Read The Bletchley Park Codebreakers Online
Authors: Michael Smith
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60
‘number of different computing projects …’: Turing, ‘Report on visit to U.S.A., January 1st – 20th, 1947’.
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61
contract with the US Army Ordnance Department: Goldstine, op. cit., 150.
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consultant to the Eckert-Mauchly project: John Mauchly recalled that 7 September 1944 ‘was the first day that von Neumann had security clearance to see the ENIAC and talk with Eckert and me’ (J. Mauchly, ‘Amending the ENIAC Story’,
Datamation,
25(11) (1979), 217). Goldstine (op. cit., 185) suggests that the date of von Neumann’s first visit may have been a month earlier: ‘I probably took von Neumann for a first visit to the ENIAC on or about 7 August’.
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63
circulated bearing only: N. Stern, ‘John von Neumann’s Influence on Electronic Digital Computing, 1944–1946’,
Annals of the History of Computing
, 2 (1980), 354.
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64
gave his engineers Turing’s ‘On Computable Numbers’: private communication from Julian Bigelow to William Aspray, reported in W. Aspray,
John von Neumann and the Origins of Modern Computing
(MIT Press, Cambridge, Mass., 1990), 313.
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65
was working by the summer of 1951: J. Bigelow, ‘Computer Development at the Institute for Advanced Study’, in Metropolis, Hewlett and Rota, op. cit.
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66
‘the great positive contribution of Turing’: letter from von Neumann to Wiener, 29 November 1946 (Library of Congress Manuscript Division, Washington DC).
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67
‘The importance of Turing’s research is just this’: the text of von Neumann’s lecture ‘Rigorous Theories of Control and Information’ is printed
in J. von Neumann,
Theory of Self-Reproducing Automata
, A.W. Burks (ed.) (University of Illinois Press, Urbana, 1966), 50.
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68
‘I know that in or about 1943 or ‘44’: letter from Frankel to Randell, 1972, printed in Randell, ‘On Alan Turing and the Origins of Digital Computers’, p. 10.
Ralph Erskine would like to thank Philip Marks for his comments on aspects of Chapter 20.
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Army’s Signal Security Agency exploited: ‘Report on the Work Carried Out at S.S.A. on GEE’ (NACP HCC Box 202, Nr. 970); Cecil Phillips, ‘The American Solution of a German One-Time-Pad Cryptographic System’,
Cryptologia
, 24 (2000), 324. Despite claims to the contrary by a former member of GC&CS, GEE was not solved by GC&CS.
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2
set out the
Grundstellungen: Der Schlüssel M Allgemeine Bestimmungen
(M. Dv. Nr. 32/3 – NHB), paras 23, 90.
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a second ‘Greek’ rotor (gamma): see p. 173.
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4
should replace Enigma by a codebook: ‘German Naval Communications Intelligence’ (NACP HCC Box 625, Nr. 1695), 256.
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5
carried out many inquiries: see R. A. Ratcliff,
Delusions of Intelligence: Enigma, Ultra, and the End of Secure Ciphers
(Cambridge University Press, New York, 2006); R. A. Ratcliff, ‘Searching for Security: The German Investigations into Enigma’s Security’,
Intelligence and National Security
, 14(1) (1999), 146.
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capture of
Schiff 26
: see p. 168.
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special
Stichwort: ‘Verlust Schiff 26 und 37 und Schlüsselsicherheit
’, 3 May 1940, OKM KTB 2/SKL (NHB, microfilm); on U-13, ibid., 11 June 1940.
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‘Either our ciphers have been compromised’: BdU, KTB, 28 September 1941 (NACP microfilm T1022, reel 4063) – translation from Ministry of Defence (Navy) [Günter Hessler],
The U-Boat War in the Atlantic
(HMSO, London, 1989), 1: 163.
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‘The more important ciphers’: Skl, Chef MND 2557/41, 24 October 1940 cited in ibid.
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10
–2 BdU recorded that: BdU, KTB, 25 March 1943, as cited in Lt.-Cdr.K. W. McMahan, ‘The German Navy’s Use of Special Intelligence and Reactions to Allied Use’, 211.
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disturbing report: ‘
Entzifferung deutschen Marinecodes
’, OKM/A Ausl/Abw IM/T B.Nr. 1663/43, 18 August 1943; cf. ‘
Operative Geheimhaltung Allgemeines SKL Chef MND 1a 1O-OKM
’ (NACP HCC Box 192, Nr. 908), 5; BdU, KTB, 13 August 1943 (copy held by author – this page was excised from
the copy filmed for NACP T1022, reel 4063).
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‘… out of the question’: BdU, KTB, 13 August 1943.
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‘At present no possible way …’: ‘
Operative Geheimhaltung Allgemeines
’, 2.
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14
‘… could not have taken place’: ibid., 7.
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report on
Kriegsmarine
cipher security: ‘Naval Cyphers and WT Procedures’, 10 July 1944, 4/SKL, 2339/44 (PG 17626 – ADM 223/505).
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Stichwort procedure: this is set out in
Der Schlüssel M - Allgemeine Bestimmungen
, as amended, paras 100 ff., and described in Ralph Erskine, ‘Ultra and Some U. S. Navy Carrier Operations’,
Cryptologia
, 19 (1988), 93. The procedure was made much more complicated as the war progressed, but to no avail.
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protecting captured key-lists: ‘
Operative Geheimhaltung Allgemeines
’, 2.
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18
‘infallible confirmation’: ‘Naval Cyphers and WT Procedures’, 5.
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‘no trace or even hint …’: ibid., 5–6.
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the contents of Allied signals: see e.g. ZTPGU 751 of 4 December 1942 (orders to RN submarine), ZTPGU 14736 of 27 May 1943 (destination of US Navy submarine).
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true HF-DF: signals 0142Z/10 April 1943 (true HF-DF) and 0959B/11 April 1943 (HF-DF as Ultra cover) (PRO ADM 199/575, 370).
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As Tranow observed: TICOM I-38 (Lt. Frowein), para. 33.
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made little real progress: ‘German Naval Communications Intelligence’, 259.
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also convinced: Wladyslaw Kozaczuk,
Geheim-Operation WICHER: Polnische Mathematiker Knackenden den deutschen Funkschlüssel ‘Enigma’
(Bernard & Graefe, Koblenz, 1989), p. 340.
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MND’s major report: ‘Naval Cyphers and WT Procedures’.
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the dropping of double encipherment: see Appendix II.
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‘change in the system’: TICOM I-92 (Wachtmeister Otto Buggisch), 5 (PRO, HW 40/167).
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remained a dead letter: TICOM I-96 (Oberstlt Mettig), cited in ‘German Naval Communications Intelligence’, 256.
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‘secure when used according to regulations’: TICOM I-45 (OKW/Chi Cryptanalytic Research on Enigma, Hagelin and Cipher Teleprinter Machines - by Dr Erich Hüttenhain and Dr Fricke), 4.
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were well aware: Buggisch as quoted in ‘European Axis Signal Intelligence in World War II as Revealed by “TICOM” Investigations’, vol. 2 (EASI, 2), 12, ‘Notes on German High Level Cryptography and Cryptanalysis’. My thanks to David Alvarez for supplying this document, which is now available at-
http://www.nsa.gov/public_info/declass/european_axis_sigint.shtml (accessed 5
November 2010).
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‘given extraordinary mechanical outlay …’: ‘Naval Cyphers and WT Procedures’, 21; cf. TICOM I-45, 5; cf. EASI, 2: 10.
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catalogues of the enciphered letter ‘e’: TICOM I-45, 4.
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whether a practical solution: ibid., 5. A manuscript note on this file adds ‘the army did according to [TICOM] DF 190’.
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rewired Enigma used by the Swiss: ‘Analysis of the Cipher Machine “Enigma,” Type K’ (NACP HCC Box 1112, Nr. 3448), cited in David H. Hamer, Geoff Sullivan and Frode Weierud, ‘Enigma Variations: An Extended Family of Machines’,
Cryptologia
, 22 (1998), 222.
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re-enciphered at a different setting: TICOM I-92 (Wachtmeister Otto Buggisch), cited in EASI, 2: 9.
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to solve Railway Enigma traffic so successfully: see p. 61.
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cribs of only ten letters: TICOM I-77 (Dr Hüttenhain, Dr Fricke on
Zählwerk
(counter) Enigma).
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started to use a new reflector: Ultra/Zip CCR 38, 22 December 1944, ‘German Signals Security Improvements During 1944’, para. 1 (RIP 403, NACP RG 38, Radio Intelligence Publications, Box 169).
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beta rotor/thin reflector Bruno combination: see p. 171.
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Umkehrwalze
D: for an outstanding study of UKD, see Philip Marks, ‘Umkehrwalze D: Enigma’s Rewirable Reflector, Part I’,
Cryptologia
, 25 (2001), 101.
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3.2×1011 different possible wirings: ibid., 112. The letters J and Y could not be rewired.
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did not enter service until November: OP-20-GY-A-1 war diary, 4 and 13 November 1944 (NACP RG 38, Crane Library, 5750/159).
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‘a pathetically meagre result’: S. Milner-Barr, memorandum, 25 July 1944, ‘Operation Dora’, 2 (PRO HW 14/108).
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much less than anticipated: S. Milner-Barry, memorandum, 7 August 1944, ‘Uncle D’, in Fried Report #73 of 8 August 1944 (NACP HCC Box 880, Nr. 2612).
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The Autoscritcher: the Autoscritcher, Superscritcher and Duenna are fully described in Philip Marks, ‘Umkehrwalze D: Enigma’s Rewirable Reflector, Part II’,
Cryptologia
, 25 (2001), 177.
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four successful solutions: ‘Signal Security Agency General Cryptanalytic Branch – Annual Report FY 1945’, 20 (NACP HCC Box 1380, Nr. 4360).
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solved only eleven keys: ‘Summary of Duenna Operations to June 1945’, Exhibit 1, RIP 608, E6 – 147 (NACP RG 38, Radio Intelligence Publications, Box 171).
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without any warning: ‘German Signals Security Improvements During
1944’, 2, 6.
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Uhr
: the
Uhr
is referred to, but not by name, in Gordon Welchman,
The Hut Six Story: Breaking the Enigma Codes
(Allen Lane, London, 1982), pp. 136–7. It is fully described in Heinz Ulbricht, ‘The Enigma Uhr’,
Cryptologia
, 23 (1999), 193.
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embodying a rewirable reflector: TICOM I-53 (Construction of ‘Schlüsselgerat 39’); EASI, 2: 16.
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Allies could not have broken: EASI, 2: 14.
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Plans were made in December: minutes of conferences held by OKW/Chi on 13 December 1943, as quoted in EASI, 2: 14.
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SG 41: for a description, see TICOM I-72 (Buggisch on SG 41).
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A post-war United States Army study concluded: EASI, 2: 13.
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displayed a greater flair: Alan Judd,
The Quest for C: Mansfield Cumming and the Founding of the Secret Service
(HarperCollins, London, 1999).
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intelligence … a departmental concern: Philip H. J. Davies, ‘Organisational Politics and Britain’s Intelligence Producer/Consumer Interface’,
Intelligence and National Security
, 10(4) (1985), 114; Philip H. J. Davies, ‘MI6’s Requirements Directorate: Integrating Intelligence into the Machinery of British Central Government’,
Public Administration
78(1) (2000), 29.
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‘50 per cent … drawn from overt published sources’: Reginald Hibbert, ‘Intelligence and Policy’,
Intelligence and National Security 5
(1) (1990), 112.
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Hence, during the Napoleonic Wars: on military intelligence in the Peninsular Wars, see for example, Jock Hasswell,
The First Respectable Spy: The Life and Times of Colquhoun Grant, Wellington’s Head of Intelligence
(Hamish Hamilton, London, 1969) and Julia Page,
Intelligence Officer in the Peninsula: the Letters and Diaries of Major the Hon. Edward Charles Coles 1786–1812
(Hippocrene, New York, 1986).
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Just as the Indian government… the Great Game: see, for example, Peter Hopkirk,
The Great Game
(John Murray, London, 1990).
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Secret Department of the Post Office: on the Post Office see, variously, P. Aubrey,
Mr. Secretary Thurloe
(Athlone, London, 1990), K. Ellis,
The Post Office in the Eighteenth Century
(OUP, Oxford, 1958).
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the Boer war: for the Boer War influence on pre-war thinking in MI6 and MI5’s predecessor MO 5, see ‘Secret Service in the Event of a European War’, cover letter dated 17 October 1905 (PRO HD 3/124).
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Admiralty and War Office before the Haldane Committee: ‘Report and Proceedings of the Sub-Committee of the Committee of Imperial Defence Appointed by the Prime Minister to Consider the Question of Foreign Espionage in the United Kingdom’ (PRO CAB 61/8).
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MacDonough Scheme: Judd,
The Quest for C
, pp. 391–3.
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‘independent sections … known as the SIS’: Vivian to Menzies, appendix to Robert Cecil, ‘C’s War’,
Intelligence and National Security
, 1(2) (1986), 186.
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led to a postwar scheme: H. A. R. ‘Kim’ Philby,
My Silent War
(Ballantine, New York, 1983), p. 124; Davies, ‘MI6 Requirements Directorate’.
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interwar and early wartime years: 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.
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excessively rigid bureaucracy: see, for example, criticisms of the Security Service in the Security Commission Report on the Michael Bettaney Case, Report of the Security Commission (HMSO, London, 1985), Cmd. 9514.
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rivalry and hostility existed: Christopher Andrew,
Secret Service: The Making of the British Intelligence Community
(Sceptre, London, 1986), p. 142.
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Foreign Office and SIS control of GC&CS: ibid., p. 421.
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six senior assistants …: ibid., pp. 374–5.
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‘technical success and organizational confusion’: John Ferris, ‘Whitehall’s Black Chamber: British Cryptology and the Government Code and Cypher School 1919–1929’,
Intelligence and National Security
, 2(1) (1987), 54.
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service branch complaints: Andrew,
Secret Service
, p. 421.
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naval, air and army sections formed: F. H. Hinsley et al.,
British Intelligence in the Second World War
(HMSO, London, 1979), 1: 22.
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commercial section was set up: ibid., p. 26; A. G. Denniston, ‘The Government Code and Cypher School Between the Wars’,
Intelligence and National Security
, 1(1) (1986), 63; ‘ATB and (EPG) 13 and 14, Item 2(b) Organization of an Intelligence Service, Interim Report’ with cover noted from Morton to Jones, 31 March 1938, FCI 968 (PRO BT 61/69/2).
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GPO-manned system of stations: Hinsley et al.,
British Intelligence
, 1: 26; Denniston, ‘The Government Code and Cypher School Between the Wars’, 68.
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meteorological section: Hinsley et al.,
British Intelligence
, 1: 339.
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MI6 circulating sections which tasked: Denniston, ‘The Government Code and Cypher School Between the Wars’, 57.
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acute lack of receivers: Hinsley et al.,
British Intelligence
, 1: 51.
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moved mainly to landlines: ibid., p. 52.
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increasingly crowded circumstances: ibid., p. 270.
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demanded an investigation: ibid., pp. 270–1.
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the reconvened Y Board and its conclusions: ibid., p. 271.
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traffic analysis proved a very valuable auxiliary method: see, for example, Gordon Welchman,
The Hut Six Story: Breaking the Enigma Codes
(Allen Lane, London, 1982).
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Y Board, the Y and cryptanalysis sub-committees: Hinsley et al.,
British Intelligence
, 1: 271.
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cryptanalysis sub-committee petered out, ADI based at the OIC: ibid., p. 272.
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GC&CS quadrupled: ibid., p. 273.
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GC&CS staff numbers in 1941, 1942: F. H. Hinsley et al.,
British Intelligence in the Second World War
(HMSO, London, 1981), 2: 25.
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exotic assortment of civilians, ‘loose collection of groups’, senior staff still performed: Hinsley et al.,
British Intelligence
, 1: 273.
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‘undisciplined’ wartime staff: ibid., p. 274.
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appeal directly to Churchill: Hinsley et al.,
British Intelligence
, 2: 25; the letter is set out at pp. x–xii in the present book; for a personal account of the events, see also S. Milner-Barry, ‘Action This Day: the Letter from Bletchley Park Cryptanalysts to the Prime Minister, 21 October 1941’,
Intelligence and National Security
, 1(1) (1986), 272.
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Double Cross, volume of work and MI5’s managerial crisis: see in particular Hinsley,
British Intelligence
, vol. 4; J. C. Masterman,
The Double Cross System in the War of 1939 to 1945
(Pimlico, London, 1995); Nigel West,
MI5: British Security Service Operations 1909–1945
(Granada, London, 1983).
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‘total operational control’; fell to quarrelling: Hinsley et al.,
British Intelligence
, 2: 26.
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GC&CS subdivided and civil side moved: ibid.; for a personal account, see P. W. Filby, ‘Bletchley Park and Berkeley Street’,
Intelligence and National Security
, 3(2) (1988), 272–4.
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subsequently received replacements, etc.: Hinsley et al.,
British Intelligence
, 2: 26–7, F. H. Hinsley et al.,
British Intelligence in the Second World War
(HMSO, London, 1984), 3(1): 460.
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redesignated himself Director General, etc.: ibid., p. 461.
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the Cold War GCHQ: for GCHQ’s Cold War internal management structure, see Duncan Campbell, Friends and Others,
New Statesman and Society
, 26 November 1982, 6; Michael Smith,
New Cloak, Old Dagger
(Gollancz, London, 1996), pp. 185–7.
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JIC in the Cabinet Office: For the current version of the JIC’s role in Britain’s National Intelligence Machinery, see the Open Government webpage on Central Intelligence Machinery, downloadable at http://www.archive. official-documents.co.uk/document/caboff/nim/0114301808.pdf (accessed 4 November 2010).