Codebreaking and Signals Intelligence

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Bletchley Park
Bletchley Park analysis
British Ciphers
Cabinet Noir
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Cecil Spring Rice
Cipher Bureau
Codebreaking
Codes
Commercial Enigma
Cryptanalysis
cryptanalysis methods
Cryptanalytical Efforts
Cryptography
Daily Key
Denniston
Diplomatic Traffic
Enigma
Enigma Machine
Enigma machine studies
Enigma Traffic
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eq_nobargain
Foreign Minister
Frank Birch
GCHQ
German Naval
Government Code Cypher School
Hand Ciphers
historical signals intelligence research
Intelligence
intelligence surveillance techniques
Intercept Operators
Intercept Station
interwar espionage research
Mess
military communications history
Military intelligence
Military signals
Military studies
Naval Section
Perforated Sheets
Peter Twinn
Russian Secret Police
Security studies
Signals
Spring Rice
Ultra
Wheel Order
Younger Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367708757
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 31 May 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Despite publicity given to the successes of British and American codebreakers during the Second World War, the study of signals intelligence is still complicated by governmental secrecy over even the most elderly peacetime sigint. This book, first published in 1986, lifts the veil on some of these historical secrets. Christopher Andrew and Keith Neilson cast new light on how Tsarist codebreakers penetrated British code and cypher systems. John Chapman’s study of German military codebreaking represents a major advance in our understanding of cryptanalysis during the Weimar Republic. The history of the Government Code and Cypher School – forerunner of today’s GCHQ – by its operational head, the late A.G. Denniston, provides both a general assessment of the achievements of British cryptanalysis between the wars and a tantalising glimpse of what historians may one day find in GCHQ’s forbidden archives. The distinguished cryptanalyst of Bletchley Park, the late Gordon Welchman, describes in detail how the Ultra programme defeated the German Enigma machine, while another Bletchley Park cryptographer, Christopher Morris, reminds us in his account of the valuable work on hand cyphers that wartime sigint consisted of much more than Ultra. Roger Austin’s study of surveillance under the Vichy regime shows the continuing importance of older and simpler methods of message interception such as letter-opening. Taken together, the articles establish sigint as an essential field of study for both the modern historian and the political scientist.

Christopher Andrew