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Recommended book | Churchill's Non-Gentleman's War

author:Lennylee's broken thoughts
Recommended book | Churchill's Non-Gentleman's War
Recommended book | Churchill's Non-Gentleman's War

This book is one of the few wonderful documentary works that tells the legendary story of the British explosives sleeper force led by the British Colin Gerbins and bomb expert Milith Jeffries during World War II. In the early days of the war, Jeffries found that hiring non-military factories to make high-quality weapon accessories could achieve the most efficient use of weapons and equipment, and could hide the manufacturing ability to avoid bombing in war. Later, the heads of the demolition squad selected by Gerbins were all from aristocratic schools, because he felt that these well-born people had a strong personality, did not panic in case of trouble, and really played a miraculous role. Later, as the war progressed, they found that even if you sent a British spy who was proficient in the Chinese of the fall, it could still be quickly identified, so they opened a secret base to train the retreating soldiers of the European continent to britain, and later the Norwegian and Czech soldiers were thrown back into the country to have a miraculous effect in the secret explosion. Jeffries' innovative weapon , the Hedgehog Gun , was used on American warships to inflict devastation on Japanese submarines , but unfortunately the heroes were abandoned by Churchill after the war , and did not receive the praise and reuse they deserved.

After all, in the face of national interests and foreign invasion, any effective way of resisting and counterattacking is understandable and acceptable, especially in the face of an enemy like Nazi Germany, and it is timely to destroy the Nazis in a Nazi way. This book tells the story of the British special operations outside the frontal battlefield of World War II, including recruiting and training guerrillas, developing and producing secret weapons, and then bombing, assassinating, and destroying the German-occupied rear of the European continent again and again by crossing the sea, airdropping, and infiltrating into the German-occupied rear of the European continent. Sadly, although these covert operations and members were quickly officially dismantled and scattered after the war with churchill's defeat of the Labour Party, as if they never existed, at least two stories have been passed down in surprising ways: Ian, the brother of Kent guerrilla leader Peter Fleming, who later modeled the famous secret agent 007, and Tucker, an apprentice sent by bomb expert Jeffries to the United States, to modify his hollow bomb into a bomb trigger device used to bomb Nagasaki. Changed the course of the war in the Far East.

When war breaks out, if you are not lucky enough to side with the overwhelming superiority of one side, you will inevitably find yourself standing naked in a waist-deep pit of poisoned, and the only way to win is to open the mouth of the equally naked opponent opposite and shove the poisonous into his throat. There is no decency to speak of, victory is everything, the old power, the old Koehler gentlemanly demeanor of the self-proclaimed Britain is very much spent a period of time to learn to use rogue means, fortunately, in the end they learned, fortunately they have a practical leader like Churchill. Another point of this book is that you must be careful of the "Uncle Tungsten" type of action super-mentally armed bear children, this crowd is too dangerous, homemade mortars to kill the headmaster's greenhouse guys more than 200 meters away and the guys who can make magnetic bombs with anise condoms and bowls bought from the supermarket are too dangerous, in the war years are priceless comrades-in-arms, in peacetime it will be maddening, a very interesting book, you can see the mind, action, wisdom, humor, eclectic and unloading donkeys, praise.

Baker Street will be secretly abolished, just as it was secretly established. January 15, 1946 – Exactly five months after Japan's surrender, the Gerbins organization ceased to exist because of a single document. Baker Street employees were to be disbanded and the office building was to be converted to civilian use. No one would have known about the extraordinary actions that were once planned at 64 Baker Street. The most legendary organization, once funded by the British government, ended in a bland ending. This is a shame. Ernest Bevin's farewell letter made no mention of heroic underground activity, daring sabotage, and the destruction of bridges and railroads. Nor has there been any mention of the successful deeds of the 7,500 parachutes of hundreds of brave team members into enemy-occupied areas. Not to mention the most stale moment of the war, a guerrilla operation led by Eddie Myers and Chris Woodhouse in Greece and the Balkans that held back 50 enemy troops.

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