ABSTRACT

Spies, secret messages, and military intelligence have fascinated readers for centuries but never more than today, when terrorists threaten America and society depends so heavily on communications. Much of what was known about communications intelligence came first from David Kahn's pathbreaking book, The Codebreakers. Kahn, considered the dean of

chapter 2|8 pages

Did Roosevelt Know?

chapter 5|34 pages

Roosevelt, Magic, and Ultra

chapter 7|32 pages

Cryptology and the Origins of Spread Spectrum

BySPECTRUM

chapter 8|16 pages

The Rise of Intelligence

chapter 9|24 pages

INTELLIGENCE IN WORLD WAR II: A SURVEY

chapter 11|10 pages

An Enigma Chronology

chapter 12|18 pages

The Black Code

chapter 14|16 pages

Finland’s Codebreaking in World War II

chapter 15|24 pages

Soviet Comint in the Cold War

chapter 17|16 pages

An Historical Theory of Intelligence

chapter 18|12 pages

Clausewitz on Intelligence

chapter 19|2 pages

SURPRISE AND SECRECY: TWO THOUGHTS

chapter 20|2 pages

Intelligence Lessons in Macbeth

chapter 21|8 pages

How Garbles Tickled History

chapter 22|4 pages

The Cryptologic Origin of Braille

chapter 23|4 pages

The Only False Message I Know

chapter 24|10 pages

The Prehistory of the General Staff

chapter 25|16 pages

Charles J. Mendelsohn and Why I Envy Him

ByENVY HIM

chapter 28|8 pages

The Old Master of Austrian Cryptology