Scotland’s WW2 radio nationalist was really Scottish Lord Haw-Haw
Donald Grant was a Nazi stooge and ‘rabid fascist’ acting on Goebbels’ orders – not a patriot promoting freedom on airwaves, say researchers
![Donald Grant who broadcast Nazi pro-independence propaganda to Scots](https://cdn.statically.io/img/www.telegraph.co.uk/content/dam/news/2024/07/18/TELEMMGLPICT000386017915_17213232916330_trans_NvBQzQNjv4Bq1_lY_I-_hc2dt60EsTX9i2o9k3b3pb0GvgMe7B3YgDo.jpeg?imwidth=350)
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Donald Grant was a Nazi stooge and ‘rabid fascist’ acting on Goebbels’ orders – not a patriot promoting freedom on airwaves, say researchers
Option to donate removed from party website prompts campaigners to claim victory
He ended the Second World War with 16 confirmed successes from 116 missions, miraculously avoiding any enemy fire or mechanical failure
Margot Friedländer graces the front of the fashion bible’s latest love-themed German issue, reminding readers ‘what unites us’
The massacre of 156 unarmed Canadian men by the 12th SS Panzer Division has been mostly lost to history
Why do we never see Pro-Palestine activists protesting about the genocide in Sudan?
Three gliders landed barely 100 yards from the bascule bridge over the Orne canal at Bénouville as part of Operation Deadstick
‘The long shadow of Auschwitz’ led him to demonstrate for peace and support Liberation Theology in Latin America and civil rights in the USA
D-Day was a triumph of military mass against an enemy that thought it was more technically advanced. There are chilling parallels today
As the 80th anniversary of D-Day arrives, a flotilla of books offer new views of the invasion of Normandy. We pick the ones you must read
My Sins Go With Me, by Martin Sixsmith, uses interviews with survivors to survey the horrific Nazi invasion of the Netherlands in 1940
Björn Höcke, AfD leader in eastern state of Thuringia, convicted of repeating phrase expressed by Hitler’s stormtroopers
Yael van der Wouden’s 1960s-set romantic novel, The Safekeep, asks hard questions about Dutch history, but ducks the most difficult answer
To mark the 80th anniversary of D-Day, we’re asking Telegraph readers to send us their relatives and loved ones’ stories from the conflict
No one wanted to believe their neighbours may be radicalising around them... until a seemingly-ordinary German trio committed mass murder
Archaeologists make discovery while digging at Wolf’s Lair in Poland, which once served as Hitler’s headquarters
As Giles Milton’s The Stalin Affair reveals, Archibald Clark Kerr charmed everyone – including his ‘possum’, the genocidal dictator
What happens when the ‘victim’ of a ‘cruel’ joke finds it hilarious? Humourless moralists realise discomfort isn’t deadly
Soviet mole revealed in new book as the possible figure behind traitor codenamed Josephine, who leaked secret plans to Germans in 1944
Miguel Berge expresses admiration for the scene in which the hotelier, played by John Cleese, offends German guests
Newly released records by National Archives show John Hipkin was 14 when he was captured whilst serving as a cabin boy in the merchant navy
At a new museum inside Schloss Colditz, our writer hears tales of derring-do involving abseiling, dirty laundry and a sewing machine
The stockbroker organised Kindertransport trains to bring children to Britain from Czechoslovakia