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Week of Jun 26, 2026 · 9 episodes · 7h 15m total listening

Holland's Barbarossa opener is the Pick, arriving right on the 85th anniversary with the strategic clarity the subject demands. The rest of the week runs heavy on 1941–45 operational gravity — McManus on the Bataan withdrawal, Salerno's near-disaster, Patton's final drive — but Castillon sneaks in to remind us gunpowder changed everything.

🎯 This Week's Pick
We Have Ways of Making You Talk artwork
Operation Barbarossa: Seeds of Calamity (Part 1)
We Have Ways of Making You Talk · 1h03m · Jun 22
James Holland — WWII historian, author of Normandy '44 & Al Murray
World War IIStrategy & Grand Strategy

The series opener covers the strategic context of Barbarossa — why Hitler was planning an eastern invasion even during the Battle of Britain, the impact of the Nazi-Soviet Pact, and Stalin's own expansionism in Eastern Europe. Holland lays out the grand strategic picture with characteristic clarity, setting up the political and military preconditions rather than jumping straight to June 1941. Essential groundwork for what promises to be one of We Have Ways' strongest series, and the Barbarossa anniversary timing is perfect.

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🔴 Essential

The Withdrawal to Bataan with John McManus
Unauthorized History of the Pacific War · 1h11m · Jun 23
John McManus — professor of US military history, Missouri S&T; Seth Paridon — former chief historian, National WWII Museum; Jon Parshall — co-author of Shattered Sword
World War IILogistics & SupplyLeadership & Command

Seth Paridon and Jon Parshall bring back John McManus to walk through the phased withdrawal to Bataan from Christmas Eve 1941 into the New Year — one of the most difficult retrograde operations the US Army ever attempted, and a stark example of the operational weight bearing down on every theater in those early war years. The episode gives Wainwright his due as the man who actually held the northern Luzon defence together while MacArthur managed from Corregidor, and the logistics discussion — moving supplies, demolishing bridges on schedule, feeding a force that was already on short rations — is exactly the kind of unglamorous operational detail that makes this show consistently excellent. At over an hour with three knowledgeable voices, this is the Pacific War podcast at its best.

More from Unauthorized History of the Pacific War →
Operation Barbarossa: Planning The Impossible (Part 2)
We Have Ways of Making You Talk · 1h00m · Jun 24
James Holland — WWII historian, author of Normandy '44 & Al Murray
World War IIStrategy & Grand StrategyLogistics & Supply

Holland and Murray continue their Barbarossa series, digging into the interwar economic dependency between Germany and the USSR and the timeline of Hitler's decision to break the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact. Holland is at his best when he traces how Germany's resource constraints made the Soviet trade relationship both essential and strategically untenable — the economic logic of invasion gets proper treatment here rather than being reduced to ideology alone. At an hour, this has the room to breathe that the topic demands, and the series format means they're building toward the operational detail rather than rushing through it.

📅 Operation Barbarossa launched on 22 June 1941 — this series drops right on the 85th anniversary.
📎 Catching up? Part 1: Seeds of Calamity
More from We Have Ways of Making You Talk →
Salerno: The Invasion That Nearly Failed
World War 2 LIVE · 1h07m · Jun 26
Dr John C. McManus — professor of US military history, Missouri S&T & Kevin Hymel — military historian
World War IITactics & BattlesLeadership & Command

McManus and Hymel take on Operation Avalanche — the September 1943 Salerno landings that came closer to disaster than most popular accounts acknowledge, a near-collapse that captures just how punishing mid-war operations in the Mediterranean could be. The episode covers the planning failures, the German counterattack that nearly split the beachhead, and the naval gunfire that saved the operation. Good on the question of why Salerno was chosen over alternatives and what Clark's leadership actually looked like under pressure.

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The Battle of Castillon
Lions Led By Donkeys · 1h04m · Jun 22
Lions Led By Donkeys hosts
MedievalTactics & BattlesWeapons & Technology

Lions Led By Donkeys covers the 1453 Battle of Castillon — the final engagement of the Hundred Years' War, where English cavalry charged directly into entrenched French artillery positions with predictable results. The episode treats Castillon as a turning point in European warfare: the moment when gunpowder fortifications and massed cannon made the mounted charge suicidal. At an hour, there's room for the tactical setup, the English command failures, and the broader implications for how wars would be fought going forward.

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Patton, 1945
The WW2 Podcast · 45:24 · Jun 22
Angus Wallace — independent military historian
World War IILeadership & CommandTactics & Battles

Angus Wallace tracks Patton's Third Army from the Bulge aftermath through the Rhine crossing and into the final drive across Germany in early 1945 — the closing chapter of the operational intensity that defined the European war from start to finish. The episode engages honestly with Patton's command style — the aggression that made him effective and the political recklessness that made him a liability — and covers the challenges of maintaining momentum through a collapsing Reich. Good on the Rhine crossing and the race into Bavaria.

More from The WW2 Podcast →

🟡 Selections

Second Marne - The Period of Waiting
Battles of the First World War · 31:43 · Jun 24
Mike Cunha — Battles of the First World War Podcast
World War IStrategy & Grand StrategyTactics & Battles

Mike Cunha covers Foch and Pétain's planning for the anticipated German offensive in mid-1918 — the Allied decision to absorb the blow and then counterattack, which would become the Second Battle of the Marne. Properly focused on the operational and strategic level.

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First Battle of Matanikau
The History of WWII Podcast · 20:25 · Jun 25
Ray Harris Jr. — independent WWII historian
World War IITactics & Battles

Ray Harris Jr. covers the completion of Henderson Field and Vandegrift's first offensive action on Guadalcanal after an American patrol gets ambushed near the Matanikau River. Short at 20 minutes but tightly focused on the tactical situation.

🔗 Pairs well with: The Withdrawal to Bataan with John McManus – Episode 605 (Unauthorized History of the Pacific War)
More from The History of WWII Podcast →
Why did the Romans completely abandon the spear in favour of the pilum?
Ancient Warfare Podcast · 10:27 · Jun 26
Murray Dahm — editor, Ancient Warfare Magazine
AncientWeapons & Technology

Murray Dahm tackles the pilum-vs-spear question and the comparative effectiveness of slings versus bows in classical warfare. Good on the tactical logic but at 10 minutes it's a quick listener Q&A rather than a proper treatment.

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📚 Reading List

Fire and Fortitude: The US Army in the Pacific War, 1941-1943 — John C. McManus

McManus covers the early Pacific War in granular detail, including the desperate retreat to Bataan that he discusses on this week's Unauthorized History episode. His command of the ground-level experience of Fil-American forces in the Philippines is exactly what you want after hearing him talk through the withdrawal.

Via: The Withdrawal to Bataan with John McManus, Unauthorized History of the Pacific War
📖 Amazon
Patton's War: An American General's Combat Leadership — Kevin Hymel

The concluding volume of Hymel's three-part Patton biography, built on Patton's diaries and personal correspondence. It covers the final months of the European war from Third Army's perspective — exactly the period Hymel walks through with Angus on this week's WW2 Podcast.

Via: Patton, 1945, The WW2 Podcast
📖 Amazon
The Hundred Years War — Anne Curry

Listed in the Lions Led By Donkeys sources for their Castillon episode, Curry's study is the standard one-volume treatment of the conflict that ended with that disastrous English cavalry charge into French cannon. Concise, well-argued, and the right entry point if the episode left you wanting the bigger picture.

Via: The Battle of Castillon, Lions Led By Donkeys
📖 Amazon
Operation Barbarossa and Germany's Defeat in the East — David Stahel

Holland and Murray's new Barbarossa series opens with the political and strategic miscalculations on both sides leading up to June 1941. Stahel's book is the go-to operational history of those opening months, drilling into exactly why the campaign was built on flawed assumptions from the start.

Via: Inspired by Operation Barbarossa series, We Have Ways of Making You Talk
📖 Amazon

🗓 This Week in Military History

Explore more: The First Day of The Somme (Dan Snow's History Hit)

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