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"Some Japanese Ruses" from Intelligence Bulletin, May 1944

[Intelligence Bulletin Cover]  
The following brief U.S. report on Japanese ruses in WWII was originally published in the Intelligence Bulletin, Vol. II, No. 9, May 1944.

[DISCLAIMER: The following text is taken from the U.S. War Department Intelligence Bulletin publication. As with all wartime intelligence information, data may be incomplete or inaccurate. No attempt has been made to update or correct the text. Any views or opinions expressed do not necessarily represent those of the website.]

 
SOME JAPANESE RUSES

1. INTRODUCTION

U.S. forces in combat against the Japanese have learned that it pays to be always on the alert against enemy ruses or tricks. Although the Japanese have used such tactics in numerous instances, they have been successful in only a relatively few cases. Frequently enemy ruses have been employed to make up for a lack of combat efficiency against U.S. troops. Certainly such tactics do not afford the Japanese any "super" advantages. It's a game that can be played by both sides, and our troops have quite often played it successfully against opposing forces.

2. EXAMPLES OF RUSES

a. Sandwiching in a few words of English occasionally, a group of Japanese screamed and yelled to give the impression that U.S. soldiers were being tortured. The idea was to attract U.S. troops to the scene for the purpose of mowing them down by enemy fire.

b. In two instances on the Burma front, the Japanese cut British telephone lines and then attempted to hide the breaks by binding the cut ends with insulating tape. The idea was to make it very difficult for line repair men to find where the wire had been cut.

c. On Betio Island, some Japanese pulled the old trick of playing dead. U.S. troops were on the alert, however, and little or no damage resulted from such tactics.

 

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