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Over the last 20 years, the role of unmanned aircraft systems in
modern warfare has grown at an unprecedented rate. No longer simply
used for intelligence, data collection or reconnaissance, drones
are routinely used for target acquisition and to strike enemy
targets with missiles and bombs. Organized by nationality, Military
Drones offers a compact guide to the main unmanned aerial vehicles
being flown in combat zones today. These include classics, such as
the MQ-1 Predator, primarily used for intelligence gathering; the
Black Hornet Nano, a micro UAV that is so small it can fit in the
palm of your hand and is used by ground troops for local
situational awareness; the Chinese tri-copter Scorpion, which is
ideal for the stationary observation and strike role in a built-up
area; and the French EADS Talarion, a twinjet long-endurance UAV
designed for high-altitude surveillance. Illustrated with more than
100 photographs and artworks, Military Drones provides a detailed
insight into the specialist military unmanned aerial vehicles that
play a key role in the modern battle space.
Over the last 30 years, Special Forces have become a key component
of the world's armed forces, often employing unconventional tactics
as part of airborne operations, counterinsurgency,
counterterrorism, hostage rescue, covert ops and intelligence
gathering. To carry out their role effectively, specific vehicles
have been developed for these elite units. Organized by type, the
book explores a wide range of vehicles, from the light utility
vehicles through mine-resistant protected vehicles (MRAP) to mini
bikes and quad bikes. Discover the Pinzgauer High-Mobility
All-Terrain Vehicle, a high clearance, all-wheel drive transporter
used by Delta Force and the New Zealand SAS; the fast, light Arquus
Scarab, a protected vehicle that can turn both the front and rear
wheels simultaneously, allowing it to move sideways like a crab;
the MRZR, used by the U.S. Marines for fast forward deployment and
off-road reconnaissance; the Toyota Hilux pick-up, which due to its
simplicity and rugged durability, has proved its worth in conflicts
from South America to Central Asia; and the Christini AWD
motorcycle, used by U.S. Navy SEALs in Afghanistan. Illustrated
with more than 100 photographs and artworks, Special Forces Land
Vehicles provides a detailed guide to the specialist vehicles used
by elite soldiers in the modern era.
As German forces took control of their country, a group of young
Belgians conceived an audacious plan to smuggle downed Allied
airmen and other evaders from Belgium, through France and over the
Spanish border. So began the Comet line. Many incredible escapes
followed, from safe houses in Brussels, along hazardous train
journeys via Lille to Paris, to goat paths through the Pyrenees
mountains, evading both German and Spanish border patrols. In this
gripping new study, Alexander Stilwell reveals the personalities
and motives of the Comet line founders, the British intelligence
organisation (MI9) that supported it, the campaign by the Gestapo
to destroy it, and the work of the Nazi collaborators who
infiltrated the Comet line with disastrous results. Above all, this
is the story of the incredibly brave civilians who risked their
lives to help Allied airmen and other evaders to escape from
occupied Europe.
Since the earliest recorded military history, scouting and
reconnaissance have been key tools employed by military commanders
to obtain a picture of the tactical situation and make informed
decisions. Scouts known as sciritae were deployed by the Spartans
and had a privileged position in their order of battle. The
Spartans were so aware of the advantage their scouting operations
gave them that they went to great lengths to keep them secret. As
military tactics, weapons and equipment developed over the
centuries, methods of scouting and reconnaissance evolved and
adapted but always remained true to the spirit of the scout - light
on their feet, taking only what they need and returning with the
information that could turn potential defeat into victory. Military
Reconnaissance provides a concise but revealing picture of the art
of military scouting and reconnaissance from the highly toned
Spartan warriors, the scouts employed by Julius Caesar, through the
middle ages to the Napoleonic Wars to the role of the scout in
modern warfare.
How were agents recruited for secret operations in World War II?
How did they fare once dropped behind enemy lines? How effective
were resistance movements? And how brutal were the reprisals?
Ranging from the American Office of Strategic Services (OSS), the
British Special Operations Executive (SOE) and the German Abwehr to
resistance movements across Europe, Secret Operations of World War
II is a fascinating account of the major special ops organisations
and underground cells in the conflict. Examining recruitment,
training, equipment and deployment of operatives, the book not only
reveals the ingenious steps taken to select suitable agents,
disguise weapons and gather intelligence, but also follows the
fortunes of particular agents after their operations were launched.
From such well known cases as the SOE and Norwegian agents
sabotaging Norwegian hydroelectric plants to the less explored
territory of Soviet partisans, from the Abwehr's rescue of
Mussolini to the French Maquis, from the Polish Home Army to OSS
operations in the Pacific, the book explores a wide range of secret
organisations and their intelligence gathering, sabotage and
reconnaissance missions. Illustrated with 120 black-&-white and
colour photographs, artworks and maps, Secret Operations of World
War II is an authoritative and novel perspective on some of the
most outlandish episodes of the conflict.
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