Their most
modern and (in theory) secure system was the M-138-A
strip cipher. Unfortunately for the Americans this system
was compromised and diplomatic messages were read by the Germans, Finns,
Japanese, Italians and Hungarians. The strip
cipher carried the most important diplomatic traffic of the United States
(at least until mid/late 1944) and by reading these messages the Axis powers
gained insights into global US policy.
Germans,
Finns and Japanese cooperated on the solution of the strip cipher. In 1941
the Japanese gave to the Germans alphabet strips and numerical keys that they
had copied from a US consulate in 1939 and these were passed on by the Germans
to their Finnish allies in 1942. Then in 1943 the Finns started sharing their
results with Japan.
Finnish
solution of State Department cryptosystems
During WWII
the Finnish
signal intelligence service worked mostly on Soviet military and NKVD
cryptosystems however they did have a small diplomatic section located in Mikkeli. This department had
about 38 analysts, with the majority working on US codes.
Head of the
department was Mary Grashorn. Other important people were Pentti Aalto
(effective head of the US section) and the experts on the M-138 strip cipher Karl Erik Henriksson and
Kalevi Loimaranta.
Their main
wartime success was the solution of the State Department’s M-138-A cipher. The
solution of this high level system gave them access to important diplomatic
messages from US embassies in Europe and around the world.
Apart from purely diplomatic
traffic they were also able to read messages of other US agencies that used
State department cryptosystems, such as the OSS
-Office of Strategic Services Bern station, Military
Attaché in Switzerland, Office
of War Information representative in Switzerland, the
Foreign Economic Administration, War Shipping Administration, Office of
Lend-Lease Administration and the War Refugee Board.
Operation
Stella Polaris
In September
1944 Finland signed an armistice with the Soviet Union. The people in charge of
the Finnish signal intelligence service anticipated this move and fearing a
Soviet takeover of the country had taken measures to relocate the radio service
to Sweden. This operation was called Stella Polaris (Polar Star).
In late
September roughly 700 people, comprising members of the intelligence services
and their families were transported by ship to Sweden. The Finns had come to an
agreement with the Swedish intelligence service that their people would be
allowed to stay and in return the Swedes would get the Finnish crypto archives
and their radio equipment. At the same time colonel Hallamaa, head of the
signals intelligence service, gathered funds for the Stella Polaris group by
selling the solved codes in the Finnish archives to the Americans, British and
Japanese.
The Stella Polaris operation was dependent on secrecy. However the
open market for Soviet codes made the Swedish government uneasy. In the end
most of the Finnish personnel chose to return to Finland, since the feared
Soviet takeover did not materialize.
The
American reaction and the Carlson-Goldsberry report
According to
the NSA study History
of Venona (Ft. George G. Meade: Center for Cryptologic
History, 1995), it was at that time that the Finns revealed to the US
authorities that they had solved their diplomatic codes. On 29 September 1944 colonel Hallamaa met
with L. Randolph Higgs of the US embassy in Stockholm and told him about their
success.
In response
two cryptanalysts were sent from the US to evaluate the compromise of US codes
in more detail. They were Paavo Carlson of the Army’s Signal Security Agency
and Paul E. Goldsberry of the State
Department’s cipher unit. Their report dated 23 November 1944 had details
on the solution of US systems.
The
Carlson-Goldsberry report
Unfortunately
locating this report proved to be quite a problem. Initially I searched for
it in the US National Archives (both in the NSA and OSS collections) but
without success.
Thankfully
the NSA FOIA/MDR office has managed to locate this file and they have finally
declassified it.
The 4-page report
summarizes the information gathered by US officials from their interviews of Finnish
codebreakers in 16, 18 and 21 November 1944.
From the
Finnish side Erkki Pale (head of the department working on Soviet ciphers) and Kalevi
Loimaranta (member of the department dealing with foreign diplomatic codes)
gave a summary of their work on various cryptosystems.
The Finns admitted
to solving US diplomatic systems, both codebooks and the strip cipher M-138-A. According
to them an unenciphered codebook could be reconstructed in 6 months but an
enciphered one was harder to solve.
Regarding the
M-138-A cipher it was solved because the alphabet strips were used for long
periods of time, the same strips were used by several users and the numerical
keys were the same for all users. Stereotypical beginnings and endings were
also exploited in assumed plaintext cryptanalytic attacks.
There was
cooperation with the German codebreakers on US systems and the Finns received a
lot of intercepts from them.
The Finnish
codebreakers also used a number of IBM machines for statistical work.
Although the
Finns stated that after the introduction of channel elimination in January 1944
they could no longer solve strip cipher traffic a memo included in the report says
that their detailed knowledge of channel elimination procedures may indicate continued
success with the M-138-A system.
Acknowledgments: I have to thank my friends in the US
for requesting this file from the NSA FOIA/MDR office and getting it
declassified.
Awesome read, many thanks!
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