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4th Psychological Operations Group

A US Army psychological operations unit that developed specialized psyops technology including the Mitralux image projector and the hurricane hustler leaflet delivery device during the Vietnam War.

The 4th Psychological Operations Group was a U.S. Army psychological operations unit that developed and deployed specialized equipment for psychological operations during the Vietnam War. Two devices attributed to the unit illustrate the range of hardware innovation pursued by US psyops units in this period.1

Mitralux Image Projector

The unit developed the Mitralux image projector, a device using an 85mm slide and a 1,000-watt bulb capable of projecting images onto large external surfaces including buildings, mountainsides, and low cloud banks. The device was designed for night operations. The ability to project imagery onto clouds represented an attempt to exploit psychological and superstitious responses in target populations, creating the appearance of apparitions or supernatural phenomena in the sky. The device was assessed as not fully successful in operational trials.1

Hurricane Hustler

The second device, called the "hurricane hustler," was a vacuum-based mechanism mounted on helicopters for delivering leaflets. Standard leaflet delivery methods faced problems of distribution accuracy and wind dispersal; the hurricane hustler used controlled airflow to spread materials across large areas more effectively. Leaflet drops were a primary delivery mechanism for the Chieu Hoi surrender program and other psychological operations messaging; in March 1969 alone, 713 million leaflets were distributed over Vietnam.1

Vietnam Psyops Network

The 4th Psychological Operations Group's technology development work existed alongside the operations of the 10th Psyop Battalion and 5th Special Squadron (which conducted Operation Tintinnabulation) and the 7th Psychological Operations Group (which produced classified propaganda analysis from Okinawa). These units were supported by academic and contractor research from organizations including CRESS, HumRRO, and the Rand Corporation, which provided social scientific analysis to guide the content and targeting of psychological operations.1

  1. Peter Watson, War on the Mind: The Military Uses and Abuses of Psychology. Basic Books, 1978. pp. 403-416 (Ch. 22).

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