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Operation Mincemeat



JOLovegrove

Well-known member
Jan 30, 2012
2,060
Was I the only one that just watched the documentary about Operation Mincemeat on BBC2? I think this is a repeat, however I haven't seen it before, and found it extremely interesting!

Anyone else see it or has seen it before?
 






Bevendean Hillbilly

New member
Sep 4, 2006
12,805
Nestling in green nowhere
Saw it let time so forced to watch superstar with her indoors.

Great story, clever buggers in room 13....
 










Seagull on the wing

New member
Sep 22, 2010
7,458
Hailsham
Being a military history fanatic I studied many operations in ww1 and ww2...(not medical ones you smartarses!).... I think this was one of the greatest deceptions of the war and saved many allied lives....
 


JOLovegrove

Well-known member
Jan 30, 2012
2,060
Being a military history fanatic I studied many operations in ww1 and ww2...(not medical ones you smartarses!).... I think this was one of the greatest deceptions of the war and saved many allied lives....

I had never heard of it before watching this documentary, but glad I stay tuned. Such a simple idea to plant a body, but was obviously very effective. Have you seen the show I watched?
 








Brightonfan1983

Well-known member
Jul 5, 2003
4,863
UK
I'm currently reading this and he spins a great yarn. Agent ZigZag was excellent too. I'm pretty much sold on Mr Macintyre's story-telling.
 






Seagull on the wing

New member
Sep 22, 2010
7,458
Hailsham
I had never heard of it before watching this documentary, but glad I stay tuned. Such a simple idea to plant a body, but was obviously very effective. Have you seen the show I watched?

Yes did watch it,read the book....still have it somewhere...saw the film. HMS Seraph was mainly used for secret ops,besides 'Mincemeat' she was in Operation ' Flagpole'and the 'Ship with two captains, where she briefly flew the US navy flag. As a weapon of aggression she was not very successful sinking only small boats,Saw her in Portsmouth about 1957/8...
 


keaton

Big heart, hot blood and balls. Big balls
Nov 18, 2004
9,972
It's very good, as are all the Ben MacIntyre programmes.
 




Tricky Dicky

New member
Jul 27, 2004
13,558
Sunny Shoreham
Was I the only one that just watched the documentary about Operation Mincemeat on BBC2? I think this is a repeat, however I haven't seen it before, and found it extremely interesting!

Anyone else see it or has seen it before?

Yup, I watched it. It was a repeat, I have seen it before, but it is superly interesting. The film about this story is also good, and reasonably true to life, called "The man who never was" if I remember correctly.
 


Seagull over Canaryland

Well-known member
Feb 8, 2011
3,557
Norfolk
Really enjoyed all of Ben Macintyre's books and the TV programmes too. The books go into much more detail but are a riveting read. The main characters are fascinating and really brave, whose stories are worthy of being told. Equally how gullible the Germans were in wanting to believe the bogus intelligence they were being fed.

It was interesting and sad to read the recurring sub-plot with Anthony Blunt's name cropping up in all of the books and giving the very chilling feeling that while 'our' spies and deceptions were brilliant, we were in turn fooled by the Russians and hadn't a clue for about 30 years. Blunt and cronies had been passing our secrets to the Russians since the 30's.

Went to a talk Ben gave shortly after the publication of Operation Mincemeat which was excellent. He alluded to further books that are in the pipeline about clandestine operations in WW11. He is certainly mining a rich source of historical treasure, long may it continue.
 


simmo

Well-known member
Feb 8, 2008
2,787
Definitely a repeat, seen it before but still a brilliant piece of deception and the way the SOE??? had the Nazis on a bit of string was beautiful...when it all loooked to be going a bit wrong sending a message that they knew would be deciphered and read by the Nazis, asking the British representative in Spain to make sure that top secret letter didn't get into the wrong hands, thus ensuring the Nazis gave it more precedence and that it did.

Genius. Probably saved hundreds if not thousands of lives.
 






Sep 7, 2011
2,120
shoreham
see a previous bbc documentry called the man who fooled hitler, or a black and white 1950s film called The man who never was ,
 


Greavsey

Well-known member
Jul 4, 2007
1,166
Were the Germans ever able to outwit the British/Allies in any way ?

That's what I'd be interested in. Now many years after the event surely we're able to look at things a bit more subjectively and it would be fascinating to hear the success stories from the enemy. There must be some instances surely!?
 


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