'Good Treatment of Prisoners' propaganda leaflet
Title
'Good Treatment of Prisoners' propaganda leaflet
Description
A propaganda leaflet issued by the Allied Forces during World War II after the return of General Douglas MacArthur to the Philippine Islands in 1944. The leaflets were probably airdropped to Japanese troops on the Philippine Islands soon after General MacArthur landed in October, 1944. It features images of Japanese prisoners of war, depicting them eating and working in a garden. The leaflet list three articles from the International Law on the treatment of prisoners. It was meant to induce the surrender of Japanese troops by demonstrating that the Allied Forces would treat prisoners of war humanely according to the International Law. It is numbered '16J1'. The leaflet is accompanied by an official description and translation of the text into English. This is one item from a scrapbook of propaganda leaflets and related materials that was compiled by the Psychological Warfare Branch of the Allied Forces in the Southwest Pacific Area during World War II. The scrapbook belonged to Colonel Karl F. Baldwin of the United States Army, who helped establish the propaganda program. It contains approximately 200 pieces of propaganda, mostly in Japanese, that were intended for distribution in the Philippines, Japan, and other nearby areas.
Creator
Allied Forces. South West Pacific Area. Psychological Warfare Branch
Is Part Of
Psychological Warfare Branch Scrapbook of American Propaganda Leaflets (MS.70)
Subject
Leaflets dropped from aircraft
World War, 1939-1945--Philippines--Sources
World War, 1939-1945--Propaganda
Place
Philippines
Language
English
Japanese
Identifier
PUA_MS70_036
Rights
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/
Type
Still Image