『World War II Unwound』のカバーアート

World War II Unwound

World War II Unwound

著者: Alan Best
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Little known or forgotten stories from World War II. The spies, heroes, decision-makers and the moments that changed everything. Hosted by U.S. Navy Veteran and World War II historian Alan Best

© 2026 World War II Unwound
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  • The Catcher Was a Spy - Moe Berg and the Lecture Hall in Zurich
    2026/07/15

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    Episode Title: The Catcher Was a Spy — Moe Berg and the Lecture Hall in Zurich

    Season 1, Episode 8 — The Spies & Secret Wars — SEASON FINALE

    He was a backup catcher with a .243 batting average.

    He was also fluent in seven languages. He held a law degree from Columbia. He read six newspapers a day in multiple languages — in the dugout — while his teammates played cards. A teammate once said of him: "He can speak twelve languages, but he can't hit in any of them."

    In December 1944, Moe Berg sat in a lecture hall in Zurich, Switzerland, with a loaded pistol in his jacket pocket and a cyanide pill in his shoe. Across the room, Werner Heisenberg — Nobel laureate, founder of quantum mechanics, and the man Allied intelligence believed was at the center of Nazi Germany's atomic weapons program — was about to deliver a lecture.

    Berg's orders were precise: listen carefully. And if anything in that lecture suggested Germany was close to building an atomic bomb, find a way to be alone with Heisenberg afterward.

    And do not let him leave.

    This is not fiction. This is the true story of one of the most extraordinary human beings of the Second World War — a man who filmed the Tokyo skyline from a hospital rooftop during a baseball goodwill tour in 1934, a decade before anyone asked him to. A man who crossed the Atlantic with a pistol that nearly fell out of his pocket at 30,000 feet. A man who was offered the Medal of Freedom after the war and turned it down — because it would embarrass him.

    His final words, spoken to a nurse in a Newark hospital in 1972, were a question: "How did the Mets do today?"

    Season One began with a man nobody wanted — who fooled Hitler's entire intelligence operation from a kitchen table in Lisbon. It ends with a man nobody expected — who sat across a dinner table from one of the most dangerous physicists alive, made a judgment call that may have changed the course of the war, and then went home and never really talked about it again.

    This is the Season One finale of WWII Unwound. And it is something else.

    In this episode, Amanda and Harry unwind the most genuinely unbelievable true story of the entire season.

    Send your thoughts and story ideas to BestStoryPublishing@gmail.com

    Visit us at www.beststorypublishing.com

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    23 分
  • The Cambridge Five - Five Men, One Betrayal, Thirty Years
    2026/07/06

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    Episode Title: The Cambridge Five — Five Men, One Betrayal, Thirty Years

    Season 1, Episode 7 — The Spies & Secret Wars

    Every story this season has been about deception aimed outward — at Nazi Germany. This one is different.

    Five men. Recruited as students at Cambridge University in the early 1930s. Educated at one of the finest universities in the world. Trusted completely by the British establishments they entered — the Foreign Office, MI5, MI6, and Bletchley Park itself.

    For decades, they passed everything they learned to Moscow.

    Kim Philby rose to become head of MI6's counter-Soviet operations — the man responsible for stopping Soviet espionage, who was himself a Soviet agent. Donald Maclean gained access to the most sensitive Anglo-American atomic intelligence discussions of the war. Anthony Blunt walked through Bletchley Park and handed decoded German signals intelligence to Moscow at the same time it was shortening the war for the Allies. John Cairncross worked at Bletchley Park directly. And Guy Burgess was everywhere, passing everything.

    They weren't recruited for money. They were recruited in the 1930s — when fascism was rising, when the Spanish Civil War was burning, when communism looked to many intelligent young people like the only serious response to what was coming. That context doesn't excuse what followed. But it explains how it began.

    What followed cost real people their lives.

    This is the episode that changes the shape of the entire season — and sets up the finale.

    In this episode, Amanda and Harry unwind one of the most significant intelligence failures in the history of the Western world.

    Send your thoughts and story ideas to BestStoryPublishing@gmail.com

    Visit us at www.beststorypublishing.com

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    24 分
  • Operation Mincemeat - The Spy Who Never Lived
    2026/06/30

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    Episode Title: Operation Mincemeat — The Spy Who Never Lived

    Season 1, Episode 6 — The Spies & Secret Wars

    He had a fiancée. A bank manager who was annoyed with him. Theater ticket stubs from a night out in London. A locked briefcase full of secret documents, chained to his wrist.

    He had never been alive.

    In the spring of 1943, the body of "Major William Martin" washed up on a beach in neutral Spain — and within days, the documents in his briefcase had traveled from a Spanish fisherman, to Spanish naval intelligence, to the German embassy in Madrid, to Berlin, to Adolf Hitler's own desk. What those papers said convinced Hitler that the Allies were about to invade Greece and Sardinia — not Sicily, the target every map in Europe pointed to. He moved real divisions. He sent Erwin Rommel to guard a coastline that was never going to be attacked.

    None of it was real. The man in the uniform had been a homeless Welshman named Glyndwr Michael, dead of rat poison, with no family to claim him. Every detail of "Major Martin's" life — his love letters, his overdraft, his engagement ring receipt — had been invented from scratch by two British intelligence officers with an almost obsessive eye for the small, unglamorous details that make a fake life feel real.

    It is one of the most successful deception operations in the history of warfare — built entirely around a man who never lived a single day of the life that fooled Hitler's high command.

    In this episode, Amanda and Harry unwind the planning, the boots that wouldn't fit a dead man's frozen feet, the nine agonizing days of waiting in Spain, and the captured German archives that finally proved the whole thing had worked.

    Send your thoughts and story ideas to BestStoryPublishing@gmail.com

    Visit us at www.beststorypublishing.com

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    23 分
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