A startling omission from the extensive literature on the Pacific
events of World War II is an analysis of Allied psychological
operations. Allison B. Gilmore makes a strong case for the importance of
psychological warfare in this theater, countering the usual view of
fanatical resistance by Japanese units. Gilmore marshals evidence that
Japanese military indoctrination did not produce soldiers who were
invulnerable to demoralization and the survival instinct.