By Alex Hanton
The pen is mightier than the sword, especially if said pen
is writing bullshit. For instance, every good military strategist knows that a
well-constructed bluff can overcome almost any odds. You just have to really
sell it, that's all. And sometimes, it's the most ridiculous lies that are the
most effective ...
You wouldn't think that, in a real guerrilla warfare
scenario, "Let's tell the enemy a vampire is after them" would be
treated as a legitimate strategy. Well, don't tell that to Edward Lansdale. He was one of the CIA's most notorious operatives during the
Cold War, his practical-joke-based "psywar" approach turning up in
everything from the agency's enthusiastic attempts to assassinate Castro to the
war in Vietnam.
For instance, Lansdale learned Vietnamese just
to write a best-selling astrological almanac - that he then smuggled into
enemy territory so he'd know what advice the Viet Cong were getting from local
soothsayers.
But Lansdale's unique combination of genius and borderline
insanity reached its height when he was leading operations against communist
guerrillas in the Philippines.
He had become aware of the local myths surrounding the aswang, an evil vampire
creature that used a pointed, prehensile tongue to drain its victims' blood.
So, when a communist unit had adopted a virtually impregnable position atop a hill
in Luzon, Lansdale grinned and leaped into
action. He set up a deeply terrifying mind game that began with spreading
rumors about an aswang living in the area. Of course, to really sell such a
story to hardened soldiers, he'd need some convincing evidence, so he started
organizing fake vampire attacks on the enemy. Oh, we're not talking about fake blood and mannequins here.
He'd set up an ambush, and when an enemy patrol came along, Lansdale's
people would silently snatch the last man in the patrol. They'd puncture his
neck with two holes, vampire style, then hold the body up by the heels, drain
it of all blood, and put the corpse back on the trail.
Sure enough, the communists abandoned the area in no time.
Although we guess it's possible they weren't afraid of the vampire, but rather
that CIA nutjob who kept kidnapping people and draining their blood.
#4. Napoleon's Officers Take a Bridge by Calmly Strolling
Across It
So you need to capture a crucial bridge, but force alone
isn't going to do it, since such an action would destroy the bridge in the
process. Once again, it's bullshit to the rescue. It was 1805, and Napoleon was having trouble conquering the
Austrians, who had adopted a strong defensive position on the east bank of the Danube. The French needed to get across, but the only
bridge within marching distance was wired with explosives, and the Austrians
had orders to blow it up the second France attacked. Knowing that
trying to take the bridge by force would simply result in it getting blown to
rubble, Napoleon's officers came up with a plan so stupid, it had to work.
Two marshals named Lannes and Murat just casually strolled
up to the bridge guards and started chatting about how glad they were that an
armistice had finally been signed and that the fighting was now over (in case
you're not following along, this was a blatant lie). The guards, being
unaccustomed to idle banter with high-ranking enemy officers, remained
unconvinced and kept them at gunpoint. Lannes and Murat didn't give a damn.
They continued to saunter across, laughing off any attempts to stop them. Meanwhile, an elite squadron of French grenadiers also
started heading for the bridge. They had been ordered to behave as casually as
possible - their guns were slung across their backs and they walked instead of
marching, laughing and joking among themselves as they slowly but surely
advanced.
When they reached the other side of the bridge, the two
marshals noticed an Austrian sergeant preparing to light the fuse to blow the
bridge. Lannes, displaying such huge balls that their gravity started
attracting debutantes, snatched the match from his hand and angrily insisted
that since a truce had been signed, the sergeant was destroying public
property, and if he tried it again, Lannes would have him arrested, goddammit. A nearby Austrian artillery force prepared to fire on the
sauntering grenadiers, but the officers persuaded them to back down - Lannes
actually stopped a cannon from being fired by nonchalantly sitting on the
barrel to light his pipe. When a particularly persistent sergeant insisted that
the whole thing was clearly a trick, Murat demanded to know if the Austrian
officers were going to let an enlisted man talk to them like that. At which
point the humiliated Austrian officers ordered the man imprisoned.
The fact that the French grenadiers crossed the bridge and
seized said Austrian officers immediately after probably made for a very
bittersweet "I told you so!" moment.
#3. Tecumseh Takes Fort Detroit
by Marching Around in Circles
The War of 1812 is famous for two things: lasting until
1815, and the Native Americans getting in on the action. Chief among them was
the legendary Shawnee
leader Tecumseh, who fought with the British. He and Isaac Brock, his equally
badass English counterpart, were assigned to capture a heavily armed American
base called Fort Detroit. They were massively outnumbered
and had no way in. Once again, it was time to dip into the old bag of tricks. What the Indians and British did have were a few captured
letters from the commander of the fort. From these, they learned that the man
was terrified of "the savage Indians." So, Brock wrote a letter of
his own to his superiors saying that he wouldn't need reinforcements because he
had 5,000 bloodthirsty Native American warriors he was about to set loose on
Detroit (of course, in reality this was only about 10 times the actual number).
He then let said letter fall into American hands.
Tecumseh then marched his 600 men toward the fort. They
embarked on a campaign of fear on the night watchmen on the stockades, howling
and chanting and whooping like men possessed, playing up the role of the
violent natives. As daylight emerged, a fearful sight met the Americans: a
massive, savage army of horribly war-painted Indians circling their fort,
hidden in the woods save for a small clearing. The horrified soldiers at the
fort managed to count at least 1,500 savage warriors from what little the clearing
revealed. In reality, Tecumseh's troops were moving single file across the
clearing. Every man walked the small open space, giving the guys at the fort
his best "bloodthirsty injun" impression, until he was safely under
the cover of the forest again. Then he'd run a large loop back until he was at
the end of the line again. This created a never-ending conveyor belt of intimidating
warriors, making the surrounding army look massive.
As their coup de grace,
Brock warned Fort
Detroit he was
"losing control" of Tecumseh (who was probably trying not to burst
into laughter in the background) and would sadly be unable to prevent an unholy
scalpin' party if the fort had to be taken by force. The fort's commander,
terrified to his very bones, surrendered without consulting his officers or
even firing a shot. Incidentally, this makes Detroit the only American city that has ever
surrendered to a foreign power. (Insert your own "If only they'd kept
it" joke here.)
The "Spirit of Detroit" statue, signifying their cowardice and gullibility in the face of danger. |
#2. Britain
Convinces Nazis They Can Set the Ocean on Fire
It was one year into World War II, a time when things
weren't going well for Britain.
They'd been unceremoniously bitch-slapped out of France
at Dunkirk.
German U-boat attacks were gnawing into their food supply routes, invasion
rumors ran rampant, and you couldn't even light a cigarette without the
Luftwaffe horror-bombing everything within a 40-mile radius. So how do you keep
Hitler from crossing the English Channel? By
telling him that you'll set the goddamned ocean on fire. It actually wasn't an entirely hollow threat - thanks to
Shell and BP, Britain had
managed to collect a hefty surplus of oil and did tests to see if they could
use it to re-enact the Battle
of the Blackwater from Game of Thrones. Sadly, what would have been the most
metal thing ever created (until Ronnie James Dio would be born two years later)
was not to be. Trial runs did manage to produce a "frightening
spectacle" of fire and smoke, but ultimately the oil spread way too
slowly. What's worse, a single mortar strike on the pipe system carrying the
oil to the sea would cause a backfire and turn the entire coastal area into the
world's largest decorative glasswork. But, of course, the Nazis didn't need to
know that.
"That's what we call 'burn off.' Let's keep that up there instead of engulfing everything we've ever known." |
So British intelligence swung into action, spreading the
story of their newly acquired pyrotechnic powers throughout occupied France, including whispering it to German
patients at the hospitals of Paris.
Before long, half the German army was convinced that anyone invading England would
have to sail through a coast-to-coast tsunami of flame. And as they grew fearful,
the locals got cocky. Soon, French resistance members started amusing
themselves in bars by pretending to warm their hands on the backs of German
soldiers. By the time the rumor reached Nazi high command, the story
had grown into a magic mine weapon that ignited the sea. They started
experimenting with asbestos-coated invasion barges, which worked pretty well
until the live test that involved loading a barge with troops and sailing it
into a pool of burning gasoline. This did not end well.
Meanwhile, the British intelligence was astonished by the
success of their plan and got a little carried away. They started circulating a
follow-up rumor, which involved the British importing 200 man-eating sharks
from Australia
and releasing them into the channel. This story was a lot less successful
(since the sharks would be boiled alive by the flaming water, duh).
#1. Robert Baden-Powell Gives Boers a Crash Course in
Bullshit
Longtime Cracked readers may remember Lord Robert Baden-Powell
as the slightly creepy eccentric who started the Boy Scouts to stop kids from
masturbating. However, Baden-Powell was also something of a living legend in
army circles for his heroic and somewhat hilarious defense of the town of Mafeking during the Second
Boer War. Baden-Powell's orders were to secure Mafeking for the British. The problem was
that the Brits and the Boers were still at the "diplomats shouting at each
other" stage and the war hadn't been declared yet. He couldn't just force
his way into the town - because manners - and they'd never give his troops
permission to enter. So Baden-Powell asked the townspeople for official
permission to move a guard into the town in order to protect his supplies
there. The second he got the permit, he marched his entire army in. When people
complained, he simply pointed out that the size of the guard had never been
specified and his supplies need a lot of protectin'.
Now Baden-Powell had Mafeking,
but how could he keep it from an incoming Boer force five times stronger? With shenanigans, that's how! Baden-Powell's men started
burying mysterious boxes around the town's perimeter. When questioned about
them, Baden-Powell announced that they were powerful landmines from England,
specifically designed to wreck Boer shit. He proved this by blowing up a
couple, making sure that enemy sympathizers saw the massive explosions and
managed to slip out of town to warn the Boers. Of course, there were no mines.
The boxes Baden-Powell had detonated were filled with dynamite from his
extremely limited supply. The rest were full of sand.
Baden-Powell's other problem was that he didn't have barbed
wire, or facilities to make any - a key tool in stopping the advance of ground
troops. What he had was a bunch of wooden posts of the kind barbed wire is
strung on, and he knew that barbed wire was really hard to see from a distance.
So, he hammered the posts in a massive circle around the town, and whenever his
men came near the posts, they would hurl themselves to the ground and inch
along as if trying to crawl under barbed wire. To an enemy with binoculars, it
totally looked like the city was now guarded from all sides with barbed wire,
in addition to the supermines.
And then added, "So suck it. All of it." |
Source: http://www.cracked.com
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