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Authors: Simon Singh

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BOOK: The Code Book
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In order to proceed with confidence, and pin down the identity of the three most common letters, O, X and P, we need a more subtle form of frequency analysis. Instead of simply counting the frequency of the three letters, we can focus on how often they appear next to all the other letters. For example, does the letter O appear before or after several other letters, or does it tend to neighbor just a few special letters? Answering this question will be a good indication of whether O represents a vowel or a consonant. If O represents a vowel it should appear before and after most of the other letters, whereas if it represents a consonant, it will tend to avoid many of the other letters. For example, the letter e can appear before and after virtually every other letter, but the letter t is rarely seen before or after b, d, g, j, k, m, q or v.

   The table below takes the three most common letters in the ciphertext, O, X and P, and lists how frequently each appears before or after every letter. For example, O appears before A on 1 occasion, but never appears immediately after it, giving a total of 1 in the first box. The letter O neighbors the majority of letters, and there are only 7 that it avoids completely, represented by the 7 zeros in the O row. The letter X is equally sociable, because it too neighbors most of the letters, and avoids only 8 of them. However, the letter P is much less friendly. It tends to lurk around just a few letters, and avoids 15 of them. This evidence suggests that O and X represent vowels, while P represents a consonant.

Now we must ask ourselves which vowels are represented by O and X. They are probably e and a, the two most popular vowels in the English language, but does O = e and X = a, or does O = a and X = e? An interesting feature in the ciphertext is that the combination OO appears twice, whereas XX does not appear at all. Since the letters ee appear far more often than aa in plaintext English, it is likely that O = e and X = a.

At this point, we have confidently identified two of the letters in the ciphertext. Our conclusion that X = a is supported by the fact that X appears on its own in the ciphertext, and a is one of only two English words that consist of a single letter. The only other letter that appears on its own in the ciphertext is Y, and it seems highly likely that this represents the only other one-letter English word, which is i. Focusing on words with only one letter is a standard cryptanalytic trick, and I have included it among a list of cryptanalytic tips in
Appendix B
. This particular trick works only because this ciphertext still has spaces between the words. Often, a cryptographer will remove all the spaces to make it harder for an enemy interceptor to unscramble the message.

Although we have spaces between words, the following trick would also work where the ciphertext has been merged into a single string of characters. The trick allows us to spot the letter h, once we have already identified the letter e. In the English language, the letter h frequently goes before the letter e (as in the, then, they, etc.), but rarely after e. The table below shows how frequently the O, which we think represents e, goes before and after all the other letters in the ciphertext. The table suggests that B represents h, because it appears before 0 on 9 occasions, but it never goes after it. No other letter in the table has such an asymmetric relationship with O.

Each letter in the English language has its own unique personality, which includes its frequency and its relation to other letters. It is this personality that allows us to establish the true identity of a letter, even when it has been disguised by monoalphabetic substitution.

We have now confidently established four letters, O = e, X = a, Y = i and B = h, and we can begin to replace some of the letters in the ciphertext with their plaintext equivalents. I shall stick to the convention of keeping ciphertext letters in upper case, while putting plaintext letters in lower case. This will help to distinguish between those letters we still have to identify, and those that have already been established.

PCQ VMJiPD LhiK LiSe KhahJaWaV haV ZCJPe EiPD KhahJiUaJ LhJee KCPK. CP Lhe LhCMKaPV aPV IiJKL PiDhL, QheP Khe haV ePVeV Lhe LaRe CI Sa’aJMI, Khe JCKe aPV EiKKev Lhe DJCMPV ZeICJe h i S, KaUiPD: “DJeaL EiPD, ICJ a LhCMKaPV aPV CPe PiDhLK i haNe ZeeP JeACMPLiPD LC UCM Lhe IaZReK CI FaKL aDeK aPV Lhe ReDePVK CI aPAiePL EiPDK. SaU i SaEe KC ZCRV aK LC AJaNe a IaNCMJ CI UCMJ SaGeKLU?”

eFiRCDMe, LaReK IJCS Lhe LhCMKaPV aPV CPe PiDhLK

This simple step helps us to identify several other letters, because we can guess some of the words in the ciphertext. For example, the most common three-letter words in English are the and and, and these are relatively easy to spot-Lhe, which appears six times, and aPV, which appears five times. Hence, L probably represents t, P probably represents n, and V probably represents d. We can now replace these letters in the ciphertext with their true values:

nCQ dMJinD thiK tiSe KhahJaWad had ZCJne EinD KhahJiUaJ thJee KCnK. Cn the thCMKand and IiJKt niDht, Qhen Khe had ended the taRe CI Sa’aJMI, Khe JCKe and EiKKed the DJCMnd ZeICJe hiS, KaUinD: “DJeat EinD, ICJ a thCMKand and Cne niDhtK i haNe Zeen JeACMntinD tC UCM the IaZReK CI FaKt aDeK and the ReDendK CI anAient EinDK. SaU i SaEe KC ZCRd aK tC AJaNe a IaNCMJ CI UCMJ SaGeKtU?”

eFiRCDMe, taReK IJCS the thCMKand and Cne niDhtK

Once a few letters have been established, cryptanalysis progresses very rapidly. For example, the word at the beginning of the second sentence is Cn. Every word has a vowel in it, so C must be a vowel. There are only two vowels that remain to be identified, u and o; u does not fit, so C must represent o. We also have the word Khe, which implies that K represents either t or s. But we already know that L = t, so it becomes clear that K = s. Having identified these two letters, we insert them into the ciphertext, and there appears the phrase thoMsand and one niDhts. A sensible guess for this would be thousand and one nights, and it seems likely that the final line is telling us that this is a passage from
Tales from the Thousand and One Nights
. This implies that M = u, I = f, J = r, D = g, R = l, and S = m.

We could continue trying to establish other letters by guessing other words, but instead let us have a look at what we know about the plain alphabet and cipher alphabet. These two alphabets form the key, and they were used by the cryptographer in order to perform the substitution that scrambled the message. Already, by identifying the true values of letters in the ciphertext, we have effectively been working out the details of the cipher alphabet. A summary of our achievements, so far, is given in the plain and cipher alphabets below.

By examining the partial cipher alphabet, we can complete the cryptanalysis. The sequence VOIDBY in the cipher alphabet suggests that the cryptographer has chosen a keyphrase as the basis for the key. Some guesswork is enough to suggest the keyphrase might be A VOID BY GEORGES PEREC, which is reduced to AVOID BY GERSPC after removing spaces and repetitions. Thereafter, the letters continue in alphabetical order, omitting any that have already appeared in the keyphrase. In this particular case, the cryptographer took the unusual step of not starting the keyphrase at the beginning of the cipher alphabet, but rather starting it three letters in. This is possibly because the keyphrase begins with the letter A, and the cryptographer wanted to avoid encrypting a as A. At last, having established the complete cipher alphabet, we can unscramble the entire ciphertext, and the cryptanalysis is complete.

Now during this time Shahrazad had borne King Shahriyar three sons. On the thousand and first night, when she had ended the tale of Ma’aruf, she rose and kissed the ground before him, saying: “Great King, for a thousand and one nights I have been recounting to you the fables of past ages and the legends of ancient kings. May I make so bold as to crave a favor of your majesty?”

Epilogue,
Tales from the Thousand and One Nights

Renaissance in the West

Between
A.D
. 800 and 1200, Arab scholars enjoyed a vigorous period of intellectual achievement. At the same time, Europe was firmly stuck in the Dark Ages. While al-Kindī was describing the invention of cryptanalysis, Europeans were still struggling with the basics of cryptography. The only European institutions to encourage the study of secret writing were the monasteries, where monks would study the Bible in search of hidden meanings, a fascination that has persisted through to modern times (see
Appendix C
).

Medieval monks were intrigued by the fact that the Old Testament contained deliberate and obvious examples of cryptography. For example, the Old Testament includes pieces of text encrypted with
atbash
, a traditional form of Hebrew substitution cipher. Atbash involves taking each letter, noting the number of places it is from the beginning of the alphabet, and replacing it with a letter that is an equal number of places from the end of the alphabet. In English this would mean that a, at the beginning of the alphabet, is replaced by Z, at the end of the alphabet, b is replaced by Y, and so on. The term atbash itself hints at the substitution it describes, because it consists of the first letter of the Hebrew alphabet,
aleph
, followed by the last letter
taw
, and then there is the second letter,
beth
, followed by the second to last letter
shin
. An example of atbash appears in Jeremiah 25: 26 and 51: 41, where “Babel” is replaced by the word “Sheshach”; the first letter of Babel is
beth
, the second letter of the Hebrew alphabet, and this is replaced by
shin
, the second-to-last letter; the second letter of Babel is also
beth
, and so it too is replaced by
shin;
and the last letter of Babel is
lamed
, the twelfth letter of the Hebrew alphabet, and this is replaced by
kaph
, the twelfth-to-last letter.

Atbash and other similar biblical ciphers were probably intended only to add mystery, rather than to conceal meaning, but they were enough to spark an interest in serious cryptography. European monks began to rediscover old substitution ciphers, they invented new ones, and, in due course, they helped to reintroduce cryptography into Western civilization. The first known European book to describe the use of cryptography was written in the thirteenth century by the English Franciscan monk and polymath Roger Bacon.
Epistle on the Secret Works of
Art and the Nullity of Magic
included seven methods for keeping messages secret, and cautioned: “A man is crazy who writes a secret in any other way than one which will conceal it from the vulgar.”

BOOK: The Code Book
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