1. World problems
  2. Psychological warfare

Psychological warfare

  • Covert psy-war operations
  • Clandestine psychological warfare

Nature

A war of nerves, of misinformation, of exaggeration, but also of communication of truth, accompanies a war of armies and weapons. The targets are not fortifications or lines of men, but minds, and these may be those of the enemy's soldiers, its military leadership, its civilian leaders, or its populace, including children.

Incidence

The forms of psychological warfare are various. They include the instilling of fear by the demonstration or use of terrible weapons even though in some cases these are not in production or are experimental. Leaflets can be dropped behind enemy lines with misinformation or facts on how their side is losing the war on other fronts. Radio broadcasts to the enemy homeland or soldiers in the field may use traitors to urge pacifism or surrender and to demoralize the civilian population. The authorities may start rumours to weaken the opposition or strengthen the unity of supporters. They may compare the enemy's high standard of civilian comforts during the conflict to the soldiers' own privations. At home, governments make propaganda statements and the media are exploited to misinform and exaggerate information concerning the progress of the war. Psychologists are employed to develop propaganda and other techniques to influence mass behaviour.

Broader

War
Excellent
Manipulation
Presentable

Narrower

Related

Propaganda
Presentable
Psychic warfare
Yet to rate

Strategy

Using secrecy
Yet to rate

Value

War
Yet to rate
Covert
Yet to rate
Clandestine
Yet to rate

Reference

SDG

Sustainable Development Goal #16: Peace and Justice Strong Institutions

Metadata

Database
World problems
Type
(C) Cross-sectoral problems
Subject
  • Defence » Espionage, subversion
  • Defence » War
  • Psychology » Psychology
  • Content quality
    Presentable
     Presentable
    Language
    English
    Last update
    Jul 30, 2024