Thomas Boghardt grew up in Germany. He has lived in Florida, France, Italy, and England where he went to university. After graduation he taught briefly in Pakistan, then came to Washington, D.C. in 2002 on a postgraduate fellowship at Georgetown University. He subsequently worked for six years as a historian for the International Spy Museum. In 2010, he joined the U.S. Army Center of Military History in Washington, D.C. as a senior historian. He lives with his wife and two young children in Bethesda, Maryland.
…Fascinating book." -- Military History "A specialist in the
history of espionage and covert operations during the Great War, in
The Zimmermann Telegram Boghardt gives us the first new book on
this event since Barbara Tuchman's treatment over 60 years ago. In
his excellent opening survey of the historiography of the subject,
Boghardt notes that Tuchman and other earlier writers on the
subject worked without many documents that remained classified
until recently, and also wrote largely without reference at all to
German sources. A valuable work for anyone interested in the
diplomacy of the war or American's participation."-StrategyPage.com
"Overall, this is a deeply researched, clearly written, and highly
analytical monograph. It certainly supersedes anything else written
on the Zimmermann telegram and should be read by anyone interested
in the First World War." -- Intelligence and National Security "I
give this book a high recommendation: FIVE CLOAKS, FIVE DAGGERS!"
--The Washington Times "…Impressive study…Well-researched,
engagingly written, and superbly produced…a valuable and enjoyable
read." -- The Journal of Military History "U.S. Army Center of
Military History senior historian Thomas Boghardt is a thoughtful,
technically astute, balanced investigator and fine author of
prose…Read The Zimmermann Telegram. You won't be disappointed."
-- Naval Historical Foundation "Boghardt blends the scholarship of
a refined historian with the narrative skills of a John Le Carré in
retelling the story of the Zimmermann telegram. Summing Up: Highly
recommended."
-- Choice "…Should be the definite work on the subject…Dr.
Boghardt's work is a masterpiece of intelligence writing. By
following the hard evidence rather than relying on historical
assumptions, he provides an incisive case study on how intelligence
can affect national affairs."
-- Intelligencer: Journal of U.S. Intelligence Studies "This is a
fresh, comprehensive study of how intelligence and
counter-intelligence can be used in war, and of an incident that
formed one of the markers on the way to the special relationship
between Britain and the USA."
-- Warships International Fleet Review "…Fascinating book."
-- Military History, July 2013 "The detailed analysis here, drawing
from documents of the time, tells us much that is new about the
telegram, its decryption, and the tricks which not only brought it
to light in 1917 but also kept the whole story from being told
until now."
--The Commercial Dispatch, (Columbus, Mississippi) "Replete with
deft pen portraits of the main protagonists such as Kemnitz--nicely
characterized by Hollweg's secretary, Riezler, as a 'fantastic
idiot'--Boghardt has produced a highly readable, scholarly, and
accomplished account. It adds particularly to our understanding of
the dysfunctional nature of German policy-making."
- The Historian "Boghardt expertly dissects the political and
military situation surrounding the decrypt ion and dissemination of
the notorious Zimmermann Telegram which triggered (but was not the
cause) America's entry into the Great War. Of equal importance are
his brief but revealing character sketches of the principal actors
in the drama: German Foreign Secretary Arthur Zimmermann, British
naval intelligence chief, William "Blinker" Hall, Wilson confidant
Colonel Edward House, and U.S. Secretary of State Robert Lansing
among many other major and minor characters."
-- "St. Mihiel Trip-Wire" on www.WorldWarI.com, December 2012 "The
Zimmermann Telegram will fascinate history buffs. It is worth
reading."
--Galveston Daily News, 18 November 201 "...The story of the
Zimmermann telegram has enough twists and turns to keep the
attention of even a jaded James Bond. U.S. Army Center of Military
History senior historian Thomas Boghardt is a thoughtful,
technically astute, balanced investigator and fine author of
prose…Read The Zimmermann Telegram. You won't be disappointed." --
Naval Historical Foundation "Boghardt has given us a deeply
researched and well-written book that tells us much that is new
about the Zimmermann Telegram and its role in American entry into
World War I. More than that, however, it is a solid analysis of
German foreign policy and the international context of 1917. It
should be a must read for anyone interested in these subjects."
--Michael S. Neiberg, author of Dance of the Furies: Europe and the
Outbreak of World War I "Thomas Boghardt has provided the most
thorough, comprehensive, and reliable account to date of the
Zimmermann Telegram. He has judiciously analyzed the diplomatic,
political, bureaucratic, and cryptological dimensions of the
crisis. His conclusions about its role in the American decision to
enter the war against Germany in 1917 are compelling."
--Roger Chickering, professor emeritus, Georgetown University, and
author of Imperial Germany and the Great War, 1914-1918 "The
Zimmermann Telegram is a critical moment in the history of World
War I and the history of intelligence. Thomas Boghardt's work
deftly examines the disclosure of the telegram, the U.S. entry into
the war, and its historical memory. It's a lovely work of
scholarship, deeply researched, that pays careful attention to all
the main actors and reads as compellingly as a thriller."
--David Silbey, author of The British Working Class and Enthusiasm
for War, 1914?1916 and The Boxer Rebellion and the Great Game in
China, 1900 "Thomas Boghardt has produced a brilliant analysis of
the most sensational code-breaking coup of World War I which also
sheds new light on the origins of today's British-American special
relationship."
--Christopher Andrew, author of Defend the Realm: The Authorized
History of MI5 "Thomas Boghardt has written the only book anyone
needs to read about the storied Zimmermann Telegram episode. By
exhaustively mining several countries' archives, using previously
unavailable records, and giving equal treatment to all the major
players, Boghardt corrects many durable misunderstandings about how
the telegram was conceived, discovered, perceived, and exploited.
He has made a vital contribution to the scholarship on intelligence
and World War I."
--David Robarge, chief historian, Central Intelligence Agency
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