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Poetry,
too, is a form of art that reaches the innermost human domain.
Beginning with Homer, the greatest war poet of Western tradition,
verse has been used to memorialize war. The endeavor was quite
unorganized with most of the notable bards working independently
of government. Finally, in the Great War (WWI), Europe first,
and later the United States, formalized the function of poets
in war. Just as artists were initially used expressly for
postwar purposes, so were Great War poets expected to provide
verse that would later salute the glorious war efforts of
their homelands. Some poets, however, did write directly for
the troops, and their special efforts were recognized by field
commanders, and sometimes even honored by their governments.
All told, the Great War inspired a vast amount of poetry,
some of the best by women.
By the
time of the first great war of this century, commanders not
only had artists doing posters for history and morale, but
also to the enemy. The lines were so close in the Great War
that it was almost as easy to propagandize enemy troops as
one's own. Until this point in history, propaganda had been
a private matter, primarily the concern of political parties,
industry, churches, the press, etc. The Great War converted
it to government enterprise, where it remains to this day.
European
nations were very history-conscious at this time. They made
extensive use of artists and historians to record events.
The artists' role was primarily to provide "pictures
that reached the heart and. soul." These would go into
the historians' postwar accounts. Posters were used both for
morale and deception, to enlist troops and to sell war bonds.
The moving picture as an art form joined the action for the
first time as the two sides dug in for over three years of
trench warfare. The British and French were quite effective
with all these approaches, so Americans tried to follow their
examples when they entered the war nearly three years after
its outbreak. President Woodrow Wilson urged them on when
be asked for "oil paintings, portraits, sketches, etchings,
etc. within the war zone for historical purposes." Even
though America had rich traditions of war art, its soldiers
saw only about eight months of fierce action; so there was
precious little time to adjust and perfect the ways art could
contribute to the war effort.
Barely
two decades later WWII erupted. Most nations simply picked
up where they had left of f in WWT. But the British were quick
to adapt to new technologies and opportunities, and offered
guidance to Americans even before Pearl Harbor. Once involved,
the United States moved quickly into deception training. President
Franklin Roosevelt talked about art and books as "weapons."
Posters on the home front warned that walls have ears, enticed
the hardy and affluent to enlist and buy bonds, and reminded
all that Hitler was the devil incarnate.
Movies
had enlisted for brief duty in WWI, but Hollywood entered
the fray with great enthusiasm early in WWIIo Even before
the United States became involved as a belligerent, isolationists
accused movie moguls of preparing the way to lead America
into war. The charge was not entirely without merit. Movies
were an extraordinary and peculiar American art form. They
were dynamic, and very capable of influencing viewers in the
very manner that the isolationists feared. When war did come,
Hollywood served primarily, under close government supervision,
to elevate and reinforce civilian morale, but appropriate
films were also widely distributed by military commanders
to troops in all theaters of the war. By and large, Hollywood
had tremendous impact during the war. It truly could, as Washington,
D.C. had expected, "mobilize public opinion."
Historians and artists also went to war again in 1941. They
were assigned to major units in all services, especially the
army. The approach, though, was still traditional: historians
and artists were expected to record events so that richly
illustrated histories could be written later. And there exist
today histories of all American armies and divisions and many
regiments and battalions. The Fifth Army that fought its way
up Italy has the grandest; nine volumes, most of which are
illustrated with splendid artwork. But before that history
was written, army policy had taken a gigantic, mutant leap
with the creation of the Ghost Army, "hidden" amongst
engineers. Unlike war artists through the centuries, these
men used their special talents not to observe and record war,
but to participate directly in combat. They used their particular
skills specifically to deceive the enemy during the preparation
for and the heat of battle. This was an entirely new dimension,
and it is where the three strands of historical background,
war, artists and deception, come together. Recall that deception
has always been en aspect of warfare, and also that artists
have long been involved in warfare, but never before were
there artists in the front lines using their skills directly
to defeat the enemy; before they had been at the front primarily
to record events for the later use of officials, historians,
museums and private collectors. Now they were there to fight
the enemy.
Deception
took place on a grand scale in WWII. Most of the techniques
that were used so successfully in Europe were pioneered or
foreshadowed by General Bernard Montgomery in his North African
battles against German General Erwin Rommel. But, since final
triumph came upon the continent, this essay will henceforth
treat exclusively with that venue, focusing upon the large
picture before getting into the small-unit, nitty-gritty of
the Ghost Army.
In the
words of Charles Cruickshank, who wrote the scholarly, Deception
in World War II,
"Deception in war is the art of misleading the enemy
into doing something, or not doing something, so that his
strategic or tactical position will be weakened. A plan may
involve months of careful preparation, the movement of thousands
of troops, hundreds of aircraft, and scores of warships, all
in order to convince the enemy that (something will or will
not occur). A cover plan may be on the same scale. The perfect
deception plan is like a jigsaw puzzle. Pieces of information
are allowed to reach the enemy (disinformation again) in such
a way as to convince him that be has discovered them by accident.
If he puts them together himself he is far more likely to
believe that the intended picture is the true one. An almost
endless variety of such pieces can be offered to the enemy."
The Allies
wanted the Germans to experience and re experience a common
occurrence; namely, to discover that things are not always
what they seem to be. So, deception became a major feature
of Allied planning, and, as the Axis was to discover over
and over again every Allied move had a phony component.
The big
flimflam that the Ally had to pull off was to keep the Germans
guessing about where the inevitable invasion would strike.
The vast plans of D Day itself were covered by the code name,
Overlord (Neptune was the code for just the actual landing
itself), but that operation was preceded by over two years
of careful planning to mislead the Axis. The Americans and
British cooperated so closely in this endeavor that neither
could keep a secret from the other after WW II because they
had totally shared ciphering and deciphering information!
The Germans
had to assume that the invasion would come somewhere between
Dunkirk and Cherbourg, probably between Calais and Normandy.
Overlord not only misled the Germans on where the strike would
come, but also made them prepare for a threatened but wholly
fictional second landing. For three days after D Day, the
Germans held back troops that might have blown the Allies
off Normandy's beaches if they had not been kept at the ready
nearly two hundred miles away, waiting for that bigger invasion!
Fortunately, Hitler himself was convinced that the follow
up would hit at Calais.
To cover
the Normandy invasion, the Allies had scores, maybe hundreds,
of code named smaller operations, most of which were subsumed
under three grand master deceptions code named, Bodyguard,
Fortitude North and Fortitude South. Bodyguard was a worldwide
sham, but it focused upon suggesting that a major invasion
would come out of the Mediterranean, probably through Greece,
maybe France. Fortitude North led Germans to expect two invasions
in Norway, anytime after April, 1944. Fortitude South, the
major deception in all the history of warfare, convinced the
Germans that the first attack in July or August would hit
in the vicinity of le Havre, and the main assault would follow
a few days later near Calais over one hundred miles to the
northeast.

German
intelligence told the general staff that the Allies had
fifty or more divisions ready to invade. They expected twenty
divisions to make the initial landing. When only five hit
Normandy, German intelligence took that as confirmation
that the main invasion would strike elsewhere. Germany kept
twenty divisions in Norway and its best western troops near
Calais. The Allies' grand schemes succeeded far beyond the
cautious but hopeful expectations of the Allies' Supreme
Commander, General Dwight "Ike" Eisenhower. In
fact, their success turned around many military skeptics,
who thereafter had higher hopes for deception in general
and the Ghost Army in particular than could possibly be
realized.
The
Ghost Army was indeed an unusual outfit. When he enlisted,
Laynor was put into the 603rd Engineer Camouflage Battalion.
At the time of its formation in mid 1942, its function was
seen solely in terms of mastering camouflage techniques,
and then passing those skills on to troops in regular infantry,
tank and artillery units. In 1943 the 603rd was merged with
three other unordinary groups, also composed largely of
people from the arts and humanities. The new unit was named
The 23rd Headquarters Special Troops, about eleven hundred
strong. This merger signaled that the high command had a
new role in mind for the Ghost Army. No longer was mere
camouflage to be its mission. Henceforth, it would be charged
with impersonating all manner of other units. The Axis was
never to be certain of its identification of opposing Allied
units. If the Ghost Army carried out its assignments with
precision, the Axis would find itself engaging a phantom,
while the "real" outfit was somewhere else.
So,
the troops of the Ghost Army began training for their new
mission. Following the lead of General Montgomery, they
worked with phony equipment and operations such as inflatable
rubber tanks, dummy artillery, fraudulent radio messages,
empty bivouacs, etc. They impersonated parts of so many
different outfits that by accident they became proficient
tailors just for the redesign of uniforms and attaching
and removing shoulder patches. Once in England they took
part in the masterful deceit of Fortitude South, and on
D Day plus five the first detachment from the 23rd arrived
at Omaha Beach. It took almost two months to get the rest
of the special troops located in the lines radiating out
from the beachheads.
The
23rd's first combat duty came with Operation Elephant, whereby
a little under half of the unit pretended to be the Second
Armored Division while that outfit secretly took up a new
position. They were minimally successful, learning among
other things that when just a bit of air went out of a rubber
tank that its cannon drooped in a tell tale manner.
The
first action that involved all units of the 23rd was called
Operation Brest, and it took place just outside that French
port city. The accompanying inserts, reveal how Task Force
Z of the 23rd was used in this engagement. As the "General
Plan" shows, the major objective was to make a tank
unit appear much stronger than it really was. The drawing
below reveals the deployment of real and phony equipment.
The plan failed to make the Germans evacuate, but it did
pin down real German troops to hold the line against phony
artillery and tank battalions.
Click
Images to Enlarge
For
the next seven months, they were in frequent combat under
many code names, among others, Casanova, Elsenborn, Koblenz,
Knifedge, and Accordion. Always, they pretended to be other
outfits. The term "notional," from the base word
"notion," meaning "to exist in the mind only,"
came to be applied officially to these fake troops. In fact,
"notional" troops were crucial in mid-June, 1944,
when Ike had to use all of his real soldiers to break out
of Normandy. Might the forces that were distracted by the
23rd have allowed the Germans to take back the beaches?
The
catalog of ruses employed by the 23rd's troops is almost
endless. They used "flash" canisters to mimic
artillery. They kept evening fires burning where there were
no troops. Half-tracks left "tank" tracks. Inflatable
artillery, trucks, planes, tanks, called big boys, and even
buildings were all over the place, often covered by poor
camouflaging! Dummy parachute drops diverted attention from
real ones. False radio messages were mingled with true ones.
Signs directing fictional traffic were put up. Some all-star
performances were put on in rural bars with German ears
by artistic "drunks" who carelessly let vital
military information slip out with their alcoholic boasts.
Phony bridge parts were stacked along streams, sometimes
a counterfeit bridge was actually built. It was going so
well once, that an alert American general ordered the last
minute substitution of real bridge parts.
Perhaps
the most effective artifice they developed were "sound"
trucks, which broadcast the complex sounds of military units.
Laynor and his comrades carefully recorded the noises of
typical tank and infantry and artillery units under varying
weather conditions and from a range of distances. Before
1944 was out, they had a "sound" recording, of
quite remarkable fidelity, of almost every type of military
unit on the continent. They could and did bamboozle the
Germans into believing they were hearing a tank battalion
crank up a mile away, or an infantry regiment on the move
just beyond that rise up ahead; or, whatever, they had a
sound for it. A mere company of "sound" trucks
could imitate a tank or infantry division!
One
of the adverse effects of being good at what they did, that
is, having the Germans believe they were the real McCoys,
in that they called fire in upon themselves frequently.
It might have been from just such a bizarre twist of fate
that Joseph Heller got his inspiration for Catch 22? There
is no doubt that it was the direct cause of the shrapnel
that Laynor caught near Bastogne.
Whenever
opportunity allowed, Laynor made sketches. He tried to capture
the "human" side of war. Look into the faces of
his figures and there one can see the whole gamut of emotions
that soldiers feel when death is near, when the shelling
stops, when rest is at hand, when food is scarce, when victory
beckons. When he returned to the United States and civilian
life, he turned those sketches into the works in this display.
We do not know yet whether Laynor will belong to the ages
as many artists, not widely recognized in their own time,
came to be. But we do know that he was a gifted painter
who executed a variety of styles with masterful strokes.
And we know also that he created an important collection
of WW II art, much of which you see in this gallery. It
displays in powerful manner what life was bike for the common
soldier.
Unfortunately,
records are not locally available that reveal where all
the 23rd's gimmicks of deceit came from. Did they come out
of the fertile imaginations of the men of the Ghost Army,
or did the Brits devise them? Probably no one would accuse
army regulars of having original thoughts; but then again,
it was army regulars who thought up the 23rd in the first
place. It was army regulars who brought these dreamers,
these artists, these men like Harold Laynor together.
What
is known for certain is that the 23rd was unique. There
was no other unit like it in military history to that time.
It was a vital part of the grandly successful joint British
and American endeavor to deceive and defeat the Axis.
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