Darryl Cooper (podcaster)
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Darryl Cooper | |
---|---|
Born | United States |
Nationality | American |
Citizenship | United States |
Occupation(s) | Podcaster, writer |
Website | https://www.martyrmade.com/ |
Darryl Cooper is an American podcaster and writer, best known for hosting The MartyrMade Podcast, where he explores historical events, political themes, and contemporary issues including a 6 part series on the history of the Israel-Palestine conflict titled Fear and Loathing in the New Jerusalem. He has also co-hosted The Unraveling podcast with Jocko Willink.[1]
Cooper has been a guest on popular podcasts, including and The Joe Rogan Experience and The Tucker Carlson Show, where host Tucker Carlson called Cooper "The most important popular historian working in the United States today."[2][3]
Cooper has garnered controversy over statements made primarily surrounding Adolf Hitler, the Nazis, Winston Churchill, and World War II. Cooper’s interpretations of historical events have received widespread criticism from historians, labeling them as inaccurate and misleading.[4] He has also been accused of downplaying Nazi crimes, engaging in Holocaust revisionism, and has been labeled a "Nazi Apologist."[5]
Early Life and Background
[edit]Cooper has shared limited details about his early life. He was serving in the United States Navy at the age of 20 during the September 11, 2001 attacks. In a 2022 "Ask Me Anything" session, he reflected on his military service, expressing a shift from youthful enthusiasm for conflict to a more critical perspective on war, influenced by historical instances of government deception.[6]
Career
[edit]After his military service, Cooper transitioned into media and content creation. In 2014, Cooper launched The MartyrMade Podcast, a series dedicated to deep explorations of historical and political topics. The podcast has covered subjects such as the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and the Jonestown Massacre.[citation needed]
In collaboration with retired Navy SEAL Jocko Willink, Cooper co-hosts The Unraveling podcast. This series examines connections between historical events and contemporary issues including the Russo-Ukrainian War.[7]
Cooper has also appeared on other platforms, including The Joe Rogan Experience, where he discussed various historical and political topics.
Views
[edit]2020 United States presidential election
[edit]In 2021, Cooper gained significant attention for a viral Twitter thread attempting to explain why many supporters of former U.S. President Donald Trump believed in claims of election fraud during the 2020 U.S. presidential election. This thread was highlighted by conservative commentator Tucker Carlson and mentioned by Trump himself.[8][9]
Philip Bump at The Washington Post wrote an article in response to the incident.[8]
Holocaust revisionism
[edit]In September 2024, Cooper appeared on The Tucker Carlson Show, where he made statements that drew widespread criticism from historians, Holocaust memorial organizations, and political figures for promoting Holocaust revisionism. While discussing Nazi Germany’s 1941 invasion of the Soviet Union (Operation Barbarossa), Cooper claimed that the Nazis "went in with no plan for [handling prisoners] and they just threw these people into camps." He further asserted that "millions died, partly because the Germans didn’t have enough food to feed their own army, let alone prisoners," framing the atrocities as a result of logistical failure rather than premeditated genocide.[2] This interpretation was widely condemned as a form of Holocaust revisionism for minimizing the ideological and systematic nature of Nazi crimes.[4]
Yad Vashem, Israel’s official Holocaust memorial, denounced Cooper’s remarks as “one of the most repugnant forms of Holocaust denial of recent years,” emphasizing that the atrocities committed during Operation Barbarossa were not incidental but ideologically driven and meticulously planned. Historians note that Nazi policies such as the Hunger Plan, which deliberately redirected food from occupied Soviet territories to Germany, were intended to cause mass starvation among civilians. Additionally, mobile killing units known as Einsatzgruppen carried out mass executions of Jews, Communists, and other targeted groups with logistical support from the Wehrmacht. Cooper’s comments, suggesting that the genocide was an unplanned consequence of wartime chaos, directly contradict the historical consensus that the Nazi regime pursued a racial war of extermination from the outset.[4]
In response to the interview, all 24 Jewish Democratic members of the U.S. House of Representatives issued a joint statement condemning Cooper as a “Nazi apologist” and warning that such rhetoric promotes Holocaust revisionism under the guise of historical reinterpretation.[10] The interview also drew criticism the Anti-Defamation League's CEO Jonathan Greenblatt who labeled Cooper as a "Nazi apologist" and criticized Carlson for promoting him as an honest historian.[11]
Despite the backlash, Cooper defended his position, suggesting that the strong reactions to his interview indicate that World War II has become a sacred myth that cannot be questioned. This response was characterized as "Kafkaesque" by the conservative National Review, highlighting the problematic nature of his assertions.[12]
In March 2025, Cooper was a guest on The Joe Rogan Experience podcast.[5] During the interview, Cooper falsey claimed that Adolf Hitler opposed the Kristallnacht pogrom.[citation needed] Cooper also said that Hitler, after viewing the "sorry state" of the German people, could only sympathize with the belief that they had been "manipulated" by the Jews, and that Hitler's "antisemitism is what allowed him to love the German people." Rogan commended Cooper's views calling them comprehensive and nuanced.[5]
Winston Churchill
[edit]In a September 2024 appearance on The Tucker Carlson Show, Cooper described British Prime Minister Winston Churchill as the “chief villain of World War II,” asserting that Churchill was “primarily responsible for that war becoming what it did, becoming something other than an invasion of Poland.” Cooper alleged that Churchill’s personal ambitions and psychological makeup played a central role in escalating the war, stating that Churchill was a “psychopath” driven by a need for historical redemption following his earlier military and political failures, including the Gallipoli campaign during World War I. Cooper argued that Churchill prolonged the war unnecessarily. He claimed that the British refusal to make peace with Nazi Germany after the fall of France in 1940 led to greater destruction and set the stage for the Soviet occupation of Eastern Europe. In his words, Churchill “could have sued for peace, but he didn’t want to be remembered as the man who gave in. He wanted to be remembered as a great war hero.”[2]
These views have sparked significant backlash from historians and Churchill scholars. Andreas Koureas, writing for the Churchill Project at Hillsdale College, called Cooper’s characterization “ahistorical and ideologically driven, ignoring primary sources, diplomatic history, and Churchill’s own writings.” Koureas emphasized Churchill’s early and consistent opposition to Nazi appeasement and his efforts to rally Britain at a time when most of Europe had already fallen under Axis control. He wrote, “To call Churchill the villain of World War II is not only factually indefensible—it verges on historical inversion.”[13]
Historian Andrew Roberts, author of Churchill: Walking with Destiny, also responded to Cooper’s claims in a special episode of the School of War podcast. Roberts called Cooper’s interpretation “an act of historical vandalism” and accused him of repackaging long-discredited revisionist narratives, similar to those promoted by pro-Axis sympathizers during and after the war. Roberts emphasized Churchill’s role in forging the Allied coalition, stating, “Without Churchill, Britain may have come to terms with Hitler. Without Britain, there may have been no staging ground for D-Day. Without D-Day, the Holocaust may have never ended.”[14]
Despite criticism, Cooper has stood by his claims, arguing that Western historiography has turned Churchill into a “mythic figure” and that challenging this portrayal is essential for what he calls “a more honest reckoning with imperial and wartime legacies.” In the same interview, he likened Churchill’s mythologizing to the “sacralization of World War II,” a term he also used when discussing criticisms of his views on the Holocaust and Nazi Germany.
Other views
[edit]In a now deleted social media tweet Cooper once claimed that a picture of Adolf Hitler coming to Nazi-occupied Paris was "infinitely preferable in every way" to a picture from the Paris 2024 Summer Olympics opening ceremony of drag queens reenacting The Last Supper of Jesus with the Twelve Apostles.[15]
References
[edit]- ^ "Darryl Cooper | Substack". Substack. Retrieved 2025-03-14.
- ^ a b c "The Tucker Carlson Show - Darryl Cooper". apple.com. 2025.
- ^ Ferguson, Niall (September 5, 2024). "Niall Ferguson: The Return of Anti-History". Financial Times.
- ^ a b c Yad Vashem Denounces Remarks Made by Darryl Cooper Regarding Nazi Atrocities as Historically False
- ^ a b c Sales, Ben (March 14, 2025). "Joe Rogan hosts Holocaust revisionist on his podcast, complains of 'paranoid' Jews". Jewish Telegraphic Agency.
- ^ Darryl Cooper AMA
- ^ Unraveling Podcast
- ^ a b Bump, Philip (July 12, 2021). "The viral Twitter thread that explains right-wing conspiracy theorizing — if only inadvertently". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on July 13, 2021.
- ^ Darryl Cooper the man behind that viral 2020 twitter thread
- ^ Statement from Jewish Members of the U.S. House of Representatives.
- ^ JGreenblattADL on X
- ^ Wright, Mark Antonio (September 4, 2024). "No, Winston Churchill Was Not the 'Chief Villain' of the Second World War". National Review.
- ^ Cooper-Koureas Hillsdale College
- ^ Andrew Roberts on Winston Churchill
- ^ Lapin, Andrew (September 5, 2024). "Tucker Carlson hosts 'historian' who promotes Nazi falsehoods on Holocaust". The Jerusalem Post.