As I've said before, war comics aren't my cup of tea but I'll try to give this a fair reading. The issue as a whole isn't very interesting because of the two problems common to most pre-Giordano Charlton comics: poor art and blah stories.
My gripe with Joe Gill's stories is that they seldom have much structure. They start, meander vaguely through a series of incidents, and end. Of the Gill stories in this issue "Mission: Tirpitz" works best because it builds up a little suspense and has a surprise tragic ending. "El Presidente Jonesy" also reads like a Gill story. It's silly but a fun read. As the info card notes, the artwork and lettering make it look like the story was inventory from another company. I think the same is true for the Ken Battefield stories but I'm not sure. That sloppy italic lettering appears in quite a few 1950s Charltons. Maybe Battefield worked directly for Charlton at that time.
The only artwork that appeals to me is Sam Glanzman's two stories. His art makes the stories look better than they are. He's the only artist who puts some thought into composition and his hardware looks like the real thing. Bill Molno's stuff is just awful. His combination of endless cop-outs and total disregard for authenticity drives me up a wall. His fake-o art on "Mission: Tirpitz" sucks the drama out of a potentially exciting story. Battefield's art falls somewhere in between. It's funny how he draws elaborately-rendered splash panels, then sloughs off most of the rest of the art.
At 68 pages it's kind of a slog, but SJG eases the journey.