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AUTHOR: Ford, K
FORMAT: 256pp 40 Bw 234x156 Hb
The campaign that defined the progress of the Second World War - and sowed
the seeds of rivalry between these two key Allied commanders. On the night of
9th-10th July 1943, an Allied armada of 2,590 vessels launched one of the
largest combined operations of the Second World War - the invasion of Sicily,
Operation Husky. Over the next thirty-eight days, half a million British,
Canadian, American and French soldiers, sailors, and airmen grappled with their
German and Italian counterparts for control of this rocky outcrop of Hitler’s
'Fortress Europe'. The Allied assault on Sicily featured airborne and amphibious
landings; mountain warfare; international rivalry; poorly performing troops;
tenacious German resistance; and, improvements in tactical air support and the
ultimate Allied victory on the island. Almost the whole of the progress of the
Second World War is illustrated by this one campaign. It was the only action
where the whole Allied war effort was brought to bear on a single objective,
with one army commanded by Patton and one army commanded by Montgomery. Both men
were insufferable egoists and insubordinate commanders; they always chose to do
their own thing, regardless of others’ sensibilities and always with one eye on
how history would see them. The seeds of rivalry between these two key Allied
commanders that were sown in the Sicily campaign eventually grew to fruition in
the battles for Normandy and the Ardennes.
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