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The Kaiser's Dawn - The Untold Story of Britain's Secret Mission to Murder the Kaiser in 1918 (Paperback)
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The Kaiser's Dawn - The Untold Story of Britain's Secret Mission to Murder the Kaiser in 1918 (Paperback)
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List price R343
Loot Price R274
Discovery Miles 2 740
You Save R69 (20%)
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In mid summer 1918 the First World War was still finely balanced. A
top secret mission, which has remained classified information for a
century, was set in motion to kill Kaiser Wilhelm II. It was felt
that by killing their head of state and commander in chief it would
serve as a mortal blow to the German forces and they would collapse
very quickly after the assassination. In 2002 one of the
participants on a battlefield tour sent a disc to Col. John Hughes-
Wilson. On it was an historical treasure trove containing a Royal
Flying Corps log book and photographs of service with 25 Squadron.
Included among the effects of Lt A.R.Watts MC, of the newly formed
Royal Air Force, was the breath-taking claim that he had taken part
in a secret British mission to kill the Kaiser. This extraordinary
secret was confirmed by further research at the RAF museum and the
RAF Historical Branch. This startling but never before revealed
story was true. On 2nd June 1918, at the height of the final German
attack of WW1, the British RAF tried to assassinate the Kaiser when
he was visiting a chateau near the front. The facts are borne out
in never-before-published notebooks, maps and pilots' flying
records, kept secret for a hundred years. Copies of these records
are in the author's possession and are backed up by details tucked
away in 25 Squadron's records. But the implications of this secret
attack raise many new - and explosive - questions. Exactly who
ordered an attack to kill the Kaiser? Was it sanctioned by the
C-in-C, Sir Douglas Haig? By the War Office? Unlikely. Was the King
informed of the attempt to kill his royal cousin? Was Lloyd George,
the Prime Minister asked? We do not know; but someone in London
must have sanctioned the attack. The Official History makes no
mention of any attack, and public records say nothing. Even the RAF
Museum has no official record: but the attack really did take
place, of that there is no doubt. Other documents and various 25
Squadron log books prove it. So someone did give an order to kill
the Kaiser. But who? John Hughes-Wilson has woven an exciting and
well-paced historical novel to mark this centennial event from the
research on discovering this mission. The story, based on true
events, looks at this long hidden secret and puts it into the
context of the time. It explores areas rarely examined: secret
service operations in 1914-18; dirty, undercover intelligence work;
the very real political intrigues between Whitehall and the
generals and the heroics of the aircrew of the day, whose life
expectancy at one point in 1917 was only eleven days in action.
General
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