The year is 1951. The Cold War is heating up. With Soviet troops amassing across Eastern Europe and the arrests of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg for spilling nuclear secrets, President Harry Truman assigned General Curtis LeMay the task of installing nuclear forces in Britain. On March 22, a massive C-124 Globemaster cargo plane—possibly carrying a “Fat Man” bomb—was dispatched to Britain with 53 passengers and crew including elite specialists in atomic warfare. Something went wrong. Either the plane was intercepted in mid-air or a catastropic series of malfunctions caused the plane to veer wildly off course.
The Globemaster never reached its destination. After radio communications ceased over the Atlantic, the plane took a sudden turn, flew hundreds of miles, and ditched in the North Atlantic. Survivors disappeared before they could be rescued.
Was this the work of Soviet saboteurs? Was the mission compromised from the very start? And is a “broken arrow” bomb still lying on the bottom of the ocean? These are just a few of the questions explored in this yet-unsolved mystery.
Drawing from classified archives and personal accounts, Robberson reconstructs LeMay’s mission in riveting detail, exploring possible security leaks including a brigadier general whose bigamy may have compromised the top-secret mission. Meticulously researched and brilliantly told, Globemaster Down tells the fascinating story of two global superpowers in a reckless race toward the brink of nuclear disaster. A must-read for fans of military adventure, Cold War intrigue, and world-class espionage.
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