Victory Through Influence
Origins of Psychological Operations in the US Army
By Jared M Tracy, Reviewed by Travis M. Prendergast
Article published on: September 9, 2025 in the Winter 2025 edition of the Aviation
Digest
Read Time: < 5 mins
Texas A&M University Press, 2022
Pp. xix, 263. $47
Every military capability was once new and untested. In most cases, a single war was enough to prove the value
of any given emerging capability. However, the psychological operations (PSYOP) capability was an exception.
Despite the long history of psychological warfare, it took three wars to firmly establish PSYOP as a capability
worthy of the U.S. Army’s investment. In the periods between World War I, World War II, and the Korean War,
hard-earned lessons and best practices were lost. It was only through repeated experiences that psychological
operations became a capability that the U.S. Army would learn to value.
In Victory Through Influence: Origins of Psychological Operations in the US Army,
Jared M. Tracy, deputy command historian for U.S. Army Special Operations Command, masterfully describes
PSYOP’s journey. In the introduction, Tracy clarifes that this is not a history of PSYOP organizations in the
U.S. Army, but rather the history of the capability itself. To tell this story, Tracy performed an impressive
act of archival research. By doing so, he was able to tell the story of PSYOP using the words of those who
brought PSYOP into the fold of the U.S. Army.
Tracy focuses on several themes that reappear throughout the book. Perhaps the most prominent is proving the
return on investment for PSYOP. In this regard, the gold standard was the surrendering enemy combatant holding
aloft a leaflet describing the U.S. Army’s fair treatment for enemy prisoners of war. However, Tracy also
presents primary source accounts that demonstrate the problems with assessing PSYOP’s effects. For instance, at
one point, the focus was on the total number of leaflets dropped, a shoddy metric at best and a harmful one at
worst.
A strength of Tracy’s research is that he is not afraid to point out instances in which PSYOP was deemed to be
ineffective. For example, he refers to surveys of enemy prisoners of war. Many of these prove that PSYOP
affected the enemy’s decision to surrender. However, Tracy is open about the fact that not all enemy soldiers
were swayed by psychological operations. During the Korean War, one captured Chinese soldier remarked that “most
of his comrades remained skeptical of propaganda and avoided surrender due to fears of UN [United Nations]
forces killing them in captivity” (158).
Another theme of Tracy’s book is the importance of winning over advocates for PSYOP. This proved difficult, as
some high-ranking officials considered psychological operations as “pansy” operations (34). Others considered
anything that detracted from the pool of combat soldiers to be a detriment to the war effort. However, the
acquisition of high-ranking advocates of PSYOP enabled the capability’s survival in the U.S. Army. At times,
Tracy goes a bit far in trying to prove that high-ranking officials valued PSYOP, as when he recounts how Maj.
Gen. William Bergin liked a picture that a PSYOP soldier had taken of him so much that he used it as his ofcial
photo. Although Tracy admits that the general’s appreciation for the photo is not necessarily an endorsement of
PSYOP, he does call it an “indirect validation of PSYOP” (177). Examples like this one are few and far between,
but they detract, albeit only slightly, from the argument that Tracy is making.
Tracy also demonstrates that talent management, a problem that the military grapples with today, was just as
much of a problem for PSYOP during the wars. He presents numerous accounts of PSYOP soldiers complaining about
incoming soldiers having no training in psychological operations. Even when schools were established for
psychological operations training, PSYOP units did not receive trained personnel to fill their rosters. A report
from the 1st Loudspeaker and Leaflet Company stated that “an attempt to obtain trained and available personnel
from the pool of Psywar School enlisted graduates, not one of whom has ever been assigned, failed” (162).
Furthermore, there was a lack of knowledge about PSYOP within other training units. This may have contributed to
issues with moving PSYOP school graduates to PSYOP units. As one soldier recounted about basic training, “The
cadre [had] never hear[d] of the [1st Radio Broadcasting and Leaflet Group], and [did]n’t understand the
functions of bon-bon troopers from high-level outfits” (174).
The last major recurring theme in Victory Through Influence is how the U.S. Army organized PSYOP units
from war to war. The organization varied from theater to theater within wars, and Tracy somewhat tediously lays
out the mishmash of radio broadcasting and leaflet groups, mobile radio broadcasting companies, loudspeaker and
leaflet companies, and reproduction companies. Keeping track of the various PSYOP organizations was an
unenjoyable aspect of the book, and a few organizational charts would have been helpful in making things
clearer.
Another minor difficulty the reader will encounter is the presentation of different theaters within each war.
Each chapter focuses on a specific theater from the beginning of the particular war being discussed to its end,
which means that when switching to another theater within the same war, the reader is taken back to the start of
that war. This can make for tedious reading, especially in the Korean War chapters. Nevertheless, the overall
presentation makes sense, even if it could have benefited from better transitions.
Overall, Tracy does an excellent job of using primary sources to demonstrate how PSYOP developed as a capability
across three wars. By showing both how the capability developed and how it was or was not retained, Tracy
provides a history of the PSYOP capability that gives readers a chance to apply the lessons of history to
today’s circumstances. A careful reader could draw parallels between the development and adoption of PSYOP and
the development and adoption of emerging technologies in recent decades. Should it take three wars before the
military understands that a capability is worthy of retention?
Authors
Maj. Travis M. Prendergast is an FA59 (Army Strategist) currently serving in the office of
the Joint Staff J-7 (Joint Force Development). He received a bachelor's degree from the United States
Military Academy at West Point and a master's in strategic intelligence from the National Intelligence
University (NIU). At NIU, his graduate thesis was about Taiwanese influence operations and their effect on
Chinese perceptions of deterrence.