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OSS Operation Black Mail - One Woman's Covert War Against the Imperial Japanese Army (Paperback)
Loot Price: R543
Discovery Miles 5 430
You Save: R300
(36%)
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OSS Operation Black Mail - One Woman's Covert War Against the Imperial Japanese Army (Paperback)
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Was R843
Loot Price R543
Discovery Miles 5 430
You Save R300 (36%)
Expected to ship within 12 - 19 working days
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OSS Operation Black Mail is the story of a remarkable woman who
fought World War II on the front lines of psychological warfare.
Elizabeth ""Betty"" P. McIntosh spent eighteen months serving in
the Office of Strategic Services in what has been called the
""forgotten theater,"" China-Burma-India, where she met and worked
with characters as varied as Julia Child and Ho Chi Minh. Her craft
was black propaganda, and her mission was to demoralize the enemy
through prevarication and deceit, and ultimately, convince him to
surrender. Betty and her crew ingeniously obtained and altered
personal correspondence between Japanese soldiers and their
families on the home islands of Japan. She also ordered the killing
of a Japanese courier in the jungles of Burma to plant a false
surrender order in his mailbag. By the time Betty flew the Hump
from Calcutta to China, she was acting head of the Morale
Operations branch for the entire theater, overseeing the production
of thousands of pamphlets and radio scripts, the generation of
fiendishly clever rumors, and the printing of a variety of faked
Japanese, Burmese, and Chinese newspapers. Her strategy involved
targeting not merely the Japanese soldier but the man within: the
son, the husband, the father. She knew her work could ultimately
save lives, but never lost sight of the fact that her propaganda
was a weapon and her intended target the enemy. This is not a
typical war story. The only beaches stormed are the minds of an
invisible enemy. Often a great deal of time and effort was expended
in conception and production, and rarely was it known if even a
shred reached the hands of the intended recipient. The process was
opaque on both ends: the origin of a rumor or radio broadcast
obscured, the target elusive. For Betty and her friends, time on
the ""front lines"" of psychological warfare in China-Burma-India
rushed by in a cascade of creativity and innovation, played out on
a stage where a colonial world was ending and chaos awaited.
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