Thanks.
While it is the generally accepted version of the event, not everyone is ready to paint Churchill as such a cold calculating individual
I read that and there seems to be some inconsistencies. I re-read the chapter on Coventry and then read the part about El Alamien; far be it for me to judge the likes of a great like Mr. Churchill but I can't help but wonder if Browns claim has any validity. It appears that Mr. Churchill didn't seem to hesitate in acting when it was discovered that Italy was sending another re-supply convoy to Rommel in which the ships were sent from five different locations on "fog shrouded" seas; IMHO it was a master stroke when British CI folks sent the traffic alluding to a breach originating with the Italians. To risk everything to prevent re-supplies from reaching Rommel but not to prevent the destruction of a major industrial city, to me, does not seem consistant. I cannot imagine Mr. Churchill not taking action to protect Coventry. In the grand scheme of things was Ultra more important in the beginning and the sacrifice deemed acceptable? I wonder what would have been the effects on future operations had Ultra been compromised so early.
V/R
MTAB