Garlinski, Jozef. The Enigma War. New York: Scribner's, 1979. Intercept: The Enigma War. London: Dent, 1980.
For Constantinides, this is neither Garlinski's best book nor the best book on the cryptographic aspects of World War II. The author relied too much on secondary sources and was "prone to repeat errors or speculations."
Nautical Brass Bibliography calls Garlinski "[a]n excellent narrative story of Enigma, spies, and intelligence from the Polish point of view."
[UK/WWII/Ultra]
Garlinski, Jozef.
Hitler's Last Weapons: The Underground War Against the V1 and V2. London: Friedmann, 1978. New York: Times Books, 1978.
Constantinides sees Garlinski as most concerned with "the contributions of the resistance, especially that of the Poles," to halting German development and deployment of the V weapons.
[OtherCountries/Poland/WWII]
Garlinski,
Jozef. Poland, SOE and the Allies. London: Allen & Unwin, 1969.
Constantinides says that this book gives "a good picture of Polish events and SOE relations to them with a primary focus on Polish personalities and activities in the covert war.... Garlinski's research made use of much material that had not previously been tapped."
[OtherCountries/Poland/WWII; UK/WWII/Services/SOE]
Garlinski, Jozef.
The Swiss Corridor: Espionage Networks in Switzerland during World War
II. London: Dent, 1981.
Rocca and Dziak note Garlinski's argument that "the British fed relevant Enigma production to the Soviets via their Swiss GRU network, the Rote Drei."
Aldrich, I&NS 6.1/212-213/fn. 5, refers to Garlinski's work as "[o]ne of the more carefully researched accounts of this period"; however, it "suffers from ignoring the CIA's Rote Kapelle, published in 1979."
[Russia/WWII/Spies; WWII/Eur/Gen]
Garmon, William
T. "The KGB in the United Nations." Military Intelligence
13, no. 3 (1987): 12-13.
[Russia/To89]
Garner,
Joe R., with Avrum M. Fine. Code Name: Copperhead; My True-Life Exploits
as a Special Forces Soldier. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1993.
According to McCombie, Parameters, Autumn 1995, the author, a former sergeant major, gives "a view from ground level" of the "modern Special Forces soldier.... He depicts well the individualism of the early Special Forces era and the willingness of SF soldiers to attempt and usually accomplish arduous, sometimes near-impossible missions." The reviewer concludes that "[t]his book of personal high adventure rings true."
[MI/SpecOps]
Garnett, David. The Secret History of PWE: The Political Warfare Executive, 1939-45. London: St. Ermin's, 2002.
Taylor, I&NS 18.3, identifies this as an "'official' history of PWE, produced in 1947 but subsequently buried.... [I]t is an essential addition to the library of any historian of propaganda."
[UK/WWII/Services/PWE]
Garofalo, Nicholas R. "Present and Future Capabilities of OTH Radars." Studies in Intelligence 13, no. 2 (Spring 1969): 53-61. [Richelson, Wizards (2002)]
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