Sunday, June 25, 2023

Episode 93: The Spymaster Who Created Modern American Espionage, Part IV


When Donovan was promoted to brigadier general, he had his uniform tailor made in New York and would often wear it and one single ribbon on his chest - the one representing the Medal of Honor - to remind the senior officers he worked with and who had rows and rows of ribbons on their chests, that he had earned the only commendation that really mattered.

In November 1944, he was promoted to major general, the rank he felt most befitting of his command.


Though many senior officers were initially wary of Donovan and his Office of Strategic Services, by the end of the war, they had proven their worth providing critical intelligence and conducting clandestine operations in all theaters of the war. Above, we see Donovan review an OSS team in 1945 prior to its deployment to China.


If pop culture has taught me anything (I'm looking at you Q from the James Bond series), any spy service worth its salt needs to have cool gadgets to help it accomplish its goals. The OSS had many of these, including T13 Beano grenades which exploded on impact and uniform buttons with compasses hidden in them.

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Episode 147: The Mayaguez Incident - The Last American Casualties in Vietnam, Part VII

In the years following the Mayaguez Incident, several memorials have popped up. As is was considered the final combat action of the Vietnam ...