Episodios

  • Spring Awakening and Upper Silesia: Episode 97
    Mar 23 2026

    The #6 Top World War 2 podcast continues following the Red Army’s advance into Hungary and Germany—and the expensive failure of the German Operation Spring Awakening.

    Map 1: Front lines in Europe, 1 March 1945

    Map 2: Operation Southwind/Sudwind

    Map 3a: German plans for Operation Spring Awakening

    Map 4: The Soviet counter-attack, The Lake Balaton counter-offensive Map 5: Following Operation Spring Awakening

    Map 6: Upper Silesian locations in 2026

    Map 7: The front lines, Europe, 1 April 1945

    People

    Rodion Malinovsky

    Fyodor Tolbukhin

    Heinz Guderian

    Friedrich Schorner

    Walther Nehring (right)

    Más Menos
    41 m
  • Silesia, Part 1—Episode 96
    Mar 9 2026

    The Red Army penetrates deep into Germany, leading to the redrawing of eastern European borders after.

    Map 1: The Oder offensive–March 1945

    Map 2: The Lower Silesian Offensive

    Map 3: The East Pomeranian Offensive

    Map 4a: European fronts, 15 February 1945

    Map 4b: European fronts, 15 March 1945

    Photos

    Marshal Ivan Konev, Commander of the 1st Ukrainian Front

    General Walther Wencke, chief of staff, Army Group Vistula, February 1945

    Child soldiers in the wehrmacht: Hitler Youth in Breslau (Wroclaw), February 1945

    Breslau (Wroclaw) in fighting, 1945

    Más Menos
    36 m
  • The Impossible Alliance, Part 2: Episode 95
    Feb 23 2026

    Why did the Yalta Conference end the way it did? Why did Churchill try an end-run around Roosevelt? Why did Roosevelt try to curry Stalin’s favour? What would this mean to post-war history?

    Author Giles Milton joins to discuss some of the Second World War’s most perplexing questions.

    People

    Author Giles Milton

    His latest book, The Stalin Affair: The impossible alliance that won the war

    The Big Three: Soviet Premier Josef Stalin, U.S. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, and U.K. Prime Minister Winston Churchill

    Kathleen “Kathy” or “Puff” Harriman, daughter of Roosevelt’s right hand and Ambassador to the USSR in 1945, Averell Harriman

    Averell Harriman

    Pamela Churchill, WInston Churchill’s daughter-in-law in 1945, and later, Mrs. Averell Harriman

    Stalin and Churchill at the Moscow Conference, 1944

    Franklin Roosevelt in 1945 Map 1: The division of Germany after May 1945

    Map 2: Invasion of Poland, 1939 Map 3: Poland moves 100 km west

    Sources

    Giles Milton, author: https://www.gilesmilton.com/

    • Books
    • podcast: Ministry of Secrets
    Más Menos
    42 m
  • The Impossible Alliance, Part 1: Episode 94
    Feb 16 2026

    Why were the Yalta Conference’s decisions so vague? Why did Stalin get everything he wanted? And why did Roosevelt act so naively?

    Giles Milton, bestselling author of The Stalin Affair: The Impossible Alliance that Won the War, joins the podcast today to help understand the relationships that had the greatest impact on the second meeting of the Big Three of the Second World War.

    Photos

    Author Giles Milton

    The Stalin Affair: The Impossible Alliance that Won the War by Giles Milton

    The Big Three at Yalta, February 1945. Roosevelt would be dead in two months.

    Map 1: Yalta in Crimea, on the Black Sea, site of the 1945 Yalta Conference of the Big Three

    Map 2: The tortured road from Saky Airfield to Yalta

    Sources

    Giles Milton, author: https://www.gilesmilton.com/

    • Books
    • podcast: Ministry of Secrets
    Más Menos
    33 m
  • From Malta to Yalta—Episode 93
    Feb 2 2026

    Winston Churchill and Franklin Roosevelt meet in Malta in the Mediterranean in February 1945, to prepare to meet Josef Stalin in the second Big Three conference on Soviet territory—Yalta.

    It was a meeting that shaped the world for decades.

    Map 1: Malta to Yalta

    Map 2: The Western Front, 1 February 1945

    Map 3: The Pacific Theatre, 1 February 1945

    Map 4: Poland’s shift west, 1945

    Photos

    Left: Franklin Roosevelt in 1944. Right: Roosevelt and Churchill at Malta, 2 February 1945.

    Averell Harriman and daughter Kathleen

    The Vorontsov Palace, quarters for the British delegation

    The Livadia Palace, quarters for the American delegation

    The Yusupov Palace, housing the Soviet delegation

    Más Menos
    42 m
  • Into Germany—Episode 92 of the first podcast to focus on the full story of the Eastern Front of World War 2
    Jan 19 2026

    The Red Army continues its continual advance onto German soil—and the flight of German civilians and military.

    Map 1: The siege of Kongisberg

    Map 2: Samland

    The Samland Peninsula in 1905, showing city and town names still present in 1945.

    Map 3: The (second) East Prussian Offensive

    Map 4: The advance across Poland

    Historical photos

    Franklin Roosevelt meets Winston Churchill in Malta, 2 February 1945

    Civilians from Konigsberg walk across frozen Vistula Lagoon, January 1945

    CIvilians flee Lodz, Poland, January 1945

    Red Army arrives in Lodz, Poland, January 1945

    Hitler shakes hands with Col. Claus von Stauffenberg at the “Wolf’s Lair," July 1944.

    Ruins of the Wolfsschanze, “Wolf’s Lair,” Hitler’s headquarters in East Prussia

    Sources

    Antony Beevor, The Second World War. New York, NY, USA: Little, Brown and Company, 2012.

    Scott Bury, Walking Out of War: Volume 3 of the Eastern Front Trilogy. Ottawa, Canada: The Written Word, 2017.

    Evan Mawdsley, Thunder in the East: The Nazi-Soviet War, 1941–1945. London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2016.

    Anthony Tucker-Jones, Slaughter on the Eastern Front: Hitler and Stalin’s War, 1941–1945. Stroud, Gloucestershire, UK: The History Press, 2017.

    David Sumner, Europe at War: A podcast about lesser-known battles of the Second World War. https://podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast/europe-at-war-a-ww2-podcast/id1788043665

    Larysa Zariczniak, Wandering the Edge: Ukrainian history and culture https://podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast/wandering-the-edge/id1547149262

    David Sumner, Europe at War: A WW2 podcast https://podcasts.apple.com/ca/podcast/europe-at-war-a-ww2-podcast/id1788043665

    Morse code by Thane Brown

    Music composed and recorded by Nicolas Bury

    Más Menos
    44 m
  • The Vise Closes: the Eastern Front, episode 91
    Jan 5 2026

    After 10 shattering blows on the Eastern Front in 1944, the Western Allies and the USSR continue to compress nazi Germany in January 1945.

    Map 1: The compressing front

    1a: 1 January 1944

    1b: 1 January 1945

    1c: 15 January 1945

    Map 2: The siege of Budapest, January 1945

    Map 3: The Vistula-Oder campaign, January 1945

    Map 4: The East Prussia offensive

    Photos

    The Budapest Chain Bridge destroyed, January 1945

    Ruins of Warsaw, even in 1947

    Source: New York photographer Henry N. Cobb, taken in 1947, via Rare Historical Photos.

    Más Menos
    37 m
  • The Battle for Budapest, Part 1—Episode 90
    Dec 22 2025

    "Budapest lay athwart the main entry route to Austria and Bohemia. It was the main railway hub of the region and also the largest Danubian port. The Red Army could not bypass it. This was the first time in the war that the Red Army had to lay siege to a major city."

    The Red Army assaults the capital of nazi Germany’s final remaining partner in the Second World War. The war appears to be almost lost—but that’s seen through hindsight. No one at the time knew that.

    Map 1: The Eastern Front, December 1944

    Map 2: Germany’s eastern and western fronts, 1 December 1944

    Map 3: The Petsamo-Kirkenes operation in northern Finland

    Map 4: The Red Army attacks Budapest Operation Konrad II

    People

    Mihai I, King of Romania, 1944–1947

    Miklos Horthy, Regent of Hungary

    Miklos Horthy Jr.

    Ference Szalasi, nazi dictator of Hungary, 1944–1945

    Edmund Veesenmayer, Hitler’s “Special Envoy” to Hungary, 1944–1945

    SS-Obergruppenführer Karl Pfeffer-Wildenbruch, commander of IX SS Mountain Corps

    Historical photos: Fighting in Budapest

    Sources

    Antony Beevor, The Second World War. New York, NY, USA: Little, Brown and Company, 2012.

    Evan Mawdsley, Thunder in the East: The Nazi-Soviet War, 1941–1945. London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2016.

    Anthony Tucker-Jones, Slaughter on the Eastern Front: Hitler and Stalin’s War, 1941–1945. Stroud, Gloucestershire, UK: The History Press, 2017.

    Morse code by Thane Brown

    Music composed and recorded by Nicolas Bury

    Más Menos
    38 m