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Broken
Brazen Subterfuge Lyrics


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Most interesting comment from YouTube:

@bradyelich2745

I do believe Ian had said this same thing about many people he worked with.
Ian and Willy (Sir William Stephenson) were in France together and Willy went for a 'walk' around the docks, Ian stayed at the safe house. After Willy's walk, Ian said there were several missing German officers.
Sir William made 27 Atlantic crossings to met with Winston.
Sir William wrote two autobiographies, but he lied about where he was born, whom his parents were. He really is Intrepid, his code name. To this day, historians are trying to figure out the facts.
The CIA webpage has a special paragraph mentioning SWS. I read it myself.
Dusan Popov was not the head of the Western Hemisphere Operations of the BSC, appointed by Winston himself. And you can see my surname.
And Dieppe was a raid to capture a Enigma machine, nothing else. Ian was there on a ship. They got close but at great cost, not just to the Canadians, but the Royal Navy and Airforce.
The last picture is of Will Bill granting the Medal for Merit , at that time the highest U.S. civilian award, the first non-American to be so honoured, to Sir William Stephenson.
Sir William Stephenson, right or wrong, created the 20th century spy agencies.



All comments from YouTube:

@thurmontilley2911

My grandfather fought in WWI. He was a member of the Pennsylvania Army National Guard and went to France. His regiment was fighting in a village called Fismes, between Reims and Braisne. They fought the Germans and put up a good fight but they were outnumbered. 500+ Germans to just over 100+ PA. Army National Guard. He was wounded in 4 or 5 places and captured by the Germans. I believe it was around August 1918. He was attended to in a German hospital and stayed awake during an operation on his leg because he didn't trust the German doctors and didn't want his leg cut off.
He was released around Christmas time in 1918.
He eventually died from a blood clot that traveled up his wounded leg and to his heart in 1965.
The village of Fesmes even built a small bridge and dedicated it to the PA. NATIONAL GUARD because they tried so hard to keep it from the Germans. I've visited the village and the bridge may years ago.

@totalbamber

Really wonderful. Helping people realise the sheer amount of stuff that goes into warfare. It's not just about that which makes the headlines.

@Brumbieman

That one about the wooden airfield being bombed with wooden bombs is just hilarious. All that effort to fool the RAF and they not only identified it as a dummy wooden field, they actually bothered bombing it with wooden bombs just to troll them 🤣

@napalmholocaust9093

My grandfather met some of those American English speaking infiltrators at the bulge. I've never heard of them except from him.
A few came around to the lines of foxholes and makeshift bunkers a few days before the push and went man to man around the woods, collecting gas masks. More than a few men refused, gramps did. I don't know the rate of refusal. They were saying some other guys in a nearby spot really needed them. Not sure how he knew it was b.s., maybe they gave nonexistent officers or something that didn't pan-out later, but they didn't stick around. They had a vehicle or a trailer or a cart with a few hundred in it already.
Later the tanks came.. My grandfather knew, you could hear the cacophony of engines for days, they didn't come quietly. Him and his mates retreated when a tank crossed their line and stuck its muzzle into a nearby bunker and evaporated it. Infantry got his friend and they left him for 💀 and kept running. He didn't mention if he needed the mask, probably not or it would have been a point of the story, I assume. It was about masks after all.
2 or 3 days is what it took to regain that ground and the friend was still alive. He had been hit again in the head to make sure, but it glanced down his temple and went through his lower jaw, you can assume pistol cartridge. He survived and lived into his 80's with a steel jaw and terrible scars. His was a local boy, so I met him a few times as a child.

@napalmholocaust9093

To clarify, the wounded friend appeared to be fatally wounded when they left him. I can't remember what anymore, but it was bad.
My grandfather got stars, he would've carried him if he thought the guy would live. It was probably rough being there deciding who to try and save as people around you are cut down and you're running from tanks and out-numbered.

*also grammer correction, it is probably "he and his" not "him and his".

@TheWarmachine375

1:39:02 Spike the Bulldog from Tom and Jerry during his World War II days.

@TheWarmachine375

"It's just a prank, bro." - Allied Forces and Axis spies probably

@geraldc5165

Excellent video. I find this kind of detailed obscure history fascinating.

@johnryder1713

The German Greif commandos, groups of Germans who created chaos behind allied lines in the Battle of the Bulge were found out early enough but done enough damage. One method to get them to reveal themselves was by asking them only a question a true American would know, like 'Name President Roosevelts dog (Fala, a Scottish Terrier in case your interested) which I doubt everyone would know, so much so, it caused General Montgomery to be detailed by MPs!

@Wardads1

Tale about US MPs being rather pleased with themselves at stumping Ike before waving him on is a bit of a larrf.

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