Product Details
Operation Fortitude: the  Story of the Spy Operation that Saved D-Day

Operation Fortitude: the Story of the Spy Operation that Saved D-Day
By Joshua Levine

List Price: £16.99
Price: £11.21 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Delivery. Details

Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Dispatched from and sold by Amazon.co.uk

69 new or used available from £0.01

Average customer review:
(5 )

Product Description

Operation Fortitude was the ingenious web of deception spun by the Allies to mislead the Nazis as to how and where the D-Day landings were to be mounted.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #32323 in Books
  • Published on: 2011-03-31
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 316 pages

Features

  • New
  • Mint Condition
  • Dispatch same day for order received before 12 noon
  • Guaranteed packaging
  • No quibbles returns

Editorial Reviews

Review
“Levine’s compelling portrait of the Troubles and subsequent peace process is the sort of book that should be thrust into the hands of a minister arriving in Northern Ireland who needs to get a handle on how things have reached this point and where they might be heading next.” Sunday Times

“Joshua Levine has a natural gift for narrative description. This superb book, based on a wide range of interviews, not only gives a clear explanation of how the peace process developed but also serves as a grisly reminder of the tribal violence, bigotry and hatred that so badly scarred Northern Ireland.” Daily Express

Beauty and Atrocity was shortlisted for the Writers’ Guild Non Fiction Book of the 2010

From the Author
This is the first book that deals with the whole story of Operation Fortitude, bringing all surrounding facts and details together. Where did your research begin?
In the National Archives at Kew. I was able to piece the story together from a number of important sources, but the most important was the PRO. In particular, the double agent story could not have been told any other way. Myths have grown up over the years about who these men and women really were, and about what they did and didn’t do. Well, the answers lie in the MI5 files which have been made available at Kew. And the files don’t only contain information. They also contain the tools of the agents’ trade, such as false identity cards and disc codes. In one file, there is even a seventy year old Veronal sleeping pill given to a spy by the German Intelligence Service.

In your opinion, which deception tactic played the biggest role in the success of Operation Fortitude?
Without a doubt, Operation Fortitude owed its success to the British Double Cross system. This was a network of double agents run by MI5. The Nazis believed (or at least hoped) that these men and women were loyal German spies, but they were, in fact, ultimately working for the British. These were the individuals who put across the effective parts of the Fortitude deception. Other elements of Fortitude, such as dummy ships and tanks, and fake wireless messages, were less successful. Having said that, other tactics played their part. For example, a captured German general, Hans Cramer, on his release from a British prison camp, was driven through south-west England. But he was told that he was in the south-east. He then hurried to warn Rommel that Allied forces were crowded around Dover preparing to attack the Pas de Calais--which was precisely what the Allied deceivers had hoped he would do.

Had Popov been successful in warning the Americans about Pearl Harbor, do you think they would have been able to prevent it from taking place at all?
In mid-1941, Dusko Popov informed J Edgar Hoover, chief of the FBI, that the Japanese were planning an attack on Pearl Harbor. Hoover ignored him. But had Hoover passed the intelligence to the White House, as he should have done, or had MI5 passed it directly to the White House themselves, as they should have done, the Americans would have been prepared for it. Popov hadn’t been given the details of precisely when and how the attack would be mounted, so it is debatable whether that it could have been prevented outright. But had Hoover taken the warning seriously, it would certainly not have come as a shocking surprise.

What was Camp 020 and why was it important?
Camp 020 was Britain’s spy prison. Suspected German spies were brought there (it was round the corner from Richmond tube station) and interrogated by teams led by Colonel Robin ‘Tin Eye’ Stephens, a man who was said to rub his hands with glee when another captured spy was on his way. Stephens used a number of innovative interrogation methods, including what has become known as ‘Good Cop/Bad Cop’, where he would intimidate the prisoner, while another, far more amenable, officer would play the sympathetic questioner. Camp 020 was important because it was where captured spies were turned into double agents. They would be threatened and cajoled, and a large number agreed to begin working for Britain. Those who didn’t were tried, and almost invariably executed. It is worth noting that Stephens did not allow violence to be used on Camp 020 inmates.

Why were the British able to deceive the Germans so effectively?
A combination of factors are important here. First of all, the system of strategic deception came of age in 1943, when the British Chiefs of Staff began to realize that it could be a truly effective weapon. It also started to become clear, at the same time, that double cross was the best method of putting that deception across. So a very effective means of fooling the Germans was in place. The success of Fortitude itself can be put down in significant part to the arrogance and imagination of Lieutenant Colonel David Strangeways, an officer on Montgomery’s staff, who ripped up the original Fortitude plan, and rewrote it according to his own cocksure instincts. And the Germans’ own frailties should not be underestimated. Admiral Canaris, the chief of the German Intelligence Service until early 1944, told one of his officers, in January of that year, that he didn’t care whether every German agent in Britain was under enemy control, so long as he could tell German High Command that he had agents in Britain reporting regularly. This attitude, which pervaded the entire German Intelligence Service, a consequence of fear and disloyalty, meant that the Germans were predisposed to believe much of what they were led to believe. Also, the Allies understood the importance of playing on Hitler’s existing beliefs – of which they had knowledge thanks to the breaking of the Enigma code. All in all, there were a large number of factors which came together to ensure the success of Fortitude--all discussed in the book!

About the Author

Joshua Levine is the author of Forgotten Voices of the Blitz and the Battle for Britain and Forgotten Voices of the Somme. He is also a playwriter and writer for television, and was the researcher for Max Arthur on three of the Forgotten Voices series.

His first book for Collins, On a Wing and a Prayer, was the story of the pioneering aviation heroes of the First World War.