What did the British or American soldier know about the German Army?
Was this knowledge accurate - and just how did he know it? There have
been several 'handbooks' of Second World War armies, but they never
tell us exactly what the Allied soldier knew at the time, or how he
was informed. This is of importance because it influenced both conduct
on the battlefield, and the way in which the soldier thought about his
enemy. The book explains the background history of the organisations
involved, followed by short chapters based around a series of original
documents. This puts the original into context and also discusses
whether the document that follows was correct in the picture it
painted, and what can be deduced about sources and the concerns of the
intelligence officers who compiled the material. Most of the documents
were produced at the time, by the British War Office or US War
Department, and cover different aspects of the German Army, including
tactics, weapons, and uniforms. Subjects include: Allied intelligence
on the German Army from 1930 onwards, British SIS / MI6 and US
Military Intelligence. The organisations responsible, how they worked,
and how they changed very rapidly with the coming of war. The role of
technology, modern – like the radio transmitter, ancient – as in
scouring libraries and periodicals, reports on military manoeuvres and
parades. Limitations of 'Ultra' The German army itself, from the tiny
force left after Versailles, to the rapid expansion in the late 1930s.
Innovation in tanks, tactics, machine guns, rocket weaponry. The
problems of gathering intelligence, not just danger, but finance,
asking the right questions and the limitations of reporting and
distribution.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781844864294
Publisert
2020
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
Conway
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter