Read Double Cross in Cairo Online
Authors: Nigel West
T
he cipher may best be described as an extension of the familiar ‘Playfair’ system.
The keyword is written down (omitting any repeated letters) as the beginning of a square of five letters by five. This square is then filled in by writing down the rest of the alphabet omitting all letters already used. In order to reduce the alphabet from twenty-six letters to twenty-five it is also necessary to omit the ‘K’. Thus, if the keyword is ELEMENTS the square will be:
| E | L | M | N | T | |
| S | A | B | C | D | |
| F | G | H | I | J | |
| O | P | Q | R | U | |
| V | W | X | Y | Z | |
Each letter of the ‘clear’ is represented by a pair of cipher letters. The first letter of the pair may be any letter in the same vertical line as the
letter to be enciphered: the second is any letter in the same horizontal line. Thus LD represents A, UM represents T, etc.
It will be noted that the cipher differs from (and has one great advantage over) Playfair in that there are sixteen alternative ways of encyphering any given letter. E can be enciphered as SL, SM, SN, ST, FL, FM, FN, FT, OL, OM, ON, OT, VL, VM, VN or VT.
‘K’ being omitted from the square, is the signal for numerals. The first two lines of the square, following K, become the figures 1 (E), 2 (L) etc., up to 10 (D). The signal for ‘numbers off’ is the letter O encoded, i.e. AH, WJ or the equivalent. The letters standing for numerals must also be encoded: 1 is not represented by E but by SL, OT or its equivalent.
It was arranged that the third word of each message should be the keyword for the next. Thus if a message (say on Monday) began with the words ‘Argent pas encore arrive…’ the square for Thursday’s message would be as follows:
| E | N | C | O | R | |
| A | B | D | F | G | |
| H | I | J | L | M | |
| P | Q | S | T | U | |
| V | W | X | Y | Z | |
In case of emergency or doubt, a standard keyword is arranged. If it was not known whether the other side had or had not received the last message, or likely to make any mistake about it, the square was to be constructed on the keyword EQUINOX. To indicate that this was being done, the first group of the message was to be SCOOI. This precaution proved a wise one. Owing partly to the incompetence of
the enemy, partly due to technical troubles, the emergency codeword has had to be used over and over again.
It will be clear to the expert that, in spite of the alternatives, the cipher does not present any very grave difficulties to the ‘cracker’. This does not matter, so far as we were concerned, though it should have caused the enemy some anxiety, had he been alive to our wireless security precautions. Meanwhile, it was easy and quick to work, and free from possible ambiguities.
B
etween 1942 and 1944 ‘A’ Force created a series of false military units with the intention of greatly exaggerating the strength of the Allied forces deployed in the Middle East. These fabricated units, which include battalions, regiments, divisions, crops and entire armies, supposedly possessed their own individual identifying insignia which aided specific observations and reports. Having been established earlier in the war, these fabricated components remained available for deception purposes throughout 1944.
1942 | | 1st SAS Brigade 2nd Indian Infantry Division 8th Division 10th Armoured Division 12th Division 27th, 38th, 39th, 101st Battalions Royal Tank Regiment 15th Armoured Division 74th Armoured Brigade Seven infantry divisions, including two Indian, one New Zealand 25th Corps HQ |
| | |
1943 | | Eight infantry divisions including two Polish and one Greek, three armoured and one airborne 12th Army 14th Corps HQ |
1939 | | September | | SNOW becomes a double agent run by MI5 |
| | November | | Richard Stevens and Sigismund Payne Best are abducted at Venlo. |
| | December | | Levi operates in Paris as a double agent for the Deuxième Bureau. |
| | | | |
1940 | | June | | Levi withdrawn from Paris. |
| | September | | Levi visits the British embassy in Belgrade, then returns to Italy. |
| | October | | Levi visits the British embassy in Belgrade for a second time. |
| | November | | The ATSB is established in Istanbul. |
| | | | |
1941 | | January | | Levi is arrested in Istanbul. Tobruk is captured by the British. |
| | February | | Levi arrives in Cairo. Rommel is posted to Libya. |
| | March | | Simpson participates in the Lofoten raid. Rommel captures Benghazi. |
| | April | | Levi leaves Palestine for Istanbul. Axis forces occupy Yugoslavia. |
| | May | | Allied BATTLEAXE attack fails. German paratroops capture Crete. |
| | June | | Levi leaves Istanbul for Rome. Ritter fails to infiltrate two spies into Egypt. |
| | July | | CHEESE establishes radio link to Bari. Auckinleck replaces Wavell. |
| | August | | Levi is arrested in Genoa. |
| | September | | Nicossof recruits Piet. |
| | October | | Levi is sentenced to five years’ imprisonment. |
| | November | | CRUSADER recaptures Tobruk. |
| | December | | Italian HQ assessment of Allied forces seized. |
| | | | |
1942 | | January | | The Abwehr loses confidence in Nicossof. |
| | February | | Levi is transferred to Lucera. |
| | March | | Whiteley appointed 8th Army Chief of Staff. |
| | April | | Plan FABRIC devised. |
| | May | | Eppler and Sandstede arrive in Cairo. |
| | June | | Torbuk captured by the Afrika Korps. |
| | July | | Afrika Korps advance stopped at El Alamein. Eppler and Sandstede are arrested in Cairo. |
| | August | | U-372 is sunk off Haifa. Five German spies executed in Aleppo. |
| | September | | Simpson completes SIME’s CHEESE Report . |
| | October | | Fackenheim parachuted into Palestine. Nicossof’s nominee fails to bring money from Aleppo. |
| | | | |
| | November | | TORCH landings in North Africa. |
| | December | | MISANTHROPE’S flat in Cairo is raided by the police. |
| | | | |
1943 | | January | | Nicossof joins OETA. |
| | March | | T. A. Robertson critiques SIME’s CHEESE Report . |
| | April | | Dick White is briefed on CHEESE in Cairo. |
| | May | | Simpson responds to MI5 criticism of SIME’s CHEESE Report . |
| | August | | The PASCHA network closes down. |
| | October | | Levi is released from prison. Mayer is captured in Yugoslavia. |
| | December | | Plan BIJOU identifies HMS Indefatigable in the Indian Ocean. |
| | | | |
1944 | | January | | The Vermehrens defect in Istanbul. CHEESE receives payment from the Abwehr. MARIE visits Nicossof in Alexandria. |
| | February | | Hamburger defects in Istanbul. Levi writes to SIME from Italy. |
| | March | | Levi arrives in Cairo and is interviewed by Robertson. Pope writes the history of the CHEESE case. |
| | April | | The Greek navy mutinies in Alexandria. Cornelia Kapp defects in Istanbul. |
| | May | | Plan JACOBITE expands CHEESE to Greece. |
| | June | | Allied troops land in Normandy on D-Day. |
| | July | | BLACKGUARD delivers transmitter to FATHER . |
| | August | | Marwitz is interned in Turkey. |
| | October | | ODYSSEY fails to produce transmitter in Athens. |
| | | | |
1945 | | January | | Kossiadis is arrested in Athens. |
| | February | | CHEESE ’S final radio transmission. |
| | March | | MI5 seeks to revive CHEESE . |
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