – Imperial Overstretch

    Britain’s War at Sea 1939-45 Part One – Imperial Overstretch

    November 28, 2021
    Economic History, European History, Military History, Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: Military History, World War II

    By 1939, the Royal Navy had lost a decade of growth, after budget cuts during the Great Depression and the closure of shipyards resulted in an older fleet than that of its enemies. The navy’s role as the defender of the sea lanes that bound the empire together meant that it was for much of the war, Britain’s primary line of defence against the Axis powers. The British were vulnerable as a net importer of food to U-Boat warfare and following the failure of the Battle of Britain and the decision b

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  • German Militarism and Social Cohesion in 1914

    German Militarism and Social Cohesion in 1914

    November 10, 2021
    European History, Military History, Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: Military History, Political History, World War I

    Despite a decade of social conflict prior to the First World War between German trade unions and bosses, the declaration of war by Germany against Russia in the summer of 1914 led to a temporary but significant period of social unity in the Reich. The SPD, Germany’s Social Democratic Party, showed its loyalty to the Kaiser’s government by voting for his war credits to fund the army, and were recognised by the Chancellor Bethman Hollweg as a pliant and passive organisation that did not need to be

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  • The Indian Army in the Middle East – 1940

    The Indian Army in the Middle East – 1940

    October 23, 2021
    European History, Middle Eastern History, Military History, Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: Military History

    In the summer of 1940 the British faced supply shortages in the Middle East and were vastly outnumbered by Italian forces in Libya. Archibald Wavell, one of Churchill’s least favourite generals, came under intense pressure from his Prime Minister for a swift and impressive victory. HIs opposite number Count Graziani quickly realised the Italian Army was poorly equipped for desert war, and despite its size would struggle to achieve a decisive victory. The Indian Fourth Division was deployed in th

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  • The Indian Army Officer Corps in World War Two

    The Indian Army Officer Corps in World War Two

    May 15, 2021
    Asian History, European History, Military History, Modern History, Podcast, Podcast: Military History, Political History

    The British hold over the Indian Army was born of strategic calculations; the army was the most powerful weapon in Asia at Britain’s disposal, and its huge manpower enabled Britain to punch above its weight on the world stage during the conflict. The British government attempted to limit the numbers of commissions granted to Indian officers, but the demands of war and the mass mobilisation of India to fight the Axis powers meant that by 1945, the numbers of officers leading Indian companies and

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