Footage of the destruction of World War 2. Documentary footage: photos of the Second World War. Punishment for General Dostler


70 years ago, on September 2, 1945, the Second World War ended World War. The largest armed conflict in human history involved 62 states out of 73 that existed at that time (80% of the population Globe). Fighting were conducted on the territory of three continents and in the waters of four oceans. This is the only conflict in which nuclear weapons were used. On September 2, 1945, Japan signed the act of “unconditional surrender” of Japan. This photo collection contains unique footage from the end of the war.

A nuclear mushroom in the sky over Hiroshima an hour after the explosion of an atomic bomb dropped by the American B-29 Enola Gay bomber. About 80,000 people died immediately, and another 60,000 died from injuries and exposure by 1950. (AP Photo/U.S. Army via Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum)


A North American B-25 Mitchell bomber raids a Japanese destroyer off the coast of Taiwan in April 1945. (USAF)


Soldiers of the US Army's 25th Division advance along the edge of Balete Pass in northern Luzon, Philippines, April 12, 1945. They pass the body of a dead Japanese soldier, which lies on a tree fallen by the bombing. (AP Photo/U.S. Signal Corps)


Anti-aircraft gunners (center foreground) shoot at a burning Japanese kamikaze aircraft as it crashes onto the flight deck of the US Navy escort carrier Sangamon during combat operations in the Ryukyu Islands off Japan, May 4, 1945. This plane crashed into the sea near an aircraft carrier. Another Japanese plane managed to crash into the deck of the ship and cause significant damage. (AP Photo/U.S. Navy)


The first of twenty Japanese men emerges from a cave on Iwo Jima with their hands raised, April 5, 1945. A group of soldiers hid there for several days. (AP Photo/U.S. Army Signal Corps)


Fire on the deck of the aircraft carrier USS Bunker Hill after two kamikaze attacks occurred within 30 seconds of each other, off the coast of Kyushu, May 11, 1945. 346 crew members were killed and 264 were injured. (U.S. Navy)


A Marine surveys the destruction after the American bombing of the city of Naha on the island of Okinawa, Japan, June 13, 1945. The frames of the buildings are all that remains of the city with a population of 443 thousand people. (AP Photo/U.S. Marine Corps, Corp. Arthur F. Hager Jr.)


A formation of B-29 Superfortress bombers of the 73rd Bombardment Wing flies over Mount Fuji, Japan, 1945. (USAF)


View of Tokyo after the bombing in 1945. The surviving residential buildings are surrounded by the ruins and ashes of neighboring buildings that were burned to the ground by incendiary bombs. (USAF)


Fireball and shock wave 0.025 seconds after detonation during the Trinity test in the New Mexico desert, July 16, 1945. (U.S. Department of Defense)


The first atomic bomb "Baby" is ready to be loaded into the bomb bay of the Enola Gay aircraft, August 1945. (NARA)


The heat released during the nuclear explosion over Hiroshima scorched the road surface on the bridge over the Ota River, approximately 800 meters from the epicenter of the explosion. Sections of the road obscured by concrete pillars and railings remained undamaged. (NARA)


Military medics treat Japanese survivors of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima, August 6, 1945. (AP Photo)


Just days after the bombing of Hiroshima, the United States began preparations for the detonation of a second nuclear bomb. Photo: Fat Man bomb being loaded onto a trailer, August 1945. After the bombing of Hiroshima, Japan still refused to capitulate, and US President Truman issued a statement in which he said: “If they do not accept our terms, they should expect an avalanche of destruction from the air such as they have never seen on the ground.” (NARA)


In this photo taken shortly after the atomic bombing, workers clear debris from a devastated area of ​​Nagasaki, Japan, on August 9, 1945. The document, obtained by the US Army from the archives of Japan's official Domei news agency, was the first photograph of the destruction in Nagasaki taken on the ground. (AP Photo)


People walk among the charred ruins of the city of Nagasaki shortly after the atomic bomb destroyed much of the city. The temperature at the epicenter of the explosion reached 3900 C. (USAF)


On August 9, 1945, the USSR launched an invasion of Manchuria. More than one million Soviet soldiers went on the offensive against the Japanese Kwantung Army. The Soviet army quickly defeated the poorly trained Japanese troops. In the photo: a column of tanks moves through the streets Chinese city Dalian. (Waralbum.ru)


Soviet soldiers stand on the banks of the Songhua River in Harbin. The occupied city was liberated by Soviet troops on August 20, 1945. Some 700,000 Soviet troops occupied Manchuria by the time Japan surrendered. (Yevgeny Khaldei/waralbum.ru)

The Second World War... People tend to forget history... Less and less are remembered about the terrible events that haunted the whole world throughout the Second World War. And many representatives of the younger generation do not know facts, dates and figures at all! This is extremely sad, because you need to know history so as not to repeat its mistakes.

We present to your attention 11 creepy footage from the time of the Second World War, which everyone needs to see in order to realize the horror of wars and remember that the good war is the one that never happened!

1 Raft from Armidale

On the first day of winter in 1942, Japanese fighters attacked the Australian patrol ship Armidale. Most of those people who were on the ship died immediately, but some survivors managed to make a raft from the remains of the ship. The raft accommodated about 20 people. A patrol seaplane spotted the raft on December 8, taking this photo, but rescuers were unable to splash down due to high waves. Unfortunately, neither the next day nor ever again the raft could be found...

2 Punishment for General Dostler


On December 1, 1945, German infantry general Anton Dostler was executed. He led the destruction of an American sabotage group, for which he received a death sentence, the execution of which was carefully filmed on photo and film.


In November 1942, in the forests of Eastern Karelia, a Finnish officer shoots a Soviet intelligence officer who, despite the proximity of death, smiles at the camera. The photo was only made public in 2006.

A selection of photographs from the thematic resource Waralbum.ru, which has collected on its pages many stunning and high-quality photographs of the Second World War.

1. Bound Jews protected by Lithuanian auxiliary guards. 1941

2. A column of Jewish women and children under the escort of the Lithuanian “self-defense”.

Time taken: 1941
Filming location: Lithuania, USSR

3. Jewish residents of the city of Siauliai before being sent to be shot near the Kuzhiai station.

Time taken: July 1941
Filming location: Lithuania, USSR

4. The famous photograph of the execution of the last Jew of Vinnitsa, taken by an officer of the German Einsatzgruppen, which was engaged in the execution of persons subject to extermination (primarily Jews). The title of the photograph was written on the back of it.

Vinnitsa was occupied by German troops on July 19, 1941. Some of the Jews living in the city managed to evacuate. The remaining Jewish population was imprisoned in a ghetto. On July 28, 1941, 146 Jews were shot in the city. In August, executions resumed. On September 22, 1941, most of the prisoners in the Vinnitsa ghetto were exterminated (about 28,000 people). Artisans, workers and technicians whose labor was needed by the German occupation authorities were left alive.

5. Sending Slovak Jews to the Auschwitz concentration camp.

Time taken: March 1942
Filming location: Poprad station, Slovakia

6. Rabbis in the Auschwitz concentration camp.

7. Jewish rabbis in the Warsaw ghetto

8. SS soldiers guard a column of Jewish prisoners in the Warsaw ghetto. Liquidation of the Warsaw ghetto after the uprising.

Photo from Jürgen Strop's report to Heinrich Himmler in May 1943. The original German headline reads: "Forcibly pushed out of shelter." One of the most famous photographs from the Second World War.

9. Fey Shulman with Soviet partisans in the forest. Fay Shulman was born into a large family on November 28, 1919 in Poland. On August 14, 1942, the Germans killed 1,850 Jews from Lenin's ghetto, including Faye's parents, sister, and younger brother. They only spared 26 people, including Faye. Faye later fled into the forests and joined a partisan group consisting mainly of escaped Soviet prisoners of war.

———————Prisoners—-

10. Line of Red Army prisoners of war.

1941
The propaganda caption for the photo read: “Among the captured Soviet soldiers there is a woman - even she has stopped resisting. This is a “woman soldier” and at the same time a Soviet commissar who forced Soviet soldiers to fiercely resist until the last bullet.”

11. A German patrol leads captured Soviet soldiers in disguise. Kyiv, September 1941

Time taken: September 1941
Filming location: Kyiv, Ukraine, USSR

12. Killed Soviet prisoners of war on the streets of Kyiv. One of them is dressed in a tunic and riding breeches, the other in underwear. Both had their shoes off, their bare feet were covered in mud—they walked barefoot. The dead have emaciated faces. Eyewitnesses recall that when the prisoners were driven through the streets of Kyiv, the guards shot those who could not walk.

The photo was taken 10 days after the fall of Kyiv by German war photographer Johannes Höhle, who served in the 637th propaganda company, which was part of the 6th German Army that captured the capital of the Ukrainian SSR.

13. Soviet prisoners of war, under the supervision of the SS men, cover the area of ​​Babi Yar with earth where the executed people lie. The photo was taken 10 days after the fall of Kyiv by German war photographer Johannes Höhle, who served in the 637th propaganda company, which was part of the 6th German Army that captured the capital of the Ukrainian SSR.

Babi Yar is a tract in Kyiv that has become notorious as a place of mass executions civilian population and prisoners of war carried out by the German occupation forces. 752 patients were shot here psychiatric hospital them. Ivan Pavlov, at least 40 thousand Jews, about 100 sailors of the Dnieper detachment of the Pinsk military flotilla, arrested partisans, political workers, underground workers, NKVD workers, 621 members of the OUN (A. Melnik faction), at least five gypsy camps. According to various estimates, from 70,000 to 200,000 people were shot at Babi Yar in 1941-1943.

Half-covered trees and bushes at the bottom indicate that the slopes of the ravine were blown up. Some of the prisoners are in civilian clothes. These are probably those who managed to change clothes to escape captivity, but were identified. Along the edges of the ditch stand SS guards, with rifles on their shoulders and helmets on their belts.

14. Soviet soldiers captured near Vyazma. October 1941.

Time taken: October 1941

15. Captured Soviet colonel. Barvenkovsky boiler. May 1942.

In the area of ​​​​the city of Barvenkovo, Kharkov region, at the end of May 1942, the 6th and 57th Soviet armies were surrounded. As a result of the unsuccessful offensive, 170 thousand soldiers and officers of the Red Army died or were captured, including the commander of the 6th Army, Lieutenant General A. Gorodnyansky, and the commander of the 57th Army, Lieutenant General K. Podlas, who went missing.

Time taken: May 1942

16. A captured Red Army soldier showing the Germans the commissars and communists.

17. Red Army prisoners of war in the camp.

18. Soviet prisoners of war. There are two wounded in the center.

19. German security guard lets his dogs have fun with a “living toy”.

20. Soviet workers during forced labor at a mining enterprise in Beuthen (Upper Silesia) during a break.

Time taken: 1943
Filming location: Germany

21. Captured Red Army soldiers at work in winter.

22. Captured Lieutenant General A.A. Vlasov, the future head of the Russian Liberation Army, being interrogated by Colonel General Lindemann after surrendering to German captivity. August 1942

Time taken: August 1942

23. Soviet prisoners of war with German officers in Germany. Disposal of unexploded bombs.

24. A Soviet prisoner of war, after the complete liberation of the Buchenwald camp by American troops, points to a former guard who brutally beat prisoners.

Time taken: 04/14/1945

25. A US Army doctor examines a Soviet forced laborer suffering from tuberculosis. He was taken to forced labor in Germany in the coal mines in the city of Dortmund.

Time taken: 04/30/1945

26. Soviet child next to the murdered mother. Concentration camp for civilians "Ozarichi". Belarus, town of Ozarichi, Domanovichi district, Polesie region. March 1944

Time taken: March 1944

27. Liberated children from the Auschwitz concentration camp.

Time taken: January 1945

------Germans-----

28. Captured German soldiers in Leningrad.

Time taken: 1942
Filming location: Leningrad

29. French from SS and Wehrmacht units in front of General Leclerc from the Free French

French prisoners from SS and Wehrmacht units in front of General Leclerc, commander of the 2nd Armored Division of the Free French.

The prisoners behaved with dignity and even defiantly. When General Leclerc called them traitors and said: “How could you, the French, wear someone else’s uniform?” one of them replied: “You yourself wear someone else’s uniform - an American one!” (the division was equipped by the Americans). They say this angered Leclerc, and he ordered the prisoners shot.

30. German prisoners of war in line to receive food. South of France.

Time taken: September 1944
Filming location: France

31. German prisoners of war are led through the Majdanek concentration camp. In front of the prisoners on the ground lie the remains of death camp prisoners, and the crematorium ovens are also visible. Outskirts of the Polish city of Lublin.

Time taken: 1944
Filming location: Lublin, Poland

32. Return of German prisoners of war from Soviet captivity. The Germans arrived at the Friedland border transit camp.

Friedland.
Time taken: 1955
Location: Friedland, Germany

——————-Hitler Youth———-

33. Captured young German soldiers from the 12th SS Panzer Division "Hitlerjugend" under the escort of the military police of the 3rd US Army. These guys were captured in December 1944 during the Allied operation in the Bulge.

Time taken: 01/07/1945

34. Fifteen-year-old German anti-aircraft gunner from the Hitler Youth - Hans Georg Henke, captured by soldiers of the 9th US Army in the city of Giessen, Germany.

Time taken: 03/29/1945
Filming location: Giessen, Germany

35. Fourteen-year-old German teenagers, soldiers from the Hitler Youth, captured by units of the 3rd US Army in April 1945. Berstadt, province of Hesse, Germany.

Time taken: April 1945
Location: Berstadt, Germany

36. Adolf Hitler awards young members of the Hitler Youth in the garden of the Imperial Chancellery. This is one of the last photographs of Hitler. In the center, awarded Iron Crosses 2nd class, are young natives of Silesia: second from right is 12-year-old Alfred Czech, third from right is 16-year-old Willi Hubner, the latter also known from a photograph with Dr. Goebbels in Lauban.

Time taken: 03/23/1945

37. Adolf Hitler awards young members of the Hitler Youth in the garden of the Imperial Chancellery.

38. A boy from the Hitler Youth, armed with a Panzerfaust grenade launcher. The so-called “Last hope of the Third Reich”.

39. Sergeant Francis Daggert with a German soldier, the soldier is only 15 years old. A dozen of these were caught in the German city of Kronach.

Filming time: Kronach, Germany
Location: 04/27/1945

40. Column of prisoners on the streets of Berlin. In the foreground " last hope Germany" boys from the Hitler Youth and Volkssturm.

Time taken: May 1945

------Our------

41. Soviet children clean the boots of German soldiers. Bialystok, November 1942

Time taken: November 1942
Filming location: Bialystok, Belarus, USSR

42. 13-year-old partisan intelligence officer Fedya Moshchev. Author's annotation to the photo - “A German rifle was found for the boy”; It's probably a standard Mauser 98K with the stock sawed off to make it easier for the boy to handle.

Time taken: October 1942

43. The commander of the rifle battalion, Major V. Romanenko (in the center), tells the Yugoslav partisans and residents of the village of Starchevo (in the Belgrade area) about the military affairs of the young intelligence officer - Corporal Vitya Zhaivoronka. Back in 1941, near the city of Nikolaev, Vitya joined a partisan detachment, in 1943 he voluntarily joined one of the units of the Red Army that stormed Dnepropetrovsk, and was awarded the Order of the Red Star for participating in battles with the Nazis on Yugoslav soil. 2nd Ukrainian Front.

Stars. 2nd Ukrainian Front.
Time taken: October 1944
Location: Starčevo, Yugoslavia

44. Young partisan Pyotr Gurko from the detachment “For Soviet Power”. Pskov-Novgorod partisan zone.

Time taken: 1942

45. The commander of a partisan detachment presents the medal “For Courage” to a young partisan reconnaissance officer. The fighter is armed with a 7.62 mm Mosin rifle.

Time taken: 1942

46. ​​Soviet teenage partisan Kolya Lyubichev from the partisan unit A.F. Fedorov with a captured German 9-mm MP-38 submachine gun in a winter forest.

Nikolai Lyubichev survived the war and lived to an old age.
Time taken: 1943

47. Portrait of 15-year-old partisan reconnaissance Misha Petrov from the Stalin detachment with a captured German 9-mm MP-38 submachine gun. The fighter is belted with a Wehrmacht soldier's belt, and behind his boot is a Soviet anti-personnel grenade RGD-33.

Time taken: 1943
Filming location: Belarus, USSR

48. Son of the regiment Volodya Tarnovsky with his comrades in Berlin.

Time taken: May 1945
Filming location: Berlin, Germany

49. Son of the regiment Volodya Tarnovsky with comrades in Berlin

Lieutenant (?) Nikolai Rubin, senior lieutenant Grigory Lobarchuk, corporal Volodya Tarnovsky and senior sergeant Nikolai Dementyev.

50. The son of the regiment Volodya Tarnovsky signs an autograph on the Reichstag column

The son of the regiment, Volodya Tarnovsky, signs an autograph on a Reichstag column. He wrote: “Seversky Donets - Berlin,” and signed for himself, the regiment commander and his fellow soldier who supported him from below: “Artillerymen Doroshenko, Tarnovsky and Sumtsov.”

51. Son of the regiment.

52. Sergeant S. Weinshenker and Technical Sergeant William Topps with the son of the 169th Air Base Regiment special purpose. Name unknown, age - 10 years old, served as an assistant weapons technician. Poltava airfield.

Time taken: 1944
Filming location: Poltava, Ukraine, USSR