Audacious Missions of World War II: Daring Acts of Bravery Revealed Through Letters and Documents from the Time
By (Author) The National Archives
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Osprey Publishing
15th April 2020
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Second World War
Modern warfare
940.541
Hardback
216
Width 189mm, Height 246mm
978g
Winning the World War II was about more than military force. It required guile, and tremendous acts of bravery by Special Forces and intelligence operatives who had the odds stacked against them. Using hundreds of documents and images from The National Archives, including some that have never been seen in print before, this book reveals some of World War IIs most audacious missions. These include the SOE dossier of the plot to assassinate Hitler which shows that it was practically impossible; Operation Frankton, where commandoes paddled 100 miles upriver in canoes to Bordeaux to blow up Axis shipping; and the joint British-American Operation Fortitude where a phantom US army of inflatable tanks was planted in Kent, fooling Hitler into thinking D-Day would occur at Calais.
The National Archives at Kew is the repository of documents that record the history of the UK. Events revealed through these papers are both large and small, ranging from momentous political events to day to day happenings in the lives of ordinary individuals.