James Emerson Loyd
The Great War Won: A Power of Recognized Superiority
The Great War Won: A Power of Recognized Superiority
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Who Desires Peace..., the first book in the Great War Won trilogy, chronicled the schemes and adventures of the conspirators laying the foundations for their peace offensive. Book Two, ...Should Prepare for War, began with the unleashing of Germany's armies as peace talks with Bolshevist Russia fail. Several calls for a peaceful resolution to the war proved inconclusive, including an intrepid mission to meet face-to-face with the American General Black Jack Pershing. Finally, the tenuous state of inaction along the Western Front was shattered by first, an unexpected Allied offensive, then a fierce German counterattack, stopped only by the courage and vigor of the new American Expeditionary Force at Chateau Thierry and Belleau Wood.
Thus is set the stage for the final showdown between and American and Germany in this Book Three, A Power of Recognized Superiority, opening with a devious scheme to disrupt the Allied rear with a flood of influenza-stricken prisoners and a distaff Fifth Column subversion by the radical Rosa Luxemburg and her unlikely comrade Estelle Vandenberg, culminating in their arrest and imprisonment. Then Pershing's American Expeditionary Force enters large-scale combat for the first time in the Saint-Mihiel salient and then the Meuse-Argonne sector. As the latter offensive slogs on bloodily, Germany begins to falter, then crumble, but her foes find themselves in desperate straits of their own, as morale, manpower and a continuing slaughter take their toll.
Finally, an unexpected rapprochement brings the War to End All Wars to a fitful end, each power reckoning the loss of young men and treasure and their peoples asking, 'Why'?
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