Showing posts with label United States. Show all posts
Showing posts with label United States. Show all posts

Thursday, April 4, 2013

Negotiating with a Madman: North Korean Threats

    North Korea is once again up to its old tricks of threatening anyone within its nuclear reach, but now they have made the claim that their military leaders have the following authority, "The report came hours after North Korea's military warned that it has been authorized to attack the U.S. using "smaller, lighter and diversified" nuclear weapons. ".  With this stern new warning from one of the United States staunch enemies it is important to review what the North's capabilities really are.
    In the previously mentioned article it is claimed that North Korea has yet to attain the technology necessary to reduce the size of the nuclear warhead enough to enable their rockets to reach the west coast of the United States, but is this a unanimously held belief?  According to www.Nuclearfiles.org, "Estimates of its range are therefore uncertain, but extend from 3,750 km to 6,700 km. If these are accurate, the Taepodong-2 would be capable of targeting most of the continental United States."  This is a frightening assessment of the rouge nations strike capabilities.  So why do we take such potential threats so lightly?
     The United States is not unfamiliar with dictators, or madmen, making threats against it.  In World War II Hitler made it quite clear what his intentions were and we failed to stand up to him in the beginning, and look where that got us.  More recently we knew that Osama Bin Laden was preparing to use airlines in some sort of domestic attack, and once again we failed to react.  Now we have a clear threat from a belligerent nation that is has been run by a family dynasty that has been plagued by madness.  So what are we to do?
     I would contend that we do more than 'try and defuse' the situation by making economic threats.  Several years ago under the Bush Administration the United States made the idiotic decision to send the North $100 million in economic aid, and in return they said they would give up their nuclear arms.  Yeah.  That worked!  Are we as a nation going to wait until two nuclear bombs detonate on our soil before we think they're serious?  I would ask our leaders to take a much more firm stance and send a militaristic message to this young leader with allusions of grandeur.  I'm not talking about declaring all out war, but a strike against its nuclear facilities, such as the one Israel successfully launched against Syria, and this should suffice for now to cripple their capabilities for the near future.  If not, we may face the horrible consequence of inaction.  Unfortunately, for the good of free people, war is at times necessary.  God bless and keep your head up.

 By Jeffrey Brandon Lee 

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

The Morality of War: World War II In Perspective

     The rationale and morality of war has always been something that is hotly debated, and with the 'War on Terrorism' still alive, it is no less so today,  As humans we all here the politicians clamor that we must fight so that justice can be brought to the world, but on the other hand you have a mother at home who sees her son come home in a coffin.  Then there is the wealthy 'landed gentry' who look at war as a means of gaining wealth and power, but are never seen on the front lines.  But if that were the only reason for war it would be quite simple to condemn the action.  Unfortunately, there are many side stories to these same conflicts that generally expose the exploitation and murder of some sector of the population.  The purpose of this paper is to show some of the different reasons for war, and in the end, try to come to some moral conclusion as to the right or wrong of such grim choices.
     World War II will be the war used as the focal point for this article, not only because it was the largest in history, but because there were so many facets to this war that it would be simpleminded to relegate the war as a quest to oust Hitler.  Once a wide view is taken of the war, the reader will be able to better understand why this great conflict was fought by so many countries.
     Germany had been humiliated in World War I and its military leaders were salivating for revenge against the harsh penalties that were imposed on them.  No one more so than the up-and-coming Nazi party leader Adolf Hitler.  Hitler had served on the Ypres Salient in World War I, and was subjected to the brutal trench warfare that drove many men mad.  Combine the alleged contraction of the mentally degenerative disease syphilis, and an unmatched love of the motherland, you have a dictator ready and willing to move the masses.  
     Prior to World War II Germany boasted the largest number of Christians on the European continent.  So how could a country that claimed famed reformers such as Martin Luther be led on such an evil and disastrous course?  Whether it was the hypnotic tone to Hitler's voice, the belief that the German people were genetically superior, or just out of plain fear, we may never know for sure.  One thing we do know is that the military leaders felt the lands of Alsace and Lorraine belonged to the German people and were willing to go to war to prove it.
     Now we have an economy that is the strongest in Europe, a leadership hellbent on regaining German soil and pride, and a public that was enthusiastically in support of a war, that is with the exception of the Jews.  The Jewish people of Germany were among the economic elite and had been well accepted by the native people for many years, but there was a slow burning ember of antisemitism that was gaining fuel that would eventually lead to the death of 6 to 7 million Jews.  As for the military, once they had successfully annexed Alsace and Lorraine and had grabbed Poland and Hungary, it was no small wonder that they would attack their old enemy France.  Hitler unsatisfied with the mounting success of his campaigns chose to take on Britain and Russia as well.  This ambition could only be stopped by a force mightier than that which came against it.
    In step the Allies.  France had been conquered, Russia was on the verge of collapse, and England was not strong enough to face the Third Reich on their own.  The English desperately needed the help of the United States if it was going to be successful in its battle against the Axis powers.  The problem was the American people felt disconnected from the European continent and wanted to stay out of the conflict.  American leadership on the other hand knew the dangers of leaving the entire area under the influence of Adolf Hitler.  While people in the upper levels knew some of what was going on in the concentration camps and Hitler's final solution, the extent of the horror was unknown.  So the President of the United States was faced with the challenge of galvanizing the American public in support of the war effort.  Pearl Harbor was the perfect opportunity to sway the common man's opinion about the war effort.
     Whether the government actually knew about the Japanese attack before it actually happened will not be addressed in this short discussion, but rather what the response was to this action.  American's need to be persuaded of the morality of a war before they will support it (as we failed to establish in the Vietnam War).  Thousands of sailors dying in horrific slaughter was the sad chance to convince them of the importance of intervening.  Now America was committed to the conflict and the balance of the war quickly shifted in favor of the Allies as the enormous American economy got into full swing.  Within less than 5 years the terrible conflict would come to an end.  So the burning question is, was it worth the cost of human life that was expended on the battlefield?
     It is estimated that between 50-70 million people died during the war, with the majority being civilians dying from starvation and 'war related diseases'.  At first glance these are jaw-dropping figures, but what could have happened if the Allies didn't fight back against Hitler and Japan?  The answer to this question is far more frightening than what really happened.
     If we take a look at some of the estimates form the war we see that nearly 6,000,000 Polish and 10,000,000-20,000,000 Chinese died from the aggressors.  Remember, these were countries that were invaded, and if we didn't come to their rescue the losses would've been far greater.  With Hitler and the war leadership in Japan's lust for natural resources, there is no telling when the killing would've stopped.  The two cultures were so brutal that there is little doubt that their occupation of the invaded lands would've led to genocide.  It was reported that when the Japanese soldiers invaded mainland China they made it a sport of throwing Chinese babies into the air and seeing how many they could catch on their bayonet.  Combine this with the already widely known German brutality, and we she the slaughter that was likely to occur.
      War is an ugly, but sadly, necessary action that must be taken up by the morally good.  If when faced with tyranny, people back down and let the aggressors step over the helpless, our world will quickly become one run by dictators and merciless governments.  This is not a utilitarian issue where we add up the total number of lost lives if the war had or had not been fought, although this is very helpful to explain the need for it, but rather a nation rising up to the aid of the weak.  The saddest part to war are those German's, Italian's, and Japanese who never wanted to fight the war in the first place.  If they died, they died as villains, but if they lived they were forced to deal with the atrocities that the were part of.  In closing, I hope that we people of the world will never fail to stand up and fight for those who cannot fight for themselves.

By Jeffrey Brandon Lee

Monday, February 4, 2013

Afghanistan:What We Should Have Learned From the Soviets

     The Cold War brought with it many smaller wars in which each side of the larger conflict sought to influence a nation into siding with their particular ideology.  One of the most prominent of those cases was the Soviet war in Afghanistan.  The Soviet Union had long desired a warm water port for its fleet and the obvious choice seemed to be gaining access through the Middle East.  Prior to 1978, Afghanistan had been ruled by the heavy-handed King Massoud, but with the Communist Revolution and coup of that year, things became more complicated for the Russian government.  Assassinations and attempted assassinations by government insiders and KGB agents marked the next couple of years for the Afghan people.  With internal tension rising between the government and the nations major tribal leaders, the Soviets sought to intervene and help stabilize its communist neighbors regime.  The end result was the catastrophic defeat of the morale and strength of the Soviet Union, and eventually the crisis helped contribute to its fall.  The purpose of this paper is to analyze the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan and the difficulties they faced in trying to stabilize the power of the government in Kabul.
Afghanistan has long had a history of war and invasion that some historians date back to as early as 3000 B.C.E. Although the country has only existed as a nation state since 1918, it has never been effectively absorbed into a greater empire or been successfully unified.  One of the reasons for these failures is expressed clearly by Larry P. Goodson in Afghanistan’s Endless War: State Failure, Regional Politics, and the Rise of the Taliban when he writes:
“Since the advent of Islam, Afghanistan has epitomized the classic
“inward-looking” peasant society.  Its terrain and wide ethnic diversity combine
to reinforce a powerful sense of isolation and “separateness” of often small
and discrete groups.  Strict tribal mores, the competition for limited resources,
and efforts at power projection also lead to clashes.”
Even with this knowledge, and the historical defeat of the British at two different times during the eighteenth century, the Soviets were undeterred.  With the perceived threat, after the fall of the Shah in Iran, of the United State seeking another ally in the region Russia was determined to prop up the feeble Afghan government.
The Soviets were not alone in their desire to keep the government in Kabul functioning as a socialist ally.  As the internal turmoil began to threaten the Taraki government, the President was forced to ask the Soviets for assistance to put down the rebellion.  Gregory Feifer in The Great Gamble: The Soviet War In Afghanistan quotes the Afghan President as saying to the Soviet leader Kosygin, “If you launch a decisive attack on Herat now, it will be possible to save the revolution.”  Kosygin and the other members of the Politburo were not ready to take such a huge risk that was sure to invite international criticism.  That opinion was soon to change.
After the successful coup attempt on the Taraki government, and the ‘nomination’ of Taraki’s rival Amin as President, the Politburo felt forced to take action.  Amin continued to remain loyal to the Soviet Union, but that proved to be not enough.  According to Gregory Feifer, “In any case, December 27 was picked as the day for “Storm-333”: a new operation to kill Amin.”  The Soviets had already made two unsuccessful attempts on the life of Amin and now they knew they had to make a decisive move.  They had their handpicked replacement Karmal waiting in Moscow as soon as the deadly deed was completed.
To this day, there is no evidence that details who ordered the actual invasion of Afghanistan in 1979, but on December 25 “Advance divisions of the invading force, under the Fortieth Army, first entered Afghanistan…”.  What was initially portrayed as an international peacekeeping force by the Soviet government was in actuality there to take control of that same government.  After cleverly requesting that Amin move to Darulaman Palace, on the premise that it was more easily defended, the Russians made their move.  According to Anthony Arnold in Afghanistan: The Soviet Invasion in Perspective on December 27 at 7:15 P.M.:
“The Soviet troops that had been airlifted into Kabul made a coordinated
attack on key government installations.  Simultaneously two or three
battalions, spearheaded by light tanks, struck at Darulaman Palace.
Hopelessly outgunned and outnumbered, Amin and his guard nevertheless
put up staunch resistance and were only overcome shortly before midnight.”
With this single act of aggression the Soviet invasion had begun.
With a far superior military force and a foe that was ‘disorganized’ and tribal in nature the Soviets thought the insurrection would be easily put down.  Arnold gives a clear example of this when he states the Soviets goals as follows, “elimination of the mujahideen (holy warrior) resistance via intimidation or, if necessary, massive military blows…”.  Russia, as Britain before, made the mistake of approaching the invasion as if they were facing another first world military power with a single military command structure.  In reality they were facing five major tribal factions that would be fighting each other if not the Soviet Union.  They also made the mistake of gauging the resolve of their opponent.  According to General Oleg Sarin and Colonel Lev Dvoretsky in Alien Wars: The Soviet Union’s Aggressions Against the Word, 1919 to 1989, “It was obvious that the only profitable way was to treat the Afghans justly and respect their sovereignty.  Any other approach would just not work because of the love of the Afghan people for freedom.”  These misjudgments would characterize the rest of the war for the Soviet Union.
The Russians initial plan was to aid the Afghan army in its own efforts to put down the insurrection, but the invasion changed all of that.  The Afghan army had been suffering mass desertions ever since the Saur Revolution and once the Soviets showed up in force the rate of desertion actually increased.  Shaista Wahab and Barry Youngerman in A Brief History of Afghanistan state, “When it became clear that the Afghan army was not up to the task, the Soviets soon found that their heavily armored forces, trained for set-piece battles in China or the North European Plain, were not ideally suited to fight local militias on difficult terrain.”  Once again this did not deter the invaders as they amassed an initial force of 85,000 troops in 1979 to quell the violence.
At first the overwhelming firepower and heavily armored vehicles of the Soviet forces gained several decisive defeats over the rebels, but that changed as the insurgents realized that they lacked sufficient weaponry to face their foes head-to-head.  The new strategy of the mujahideen is stated clearly by Gregory Feifer when he states, “Realizing they couldn’t win battles by directly engaging Red Army forces, the vastly outgunned mujahideen soon began forming highly mobile units composed of ten to thirty men.”  These highly mobile units were still just a bothersome presence to the Russians as most of the insurgents carried World War II or older model rifles.  Weapons such as these were unable to reach aircraft or pierce the heavily armored ground units.
The Afghan rebels sought to find a better way to thwart their foe with the weapons they had at the time, and the ambush was found to be the most effective practice.  Examples of this occurred regularly in the Panjshir Valley.  The mujahideen fighters had learned the art of making the I.E.D. or Improvised Explosive Device and littered the valley floor with these deadly weapons.  The Soviets had already learned earlier that their cumbersome BTR-60 troop transports had insufficient armor to withstand these explosives so they had carefully swept the valley prior to their attack.  With Mi-8 and Mi-24 helicopters flying overhead for support the Russians felt confident that they would be able to take the Panjshir Valley with ease.  But according to Feifer what transpired was as follows:
“After several minutes under fire, he and several of his men realized
the mujahideen would eventually pick them off from above.  Their only
hope would be to clamber up the rocky mountainside to attack the rebels
targeting them.  They slowly scrambled up-and found nothing: the Afghans
had avoided them by the simple means of leaving for higher ground…The
sun rose to expose those who’d remained in the valley: some twenty-five
men, now all dead.”
This caused a great amount of anxiety among the Soviet troops as they began to fear that the enemy was behind every rock or building.  Also, the fact that the mujahideen were dressed as a common villager led to the inability to discern who the real enemy was.
This fact and the atrocious way in which the Afghan insurgents treated their enemy captives led to many massacres on the part of the Soviets.  One of the gruesome practices of the mujahideen was according to Feifer, “…their favorite tortures was skinning Soviet soldiers alive by slitting them around the waist, pulling their skin above their heads, and tying it there, leaving the doomed to suffer excruciating deaths.”  The Soviets upon seeing their comrades left in such a state would on many occasions kill anyone in sight; including women and children.  This only helped to solidify the resistance to the perceived invaders.
In response to the I.E.D.’s and ambush attacks the Soviets brought in the more heavily armored BTR-70s and BMP-2 infantry-fighting vehicle.  Even though the safer BTR-70s offered more protection, many troops opted to ride on the top risking being taken out by sniper fire rather then ride inside.  The thought was that by riding on top you had more of a chance of surviving a mine blast then by remaining inside.  These measures had a small impact, but with the increased assistance from the United States and Saudi Arabia in weaponry and financial aid, it soon offset any advantage they had gained.
The United States took a stand verbally against the invasion of Afghanistan by the Soviet Union, but were not ready to outright help the Afghan’s after their recent failures in Vietnam.  $30 million was all the Carter administration was willing to commit to the rebel forces and that had to be done through third parties so as not to overtly alert the Soviets to their aid.  When Reagan was elected in 1980 he sought to restore the United States presence overseas and according to Wahab and Youngerman he ordered, “…the CIA to do what it could.  During his first administration, direct aid remained at fairly modest levels, rising to around $250 million in 1984.”  Although direct aid to the mujahideen was at ‘modest’ levels, the United States was also funding the Zia government in Pakistan with a $3.2 billion package of aid, which included the possible sale of F-16 fighter jets.#  It was very important for the United States and the mujahideen to shore up the Pakistani government because it was through this nation that most of the arms were shipped into Afghanistan.
Disguising where the arms came from was a problem that was solved fairly easily.  The Soviet Union had backed Egypt and Syria in their war against Israel and after their defeat and subsequently becoming allies of the United States it was easy to supply the rebels with Soviet made weapons.  This along with the steady flow of blankets, food, and other necessities was helping to turn the tide of the war.  The Soviets scorched earth policy against the locals was also beginning to turn against them.  The main reason for this was according to Wahab and Youngerman, “Perhaps the most important, in the summer of 1986, the United States made the decision to supply the mujahideen with shoulder-fired, heat-seeking Stinger anti-aircraft rockets (and British blowpipe missiles).”  These new weapons not only made the war more costly for the Russian government, but it also dealt a great blow to the already demoralized Soviet troops.
 No longer able to dominate the Afghanistan skies with impunity the Soviets began to suffer heavy losses in most of their campaigns.  The Afghan War was costing the Soviet Union between $7-$12 billion a year and with the military only being able to gain control of the major cities (and that only being during the daytime) international sentiment began to turn against their effort.  By the end of the war the losses for the Russians were according to Feifer:
“Some 620,000 Soviets served in Afghanistan.  Officially, 13,833 died-
although that number is still the subject of debate between various
Russian government agencies…Among the equipment lost were 118 jets,
333 helicopters, 147 tanks, 1,314 APCs, 433 artillery pieces and mortars,
1,138 communications vehicles, 510 engineering vehicles, and 11,369 trucks.”
Although the Soviet losses seem rather significant, when compared to what happened to the Afghan people, they pale.
The Afghans may be a fiercely independent country which will fight to the end, but that didn’t stop them from taking the brunt of the blows in this war.  According to Sarin and Dvoretsky, “The Afghans were able to defend their independence at a tremendously high cost: a million casualties, expenditure of huge sums, and the ravaging of a land that still remains in ruins.  The “holy war” against the infidels has developed into a civil war with brothers and previous allies fighting each other.”#  The end result of the post-soviet era in Afghanistan was the rise of the Taliban and the extreme Sharia law.
With Soviet troop morale at an all-time low, and international sentiment turning against the Politburo, the Gorbachev government agreed to the Geneva agreements to the withdrawal of their forces.  The agreement stated that the Soviet Union would have all of their forces out of Afghanistan within nine months beginning May 15, 1988.  Once again Sarin and Dvoretsky state:
“There were two routes of the Soviet withdrawal: via Kushka and via
Termez.  The transportation sequence was strictly observed.  Between
May 15 and August 1988, about 50,200 Soviet troops returned to Soviet
territory from garrison in Jalalabad, Ghazni, Gardez, Faizabad,
Kunduz, Lashkargah, and Kandahar.”
Although there were quite a few troops left behind after these initials pull outs, their main objective was to train and supply the remaining Afghan army.  Even as the final troops attempted to leave peacefully from the Afghan countryside they came under constant attack from the mujahideen.  Once safely out of Afghanistan many troops returned to a life that mirrored closely that of a Vietnam veteran.
The Soviet Union and the United States were constantly at each other’s proverbial throats during the last half of the twentieth century.  Afghanistan was just one instance of this in the Cold War that led to the eventual collapse of the Soviet Empire.  The Politburo failed to learn from history what happened to invaders attempting conquer and subdue the Afghan people.  With their superior technology and highly trained troops they made the mistake of underestimating the heart of the people and their desire for freedom and independence.  The Soviet troops on the one hand went in with the pride of the Soviet Union beefing up their confidence, but the Afghan’s had something different to inspire them, and that was the protection of their families and homes.  Once the horrible life of living in a battle zone with low quality or no food at all the Soviets morale quickly declined.  This coupled with the virtual elimination of Soviet military power by the guerilla warfare tactics of the mujahideen, and American supplied artillery and modern automatic weapons, proved to be too great of an economic cost for the communist regime in Moscow to handle.  The end result was the ‘agreed’ withdrawal of Soviet troops and the eventual rise of the Taliban.  It remains to be seen whether the current United States incursion into Afghanistan will lead to a similar fate for its forces.

Monday, January 28, 2013

Immigration, Technology, and Security: Against and International Regulatory Body


     Immigration is an important topic that is now one of the top issues debated by Presidential candidates in the United States. With the increase reach of global corporations and the human drive for a better existence, the migration of peoples is a subject that must be dealt with. The commissions report help shed light on some of the basic areas that nations must address and some of the challenges they face both globally and domestically.
     An area that the commission and most scholars and politicians in the developed world must deal with is that of political correctness. Throughout the entire report immigrants who entered a country illegally were referred to as irregular migrants. Unless these were migrants who were experiencing some sort of bowel trouble they should be called what they are and that is illegal immigrants. It seems inconsistent to state in the study that ‘irregular’ migrants should be sent back to their own nation (which is a very strong statement) and then not explicitly state the reason for their return.
     The idea of immigrants filling the needs of aging developed nations is an aspect I have yet to think of. Initially I see some favorable aspects in this line of thinking. First, I agree with the commission that it may be necessary to keep our social security system and pension plans running efficiently. Secondly, it would seem an effective tool in the spreading of wealth to developing nations through their remittances. The wealth and knowledge that is returned to these nations upon return of the worker could be a great driver to that economy.
     Now the sixty-four thousand dollar question. How does a nation force a migrant to return to his or her nation of origin? An international body that gets together and produces a report to the Secretary General of the United Nations once a year does not seem a very effective tool. That is not to say there shouldn't be a forum where countries can discuss and share experience, but the power to enforce should remain at the national level.
     With the age of terrorism now upon us it is important to strengthen national borders and that is best done by the nation itself. To grant power of any sort over a nations immigration policy is a direct violation of its sovereignty. Bilateral discussions and forums for the sharing of information or relevant technology are as far as the power should stray from national governments.


Jeffrey Brandon Lee

Sunday, January 20, 2013

Intelligence During World War II

          World War II brought with it many new advances in the art of warfare, which helped and at times led to the fooling of various commanders in the field.  One of the most important developments during this conflict was the use of intelligence and deception.  Whereas before this conflict many military leaders were left with techniques such as scouting parties, blimps, and maybe a phone tap here or there.  With the improvement in technologies governments of the world sought better ways to protect information and also more improved methods of obtaining their opponents vital strategies.  Trying to achieve this latter goal often left the other side with the opportunity to pass along false information.  It is the purpose of this paper to; first analyze some of the techniques and instances where intelligence played a key role in some battle or operation, and second to show the significance of deception and its effectiveness in deceiving the opponent.  Although not all operations proved to be wildly successful, many proved to be game changers in the Allied war efforts against the Axis powers.
One of the greatest developments that occurred prior to World War II was the advent of code making and code breaking.  Although not as flashy and interesting as the Cloak & Dagger spies that movies have made famous, intelligence analyst played a far greater role than most would suspect.  Ronald H. Spector sheds light on this fact in Eagle Against The Sun: The American War With Japan:
 “More often it was hollow-eyed, unshaven cryptologist or photo-
reconnaissance analyst deep in a basement or windowless room,
surrounded by the clack of IBM sorters and tabulator machines or
the stench of darkroom chemicals-it was men (and women) of this
sort who were the intelligence aces of World War II.”[1]
It was analyst such as this that could have, with a little more concern from their superiors, prevented much of the damage the Japanese inflicted on the unprepared forces of Pearl Harbor.
            The real beginnings of American attempts to break potential combatant countries codes started with the formation of the Signal Intelligence Service in 1929.  Headed by William F. Friedman the SIS was able to rebuild a replica of the Japanese code machine and by late 1940 they were able to read almost all of Japan’s code ‘Purple’ diplomatic messages.[2]  Although authors such as Ronald Lewin quote General Marshall in The American Magic as saying that, “Operations in the Pacific are largely guided by the information we obtain of Japanese deployments.  We know their strength in various garrisons, the rations and other stores continuing available to them, and what is of vast importance, we check their fleet movements and the movements of their convoys.”[3] It appears evident that code Purple messages were of far more significance than General Marshall believed. 
On November 30th 1941 the cryptanalysts in Washington intercepted a message from Tokyo to Berlin informing the ambassador that war with American may come “quicker than anyone dreams”.  During this same time Dutch and English Intelligence were warning of massive Japanese troops buildups in Southeast Asia.[4]  General Marshall may have believed in old fashion navy flyovers and patrol boats to gather such information, but it seems apparent that before the bombing of Pearl Harbor there was ample information available through code breaking intelligence that could have alerted the Navy and possibly saved lives.  Intelligence analyst may not have ultimately been able to stop the attack on Pearl Harbor, but they did play key roles in deciphering other Japanese codes throughout the war effort. 
One of the greatest examples of American intelligence success against the Japanese Navy was achieved before the battle of Midway.  Although code Purple was very important in assessing the general mindset of the Japanese government, JN-25 was considered by most analysts to be the golden egg.  JN-25 was the Japanese Navy’s military code in which it sent all of it orders for naval movements and attacks.  This code had been around for a couple of decades by 1941, and according to Stephen Budiansky in Battle of Wits:
“Slowly and laboriously, the new code book was being reconstructed;
 again, inexorably, on August 1, 1941, the Japanese introduced a
 new, 50,000 group additive book that sent the code breakers back to
 the beginning.”[5]
This setback did not deter the intelligence officers Rochefort and Layton as they went back to the drawing board and set about breaking this new codebook.  And according to Stephen Budiansky on May 14, 1942 Rochefort called Layton claiming, “I’ve got something so hot here it’s burning the top of my desk!”[6]  What he had uncovered was a massive assault planned by the Japanese on Midway Island which they designated AF.  The problem once again wasn’t that the intelligence was bad, but that the bureaucracy in the military inhibited the flow of information.
            OP-20-G was the designation of the top intelligence office in Washington, and upon receiving the information on the probable attack on Midway they dismissed it as a Japanese ‘deception’.[7]  Those in Washington were under the false impression that the real target was the Hawaiian Islands.  Furious at the meddling by OP-20-G, Rochefort approached Admiral Nimitz and asked permission to have the radio operators on Midway send an uncoded message claiming that their only means of fresh water had failed.  The purpose of this operation would be to prove that AF was in fact the Japanese code for Midway.  Nimitz’ agreed to the charade and the message was sent on May 19, 1942.  Again according to Stephen Budiansky, “Two days later Tokyo Naval Intelligence sent a signal in JN-25 reporting that “AF Air Unit” had sent a message to Hawaii reporting it had only a two weeks’ supply of fresh water and asking for an immediate resupply.”[8]  It immediately became evident that Midway was indeed the target of the Japanese Navy, and now the Americans had a hand up on the enemy.  The end result of the Battle of Midway was the Japanese Navy’s eventual withdrawal sand massive losses in aircraft carriers and planes.
            On the other front of World War II there was the important efforts of the combined British and American Intelligence Services.  One of the greatest test of these two allied intelligence services was that attempt to break the ever changing code of the famed Enigma machine.
            The beginning of the Enigma code machine began nearly two decades before the advent of World War II.  In October of 1919 a patent was filed in the Netherlands for a ‘Geheimscfriffmachine’, which was later bought by a German named Arthur Scheribus.  Scheribus then, according to Charles Whiting in The Spymasters, “…designed a machine including ‘multiple switch boards which connect each arriving lead with one of the outgoing leads and which are adapted to interchange this connection with great facility of variation.”[9]  While the German inventor intended his Enigma machine to be used for business purposes, that was not to be the case.  The company was liquidated soon after Hitler came to power and was reformed for the military purpose of producing a machine used to send code to commanders in the field and the infamous U-boat captains.[10]
            Once the American and British found out about the use of this encrypting machine they knew of the necessity of breaking its code.  The British manned over a thousand individuals at its’ Bletchly Park facility and the Americans used Building 26 on the NCR Campus in Dayton, Ohio.  Although both of these services were instrumental in the deciphering of the Enigma code, neither would have had such success if it were not for the Poles.
            In Peter Calvocoressi’s Top Secret Ultra: An insiders account of how British Intelligence monitored and broke the Nazi top-secret code he states, “From 1932 to 1938 German Enigma traffic was read by the Polish secret service.  The Poles were almost certainly the only people to do so in these years.”[11]  This amazing feat was soon ended as the German’s modified the machine by changing the way code was sent and by adding two extra wheels to the machine.  The Polish secret service was aware of the changes, but lacked the resources to solve the problem.  In an act of trust not shown often during times of war, they gave all the information they had to the British at Bletchly Park and the French equivalent.[12]  The German army soon defeated the Polish, but their help to the Allied cause was significant.
            The British at Bletchly used the model Enigma machine the Pole’s had provided them and adapted it to their own Typex machine in an attempt to solve the riddle.  Once they had achieved this, the tedious effort of data analysis began.  Stephen Budiansky gives a great example of this when he writes:
            “The other task was equally straightforward: begin cranking a cyclometer
through all 17,576 settings in all fifty-eight remaining wheel orders, note
down the ones that permit repeated letters in the doubly enciphered
indicators, and punch two new complete sets of 1,560 Zygalski sheets…”[13]
This process was eventually replaced by what was labeled by most countries as a ‘bombe’.  The British version of the bombe was “…like a series of Enigma machines in reverse.”[14]  Although highly ineffective at first, when coupled with the new bigram table, Banburismus machine, and captured daily Enigma settings the British bombe was able to break the German naval enigma code.  This led, “…to a sharp decline in sinkings by U-boats in the Atlantic that began in the summer of 1941.”[15]  Although the British played a major role in breaking the Enigma code they were not alone in their efforts.
            The American effort, as stated above, was located in building 26 in Ohio, and even though they were allies, there was fierce competition between the two services.  According to Jim DeBrosse and Colin Burke:
            “For the Navy and Desch, the race was on, not only against the Germans
and the U-boats in the Atlantic but in some ways against the British. 
The Americans knew that Bletchly Park was working on its own design for
 a four wheel Bombe and that their careers, their nation’s prestige, and the
Navy’s investment of millions of dollars and scores of highly skilled
personnel were at risk if they failed to arrive first at a working machine.”[16]
 Despite the competition for the prestige of having the best intelligence service, at times the British and American’s were forced to cooperate.  One reason for this was the far superior quality of the American Bombe’s, and the British need to decipher Germany’s Army and Naval codes.
            The United States had a choice of the two private sector companies IBM and National Cash Register Company to begin their code breaking efforts.  NCR was chosen over IBM due to its available plant space and technological prowess.  According to DeBrosse and Burke, “Even more propitious, NCR had at its disposal eleven city blocks of mostly idle factories and office buildings and a regional network of skilled labor and parts suppliers, all waiting to be put to work.”[17]  In early 1942 the government proceeded to authorize NCR to begin building its own ‘Bombe’. 
            At first the efforts were considered by many to be embarrassing, but in time those opinions would change drastically.  Early in 1943 the American Bombe needed an average of twenty-five days to read the German Navy’s ‘Shark’ code, but by late that same year the time was brought down to thirty-six hours.[18]  This speed was even greater than the best the British had achieved up to that point.  Disregarding their precious pride the British saw the necessity of using the much more efficient American Bombes to read the vital German military Enigma traffic.  The American Bombes were about ’50 percent’ faster and again according to DeBrosse and Burke:
            “The power of the 120 or so American Bombes was equal to or greater
than that of the 220 British Bombes at Bletchly Park.  The British, who
were charged with attacking many more German systems than were
the Americans-including the three-wheel Army and Air Force Enigma
traffic known as Bovril-asked for time on the American Bombes.”[19]
Although many discount the effectiveness of the breaking of the Enigma code, it is estimated by some experts that towards the end of World War II Ultra intelligence was directly responsible for up to thirty percent of all U-boats sunk.[20]
            While code breaking was a large part of the intelligence effort in World War II, it was not the Allies only means of using intelligence.  Deception was a strategy put to use on a grand scale during the conflict.  There are many examples of successful and failed attempts to fool the other side, but the focus here will be the deceptions leading up to the invasion of Normandy.
            By 1943 Hitler suspected a cross channel invasion from England was imminent, but the question remained where would this battle take place.  In order to reduce the amount of lives lost to the Allies it was decided that they needed to develop a scheme to leave Germany guessing whether the invasion would be anywhere from Norway to the Mediterranean. Originally the planned phony invasions were code named FORTITUDE and included three stages named TINDALL, STARKEY, and WADHAM.[21]  Although eventually the name for the operation was eventually changed to QUICKSILVER and divided in to six smaller parts, in the end it remained largely intact.
            QUICKSILVER I and II were the most important of the deceptions and included; the false placement of the American Third Army in the East, phony radio traffic, and the movement of several corps east to mislead the Germans into thinking the invasion would take place at the Pas-de-Calais.[22]  To help pass along this information to the Third Reich the Allies used men such as the Dutchman Hans Hansen who according to William B. Bruer in Deceptions of World War II, “Hans Hansen had been captured soon after his arrival and “turned”-given a choice of being hanged or sending finely orchestrated intelligence bulletins back to Hamburg.”[23]  With over 900 messages sent from Hansen during the course of the war the Abwher was fully convinced of his loyalty.
            QUICKSILVER III, V, and VI included the limited use of ‘physical deception.  QUICKSILVER III would use dummy landing craft on the southeast and east coast of England, while QUICKSILVER V would show the appearance of ‘extra tunnel construction’.[24]  QUICKSILVER VI would according to Holt include, “…the tempo of seeming activity round the dummy craft on the east coast would pick up, by simulated beach lighting and vehicle lights suggesting round-the-clock busyness.”[25]  QUICKSILVER IV called for an increase in training flights in the southeast and practice air-sea rescue missions.
            Although most of QUICKSILVER went according to plan, there were a few instances of failure or setbacks.  QUICKSILVER III ran into the problem of some of the dummy crafts blowing away and when the simulated activity did show up it was ‘late and ineffective’.[26]  The fifth and sixth stages of the plan ran more smoothly, but still ran into small problems.  Due to a disagreement on what type of lighting should be used on the real locations and the fake ones Holt writes, “…the lighting at the fake locations was brighter than at the real ones…”[27] These problems were relatively small and didn’t effect the outcome of the whole operation, as Hitler was thoroughly caught off guard by the D-Day invasion at Normandy.
            Since the ancient writings of Homer and the fall of Troy, it has been the goal of military leaders to gather information about their enemy and if possible to fool them as to their own intentions.  With the increase in technology that preceded World War II these facts became more important and necessary for each side of the conflict.  While some experts claim that the overall part that intelligence and deception played was a small role, if any, in the Allied victory over the Axis powers, it is beyond argument that it at the, very least saved many lives.  If the Japanese had the advantage of surprise at Midway or if Hitler knew the exact locations of the landings on D-Day, the cost to both sides could have been horrific.  Intelligence and Deception, as it grew out of World War II, has become a permanent fixture in military operations today and seems poised to stay that way for the indefinite future.