MICHAEL WALSH REAL HISTORY. After June 1940 there was much allied concern at the lack of any resistance to the German Occupation in the Low Countries and France. To inflame passions and invite reprisals Britain’s Special Operations Executive (SOE) proceeded to carry out acts designed to shake off such inertia. Typically, parachuted British SOE operatives would clandestinely butcher German servicemen, often sentries.

Michael Walsh journalist and author says, ‘Ian Souter Clarence, a former SOE operative boasted to me that he had been part of such engagements. After such forays SOE commandos would leave clues to suggest responsibility for the murders and acts of sabotage lay with the local resistance.
In many cases, units of the local occupation force were fooled and sometimes did take out reprisals on the local population. This had the desired effect of arousing bad feelings and encouraging retaliatory attacks on German targets.
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One British agent was the Anglo-French Violette Szabo. Recruited as an allied agent, she made several drops into occupied France. With other agents, she brought considerable destruction and loss of life to civilians, to French and German servicemen and women.
Szabo was twice captured and twice she escaped. On a third occasion, holed up with others, she savagely killed several German soldiers before she was captured. Szabo was subsequently executed by a firing squad. This was strictly following international conventions.
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Claims that the Gestapo routinely tortured captives are very wide of the mark. For this reason, incidences of maltreatment had to be made up. The most infamous of these fraudulent torture claims related to the capture of Violette Szabo.
These lurid fantasies were later repeated in the movie and book Carve Her Name with Pride. Szabo’s fellow captives, Captain Peuleve and Wing Commander Yeo-Thomas G. C., both of whom were interrogated and imprisoned with Violette Szabo, stated unequivocally that their German captors never maltreated the female agent.
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The torture claims made by her researcher Mr. Minney caused Captain Peuleve much embarrassment. The captain had wrongly and without his knowledge was cited as the sole source of evidence for the torture allegations in the posthumous George Cross citation awarded to Violette Szabo. (Sunday Times 4.4.1965). NOTE: This story was first published in The All Lies Invasion by Michael Walsh. This book and over 70 other book titles were removed by Amazon. BEAT WESTERN PRESS CENSORSHIP BY POSTING ON SOCIAL MEDIA

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