Tokyo Rose

From Film & Radio Propaganda in World War II, 1983.

Chapter 15 was written by Namikawa Ryo. He worked at NHK during the war.

Ryo notes that the NHK had a staff of over 6,000 people working for it. This included ten Nisei announcers. “Sons and daughters of Japanese parents were automatically Japanese, including the children of Japanese born and living in America.”

He says Tokyo Rose first worked as a typist, and then became an announcer. The way he writes indicates that there was only one "Tokyo Rose.""

”We at NHK knew of the gap between the achievements of Japan and the USA but we could not give any hint of defeat on the air. The truth about all these matters was hidden from the nation by the Daihonei (Japanese Imperial Headquarters) and the mass media.”

He notes that this led to shock and surprise when Japan was defeated, and that led to "Hatred of authority, of militarism" after the war.

The NHK was also to use Prisoners-of-War to work on propaganda. "Three Allied officers were selected and sent to Tokyo where they were assigned to the overseas broadcasting section of NHK. ...They worse suits and were treated the same as Japanese employees. Many books written after the war said that they were treated violently, but the fact is that they were subjected to no force, either physically or mentally."

Then he goes into a history of the "Zero Hour" radio show, which broadcast to U. S. troops in the field. He even includes a transcript from a show. The show included classic music, news, popular music, Jazz, and messages from war prisoners. Records were played by "Orphan Ann," who he identifies as Ikuko Toguri, known as Tokyo Rose. He again refers only to one Tokyo Rose, and not a group of women broadcasting under that generic name.



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