![]() ![]() ![]() The Pentagon and the Eisenhower Presidential Library were also consulted and the results at both institutions were also negative. David Lesjak, proprietor of the Toons at War blog, who almost certainly knows more about the Disney studio's history in World War II than anyone else, stated some time ago: "Disney staff did a search of the Archives and of all internal Disney Company computer databases and found no reference anywhere to Mickey Mouse being the codeword for the D-Day Normandy landings. For instance, Neal Gabler writes in Walt Disney: The Triumph of the American Imagination that "at Allied headquarters the code name for the operation was 'Mickey Mouse.'" Gabler cites no source for that statement, and although many other books and Web sites say essentially the same thing, all of them are obviously peddling secondhand information. The notion has long been widespread that "Mickey Mouse" was the code name for the D-Day invasion of Normandy on June 6, 1944. Mickey Mouse was the password for which World War 2 invasion? from article ""Mickey Mouse" and D-Day" It's strange how many such falsehoods have attached themselves to Walt Disney and his creations, even though Walt himself was exceptionally accurate and straightforward in responding to interviewers' questions. This particular legend will no doubt continue to thrive, even though it's false. That surely is the tiny incident that was ultimately inflated, by Neal Gabler among many others, into something much grander, so that "Mickey Mouse" became the password not just for one meeting, but for the entire Allied invasion. Naval officers gathering for invasion briefing at a southern port approached the sentry at the door and furtively whispered into his ear the password of admission: "Mickey Mouse." Mickey Mouse played a part in the invasion of northern France, it was revealed today. Here's the UP item as it appeared in the Charleston (West Virginia) Daily Mail: The exact wording in the three papers differs, thanks presumably to editing, but the substance in each is the same. I haven't yet checked the Postmicrofilm for the "news item" that Braggiotti mentions, but a quick online check of other newspapers turned up three that published a very brief United Press item, datelined London, on June 8, 1944. "Supporting documentation" has finally turned up, but what it supports is another matter. ![]() There is speculation that 'Mickey Mouse' may possibly have been used at the lower unit level as a codeword, but even then there is no supporting documentation." Common Password Mickey Mouse was a common password in World War 2. ![]()
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