Who's Who in World War IIJohn Keegan Routledge, 11/09/2002 - 192 من الصفحات First Published in 2004. World War II, unlike World War I, was truly a global conflict, fought in every one of the five continents, from the Caribbean to the South China Sea, from New Guinea to the North Cape, and by combatants from every continental region, Latin America, the Balkans, Scandinavia, the Middle East, South Asia and Africa as well as from Europe and North America. It was also, as World War I had not been, a conflict of ideologies. Its dramatis personae was therefore of a peculiar richness, including not only soldiers and statesmen of orthodox background but three dictators of world stature—Hitler, Mussolini and Stalin, demagogues like Goebbels and ideologues like Alfred Rosenberg, politicians of charismatic power, like Franklin Delano Roosevelt, prophets of national renaissance, like Charles de Gaulle, and of national liberation like Mahatma Gandhi, showmen, mountebanks, martyrs, heroes, traitors and quislings—a word we owe to the politics of World War II. This book attempts to assemble the most important among this vast cast of characters, from every country and from every sphere of responsibility— or irresponsibility—and to convey not only the salient facts about the life and career of each but also the flavor of their individuality. |
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... captured by the Russians and interned in Lubianka jail where the Red Army tried to recruit him. After the German invasion of the USSR he was freed and set about tracing the Poles who had been held in camps after 1939. The Soviets were ...
... captured by the Russians and interned in Lubianka jail where the Red Army tried to recruit him. After the German invasion of the USSR he was freed and set about tracing the Poles who had been held in camps after 1939. The Soviets were ...
الصفحة 6
... captured the Kasserine Pass but had to fall back for lack of support. Arnim then decided to go through with his own Ochsenkopf plan to take Béja, but as it should have been initiated earlier he failed to make any progress. In March ...
... captured the Kasserine Pass but had to fall back for lack of support. Arnim then decided to go through with his own Ochsenkopf plan to take Béja, but as it should have been initiated earlier he failed to make any progress. In March ...
الصفحة 8
... captured. He spent the rest of the war in POW (Prisoner of War) camps. Badoglio, Field Marshal Pietro, 1871–1956 ... capture of Monte Sabotino in August 1916. He negotiated the armistice at the end of the war. He was their Chief of Staff ...
... captured. He spent the rest of the war in POW (Prisoner of War) camps. Badoglio, Field Marshal Pietro, 1871–1956 ... capture of Monte Sabotino in August 1916. He negotiated the armistice at the end of the war. He was their Chief of Staff ...
الصفحة 15
... capture of Buna and retained command of Australian Land Forces in New Guinea. The Australians had to patrol Japanese troop concentrations at Wewak and in the Solomons. Under pressure from MacArthur he planned operations by Australian ...
... capture of Buna and retained command of Australian Land Forces in New Guinea. The Australians had to patrol Japanese troop concentrations at Wewak and in the Solomons. Under pressure from MacArthur he planned operations by Australian ...
الصفحة 18
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Admiral Air Force aircraft Allied American appointed Commander April Army Group Army Group North arrested attack August Battle became bombers bombing Britain British Burma Cabinet campaign captured carriers Chiang CHIANG Kai-shek Chief of Staff Churchill CHURCHILL’s Commander in Chief Conference Corps December defeat defense Deputy Division East February Field Marshal Fighter fighting Fleet fought France French Front Gaulle German Army Gestapo given command Goering Guadalcanal Hitler invaded island Italy January Japan Japanese July June King Kluge landings leader Lieutenant Luftwaffe MacArthur major March Marshal Sir military mission Moscow Mussolini naval Navy Nazi negotiate North Africa November October offensive officer Operation Overlord operations Pacific Panzer Pearl Harbor Philippines planning Poland President Prime Minister Red Army replaced resigned resistance Rommel Roosevelt RUNDSTEDT Russian sent September served Soviet Special Operations Executive Stalin Stalingrad Stavka Stilwell strategic surrender took tried troops USSR Vice-Admiral victory Who’s World World War II