Operation Underworld: How the Mafia and U.S. Government Teamed Up to Win World War II

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UPC:
9780806542157
Maximum Purchase:
2 units
Binding:
hardcover
Publication Date:
12/27/2022
Release Date:
12/27/2022
Author:
Black, Matthew
Language:
English: Published; English: Original Language; English
Pages:
384
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Never has the saying the enemy of my enemy is my friend had more truth than when the US government and the criminal underground joined forces to defeat the Nazi menace. For the first time ever the full story of how Charles Lucky Lucianothe U.S. Mafia boss who put the organized into organized crimewas recruited by U.S. Naval Intelligence in 1942 to aid the Allied war effort in the U.S. invasion of Sicily, a turning point in WWII. In 1942, a rational fear was mounting that New York Harbor was vulnerable to sabotage. If the waterfront was infested with German and Italian agents then the U.S. Navy needed a recourse just as insidious to secure it. Naval intelligence officer, Commander Charles Radcliffe Haffenden had the solution: recruit as his own spies, members of La Cosa Nostra. Pier to pier, no one terrified the longshoremen, stevedores, shopkeepers, and boat captains along the harbor better than the Mafia gangs of New York, who controlled the docks in Manhattan and Brooklyn. Haffenden was prepared to make a deal with the devilthe man who put organized into organized crime. Even from his cell in Dannemora State Prison, former Public Enemy #1, Charles Lucky Luciano still had tremendous power. Luciano was willing to wield it for Haffenden. But he wanted something in returnLucianos contacts in Italy to track the Nazis movements. Operation Underworld is a tale of espionage and crime like no other, the unbelievable, first-ever account of the Allied war efforts clandestine coalition between the Mafia and the U.S. Government to protect New York, vanquish the Nazis by taking the fight to the enemy in the 1943 U.S. invasion of Sicily. It was an ingenious strategy carried out by some of historys most infamous, improbable, and unsung heroes on both sides of the law. It was a Faustian bargain that brought homefront enemies together but, as journalist and crime historian Matthew Black reveals, one that ultimately succeeded in helping the Allies win World War II.