00:00Did you know that during the Korean War, American soldiers confessed to war crimes they never
00:04committed? Without a single punch thrown. In 1950, Chinese and North Korean forces captured
00:11thousands of US troops. But instead of beatings, they used something far more sinister. They called
00:17it thought reform. First, they isolated prisoners completely. No human contact for weeks. Then came
00:24the questions. The same ones. Over and over. For hours. Why are you here? What did America
00:32tell you? Sleep deprivation. Constant bright lights. Prisoners were forced to write their
00:38life stories dozens of times, each version criticized and rewritten. Slowly, methodically,
00:44they broke down every belief these soldiers held. The results were horrifying. Battle-hardened
00:50Marines stood before cameras denouncing their own country. Elite pilots confessed to dropping
00:55biological weapons they never carried. When the war ended, 21 Americans refused to come
01:01home. They chose to stay with their captors. The techniques were so effective that they became
01:06the blueprint for modern psychological interrogation. No physical scars. No broken bones. Just shattered
01:13minds. This was the birth of psychological warfare.
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