Topic > World War II: spies, civil resistance and soldier's equipment

IndexThe spy networkCivil resistance (against the Nazis)Soldier's equipmentLife as a soldier or fighter pilotBang! Bang! Bang! Guns and tanks Shooting everywhere. This is World War II. But this is not the full story. All this happened behind the scenes. Say no to plagiarism. Get a tailor-made essay on "Why Violent Video Games Shouldn't Be Banned"? Get an original essay The Spy NetworkThere were many heroic spies and double agents on the Allied side. Two of them are Juan Pujol García and Eddie Chapman. Here's what they did to help the fight against the Nazis. Eddie Chapman was a former criminal who was imprisoned, hired by the Nazis to spy for them. However, when he returned to Britain he became a double agent for Britain, because they wanted to learn about the Nazi spy system, the Abwehr. The Abwehr had ordered him to blow up the De Havilland factory. The British spy agency M15 and Chapman simulated the attack using a complex camouflage system including papier-mâché and damaged wooden transformers, and made the buildings look like the remains of half-destroyed walls, they even scattered debris and had the newspaper put up Daily Express in a fake article titled "explosion at factory on the outskirts of London". Juan Pujol García was an M15 double agent who saved many lives on both sides in the Battle of the Normandy Beaches known more commonly as D-day. He was hired by the Nazis to hire as many sub-agents as he could to provide him with reports on Allied positions. However, all of his subagents were fictional. His “subagents” provided him with numerous reports that earned him the trust of the Nazis. Before D-Day he communicated several times with the allies to decide that the attack would take place on the beaches of Normandy. He then told Hitler that the attack had taken place north of Normandy, and instead in the Pas de Calais area. This prompted Hitler to move many Normandy troops. Jewish children who were in concentration camps or ghettos had a very uncertain future. Their fate was normally one of the following. First, most children were killed almost immediately upon arrival in an extermination camp or killed soon after birth. Secondly, some of the children born in the camps survived because they were hidden by the other prisoners. Third, children over the age of 12 were used as laborers or subjects of medical experiments, such as giving a child a battlefield disease such as malaria and testing untested medicine for the disease until the disease or bad medicine didn't kill them. Civil resistance (against the Nazis)There are many stories of people in the axis territories who fought back, this one tells of how three boys, three German boys, resisted Hitler's rule. Rudi Wobbe, Helmuth Hübener and Karl-Heinz Schnibbe were three teenagers who made leaflets to inform other Germans that Hitler wanted power only for himself, rather than for Germany. The boys' leaflets contained messages such as "Hitler the murderer" and "You know they are lying to you" and were thrown in public places around Hamburg. Some leaflets were posted on noticeboards and even dropped into the coat pockets of high-ranking Nazi officials. the thoughts of soldiers and pilots at war Many pilots and soldiers who survived the war have shared their thoughts on their experiences. These can tell you how they felt about the war and what they did. When a driver talks about the jeep races he saw in the jungle, he says that “it was an ugly and inhospitable jungle... but there were moments of.