Lt. Commander Miriam Perlberg: Intelligence Lessons Learned from the Battle for Crete 1941, Kartoniert / Broschiert
Intelligence Lessons Learned from the Battle for Crete 1941
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- Verlag:
- Nimble Books, 06/2026
- Einband:
- Kartoniert / Broschiert
- Sprache:
- Englisch
- ISBN-13:
- 9798259503038
- Artikelnummer:
- 12808098
- Umfang:
- 46 Seiten
- Gewicht:
- 145 g
- Maße:
- 280 x 216 mm
- Stärke:
- 3 mm
- Erscheinungstermin:
- 18.6.2026
- Serie:
- KDP Print Rescue
- Hinweis
-
Achtung: Artikel ist nicht in deutscher Sprache!
Klappentext
What happens when a commander knows the enemy's entire plan in advance and still loses? In the spring of 1941 the British, reading German message traffic through the ULTRA program, possessed what Winston Churchill called intelligence so truly and precisely informed as at no other moment in the war, yet the airborne assault on Crete drove them off the island. Intelligence Lessons Learned from the Battle for Crete 1941 confronts that paradox. Written by Lieutenant Commander Miriam F. Perlberg of the United States Navy and submitted to the Naval War College in Newport, Rhode Island, in 1992 under the direction of Captain H. Ward Clark, Jr., the study was approved for public release. Its timing matters: ULTRA had been an official secret until the mid-1970s, so only after disclosures by Winterbotham, Lewin, and Bennett could a serving officer openly mine the campaign for lessons.
Perlberg sets the scene with care. Crete sat astride the sea lanes by which Britain protected the Iranian oilfields, the Haifa refineries, and the Suez Canal, while its airfields at Maleme, Retimo, and Heraklion threatened the eastern Mediterranean and, for Germany preparing Operation Barbarossa, the route to the Ploesti oil. Yet little was done to fortify the island. When Greece fell, command went to General Bernard Freyberg, who on the day of the assault had perhaps 28, 600 British, Australian, and New Zealand troops plus over 10, 000 Greeks, figures Perlberg calls deceiving because the men had been evacuated without heavy arms, fighter cover was unavailable, and Freyberg had no staff, no trained intelligence officers, and too few radios to link his command.
The heart of the paper is the gap between knowing and acting. ULTRA, decrypted at Bletchley Park, revealed the movement of the XI Air Corps and 22nd Air Landing Division, the buildup of transports and fuel, and on 6 May the full assault plan. But Perlberg argues the windfall was producer-driven rather than consumer-driven: Freyberg received only what the producers chose to send, could not task collection, was forbidden to discuss the source, was never told the total parachute strength or that no reserve was held back, and was barred from acting tactically without independent corroboration. Anchored to the precedent that no island had ever fallen to airborne assault, he split his forces between the airfields and the coast rather than concentrating at Maleme, the German center of gravity. When a New Zealand battalion lost communications and withdrew on the night of 20 May, the Germans flew in the 100th Mountain Rifle Regiment, secured the airstrip, and could not be dislodged. In Lewin's phrase that Perlberg adopts, Freyberg got the message but not the meaning.
From this she draws five enduring lessons: intelligence must be available throughout an operation, not just before it; intelligence without communications is nearly worthless; the commander must understand his intelligence system yet cannot be his own intelligence officer; there is an unavoidable trade-off between using intelligence and protecting its source; and intelligence never paints a wholly unambiguous picture. She then projects each lesson onto 1992 doctrine, warning that the linkages between intelligence and operational utility remain largely human.
This Nimble Books edition reproduces the study faithfully and adds a full editorial apparatus prepared for this volume: an original Historical Context essay on Crete and the post-ULTRA disclosure era; two complementary plain-language abstracts, an accessible summary and an advanced analytical reading; a Glossary covering ULTRA, ENIGMA, Y service, and signals intelligence terms; Indexes of persons, places, and concepts; and an original computational RKHS knowledge-graph analysis placing the work among related intelligence and operational histories. It serves intelligence professionals, military officers, historians, students, and librarians.
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