Fire in the Night: Wingate of Burma, Ethiopia, and Zion

Preis 27.59 - 29.95 USD

EAN/UPC/ISBN Code 9780375500619

Marke Random House

Few men have made as outstanding contributions to their country"s cause as Orde Wingate, yet few have divided opinion so completely. "We don"t want any more Wingates in the British Army," says an Army Council minute written after the end of the Second World War, and after his death. In contrast, no less than Winston Churchill himself said, before the House of Commons, "There was a man of genius, who might well have become a man of destiny." John Bierman and Colin Smith"s enlightening and rigorous biography of this brilliant man amply demonstrates how the conservative establishment of the British Army could come to adopt such an ungracious attitude to one of their most dynamic sons, who contributed so much to the war effort with dazzling performances in Abyssinia and Burma, and so much to future strategic thinking with his bold formulation of new methods. He ruffled feathers with his uncompromising style, unconventional thinking, and eccentric nature (perhaps most memorably expressed in his unaffected penchant for receiving visitors in the nude). Together with an acute intelligence and great breadth of learning, Wingate was a man possessed of awe-inspiring will and single-minded application, and he was often seen flying into a rage when things were not done as he thought they should be. Many, regardless of rank, felt the lash of his tongue. His almost fanatical commitment to the cause of Zionism, a highly sensitive and ambivalent political hot potato for the British at the time, seems also to have rankled many who simply could not understand a man so unlike the typical public-school-educated officer. Although not Jewish himself, to this day he is widely honored in Israel. Zvi Brenner, his Jewish bodyguard in Palestine before the war when he was commanding the Special Night Squads, elegantly encapsulated the man when, in describing Wingate"s uncanny ability to negotiate all terrain in darkness, he said, "Wingate didn"t follow any paths but walked in straight lines." A truly exceptional man; there is, unfortunately, little chance of the British Army"s having any more Wingates. --Alisdair Bowles, Amazon.co.uk