The Spanish government under General Francisco
Franco had close ties to Germany, as would be expected considering the
support that the Nationalists had received from Germany and Italy during the Spanish Civil War of
1936-39. Without support from Hitler and Mussolini the Nationalists would
not have been able to defeat the Republican forces. Yet despite these close
ties the position of the Spanish government during WWII was to remain neutral
and avoid foreign entanglements.
Even though
Spain was neutral the police and the intelligence service cooperated to some
extent with the German intelligence services Abwehr and Sicherheitsdienst. In
the field of signals intelligence the authorities allowed the establishment of a
main radio-intercept station in Madrid and smaller outstations throughout the
country. These first of these stations were controlled by the German High
Command’s deciphering department – OKW/Chi.
OKW/Chi was
not the only German agency with radio stations in Spain. In the course of the
war a clandestine naval D/F station was added to the OKW/Chi Seville facility and
a Luftwaffe intercept station was established in Barcelona. Also in the latter
stages of the war the main station in Madrid added a separate section for the
Radio Security Service of the Armed Forces- Funkabwehr.
OKW/Chi stations
Information
on the OKW/Chi stations is available from several sources such as ‘European Axis Signal Intelligence in World
War II’ vol3 and the TICOM
reports I-49 and DF-116-J. It should be noted that these sources do not always agree on all the
details.
According to these reports the controlling station was established at the
German consulate in Madrid (10 Ayala Street) in 1939 or 1940. The commanding
officer in the period 1940-1943 was Major von Nida, followed by Lieutenant
Eichner up to June 1944 and finally 1st Lieutenant Planker. The
codename for the intercept organization in Spain was ‘Stuermer’.
There were outstations in the outskirts of Madrid, on a German owned
cattle ranch north of Seville, in Tangiers, in Las Palmas, Tenerife and
possibly in the Balearic Islands.
The stations were tasked with intercepting traffic from French, Belgian and
Portuguese colonies and later traffic from North America and from the British Dominions
but did not carry out any codebreaking activities. Instead the coded messages
were transmitted back to Berlin.
Security measures were strict with all the personnel being told to avoid
contact with the locals and even other Germans working at the embassy. The
members of the group wore civilian clothes and used at the outstations radio
equipment of the American Hallicrafters company. Married men were not allowed to bring their
wives to Spain and the unmarried ones were forbidden from marrying Spanish
women.
Even so the work of these stations could not remain a secret forever. The
Allied authorities occasionally tipped the Spanish police so it could raid
these stations but thankfully the Spanish authorities always proceeded with
such sluggishness that serious problems were avoided. By the time the police
arrived there was nothing compromising for them to find.
In the course of the war other German agencies also established covert
intercept stations in Spain.
Luftwaffe station
The signal intelligence service of the Luftwaffe operated an intercept
station in Barcelona and it seems that from 1942 they had exclusive control of
the entire facility. Flicke in DF-116-J says they had another station near
Madrid. According to EASI vol5, p36 they mostly intercepted traffic of the
USAAF ferry service.
B-Dienst station
The naval
signal intelligence service B-Dienst (Beobachtungsdienst) operated an intercept
station in the same facility in Seville that OKW/Chi was using (or in Barcelona
and in the outskirts of Madrid according
to DF-116-J). They focused on naval traffic from the Mediterranean and the
Atlantic.
Funkabwehr
station
The
organizations tasked with monitoring the radio transmissions of illicit
operators and spy groups were the Radio Defence Corps of the Armed Forces High
Command – OKW Funkabwehr and the similar department of the regular police
– Ordnungspolizei. Both agencies operated in occupied Europe but they were
assigned different areas.
In late 1942 or
early 1943 a special OKW Funkabwehr section was established at the Madrid intercept
station. This unit conducted direction finding operations for the radio
transmitters of Allied and Spanish Republican spy groups. It seems that they
also had a small number of civilian vehicles equipped with mobile D/F devices. According
to the study HW 34/2 ‘The Funkabwehr’, p21-22 the Spanish authorities not only allowed the
Germans to set up this station but cooperated closely with them in the field of
counterintelligence against foreign spies. It was only natural that the Spanish authorities would be worried about Allied spy groups and even more so about the activities of the surviving Republican resistance networks. The civil war had ended only a few years earlier and the supporters of the Republican government could still organize a movement against the regime, especially if they had support from the Allies.
Lieutenant colonel Mettig, who was second in command of
OKW/Chi in the period 1943-45 said in TICOM report I-115, p7 that the
Funkabwehr station assisted the Spanish General Staff in counterintelligence
activities and had good results with traffic from Southern France.
In the course
of the war new stations were activated and the Spanish authorities obviously
benefited from the German activities, especially in the field of
counterintelligence. However as Germany was pushed back by the Allies it was
obvious that the war would end with an Allied victory. This influenced the
decisions of the Spanish government and in 1944 the Seville, Tangiers and
Barcelona stations were closed down. At the end only the Madrid stations
remained and they were closed down in 1945, with their equipment turned over to
the Spanish authorities and the personnel being repatriated in 1946.
Conclusion
The German
signal intelligence agencies operated several clandestine radio-intercept
stations in neutral countries during WWII. The close relations between Nazi Germany
and Nationalist Spain ensured that the authorities would turn a blind eye on
the German intercept activities, especially since some of their results were
shared with the Spanish intelligence service.
These
stations were valuable to the Germans since they had better reception of local radio
traffic from Southern Europe and North Africa. However as the tide of war
turned against Germany the Spanish government was forced to follow a policy of
‘strict’ neutrality and most of the stations were closed down.
Unfortunately
there is limited information available on the performance and setup of these
stations in Spain. It is up to Spanish researchers and historians to find more
information on this subject.
Hello from gmansw7
ReplyDeleteVery interesting as always. What is the source of this info? It would be interesting to know where these stations were located.
NARA for DF-116-J and British national archives for the Funkabwehr study
Deletehttp://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/SearchUI/Details?uri=C10959984