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British contributions to the successful decryption of German Enigma
messages at Bletchley Park and elsewhere are well known. Lesser
known, but of equal importance, were German achievements in
decrypting 'secure' transatlantic voice circuits between the White
House and Whitehall. In August 1941, to address common concerns,
Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Winston Churchill first met aboard
warships at the U.S. Naval Operating Base at Placentia Bay,
Newfoundland. Guarded references to the proposed meeting had been
intercepted, and the German High command had ordered that the
meeting be prevented or disrupted at all costs. Noted naval author
J. F. (Jack) Leahy recounts events leading to the historic meeting,
especially the morning of Sunday, August 10, 1941, when the two
leaders met aboard HMS Prince of Wales. The story unfolds through
many perspectives: that of Roosevelt's staff; Churchill and his
colleagues; the German High Command and the U-boats crews deployed
to intercept Prince of Wales enroute; and focuses upon a small team
of U.S. Navy communications specialists, who inadvertently and with
limited support from their superiors intercepted vital
communications between German coast watchers and a team of
saboteurs landed by U-boat on the island's south coast. Fleet
Admiral William (Bull) Halsey remarked after the war: "There are no
great men. There are only ordinary men, such as you and I, who are
forced by circumstances to overcome great challenges. There are no
great men." This lightly fictionalized book is the story of
ordinary men and women, of both the Allied and Axis forces, and
their efforts to overcome extraordinary challenges at a critical
"hinge point" of modern history. It contains twenty-six black and
white photographs and eleven maps and navigation charts.
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