THE SPECTACULAR STORY OF THE PRISON BREAK STAGED BY AN ELITE GROUP OF
ALLIED PILOTS, WHO FLEW A DARING LOW-LEVEL MISSION TO BLOW HOLES IN
THE WALLS OF AMIENS JAIL AND FREE FRENCH RESISTANCE PRISONERS.
With D-Day looming, early 1944 was a time of massive intelligence
activity across northern France, and many résistants were being
captured and imprisoned by the Germans. Among the jails full of French
agents was Amiens, where hundreds awaited likely execution for their
activities.
To repay their debt of honour, MI6 requested an air raid with a
seemingly impossible brief: to simultaneously blow holes in the prison
walls, free as many men and women as possible while minimizing
casualties, and kill German guards in their quarters. The crews would
have to fly their bomb-run at an altitude of just 20ft. Despite the
huge difficulties, the RAF decided that the low-level specialists of
No. 140 Wing had a chance of success.
With the aid of first-hand accounts, explanatory 3D diagrams and
dramatic original artwork, the eminent historian Robert Lyman explains
how one of the most difficult and spectacular air raids of World War
II was pulled off, and debunks some of the myths over why the raid was
ordered in the first place.
Les mer
Freeing the French Resistance from Gestapo jail, Amiens 1944
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781472851970
Publisert
2022
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter