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AUTHOR: Williamson, D G
FORMAT: 256pp 40 Bw 234x156 Hb
Hitler's attack on Poland in 1939 was the first brutal act in six years of
world war, but the campaign is often overshadowed by the momentous struggle that
followed across the rest of Europe. David Williamson, in this timely and
thought-provoking study, reconstructs each stage of the battle in graphic
detail. He looks at the precarious situation of the Polish nation caught between
Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union, reconsiders the pre-war policies of the other
European powers, particularly France and Britain, and assesses the state of the
opposing armed forces before the Germans launched Operation White. In a vivid
and fast-moving narrative he follows the course of the campaign as it moved
across Poland in September 1939. His book should encourage a fresh understanding
of the Polish-German war and of its significance for the wider conflagration
that followed. Critical episodes in the German offensive are re-examined: the
mock attack at Gleiwitz, the battles at Westerplatte and Bzura, the siege of
Warsaw and the impact of the intervention of the Red Army. Throughout the
narrative, first-hand accounts of soldiers and civilians who were caught up in
events are used to give an insight into the experience of the war. The author
dispels myths that persist about the course of the campaign - the apparent
destruction of the Polish air force, the Poles' use of cavalry - and he draws
attention to often overlooked flaws in German military organisation. He also
records the immediate aftermath of the Polish capitulation - the division of
Poland between Hitler's Germany and Stalin's Soviet Union and the fate of the
captured Polish troops.
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