D-Day Cover Up at Pointe du Hoc e-bog
77,76 DKK
(inkl. moms 97,20 DKK)
A follow-up to the New York Times-bestselling The Cover-Up at Omaha Beach. ';The second volume of the epic study breaks new ground.' Firetrench Gary Sterne, a keen collector of militaria and co-founder of The Armourer and Skirmish magazines, has always been fascinated by the D-Day landings. In particular he was intrigued by the lack of precise information relating to the mystery of the ';missi...
E-bog
77,76 DKK
Forlag
Pen & Sword Military
Udgivet
30 marts 2019
Længde
1160 sider
Genrer
1DDF
Sprog
English
Format
pdf
Beskyttelse
LCP
ISBN
9781526715982
A follow-up to the New York Times-bestselling The Cover-Up at Omaha Beach. ';The second volume of the epic study breaks new ground.' Firetrench Gary Sterne, a keen collector of militaria and co-founder of The Armourer and Skirmish magazines, has always been fascinated by the D-Day landings. In particular he was intrigued by the lack of precise information relating to the mystery of the ';missing guns' of Pointe du Hoc. His research led to the finding of a map which indicated the position of an ';unknown' German gun position buried in the village of Maisy. The rediscovery of the Maisy Batteries made headline news around the world and his bestselling book The Cover-Up at Omaha Beach subsequently changed the history of the Omaha sector and made many start to question the Rangers' Pointe du Hoc mission. The Maisy site is now one of the major Normandy D-Day attractions. For the first time ever this follow-up book now offers complete Rangers history for the seven months prior to D-Day and does so using period documents, many of which have only recently been released from TOP SECRET status in U.S. Archives. The author fills in the gaps that many have only guessed at concerning the Rangers' real missions on D-Day, he explains why a battalion commander was removed hours before the landings, why the Rangers were not briefed on their actual D-Day missions and the extraordinary role that Lt. Col. Rudder played at Pointe du Hoc. This book is a historical game-changer that pulls no punches.