Five Towns Jewish Home 7.21.22

Page 94

94

The Jewish Home | JULY 21, 2022

Forgotten Her es

Tricks of the Trade By Avi Heiligman

General William Donovan

B

efore the CIA was founded in 1947, it was the Office of Strategic Services, the OSS, which coordinated espionage activities behind enemy lines, propaganda, and subversion of enemy assets. The operators and the people who were behind the operations came from all walks of life. Led by WWI hero General William Donovan, the OSS put together a large organization in a few short years that gave the Axis powers much consternation. Over the course of the war, the research and development department was headed by Dr. Stanley Lovell. Along with other departments within the OSS, they came up with many tricks, gadgets, tools, equipment, and ideas to fight the enemy. Some of these included grenades that would shriek and make a loud boom but would not explode, underwater oxygen rebreathers, and producing manuals on how to be annoying at work. The one idea from Lovell that caught the attention of OSS officers was the idea of the silencer. In reality, it was more of a suppressor, but the enemy would not know where a bullet had come from if it had these device attached. Camouflaging items to contain other items useful to a spy was a big focus for Lovell and his team. Buttons could

At an OSS weapons training area

be separated by twisting them and hollowing them out to contain secret items. However, the Germans soon caught on to this trick and started twisting the buttons of a suspected OSS agent’s clothes counter-clockwise. The OSS countered this measure by reversing the thread, and the button would only become loose by twisting it clockwise. Interestingly

Maps could be hidden in all sorts of places. Playing cards were constructed to conceal maps inside and the decks were snuck into those trapped behind enemy lines. Silk maps also proved useful, and they didn’t make any noise when opened and were resilient against bad weather. Counterfeit experts reproduced enemy currency and documents. One of

One of these experts, who was “on loan” from a federal prison, was able to reproduce a person’s handwriting so well that the person himself thought he wrote the document.

enough, the Germans never caught onto this countermeasure. Coal from hotspots around the world were brought into the OSS labs, tested and duplicated. Explosives were then placed in the coal lumps intended for boilers used by the enemy. Logs were also filled with explosives and sent to areas where unsuspecting Axis fighters could use them as firewood.

these experts, who was “on loan” from a federal prison, was able to reproduce a person’s handwriting so well that the person himself thought he wrote the document. The OSS spent considerable time creating manuals for their agents and friendly forces and citizens living behind enemy lines. The Simple Sabotage Field Manual provides a fascinating look into

what a regular citizen could do to weaken an invading and occupying army. For example, if one was at a workplace meeting at an enemy-controlled facility, the manual states that the person should make long irrelevant speeches, refer all matters to committees that should be made as large as possible, and tell everyone to be cautious. The purpose of this was to slow down production by being a bad employee but showing that one “cared” about the job. Working slowly using bad tools and blaming it on the machinery was a good way to slow down manufacturing of critical war material. These weapons, methods, and tricks helped many agents perform their duties. One of the most important field offices for the OSS was in a neutral European country. The OSS office in Bern, Switzerland, was active throughout most of the war and recruited the most important spy for the Allies during the conflict. Fritz Kolbe, aka George Wood, was a German diplomat trusted with secret documents that were photographed and handed to the OSS. He was an ardent anti-Nazi, and the information that he passed on included information on the German defenses for the Allied landings in France, experimental aircraft, and missile details and plans for Japa-


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Articles inside

Tricks of the Trade by Avi Heiligman

5min
pages 94-95

Your Money

3min
page 102

Some Helpful Feedback by Rivki D. Rosenwald Esq., CLC, SDS

2min
pages 103-104

Mr. President, I Read the Polls by Marc A. Thiessen

4min
page 93

Mind Your Business

10min
pages 86-87

Notable Quotes

6min
pages 88-91

Putin’s Long Game in Ukraine by David Ignatius

4min
page 92

The Aussie Gourmet: Blueberry Scones

2min
page 85

Fishing for Benefits by Aliza Beer, MS RD

7min
pages 78-79

Finding the Positive in Your Spouse by Dr. Deb Hirschhorn

7min
pages 80-81

Upside Down in the Holy Land

5min
pages 66-67

Parenting Pearls

7min
pages 82-83

JWOW

3min
page 84

Land of Milk, Honey, and Natural Gas

12min
pages 68-71

Welcome to the New Tampa by Avi Waldman

8min
pages 72-73

Delving into the Daf by Rabbi Avrohom Sebrow

4min
pages 64-65

National

14min
pages 28-32

Centerfold

4min
pages 56-57

Israel News

7min
pages 24-27

Rabbi Wein on the Parsha

2min
pages 58-59

You’ve Got Mail by Rav Moshe Weinberger

8min
pages 60-61

Community Happenings

27min
pages 34-53

Finding Your Role by Rabbi Shmuel Reichman

8min
pages 62-63

That’s Odd

5min
page 33
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