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John Hughes-Wilson, a former colonel in British Intelligence, set out in 2007 to go through the millions of words and thousands of pieces of evidence, to put together an intelligence jigsaw of what really happened that dreadful high noon in Dallas in 1963. The result is a dramatic exposure of what really happened and a clear indication that, while some of the pieces of that jigsaw may be missing, the truth is emerging. While the US Federal Archive still keeps a million documents relating to the case under lock and key, he has uncovered enough information available for us now to see the overall picture. It is beyond reasonable doubt that Jack Kennedy was the victim of a plot to remove the President of the United States. John Hughes-Wilson highlights the facts behind:The myth of ‘Camelot’Jack Kennedy’s insatiable sex lifeWhy Marilyn Monroe had to be silencedHow the President was blackmailed by J Edgar HooverLBJ’s corrupt and murderous secretsHow the Kennedys secretly planned a coup in CubaHow a hero of the revolution wanted to work for the CIAWhy Israel and the White House were openly at loggerheadsMHow the Mafia manipulated politicians and the CIARogue elements in the CIAHow the assassination was covered up- and whyWhat the KGB discoveredReading this book no-one can be in any doubt that JFK’s life was not at the hands of a lone deranged gunman, but a deadly plot to remove a President who threatened vested interests at home and abroad.
This book is a professional military-intelligence officer's and a controversial insider's view of some of the greatest intelligence blunders of recent history. It includes the serious developments in government misuse of intelligence in the recent war with Iraq. Colonel John Hughes-Wilson analyses not just the events that conspire to cause disaster, but why crucial intelligence is so often ignored, misunderstood or spun by politicians and seasoned generals alike.
This book analyses: how Hitler's intelligence staff misled him in a bid to outfox their Nazi Party rivals; the bureaucratic bungling behind Pearl Harbor; how in-fighting within American intelligence ensured they were taken off guard by the Viet Cong's 1968 Tet Offensive; how over confidence, political interference and deception facilitated Egypt and Syria's 1973 surprise attack on Israel; why a handful of marines and a London taxicab were all Britain had to defend the Falklands; the mistaken intelligence that allowed Saddam Hussein to remain in power until the second Iraq War of 2003; the truth behind the US failure to run a terrorist warning system before the 9/11 WTC bombing; and how governments are increasingly pressurising intelligence agencies to 'spin' the party-political line.
The Cold War was an undeclared war, fought silently and carefully between ideological opponents armed with the most fearsome weapons mankind has ever seen.
Hughes-Wilson takes a cool look at this war, from the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917 to the collapse of the Berlin Wall in 1989 and the dissolution of the USSR thereafter. He examines the suspicion and paranoia -- on both sides -- of the greatest stand-off in history. Written by one of Britain's leading, popular, military historians, this book makes accessible for the first time one of the key periods to shape our world.
He joined a hastily formed mixed battalion of reservists, regular and territorial soldiers and found himself pitchforked into the mayhem of the Battles of the Marne, the Aisne and then the drawn-out agony of Ypres as the high hopes of summer sank into the frozen trenches of the winter of 1914.
But by the time of the brief Christmas Truce with the Germans, Acting Captain Thaddeus Gunn and his men began to realise that this was going to be a long war – and one that was expanding world-wide.
Little did he know that fate – or rather, the War Office – had plans that would take the newly promoted young captain of the Sherwood Foresters to the dangerous Mediterranean shores of Gallipoli and then the hell of Loos . . . .
Reviews
“Fantastic detail. He really captures the mood both on the home front and as the troops go into battle. A really authentic piece of work.” Nick Gordon, Award winning journalist and ex-deputy editor of the Daily Mail
“If Hughes-Wilson finishes this sequence of novels it will be an unique achievement” Rick Gekoski. Chair of The Booker Prize, author and rare book dealer.
“If you enjoyed Flashman and Sharpe, you will love Tommy Gunn.” International Guild of Battlefield Guides.
“These gripping novels have the triple advantage of being superbly written, true to life down to the last military detail, and very exciting.” Prof Andrew Roberts, FR Hist S
John,
I am not clever enough to write fiction, so I take my hat off to you. You can say this:
'From the moment in this remarkable series of novels that we meet young infantry officer Thaddeus Gunn fighting in the heat and dust of the North-West Frontier in 1913, his tale fairly rattles along, like a well-oiled Vickers machine-gun.
It sweeps us out on a rip-roaring tide to Ypres, the shores of Gallipoli then back into the charnel houses of the Somme and Passchendaele, before pitching us alongside him to fight the final hectic battles of 1918.
This is a unique story about a very human and sympathetic character, worthy of being described as ‘the Sharpe of the Great War.’
The volumes and extracts I have read I found hugely enjoyable; page turners to be sure, with a real whiff of cordite.” Jon Cooksey, WW1 Historian, TV presenter, military historian and author of ‘The Barnsley Pals’, ‘Harry’s War’, ‘The Western Front - Blood and Iron,’ Battlefields Review
He joined the 4th battalion of the Sherwood Foresters, a hastily formed mixed battalion of reservists, regular and territorial soldiers. The young platoon commander found himself pitchforked into the mayhem of the Battles of the Marne, the Aisne and then the drawn-out agony of Ypres as the high hopes of summer sank into the frozen trenches of the winter of 1914.
Then in 1915 the War Office sent the newly promoted young captain to the Mediterranean as a staff officer on the ill-fated Gallipoli expedition, a venture that ended with him repatriated to England as a medical casualty. Thaddeus Gunn ended the year as a company commander fighting for his life in the bloody chaos and slaughter of Loos; a battle that ended with his promotion.
Now in 1916 his whole world is turned upside down as his regiment is engulfed by the long drawn out slaughter of the Somme, while back home his family and friends struggle when their world changes forever as young lives are wrecked by the pressures of war.
Reviews
“Fantastic detail. He really captures the mood both on the home front and as the troops go into battle. A really authentic piece of work.” Nick Gordon, Award winning journalist and ex-deputy editor of the Daily Mail
“If Hughes-Wilson finishes this sequence of novels it will be an unique achievement” Rick Gekoski. Chair of The Booker Prize, author and rare book dealer.
“If you enjoyed Flashman and Sharpe, you will love Tommy Gunn.” International Guild of Battlefield Guides.
“These gripping novels have the triple advantage of being superbly written, true to life down to the last military detail, and very exciting.” Prof Andrew Roberts, FR Hist S
John,
I am not clever enough to write fiction, so I take my hat off to you. You can say this:
'From the moment in this remarkable series of novels that we meet young infantry officer Thaddeus Gunn fighting in the heat and dust of the North-West Frontier in 1913, his tale fairly rattles along, like a well-oiled Vickers machine-gun.
It sweeps us out on a rip-roaring tide to Ypres, the shores of Gallipoli then back into the charnel houses of the Somme and Passchendaele, before pitching us alongside him to fight the final hectic battles of 1918.
This is a unique story about a very human and sympathetic character, worthy of being described as ‘the Sharpe of the Great War.’
The volumes and extracts I have read I found hugely enjoyable; page turners to be sure, with a real whiff of cordite.” Jon Cooksey, WW1 Historian, TV presenter, military historian and author of ‘The Barnsley Pals’, ‘Harry’s War’, ‘The Western Front - Blood and Iron,’ Battlefields Review
In the third book in the series, by 1916 his whole world had been turned upside down as his regiment was engulfed by the long drawn out slaughter of the Somme. Meanwhile, as the year ended back home, his family and friends struggled with tragedy as their world changed forever when young lives are wrecked by the pressures of war.
By the end of 1917 ‘Tommy’ Gunn is now a temporary Lieutenant Colonel, posted to the staff and seeing the war, his country and his life, through a seasoned, cynical veteran’s eyes. Tragedy has hardened him. But not so far as to make him unaware of the temptations to a young man in war, far from home. Gunn’s love life suddenly becomes very complicated indeed . . .
By the end of 1917 the soldiers of the BEF and even Gunn himself are questioning both the war and their own lives. ‘Hanging On’ reflects the impact of war on a young man and his family, in a world that has gone forever.
And he is not yet 27 years old . . .
Reviews
“Fantastic detail. He really captures the mood both on the home front and as the troops go into battle. A really authentic piece of work.” Nick Gordon, Award winning journalist and ex-deputy editor of the Daily Mail
“If Hughes-Wilson finishes this sequence of novels it will be an unique achievement” Rick Gekoski. Chair of The Booker Prize, author and rare book dealer.
“If you enjoyed Flashman and Sharpe, you will love Tommy Gunn.” International Guild of Battlefield Guides.
“These gripping novels have the triple advantage of being superbly written, true to life down to the last military detail, and very exciting.” Prof Andrew Roberts, FR Hist S
John,
I am not clever enough to write fiction, so I take my hat off to you. You can say this:
'From the moment in this remarkable series of novels that we meet young infantry officer Thaddeus Gunn fighting in the heat and dust of the North-West Frontier in 1913, his tale fairly rattles along, like a well-oiled Vickers machine-gun.
It sweeps us out on a rip-roaring tide to Ypres, the shores of Gallipoli then back into the charnel houses of the Somme and Passchendaele, before pitching us alongside him to fight the final hectic battles of 1918.
This is a unique story about a very human and sympathetic character, worthy of being described as ‘the Sharpe of the Great War.’
The volumes and extracts I have read I found hugely enjoyable; page turners to be sure, with a real whiff of cordite.” Jon Cooksey, WW1 Historian, TV presenter, military historian and author of ‘The Barnsley Pals’, ‘Harry’s War’, ‘The Western Front - Blood and Iron,’ Battlefields Review
Now at the start of 1918 he is a Lieutenant Colonel, appointed to an Army staff and then back by pure chance as Commanding Officer of his beloved soldiers of 4 Foresters. As far as he is concerned, by 1918 the trench war will go on for ever. As more and more of his comrades in arms are killed or maimed, he now sees the war as an endless round of blood, misery and hopelessness.
But in 1918, he and the BEF will face their biggest test so far, as the tides of war sweep Gunn, his comrades and his family, to the dramatic conclusion of what our grandfathers called ‘The Great War.’
Reviews
“Fantastic detail. He really captures the mood both on the home front and as the troops go into battle. A really authentic piece of work.” Nick Gordon, Award winning journalist and ex-deputy editor of the Daily Mail
“If Hughes-Wilson finishes this sequence of novels it will be an unique achievement” Rick Gekoski. Chair of The Booker Prize, author and rare book dealer.
“If you enjoyed Flashman and Sharpe, you will love Tommy Gunn.” International Guild of Battlefield Guides.
“These gripping novels have the triple advantage of being superbly written, true to life down to the last military detail, and very exciting.” Prof Andrew Roberts, FR Hist S
John,
I am not clever enough to write fiction, so I take my hat off to you. You can say this:
'From the moment in this remarkable series of novels that we meet young infantry officer Thaddeus Gunn fighting in the heat and dust of the North-West Frontier in 1913, his tale fairly rattles along, like a well-oiled Vickers machine-gun.
It sweeps us out on a rip-roaring tide to Ypres, the shores of Gallipoli then back into the charnel houses of the Somme and Passchendaele, before pitching us alongside him to fight the final hectic battles of 1918.
This is a unique story about a very human and sympathetic character, worthy of being described as ‘the Sharpe of the Great War.’
The volumes and extracts I have read I found hugely enjoyable; page turners to be sure, with a real whiff of cordite.” Jon Cooksey, WW1 Historian, TV presenter, military historian and author of ‘The Barnsley Pals’, ‘Harry’s War’, ‘The Western Front - Blood and Iron,’ Battlefields Review
Three hundred and fifty-one men were executed by British Army firing squads between September 1914 and November 1920. By far the greatest number, 266 were shot for desertion in the face of the enemy. The executions continue to haunt the history of the war, with talk today of shell shock and posthumous pardons.
Using material released from the Public Records Office and other sources, the authors reveal what really happened and place the story of these executions firmly in the context of the military, social and medical context of the period.
Reviews
“Fantastic detail. He really captures the mood both on the home front and as the troops go into battle. A really authentic piece of work.” Nick Gordon, Award winning journalist and ex-deputy editor of the Daily Mail
“If Hughes-Wilson finishes this sequence of novels it will be an unique achievement” Rick Gekoski. Chair of The Booker Prize, author and rare book dealer.
“If you enjoyed Flashman and Sharpe, you will love Tommy Gunn.” International Guild of Battlefield Guides.
“These gripping novels have the triple advantage of being superbly written, true to life down to the last military detail, and very exciting.” Prof Andrew Roberts, FR Hist S
John,
I am not clever enough to write fiction, so I take my hat off to you. You can say this:
'From the moment in this remarkable series of novels that we meet young infantry officer Thaddeus Gunn fighting in the heat and dust of the North-West Frontier in 1913, his tale fairly rattles along, like a well-oiled Vickers machine-gun.
It sweeps us out on a rip-roaring tide to Ypres, the shores of Gallipoli then back into the charnel houses of the Somme and Passchendaele, before pitching us alongside him to fight the final hectic battles of 1918.
This is a unique story about a very human and sympathetic character, worthy of being described as ‘the Sharpe of the Great War.’
The volumes and extracts I have read I found hugely enjoyable; page turners to be sure, with a real whiff of cordite.” Jon Cooksey, WW1 Historian, TV presenter, military historian and author of ‘The Barnsley Pals’, ‘Harry’s War’, ‘The Western Front - Blood and Iron,’ Battlefields Review
A History of the First World War in 100 Objects narrates the causes, progress and outcome of the First World War by telling the stories behind 100 items of material evidence of that cataclysmic and shattering conflict.
From weapons that created carnage to affectionate letters home and from unexpected items of trench decoration to the paintings of official war artists, the objects are as extraordinary in their diversity and story-telling power as they are devastating in their poignancy.
Each object is depicted on a full page and is the subject of a short chapter that 'fans out' from the item itself to describe the context, the people and the events associated with it. Distinctive and original, A History of the First World War in 100 Objects is a unique commemoration of 'the war to end all wars'.