(Upper Left): Truman Smith with German military personnel and another unidentified American officer in uniform looking at German aircrafts. (Upper Right): German aircraft factory producing fighters during the Second World War.

(Above): A sketch (drawing) of The Treaty of Versailles, mocking or exaggerating the terms.

 (Upper Left): German Officers attending a visit at an airstrip. (Upper Right): The deadly Messerschmitt Bf-109 was the most produced fighter aircraft of the Second World War. (Lower Left): A prototype German four-engine bomber soars the skies. (Lower Right): This Heinkel 111 bomber flying over the clouds became an infamous sight during the early war period.

(Below): The Ju-88 was a medium bomber that was consider to be fast for its time. Many would see service in many combat operations in the early war period from the Battle of Britain to the siege of Stalingrad.

 

(Upper Left): Charles Lindbergh on one of his visits to Nazi Germany. (Lower Right): Heinkel 111 bombers, designed for high-level bombing strategic targets, being produced in a German factory during the Second World War. (Below): Charles Lindbergh poses in front of his famous plane “Spirit of St. Louis” that managed to cross the Atlantic Ocean alone in one flight.

(Upper Left): The cover for “Berlin Alert: The Memoirs and Reports of Truman Smith.” (Upper Right): Truman Smith talking with German General Ludwig Beck and American officers during military maneuvers.