Quote from William Rennick:
Balderdash!! The Krauts were attacked first when German SS dressed up as Polish Military captured a German radio station on the border. Hitler retaliated the next morning with the famous Blitzkreig. Those poor Polish bastards woke up and were part of the new Reich. A German friend joked the invasion was so easy that they marched in backwards and told the Poles they were leaving.
Rennick Cronkite out
The Fake Invasion at Gleiwitz that Started World War II
In the late evening of Thursday, August 31, 1939, German covert operatives pretending to be Polish terrorists seized the Gleiwitz radio station in the German/Poland border region of Silesia.
The station's music program came to an abrupt halt, followed by frantic German voices announcing that Polish formations were marching toward town; Germany was being invaded by Poland!
Then, like a bad imitation of the previous year's infamous War of the Worlds broadcast, the transmission went dead for a moment of dramatic silence.
Word of Gleiwitz Reaches Rest of World
Soon, the airwaves popped and crackled to life again, and this time Polish voices (clever little devils, those Germans...) called for all Poles in the broadcast area to take up arms and attack Germany.
In no time, radio stations across greater Europe picked up the story. The BBC broadcast this statement:
There have been reports of an attack on a radio station in Gleiwitz, which is just across the Polish border in Silesia. The German News Agency reports that the attack came at about 8.00pm this evening when the Poles forced their way into the studio and began broadcasting a statement in Polish. Within quarter of an hour, says reports, the Poles were overpowered by German police, who opened fire on them. Several of the Poles were reported killed, but the numbers are not yet known.
And thus, Hitler invented an excuse to invade Poland, which he did the next day: September 1, 1939. The day World War II began.
http://ezinearticles.com/?The-Fake-Invasion-at-Gleiwitz-that-Started-World-War-II&id=505309