Late October –
Gustav Siegfried Eins, a British
black propaganda station, ceases broadcasting to German troops in Western Europe on the short wave, ostensibly because of a
Gestapo raid.[6]
November
14 November –
Soldatensender Calais, a British
black propaganda station, begins broadcasting to German troops in Western Europe from a studio at
Milton Bryan in Bedfordshire through the powerful medium wave
Aspidistra transmitter in Sussex, purporting to be an official German military station.[6]
3 December – London-based American war reporter
Edward R. Murrow delivers his classic "Orchestrated Hell" broadcast over
CBS describing an RAF nighttime bombing raid over Berlin.
Late October –
Gustav Siegfried Eins, a British
black propaganda station, ceases broadcasting to German troops in Western Europe on the short wave, ostensibly because of a
Gestapo raid.[6]
November
14 November –
Soldatensender Calais, a British
black propaganda station, begins broadcasting to German troops in Western Europe from a studio at
Milton Bryan in Bedfordshire through the powerful medium wave
Aspidistra transmitter in Sussex, purporting to be an official German military station.[6]
3 December – London-based American war reporter
Edward R. Murrow delivers his classic "Orchestrated Hell" broadcast over
CBS describing an RAF nighttime bombing raid over Berlin.