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Hearts Of Iron 3 Timelapse - Operation Barbarossa 1941 - Scenario

Hey Guys And welcome to another Timelapse on Hearts of Iron 3 Their Finest hour. Here is the timelapse for 1941 Operation Barbarossa Scenario Subscribe - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCxcBpISk4ereqwkGMYnnvug I really hope you enjoyed. If you did then please smack that Like button. If you want more timelapse on hearts of iron 3 then please subscribe ( You only need to press one button). I will upload timelapse on Asia as well. I will also try to do timelapse on the Black Ice mod which I got installed yesterday. I will end the timelapse when I see that The allies are the axis can not win anymore. For instance if Soviet union surrenders are if Germany falls June 1941: Barbarossa As most of Europe and northern Africa has fallen into the hands of Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy, as the British people stand isolated but resolute in opposition, and as the exiled governments of Europe desperately pray for the restoration of their homelands, Hitler is about to launch his most audacious doublecross... In September 1939, German armies utilizing Blitzkrieg tactics had first crushed the outclassed defenders of Poland in six weeks. The British and French remained quietly, at first, sheltering from the might of Germany behind the Maginot Line’s walls of concrete and the English Channel’s walls of water. Aerial sniping went on, and great ships on both sides rose and fell upon the fortunes of war. But, for the most part, the Allies kept their options open, feeling powerless, and somehow hoping it would all be over with the surrender of Warsaw. His mind freed from worry along the shared Polish frontier with Germany, Hitler’s neighbor Stalin turned his attention to expanding Soviet borders by whatever means necessary. Mere months after she occupied eastern Poland, as allowed by the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact, Stalin’s Red Army invaded Finland, beginning the Winter War. Finland fought with unexpected ferocity, and the Soviets were initially repelled. Eventually, the Russians wore the Finns down, and peace was concluded with large sections of border territory exchanged. Emboldened by this victory, Stalin forced territorial concessions against Romania, and against the Baltic States of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. Then, in the spring of 1940, Germany stormed into Denmark and Norway with commandos and paratroopers, thereby securing access to the Baltic Sea, and shielding its important trade routes with iron-rich Sweden. Soon after, Blitzkrieg hit the “low countries” – Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxembourg became their route around the flank of the Maginot Line into the heart of France. British and French defenders were powerless against the onslaught. The Allies were effectively defeated within two weeks, and soldiers scrambled onto evacuation transports at Dunkirk and elsewhere, desperate to save themselves as the rest of France fell and Great War veteran Marshal Pétain arranged a separate peace which allowed him to set up a collaboration government in Vichy. Much of France’s colonial empire declared with the Vichy government, while some refused. In the Far East, the Axis ally of Japan agreed to “protect” French Indochina, while things got sorted out in Europe. In the face of Hitler's series of stunning victories, only the United Kingdom stood steadfast against him. Germany attempted to destroy Britain’s Royal Air Force with precision bombing attacks, and then relented in favor of bombing cities with the intent of lowering British morale. In the end, this became Germany’s first defeat – in the RAF’s “finest hour” they caused the Luftwaffe so many casualties that the Battle of Britain became unsustainable as a daily campaign. Sporadic strategic bombing continued throughout the war, later coming to include even Germany’s high-tech rocket weapons, but after the summer of 1940, Hitler gave up on invading across the English Channel, and turned his sights elsewhere. The North African theatre of war was an interesting sidelight to the campaigns in Europe. British General Montgomery fenced with German Field Marshal Rommel across the desert sands of Libya and Egypt. This became one of the longest running back-and-forth campaigns of the war, and one of the earliest moments of decision came when Rommel besieged a British enclave at Tobruk, which held from April until relieved in November 1941. Having delayed his offensive into Soviet Russia, it wasn’t until June that Germany massed its army groups for a surprise offensive into the USSR. Complete surprise was on her side, and yet this ultimately became Hitler’s biggest mistake.

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Hey Guys And welcome to another Timelapse on Hearts of Iron 3 Their Finest hour. Here is the timelapse for 1941 Operation Barbarossa Scenario Subscribe - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCxcBpISk4ereqwkGMYnnvug I really hope you enjoyed. If you did then please smack that Like button. If you want more timelapse on hearts of iron 3 then please subscribe ( You only need to press one button). I will upload timelapse on Asia as well. I will also try to do timelapse on the Black Ice mod which I got installed yesterday. I will end the timelapse when I see that The allies are the axis can not win anymore. For instance if Soviet union surrenders are if Germany falls June 1941: Barbarossa As most of Europe and northern Africa has fallen into the hands of Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy, as the British people stand isolated but resolute in opposition, and as the exiled governments of Europe desperately pray for the restoration of their homelands, Hitler is about to launch his most audacious doublecross... In September 1939, German armies utilizing Blitzkrieg tactics had first crushed the outclassed defenders of Poland in six weeks. The British and French remained quietly, at first, sheltering from the might of Germany behind the Maginot Line’s walls of concrete and the English Channel’s walls of water. Aerial sniping went on, and great ships on both sides rose and fell upon the fortunes of war. But, for the most part, the Allies kept their options open, feeling powerless, and somehow hoping it would all be over with the surrender of Warsaw. His mind freed from worry along the shared Polish frontier with Germany, Hitler’s neighbor Stalin turned his attention to expanding Soviet borders by whatever means necessary. Mere months after she occupied eastern Poland, as allowed by the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact, Stalin’s Red Army invaded Finland, beginning the Winter War. Finland fought with unexpected ferocity, and the Soviets were initially repelled. Eventually, the Russians wore the Finns down, and peace was concluded with large sections of border territory exchanged. Emboldened by this victory, Stalin forced territorial concessions against Romania, and against the Baltic States of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. Then, in the spring of 1940, Germany stormed into Denmark and Norway with commandos and paratroopers, thereby securing access to the Baltic Sea, and shielding its important trade routes with iron-rich Sweden. Soon after, Blitzkrieg hit the “low countries” – Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxembourg became their route around the flank of the Maginot Line into the heart of France. British and French defenders were powerless against the onslaught. The Allies were effectively defeated within two weeks, and soldiers scrambled onto evacuation transports at Dunkirk and elsewhere, desperate to save themselves as the rest of France fell and Great War veteran Marshal Pétain arranged a separate peace which allowed him to set up a collaboration government in Vichy. Much of France’s colonial empire declared with the Vichy government, while some refused. In the Far East, the Axis ally of Japan agreed to “protect” French Indochina, while things got sorted out in Europe. In the face of Hitler's series of stunning victories, only the United Kingdom stood steadfast against him. Germany attempted to destroy Britain’s Royal Air Force with precision bombing attacks, and then relented in favor of bombing cities with the intent of lowering British morale. In the end, this became Germany’s first defeat – in the RAF’s “finest hour” they caused the Luftwaffe so many casualties that the Battle of Britain became unsustainable as a daily campaign. Sporadic strategic bombing continued throughout the war, later coming to include even Germany’s high-tech rocket weapons, but after the summer of 1940, Hitler gave up on invading across the English Channel, and turned his sights elsewhere. The North African theatre of war was an interesting sidelight to the campaigns in Europe. British General Montgomery fenced with German Field Marshal Rommel across the desert sands of Libya and Egypt. This became one of the longest running back-and-forth campaigns of the war, and one of the earliest moments of decision came when Rommel besieged a British enclave at Tobruk, which held from April until relieved in November 1941. Having delayed his offensive into Soviet Russia, it wasn’t until June that Germany massed its army groups for a surprise offensive into the USSR. Complete surprise was on her side, and yet this ultimately became Hitler’s biggest mistake.

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