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The complete story of the remarkable canoe raid on German ships in
Bordeaux Harbour - by the man who himself served in the Special
Boat Squadron. In 1942, before El Alamein turned the tide of war,
the German merchant fleet was re-supplying its war machine with
impunity. So Operation Frankton, a daring and secret raid, was
launched by Mountbatten' s Combined Operations and led by the
enigmatic ' Blondie' Hasler - to paddle ' Cockleshell' canoes right
into Bordeaux harbour and sink the ships at anchor. It was a
desperately hazardous mission from the start - dropped by submarine
to canoe some hundred miles up the Gironde into the heart of Vichy
France, surviving terrifying tidal races, only to face the biggest
challenge of all: escaping across the Pyrenees. Fewer than half the
men made it to Bordeaux; only four laid their mines; just two got
back alive. But the most damage was done to the Germans' sense of
impregnability. Paddy Ashdown, himself a member of the Royal
Marines' elite Special Boat Squadron formed as a consequence of
Frankton, has always been fascinated by this classic story of
bravery and ingenuity - as a young man even meeting his hero Hasler
once. Now, after researching previously unseen archives and tracing
surviving witnesses, he has written the definitive account of the
raid. The real truth, he discovers - a deplorable tale of Whitehall
rivalry and breakdowns in communication - serves only to make the
achievements of the ' Cockleshell' heroes all the more heroic.
From bestselling and prize-winning author Paddy Ashdown, a
revelatory new history of German opposition to Hitler. 'Ashdown has
a great gift for narrative history. He unearths little known
stories and places them in context with great dexterity. His new
book throws fresh and important light on a crucial topic.' JONATHAN
DIMBLEBY In his last days, Adolf Hitler raged in his bunker that he
had been betrayed by his own people, defeated from the inside. In
part, he was right. By 1945, his armies were being crushed on all
fronts, his regime collapsing with many fleeing retribution for
their crimes. Yet, even before the war started, there were Germans
very high in Hitler's command committed to bringing about his death
and defeat. Paddy Ashdown tells, for the first time, the story of
those at the very top of Hitler's Germany who tried first to
prevent the Second World War and then to deny Hitler victory. Based
on newly released files, the repeated attempts of the plotters to
warn the Allies about Hitler's plans are revealed. What is revealed
is that the anti-Hitler bomb plots, which have received so much
attention are, in fact only a small part of a much wider story; one
in which those at the highest levels of the German state used every
means possible - conspiracy, assassination, espionage - to ensure
that, for the sake of the long-term reputation of their country and
the survival of liberal and democratic values, Hitler could not be
allowed to win the war. It is a matter of record that the European
Union we have today and the nature and central position of Germany
within it, is, in very large measure, the future envisaged by the
plotters and for which they gave their lives.
Spies, bed-hopping, treachery and executions - this story of
espionage in wartime Bordeaux is told for the first time. Game of
Spies uncovers a lethal spy triangle at work during the Second
World War. The story centres on three men - on British, one French
and one German - and the duels they fought out in an atmosphere of
collaboration, betrayal and assassination, in which comrades sold
fellow comrades, Allied agents and downed pilots to the Germans, as
casually as they would a bottle of wine. In this thrilling history
of how ordinary, untrained people in occupied Europe faced the
great questions of life, death and survival, Paddy Ashdown tells a
fast-paced tale of SOE, betrayal and bloodshed in the city labelled
'la plus belle collaboratrice' in the whole of France.
From best-selling author of 'A Brilliant Little Operation', winner
of the British Army Military History prize and the Royal marines
History prize for 2013, comes the long neglected D-Day story of the
Resistance uprising and subsequent massacre on the Vercors massif -
the largest action by the French Resistance during the Second World
War. In 1941 factions of the French Resistance began to plot
against their German occupiers. Aided by Allied arms and secret
agents, they would seize the mountainous Vercors plateau in
south-eastern France in a D-Day uprising intended to divert the
Nazis from the Normandy beaches. But when muddled Allied strategy
in London and Algiers left them abandoned, the 4,500 young fighters
were left to face the might of the German Army alone. 'The Cruel
Victory' gives voice to the young fighters who fought the largest
Resistance battle of the war. It is a story of how early idealism
can turn to despair, and of the cost to those on the front line of
battle when those at the top know too little about the harsh
realities of war. It is a human story of heroic proportion.
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