The Ultimate Weapon
In The Ultimate Weapon, Oleg Anisimov attempts to define, within the framework of his personal experience in the Soviet Union, Germany, and Western Europe, “the profound revolution which has taken place in the political thinking of a continent exposed to totalitarianism, two devastating world wars, and the threat of a third within our lifetime.”

The book is concerned with psychological warfare. Efforts to turn soldiers and civilians in the enemy country against their rulers have been made by many a political leader since time immemorial, but what was new about political warfare [at the time of publishing this book in 1953] was its great scope and immense complexity. “Propaganda”—for this is what was regarded as political warfare in the last war—played a certain role in 1939-45. The Soviets, the Axis powers, and the Western Allies all used it as a means of influencing the people in the enemy camp, but it is very difficult to assess what effect it actually had in World War II.

Mr. Anisimov’s book is the first serious attempt to offer a new approach to this complex problem of political warfare. He does not presume to present any quick formula for the solution of the formidable difficulties that face the United States in its struggle against the Kremlin, but rather faces the problem squarely, and suggests a method of tackling it that deserves serious attention.
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The Ultimate Weapon
In The Ultimate Weapon, Oleg Anisimov attempts to define, within the framework of his personal experience in the Soviet Union, Germany, and Western Europe, “the profound revolution which has taken place in the political thinking of a continent exposed to totalitarianism, two devastating world wars, and the threat of a third within our lifetime.”

The book is concerned with psychological warfare. Efforts to turn soldiers and civilians in the enemy country against their rulers have been made by many a political leader since time immemorial, but what was new about political warfare [at the time of publishing this book in 1953] was its great scope and immense complexity. “Propaganda”—for this is what was regarded as political warfare in the last war—played a certain role in 1939-45. The Soviets, the Axis powers, and the Western Allies all used it as a means of influencing the people in the enemy camp, but it is very difficult to assess what effect it actually had in World War II.

Mr. Anisimov’s book is the first serious attempt to offer a new approach to this complex problem of political warfare. He does not presume to present any quick formula for the solution of the formidable difficulties that face the United States in its struggle against the Kremlin, but rather faces the problem squarely, and suggests a method of tackling it that deserves serious attention.
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The Ultimate Weapon

The Ultimate Weapon

The Ultimate Weapon

The Ultimate Weapon

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Overview

In The Ultimate Weapon, Oleg Anisimov attempts to define, within the framework of his personal experience in the Soviet Union, Germany, and Western Europe, “the profound revolution which has taken place in the political thinking of a continent exposed to totalitarianism, two devastating world wars, and the threat of a third within our lifetime.”

The book is concerned with psychological warfare. Efforts to turn soldiers and civilians in the enemy country against their rulers have been made by many a political leader since time immemorial, but what was new about political warfare [at the time of publishing this book in 1953] was its great scope and immense complexity. “Propaganda”—for this is what was regarded as political warfare in the last war—played a certain role in 1939-45. The Soviets, the Axis powers, and the Western Allies all used it as a means of influencing the people in the enemy camp, but it is very difficult to assess what effect it actually had in World War II.

Mr. Anisimov’s book is the first serious attempt to offer a new approach to this complex problem of political warfare. He does not presume to present any quick formula for the solution of the formidable difficulties that face the United States in its struggle against the Kremlin, but rather faces the problem squarely, and suggests a method of tackling it that deserves serious attention.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781787202061
Publisher: Hauraki Publishing
Publication date: 10/27/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 150
File size: 801 KB

About the Author

OLEG ANISIMOV was a Russian interpreter and author.

He left Russia in 1922 at the age of fourteen and lived in France for several years. He taught French history and literature in Riga, Latvia when, in 1940, the tiny Baltic land was occupied by the Red Army and annexed by the Soviet Union.

Owing to his knowledge of Russian and German, Anisimov was appointed an interpreter with the German Economic Inspection in occupied Soviet territory and, between 1941 and 1945, came to know Soviet people of all classes: peasants and workers, professors and writers, officers and soldiers.

Following the end of World War II, Anisimov served as chairman of the Welfare Committee for Russian Refugees in the British zone of Germany from 1945 to 1951.

Anisimov used his extensive experiences for his acclaimed study of psychological warfare, The Ultimate Weapon, first published in 1953.

WILLIAM JOSEPH ("WILD BILL") DONOVAN (January 1, 1883 - February 8, 1959) was a highly decorated United States soldier, lawyer, intelligence officer and diplomat. Donovan is best remembered as the wartime head of the Office of Strategic Services (OSS), a precursor to the Central Intelligence Agency, during World War II. He is also known as the "Father of American Intelligence" and the "Father of Central Intelligence".

General Donovan is the only person to have received all four of the United States’ highest awards: The Medal of Honor, the Distinguished Service Cross, the Distinguished Service Medal, and the National Security Medal. He is a recipient of the Silver Star and Purple Heart, as well as decorations from a number of other nations for his service during both World Wars.

He died in 1959 at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, D.C. aged 76 and is buried in Section 2 of the Arlington National Cemetery.
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