It was said in the United States after Pearl Harbour that Japanese workmen near the naval base had cut huge arrows in the fields to guide Japanese aircraft towards their targets. Pure fantasy, of course, but the home front everywhere was a breeding ground for rumour.
With censorship in operation and everyone strained by anxiety, people's imaginations filled in the details whenever something strange or disastrous occurred. Many wild reports like the one above played on fears of the enemy's fiendish ingenuity. So, for example, Britons spoke in hushed voices of a German bomb so advanced that it could chase you round corners; and of a nun seen in a railway carriage who had apparently shown her ticket to the inspector with a big, hairy hand she was really a Nazi paratrooper in disguise ... or so the story went. Wild rumours circulated about foreign spies, bungling by the government and an imminent invasion. Keeping public morale high was an obsession of the authorities in world war two, so that even a calamity of the withdrawal from Dunkirk was reported in Britain as if it were a triumph. A person good go on trial for spreading alarm or despondency. Addressing his anxious readers in Britain in May 1940, the comic poet A P Herbert wrote:
Do not believe the tale the milkman tells;
No troops have mutinied in potters bar.
Nor are their submarines in Tunbridge Wells.
The BBC will warn us when they are.
Edginess on the Home Front created an ideal climate for enemy propagandists to exploit, and the Nazis spread disquiet in Britain through the son of an Irish-born American, William Joyce.
Jarmany calling, "Lord Haw-Haw" made slanted remarks about coming air-raids that some of his British audience found deeply upsetting.
Nicknamed 'Lord Haw-Haw', Joyce was a former British Fascist who broadcast to Britain from Berlin. His sinister, hectoring voice announcing, "Jarmany calling, Jarmany calling", became well known to 6 million listeners. Some found his show amusing, others tuned in the hope of learning facts that the Ministry of Information was withholding.
Japan produced an equally notorious broadcaster in the shape of Iva Ikuko Toguri, nicknamed Tokyo Rose. Her I5-minute radio show, broadcast to GIs in the Pacific, interspersed music with news and comment delivered in a flirtatious American accent (she was, in fact, an American born Japanese). GIs in Italy were meanwhile tormented by the sexy voice of a lady known as Axis Sally. "Hullo suckers", was how she began her Front Line Radio show, which mixed scratchy boogie woogie tunes with tales of Allied setbacks and the names of POWs held in Rome. There were stories of draft dodgers fooling around with GIs' girlfriends on the home front, and of hideous injuries sustained by American fighting men. Think it over, a show would end. "Why should you be one of those rotting carcasses?"
These and similar themes were worked over in the countless propaganda leaflets showered from the sky by Axis aircraft. Some were fairly gruesome; others were downright obscene. The more attractive served as pin-ups, but for multitudes in the ration hit nations, propaganda leaflets served above all as a handy source of toilet paper.
Voice of the Enemy: Tokyo Rose's radio shows, transmitted across the Pacific region, were designed to demoralise the American GI's and naval crews who were serving in the region. After the War she was put on trial in the USA.


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