@NoirMJ Journalists... Um. OK. Name them. There were, genuinely, journalists landed on the beaches of D-Day during the fighting. But they were all men. They had carrier pigeons to send their reports back.
@DecodingFoxNews@michaelhills8@afneil@CBSNews Andrew Neil, who will be remembered as one of the great journalists of the 20th and early 21st Centuries, honoured you with 100 or so characters of his time.
@Danjsalt A World At Arms. An operational level history of world war two. Written after the Soviet archives were opened up, in the period before Putin got sniffy.
A World at Arms: A Global History of World War II: https://t.co/dbhz2g3vHH: Weinberg, Gerhard L.: 9780521618267: Books
@fleemlin@VivaldiVril The man in charge of US submarine operations was the man who signed off on the torpedoes that didn't work. I'm not saying that 18 months of working torpedoes would have moved things forwards but they'd have been down a few carriers at least a year earlier.