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Mind of a Codebreaker
Part 2 | Back to Part 1
I thought of this imaginary German fellow with his wheels and his book of keys.
He would open the book and find what wheels and settings he was supposed to use
that day. He would set the rings on the wheels, put them into the machine, and
the next thing he would have to do would be to choose a three-letter indicator
for his first message of the day.
So I began to think, how would he choose that indicator. He might just take it
out of a book, or he might pluck it out of the air like ABC or whatever. Then I
had the thought, suppose he was a lazy fellow, or in a tearing hurry, or had
the wind up, or something or other and he were to leave the wheels untouched in
the machine and bang the top down and look at the windows, see what letters
were showing and just use them.
Then another thought struck me. What about the rings? Would he set them for
each of the three given wheels before he put them into the machine or would he
set them afterwards? Then I had a flash of illumination. If he set them
afterwards and, at the same time, simply chose the letters in the windows as
the indicator for his first message, then the indicator would tend to be close
to the ring setting of the day. He would, as it were, be sending it almost in
clear.
If the intercept sites could send us the indicators of all the Red messages
they judged to be the first messages of the day for the individual German
operators, there was a sporting chance that they would cluster around the ring
settings for the day and we might be able to narrow down the 17,576 possible
ring settings to a manageable number, say 20 or 30, and simply test these one
after the other in hope of hitting on the right answer.
The next day I went back to Hut 6 in a very excited state and told my
colleagues of this idea. "Oh, brilliant," they all said. Welchman immediately
arranged, very discreetly, for the first message indicators on the Red to be
sent early each day to Hut 6. It was a simple matter to look for clusters. The
idea, as my colleagues said, was a good one, and it was faithfully tested every
day. Unfortunately, it never worked. Not that is until the unleashing of the
German blitzkrieg in the West some two months later in May 1940.
I wasn't there, but David Rees, who was on that particular night shift, noticed
that among the first messages there were several whose indicators were very
close together. So he tried the different possibilities on the different wheels
and when I came in at 8 o'clock that morning, there was a little group of
people around David who had broken the Red. He had got the right wheels and
ring settings. Well it was a very exciting moment. Welchman drew me aside and
he said: "Herivel, this will not be forgotten."
The importance of the break that the Herivel Tip had allowed was not realized
at the time. But the Red key would never be lost again. It became Bletchley
Park's staple diet. It was used by countless Luftwaffe units and,
because they needed to liaise closely with both the Army and the Navy in order
to provide them with air support, its use gave a good overall insight into all
the major German plans and operations.
"From this point on it was broken daily, usually on the day in question and
early in the day," recalled Peter Calvocoressi, one of the members of Hut 3.
"Later in the war, I remember that we in Hut 3 used to get a bit tetchy if Hut
6 had not broken Red by breakfast time.
Chinks in the Armor
If German codemakers in the field had stuck unflinchingly to their
instructions on how to encode messages, Polish and British codebreakers may
never have succeeded in breaking the Enigma. Fortunately for the Allies, those
German operators often typed in keys based on whatever came into their heads.
The first method of breaking the messages was the work of "the Cilli Hunters"
who relied on the tendency first identified by [Polish mathematician and
codebreaker Marian] Rejewski for operators to choose keys that were easy to
remember. "Just occasionally you would get a chap who was rather fond of the
same letters," said Susan Wenham, one of the codebreakers recruited by [codebreaker] Stuart
Milner-Barry from Newnham College, Cambridge. "It might be for some personal
reason. Perhaps one chap might use his girlfriend's initials for the setting of
the wheels or his own initials. Something like that, you know silly little
things. They weren't supposed to do it but they did."
Searching for Cillis, named after one of the operators' girlfriends whose name
frequently appeared in the Enigma settings, became something of an art, said
Mavis Lever.
One was thinking all the time about the psychology of what it was like in the
middle of the fighting when you were supposed to be encoding a message for your
general and you had to put three or four letters in these little windows and in
the heat of the battle you would put up your girlfriend's name or dirty German
four-letter words. I am the world's expert on German dirty four-letter words!
The other methods were the cribs and 'kisses,' messages that had been sent
previously—perhaps on a lower-level radio net in a cipher that was already
broken—and then turned up in the Enigma traffic, providing a crib for the
message. This made it very easy for the codebreakers, though it was an
infrequent occurrence. Most cribs were fairly short, although Mavis Lever
remembered on occasion when there was a crib for a whole message.
The one snag with the Enigma of course is the fact that if you press A, you can
get every other letter but A. I picked up this message and—one was so used
to looking at things and making instant decisions—I thought: "Something's
gone. What has this chap done? There is not a single L in the message."
My chap had been told to send out a dummy message and he had just had a fag and
pressed the last key of the middle row of his keyboard, the L. So that was the
only letter that didn't come out. We had got the biggest crib we ever had, the
encipherment was LLLL right through the message and that gave us the new wiring
for the wheel. That's the sort of thing we were trained to do. Instinctively
look for something that had gone wrong or someone who had done something silly
and torn up the rule book.
Continue: Turing's machines
Crack the Ciphers |
Send a Coded Message |
A Simple Cipher
Are Web Transactions Safe? |
Mind of a Codebreaker |
How the Enigma Works
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