THE DAY OF THE JACKAL
The date of the book alone tells me it could not have been written before 197O, let me explain:
1945 THE WAR OFFICE thinking there may be other conflicts came up with a 25 year plan of survival, they placed all forces on a reserve list. This meant just a telegram and they all would return to the forces again. 25 years meant 1970. In 1970 they released scores of information about wartime doings. Now 'Forsyth' could write his book, but some were half stories so he added fiction. 'Forsyth' new nothing about hitmen, doubt he had ever a gun, he was a brylcream boy.
I and several of my mates had practiced this 'hitman' thing several times, LORD HALIFAX was my target as special forces. It never worked, military police always caught us, so sniper bullet from a distance was the answer.
1930 and France spent the equivalent of 39 BILLION POUNDS and ten years on the MAGINOT LINE, outdated by modern tanks and aerial bombardment. De Gaulle had opposed, but De Gaulle was an old man when when the OAS or whatever. They never had the money to hire a 'HITMAN'. In any case no one would have known of a HITMAN'S DEAL. The greatest HITMAN of all time was LEE OSWALD.
De Gaulle died aged 80 with a heart attack.
In 1940-thousands of French soldiers came here from Dunkirk, De Gaulle was placed in charge of them.
The book was OK for civilians, but for special forces it was 'old hat'.