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    Britain's Secret Defences: Civilian saboteurs, spies and assassins during the Second World War

    Posted By: Free butterfly
    Britain's Secret Defences: Civilian saboteurs, spies and assassins during the Second World War

    Britain's Secret Defences: Civilian saboteurs, spies and assassins during the Second World War by Andrew Chatterton, James Holland
    English | August 9, 2022 | ISBN: 163624100X | 236 pages | PDF | 16 Mb

    The narrative surrounding Britain’s anti-invasion forces has often centered on ‘Dad’s Army’-like characters running around with pitchforks, on unpreparedness and sense of inevitability of invasion and defeat. The truth, however, is very different.

    Top-secret, highly trained and ruthless civilian volunteers were being recruited as early as the summer of 1940. Had the Germans attempted an invasion they would have been countered by saboteurs and guerrilla fighters emerging from secret bunkers, and monitored by swathes of spies and observers who would have passed details on via runners, wireless operators and ATS women in disguised bunkers.

    Alongside these secret forces, the Home Guard were also setting up their own ‘guerrilla groups’, and SIS (MI6) were setting up post-occupation groups of civilians - including teenagers - to act as sabotage cells, wireless operators, and assassins had the Nazis taken control of the country.

    The civilians involved in these groups understood the need for absolute secrecy and their commitment to keeping quiet meant that most went to their grave without ever telling anyone of their role, not even their closest family members. There has been no official and little public recognition of what these dedicated men and women were willing to do for their country in its hour of need, and after over 80 years of silence the time has come to highlight their remarkable role.

    Table of Contents

    Acknowledgments
    Introduction
    Chapter One - Formation
    Chapter Two - Role, ruthlessness and training
    Chapter Three - Bunkers, equipment, explosives and weapons
    Chapter Four - Changing role and stand-down
    Chapter Five - Special Duties Branch: Civilian spies and wireless operators
    Chapter Six - Signals and ATS
    Chapter Seven - Secrecy and change of role
    Chapter Eight - 'Unofficial' auxiliary unites and Home Guard guerrillas
    Chapter Nine - Post-occupation resistance: SIS Section VII and industrial saboteurs
    Conclusion

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