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PEARL HARBOUR (11) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   111276


Air dominance over the oceans / Singh, Jasjit   Journal Article
Singh, Jasjit Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
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2
ID:   037744


Captains without eyes: intelligence failures in world war II / Kirkpatrick, Lyman B 1969  Book
Kirkpatrick, Lyman B Book
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Publication London, Macmillan Company, 1969.
Description xiv, 303p.Hbk
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Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
004112940.5485/KIR 004112MainOn ShelfGeneral 
3
ID:   037313


Captains without eyes: intelligence failures in world war II / Kirkpatrick, Lyman B 1987  Book
Kirkpatrick, Lyman B Book
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Publication Boulder, Westview Press, 1987.
Description xiv, 303p.Pbk
Standard Number 0813374936
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Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
030208940.5401/KIR 030208MainOn ShelfGeneral 
4
ID:   139173


Cyber security: avoiding a 2020 Pearl Harbour / Kanwal, Gurmeet   Article
Kanwal, Gurmeet Article
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Summary/Abstract The mellow rays of the winter sun glinted off the Drum Major’s mace as the colourfully attired pipes and drums band marched past the Chief of the Army Staff to the stirring strains of Deshon ka Sartaj Bharat at the end of the Army Day parade. In the speech that followed, the Chief exhorted the Army to be vigilant and prepared to resolutely face the challenges being constantly posed by the neighbour across the western border. The speech was telecast live to the nation and to almost half a million men deployed all along the border, waiting in a state of full readiness in strike corps concentration areas, following a major terrorist strike that led to the breakdown of diplomatic relations. As the Chief walked across to join the foreign diplomats and other guests for tea, his Military Attaché (MA) received a message on his secure cellular phone that the Command Information and Decision Support System had gone on the blink since 0945 hours and that the systems engineers were working furiously to get it operational again. The MA decided to keep the news to himself for the time being and posted an aide de camp to keep in touch with the Military Operations Directorate at the Army Headquarters.
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5
ID:   125987


Dieppe raid (world war II) / Gupta, Ashwani   Journal Article
Gupta, Ashwani Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Key Words Britain  Pearl Harbour  Dieppe Raid  Nazi Army  World War II 
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6
ID:   035929


Merchant shipping and the demands of war / Behrens, C B A 1955  Book
Behrens, C B A Book
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Publication London, Her Majesty's Stationery Office, 1955.
Description xix, 494p.Hbk
Series History of the Second World War; United Kingdom Civil Series
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Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
008462940.545941/941 BEH 008462MainOn ShelfGeneral 
7
ID:   140567


Modern Japan / Williams, Barry 1969  Book
Williams, Barry Book
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Publication London, Longmans, Green and Co. Ltd, 1969.
Description x, 150p.pbk
Series Modern Times
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003980952/WIL 003980MainOn ShelfGeneral 
8
ID:   036315


North American supply / Hall, H Duncan 1955  Book
Hall, H Duncan Book
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Publication London, Her Majesty's Stationary Office, 1955.
Description xvi, 559p.Hbk
Series History of the Second World War; United Kingdom Civil Series
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Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
010018940.531/HAL 010018MainOn ShelfGeneral 
9
ID:   114622


Pearl Harbour: as viewed through a different lens / Pereira, V   Journal Article
Pereira, V Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract At 0749 hours on Sunday, December 07, 1941, the Japanese launched the first of two waves of attacks against American facilities at Pearl Harbour, Hawaii; the second wave of aircraft arrived at 0900 hours. The first wave consisted of 183 Japanese dive/torpedo bombers accompanied by 'Zero' fighter escorts, whilst the second wave consisted of 168 aircraft similar in nature/composition to the first wave. Eighteen operational warships, including four battleships, were sunk or badly damaged, 188 aircraft were destroyed, 2,403 Americans were killed (including civilians) and 1,178 were wounded. 1 Although it could be said that the Japanese achieved local and tactical surprise, the American losses in the attack could have been much worse had it not been for the fact that three aircraft carriers were not in port, nine cruisers and virtually all of the destroyers remained afloat, and none of the fleet's submarines was lost. The possible extent of American losses were further limited by the fact that Adm Nagumo, the commander of the Japanese task force, refused to authorise a third wave of attack that could possibly have led to the calamitous destruction of the naval dockyards and oil storage tanks; the loss of which would have placed severe restraints on the use of Pearl Harbour as a forward base for counter-offensives against Japanese advances towards the Philippines, Malaya and the Dutch East Indies. The attack solved President Franklin D. Roosevelt's most pressing problem at the time - how to overcome American public opposition to involvement in a war that was ongoing in Europe for the previous year and a half. It is a known fact that over 80 per cent of the American population (at least on the eve of Pearl Harbour) was not in favour of the US entering the war as an active participant. Roosevelt obtained overwhelming majority support when he asked Congress for a 'declaration of war' against Japan after the attack on Pearl Harbour.
Key Words Political Leadership  Japan  America  Churchill  Pearl Harbour 
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10
ID:   024031


Secrets of the second world war / Deborin, G 1971  Book
Deborin, G Book
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Publication Moscow, Progress Publishers, 1971.
Description 277p.Hbk
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009436940.5311/DEB 009436MainOn ShelfGeneral 
11
ID:   067287


Victory in the west / Ellis, L F 1962  Book
Ellis, L F Book
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Publication London, Her Majesty's Stationery Office, 1962.
Description xix, 568p.Hbk
Contents V.I: The Battle of Normandy
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Accession#Call#Current LocationStatusPolicyLocation
008441940.53/ELL 008441MainOn ShelfGeneral