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That's the one.
You'd probably pay more with shipping than the total cost of the book, but it's a nice little addition to anyone's uboat book collection. But about the author.... |
On Historisches MarineArchiv's site - http://historisches-marinearchiv.de/...2/ergebnis.php - I found this entry:
Busch, Harald Correspondent 05.08.1904 Godesberg U 101. (1941). U 1107. wrote book U boot auf Feindfahrt so apparently he was a correspondent, not an actual Kriegsmarine officer of any kind. |
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Donitz "Rescue no one and take no one with you. Have no care for the ship's boats. Weather conditions and the proximity of land are of no account. Care only for your own boat and strive to achieve the next success as soon as possible! We must be hard in this war. The enemy started the war in order to destroy us, therefore nothing else matters" |
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[QUOTE=BigWalleye;2245309]Clay Blair: Hitler's U-Boat War: The Hunted: 1942-1945, Prologue and Chapter One, tells the complete story of what the QUOTE]
Did u mean volume 1: Hitler's U-boat war: The Hunters:1939-1942? |
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In the JFO! mod, there is a file named target attack restrictions.txt, which contains summaries of all the subject orders issued by BdU. These are not the authentic translated text of the orders, but they are a fairly careful paraphrasing. You might find that file easier to absorb than the detailed account threaded through several chapters of Blair. But, while the file gives an idea of what and when, it does not tell the story of why. |
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But an incident in 1942 could not have been the basis for the order. Blair in Chapter 2 (and endnotes) states that a copy of that order was found in U-13, which was captured by the British in May, 1940. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laconia_incident |
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But Blair is also pretty clear in stating that the order, which he quotes verbatim from the Nuremburg record, came into Allied possession through the capture of U-13 in May 1940, two years before the Laconia Incident. Blair cites as Doenitz’s Nuremburg defense a claim that the order was a response to U-boat commanders’ excessive willingness to risk their boats to assist survivors. I don’t see how these two sources can both be correct. Does anyone have additional information? |
In clay Blair's 1st u boat book, does it say what was the last restriction to be removed? If so please tell me what page or chapter.
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/War_Order_No._154 That was likely the one recovered from U-13, and the Laconia order was probably an extension and reiteration of Order 154. |
let me change my question. What was the last restriction removed? If you guys can please tell me when the final restriction was removed.
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