The Brandenburgers
Germany’s WWII Covert Operatives (Everything World War 2-WWII, Book 39)
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Lu par :
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Lt Col Tom Briggs
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US Army (Ret)
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De :
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Cyril Marlen
There are periods in history when the character of warfare alters so profoundly that those living through it only partially understand what is happening. The change does not come as a single moment of recognition, but as a gradual shift in practice, driven by necessity rather than design. Methods that once seemed sufficient begin to show their limits. Assumptions that guided earlier conflicts become unreliable. In their place, new approaches emerge, often quietly at first, shaped not by theory alone but by the pressing demands of reality.
The Second World War was one such period.
It was a conflict defined not only by scale, but by adaptation. Nations were forced to reconsider how war could be fought, not simply in terms of force, but in terms of access, timing, and control. Traditional engagements remained central, but actions beyond the visible battlefield increasingly supported them. These actions did not always involve large formations or confrontation. Instead, they relied on precision, discretion, and the ability to operate within environments that resisted conventional methods.
It is within this evolving landscape that the Brandenburgers must be understood.
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