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| Agency overview | |
|---|---|
| Formed | May, 1942 |
| Dissolved | May 9, 1945 |
| Headquarters | Post Office Box 1142, Fort Hunt |
| Agency executives |
|
| Parent department | United States Department of War |
| Parent agency | Military Intelligence Service |
| Child agency |
|
The Military Intelligence Service, Escape and Evasion Section, or MIS-X, was a section of the Military Intelligence Service and the United States Department of War that operated during World War II. It was an escape and evasion organization, and aided U.S. servicemen held as prisoners of war (POWs) and those evading capture in enemy territory. They worked closely with MI9 to establish escape and evasion lines. The section, which was modeled after MI9, was disbanded at the war's end. [1]
The organization was divided into five sections: interrogation, correspondence, prisoner of war locations, training and briefing, and technical. It was commanded by Colonel Catesby ap C. Jones. To avoid revealing the purpose of the organization, it was referred to by its Post Office Box 1142, rather than its location at Fort Hunt. [2] The interrogations handled by MIS-X were of recently escaped Allied POWs, not to be confused with the duties of its counterpart, MIS-Y, which handled the housing and interrogations of enemy German and Japanese POWs. [3]
MIS-X was based in Fort Hunt, Virginia. Secret equipment such as small compasses, maps, and radios were smuggled into German prisoner of war camps; to avoid compromising legitimate aid organizations like the Red Cross, MIS-X invented its own aid organizations and created aid packages from these, in which secret items were hidden. [1] A radio code was devised to send messages via BBC broadcasts; this was based on Morse code: a one-syllable word was a dot, a two syllable word a dash. Such messages were preceded by a bell tone. A method of hiding a message in innocuous-looking outgoing letters to the United States was devised: all incoming letters were screened for such messages before delivery. These were signaled by having the date in numbers rather than letters. American officers who were privy to the secret and codes debriefed incoming prisoners and sent any useful information back to the United States. [4]
In a controversial decision, at the end of the war, following the Surrender of Japan, the War Department ordered that all documents belonging to MIS-X be destroyed. Over the course of 36 hours, the staff worked nonstop to burn all records and documents in their possession. [5] The documents that do survive are those that were not in their possession at the time.