The Strange Soldiers Who Broke Hitler’s Mind

Dark Docs March 4, 2025
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Business Inquiries: [email protected] Dark Docs brings you cinematic short military history documentaries featuring the greatest battles and most heroic stories of modern warfare, covering World War I, World War II, the Korean War, the Vietnam War, the Gulf War, and special forces operations in between. As images and footage of actual events are not always available, Dark Docs sometimes utilizes similar historical images and footage for dramatic effect and soundtracks for emotional impact. We do our best to keep it as visually accurate as possible. All content on Dark Docs is researched, produced, and presented in historical context for educational purposes. We are history enthusiasts and are not always experts in some areas, so please don't hesitate to reach out to us with questions, corrections, additional information, or new ideas at [email protected]. For all business inquiries, please reach out using the contact info below.

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In the quiet mountains of Maryland, the United States Army’s Camp Ritchie was anything but ordinary. Here, the U.S. Army trained a new breed of soldier, men tasked with turning the enemy’s language, culture, and tactics into weapons against the Reich. The camp itself was full of peculiar sights. Soldiers dressed in German uniforms drilled alongside wooden tanks painted to resemble the Wehrmacht’s finest. Towering above the recruits was Frank Leavitt, a World War 1 veteran and former professional wrestler, who taught them close combat fighting techniques. Among the recruits were thousands of German-born Jewish refugee men. With their families in concentration camps, or worse, Hitler had stripped them of their citizenship, but now, the US unit would use their very German-ness to blow apart the Nazi war machine. At Camp Ritchie, every mission began with one motto: Know your enemy. - As images and footage of actual events are not always available, Dark Docs sometimes utilizes similar historical images and footage for dramatic effect. I do my best to keep it as visually accurate as possible. All content on Dark Docs is researched, produced, and presented in historical context for educational purposes. We are history enthusiasts and are not always experts in some areas, so please don't hesitate to reach out to us with corrections, additional information, or new ideas. -

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