Tag: military intelligence

  • Inducing Surrender: Psychological Operations during the Gulf War (1990–1991)

    Inducing Surrender: Psychological Operations during the Gulf War (1990–1991)

    Introduction

    In the study of psychological operations, the 1990–1991 Gulf War represents a quiet but decisive turning point. Not because of technological innovation alone, but because tens of thousands of Iraqi soldiers surrendered without fighting, convinced that resistance was pointless, dangerous, or irrational.

    This mass surrender was not a spontaneous reaction to military superiority. It was the result of a systematic psychological campaign, integrated with military operations and aimed at the most vulnerable element of the Iraqi forces: the will to fight.

    1. Strategic context

    In August 1990, Iraq invaded Kuwait. A UN-mandated coalition formed rapidly. On paper, Iraqi forces appeared strong. In reality, morale was fragile, leadership distrusted, and fear widespread.

    PSYOPS were designed to amplify existing weaknesses, not fabricate new ones.

    2. Psychological objective

    The goal was not terror, but persuasion through rational fear. Soldiers were encouraged to view surrender as the safest and most logical choice.

    This marks a shift from propaganda to decision engineering.

    3. Leaflets

    Millions of leaflets were dropped, offering clear instructions on surrender, reassurance about treatment, and warnings of impending strikes.

    Psychologically, they provided predictability, perceived control, and reduced uncertainty.

    4. Radio broadcasts

    Radio messaging reinforced battlefield realities, undermining regime credibility and creating cognitive isolation.

    When enemy messages align with observed reality, resistance collapses.

    5. Technological dominance and perception

    Precision strikes created a sense of omnipresence and helplessness. Soldiers felt there was no safe place.

    6. Behavioral contagion

    As surrender proved safe, it spread rapidly. Behavior became socially validated.

    7. Psychological analysis

    Gulf War PSYOPS leveraged loss aversion, fear, conformity, and distrust in leadership. Soldiers faced an asymmetrical choice where fighting seemed irrational.

    8. Results

    Tens of thousands surrendered. Ground combat was brief. Coalition casualties were minimized.

    This is the highest achievement of PSYOPS: victory without direct confrontation.

    Conclusion

    The Gulf War shows that true superiority lies in shaping perception and decision-making. When the mind yields, the battlefield follows.

  • Fear in the Language of Culture: Psychological Operations in Vietnam and the “Ghost Tape No. 10” Case

    Fear in the Language of Culture: Psychological Operations in Vietnam and the “Ghost Tape No. 10” Case

    Introduction

    If Operation Fortitude represents rational deception and the Gulf War exemplifies persuasion through survival, the Vietnam War exposes the most ambiguous side of psychological operations.

    “Ghost Tape No. 10” stands as a documented and controversial case where cultural fear became the primary psychological lever.

    1. Context: a war without a front

    Vietnam was an asymmetric conflict, culturally distant from Western frameworks. PSYOPS were seen as a way to reduce direct confrontation.

    2. Cultural fear

    Some Vietnamese beliefs held that souls of the unburied dead would wander eternally. This belief became the foundation of the operation.

    Understanding a belief, however, does not mean understanding its depth.

    3. Operation description

    Night-time broadcasts simulated voices of wandering spirits, urging fighters to stop. Sound design amplified emotional impact.

    4. Psychological assumptions

    The operation assumed fear would override ideology. This proved overly simplistic.

    5. Field effects

    Initial surprise quickly faded. In some cases, the operation strengthened enemy cohesion.

    6. Psychological analysis

    Fear must be credible, coherent, and inescapable. In Vietnam, resilience and ideology prevailed.

    7. Ethical and cultural issues

    Using sacred symbols as tools carries serious ethical and strategic risks.

    8. Lessons learned

    Effective PSYOPS require anthropological depth, not cultural shortcuts.

    Conclusion

    “Ghost Tape No. 10” reminds us that the mind is not a programmable system. When fear is misunderstood, psychological operations fail.