- ホーム
- > 洋書
- > ドイツ書
- > Humanities, Arts & Music
- > History
- > general surveys & lexicons
Description
To save thousands of lives, British intelligence entrusted the fate of the Mediterranean invasion to a fabricated officer who was already dead. In 1943, the Allied forces faced a terrifying dilemma: how to invade Sicily without walking into a heavily fortified Axis slaughterhouse. The solution proposed by British intelligence was so utterly absurd, so deeply morbid, that it sounded like the plot of a cheap pulp novel. They decided to win the battle by utilizing a weapon that could not speak, could not fight, and was already dead.Operation Mincemeat is the pinnacle of wartime deception. British agents acquired the body of an anonymous, deceased tramp, dressed him as a fictitious Royal Marines officer, chained a briefcase of fabricated top-secret documents to his wrist, and dropped him off the coast of Spain. The goal? To trick Adolf Hitler into believing the Allies were targeting Greece and Sardinia, leaving Sicily virtually undefended.This meticulous historical account traces the grotesque logistics and brilliant psychological engineering of the plot. We uncover the frantic race to construct a flawless fake identity, complete with forged love letters and theater tickets, and the sheer luck that allowed the deception to infiltrate the highest ranks of the Nazi high command.Step into the shadows of the greatest bluff in military history. Operation Mincemeat proves that wars are not just won with artillery and manpower, but with audacious creativity, psychological manipulation, and one remarkably convincing corpse.



