Episodi

  • Episode 53 - Operation Mincemeat: The Spy Who Came in from the Sea
    Jun 20 2026

    In 1943, the Allies faced a problem: everyone knew Sicily was the obvious next target. To make Operation Husky succeed, British intelligence needed the Germans to believe the real invasion would strike somewhere else. Their solution was audacious, macabre, and almost absurd: take the body of Glyndwr Michael, create a fictional Royal Marine officer named Major William Martin, attach forged invasion plans to his wrist, and let him wash ashore in neutral Spain.

    In this episode of The Rum Ration, Rejoy and Colin unpack Operation Mincemeat, one of the Second World War’s most successful deception operations. It is a story of espionage, forgery, bureaucracy, Spanish neutrality, German overconfidence, and extraordinary attention to detail. But beneath the dark humour lies a human story too: the real man whose identity was hidden for decades, and whose death helped change the course of the war in the Mediterranean.

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    41 min
  • Episode 52 - Strategic Bombing: The Theory of Terror
    Jun 13 2026

    Rejoy and Colin tackle one of the darkest questions in modern warfare in our latest episode of The Rum Ration Podcast:

    Can bombing civilians actually break a nation's will to fight?

    Beginning with Colin’s visit to the haunting ruins of Hamburg’s St. Nikolai Memorial and Rejoy’s experiences living in post-war Germany, this episode traces the evolution of strategic bombing from the Zeppelin raids of the First World War to the firestorms of Hamburg, the skies over Vietnam, and the modern doctrine of “Shock and Awe.”

    Along the way, we examine the theories of air power advocates who believed that terror from above could force populations to surrender, and compare those ideas against the historical record. Did bombing campaigns achieve their intended political objectives? Or did they harden civilian resolve and create a different kind of endurance?

    We also explore the Royal Montreal Regiment’s own experiences under Luftwaffe attack during the Battle of Britain, reminding us that strategic bombing was not an abstract concept, but a lived reality for thousands of Canadian soldiers.

    This is an episode about technology, strategy, leadership, and, above all, the resilience of ordinary people caught beneath extraordinary violence.

    🎙️ Listen now and join the discussion: does air power win wars, or merely change how they are fought?

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    52 min
  • Episode 51 - Delayed Homecoming: The Kinmel Riot of 1919
    May 30 2026

    In March 1919, long after the guns had fallen silent on the Western Front, nearly 20,000 Canadian soldiers found themselves trapped in another kind of battlefield: Kinmel Park, a bleak repatriation camp in North Wales.

    In this episode of The Rum Ration Podcast, Colin and Rejoy unpack the forgotten and deeply troubling story of the Kinmel Park Riots, where frustration, poor leadership, broken promises, and brutal living conditions erupted into deadly violence.Separated from their original units, unpaid, overcrowded, freezing, and stuck in administrative limbo after surviving the trenches of the First World War, these men were pushed to a breaking point.

    What followed was one of the most serious episodes of unrest involving Canadian troops overseas: looting, arson, clashes with loyal troops, and ultimately Canadians firing on Canadians.The episode explores the failures of command, the chaos of demobilization, the deaths of five soldiers who never made it home, and the military effort to quietly bury the scandal.

    More than a mutiny story, Kinmel is a stark reminder that when leadership breaks its covenant with those who serve, the consequences can be tragic.

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    37 min
  • Episode 50 - 08 August 1918: The Breaking of the German Army
    May 23 2026

    At 4:20 a.m. on August 8, 1918, the silence east of Amiens shattered. No warning bombardment. No days of shellfire. Just fog, fire, tanks, and thousands of Allied soldiers moving forward behind one of the most carefully coordinated assaults of the First World War.

    In this milestone 50th episode of The Rum Ration Podcast, hosts Rejoy Chatterjee and Colin Robinson dive into the opening day of the Battle of Amiens—the moment that German commander Erich Ludendorff would forever label “the Black Day of the German Army.”

    Listeners are taken into the chaos of that August morning, where the Canadian Corps—including the 14th Battalion, the fighting lineage of The Royal Montreal Regiment—helped smash through German defenses and begin the Hundred Days Offensive.

    This is not just the story of a battle. It’s the story of the day the Western Front finally began to break.

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    47 min
  • Episode 49 - Sir Sam Hughes: Empire, Ego, and War
    May 16 2026

    In this episode of The Rum Ration, hosts Colin Robinson and Rejoy Chatterjee tackle one of the most controversial, brilliant, infuriating, and undeniably influential figures in Canadian military history: Sir Sam Hughes.

    Teacher, newspaper editor, politician, militia fanatic, and unapologetic brawler, Hughes helped build the Canadian Expeditionary Force at breakneck speed in 1914, turning the wilderness of Valcartier into a military city in mere weeks and sending tens of thousands of volunteers overseas. His fierce belief in the “citizen-soldier” helped shape Canada’s wartime identity.

    But Hughes’s legacy is anything but simple. From his disastrous defence of the Ross Rifle and the infamous MacAdam shovel, to accusations of patronage, nepotism, and his bitter feud with Sir Arthur Currie, Hughes often proved as destructive as he was visionary.

    Was Sam Hughes a patriot, a madman, or both? This episode dives deep into the man who helped launch Canada’s army—and nearly tore it apart in the process.

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    58 min
  • Episode 48: What If Rommel Controlled the Panzers on D-Day
    May 2 2026

    On the latest episode of The Rum Ration, Rejoy and Colin tackle one of military history’s most irresistible “what ifs”: what if Erwin Rommel had direct control of the German Panzer reserves on D-Day?

    Rather than drifting into fantasy, they ground the discussion in the hard realities of June 6, 1944: a fractured German command system, delayed decision-making, Allied air superiority, and the brutal geography of Normandy. The episode zeroes in on the British and Canadian sector around Caen and Juno, arguing that this was the likeliest place where an earlier, sharper German armoured response could have created a genuine crisis.

    Still, this is no cheap revisionism. Rejoy and Colin weigh Rommel’s instincts against the enormous strength and redundancy built into Overlord, and against the stubborn resistance of Allied troops already ashore. The conclusion is both sober and compelling: Rommel probably could not have repulsed the invasion, but he might have made Normandy even bloodier and more dangerous than it already was.

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    49 min
  • Episode 46 - Shot At Dawn: Canadians executed in WW1
    Apr 18 2026

    In this episode of The Rum Ration, Rejoy and Colin explore one of the darkest and least understood chapters of Canada’s First World War: the 25 Canadian soldiers executed by their own side, “shot at dawn.” Through the story of Private Fortunat Auger of The Royal Montreal Regiment, we examine the brutal logic of military discipline in trench warfare and the impossible strain placed on ordinary volunteers.

    Auger was not a simple victim, nor a villain. He was a Montreal architect, an early volunteer, and a man who endured the horrors of Ypres and Festubert before repeatedly deserting the line. His execution in March 1916 became a warning to others, meant to preserve discipline in a citizen army under unbearable pressure.

    This episode looks beyond easy judgments to ask harder questions about fear, duty, morale, and how armies chose to enforce obedience. It is a sobering reminder that the war claimed lives in more ways than one.

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    34 min
  • Episode 47: Five in Fifteen - The Legend of Billy Bishop
    Apr 18 2026

    On this episode of The Rum Ration, Rejoy and Colin take listeners into the life and legend of Billy Bishop, Canada’s most famous and most controversial First World War air ace. Beginning with his dramatic final patrol over the Western Front on 19 June 1918, the episode explores both the astonishing exploits that made Bishop a national hero and the lingering questions that still surround his record.

    From his unruly youth in Owen Sound and his gift for marksmanship to his rise in the Royal Flying Corps and Royal Air Force, Bishop emerges as a bold, complex, and deeply individualistic figure. The episode also examines the machines and tactics that shaped aerial combat, especially Bishop’s “lone wolf” style of flying, which brought spectacular success but also fuels debate among historians.

    Rather than offering simple hero worship or easy dismissal, Rejoy and Colin tackle the harder question: how should we understand Billy Bishop today?

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    1 ora e 6 min