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Publicado por Military Library Research Service Ltd, Buxton, Derbyshire, 2008
ISBN 10: 184791330XISBN 13: 9781847913302
Librería: Godley Books, Hyde, Reino Unido
Libro
Soft Cover. Condición: Near Fine. Appears unread. No marks or inscriptions. No creasing to covers or to spine. A very clean very tight copy with bright unmarked boards, minor traces of storage and no bumping to corners. Unpaginated pp. The operations manual for the Junkers 87 R-2 dive bomber tropical version, as seen in North Africa. L. Dv. T. 2087 R-2/F1. Fully illustrated. All text in German. We do not use stock photos, the picture displayed is of the actual book for sale. Every one of our books is in stock in the UK ready for immediate delivery. Size: 8.25 x 6.25 inches.
Mint paperback reprint of a 1941 publication. 102pp. In German. The operation manual for the Junkers 87 R-2 dive bomber tropical version, as seen in North Africa. Fully illustrated.
Publicado por 13th January ., 1988
Librería: Little Stour Books PBFA Member, Canterbury, Reino Unido
Miembro de asociación: PBFA
Ejemplar firmado
8½'' x 5'' flown cover No. 9 of 50 post marked Royal Air Force Squadron 617 Marham Kings Lynn | SIGNED to the front cover 'J. B. Tait' | Royal Air Force stamp to the rear 'Flown on Training Mission on 4th January 1988 in Tornado - Flight Time 2hrs 30mins. One cachet insert. Member of the P.B.F.A. BATTLE OF BRITAIN.
Publicado por Grub Street Publishing, 2005
ISBN 10: 1904943225ISBN 13: 9781904943228
Librería: Aragon Books Canada, OTTAWA, ON, Canada
Libro
Condición: New.
Publicado por Grub Street Publishing, 2005
ISBN 10: 1904943225ISBN 13: 9781904943228
Librería: Aragon Books Canada, OTTAWA, ON, Canada
Libro
Condición: New.
Publicado por no publisher], [no place, 1945
Librería: Between the Covers-Rare Books, Inc. ABAA, Gloucester City, NJ, Estados Unidos de America
Original o primera edición
Hardcover. Condición: Near Fine. First edition. Quarto. 13 [1] ff., typescript or carbon copy on onion skin, printed rectos only. Bound into clothbacked card covers by threaded plastic lugs (lacking one, possibly two), with a photographic frontispiece laid down on cover. A bit of wear on the spine and the upper holes of the first couple of leaves, else just about fine. The photographic frontispiece shows a graph the German Air Force's operational strength, beginning at Stalingrad, in the form of an airplane's trajectory, which plummets in 1945. According to the first page, this document contains information on reasons for the decline of the German Air Force "obtained from a German Air Force Colonel, captured 1 January 1945. Received in Britain 15 March 1945. Note: At the time of his capture this prisoner was in command of a Fighter Wing. He has written what follows below in the hope that it may ultimately help to assure that responsibility for disasters which have overtaken the G.A.F. and for the catastrophe thus brought on Germany herself, may rest where it properly belongs." A purported history of German WWII air combat, and an analysis of the German Air Force's failings, by a captured Colonel, who claims to have been both a *Gruppenkommandeur* and *Geschwaderkommodor*. He seems to believe that, as the enemy's tactics and technology changed, a lack of far-sighted planning (changes sometimes taking six months to be implemented), did the G.A.F. in. The plot thickens. According to a penciled note on the final leaf, signed "FJU[A?]", "The above is actually a recorded 'cut-in' taken at CSDIC (UK) early 1945 from 'M' room." "M" (for "miked") room was the location of an intelligence operation that secretly recorded the conversations of over 10,000 German PoWs. CSDIC stands for "Combined Services Detailed Interrogation Centre." The U.K. CSDIC, CSDIC(I)-Z Section, was located at 49 St. George's Drive, Pimlico, London. While we can't validate FJU's claim, this doesn't seem to be a publication made as propaganda for a wide audience. The account closes thusly: "For A. C. of S., G-2," which we understand to mean "the head of intelligence for the Army Chief of Staff." And below: "/s/P.E. Peabody," (Paul E. Peabody) who is identified as a Brigadier General and Chief of the Military Intelligence Service. We surmise it was published for internal use. A purported first-hand account of the failings of the German Air Force, by a captured Nazi Colonel, apparently recorded in one of the major Allied intelligence operations of World War II. Rare. *OCLC* locates two copies, both in U.S. military libraries.