The Bletchley Park Codebreakers (63 page)

BOOK: The Bletchley Park Codebreakers
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CHAPTER 14 MIHAILOVIĆ OR TITO? HOW THE CODEBREAKERS HELPED CHURCHI LL CHOOSE

All references, except where otherwise stated, are to documents held at the Public Record Office.

Page
1
‘extreme elements’: WO 208/2014, Enclosure 22A.

Page
2
pigeons: HW 19/53, ISOS 58952 and HW 19/137, ISK 60438.

Page
3
‘decrypted about so little’: HW 11/10, 10.

Page
4
start time: HW 5/11, CX/JQ/822.

Page
5
monitoring station: Noel Currer-Briggs describes the operation in ‘Army Ultra’s Poor Relations’ in F. H. Hinsley and Alan Stripp (eds),
Codebreakers: The Inside Story of Bletchley Park
(OUP, Oxford, 1993), p. 209.

Page
6
somewhat smugly: HW 13/14.

Page
7
Brig. E. T. Williams: ‘The Use of Ultra’, WO 208/3575.

Page
8
identical to BP decrypts: e.g. an
Abwehr
decrypt of 17 August 1943, HW 19/60, ISOS 66091 is virtually the same as a decrypt of a Comintern message to Tito on 16 September, HW 17/51, ISCOT 1038.

Page
9
regular oral briefings: Davidson wrote notes for the Cabinet Office Historical Section in 1972. He referred to frequent telephone briefings to Churchill as well as visits to No. 10 and Chequers. Davidson papers, Liddell Hart Centre, King’s College London, Document F.

Page
10
Zwei Fischer
: HW 19/51, ISOS 56939.

Page
11
attacks on railway lines: HW 19/11, ISOS 8537.

Page
12
Italian aircraft: HW 5/24, CX/MSS/79.

Page
13
law and order: HW 16/6, ZIP/MSGP/27.

Page
14
bodies mutilated: HW 19/12, ISOS 9699.

Page
15
pacification of Bosnia: HW 19/12, ISOS 9841.

Page
16
‘to crush the rebellion’: HW 5/26, CX/MSS/265 and HW 1/82, C/7641.

Page
17
Italian divisions: HW 5/35, CX/MSS/364.

Page
18
German divisions: HW 5/37, CX/MSS/406.

Page
19
‘clashes’: HW 5/38, CX/MSS/437 and HW 1/218, C/8072.

Page
20
‘Russia would win’: HW 19/18, ISOS 148591.

Page
21
‘caps over the fence’: WO 208/4604, CAB 79/15-COS(41)354.

Page
22
revolt could be maintained: WO 208/4604, Minute 31.

Page
23
‘in human power’: quoted in F. W. D. Deakin,
The Embattled Mountain
(OUP, London, 1971), p. 144.

Page
24
situation reports: including HW 5/71, CX/MSS/784 and HW 1/402, C/8923.

Page
25
‘only ones to be reckoned with’: HW 19/89, ISK 3514.

Page
26
becoming steadily worse: HW 5/76, CX/MSS/823.

Page
27
time was right: WO 208/2014, Minute 11.

Page
28
all-out offensive: WO 208/2014, Enclosure D to Minute 11.

Page
29
movement of trains: HW 5/95, CX/MSS/1021.

Page
30
‘smash the resistance’: HW 5/90, CX/MSS/976.

Page
31
Churchill commented: WO 208/2014, Minute 22.

Page
32
Italians wished to withdraw: HW 5/126, CX/MSS/1333.

Page
33
had seized control: HW 5/130, CX/MSS/1390.

Page
34
‘really ticklish situation’: HW 5/132, CX/MSS/1394.

Page
35
‘to do their part’: WO 208/2014, Minute 30.

Page
36
vigorous action: HW 5/138, CX/MSS/1458.

Page
37
under German command: HW 5/138, CX/MSS/1455.

Page
38
‘needlessly sacrificing’: HW 5/139, CX/MSS/1468.

Page
39
clean up the Livno area: HW 5/148, CX/MSS/1559.

Page
40
antimony mine: HW 5/149, CX/MSS/1562.

Page
41
during the winter: HW 5/171, CX/MSS/1781.

Page
42
Operation
Weiss
and Operation
Schwarz
: HW5/182, CX/MSS/1891 and HW 5/191, CX/MSS/1986.

Page
43
surround the Partisans: HW 5/194, CX/MSS/2015 and HW 1/1332; HW 5/194, CX/MSS/2011; HW 5/196, CX/MSS/2031.

Page
44
operation in mid-winter: WO 208/2019, Minute 7.

Page
45
prestige and influence: WO 208/2026, Minute 3.

Page
46
‘active and vigorous Partisans’: WO 208/3102. Minute 1.

Page
47
advancing on bauxite area: HW 5/208, CX/MSS/2156.

Page
48
left flank was exposed: HW 5/208, CX/MSS/2136.

Page
49
towns had fallen: HW 19/48, ISOS 53156.

Page
50
Löhr said he did not have: HW 5/207, CX/MSS/2141, 2144.

Page
51
to relieve: HW 5/210, CX/MSS/2174.

Page
52
thirteen and sixty: HW 19/49, ISOS 54524.

Page
53
Italian-officered Chetnik units: HW 5/216, CX/MSS/2236.

Page
54
German fire: HW 5/215, CX/MSS/2228.

Page
55
transporting them: HW 19/50, ISOS 55961.

Page
56
negotiation with the Partisans: HW 19/51, ISOS 56608, 56699.

Page
57
‘current policy of supporting’: WO 208/2019, Minute 3.

Page
58
Partisans should be contacted: CAB 80/68: COS(43) 142(0).

Page
59
yet to play a decisive part: HW 1/1474, C/2604.

Page
60
Chetnik reinforcements: HW 19/50, ISOS 55961.

Page
61
Mihailović barely escaped: HW 19/51, ISOS 56734.

Page
62
said to have joined the Partisans: HW 19/52, ISOS 57654.

Page
63
captured large quantities: HW 19/52, ISOS 55915, 58191, 58888.

Page
64
organizing in the towns and villages: HW 17/51, ISCOT 1040.

Page
65
headquarters near Foca: HW 19/53, ISOS 59368.

Page
66
Mihailović and his Chetniks: WO 208/2026, Minute 8.

Page
67
Hitler’s instructions: HW 5/255, CX/MSS/2627.

Page
68
Djurisić had fallen out with Mihailović: HW 19/54, ISOS 59683, 59969.

Page
69
providing transport: HW 19/54, ISOS 60020.

Page
70
protect as many of the Chetniks: HW 5/250, CX/MSS/2574.

Page
71
near Jajce: HW 19/127, ISK 51991.

Page
72
Partisan and Chetnik losses: HW 5/271, CX/MSS/2782 and HW 1/1765, C/3654.

Page
73
Churchill argued in a note circulated: Winston S. Churchill,
The Second World War, Closing the Ring
, vol. V (Cassell, London, 1952), pp. 736–7.

Page
74
report from the intelligence services: PREM 3/510/7 124298.

Page
75
‘satisfied from information’: CAB 121/674.

Page
76
British efforts to unify the resistance: CAB 121/674.

Page
77
‘of the highest importance’: PREM 3/510/7 124298.

Page
78
could be sent to the Partisans: ibid.

Page
79
‘hunting in the next field’: CCAC, CHR/20/131.

Page
80
‘the great disorder’: HW 1/1820 Personal Minute Serial No. 122/3.

Page
81
the marvellous resistance: CCAC, CHR/20/131.

Page
82
conserve his forces: HW 17/51, ISCOT 1048.

Page
83
‘main object of an Allied attack’: HW 19/134, ISK 57401.

Page
84
‘the first to be invaded’: HW 36/1, GERDI 0460.

Page
85
their attention on the Balkans: HW 19/136, ISK 59589.

Page
86
‘must strengthen her defences’: HW 11/10, BJ 120793.

Page
87
Italians were withdrawing: HW 19/60, ISOS 65953.

Page
88
‘a planned evacuation’: HW 5/229, CX/MSS/3126.

Page
89
Italians were offering arms: HW 19/135, ISK 59221.

Page
90
to seize Italian naval installations: HW 5/340, CX/MSS/3180.

Page
91
5,000–6,000 Chetniks: HW 19/61, ISOS 67118.

Page
92
Mihailović would act only: HW 19/237, ISOSICLE 5863.

Page
93
German troops were marching: HW 11/10, BJ 122406.

Page
94
‘firmly in our hands’: HW 5/343, CX/MSS/3196.

Page
95
28,000 Italians: HW 19/62, ISOS 68601.

Page
96
‘extremely bad effect’: HW 19/88, ISOS 64286.

Page
97
‘major operations’: HW 5/363, CX/MSS/3299.

Page
98
actions of the Partisans: HW 19/141, ISK 66865.

Page
99
removed from Yugoslavia: HW 5/359, CX/MSS/3276.

Page
100
to seize Jews and others: HW 19/62, ISOS 69043.

Page
101
Partisan leader’s complaints: HW 17/51, ISCOT 1063, 1192.

Page
102
a shopping list: HW 17/51, ISCOT 1092, 1303.

Page
103
sole recipient: WO 208/2026, Minute 22.

Page
104
sent to the resistance: HW 5/366, CX/MSS/3313/3328, HW 1/2078, C/4555, HW 1/2085, C/4574.

Page
105
could soon be sent: John Ehrman,
Grand Strategy Vol. V, August 1943 September 1944
(HMSO, London, 1956).

Page
106
provision of supplies: HW 1/2108, C/4643.

Page
107
threat to the major towns: ZIP/MSGP/50, GPD/1688–1905 and HW 5366/367.

Page
108
death of 3,200 Partisans: HW 5/381, CX/MSS/3431.

Page
109
‘unsatisfactory’: HW 5/411, CX/MSS (Series 2) R11.

Page
110
‘the more active body’: WO 208/4628, Appn/710/43/MI3b.

Page
111
Lukacevic treaty: HW 19/146, ISK 73795 and HW 1/2259, C/5058.

Page
112
should be intensified: Ehrman,
Grand Strategy
, p. 111.

Page
113
‘to overcome certain difficulties’: HW 17/51, ISCOT 304/1459 (a signal of 28 September 1943, decrypted on 28 December 1945).

Page
114
alleged by a number of commentators: e.g. Michael Lees,
The Rape of Serbia
(Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, New York, 1990); David Martin,
Web of Disinformation: Churchill’s Yugoslav Blunder
(Harcourt Brace Jovanovich,
New York, 1990).

Page
115
‘agent of influence’: Christopher Andrew and Vasili Mitrokhin,
The Mitrokhin Archive: The KGB in Europe and the West
(Allen Lane, London, 1999), p. 167.

Page
116
Ralph Bennett … and others: Ralph Bennett et al., ‘Mihailović or Tito’,
Intelligence and National Security
, 10(3) (1995), 526.

Page
117
addressed the House of Commons: Parliamentary Debates (Hansard) Fifth Series, 397, House of Commons, 22 February 1944, 692–7.

CHAPTER 15 TRAFFIC ANALYSIS: A LOG-READER’S TALE

The author was given access to ‘The Sixta History’. This unpublished source is retained by GCHQ under section 3(4) of the Public Records Act 1958.

Page
1
‘My Y Service exists to produce intelligence …’: Michael Smith,
Station X: The Codebreakers of Bletchley Park
(Channel 4 Books, London, 1998), p. 24.

Page
2
‘a difficult and dangerous art’ etc.: J. E. Cooper, memorandum, 24 June 1941, ‘Relationship of Cryptography and W.TL’ (PRO WO 208/5125).

Page
3
inference ‘solely based upon radio studies …’: W. F. Friedman, ‘Report on E Operations of the GC&CS at Bletchley Park’, 30 (NACP HCC, Box 1126, Nr. 3620).

CHAPTER 16 BLETCH LEY PARK, DOUBLE CROSS AND D-DAY

Page
1
Jones said: Eric Jones, Memo to All Hut 3 Personnel, 6 June 1944 (PRO HW3/125); Brig. E. T Williams, The Use of Ultra, 6 June 1944 (PRO WO 208/3575).

Page
2
Jellyfish information: Hinsley et al.,
British Intelligence,
3(2): 777–80; Michael Smith,
Station X: The Codebreakers of Bletchley Park
(Channel 4 Books, London, 1998), pp. 157–8.

Page
3
Allied assessments of German defences fairly good: F. H. Hinsley et al.,
British Intelligence in the Second World War: Its Influence on Strategy and Operations
(HMSO, London, 1988), 3(2): 771–6.

Page
4
Codebreaker’s memories of Oshima message: Carl Boyd,
Hitler’s Japanese Confidant: General Oshima Hiroshi and Magic Intelligence, 1941–1945
(University Press of Kansas, Kansas, 1993), p. 106.

Page
5
Japanese military attaché’s message: Hinsley et al.,
British Intelligence
, 3(2): 18.

Page
6
Japanese naval attaché report: see Hinsley et al.,
British Intelligence
, 3(2): 787–92.

Page
7
Bennett on location of German divisions: Peter Bate interview with Ralph Bennett, for the Channel 4 television series
Station X
(Darlow Smithson Productions, 1999).

Page
8
White proposal: Tom Bower,
The Perfect Englishman
(Heinemann, London, 1995), pp. 37–8.

Page
9
Details of Snow: Summary of the Snow Case (PRO KV 2/452), 1–3; Transcript of shorthand notes taken at Scotland House, London SWl, on 24 September 1938 at the interrogation of [Arthur Owens] by Col. Hinchley Cooke (KV 2/452), 6, 21–2.

Page
10
Details of code sent to GC&CS: Robertson to Vivian, 19 September 1939 (PRO KV 2/453).

Page
11
Alert operator and GC&CS scepticism: [John Curry],
The Security Service 1908–1945: The Official History
(PRO, London, 1989), pp. 206–7.

Page
12
Broken by Gill and Trevor-Roper: ibid., pp. 178–9, 206–7.

Page
13
Setting up of GC&CS
Abwehr
section: ibid., pp. 178–9.

Page
14
Use of Pear codename: Report entitled ‘ISOS’, 25 September 1945 (PRO ADM 223/793), 1.

Page
15
Astor on MI5 and MI6 responsibilities: author’s interview with Hugh Astor, 23 January 1998.

Page
16
Twenty Committee set up: J. C. Masterman,
The Double Cross System in the War of 1939 to 1945
(Pimlico, London, 1995), pp. 10–11.

Page
17
Astor on Robertson, Masterman and White: author’s interview with Hugh Astor.

Page
18
Workings of the Double Cross system: Masterman,
The Double Cross System
, pp. 1–35; Michael Howard,
British Intelligence in the Second World War: Volume 5 – Strategic Deception
, HMSO, London, 1990), 5: 8–9; Report entitled ‘ISOS’.

Page
19
Astor on consultations with the Twenty Committee: author’s interview with Hugh Astor.

Page
20
Montagu quotes: Ewen Montagu, The XX System (PRO ADM 223/794).

Page
21
Knox solution of
Abwehr
Enigma: Denniston to Menzies, minute, 10 December 1941 (PRO HW14). Lever solution of GGG machine: private information.

Page
22
Robertson quotes: Howard,
British Intelligence
, 5: 20–1.

Page
23
Philby quotes: West and Tsarev,
The Crown Jewels
, p. 309.

Page
24
Montagu quotes: Report entitled ‘ISOS’, 25 September 1945, 2–3.

Pages
25
–61 Garbo and ISBA reports bring situation to a head:
The Security Service 1908–1945
, pp. 207–11; F. H. Hinsley and C. A. G. Simkins,
British Intelligence in the Second World War: Volume 4 Security and Counter-Intelligence
(HMSO, London, 1990), 4: 125–7; Howard,
British Intelligence
, 5: 19.

Page
26
A few weeks later:
The Security Service 1908–1945
, pp. 206–9.

Page
27
Petrie takeover bid for Section V and Menzies compromise: Michael Smith,
Foley: The Spy Who Saved 10,000 Jews
(Hodder & Stoughton, London, 1999), pp. 242–3.

Page
28
Masterman quotes: Masterman,
The Double Cross System
, p. 65,

Page
29
Problems of accepting that German perception different from that of the British: PRO DEFE 28/49.

Page
30
Quotes on improvements in MI5–MI6 liaison following Foley appointment: Smith,
Foley
, pp. 243–4.

Page
31
–63 Details of Mincemeat: PRO ADM 223/794; Currer-Briggs quotes: Smith,
Station X
, pp. 121–2.

Page
32
Astor on ‘impression of tremendous rivalry’: author’s interview with Hugh Astor.

Page
33
Radio Security Intelligence Conference: Report entitled ‘ISOS’, 6.

Page
34
Astor on relations between MI5 and MI6 and use of Ultra: author’s interview with Hugh Astor.

Page
35
Bodyguard: Roger Hesketh,
Fortitude: The D-Day Deception Campaign
(St Ermin’s Press, London, 1999), pp. 17–19.

Page
36
Number of double agents: ibid., p. 46.

Page
37
Evolution of Fortitude: ibid., pp. 25–7.

Page
38
Main agents: ibid., pp. 46–56.

Page
39
Treasure comes close to giving away Fortitude: Summary of Treasure Case (PRO KV 2/464).

Page
40
Treasure ‘saves Bletchley’s bacon’: Page to Masterman and Masterman memo, both 29 November 1944, Summary of Treasure Case (ibid.).

Page
41
Garbo networks: Howard,
British Intelligence
, 5: 231–3.

Page
42
mobile wireless vehicles: Operation Neptune Radio Deception (PRO WO 208/5050), 2; Notes on Army Wireless Deception for Operation Overlord (ibid.), 2.

Page
43
Garbo message and shown to Hitler: Howard,
British Intelligence
, 5:188.

Page
44
Garbo reports and German acceptance of them: ibid., pp. 188–9.

Page
45
Interrogation of relieved German: Hesketh,
Fortitude
, pp. 489–90.

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