Gee Honey

Among the various picture sides of these surrender passes are "cheesecake" photographs of women showing their legs, strips of photographs showing a man kissing his wife, A sliced ham, and even a Hollywood pin-up portrait of as reclining brunette looking at the camera in a rather sexy way. One Full-color cartoon leaflet pictures a man with a cane talking to a woman. She says in broken English, "Gee Honey, how can you get back here. Iam certainly glad to have with you." He answers in kind, "Thas simple, darling! Ive done my duty. Then, surrendered with honor. Thats why Iam here with you.

As in the Philippine campaign, there were a number of morale leaflets in the form of Christmas cards. At least seven different Christmas cards were dropped on U. S. forces on Guadalcanal in December of 1942. The text is in English. Some of these cards are described in the Japanese-language book Paper War, published by the Preservation Society of the Peace Museum. 45 pages of Japanese wartime leaflets were also pictured in a special 214-page edition of the magazine Nihon Shuho (Weekly Japan Report) published by Nihon Shuhosa on 4 June 1959. I should point out that the first four cards are in the form of "Vargas girls" pinup posters, so GIs would be likely to collect them as much for the pictures of the girls as for the Christmas sentiments. The last few cards are classic Christmas scenes and could have been found on any Hallmark greeting card.

Can't he be original? Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.

1. This card is on blue paper and depicts a pinup drawing of a girl in a transparent white negligee talking on a telephone. Text on the front says "Can't he be original? Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year." The back of the card shows a similar picture of a girl in a black negligee. When opened, the card has a long handwritten note to "Dearest Jim," which starts "Another day passes without word from you and I write wondering whether this will reach you or not. Why, oh why don't I hear from you ?" The letter is signed "Love and kisses, Claire."

2. The front of this beige-colored card depicts a pinup of a girl in a bunny suit talking on a telephone. The text reads, "It's me, darling, saying Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year." The back shows a girl in a transparent summer outfit with a wide-brimmed hat. The hand-written letter inside begins "Dearest husband, It's Christmas time again and here I am, sending you my love and greetings, instead of being able to wish you the same in person. I'm sure your life is full of hardship and misery. My head aches when I wonder why we had to start this war " and ends "Love and kisses, Joan." The same line  Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.

3. This bright yellow card features, in the front, a girl in a bathing suit talking on a telephone. The text is "The same line  Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year." The back shows a girl in a bathing suit on a swing. The text begins "My dearest darling. They promised us that the war would be over by autumn and so I could see you by Christmas, but their promise hasn't come true. They make all sorts of promises, these politicians, but it all just so much air! When will the war end? It seems like it'll go on and on forever " and ends, "With love and kisses, Lorraine."

4. A girl in a beautiful formal black dress reclines across both the front and back of this beige-colored card. Text on the front reads "Oh, Darling, you say it in the sweetest way Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!" The text inside begins "Dearest Darling, it was rumored that this awful war would end by Christmas last year. We all hoped that the rumor would come true, but Christmas is here again and peace seems as far away as ever, and I feel so lonely and so despondent " and ends, "With love, Nancy." This card was first illustrated in Psychological Warfare, Paul Linebarger, Combat Forces Press, Washington DC, 1954. Linebarger treats this propaganda as sexual in nature and ignores the Christmas connection. He says, "Young human beings, especially young males, are apt to give considerable attention to sex. In areas of military operations, they are removed from the stimuli of secondary sex references, which are (in America) an accepted part of everyone's daily life: bathing beauty photos, magazine covers, semi-nudes in advertisements, etc. Our enemies tried to use the resulting pin-up craze for propaganda purposes, hoping that a vain arousal of oestrum would diminish morale." Linebarger states that this leaflet was used in the Philippines, so it might have been dropped more than once. Greetings!

5. This is the first of the more traditional cards. The front shows "Greetings!" with a candelabrum and a picture window through which we see a snowy Christmas scene. Inside on the left: "He that oppresseth the poor and just to increase his riches, and he that giveth to the rich, shall surely come to want. Proverbs 22. 16." Inside on the right: "The question on which strikes at the heart of the war situation like a dagger is not: who caused the war? It is not even: who brought America into the war? The revealing question is: who profited by the war, pocketed the profit and defends the profit? The major portion of the war profits goes into the hands of the wealthiest families of America. (by) Frederick Wiehl, President of the All-American Association. But whether or not these plutocrats will come to want is another question."

6. The front of this blue-colored card shows "Greetings", with three homes with snowy roofs and a bright moon above. Inside on the left is the same verse from Proverbs 22.16 as in the preceding card. Inside on the right: "The capitalists that oppress the poor to increase their riches, and the government that helpth (sic) the rich in waging this war shall surely come to grief." Christmas Eve - All's well - Let us remember one thing...it isn't our war.

7. There is another Christmas card leaflet printed only on the front of a single page. The leaflet is 128 x 90 mm in size. The card shows an American corporal in a tattered overcoat walking with crutches. His right leg is heavily bandaged. Behind him there is a nighttime holiday scene of snow-covered homes beneath a starry sky. The text on this leaflet is "Christmas Eve - All's well - Let us remember one thing...it isn't our war." The back is blank.

Finally, there were a number of rather well done leaflets showing maps or official photographs that looked very much like newsletters. These were more serious, with none of the cartoons or bright colors found on the other leaflets.

One shows a meeting of a pacifist group in America with a sign in the background "Save Our Sons - No deaths for American boys." The other side depicts three photos of happier days and attractive girls with the text, "Sweet days.... and bitter today." The National Liberation front prepared very similar leaflets years later for use against Americans in Vietnam showing peace demonstrations back home.

Another depicts a dance at the top and a cart full of dead bodies below with the text "Melancholy was reserved for darkness and the day after." The back of the leaflet depicts a couple at the top, a soldier in the jungle at the center, and a grave at the bottom. The text is "Today...and Tomorrow."

DEVIL or DEMIGOD?

One Japanese leaflet depicts two photographs of President Roosevelt. Beneath him is the text:

DEVIL or DEMIGOD?

Neither exactly

Desperate

Abandoned

Marines

Nutshelling

Effacing

Despot.

(Signed) Franklin D. Roosevelt."

Notice that the six descriptive words start with letters that spell out Damned. I suspect many Americans would be stumped by the term nutshelling. I certainly am.

The final leaflet we will mention here depicts a map of Australia and Guadalcanal. The text is "GUADALCANAL - is isolated - reinforcement is out with the Navy down no help...no hope...resistance is futile." The back of the leaflet depicts a news photograph of a burning aircraft carrier with the caption, " A most dramatic moment as the Lexington exploded in the Coral Sea: The crew of the aircraft-carrier swarming down ropes from the flight deck after it had been set on fire by Jap bombs: the great explosion which followed is believed to have been caused by the blowing up of the petrol tanks. 'The Sphere' July 11."

WE GUARANTEE YOUR LIFE AND PROPERTY

The Japanese invaded the island of Tulagi, about 30 miles north of Guadalcanal on 3 May 1942. This was part of Operation Mo, the Empire of Japan's strategy in the South Pacific and South West Pacific Area in 1942. The plan called for Imperial Japanese Navy troops to capture Tulagi and nearby islands in the Solomon Islands Protectorate. The occupation of Tulagi by the Japanese was intended to cover the flank of and provide reconnaissance support for Japanese forces that were advancing on Port Moresby in New Guinea. On 7 August 1942, 3,000 U.S. Marines landed on Tulagi and nearby islands. The Japanese troops on Tulagi and nearby islands were outnumbered and killed almost to the last man. The leaflet above was found on Tulagi by an American sailor. It appears to be aimed at the native population. The text is:

WE GUARANTEE YOUR LIFE AND PROPERTY

Nippon has declared war against the United State of America and England and is going to the grorious war with them to keep the independence and honour of the Yellow Race. Already Navy of Nippon is wining a victory everywhere, and occupied all Bismarck archipelago Therefore you dont belong to the sovereignty of England but the sovereignty of Nippon. See your circumstances in past time! There is nothing but oppression and squeeze of the White race! Follow us! And happiness and wealth will be given

NAVY OF NIPPON

To Indian Troops fighting with the British

Since the Japanese claimed to be freeing the natives of Asia from their colonial powers, it was only natural that they would attempt to drive the British out of India. There were two major PSYOP campaigns used in this attack on the British Raj. The first was propaganda directed at the Indian military forces fighting on the British side, asking them why they fought to protect the masters that dominated and enslaved them. The second was the support of an Indian National government, which would give some legitimacy to the Japanese claims of fighting for Indian freedom and independence.

Britain had controlled the Indian subcontinent since the late 18th century. There had been numerous uprisings and agitation as the Indians attempted to free themselves from the British yoke. When war between Britain and Germany broke out on 2 September 1939, the British viceroy in India unilaterally declared India to be a belligerent. The move infuriated the Indian people and eventually the Indian Congress adopted a resolution on 8 August 1942 demanding freedom from Britain as a condition for Indian participation in the war. The British rejected this resolution, which led to widespread public disorder. The British then jailed members of the Indian Congress and this helped to create a leadership vacuum and provided an impetus for the ascendancy of Subhas Chandra Bose as a leader of the militant opposition.

Subhas Chandra Bose

Subhas Bose (1897-1945) had been a fervent nationalist since his youth. For a time he was a follower of Gandhi, but he soon became disillusioned with the philosophy of non-violence. His book, The Indian Struggle, was published in 1934 and advocated a dictatorship form of government for India. Between 1920 and 1941, Bose was arrested eleven times for fomenting agitation. In 1939 he had visited Berlin where he attempted to enlist Nazi support for his independence movement. Back in India, He was placed under close house arrest in 1940, but managed to deceive the British and escape, and after a historic overland trek to Kabul made his way back to Berlin in 1941. While in Germany he made broadcasts advocating freedom for India. He supported the elite special unit (Sonderkommando B) and the Indian Legion numbering about 3000 men that were formed by the Germans from Indian prisoners of war in North Africa. On 3 February 1943 Bose began a voyage aboard German submarine U-180 to the coast of Madagascar where he was met by Japanese submarine I-29. He reached Sabang on 1 May. He was immediately flown to Tokyo. He met with and impressed Prime Minister Hideki Tojo, and was sent to Singapore where he assumed the presidency of the Indian Independence League and command of the reconstituted Indian National Army (INA). On 21 October 1943, a Provisional Government of Azad Hind was formed with Bose as its first president. The Provisional Government of Azad Hind immediately declared war against Great Britain and the United States of America. By now Bose was well known throughout India and was called Netaji ("Revered Leader").

Azad Hind Propaganda Postage Stamp

This stamp is one of a set produced in Germany and sent to Japan to be used by the Free Indian Army. They had no value and since the Indian Army never controlled any territory saw no use. My original 1972 description of these stamps is "A turbaned soldier carrying the Azad Hind flag with two companions in German-style field caps, the design flanked by two ceremonial swords."

After the fall of Singapore in early 1942, the Japanese took 40,000 Indian soldiers as prisoners of war. Some volunteers were organized into an Indian National Army, better known as Azad Hind Fauz. This unit saw no action, and was torn by dissention among its high officers and with the Japanese. It was not an effective fighting force until the arrival of Netaji Bose in Singapore. In 1944, while under the command of Bose, the INA fought alongside the Japanese on the Burma front in an attempt to advance into India. The drive toward Imphal stalled. The Japanese retreated, and there was a horrendous loss of life among the troops of the INA. It became clear to Bose that his dream of a free India was ended. It would only be realized after the war by political rather than military means. Bose moved from Rangoon to Bangkok to Saigon. Two days after the Japanese surrender on 15 August 1945, he attempted to preserve his political movement by flying to Manchuria where he hoped to gain asylum with the advancing Soviet forces. Bose was killed on 18 August in an aborted takeoff after a refueling stop at Taihaku airport on Taiwan.

Like the Guadalcanal campaign, there are dozens of Japanese leaflets that attempt to divide the Indian troops from their British allies. Except for a very small minority, almost all of the leaflets are written in the various languages of the Indian subcontinent. As a result, we cannot mention the text on most of these leaflets, but we can describe some of the more interesting ones.

Japanese Leaflets

The Japanese propaganda leaflets to the Indians were quite different from the German leaflets. Whereas the German leaflets tended to be monochromatic and sometime wordy on the back, the Japanese leaflets were very bright and full-colored; sometimes very busy with numerous images piled one upon another, and with minimal text. They also made great use of political satire and cartoons attacking Allied leaders such as Franklin Roosevelt, Winston Churchill and Chiang Kai-shek, and also the various nations opposed to Japan . For those who want to know more about the Japanese psychological operations against India , I suggest you read my article Axis Propaganda Against Indian Troops.

The Japanese attitude toward psychological warfare against Indian troops is mentioned by Lieutenant Colonel Mahmood Khan Durrani in The Sixth Column, Cassell and Company, 1955. Durrani was a prisoner of the Japanese and quotes a lecture given by a Japanese officer on how leaflets should be prepared for use against the Indians fighting for the British. He says in part: