History remembers the big things: the empires and the great kings and conquerors. But often it is common men who turn the tides. In the right place, at the right time, they stand in the path of history and by their will alter its course, like at the 1940 Battle of Drøbak Sound. Image
1/ In early 1940 the Second World War was going well for Germany. Having recaptured most of the former German Empire, they were enjoying the period known at the Phoney War, when Great Britain and France sat around and did nothing while the Germans took their half of Poland. Image
2/ But the Germans were not done, their war machine desperately needed Swedish iron ore. To create a buffer against Allied interdiction, and to give the Kriegsmarine access to more Atlantic ports, they decided to add neutral Norway to their win column. Image
3/ Their plan was simple, sail their brand new, state of the art heavy cruisers right up the fjord to Oslo, capture the king and the state gold reserves, and the rest of the country will fall in line.

The Kriegsmarine Kampfgruppe sailing to Oslo was small but extremely powerful. Image
4/ Leading the German battle line was the heavy cruiser Blücher, less than a year old. At the time, battleships still ruled the Atlantic. The only one sunk so far in the war had been an old one, sunk in harbor at anchor, by a submarine.
5/ Both sides assumed their heavy surface fleets would bring victory. The Blücher was a ship built semi-illegally under the German re-armament effort.

It was 18,000 tons, carried 20 heavy guns, including eight 203mm's, and could do 32 knots on the open seas. She was a monster. Image
6/ She was designed to chase down enemy ships all over the world’s oceans, and send them mercilessly to the depths. The Blücher also carried about a thousand men of the 163rd Infantry Division, and a large number of Gestapo agents. Image
7/ They hoped to capture and garrison the Norwegian capital quickly to crush Norway's resistance. All that stood between them and another quick victory was a 64-year-old man, a company of conscripts, and guns that were half a century old. Image
8/ Norwegian Colonel Birger Eriksen had spent his long career in the Coastal Defense Artillery, back when that was a thing. He commanded the Oscarborg Fortress, which was the last line of defense before Oslo. The fort boasted 3, 280mm guns bought in 1893 from…Germany. ImageImage
9/ It also had two torpedo launchers, firing 40 year old torpedoes originally purchased from the extinct Austro-Hungarian Empire. Manning the guns were a collection of raw recruits and some trained officers, who in normal circumstances were no match for the oncoming Germans. ImageImage
10/ Eriksen knew ships were coming up the fjord, but in the dark the outposts further up could not determine whose. Were they British, or German? What Eriksen did know was that he and his motley crew were the last line of defense for his King and his country.
11/ At the time, Norwegian ROE was to fire warning shots. But Eriksen knew his poorly trained gun crews, who had only been in the Army for a week, would never be able to reload the guns in time. As the blacked out fleet crept silently nearer, he decided to disobey orders. Image
12/ Yelling that "either I will be decorated or I will be court martialed. Fire!” he ordered his guns to fire on the massive ghostly ships. The first Norwegian shell tore into the Blücher, igniting some of the 163rd’s ammunition.
13/ The second slammed into an unarmored aircraft hanger, which the Germans had wisely decided to store aviation gas and fuel in. The fire from the Blücher light up the night sky, and only then did the voices from the burning ship betray the German crews.
14/ The Blücher burned, but it kept sailing past the guns at Oscarborg, and towards Oslo, directly into the sights of Commander Andreas Anderssen (who had retired in 1927). Anderssen fired his torpedoes into the side of the Blücher at point blank range. Image
15/ The first struck under a turret, causing minimal damage but the second hit directly below the second shell impact, and tore the Blücher apart. Flames roared through the dying ship as it drifted in the fjord towards the inevitable.
16/ The German crew tried desperately to save the ship, even firing her torpedoes into the shore so they wouldn’t ignite, but it was no use. The ship and the hopes for an easy invasion and occupation were doomed to a grave in an icy Norwegian fjord.
17/ As the rest of the German flotilla turned back, the brand new Blücher rolled over and sunk, taking almost a thousand soldiers, sailors, and Gestapo agents with it. One old man, his two old guns and his old torpedoes had stood between the might of Germany and his king, and won Image
18/ He had given his government the day it needed to evacuate Oslo, and to organize a hasty defense. The King and the gold would make it to England, where it would fund the Norwegian Resistance for the next five years of war. One man. ImageImageImage
19/ Society tells us the same old story. “Who are you, you are one person, you can’t change anything”. And most of the time, they are correct. One person rarely changes the course of history. But it can. We rarely know the moment is coming, or even is upon us. But we can prepare.
20/ I didn’t know Colonel Eriksen, but I am certain he prepared in his mind for that night. He readied himself both technically and mentally for this decision, and when his time came, he did not freeze. The same is true for us.
21/ We don’t know if we will be asked to answer the call of history, but we can prepare. Maintaining a sharp mental and physical edge, not giving into mental atrophy and refusing the black pill are the only way we will be fit enough to answer that bell. Image
22/ Eriksen had as much right as anyone to take a black pill. With his useless ass troops and old ass guns, he had no chance against Germany's best, right? Instead he stood his ground and fought. And today Blücher's anchor sits on display in Oslo as a war trophy. Image
23/ He deprived his new enemy of one of the crown jewels on their fleet, and did as much as any regular man to win the largest war in human history.

While generals may have their names etched into immortality, they rarely are the ones who win their most famous battles.
24/ It is us. You and me. The regular people who actually shape history. As long as we have done everything we can to prepare for the night our own Blücher rolls down our fjord, we too will have our chance.

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with Voödoo 6 von Inyanga

Voödoo 6 von Inyanga Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @6Voodoo

Feb 8
I want to be on the side that cares about what is said, and doesn’t clap like a seal at what a famous person says no matter what pours out of their self indulgent mouth. The side where even small accounts feel safe standing up to a bigger ally and say “look, you got this wrong”
I want to be on the side that refines and hardens itself and it’s Allies into a message we can all stand behind, one that I know won’t betray me when they feel scared because I’m anonymous. Not the side that group thinks itself into zealotry.
I want people who aren’t trapped in simplistic binary thinking. Ones who can recognize that some anons on here generate the quality of content that celebrities can only dream of, and don’t see it as a false good/bad dichotomy.
Read 5 tweets
Feb 5
What your favorite WW2 airplane says about you.

If you don't see your favorite plane, I think we both know what that means.
The Old Guard
You were beautiful once. The stuff legends were made of. People once trembled in fear as you walked by. Kids talked about you. But the years went on, and you didn't change, and well, time is what time is, but you were as good once as you ever were
The Deathwish Crew
You approach life either slow or fast as fuck. You have a wanton disregard for your own safety, as well as the safety of one other person. Voted most likely to say "hey, watch this" you play Eminem's Lose Yourself on repeat, because you only got one shot.
Read 18 tweets
Feb 2
Modern society and social media demand instant gratification, but history shows us that sometimes the best victories are won generation to generation, with each handing the next a brick in the wall. How a father saved Europe in the Second Mongolian Invasion of Hungary in 1285.
2/ In 1241, the Mongols were the dominant military power in the world, stretching from Korea in the East to the very borders of modern Europe. With the defeat of the every nation to the east, only two states, Hungary and Poland stood between the Mongols and Western Europe.
3/ King Béla IV of Hungary lead a fractured kingdom rife with political and religious infighting, unchecked immigration from Eastern tribes fleeing the Mongols, and an unreliable Europe to his rear. Béla knew the Mongols were coming.
Read 27 tweets
Jan 23
1/ Humans often view the institutions of their time as permanent. This is folly. Not only is history filled with examples to the contrary, but it is our duty to shatter institutions that have outlived their purpose. The Mongol Siege of Baghdad in 1258:
2/ For those of us who have been to the Islamic world, it is difficult to picture what the Islamic Golden Age was like.
3/ Lasting almost 600 years, the Islamic world, namely the Abbasid Caliphate in Baghdad carried the torch of knowledge and science for humanity while Europe was mired in the Dark Ages.
Read 22 tweets
Jan 5
With all this talk of "amnesty" after the disastrous government/media response to the Bug and a backlash of free people, it is important we look back when elites ignored other warnings and when examples were made of them. Amnesty and the 1221 Destruction of the Khwarazmian Empire Image
1/ In 1218, a 400 person trade caravan arrived at the Khwarazmian city of Otrar from their eastern neighbors on the steppes of Asia, the Mongol tribes. The Mongols in 1218 were far from the unified juggernaut they would become. ImageImage
2/ They were still a generation or more from reaching Budapest and threatening the west. They had fought barbaric wars in China, but the Mongol leader Genghis was consolidating his control over the steppe tribes. Image
Read 28 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us on Twitter!

:(