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Tokyo Rose broadcasts?
I'm reading "Bringing the Thunder" by Gordon Bennett Robertson about his 35 missions in command of a B-29. Great book so far but I was pretty surprised , much like him, about how on the day he arrived at Guam, Tokyo Rose mentioned all the Pilot's names including him during her nightly broadcast. I realize of course, that there was no such person as Tokyo Rose, but was the traitor that was providing such info to the Japanese ever caught? I did a quick Google but not much luck.
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Do some research on Iva Ikuko Toguri D'Aquino
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Tokyo Rose was actually several Japanese-American women, who broadcast often surprisingly shrewd guesses of Allied dispositions and intentions as a way to break the morale of Allied troops. However, these broadcasts rarely had much effect on Allied morale, particularly since "Tokyo Rose" occasionally was wildly wrong.
In 1949, Iva Toguri, who was foolish enough to confess to a reporter to being one of the Roses, was convicted of one count of treason for broadcasting as Tokyo Rose. She was imprisoned for six years and fined $10,000. An American citizen who had been awarded a degree in geology by the University of California, she was visiting in Japan without a valid U.S. passport at the outbreak of war. She refused to renounce her U.S. citizenship but was subsequently pressured into making (fairly innocuous) broadcasts for the Japanese. In the 1970s, investigative journalists uncovered serious irregularities in her treason trial, and she received a presidential pardon. Incidentally, most of the broadcast material for the Roses was written by a captured American officer who was never prosecuted. |
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But the original question is still unanswered: Where did the detailed information come from? A captured American officer has no more access to unit movements than Rose herself. Someone was sending them the information.
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During her trial Iva's lawyers put the blame on the Army captain who had taught her the broadcasting business. They were informed that the captain was not under the jurisdiction of the court at which point the jury refused to charge her. When the prosecution assured the jury that the captain would also be brought to justice, Iva was indicted. The captain was never tried. He was later promoted to major. Unfortunately, Toland doesn't give a name. |
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Hmm. Hadn't thought of that. It's funny when civilians know things about the military that the military doesn't know itself, but it's also true here. A saying that was old even when I was in was that if you wanted to know when a ship was due in, just ask the local bartender.
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I may be wrong here but I thought it was an Australian, Maj. Charles Cousens that wrote her scripts, not an American Captain.
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My guess is that whatever miss-direction may have actually happened or been planned probably had to do with invasion plans for Japan. Seeing as it never happened, the US never felt the need to make much of it. |
I don' care! I still want's to know! :stare:
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Maybe this is a clue... http://www.straightdope.com/columns/...ship-movements |
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