Category: WW2 Podcast

  • 275 – War, Empire and the Struggle for a New World

    275 – War, Empire and the Struggle for a New World

    In this episode, we’re turning our attention to British India during the Second World War. While the war in Europe and the Pacific often dominates the narrative, the role India played—both as a military contributor and as a nation on the cusp of independence—is often overlooked. Angus is joined by Philip Craig, author of 1945: The…

  • 274 – The Battle of Meiktila

    274 – The Battle of Meiktila

    What was the situation in Burma following the Allied victories at Imphal and Kohima? By the summer of 1944, those two hard-fought battles had marked a major turning point in the Burma campaign. Japanese forces were in retreat, and the initiative had passed firmly to the Allies. But pushing into central Burma would require bold…

  • 273 – Operation Barbarossa, June–July 1941

    273 – Operation Barbarossa, June–July 1941

    In this episode of the WW2 Podcast, we’re turning our attention to the opening phase of one of the most brutal and vast campaigns of the Second World War—Operation Barbarossa. On 22 June 1941, Hitler launched his long-anticipated invasion of the Soviet Union. In the first two weeks, the German Wehrmacht made some of its…

  • Second Front: Anglo-American Rivalry

    Second Front: Anglo-American Rivalry

    When we talk about the Second Front, most of us think of the Allied invasion of Northwest Europe—D-Day, June 1944. But in his new book, Second Front: Anglo-American Rivalry and the Hidden Story of the Normandy Campaign, historian Professor Marc Milner offers a different perspective. What if the real second front wasn’t in Normandy, but in…

  • Feeding the Bear: Lend Lease to the USSR

    Feeding the Bear: Lend Lease to the USSR

    In this episode, we’re doing something a little different. Angus recently joined Scott Bury on his podcast Beyond Barbarossa, which takes a close look at the Eastern Front of the Second World War from a Soviet perspective. Together, we explored the topic of American aid to the USSR through the Lend-Lease program. The usual narrative often paints…

  • Bruce Lockhart and the Political Warfare Executive

    Bruce Lockhart and the Political Warfare Executive

    In this episode of the WW2 Podcast, Angus is joined by Professor James Crossland to discuss the extraordinary life of Robert Bruce Lockhart — a British diplomat, journalist, author, and secret agent. Though not a household name, Lockhart was a key figure behind the scenes of 20th-century history. His career began before the First World…

  • The Diary of a German POW

    The Diary of a German POW

    In this episode of the WW2 Podcast, Angus is joined by Bernd Häber to discuss the remarkable story of his grandfather, Fritz Häber — a German soldier who became a prisoner of war in American custody at the end of World War II. During his 16 months in a U.S. POW camp, Fritz kept a…

  • The First US Army Rangers of WWII

    The First US Army Rangers of WWII

    In the early stages of America’s involvement in the Second World War, the U.S. Army began forming a new kind of fighting force—elite units trained for speed, surprise, and special operations behind enemy lines. These were the first Army Rangers, inspired by British Commandos and destined for some of the toughest missions of the war.…

  • The T-13 Tank Destroyer

    The T-13 Tank Destroyer

    During the critical interwar years, Belgium found itself walking a diplomatic tightrope—maintaining neutrality while neighbouring Germany rapidly rearmed. Faced with the growing threat of conflict, the country was forced to modernise its defences. One of Belgium’s key military developments during this period was the T-13 tank destroyer—an armoured vehicle that, although modest by international standards,…

  • Robert Capa’s D-Day Photographs

    Robert Capa’s D-Day Photographs

    On the morning of June 6th, 1944, war photographer Robert Capa waded ashore on Omaha Beach during the Allied landings in Normandy. What happened next became the stuff of legend: under withering fire, Capa supposedly captured over a hundred photographs of the chaos and courage of D-Day, only for all but eleven to be lost…