The Second World War Quotes
The Second World War
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Antony Beevor10,680 ratings, 4.40 average rating, 798 reviews
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The Second World War Quotes
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“In Soviet eyes the definition of ‘fascist’ included anyone who did not follow the orders of the Communist Party.”
― The Second World War
― The Second World War
“A quarter of them came from countries overrun by the Nazis as well as from the Dominions: Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Rhodesia and South Africa. There were so many Canadians that they formed separate RCAF squadrons, and so later did men from other countries, such as the Poles and French.”
― The Second World War
― The Second World War
“You must leave your imagination behind or it will do you harm.”
― The Second World War
― The Second World War
“The Nazi regime had trapped the whole population of the country as accomplices, willing or not, in its own crimes, and its own insanity.”
― The Second World War
― The Second World War
“In 1938 the biological warfare establishment Unit 731 had been set up outside Harbin in Manchukuo, under the auspices of the Kwantung Army. This huge complex, presided over by General Ishii Shir, eventually employed a core staff of 3,000 scientists and doctors from universities and medical schools in Japan, and a total of 20,000 personnel in the subsidiary establishments. They prepared weapons to spread black plague, typhoid, anthrax and cholera, and tested them on more than 3,000 Chinese prisoners. They also carried out anthrax, mustard-gas and frostbite experiments on their victims, whom they referred to as maruta or ‘logs’.”
― The Second World War
― The Second World War
“Stalin’s appeasement of Hitler had continued with a large increase in deliveries to Germany of grain, fuel, cotton, metals and rubber purchased in south-east Asia, circumventing the British blockade. During the period of the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, the Soviet Union had provided 26,000 tons of chromium, used in metal alloys, 140,000 tons of manganese and more than two millions tons of oil to the Reich. Despite having received well over eighty clear indications of a German invasion–indeed probably more than a hundred–Stalin seemed more concerned with ‘the security problem along our north-west frontier’, which meant the Baltic states. On the night of 14 June, a week before the German invasion, 60,000 Estonians, 34,000 Latvians and 38,000 Lithuanians were forced on to cattle trucks for deportation to camps in the distant interior of the Soviet Union. Stalin remained unconvinced even when, during the last week before the invasion, German ships rapidly left Soviet ports and embassy staff were evacuated.”
― The Second World War
― The Second World War
“Blunden tomba sur un groupe de jeunes prisonniers de guerre américains à demi affamés, avec des "côtes en xylophone", les joues creuses, le cou décharné et des "bras dégingandés". Ils étaient "un peu hystériques" tant ils étaient heureux de rencontrer d'autres anglophones. "Des prisonniers américains que j'ai rencontrés ce matin m'ont paru être les plus pitoyables de tous ceux que j'ai vus. Ils ne sont arrivés en Europe qu'en décembre dernier, ont été immédiatement envoyés sur le front et ont pris de plain fouet la contre-offensive allemande dans les Ardennes. Depuis leur capture, ils ont été transférés presque constamment d'un endroit à un autre. Ils racontaient des histoires de camarades battus à mort par les gardes allemands seulement parce qu'ils étaient sortis des rangs pour ramasser des betteraves à sucre dans les champs. Ils étaient plus pitoyables parce qu'ils n'étaient que de jeunes garçons arrachés à leurs belles maisons dans un beau pays ne sachant rien de l'Europe, ils n'étaient pas durs à cuire comme les Australiens, ou roublards comme les Français ou têtes de mule comme les Anglais. Ils ne comprenaient tout simplement pas ce qui se passait.”
― The Second World War
― The Second World War
“and the French soldiers had been sitting in the bars for two days, waiting to be taken prisoner. So that’s how it was in France, that was the celebrated “Grande Nation”.”
― The Second World War
― The Second World War
“Operation Typhoon.”
― The Second World War
― The Second World War
“He did not want headlines round the world proclaiming that a ship called ‘Germany’ had been sunk.”
― The Second World War
― The Second World War
“The Abwehr also achieved a great success against the Dutch resistance beginning in March 1942. It called this counter-intelligence coup Operation North Pole, or the Englandspiel. This disaster was almost entirely due to appallingly lax practices in N Section at SOE’s London headquarters. An SOE radio operator was picked up in a sweep in The Hague. The Abwehr forced him to transmit to London. He did so, assuming that, because he had left off the security check at the end of his message, London would know that he had been captured. But to his horror London assumed that he had simply forgotten it, and replied telling him to arrange a drop zone for another agent to be parachuted in. A German reception committee was waiting for the new agent, and he was in turn forced to signal back as instructed. The chain continued, with one agent after another seized on arrival. Each was deeply shocked to find that the Germans knew everything about them, even the colour of the walls in their briefing room back in England. The Abwehr and SD, for once working harmoniously together, thus managed to capture around fifty Dutch officers and agents. Anglo-Dutch relations were severely damaged by this disaster; in fact many people in the Netherlands suspected treachery at the London end. There was no conspiracy, just a terrible combination of incompetence, complacency and ignorance of conditions in occupied Holland.”
― The Second World War
― The Second World War
“Apart from the risk in the blackout of walking into a lamp-post, the greatest danger was being run down by a motorcar. In London, over 2,000 pedestrians were killed in the last four months of 1939.”
― The Second World War
― The Second World War
“The surgeon-general of the US Army estimated that American front-line forces suffered a 10 per cent rate of psychiatric breakdown.”
― The Second World War
― The Second World War
“Field Marshal Brooke once wrote in his diary: ‘It is astonishing how petty and small men can be in connection with questions of command.”
― The Second World War
― The Second World War
“It was a young man’s war. Even a thirty-one-year-old pilot was nicknamed ‘Grandpa’.”
― The Second World War
― The Second World War
“The United States ambassador, William Bullitt, was so trusted by the French administration that he was temporarily made mayor and asked to negotiate the surrender of the capital to the Germans.”
― The Second World War
― The Second World War
“Alliances are complicated enough in victory, but in defeat they are bound to produce the worst recriminations imaginable.”
― The Second World War
― The Second World War
“His policy of aggression was stated clearly on the very first page. Yet even though every German couple had to purchase a copy on marriage, few seem to have taken his bellicose predictions seriously.”
― The Second World War
― The Second World War
“cap abilities’.”
― The Second World War
― The Second World War
“Another Pole landed one afternoon in the grounds of a very respectable lawn tennis club. He was signed in as a guest, given a racket, lent some white flannels and invited to take part in a match. His opponents were thrashed and left totally exhausted by the time an RAF vehicle came to collect him.”
― The Second World War
― The Second World War
“In that one month of January 1945, Wehrmacht losses rose to 451,742 killed, roughly the equivalent of all American deaths in the whole of the Second World War.”
― The Second World War
― The Second World War
“The brigade fought to the end with great courage, winning the admiration of the Germans. But the continuing failure of British commanders to counter-attack in force from the west was one of the least impressive examples of generalship in the war.”
― The Second World War
― The Second World War
“Meanwhile the 7th Armoured Division had charged ahead to cut off Tobruk. Two Australian brigades hurried on from Bardia to complete the siege. Tobruk also surrendered, offering up another 25,000 prisoners, 208 guns, eighty-seven armoured vehicles and fourteen Italian army prostitutes who were sent back to a convent in Alexandria where they languished miserably for the rest of the war.”
― The Second World War
― The Second World War
“The practice of treating prisoners as ‘human cattle’ had not come about from a collapse of discipline. It was usually directed by officers. Apart from local people, victims of cannibalism included Papuan soldiers, Australians, Americans and Indian prisoners of war who had refused to join the Indian National Army. At the end of the war, their Japanese captors had kept the Indians alive so that they could butcher them to eat one at a time. Even the inhumanity of the Nazis’ Hunger Plan in the east never descended to such levels.”
― The Second World War
― The Second World War
“Perhaps the most shocking element in the whole story of Unit 731 was MacArthur’s agreement, after the Japanese surrender, to provide immunity from prosecution to all involved, including General Ishii. This deal allowed the Americans to obtain all the data they had accumulated from their experiments. Even after MacArthur had learned that Allied prisoners of war had also been killed in the tests, he ordered that all criminal investigations should cease. Soviet requests to prosecute Ishii and his staff at the Tokyo War Crimes tribunal were firmly rejected.”
― The Second World War
― The Second World War
“Other means were used to wear down the Germans and prevent them getting any rest. The 588th Night Bomber Regiment specialized in flying their obsolete Po-2 biplanes low over the German lines at night and switching off their engines as they made their bombing run. The ghostly swish made a sinister noise. These outstandingly brave pilots were all young women. They were soon dubbed the ‘Night Witches’, first by the Germans and then by their own side.”
― The Second World War
― The Second World War
