Very interesting first-person account of a famous WWII German commando who operated across Europe and interacted with top level German officials including Hitler. Brave, resourceful, and outspoken, Skorzeny is perhaps best known for his snatching of Mussolini from an Italian mountain top hotel where he had been locked up by the Italian government when it was planning to break from its alliance with Germany and surrender to the Allies. Hitler considered Mussolini a personal friend and called upon Skorzeny to rescue him, which he did in a high-risk glider operation.
Skorzeny writes here about the widespread treason that existed in the Third Reich, with leaks and espionage aiding Russia and the Allies. Interestingly he is such a charismatic person, even in his writing, that the reader may share his outrage--until recognizing that these traitors are the people
who were helping the West win the war. He notes as examples Admiral Canaris, head of a German intelligence agency who provided misleading information to the German military, and Count Stauffenberg, the man who planted the bomb intended to kill Hitler at a staff meeting in July 1944.
This is truly looking at WWII from the opposite perspective.
Recommended for history and military readers for its detailed insight into various WWII figures, events, and battles.