In less than six hours in August 1942, nearly 1,000 British, Canadian, and American commandos died in the French port of Dieppe in an operation that, for decades, seemed to have no real purpose. Was it a dry-run for D-Day, or perhaps a gesture by the Allies to placate Stalin’s impatience for a second front in the west? Canadian historian David O’Keefe uses hitherto classified intelligence archives to prove that this catastrophic and apparently futile raid was, in fact, a mission set up by Ian Fleming of British Naval Intelligence as part of a “pinch” policy designed to capture material relating to the four-rotor Enigma Machine that would permit codebreakers like Alan Turing at Bletchley Park to turn the tide of the Second World War.
Secret Pigeon Service : Operation Columba, Resistance and the Struggle to Liberate Europe
Gordon Corera
audiobookScottish History For Dummies
William Knox
audiobookEnemy Coast Ahead---Uncensored
Guy Gibson
audiobookTestimony of a Resistance Fighter : My Story as a Resistance Fighter in France During World War II
Raymond Heymann
audiobookSisters in Captivity : Sister Betty Jeffrey OAM and the courageous story of Australian Army nurses in Sumatra, 1942–1945
Colin Burgess
audiobookbook1945
Tom Pocock
audiobookSAS : The History of the SAS
Joshua Levine
audiobookSecret Alliances : Special Operations and Intelligence in Norway 1940–1945 – The British Perspective
Tony Insall
bookIntrepid’s Last Case
William Stevenson
audiobookNo More Secrets - My part in codebreaking at Bletchley Park and the Pentagon (Unabridged)
Betty Webb
audiobookOperation Biting : The 1942 Parachute Assault to Capture Hitler’s Radar
Max Hastings
audiobookWorld War II: Ep 1. The Road to War : September-December 1939
Liam Dale
audiobook
Vera
2024-04-21
Intressant, om än mycket långvindlande.
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