Synopses & Reviews
Winston Churchill called the cracking of the German Enigma code "the secret weapon that won the war." Now, for the first time, Hugh Sebag-Montefiore reveals the complete story of the breaking of the code by the Alliesthe breakthrough that played a crucial role in the outcome of World War II.
Until recently, most historians exclusively credited the brilliant mathematicians and professors at Bletchley ParkBritains famous World War II counterintelligence stationfor breaking the elusive Enigma code. But as this spellbinding narrative recounts, while Bletchley stars such as Alan Turing and Harry Hinsley made outstanding contributions, the critical breaking of the code depended on the work of a much larger group of heroes, most of them unsung.
Masterfully told and engagingly written, Enigma not only presents fascinating new details about the genesis of the code and the secret work at Bletchley but also tells the hair-raising stories of those who selflessly put their lives on the line to provide the codebreakers with the materials they needed. We get a compelling glimpse of the daring exploits of secret agents and spies, naval officers and ordinary seamenthe courageous men and women who risked their lives, and in some cases lost them, snatching the vital codebooks from under the noses of Nazi officials and from sinking German ships and submarines.
From Hans Thilo Schmidt, the German who gave the Allies their first clues on how to break Enigma, to Lieutenant Commander Mark Thornton, who masterminded the capture of codebooks from a German U-boat, Enigma deftly delivers sharply etched portraits of the many heroic but hitherto unknown British and American sailors without whose bravery Enigma would never have been broken.
As the story unfolds, many of the last surviving witnesses to the Enigma dramasome of them speaking on record for the first timeprovide unforgettable firsthand accounts, vividly reconstructing their daring exploits. Sebag-Montefiore introduces us to the head of French counterintelligence, who contributes details of the spying and double-crossing that took place in the race to break the Enigma code and discloses little-known facts about how the Poles first cracked the Luftwaffes version of the code and then managed to pass it along to the British.
Based in part on documents recently unearthed from American and British archivesincluding previously confidential government filesand in part on several surviving witnesses to the saga, Enigma tells the stunning story of the brilliant piece of decryption that changed history.
Review
"cracking stuff...vivid and hitherto unknown details." Sunday Times (London)
Review
In a crowd of books dealing with the Allied breaking of the World War II German cipher machine Enigma, Hugh Sebag-Montifiore has scored a scoop.
The original 1931 solution to Enigma depended on information sold by a German cryptographic employee. In the course of my own researches on code-breaking, I had learned his name (Hans Thilo Schmidt), his Nazi Party number (738,736) and that he was the brother of a renowned panzer general (Rudolf Schmidt). But neither I nor later authors had gone beyond this point. Gestapo records of his arrest had vanished, files of the People's Court which would have tried him, had been destroyed, the name was common, and the events were well over half a century old. It seemed impossible to learn any more about the World War II era's most important spy-more important than Richard Sorge, more important than Cicero, more important to that conflict than even the atomic spies.
Sebag-Montifiore drove beyond the obstacles to find Schmidt's daughter. She depicted an affectionate father whose sife's family business had failed in the great inflation of 1924, who seduced one housemaid after another, who always needed money. She told of seeing him after his arrest by the Gestapo, of giving him cyanide pills, of identifying his body, of his burial in an unmarked grave next to his parents'. Sebag-Montifiore has fleshed out a name, and we historians of the intelligence world are grateful.
The bulk of the book recounts British naval actions mounted to seize the documents that permitted them to set about solving the more complicated Kriegsmarine version of the Enigma. Some of these sagas have been sung before. But not all have. Many new British and American documents have been declassified in recent years, and Sebag-Montifiore, a British journalist, has a remarkable talent in finding survivors. He has used both sources to tell new tales and to add to the old.
Take, for example, the tale of HMS Petard. Its captain wanted desperately to capture a U-boat and seize its Enigma-not realizing that its associated keying papers were more important than the machine itself, whose innards the Allies had long since reconstructed. The destroyer forced U-559 to the surface off Haifa. Its crew abandoned her, and a Royal Navy officer and two seamen swam to enter her and rescue the Enigma and any papers. They managed to send up valuable papers before the submarine sank suddenly, taking them with her. The papers were sent to the British code-breaking establishment at Bletchley Park, a country mansion northwest of London. There British cryptanalysts, who had not been able to crack U-boat Enigma messages for most of 1942, started reading them again.
Such details have already been told. Sebag-Montifiore adds what was happening in U559 while Petard was depth charging it-carbon monoxide made the crew lightheaded, two members panicked-though unfortunately he does not cite any sources for this. He provides more details on the heroism of the British sailors and tells about King George VI decorating a survivor. So although he does not alter our knowledge of the events in any significant way, he does humanize them more.
He also enlarges the story by telling what was happening on the spy front, how the Germans were led to Schmidt, how they failed to learn of early Polish and French solutions to the Enigma, how a U.S. task force also captured a submarine-the U505, now at the Chicago Museum of Science and Industry. He rightly asserts that Sublieutenant David Balme, whose entering the surfaced U-110 to grab and Enigma perhaps inspired the recent movie "U-571," should have been awarded the George Cross. Six appendixes give technical details.
The books content exceeds its form. It is adequately but not elegantly written. Too many errors of detail and grammar pock it, and the author is prone to clich?. The book's chief merit lies in its new information, though it lacks a summary of the vlaue of the cryptanalysts' work. In addition, a paragraph or two fitting the code battle of the Atlantic into the Allies' great crypologic victory of World War II, which shortened that conflict, would have helped. But the book is superior to the others on its subject. An in a way Sebag-Montifiore is the right man to have written it. His great-great-grandfather once owned Bletchley Park.
--The Washington Post
Synopsis
The complete untold story of the cracking of the infamous Nazi code.
Most histories of the cracking of the elusive Enigma code focus on the work done by the codebreakers at Bletchley Park, Britains famous World War II counterintelligence station. In this fascinating account, however, we are told, for the first time, the hair-raising stories of the heroic British and American sailors, spies, and secret agents who put their lives on the line to provide the codebreakers with the materials they needed. Noted British journalist Hugh Sebag-Montefiore tracked down many of the surviving players in the Enigma drama, and these witnessessome of them speaking on record for the first timeprovide unforgettable firsthand accounts of the courageous men and women who faced death in order to capture vital codebooks from sinking ships and snatch them from under the noses of Nazi officials. In addition to these gripping stories, we learn fascinating new details about the genesis of the code and the feverish activities at Bletchley. Enigma is a spellbinding account of the brilliant feat of decryption that turned the tide of World War II.
Synopsis
The entire story of the breaking of German Enigma codes, including the brilliant work at Bletchley Park but also the exploits of spies, naval officers and ordinary seamen who risked their lives to provide the materials essential to the codebreakers' success.
About the Author
HUGH SEBAG-MONTEFIORE is an attorney and journalist who has written for numerous British newspapers, including the Sunday Times, the Sunday Telegraph, and the Observer. His family owned Bletchley Park before it was sold to the British government in the late 1930s. He lives in London.
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations.
Acknowledgements.
Introduction.
Prologue.
The Betrayal - Belgium and Germany, 1931.
The Leak - Poland, Belgium and Germany, 1929-38.
An Inspired Guess - Poland, 1932.
A Terrible Mistake - Poland, 1933-9.
Flight - Germany, Poland and England, 1939-40.
The First Capture - Scotland, 1940.
Mission Impossible - Norway and Bletchley Park, 1940.
Keeping the Enigma Secret - France and Bletchley Park, May-September 1940.
Deadlock - Bletchley Park, August-October, 1940.
The Italian Affair - Bletchley Park and the Mediterranean, March 1941.
The End of the Beginning - Norway, March 1941.
Breakthrough - North of Iceland, May 1941.
Operation Primrose - The Atlantic, May 1941.
The Knock-Out Blow - North of Iceland, June 1941.
Suspicion - Bletchley Park, the Atlantic and Berlin, May-October 1941.
A Two-Edged Sword - The Atlantic and the Cape Verde Islands, September 1941.
Living Dangerously - The South Atlantic and Norway, November 1941-March 1942.
The Hunt for the Bigram Tables - Bletchley Park and Norway, December 1941.
Black Out - The Barents Sea, Bletchley Park and the Admiralty, February-July 1942.
Breaking the Deadlock - The Mediterranean and Bletchley Park, October-December 1942.
The Turning Point - South of France, the Mediterranean and the Atlantic, November 1942-September 1943.
Trapped - South of France, November 1942-March 1943.
The Arrest - Berlin, March-September 1943.
Sinking the Scharnhorst - The Barents Sea, December 1943.
Operation Covered - Paris, the Indian Ocean and the Atlantic, August 1943-March 1944.
The Last Hiccough - Germany, France and the South Atlantic, March-June 1944.
Epilogue - Where did they Go?
Chronology.
Glossary.
Appendix 1: Polish Codebreaking Techniques.
Appendix 2: The Bombe.
Appendix 3: Naval Enigma.
Appendix 4: Cillis.
Appendix 5: Rodding.
Appendix 6: Naval Enigma Offizier.
Notes.
Bibliography.
Index.