Here Be Monsters

HBM055: Ghost Tape Number Ten


Listen Later

All is fair in love and war... even mind games. The United States military employs psychological warfare in nearly every war it's part of. From creating a "ghost army" of inflatable tank fleets in World War II, to blasting heavy metal music toward enemy territory during the Gulf War, the purpose of these tactics is to decrease morale and inspire enemy combatants to surrender or defect. The US Military calls these tactics "Psychological Operations", or "PSYOP".

The Vietnam War was no different. Threatened by the growing popularity of communism in North Vietnam, the United States joined the conflict in the early 1960's in support of anti-communist South Vietnam. Within a few years, U.S. Army 6th PSYOP Battalion tried a new form of psychological warfare, they called it "Operation Wandering Soul".

Operation Wandering Soul was designed to exploit a Vietnamese belief that death far away from home meant becoming a restless spirit, doomed to wander aimlessly for eternity. The PSYOP unit hired South Vietnamese voice actors to play the role of ghost soldiers and their families lamenting in an echo chamber. They played these recordings at full volume from helicopters and airplanes flown over enemy territory in the middle of the night. The hope was that North Vietnamese soldiers, exhausted by combat, would drop their weapons and go home.

In this episode, Sergeant Major Herb Friedman (Retired) explains how Ghost Tape Number Ten was created and its effect (or lack there of) on the course of the Vietnam War.  Friedman did not work in the U.S. Army 6th PSYOP Battalion nor any other psyops unit, but in his civilian life he became an expert U.S. psychological operations. You can read more about him and other psyop tactics at psywarrior.com, including his article about Operation Wandering Soul.

This episode included excerpts from Lynden B. Johnson's 1966 State of the Union address.

Caitlin Pierce produced this episode. Caitlin is an independent producer living in New York, and is the creator of the podcast Borders. This episode was edited by Bethany Denton and Jeff Emtman. Our editor at KCRW is Nick White.

Music:  Phantom Fauna ||| The Black Spot

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Here Be MonstersBy Here Be Monsters

  • 4.6
  • 4.6
  • 4.6
  • 4.6
  • 4.6

4.6

1,229 ratings


More shows like Here Be Monsters

View all
Radiolab by WNYC Studios

Radiolab

43,848 Listeners

Radio Diaries by Radio Diaries & Radiotopia

Radio Diaries

1,256 Listeners

Snap Judgment by Snap Judgment and PRX

Snap Judgment

11,591 Listeners

the memory palace by Nate DiMeo

the memory palace

6,861 Listeners

Rumble Strip by Erica Heilman / Rumble Strip, Erica Heilman

Rumble Strip

1,143 Listeners

Criminal by Vox Media Podcast Network

Criminal

37,266 Listeners

The Kitchen Sisters Present by The Kitchen Sisters & Radiotopia

The Kitchen Sisters Present

1,278 Listeners

Imaginary Worlds by Eric Molinsky | QCODE

Imaginary Worlds

1,988 Listeners

Reply All by Gimlet

Reply All

27,366 Listeners

Nocturne by Vanessa Lowe

Nocturne

1,273 Listeners

The Allusionist by Helen Zaltzman

The Allusionist

2,972 Listeners

The Mortified Podcast by Mortified Media and Radiotopia

The Mortified Podcast

2,188 Listeners

Endless Thread by WBUR

Endless Thread

2,645 Listeners

Decoder Ring by Slate Podcasts

Decoder Ring

2,061 Listeners

The Secrets Hotline by Love and Radio | QCODE

The Secrets Hotline

205 Listeners