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Paperback The Hut Six Story: Breaking the Enigma Codes Book

ISBN: 0947712348

ISBN13: 9780947712341

The Hut Six Story: Breaking the Enigma Codes

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Very Good

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Interesting and detailed account of one mathematician's time at Bletchely Park

Fascinating account of Gordon Welchman's work at Bletchley Park, where he worked particularly on understanding patterns in German radio traffic (for example, call signs) and more generally on cryptography. The later part of the book talks about his experiences after the war, for example with MITRE, and includes numerous well-thought-out policy recommendations. I purchased this book as an adjunct to Robert Harris fictionalized account of Bletchley Park, Enigma, which of course is much higher on overt human-interest type things (love affairs, cloak-and-dagger operations) than this non-fiction account. But one can still see the excitement and danger lurking through the surface of this work. Welchman comes across here as an extremely careful and scrupulous (auto)-biographer. He is careful to qualify all his conclusions, and he even goes out of his way to minimize his own role. This understated style, needless to say, is well out of fashion. Nevertheless, Welchman paints a very interesting portrait of himself and his compatriots. Some were mathematicians, some were chess-players, some were classicists. He describes in great detail exactly how he went about deriving a method for breaking Enigma. Despite Welchman's rather understated, perhaps classically British, account, it's clear that there were great people working there at that time, and that they were in fact utterly critical to the defeat of Germany. Welchman persuasively argues that Germany would likely have won Europe, or at least invaded England, had Bletchley Park not been so dramatically successful. Welchman's policy suggestions also seemed wise. He believes American should focus more on communication security. He specifically notes Afghanistan as a potential theater of future war operations (this in 1982). Even apart from the distinct possibility that Bletchley Park preserved Europe from the Nazis, and the certainty that its work dramatically changed the course of the war, and even the importance of what were then some of the earliest computers, somehow I found more interesting Welchman himself. He comes across as a pleasant, warm, good person; who loves puzzles; who loves mathematics; and who is extremely honest and careful. And Bletchley Park itself comes across as one of those rare times and places in history when people like Welchman can and do succeed. So there is almost a wistfulness to the passing of the place. There were also a lot of just fun and fascinating details. Perhaps the major theme running through the book was the remarkable carelessness of the German radio operators. Welchman notes the Enigma itself was relatively secure: but the operators failed to follow good cryptographic protocol. For example, the person who chose the keys got lazy and just reused old keys! Sometimes operators would select keys based on patterns on the keyboard. One operator in the African theatre of operations daily sent the same message "nothing to report", letting that day's key be quickly

An excellent, insightful and inspiring book

The men and women of Bletchley Park, who repeatedly broke German military cyphers throughout the Second World War, made an incalculable contribution to the allied success. This book, written by one of the code-breakers provides a fascinating insight into the process.Despite the core subject, this is not really a book about cryptography, but about how to manage people and technology to solve complex, important problems. Welchman was the "glue" between the pure ideas men like Alan Turing, and the code-breaking production line. His talents were clearly in building the organisation, and liaising between the different parties so that interception, decoding, understanding and using the intelligence became a repeatable success.Welchman's insights into British wartime society and bureaucracy are keen and frequently very humourous. Many of his insights are equally applicable today, in business as well as military circles. For example an individual's promotion, prestige and salary should not depend solely on the number of subordinates.Although he was very modest about it, it is clear that Welchman was no mean cryptologist himself. The book does attempt to explain several of the ways in which Enigma was cracked, but I found the primarily verbal explanations difficult to follow. However, this doesn't prevent an understanding of the principals, and how different methods were applied at different points during the war.The book does have some limitations. Because he was not personally involved, he explicitly refuses to discuss the effort focused on the German naval codes so important to the Battle of the Atlantic, and generally says little about the use of the intelligence information. Sadly, the current edition of the book omits much of Welchman's advice on the analysis of battlefield communications, and how to keep such communications secure. However, one observation has been retained - it was a fundamental mistake to believe Enigma was secure simply because of the enormous computing power required for a brute-force attack. This should perhaps be noted in our Internet age, when so much depends on the assumed difficulty of factoring large numbers.If I have a criticism of the book, it's the rather poor production in places, with very faded photographs and occasionally blurred text. Figures are sometimes absent when they are most needed, e.g. when first explaining the Enigma machine. I read this book having only recently attended an excellent lecture and actually seeing an Enigma - otherwise I would have struggled at such points.Nonetheless this is an excellent, insightful and inspiring book, containing a range of lessons relevant today, and I thoroughly recommend it....
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