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My Commando Operations: The Memoirs of Hitler's Most Daring Commando

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The memoirs of the legendary Skorzeny appear here in its first unabridged English edition. Skorzeny's fame began with the successful raid to free Benito Mussolini from the Gran Sasso, Italy in 1943. His elite commandos surprised Italian guards in a daring daytime raid. Hitler presented Skorzeny with the Knight's Cross for this operation. Not only is this raid explained in minute detail, many of Skorzeny's previously unknown operations in all European and Russian theatres of World War II are given in detailed accounts. Operation Griffin - the innovative use of German Kommandos dressed as American soldiers working behind enemy lines - during the Ardennes Offensive in 1944 is given in-depth coverage, as is Skorzeny's rememberances on the Malmedy massacre. Skorzeny also offers his insights into the mysterious Rudolf Hess mission to England in May 1941, and offers a behind the scenes look at German and Russian secret military intelligence, and the workings of Canaris and Gehlen.



***This 1997 Schiffer edition has the same ISBN (0887407188. 9780887407185) as the 1995 edition from the same publisher, though the dust-jacket is completely different.***

496 pages, Hardcover

First published February 1, 1975

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About the author

Otto Skorzeny

34 books25 followers
Otto Skorzeny was an Austrian SS-Standartenführer (colonel) in the German Waffen-SS during World War II. After fighting on the Eastern Front, he was chosen as the field commander to carry out the rescue mission that freed the deposed Italian dictator Benito Mussolini from captivity.

Skorzeny was also the leader of Operation Greif, in which German soldiers were to infiltrate through enemy lines, using their opponents' language, uniforms, and customs. At the end of the war, Skorzeny was involved with the Werwolf guerrilla movement and the ODESSA network where he would serve as Spanish coordinator.

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Profile Image for Mahdi Lotfi.
447 reviews133 followers
August 16, 2017
در سال 1945 با تسلیم بدون قید و شرط آلمان و ژاپن، جنگ جهانی دوم پس از شش سال کشت و کشتار بیرحمانه پایان یافت. این هولناکترین جنگی بود که تاریخ بشر به یاد دارد، چون بیش از پنجاه میلیون نفر تلفات بر جای گذاشت و صدها میلیون نفر را به دنبال تحولات سیاسی پس از جنگ از خانه و کاشانۀ خود آواره ساخت. مهمترین پیامد جنگ جهانی دوم خرد شدن قدرت نظامی و صنعتی آلمان و ژاپن و پیدایش امپراتوری عظیم کمونیستی از برلین و اروپای شرقی تا پکن، پیونگ یانگ و سایگون بود که طی نزدیک به نیم قرن لرزه بر اندام هر فرد آزادیخواه در چهار گوشۀ جهان می انداخت.
در طول دهه های گذشته کتابهای بیشماری در بارۀ جنگ جهانی دوم نوشته شده که بیشترشان از منابع غربی (انگلیسی، آمریکایی، فرانسوی، ایتالیایی) و تعداد کمتری از منابع روسی بوده است. "جنگ ناشناخته" نخستین اثری در این زمینه است که نظریات آلمانیها را بیان می کند و روایت جدیدی از این جنگ عالمسوز به دست می دهد که به کلی با روایتهای غربی و شرقی آن تفاوت دارد.
اتو اسکورزنی افسری اتریشی بود که با عملیات شگفت انگیز خود در دوران جنگ، شهرت به سزایی یافت و با عملیاتی مانند نجات موسولینی، ربودن پسر دریاسالار هورتی و رخنه کردن در صفوف سربازان متفقین در جبهۀ بلژیک، "خطرناکترین مرد اروپا" لقب یافت. او در این کتاب حقایق ناگفته ای را فاش می سازد و نشان می دهد که بسیاری از ادعاهای متفقین در زمان جنگ، عاری از حقیقت بوده و جنبۀ شعار داشته و به منظور بی آبرو ساختن رایش آلمان ساخته و پرداخته شده بوده است که قهرمانانه تا استالینگراد و العلمین پیشروی کرد ولی سر انجام در برابر نیروهایی ده برابر بیشتر و نیرومندتر شکست خورد.
524 reviews33 followers
June 16, 2016
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.
Profile Image for Ellie Midwood.
Author 43 books1,149 followers
December 12, 2016
An amazing inside look into the Waffen-SS and Skorzeny's commando operations. But what I appreciated even more was the "voice" of the author, sometimes sarcastic, sometimes bitter, sometimes hilarious but I couldn't get rid of the feeling that he was sitting in the same room with me and telling his stories. The book isn't your typical dry account of certain historical events, and I would highly recommend it to everyone interested in WWII history.
What I also liked was that unlike Walther Schellenberg for example, Skorzeny didn't try to picture himself an "all good, innocent man and a victim of the circumstances." His memoirs are more or less honest account of a regular soldier, even though a very gifted and lucky one. His praises of the Russian army and their bravery was also a very nice touch, just like his mentioning of certain guards in Nuremberg, who he befriended in spite of the constant picking and hatred directed towards the prisoners from the prison administration. It's those little details that made it a very personal and very compelling read. Loved it!
Profile Image for djcb.
613 reviews8 followers
June 3, 2023
Skorzeny was Hitler's Rambo/Bond-style special agent, famously rescuing Italian "Il Duce" Mussolini from captivity. Also, seems he never really distanced himself from the Third Reich even decades after its end, although he did transform it a bit of a Pan-European; the book somewhat hints at him knowing about concentration camps even during the war...

Such trifles aside, it is interesting to get a bit of an inside view on some the actions / battles; possible traitors on the German side etc. (not sure that can be corroborated; it's always attractive to blame defeat on such things...).
Profile Image for Jukka Häkkinen.
Author 5 books6 followers
December 15, 2023
Hitlerin kommandoksi ja Euroopan vaarallisimmaksi mieheksi nimetty SS-kapteeni Otto Skorzeny kertoo elämäntarinansa kirjassa, jossa hän liioittelee omia ansioitaan tai suorastaan keksii omasta päästään uusia yksityiskohtia dramatisoidakseen tapahtumia. Hän myös yrittää puhdistaa omaa ja Waffen-SS -joukkojen mainetta ja vihjaa, että Natsi-Saksan kaatuminen johtui juonittelevistä pettureista hallinnossa, ei niinkään Hitlerin toiminnasta. Satuiluun taipuvaisen upseerin näkemys sodasta on omalla tavallaan kiinnostava vaihtoehtohistoria.
Profile Image for Bradford Bailey.
15 reviews
June 5, 2019
Clearly a die hard Nazi who could not grasp why Europe could not become united against the communists. He seems to skip over the fact that Germany was the Aggressor invading country that started WWII. Who would join your cause or line of thinking when you just pummeled their country to ruins. Great warrior. Political thinking is not his game.
626 reviews4 followers
July 28, 2017
For me this was a hard book to read & follow. The author jumped around too much for me...we were in 1943 then all of a sudden jumped back or forward. The author was most definitely a Nazi from before the war to the end of his life. I found his complaining of how he was treated in prison or how civilians were killed during bombing raids the pot calling the kettle black. He never acknowledged the same happen during the Battle of Britain or how Jews or others were treated by the Germans, but he does make a big deal about being guarded by blacks in prison or a Jewish lawyer at Nuremberg. All in all, a bit too much trying to justify the German position for me. That said glad I read it but glad I'm finished.
57 reviews1 follower
July 1, 2015
At it's best, this book has an"uncle Otto shares his war stories" vibe, but it meanders all over the place and through time. Great insights into the German point make it a valuable WWII read.
2 reviews
May 2, 2018
Good for wanna-be Historians and for those who want to study History
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