PROPAGANDA ANALYSIS, BY ALEXANDER L. GEORGE. ( EVANSTON, ILL.: ROW, PETERSON AND COMPANY. 1959. PP. 287. $600)

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02198832
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RIFPUB
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6
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July 13, 2023
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February 22, 2022
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F-2019-01816
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June 1, 1959
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Approved for Release: 2021/12/01 CO2198832 PROPAGANDA ANALYSIS, George � �anetcn, Ill.t Row, Peterson and Company. 1959. 287, 6490 This scholarly and imaginative one of Rand Corporationa social scientists is of special significance because it evaluates propaganda analysis techniques actually used in an operational situation and has therefore had to consider the dynamics of politics, rather s s the formal science is devoted. Nr George's guinea pig is the analysis of German propaganda done by the FCC's Foreign Broadcast intelligence Service during World War II. He examines it in the light of information obtained later from German war documents and German officials, which providei a unique opportunity to validate the inferences drawn from propaganda bearing on intelligence problems and questions critical to Allied pdlicy. Some 80 percent of the FCC inferences that could be scored proved to be accurate. The reader who does not make a specialty of propaganda analysis. will be most interested in Part //I, nHethodolou and Applications," in which 20 case studies are presented to illustrate the broad range of intelligence problems approached by the FCC. The analysts? reasoning is reconstructed and their inferences metaled against the available historical record on such important problems as the question of a German offensive against Russia in 1943, 4he-Germaa expectations in 1942 of an-Allied second front in North Africa the German public's attitude toward the Nazi information to Which the usual scholarly study in political Approved for Release: 2021/12/01 CO2198832 Approved for Release: 2021/12/01 CO2198832 and a predicted change in the propaganda presentation of 014tary setbacks on the Russian front. The first case study, on the German V-weapons propaganda, is cited as one in which the FCC analysts did not do as well as their British counterparts. The brilliant British analysis way be known to some readers. Based on the nubstantiated hypothesis that German propaganda would not deliberately mislead the German people about an Increase of German power it concluded that the Germans actually had sane sort of new weapon and were not merely bluffing, It accurately described the German leaders' evaluation of the new weapon and made the tentative estimate based on subtle shifts in the propaganda, that in November 194, the Germans expected to have it rear between mid-January and mid-April 1944 This *Abate prtnrelamasingly curate. The deduction concerning Isadore' private estimate of the timing of the If-weapon was. based upon ingenious use of a gen 1 Observation about Nazi propaganda practice. The British analyst reasoned that Goebbels would be careful not to give the German public a promise of retaliation too far ahead of the date on which the promise could be fulfilled. ....Ttking a nuMber of factors into account the British analyst reckoned that Gcebbels would give himself about three months as the RaXiMUM period propagandize forthcoming retaliation in advance. **Atte Approved for Release: 2021/12/01 CO2198832 Approved for Release: 2021/12/01 CO2198832 One of the reasons - 3-- ced for the lower ber of TCC anairee on this problem is that C analyits, unlike the Briti worked on their own and were not asked to coordinate their If-weapon researoh with that of other intelligence specialists. They assumed that other intelligence techniques more appropriate than propaganda analysis were being applied to the problem. This lack of coordination may also have damaged the quality of their analysis in another case study citadt they were not informed of TORCH or briefed to look for indications of Nazi concern over possible invasion of North Africa, and so continued to search for signs of the Nazi attitude toward a possible second front across the English Channel or in Northern Europe These two cases, in both of whici predicting a =jar action, are not regarded asexelusively typi author recoil/112es and discusses at same kingth the possibility that leaders may decide to forego any propaganda preparation which might reveal a planned action in advance. In either event, he points out, The value to the policy maker of inferences assessing the nature and objectives of the major action once it is taken should not be underrated; in many cases they overshadow in importance the usefulness of having predicted the action before it occurred. Writing for scholars and experts, Kr. George has set himself a subtler teak than presenting these interesting case studies. He Approved for Release: 2021/12/01 CO2198832 Approved for Release: 2021/12/01 CO2198832 - 4 - idtif general types of inference made about conditions which h.:Lped to d ermine the communication content (for example propaganda goals and techniques, "situational factors, and elite estimates, expectations, and policies); (2) to identify other possible determinants about which the FCC did not attempt to make inferences, and then to depict the relationship among all the various factors making up the Tystan of behavior; and (3) t identify reasoning patterns in individual inferences and codify the more general methods, direct and indirect, that were used. Out of this thorough and painstaking study comes his cautious conclusion: It as that propaganda analysis can become a reasonably objective diagnostic tool for making certain kinds of inferences and that its techniques are capable of refinement and improvemen The book is not early to read in part becau�e of both undefined and overrefined terminologyrently th,e--4alt4,erusea4ut:erchangeablr taie ,-.- undefined -terays--nprepegander," "propaganda cormandcations," "political connunications and "public communication, Imwt propaganda is distingu f mass communication," also undefined. Readers may find quite confusing the relationships between propaganda analysis, conunicstIcns analysis, content analysis, quantitative analysis and nonfrequency analysis. And many a reader may never get beyond a choker on page the introduction: 4. Dichotomous attributes meaning or nonmeaning characteristics which can be'_pitedivbed only as belonging or net Approved for Release: 2021/12/01 CO2198832 Approved for Release: 2021/12/01 CO2198832 belonging to a given unit of the communication materia1)4/ It he persists, however,footnote 4 an page 81 will refer him to page 96, where he can learn that a dichotomous attribute is merely the presence or abaence* of a designated symbol or theme. Addressing an academic audience which historleaL4 has tended to wsw meke content analysis eynonymoup with counting, the author overstates his criticism of quantitative techniques in propaganda analysis tame' reader may miss his references to the fact that quantitative teehniques are important in the first elmewntarr task of propaganda, analysis, that is in describing tts Content, and his judgment that *another deficiency of FCC's procedure was its failure to make use of systematic quantitative procedures in evaluating certain aspects of Nazi V-Weapon propaganda* Debate over quantitative vv. qualitative techniques is actually beside the point. The real question is how best to combine these tedhniques in attacking each specific intelligence problem. Despite these minor tortccTnings, it is udnently qualified and objective expert as eh Onclusions like the followingt Provision must be made for examining al of the output of a propaganda system and for evaluating its over-all propaganda rater/. Any division of labor which divorces trend analyais on o f d soh Approved for Release: 2021/12/01 CO2198832 Approved for Release: 2021/12/01 CO2198832 te from cross-sectional propaganda opaganda cstrategr ray result interpretations of specific trends* The propaganda analyst 'makes the basic assumption that propaganda coordinated with elite foliates, but he needs more concrete knowledge which he can obtain only from a set of earpiricelly derived generalisation* about an elite's operational pm:agenda theory. ...ffie slog requires knowledge about technical expertise and skillfulness of propaganda incstems under scrutiny and that of individual propagandists employed therein. The investigator must have rather specific, detailed knowledge of the popaganda organisation whose output he is analysing in order to appraise the ituational ccatext who says it, to whom, and under What stances. ...Comparison of what is said to different audiences is generally of considerable value in making inferences. In propaganda analysis, it is typical for the inve concerned with eatablishing slight changes in propaganda or subtle differences in the wording employed by different 5 or by the same speaker to differznt audiences. to be minute Approved for Release: 2021/12/01 CO2198832