Short Stuff: Did a vampire legend help win the Cold War? | STUFF YOU SHOULD KNOW
This piece explores the role of a Filipino vampire legend, known as the aswang, in the context of Cold War propaganda tactics employed by the CIA. It examines how the myth, which embodies fear and misfortune, was leveraged to influence perceptions and actions during this geopolitical conflict, linking cultural beliefs to covert operations.
Key Takeaways
- In a culture with 7,000 islands, the aswang embodies fear of the unknown—vampires meet folklore in a unique twist.
- Ed Lansdale turned local folklore into psychological warfare, weaponizing superstition against communist rebels in the Philippines.
- Forget Dracula: the aswang preys on children and pregnant women, embodying deeper societal fears that US media exploited.
- Lansdale's ad-man background made him a master manipulator; wartime SCOPs evolved from leaflets to lore as propaganda.
- The Hooks fought valiantly in WWII, but post-war labels turned them into 'terrorists'—a classic case of history rewriting itself.
Mentioned in This Episode
- aswang (concept)
- Edward Giri Lansdale (person)
- Hooks (company)
- Jordan Clark (person)
- World War II (event)
- Office of Strategic Services (OSS) (company)
- Louie Taruk (person)
- Cold War (event)
- Philippine Trade Act of 1946 (book)
- Ramon Magsaysay (person)
- Dracula (fictional_character)
- lick hole (concept)
- self-segmenting aswang (concept)
- Dave Ruse (person)
- Manananggal (concept)
- flem (concept)
- Tokyo Rose (fictional_character)
- The Agency: Central Intelligence (media)