George Lasry
University of Kassel, Germany
Ladda ner artikelIngår i: Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Historical Cryptology HistoCrypt 2018
Linköping Electronic Conference Proceedings 149:13, s. 55-64
NEALT Proceedings Series 34:13, p. 55-64
Publicerad: 2018-06-13
ISBN: 978-91-7685-252-1
ISSN: 1650-3686 (tryckt), 1650-3740 (online)
In World War One (WW1), the German diplomatic services and the Imperial Navy employed codebooks as the primary means for encoding confidential communications over telegraph and radio channels. The Entente cryptographic services were able to reconstruct most of those codebooks, to obtain copies of others, and to overcome various enhancements introduced by the Germans. A collection of diplomatic and naval attaché cryptograms from and to the German consulate in Genoa, dating from the late 19th Century to 1915, has been preserved and is held in German archives. In this article, the author describes the process of identifying the encoding methods, of reconstructing the 18470 diplomatic codebook, and of recovering the superencipherment applied to the German Navy’s Verkehrsbuch. The vast majority of the messages can now be read in clear. Before the war, the com- munications are mainly about routine consular matters. From the summer of 1914, they reflect the sequence of events leading to war, including the declarations of war. The messages also describe the crucial role played by the German consulate in collecting naval intelligence, and in assisting the German warships Goeben and Breslau in their escape to the Dardanelles in August 1914.
ADM. 137. Admiralty: Historical Section: Records used for Official History, First World War. The National Archives.
ADM. 223. Admiralty: Naval Intelligence Division and Operational Intelligence Centre: Intelligence Reports and Papers. The National Archives.
Peter Freeman. 2006. The Zimmermann Telegram Revisited: A Reconciliation of the Primary Sources. Cryptologia, 30(2):98–150.
Paul Gannon. 2010. Inside Room 40: The Codebreakers of World War 1. Ian Allan Publishing Ltd.
HW. 7. Room 40 and successors: World War I Official Histories. The National Archives.
Saul Kelly. 2013. Room 47: The Persian Prelude to the Zimmermann Telegram. Cryptologia, 37(1):11–50.
George Lasry, Ingo Niebel, Nils Kopal, and Arno Wacker. 2017. Deciphering ADFGVX messages from the Eastern Front of World War I. Cryptologia, 41(2):101–136.
Hermann Lorey. 1928. Der Krieg in den t¨urkischen Gew¨assern: Bd. Die Mittelmeer-Division, volume 1. ES Mittler.
Charles J. Mendelsohn. 1937. Studies in German Diplomatic Codes Employed during the World War. War Department, Office of the Chief Signal Officer, Government Printing Office, Washington, DC. Register 191.
PAAA. c. 1915. RAV Genua - Records from the German General Consulate in Genoa. Politisches Archiv des Ausw¨artigen Amtes.
Hermann Stützel. 1969. Geheimschrift und Entzifferung im Ersten Weltkrieg. Truppenpraxis, 7:541–545.
Geoff Sullivan and Frode Weierud. 2005. Breaking German Army Ciphers. Cryptologia, 29(3):193–232.
Dan Van der Vat. 2000. The Ship that Changed the World. The Escape of the Goeben to the Dardanelles in 1914. Edinburgh.