Hitler was massive, involving soldiers, sailors, airmen, factory workers and many other people in a wide range of occupations.But perhaps the strangest operation of World War 2 was dreamed up by a novelist.Ian Fleming, long before he became famous as the creator of super-spy James Bond, worked as assistant to the director of Naval Intelligence, Admiral Sir John Godfrey (who was the inspiration for Bond’s boss M).In 1943, with the massive Allied invasion of Sicily poised to strike at what Churchill called the “soft underbelly” of Hitler’s Europe, the German defenders needed to be lured elsewhere to prevent a bloodbath on the beaches.And back in 1939, Fleming had dreamed up a secret plan as wild as the plot of any of his novels that would distract the Nazis from the obvious target.In fact, the original idea was pinched from a 1937 detective novel by Basil Thomson, The Milliner’s Hat Mystery.In a list of ideas for baffling the German High Command, Fleming wrote: “A suggestion (not a very nice one).“A corpse, dressed as an airman, with despatches in his pockets, could be dropped on the coast.”The fake despatches would contain misinformation to convince Hitler’s henchmen that the strike would come not in the obvious place of Sicily, but in Greece and Sardinia.From Fleming’s “not very nice” idea Ewen Montagu of Naval Intelligence, a barrister in civilian life, and the RAF’s Charles Cholmondeley, created Operation Mincemeat, an operation so bold, and so strange, it’s inspired two major feature films.Many of the details of the plan were only declassified in 1996.
Among them, the name of the unlucky man whose body was used as the centrepiece of Montagu and Cholmondeley’s deception.Glyndwr Michael was a lonely drifter who who had.
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