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Enigma ww2
Enigma ww2












  1. ENIGMA WW2 HOW TO
  2. ENIGMA WW2 CODE

He backed up his promise to protect them by introducing training methods which, while effective, might have been described today as abusive. He told his assembled crew that his war experience to date had proved that his methods made him indestructible, and that while he was their leader they must adopt them too. It was Mark Thornton, a 35-year-old lieutenant commander, who had become obsessed not only with making his ship, HMS Petard, one of the best run in the Navy, but also with the desire to capture a U-boat and its codebooks.Ī thickset, stocky man with a huge head set on powerful shoulders and the features of a boxer, the seeds of his fearsome reputation were sown on his very first day as the commander on the Petard. The only luck involved on the British side when a U-boat was finally cornered was the identity of the commander of the destroyer on the spot. Documents declassified more recently reveal that in fact a conscious effort was made to train British destroyer commanders so that they could extract as much cipher material as possible from captured vessels. When I did the original research for my Enigma book, the available evidence suggested that the seizing of the codebooks was all down to a lucky break. Photograph: Bletchley Park Trust/Getty Images The machine room in hut 6 at Bletchley Park.

enigma ww2

It is this game-changing capture whose anniversary will be celebrated at the end of this month.

ENIGMA WW2 CODE

The gloom was only lifted after the seizing of a U-boat, U-559, with her codebooks on 30 October 1942, 75 years ago, enabled Bletchley Park to break the code once again. There was a growing fear that Britain might eventually be starved into submission. From February to October 1942 hundreds of thousands of tons of allied shipping was sunk each month. At a stroke this safety net had disappeared. While the naval Enigma messages were being read, convoys could be routed clear of the Nazi wolf packs lying in wait in the Atlantic. This had disastrous consequences for Britain and her allies. The longest blackout occurred following the German order that vessels operating in the Atlantic and Mediterranean after 1 February 1942 should insert a fourth rotor into their machines. Every now and then the Germans, suspecting that their code might have been compromised, altered it, blacking out the codebreaking effort.

ENIGMA WW2 HOW TO

Using the items seized, Alan Turing and his fellow codebreakers were at long last able to work out how to read Germany’s naval Enigma messages. The British capture of a string of German vessels – and their Enigma machines and codebooks – during the first seven months of 1941 changed all that. British intercept stations could listen in to these signals, but because they were encoded, they could not understand what was being said.

enigma ww2

It was used to transform normal German into gibberish which was then transmitted using morse code over the airwaves. The Enigma machine did not actually send the messages. But yeah, it's definitely a film I'd recommend.Now extraordinary fresh details can be told of how the Royal Navy seized vital cipher information from captured German boats to make the work of the codebreakers possible. But other than that it was a really enjoyable watch and for someone who wasn't really familiar with the true story I found it educational also, which is a nice bonus. All tension was gone from the film and you're left with 20 mins or so of just wrapping up stuff and dragging scenes on that didn't need to be, so I got a touch bored towards the end. The plot itself was interesting and kept you in suspense throughout and it had great characters that were all likeable and kept you invested throughout! My only real problem I had was that when they finally figured out the code, the film kind of dragged. It was a wonderful performance from Benedict (never used that word to describe acting before which speaks volumes) and he carried the film in the parts where not a lot was going on. I thought I'd quickly whack this in here, because I saw some negative reviews because it was a little bit inaccurate.

enigma ww2

Whenever I watch films where it's based on a true story, I typically tend to not delve into the story itself and watch the film for its main purpose.














Enigma ww2