In 1941, as the Allies struggled elsewhere, Axis forces were gaining Middle Eastern power through the Golden Square coup in Iraq, and the pro-Vichy Syrian regime. Broich tells how, with limited resources and manpower, a ramshackle coalition of militias, troops and individuals (including Roald Dahl and Freya Stark) improvised responses in battle zones including Fallujah, Baghdad and Damascus.
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https://integration-5ojmyuq-6wp5anmhke56o.eu-3.magentosite.cloud/blood-oil-and-the-axis513783Blood, Oil and the Axishttps://integration-5ojmyuq-6wp5anmhke56o.eu-3.magentosite.cloud/media/catalog/product/5/1/513783_abf0c822d1918c745d62ad6fb04698f0.jpg9.999.99GBPInStock/History/Military History/Categories/World War Two/History/History/Military History/History/Military History/Almost Gone/Almost Gone/Almost Gone HistoryIn 1941, as the Allies struggled elsewhere, Axis forces were gaining Middle Eastern power through the Golden Square coup in Iraq, and the pro-Vichy Syrian regime. Broich tells how, with limited resources and manpower, a ramshackle coalition of militias, troops and individuals (including Roald Dahl and Freya Stark) improvised responses in battle zones including Fallujah, Baghdad and Damascus.Hardback00add-to-cartJohn BroichGeneral225x152mmAbramsHardbackSecond World War