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MacArthur's Undercover War: Spies, Saboteurs, Guerrillas, and Secret Missions
 
 
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MacArthur's Undercover War: Spies, Saboteurs, Guerrillas, and Secret Missions [Hardcover]

William B. Breuer (Author)
2.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)


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Hardcover, April 17, 1995 --  

Book Description

April 17, 1995
Guadalcanal . . . Midway . . . the battle for the Philippines. In each of these critical conflicts, intelligence played a crucial role in bringing about an Allied victory. General MacArthur's brilliant Pacific campaign was designed around espionage and guerrilla warfare. This is the story of his undercover war.

Praise for William B. Breuer's Previous Works...

"An exciting narrative presented by a first-rate story teller." —Publishers Weekly on The Great Raid on Cabanatuan

"A first-class historian." —The Wall Street Journal

"Another smasher by Breuer, who specializes in thrilling reports of WWII spycraft and warfare." —Kirkus Reviews on Race to the Moon

"Fast-paced, detailed, and satisfyingly dramatic." —World War II magazine on Devil Boats

"Vivid . . . skillfully written." —Los Angeles Times on Retaking the Philippines

"Brings to life how airborne soldiers survived, how the human will prevails . . . against overwhelming enemies, tactical failures, and even death." —The New York Times on Geronimo: American Paratroopers in World War II

MACARTHUR'S UNDERCOVER WAR

The covert war General Douglas MacArthur waged against Japanese forces in the Pacific arena was the largest undercover operation ever undertaken. Here, for the first time, is the complete story of the legendary exploits and heroism of the thousands of courageous individuals who fought as spies, guerrillas, propagandists, and saboteurs behind enemy lines.

When the Japanese war juggernaut overran the Philippines, it took a near miraculous PT-boat escape for MacArthur to make his way to safety in Australia. He left behind a force of seventy thousand American and Philippine troops marooned on the Bataan Peninsula. To these brave men the general vowed, "I shall return."

Against overwhelming odds, MacArthur succeeded. Crucial to his success was his massive covert war effort. MacArthur created his own undercover warfare agency, the super-secret Allied Intelligence Bureau (AIB), to organize the many far-flung resistance groups. They were the coast watchers—jungle-wise miners, traders and planters, missionaries, and telegraph operators who occupied remote Pacific islands, living in the most primitive conditions while keeping a constant vigil for Japanese movement. They were American soldiers who escaped the Bataan Peninsula and were commanding guerrilla armies in the interior mountain and jungle locations of the Philippines. And they were double agents operating right under the noses of the Japanese in Manila, occupying positions close to the Imperial Army and in the collaborationist Philippine government.

The phenomenal success of MacArthur's island-hopping "hit-'em-where-they-ain't" campaign was built on the accuracy of the intelligence gathered by the AIB. Early in the conflict, the Americans cracked the secret Japanese naval code and established a chain of intelligence radio-monitoring posts circling the Japanese empire from Alaska to Australia. The information garnered from their interceptions of Japanese transmissions and from operatives on the ground allowed MacArthur to pick soft targets—islands the Japanese had left relatively unguarded—for invasion. It was the steel nerves and unbounded resourcefulness of those who fought the secret war that paved the way for MacArthur's "Great Return" to the Philippines and saved the lives of countless American soldiers.

In an action-packed narrative, MacArthur's Undercover War tells of thrilling feats of valor and derring-do—impossible missions to blow up harbors, kidnap heads of state, undermine currency, and arrange prison escapes, all deep within enemy territory. Firsthand interviews with veterans and information from previously unpublished documents reveal a riveting tale of World War II that has never been fully told.



Editorial Reviews

Book Description

Guadalcanal…Midway…the battle for the Philippines. In each of these critical conflicts, intelligence played a crucial role in bringing about an Allied victory. General MacArthur's brilliant pacific campaign was designed around espionage and guerrilla warfare. This is the story of his undercover war.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From the Publisher

An action-packed account of the heroics and resourcefulness of countless individuals who worked undercover in espionage operations under the direction of Douglas MacArthur. Tells in full for the first time the story of MacArthur's Allied Intelligence Bureau--an operation so secret that its existence was not known until long after World War II. Features new information based on first-hand interviews with those who participated in shortening the war and saving thousands of lives in the Pacific Theater. Includes an escape from a Japanese POW camp so dramatic that it seems implausible.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 257 pages
  • Publisher: Wiley; 1 edition (April 17, 1995)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0471114588
  • ISBN-13: 978-0471114581
  • Product Dimensions: 9.5 x 6.4 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.3 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 2.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,767,351 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Exciting but questionable tales, September 15, 2006
By 
brentmark (Wall Lake, IA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: MacArthur's Undercover War: Spies, Saboteurs, Guerrillas, and Secret Missions (Hardcover)
"MacArthur's Undercover War" has all the makings of a great modern World War II book: seldom heard-of commando raids in the Pacific, daring esponiage, and a larger-than-life character in the famous and controversial Douglas MacArthur. Yet a few obvious errors and a lack of solid citations has left me to question a great deal of material in this book (as another reviewer warned.)

First off, for readers eager to dive into the MacArthur controversy, this book will be a disappointment. Breuer has nothing but praise for MacArthur although he does acknowledge the commander's prima donna demeanor. Indeed, you will not see in this book a citation of the "Dugout Doug" poem that was undoubtedly uttered by so many GIs on Corregidor and Bataan in 1942.

One error (or maybe a slip of the author's organization) in the book nearly caused my to shelve it without completing the work. While discussing the early battles between Japanese-American forces, the author places the battle of Midway after the struggle on Guadalcanal! In reality, the great turning point at Midway occured in the summer of 1942, while the Guadalcanal battle wrapped up a year later in 1943. I was quite stunned upon reading Breuer's account of Midway, and I looked over the pages again to make certain that I did not skip any dates that the author inserted in the text. There was none. In the chapter titled "The Great Manila Bay Silver Heist," the last year mentioned before Breuer explains Midway is 1943. Then Breuer continues onward to mention how the battle of Midway opened on June 7 without mentioning the year, seemingly implying to any reader that he is still discussing 1943.

In another error I noticed, Breuer describes the B-29 "Flying Fortress." This again is misleading, since the B-17 was the official "Flying Fortress," while the mammoth B-29 was the "Super Fortress." Such errors would certainly force any knowledgeable reader to question an author's credibility.

The good news is that "MacArthur's Undercover War" is an entertaining book; a great book for anyone looking for a "shoot 'em up" tale that may or may not be fiction. For educational purposes, however, readers should look elsewhere.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Very Disappointing, Inaccurate, Non-scholarly, Fun to Read, But Worthless, January 6, 2009
This book has so many factual inaccuracies it is hard to know where to start. Maybe in the Introduction, where the author states that one of his heroes, John Bulkeley, was "American history's most highly decorated warrior." Gee, how about Audie Murphy who was the most decorated soldier in World War II or Marine Major Smedley Butler who was the only man ever to win two Medals of Honor (Bulkeley only won one). Also, author Breuer uses the term "Congressional Medal of Honor" -- a medal that does not exist -- it is simply the "Medal of Honor." An historian should know that.

Author Breuer appears to be in awe of General MacArthur -- a man who apparently never made mistakes (such as not moving food supplies to Bataan in time for his army to be able to effectively resist the Japanese). Also high in the author's estimation is Charles Willoughby, a truly bizarre and Byzantine character born Karl Weidenback in Germany, and upon whom the author seems to rely for many of his "facts" and stories. Unfortunately Willoughby was not shrewd, incisive and skilled as the author characterizes him, but demanding, arrogant, inept, paranoid, inflexible and lacking in judgment. Willoughby's reports and narratives of events during the war have been proven to be unreliable, highly slanted to put MacArthur in the best possible light, and to place himself in an omniscient, heroic role. The truth is much different.

As an example of the author's endemic errors, consider his treatment of Wendell Fertig, apparently based almost solely on Willoughby's writings which are those of a man who hated Fertig with a passion as a dangerous historical figure to the glorification of MacArthur and himself. The author describes Fertig as a "civilian engineer who was considered to be as brilliant as he was eccentric" (page 48), completely missing that Fertig was a Lt. Colonel in the Army Corps of Engineers who had been called to duty from the Reserves when the Japanese invaded the Philippines. Nor was he "eccentric" in any respect except to refuse to surrender in May, 1942, after having escaped from Corrigidor to Mindanao. Fertig built the MOST SUCCESSFUL GUERRILLA MOVEMENT IN AMERICAN HISTORY on Mindanao -- for over a year totally unsupported by the great men Willoughby and MacArthur, and by his presence and success threatened MacArthur's position as savior of the Philippine people.

In taking over command of the guerrilla bands on Mindanao in September, 1942, Fertig was addressed as "General" by a mestizo leader Luis Morgan and Morgan's lieutenant Bill Tait, and the people on Mindanao rallied to Fertig in that capacity. Morgan said later, knowing that Fertig was just a Lt Colonel, "I made him a Brigadier General", and once made, that rank could not be taken back. Morgan himself took on the rank of Colonel shortly thereafter. In October, 1942, Fertig issued his first general orders "By order of the commanding general, Wendell W. Fertig, Brigadier General, USA, Commanding."

Willoughby/MacArthur did not communicate with Fertig until March, 1943, and then only to to chastize him, changing his branch from the Corps of Engineers to the Infantry and to say, "No officer of rank of general will be designated..." Obviously Willoughby/MacArthur did not understand the Asian concept of "face" and were only interested in bringing what Willoughby perceived as a rouge officer into line.

The author's narrative of MacArthur's sending of silver oak leaves to Fertig later in 1943 is sheer fictional fantasy along with the supposed conversation between Chick Parsons and Fertig. Parsons actually told Fertig that Willoughby had blown up over the brigadier general rank, and he was there to see if Fertig was competent to command. Supposedly Willoughby had said that Fertig couldn't command men he didn't see. Of course, that was all garbage, since no general commands only men he can see. At any rate, Fertig ultimately commanded over 35,000 men on Mindanao, not counting civilian supply and supports, a number of small ships and some aircraft, in effect a full army corps that should have been commanded by a Lieutenant General plus performing the duties of a military governor. However, Fertig was so dangerous as a potential competitor to MacArthur for the Filipinos' affections, he was never promoted at any time or even upon retirement. He retired after the war at the same rank as in December, 1941 in the US Army Reserves -- Lt. Colonel. All this would have made a wonderful story, but the author either didn't know it or knew that it detracted from the luster of MacArthur/Willoughby.

From this one example and others I could recount (such as Willoughby's consistent under-estimating of Japanese troop strengths) one can easily see that the author's narrative cannot be taken as history and is therefore of little value. Some of his stories based on personal conservations and memoirs are fascinating, but are not to be taken literally until backed up with adequate sources and thorough scholarship. Unfortunately such sources and thorough scholarship are missing in this book.

Put this work on the shelf with fiction until the author performs the necessary research to validate his stories and tones down the uncritical hero worship so evident on page after page.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Asymetrical operations in the Pacific- World War II, April 10, 2011
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This book provides a good familiarization with a part of history that is often over-looked. There are other books that provide a more in-depth study of a single element of the Pacific war like the coastwatchers,or the Phillipino guerrillas,or the American Nisei but this book covers the various groups working to defeat the Japanese in a single interesting volume.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
A veil of darkness caressed the sprawling metropolis of Manila as, one by one, furtive figures slipped through a side door of the Triangulo Photography Studio on Rizal Street, named after the Philippine national hero, Dr. Jose Rizal. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
United States, New Guinea, Kempei Tai, Dai Nippon, Ivan Lyon, President Quezon, President Roosevelt, Pearl Harbor, Alamo Scouts, Manila Bay, Port Moresby, John Bulkeley, Imperial General Headquarters, Lingayen Gulf, Richard Sakakida, Admiral Yamamoto, High Pockets, Imperial Navy, Rising Sun, South Seas Development Company, Captain Lyon, Del Monte, Down Under, Father de Klerk, Fourteenth Army
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