Hitler’s Field Marshals

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  • Hitler's Field Marshal Who Surrendered at Stalingrad: Friedrich Paulus

    At Stalingrad, over 200,000 German troops were encircled and crushed. Leading them was Field Marshal Friedrich Paulus, the first German commander of his rank ever to surrender. Refusing to take his own life, Paulus became a symbol of defeat and betrayal in Nazi Germany. This film revisits his bat...

  • The Field Marshal Behind Mass Murder: Walter von Reichenau

    Walter von Reichenau was one of Nazi Germany’s most infamous generals. A loyal supporter of Hitler, he commanded the 6th Army during invasions of Poland, France, and the Soviet Union. His infamous “Severity Order” encouraged soldiers to kill Jews and civilians, paving the way for massacres like B...

  • The Sex Scandal That Destroyed Hitler’s Field Marshal: Werner von Blomberg

    Werner von Blomberg rose to the highest ranks of Hitler’s military elite, becoming the Third Reich’s first Field Marshal. Once a trusted ally of the Führer, his career was shattered by scandal after marrying a woman with a criminal past. Cast out of power, Blomberg lived in disgrace, abandoned by...

  • Nazi Field Marshal with Jewish Origins & Dark Secrets: Erhard Milch

    Erhard Milch, a Nazi Field Marshal with Jewish origins, rose to power as the mastermind of Hitler’s Luftwaffe. He oversaw slave labor in aircraft production, exploited concentration camp prisoners, and played a key role in Germany’s war machine. Tried for war crimes after WWII, Milch denied his r...

  • Field Marshal Erwin Rommel: Hero, Traitor, or Nazi Pawn?

    Erwin Rommel, known as the “Desert Fox,” rose to fame as Hitler’s favored field marshal, celebrated for his daring tactics in North Africa. Yet behind the myth of a noble soldier lies a far more complex reality—Rommel’s ties to Hitler, his ambiguous stance on Nazism, and his forced suicide after ...

  • From German Field Marshal to Nuremberg Gallows: Hitler's Lackey Wilhelm Keitel

    Wilhelm Keitel rose to the top of Hitler’s war machine as a loyal “yes-man,” signing criminal orders that fueled massacres and repression across Europe. From the invasion of Poland to Operation Barbarossa, his obedience enabled atrocities. At Nuremberg, he pled he was “just following orders,” but...

  • German Field Marshal Executed by Nazis: Erwin von Witzleben

    When German officers plotted to kill Adolf Hitler on 20 July 1944, field marshal Erwin von Witzleben was their choice to command the army afterward. When the plan failed, he was dragged before the People’s Court, mocked, and sentenced to death. This documentary explores his rise, his resistance, ...