- Robert A. McClure
Robert Alexis McClure (
March 4 ,1897 –January 1 ,1957 ) was an American soldier andpsychological warfare specialist.Born in
Mattoon, Illinois , he graduated from theKentucky Military Institute in 1915. He initially joined thePhilippine Constabulary before joining the regular army in 1917.In 1941 he served as military attaché to the American Embassy in London before being appointed by
Dwight D. Eisenhower to chief of intelligence for the European theater of operation in 1942. Eisenhower next placed him in charge of the Allied Forces Information and Censorship Section which was responsible for the operation of twelve radio stations as well as the censorship of troop mails and cables.McClure was appointed director of the newly created
Psychological Warfare Division of SHAEF in 1944. With the end of the war in Europe he was responsible for theInformation Control Division which controlled broadcasting and newspapers in Germany during the early stage of the occupation.After the invasion of Korea in 1950, beginning the
Korean War , the Office of the Chief of Psychological Warfare was formed in Washington, D.C., headed by McClure. During his tenure, the Psychological Warfare Center was established atFort Bragg, North Carolina which centralized the newly formed Psychological Warfare School and 10th Special Forces Group at a single location.In 1953, McClure was assigned to Iran as chief of the U.S. Military Mission where he formed a close relationship with the Shah.
He retired from the Army in 1956.
External links
*cite web
url=http://www.psywarrior.com/mcclure.html
title=Major General Robert Alexis McClure: Forgotten Father of US Army Special Warfare
author=Colonel Alfred H. Paddock, Jr.
publisher=www.psywarrior.com
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