THE BIG PICTURE PSYCHOLOGICAL WARFARE IN KOREAN WAR 35012

One of the classic episodes of the U.S. Army's TV show "The Big Picture", this episode looks at the use of psychological operations to sap enemy morale. At 2:43, broadcasts are made in the field using loudspeakers to North Korean soldiers, attempting to get them to surrender. At 3:10, a reel to reel tape recorder is used as part of this effort. At 3:17, brochures are seen printed by the hundreds. General Robert McClure is seen describing the "struggle for men's minds" at 3:40. At 7:05, a C-47 is loaded with surrender leaflets for release over enemy territory. At 8:18, the aircraft flies low while loudspeakers blare propaganda. At 9:45, some of the training programs behind these efforts are seen including laboratory testing at Ft. Riley, Kansas where a Psychological Warfare School was established (a la the Manchurian Candidate ).
At 10:30, General HQ at Tokyo is shown with the Psychological Warfare headquarters activities are described. Psywar broadcasts are seen at 12:20, with broadcasts of news and information via radio. At 12:35, records are recorded on discs, and recordings are made to reel-to-reel tape for use by mobile transmitters. At 15:00, strategic printing of leaflets is shown at the Tokyo facility. At 16:50, propaganda leaflets are designed including text and image, and translated from English into Korean and Chinese. These leaflets are seen distributed by the tens of thousands by B-29 at 20:14. Artillery bursts of literature are also shown at 22:19.
Loudspeakers are seen in use with a front-line unit at 22:30 and at 24:00. An airborne loudspeaker is seen on board an A-26 being used with a Korean woman narrating, for effectiveness against the Chinese and Korean soldiers.
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Пікірлер: 12

  • @neverendingjourneystilllea5271
    @neverendingjourneystilllea52712 жыл бұрын

    Thanks

  • @PeriscopeFilm

    @PeriscopeFilm

    2 жыл бұрын

    Welcome. Consider becoming a channel member kzread.info/dash/bejne/gXh2uZWphsTOhag.html

  • @richardtallent8175
    @richardtallent81756 жыл бұрын

    My c.o,dealt w/ psychological warfare, & mind control during & after the Korean war. Brigadier General "jack" mohr. He also served in the 80's during Reagan, & the "red dawn " era. That's when i served ,& knew him. R.I.P sir.😟😢

  • @PeriscopeFilm

    @PeriscopeFilm

    6 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for your service to our great nation.

  • @kaptainkaos1202
    @kaptainkaos12022 жыл бұрын

    I had the pleasure, yeah I call it that, of attending SERE school in the early 80’s. That was psychological warfare. Oh SERE is Survival Evasion Resistance Escape. Basically POW school. Being a smart aleck I got my butt whooped.

  • @byronking9573
    @byronking95736 жыл бұрын

    Very interesting period piece... So "period" that one key speaker, BG Robert McLure, at 3:24 is smoking a cigarette, and clearly gazing eyeballs-down at notes while he speaks. That is sooo unprofessional anymore, in terms of being a talking head. Really... Was the guy that addicted to smoking? Quite distracting. (I can almost hear his staffers, saying under their breath, "Ummm.. General... Please lose the GD cigarette!") Yet that kind of kid-stuff mistake is part of the evolution of these kind of infomercial films/videos.

  • @sjoldtimer

    @sjoldtimer

    6 жыл бұрын

    In those days, no one thought twice about someone smoking a cigarette. People had cigarettes in their hands in formal photographs, in films, on TV, in stores, restaurants....everywhere. I remember going to the local supermarket and the cashiers having cigarettes hanging from their lips as they tallied your groceries at their registers....half the customers were smoking too. It's just the way it was...yes, it wouldn't happen today, but if they knew what the norm would be in 2017, they would be mortified.

  • @grunthostheflatulent269

    @grunthostheflatulent269

    6 жыл бұрын

    You really don't get it, do you? The cigarette *is part of* the whole, "let us get the public to accept this rhetoric about our brutal murderous methods, and make them feel more comfortable doing it by means of this comforting and delicious cigarette." Pipes were on the desk next to him. Mmm, Grandpa's pipe..

  • @kaptainkaos1202

    @kaptainkaos1202

    2 жыл бұрын

    Smoking was a symbol of manliness back then. I remember when I was a kid my brothers and sisters and I would be laying in the floor watching tv while mom and dad were smoking and drinking on the couch.