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To see the whole film go here: • Hitler Made So Many Mistakes. Why & How? E... Charles V.P. von Luttichau was a German-born military historian who worked for the U.S. Army’s Office of the Chief of Military History. Born in Germany, he served in the German Army (Wehrmacht) during World War II. After the war, he immigrated to the United States and became a U.S. citizen. Von Luttichau contributed to several official U.S. Army histories of World War II and was valued for his knowledge of German military operations and access to German-language sources. His work helped provide a more balanced and detailed understanding of German strategy and operations during the war. He is often credited in academic and military publications for research and writing on the Eastern Front, the German high command, and the collapse of Nazi Germany. His unique background as a former German officer turned American military historian gave him a rare perspective on the events of the war. Charles V.P. von Luttichau (born November 15, 1917; died May 27, 2005, in Maryland) appears in my 1989 documentary How Hitler Lost the War that is, he is featured on camera among the veterans and experts discussing the war. In the film’s cast listing, von Luttichau is credited along with other notable figures such as Adolf Galland, Johannes Steinhoff, Johann von Kielmansegg, and Erich von Manstein, indicating that he participated in the documentary in an on-screen interview capacity. Von Luttichau had been a German officer who later became a U.S.-based military historian. In the documentary, he contributes firsthand recollections and historical commentary, likely drawing on his experiences in the German Wehrmacht and his later scholarly background—offering perspective on German military operations and strategy during WWII. So, while not a household name, Charles von Luttichau is one of the interviewed German veterans featured in Hoffman’s exploration of Hitler’s strategic missteps.