Appendix 1: Key Players
DWIGHT âIKEâ EISENHOWER (1890â1969)
Dwight D. Eisenhower
Born in Texas into a family of German immigrant pacifists, Dwight Eisenhower, the third of seven boys, was brought up in Kansas. He attended the West Point Military Academy, graduating in 1915. Although he rose to the temporary rank of lieutenant colonel during the First World War, he never saw any action; a drawback, as he saw it, that caused him embarrassment and was later used against him as an example of his lack of frontline experience.
Eisenhower married his wife, Mamie Geneva Doud, in 1916. (But during the Second World War he became very close to his driver, Kay Summersby. When Eisenhower visited US troops on the eve of D-Day, Summersby accompanied him. Whether they had an affair is open to speculation, although Summersby clearly said so. In 1975, after the death of Eisenhower, Summersby wrote her autobiography entitled Past Forgetting: My Love Affair with Dwight D. Eisenhower.)
During the interwar years, while stationed in France, he wrote a guide to the battlefields of the Great War, as it was still known.
In 1939, Eisenhower, or Ike, was a 49-year-old lieutenant colonel (now no longer temporary). Yet, within three years, he had been appointed ahead of 366 more senior officers to take command of US forces in Europe. Based in Britain, he commanded Operation Torch, the Allied landing in North Africa; and, in 1943, oversaw the invasion of Italy. As Supreme Commander of Allied Forces, appointed in December 1943, he masterminded the D-Day landings, the Battle of Normandy and the subsequent push into Germany.
Despite his lack of combat experience, Eisenhower was known for his diplomacy, bringing together a sense of collaboration between the British and Americans, and his ability to cope with conflicting egos, especially with the likes of Montgomery and Patton.
Following the liberation of Nazi-occupied France, Eisenhower favoured a âbroad thrustâ into Germany rather than the quicker but riskier narrow front favoured by Bernard Montgomery.
He served briefly as Governor of the US Zone in post-war Germany, before returning to the USA and becoming Army Chief of Staff. He was courted by both the Republican and Democrat parties ahead of the 1948 presidential election, but refused to be drawn in. Instead, Eisenhower became President of Columbia University and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, during which time he wrote his bestselling Crusade in Europe. In 1951, he was appointed the Supreme Commander of the newly created North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), serving for just fifteen months.
In 1953, standing as a Republican, Eisenhower became the thirty-fourth US President, serving two terms. The first Republican president for twenty years, he oversaw the ending of the Korean War, sent the first US troops to South Vietnam and, in 1956, stopped the Anglo-French invasion of Suez. Although he had a serious heart attack in 1955, and a series of minor ones throughout his time as president, he fought and won a second term the following year. As president, Eisenhower was much criticized for allowing Senator Joseph McCarthy, with Vice-President Richard Nixonâs backing, too much of a free hand in exposing supposed communists within American society. It was only as McCarthy started to attack the military, most famously, George C. Marshall, Eisenhowerâs old mentor, that Eisenhower finally and rather belatedly intervened.
Eisenhower refused to stand behind Nixon during the 1960 presidential election. Nixon narrowly lost to Democrat, John F. Kennedy.
Dwight D. Eisenhower died, aged 78, on 28 March 1969.
OMAR BRADLEY (1893â1981)
Omar Bradley
Born in 1893 in Missouri, Omar Nelson Bradley fought on the Western Front during the last months of the First World War. His father, a schoolteacher who had married one of his pupils, died in 1906 while Omar was still only thirteen.
In 1943, during the Second World War, Bradley led US troops on to Sicily. The following year, based in London, he was given command of American troops assigned to the Normandy landings. His immediate commander was Bernard Montgomery. After a battle of attrition, he led the capture of Cherbourg, then the advance into the town of Avranches. On 1 August 1944, Bradley was given command of the US Twelfth Army Group, consisting of one and a quarter million troops, the largest US army ever assigned to a single general. Bradleyâs army fought in the Ardennes, during the Battle of the Bulge, December 1944âJanuary 1945, and his soldiers were among the Allied troops who shook hands with their Soviet counterparts on the River Elbe in April 1945.
Post-war, Bradley served on the US Joint Chiefs of Staff and in 1950 was appointed âGeneral of the Armyâ, the highest rank in the US army. He oversaw US strategy during the Korean War and retired in 1953, a month after the end of the war. Although retired, he advised President Lyndon Johnson on military policy during the Vietnam War.
His memoirs, A Soldierâs Story, were published in 1951.
Omar Bradley died on 8 April 1981, aged 88, and is buried at Arlington National Cemetery.
ROBERT CAPA (1913â54)
Robert Capa.
âIf your photographs arenât good enough, youâre not close enough.â
Considered one of the greatest war photographers, Robert Capaâs images, especially those taken during the Spanish Civil War and the D-Day landings, are among the iconic images of the twentieth century.
Born Andre Friedmann in Budapest in 1913, he had, by the age of 18, turned into a political radical, opposed to the authoritarian rule of Hungarian regent, MiklĂłs Horthy. In 1931, Friedmann was arrested and imprisoned by Hungaryâs secret police. On his release, after only a few months, he moved to Berlin where he studied journalism and political science while working part-time as a darkroom apprentice. In 1933, alarmed by the rise of Nazism, Friedmann, who was Jewish, moved to Paris.
Two years later, while in Paris, Friedmann met Gerta Pohorylle, a German Jew who had also fled Hitlerâs Germany. Together they worked as photojournalists, fell in love and, in an attempt to make their work more commercially appealing, pretended they both worked for the famous American photographer, Robert Capa. Friedmann took the photos, Pohorylle hawked them to the news agencies and credit was given to the fictional Robert Capa. (The name âCapaâ was chosen as homage to the American film director, Frank Capra.)
In 1936, Friedmann, having now assumed the name Robert Capa, and Pohorylle, who had also changed her name, becoming Gerda Taro, travelled to Spain to cover the Civil War, which had erupted in July that year. It was in Spain that Capa took the photo, first published in September 1936 by French magazine Vu, and later in Life magazine, that made him a household name â The Falling Soldier, a photograph of a Republican soldier supposedly at the moment of death from a sniperâs bullet. The photo has been the subject of much debate. While Capaâs defenders, particularly his brother, maintain its authenticity, others accuse Capa of having staged the scene. Research shows that the photograph was taken some thirty-five miles away from where Capa said it had been, in an area that saw no fighting on the day the shot was taken. Perhaps more damning is that the photo bears no evidence of a bullet wound.
On 25 July 1937, while Capa was away in Paris, Taro was injured in Spain, crushed by a reversing Republican tank. She died the following day, a week short of her twenty-seventh birthday. Grief-stricken, Capa travelled to China to document the Sino-Japanese War.
With the outbreak of war in 1941, following Japanâs attack on Pearl Harbor, Capa was in New York, and started working for various magazines, including Life and Time. Sent to Europe, he accompanied American troops during the 1943 advance through German-held Sicily, and, in October, the battle for Naples.
In April 1944, he transferred to London ahead of the planned invasion of Normandy. He landed with the second wave of troops on Omaha beach on 6 June, D-Day. Sheltering from German gunfire and shaking with fear âfrom toe to hairâ, Capa managed, over the course of two hours, to take 106 shots of American soldiers fighting and struggling on the beach. He quickly returned to London to have the four rolls of film developed. Unfortunately, a laboratory assistant dried the pictures too quickly, thereby melting three rolls and half the fourth. The only surviving eleven photographs were, as a result of the blunder, blurred. Since dubbed the âMagnificent Elevenâ, part of the set was originally published in Life on 11 June.
Following the war, Capa became an American citizen and, in 1947, founded Magnum Photos in Paris with French photographer, Henri Cartier-Bresson. He continued his travels, working in Israel and the Soviet Union, where he took photos for the novelist John Steinbeck on his tour of the country.
Although Capa had decided not to work in any more war zones, in 1954 he accepted Timeâs request to cover the war in French Indochina, modern-day Vietnam. On 25 May, in the city of ThĂĄi BĂŹnh, Capa stepped on a mine and was killed. He was 40.
JUAN PUJOL GARCIA (1912â88)
Juan Pujol Garcia
Juan Pujol Garcia was unique among Second World War agents â he was the only one to offer his services as a double agent as opposed to all others who had been captured and âturnedâ. Bespectacled, balding and timid, Pujol was not the image usually associated with a double agent, let alone Britainâs most effective one.
Born in Barcelona in February 1912, Pujol was working on a chicken farm when, in 1936, the Spanish Civil War broke out. He managed to fight for both the Republican side and the Nationalists. He was committed to neither and hated the extreme views they each represented. By the end of the war, he was able to claim that he had served in both armies without firing a single bullet for either.
He emerged from the experience with an intense dislike for extreme ideologies and, for the âgood of humanityâ, sought to help achieve a more moderate system. Three times he approached British services in Lisbon and Madrid, offering to spy for them, only to be turned away without an interview. Undeterred, Pujol decided to become a double agent. He offered his services to the German Abwehr service based also in Lisbon, proposing to spy on the English, claiming that as a diplomat working in London, he knew England well. His audacity was certainly impressive â he had never visited England nor could he speak the language, and he had forged a British passport without ever having seen a real one. Incredibly, the Germans fell for the story, put him through an intensive training course, and supplied him with the tools of the trade â invisible ink, cash, and a codename, Arabel â and sent him on assignment to England with instructions to build a network of spies.
This Pujol did. Soon, he had a team of agents working for him. They included disillusioned men and women, disaffected English nationals, and people prepared to betray Britain in return for wine. Between them, they supplied Pujol a steady stream of information which, in turn, he passed on to the Abwehr.
But it was all false. Pujol never went to England. Instead, he ensconced himself in Lisbon and armed with a Blue Guide to England and various books he found in the library, made everything up. He reported on non-existent troops, and routinely mixed up his pounds, shillings and pence. The Germans seemed not to notice. He even had the nerve to post his reports from Lisbon letterboxes, telling his German paymasters that among his agents was a pilot who regularly flew to Portugal, posting his correspondence locally.
Soon, the British were intercepting his messages and were delighted at the amount of false information being fed to the enemy. They determined to track him down. But in April 1942, Pujol approached them. This time, not surprisingly, they took his offer more seriously. Given the codename Garbo, Pujol began working with a Spanish- and German-speaking Security Service officer, TomĂĄs (Tommy) Harris.
The Germans were so impressed with the work of their Arabel and his network of agents that they rarely bothered to recruit further agents. For the British, it was imperative that the Abwehr continued to trust Arabel. Thus, the information Pujol and Harris fed them was often accurate but of low importance, or of high value but timed so that by the time the Germans received it, it was too late to do anything.
Soon, Pujolâs team of fictional agents numbered twenty-seven, each with their own backstory, supposedly based across Britain. Some were caught, imprisoned or, as Arabel told the Germans, had become untrustworthy. On one notorious occasion, a Liverpool-based agent had died. The Secret Service even had his obituary published in the local newspaper, and Arabel got the Abwehr to pay the agentâs âwidowâ an annual pension.
Pujol played a major role in keeping much of German strength focused on a possible invasion at the Pas-de-Calais. The difficulties the Allies had l...