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Saturday, May 6, 2023
My Washington Times 'On Crime' Column: 'One Day In August: Ian Fleming, Enigma And The Deadly Raid On Dieppe
Some years ago, I came across an account of the disastrous World
War II raid on Dieppe written by a British naval intelligence officer who
viewed the raid from the deck of a warship off the coast of France.
The intelligence
report read like a thriller, which should come as no surprise, as the naval
intelligence officer was Royal Navy Lt. Commander Ian Fleming, who went on to
write the classic James Bond thrillers.
The Dieppe Raid
was the stuff of thrillers, and Canadian historian David O’Keefe has written a
fine book about the failed operation called “One Day in August: Ian Fleming,
Enigma and the Deadly Raid on Dieppe.”
I reached out to
David O’Keefe and I asked him why the Dieppe Raid was controversial, tragic and
something of a mystery.
As an Ian Fleming aficionado, I wrote about
One Day in August: Ian Fleming, Enigma and the Deadly Raid On Dieppe and offered my interview with David O’Keefe in my Washington
Times On Crime column back in December of 2020.
You can read the column via the below link to the Washington
Times or the text below:
Some years ago, I came across an account
of the disastrous World War II raid on Dieppe written by a British naval
intelligence officer who viewed the raid from the deck of a warship off the
coast of France.
The intelligence report read like a
thriller, which should come as no surprise, as the naval intelligence officer
was Royal Navy Lt. Commander Ian Fleming, who went on to write the James Bond
thrillers.
The Dieppe Raid was the stuff of
thrillers, and Canadian historian David O’Keefe has written a fine book about
the failed operation called “One Day in August: Ian Fleming, Enigma and the
Deadly Raid on Dieppe.”
I reached out to David O’Keefe (seen in the bottom photo) and I
asked him why the Dieppe Raid was controversial, tragic and something of a
mystery.
“In less than 9 hours on August 19th,
1942, over 1,000 Allied soldiers, sailors and airmen died in a raid on the
German-held port of Dieppe, France in the English Channel,” Mr. O’Keefe said.
“The vast majority of these deaths, 907, were taken by the Canadians, but the
British and the Americans (fighting their first actions against Hitler in
Europe) also paid a heavy toll. Right from the start, the excuses given for the
inception and the intent behind the raid did not seem to fully explain what the
Allies were attempting to do on that one day in August.”
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