🔍
Hitler's Actual Plan for Taking Over America - YouTube
Channel: The Infographics Show
[0]
Somewhere far out in the Atlantic, a reinforced
American destroyer squadron out on patrol
[5]
comes under fire.
[6]
The first few shots are off-target, but as
American crews scramble to their battle stations,
[10]
the fire becomes much more accurate.
[12]
The USS Breckinridge takes a direct hit right
on her bow, twisting metal and killing dozens
[17]
of sailors.
[18]
The high Atlantic waves pour into her from
the giant hole left behind, and within minutes
[22]
she begins to sink.
[24]
In the distant horizon, the attackers are
visible to US Navy spotters.
[28]
There's the tell-tale puff of multiple large
caliber guns firing simultaneously on several
[33]
of the enemy vessels.
[34]
Twenty eight seconds later thirty 1500 pound
shells smash into the American formation.
[40]
The results are devastating, and hundreds
more American lives are lost in seconds.
[44]
The destroyers are all but helpless in the
onslaught.
[46]
Their 4 inch guns can't hope to match the
massive range of the enemy battleships, and
[51]
the only real hope they have is their torpedoes-
but that means getting closer and braving
[55]
heavy enemy fire.
[57]
With few options left, the American ships
turn onto their enemies with grim determination,
[61]
hoping to make use of their torpedoes.
[63]
There is no air cover for the destroyer squadron,
most of America's carriers have long ago been
[68]
sent to the bottom of the Atlantic, and those
that survive are held in reserve in the Pacific
[72]
in a desperate last stand to hold the Japanese
off the California coast.
[76]
Likewise, most of America's battleships have
long ago been lost to the major naval engagements
[81]
of 1942 and 1943.
[84]
Overwhelmed by a superior enemy with better
planes, ships, and guns- and more of all three
[89]
of those- the US Navy has been able to do
little but put up enough of a fight to discourage
[93]
an invasion of the homeland.
[95]
Until now.
[96]
As the destroyers steam towards their targets,
ships being lost one by one under the withering
[100]
enemy fire, the full complement of the enemy
formation at last comes into sight.
[105]
Rows of battleships supported by several squadrons
of destroyers, and at the rear aircraft carriers
[110]
for establishing air dominance.
[112]
Several spotters planes have been launched
and have allowed the enemy to accurately direct
[116]
the fire of the battleships below onto the
Americans, but the carriers haven't even bothered
[120]
to launch their torpedo planes- they don't
need to.
[123]
This last line of American defense in the
Atlantic shatters and breaks in its suicidal
[128]
attack, the joint British and German task
force, protecting the largest invasion fleet
[132]
ever assembled by mankind, continues on its
path to the American east coast.
[137]
In the late 1930s, as Hitler began to ramp
up his ambitions to create a new German Reich,
[142]
it was clear he had one major problem: the
United States.
[145]
Taking on France and Britain would be difficult,
though all of his advisors were confident
[149]
neither nation was prepared for war and could
be defeated.
[152]
But if the United States were to once more
throw its weight behind the Allies, as it
[156]
had in World War I, then Hitler's dreams of
conquering Europe could be at serious risk.
[161]
Russia too would be problematic, but once
his western flank was secure, shifting superior
[165]
German firepower to the Russian front would
be simple.
[168]
Hitler's spies assured him that the Red Army
was fundamentally weak- Stalin's great ideological
[172]
purges and paranoia both had resulted in the
extermination of many of the Red Army's best
[177]
officers.
[178]
What remained was a rag-tag force of mostly
conscripts led by officers who's primary qualification
[184]
wasn't battlefield expertise, but rather loyalty
to Stalin.
[187]
The United States was the ultimate thorn in
Hitler's side.
[190]
Even if the nation remained neutral, Hitler's
dream of German superpowerdom only meant that
[194]
it would eventually be put into direct competition
with the United States, a nation that German
[198]
observers were quick to point out was well
on its way to becoming the dominant industrial
[202]
and economic power in the world.
[204]
Despite the Great Depression having leveled
the US economy, the potential was nonetheless
[209]
there- its navy alone had grown by almost
100 ships by the time of Germany's invasion
[213]
of Poland.
[214]
It was obvious- Germany would either have
to face America today, or defer the conflict
[218]
to a post-war era, when it had consolidated
power in Europe.
[222]
However, postponing the conflict meant that
the United States could continue to grow in
[226]
power while Germany depleted itself in combat,
potentially giving America an insurmountable
[231]
lead.
[232]
Better that the US be dealt with now, while
Germany was still strong.
[235]
But how, exactly?
[236]
First, American naval might would have to
be neutralized- or at least heavily occupied.
[241]
A modern industrial power protected on both
sides by vast oceans, the United States enjoyed
[246]
the best strategic position of any major nation
in human history.
[250]
It could easily engage in trade with both
the European and Asian world, while being
[253]
protected from both by the sheer size of the
oceans at either coast.
[258]
America knew this too, which is why in the
20th century it had begun a sizable investment
[262]
in its Navy, which now rivaled the legendary
British Royal Navy in might.
[267]
It had also worked to deter any European expansion
of power into its hemisphere of the world.
[271]
The United States would tolerate no threat
based in the southern or northern spheres
[275]
of the American continents.
[277]
The German navy wasn't big enough to take
on the Americans alone, its navy was more
[281]
focused on controlling the Baltic sea- and
already faced incredible difficulty in doing
[285]
so thanks to the British and French navies.
[287]
What was needed was an ally with a strong
navy of its own, and Japan afforded just such
[292]
an opportunity.
[293]
If the United States could be distracted in
the Pacific, not only might it be deterred
[297]
from joining the European war, but when the
time came to bring the fight to American shores,
[302]
the US would have to split its fleets between
the Pacific and Atlantic.
[306]
But Japan would never be able to support an
actual invasion of the American homeland,
[310]
which is what would be needed to truly neutralize
the threat that the US posed to German dreams
[314]
of superpowerdom.
[316]
It simply wouldn't be economic, or realistic,
to ship German troops and equipment all the
[320]
way to the Pacific where it could be escorted
to the American coast by Japanese ships.
[324]
Instead, it would have to be an Atlantic power
that aided the German effort, and only one
[329]
nation had the naval might to challenge, and
destroy, the American navy: Great Britain.
[333]
But how could Britain be persuaded to join
its bitter enemy in a fight against the United
[338]
States?
[339]
Well, if Britain could be defeated quickly
enough, or at least made to suffer heavily,
[343]
then perhaps Hitler could coerce the British
to view America as an enemy, opposed to its
[347]
own colonial interests.
[349]
It was no secret that the American president,
Franklin Roosevelt, and his vice-president,
[352]
Harry Truman, were both no fans of European
colonialism.
[356]
Already talks amongst American leadership
echoed a sentiment that if the US were to
[360]
aid the Allies, it would only do so with the
assurances that many of Britain and France's
[364]
colonies would be liberated in the post-war
period.
[368]
With British colonies providing much of its
industrial and economic power, surely England
[372]
could be convinced that opposing the United
States was in its own best interests.
[376]
After all, Hitler had no plans to take and
hold the British isles themselves- Britain
[380]
could be allowed its independence and even
given favorable trading status with the new
[384]
German reich, in exchange for helping it crush
America.
[387]
However, even before a naval invasion by a
joint German-British fleet could commence,
[393]
American industrial power would have to be
pounded into submission.
[395]
And that was a hell of a challenge considering
New York was 4,000 miles (6400 km) from Berlin.
[401]
German engineering genius however, could solve
that issue.
[404]
Enter the Amerikabomber, a massive long range
strategic bomber which could take off from
[409]
airfields in France and deliver several tons
of bombs to the American east coast.
[413]
With competition from several different manufacturers,
Hitler's dream of seeing New York city in
[417]
flames, and Hermann Goring's ambition to “stuff
the mouth of arrogance across the sea” would
[422]
finally come true.
[424]
The die was cast, Hitler finally had a plan
to crush America and ensure uncontested German
[428]
superpowerdom in the age to come.
[430]
There was just one problem- none of Hitler's
plans were even remotely realistic.
[435]
First, gaining British cooperation was exceedingly
unlikely at best.
[439]
Had Hitler actually succeeded in forcing Britain
to surrender before American intervention,
[443]
perhaps the Royal Navy could have been wrangled
for his effort to destroy American naval might
[448]
as part of an unconditional surrender.
[449]
However, the US entry into the war in 1941
all but insured that Britain would continue
[454]
to resist, and a cross-strait invasion was
still an impossibility for the German army-
[459]
even without American reinforcements waiting
to greet them on British soil.
[463]
Secondly, Hitler's dream of a bomber capable
of reaching US soil was pure fantasy.
[468]
Not only were the engineering challenges of
such a long range bomber incredibly difficult
[472]
to overcome, and expensive, but German bombers
would be put into the same position that Allied
[476]
bombers would face themselves later in the
war: forced to attack a heavily defended target
[481]
with no fighter escorts.
[482]
The savage mauling American bomber crews faced
over Europe at the hands of the Luftwaffe
[487]
due to a lack of a long-range fighter made
it clear that Hitler's plan to bomb the United
[491]
States was destined for disaster even if the
technical challenges were overcome.
[496]
However, the nail in the coffin for Hitler's
plan to bomb the US came when Portugal lent
[501]
the use of the Azores to the allies, denying
Germany desperately needed airfields in the
[505]
Atlantic.
[506]
The truth is that other than a hazy ambition
to attack the United States at home, Hitler
[510]
never truly had a plan to invade the US that
was remotely realistic.
[514]
In a conversation with the Japanese ambassador
in 1942, Hitler admitted that he did not yet
[519]
know how to defeat the United States.
[522]
Surely a troubling line of conversation coming
from the wartime ally that dragged Japan into
[526]
a one-on-one deathmatch with America in the
Pacific.
[528]
Now you need to go watch Could the US defend
from an invasion of the homeland?
[532]
Or click this other video instead.
Most Recent Videos:
You can go back to the homepage right here: Homepage





