In his view it would be of great advantage for a representative of the Ministry of Information to attend J.I.C. Meetings as required. The J.I.C. was the only place where the views of the Service Departments, the Foreign Office, the Ministry of Economic Warfare, the Secret Service, the Ministry of Information and Department E.H. could all be considered, and co-ordinated. He suggested that the main object of the discussion of propaganda policy by the J.I.C. should be to give the Chiefs of Staff some control over the general trend of our propaganda, and to enable them to take advantage of it for the furtherance of their plans.
- Collection ID
- CAB81
- Conflict
- Second World War
- Countries
- Germany Great Britain Holland Netherlands Portugal United Kingdom
- Document Reference
- CAB 81/87/71
- Document Types
- Summary
- File Reference
- CAB 81/87
- Identifier
- 10.1080/swwf.cab81.0087.071
- Keywords
- Propaganda German Propaganda Information Sharing British Intelligence Organisation Joint Intelligence Sub-committee Duties Rumours Intelligence Distribution Broadcast Services
- Languages
- English
- Organizations
- Chiefs of Staff Foreign Office Joint Intelligence Sub-Committee Ministry of Economic Warfare Secret Intelligence Service Security Service Inter-Services Security Board
- Pages
- 9
- Persons Discussed
- Victor Cavendish-Bentinck C Edwards Ian Fleming John Godfrey Adolf Hitler Stewart Menzies Phillipe Pétain Geoffrey Vickers
- Published in
- United Kingdom
- Themes
- Propaganda Censorship Psychological Warfare