Bültmann & Gerriets
Churchill and the Montgomery Myth
von R W Thompson
Verlag: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Taschenbuch
ISBN: 978-1-59077-396-3
Erschienen am 25.04.2014
Sprache: Englisch
Format: 216 mm [H] x 140 mm [B] x 15 mm [T]
Gewicht: 322 Gramm
Umfang: 272 Seiten

Preis: 19,00 €
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Klappentext
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Biografische Anmerkung

This is perhaps the most revealing case history of the politics of modern warfare ever set down. It is a story of a time when image making and public relations took precedence over strategy at the cost of thousands of lives. It is the story of the distortion of history and the promulgation of questionable glory.
By August 1942, disaster had struck Great Britain in every theater of war, Singapore had fallen; Crete was gone; the Egyptians were hammering at Egypt. The British Navy and Air Force were being repulsed, and Churchill wrote: ¿I should have then vanished from the scene and the harvest would have been ascribed to my belated disappearance.¿ The shadow of becoming a second class power was already falling on Britain, and Churchill and his generals were about to be eclipsed by Roosevelt and the strength of America. Churchill was desperate for victory and a glamorous hero.
General Auchinleck, commander of Britain¿s Eighth Army, had already fought a successful battle at El Alamein. But Churchill needed something more theatrically effective than what Auchinleck could provide. SO he set the propaganda machinery working to obliterate that victory. Auchinleck was sacked and replaced by Montgomery.
Although Rommel was by this time a very sick man with a weakened army, the myth of the Desert Fox was revived as well. And the second Battle of El Alamein, the one recorded in the history books, was launched. Every man played his part well, including the public relations staff, General Montgomery¿s personal photographers, the moving picture teams, and those who fell in battle.
This is a fascinating book, not just for buffs of military history, but for anyone concerned with how a war is really run in an age of propaganda.



Introduction
Part I: The Inheritance
1. Churchill's Agony
2. Redemption
3. Catharsis
Part II: The Inheritors
4. The General
5. Alam Halfa: the general and the battle
6. The 15th of September
Part II: Anatomy of a Legend
7. 2nd Alamein
8. 2nd Alamein I
9. The Triumphal March
10. On to Tunis!
Part IV: Under Two Flags
11. The Allied Command
12. 'Husky'
13. Fortress Europe
14. A Soldier's Farewell
Notes
Reading List
Index



R. W. Thompson served in World War II and was promoted to Captain before he was transferred to the Intelligence Corps for training. After his release from the army he traveled extensively as a war correspondent for the Sunday Times. He attended the Nuremberg trials as a reporter. In 1951 he settled in Suffolk to write full time on military subjects.
 


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