The summary says:
During the Second
World War, Australia maintained a super-secret organisation, the Diplomatic (or
`D’) Special Section, dedicated to breaking Japanese diplomatic codes. The
Section has remained officially secret as successive Australian Governments
have consistently refused to admit that Australia ever intercepted
diplomatic communications, even in war-time.
This book recounts the
history of the Special Section and describes its code-breaking activities. It
was a small but very select organisation, whose `technical’ members came from
the worlds of Classics and Mathematics. It concentrated on lower-grade Japanese
diplomatic codes and cyphers, such as J-19 (FUJI), LA and GEAM. However,
towards the end of the war it also worked on some Soviet messages, evidently
contributing to the effort to track down intelligence leakages from Australia
to the Soviet Union.
This volume has been
produced primarily as a result of painstaking efforts by David Sissons, who
served in the Section for a brief period in 1945. From the 1980s through to his
death in 2006, Sissons devoted much of his time as an academic in the
Department of International Relations at ANU to compiling as much information
as possible about the history and activities of the Section through
correspondence with his former colleagues and through locating a report on
Japanese diplomatic codes and cyphers which had been written by members of the
Section in 1946. Selections of this correspondence, along with the 1946 report,
are reproduced in this volume. They comprise a unique historical record,
immensely useful to scholars and practitioners concerned with the science of
cryptography as well as historians of the cryptological aspects of the war in
the Pacific.
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