Transcript
Page 1: A History of Psychological Warfare

A History of Psychological Warfare

From Political Warfare to Information Support

Prof. Philip M. Taylor

University of Leeds

Page 2: A History of Psychological Warfare

As Old as War itself

• Sun Tsu (‘the acme of skill’)

• Trojan Horse (Deception)

• Walls of Jericho

• Alexander the Great

• Sack of Carthage (propaganda of the deed)

• Caesar and his circuses (importance of domestic morale)

Page 3: A History of Psychological Warfare

More relevant now than ever before

• The New Jericho: Panama, 1989

• The Gulf War as catalyst

• Kosovo: a sobering lesson

• Propaganda of the Deed – September 11th 2001

• The ‘war’ against Terrorism

Page 4: A History of Psychological Warfare

Evolution of Terminology

• Political WarfarePolitical Warfare

• Psychological WarfarePsychological Warfare

• Psychological OperationsPsychological Operations

• Information WarfareInformation Warfare

• Information OperationsInformation Operations

• Information Support (UK)Information Support (UK)

• Perception ManagementPerception Management

Page 5: A History of Psychological Warfare

It IS propaganda

• Black (Covert)Black (Covert)

• White (Overt)White (Overt)

• Grey (Unknown)Grey (Unknown)

• Hence defined by sourceHence defined by source

• Value neutralValue neutral

• Democratic values of propagandaDemocratic values of propaganda

Page 6: A History of Psychological Warfare

From combat propaganda to strategic PSYOPs

• Soldier-to-soldier communication

• Total War and the importance of civilian morale/support

• The Cold War as ‘a war of ideologies’

• Operations other than war in the 1990s

• Soldier-to-civilian communication

• Terrorism: a war against an idea/concept

Page 7: A History of Psychological Warfare

World War One

• ‘The thing is to kill Germans’

• ‘The defilement of the human soul is worse than killing’

• Not over by Xmas 1914: new weapons needed

• Crewe House and ‘munitions of the mind’ against Austria-Hungary and Germany

Page 8: A History of Psychological Warfare

WW1: consequences

• The importance of public opinion and the advent of public diplomacy

• The arrival of new communications technologies• Policy and Propaganda synergy and the tragedy of

Versailles• The arrival of new, aggressive, ideologically

motivated regimes in Russia, Italy, Japan and Germany.

Page 9: A History of Psychological Warfare

World War Two: Total War, Total Propaganda

• First RAF raid of the war was with leaflets! (‘bullshit bombs’)

• Media access to the battlefield

• Ministry of Information and Political Warfare Executive

• Psychological Warfare Division of SHAEF

• Deception and Operation Fortitude

Page 10: A History of Psychological Warfare

WW2: consequences

• The ‘Strategy of Truth’

• The importance of credibility (and hence of the BBC – but to how to get heard?)

• Policy and Propaganda synergy and the tragedy of ‘Unconditional Surrender’

• The Ultra Secret vs. Political Warfare Executive (joint military-civilian)

Page 11: A History of Psychological Warfare

The Cold War

• Back into the shadows (KGB vs. CIA)

• Into the strategic domain (USIA, British Council etc)

• Low Intensity Conflicts

• High-fidelity battles (e.g. space race, Olympic Games)

• The Great Communicator & ‘Star Wars’

Page 12: A History of Psychological Warfare

Vietnam and its antidotes

• ‘The Uncensored War’, ‘The first television war’

• Decline of psyops

• The Falklands Factor

• The Gulf War of 1991 as catalyst

• The Revolution in Military Affairs

Page 13: A History of Psychological Warfare

The Gulf War as catalyst

• US-led ‘Burning Hawk’US-led ‘Burning Hawk’• 29 million leaflets for Iraqis in KTO29 million leaflets for Iraqis in KTO• 4 POG and 193rd PNG deployment of 4 POG and 193rd PNG deployment of

leaflets, radio, loudspeakers and Commando leaflets, radio, loudspeakers and Commando SoloSolo

• 44% of Iraqi army deserted (60-80,000)44% of Iraqi army deserted (60-80,000)

Page 14: A History of Psychological Warfare

The changing role of the military in the 1990s

• OOTWs in N. Iraq, Somalia, Bosnia, Haiti, Kosovo 1999

• New types of deployments, new skills required

• Revolution in Communications technologies

• Democracies and non-democracies

Page 15: A History of Psychological Warfare

Kosovo: WWW1

• Gulf War 2 without the ground war

• The arrival of the Internet and the mobile phone

• Asymmetrical warfare and the importance of propaganda (‘SOFTWAR’)

• Information Warfare and 103 million leaflets

Page 16: A History of Psychological Warfare

THE IMPORTANCE OF INFORMATION TO THE

MILITARYInformation In Warfare Information Warfare

Intelligence

Surveillance

Reconnaissance

Weather

Geographic

Other

Influence Attitudes

Deny / Protect

Deceive

Exploit / Attack

Page 17: A History of Psychological Warfare

Information Warfare

Influence Attitudes‘Perception Management’

Public DiplomacyPrivate DiplomacyPSYOPSMedia Relations(PA/PI)Education (‘soft power’)Counter Influence/Propaganda

Deny/Protect

OPSEC

Information Assurance

Counter-Intelligence

ComputerNetworkDefence

Deceive

Spoofing

Deception

Imitation

Distortion

Exploit/Attack

Ballistic

ElectronicWarfare

ComputerNetworkAttack

EMP

Page 18: A History of Psychological Warfare

Perception Management and the ‘war’ on terrorism

• PSYOPs deployed in Afghanistan• Al Jazeera as the ‘new Baghdad loophole’• Coalition information centres in London,

Washington and Islamabad• ‘we are losing the war of words’ - is this a failure

of strategic information policy?• Co-ordinate across the spectrum of

communications, from the tactical to the strategic, and back again

Page 19: A History of Psychological Warfare

Weapons of Mass Communications – my questions

• Communications and information are to the 21st century what oil and coal were to the 20th

• is the ‘thing’ to kill terrorism?

• How to deter future terrorists?

• In for the long haul

• How long can the public stand for it?

Page 20: A History of Psychological Warfare

Any questions from you?


Top Related