Today we read on a daily basis about alleged wiretapping engaged in by leaders and governments both foreign and domestic. Americans find themselves asking, What is our government up to? Have we as American citizens lost all privacy rights? How did this all begin?
Much of the “surveillance society” in which we live today had its origins in the decade after Marconi’s first transmission, in World War I espionage. For example, the British built a sophisticated signals intelligence network designed to monitor German radio traffic during the war. The SIS (Secret Intelligence Service and forerunner to MI6) established monitoring stations from Folkestone to London. Surprisingly, America’s entry into World War I one hundred years ago was in large part prompted by this clandestine surveillance activity.
Room 40 was the decryption service of the British Admiralty in World War I. It managed to obtain the German naval codebooks in 1914, including one seized by the Russian Navy in the Baltic. Room 40’s greatest coup of the war, however, was the interception and decryption of the famous Zimmermann Telegram in 1917.
Patton and WWI Tank |
Pancho Villa, as it turned out, proved to be somewhat elusive, but Patton, leading a small patrol, participated in a skirmish at a hacienda in San Miguelito. Three Villistas were killed. When about fifty Villistas approached the hacienda, Patton beat a hasty retreat with the three dead men strapped across his automobile hood. Patton was later promoted to first lieutenant.
In January 1917, less than eight months after Patton’s skirmish, the Zimmerman Telegram was intercepted and decrypted by Room 40.
This message, sent by the German minister of foreign affairs to the German ambassador in Mexico City, proposed an alliance with Mexico in the event of America’s entry into the war. According to its terms, Mexican territory lost in previous wars with the United States, in states such as Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas, would be returned to Mexican sovereignty in exchange for Mexico’s declaration of war on the United States. When its contents were disclosed, the telegram enraged many Americans, and was one of the catalysts (along with unrestricted submarine warfare) for the declaration of war by the United States Congress on April 6, 1917.
Room 40 also decrypted messages that identified Mata Hari—a Dutch courtesan and exotic dancer in Paris, who was born Margaretha Geertruida Zelle in Leeuwarden, Netherlands, in 1876—as H-21, a German spy. The information was passed to French intelligence, and the femme fatale was arrested, convicted, and executed by firing squad in 1917. The unfortunate Mata Hari had been overly friendly with officers on both sides of the Great War.
Museum of Flight Seattle WA |
Years later, Room 40 would, of course, provide inspiration for the codebreaking that took place at Bletchley Park in World War II. Both Britain and America were routinely listening in on Axis messages. Eisenhower claimed that the work of the codebreakers may have shortened the war by as much as two years, saving countless lives.
After World War II, Henry Stimson, FDR’s Secretary of State, would write in his memoirs that “Gentlemen do not read each others' mail.” But the truth is that gentlemen began reading each other’s mail long before World War II. And they continue to read our mail today.
Christopher Kelly recently edited and introduced An Adventure in 1914 which is a memoir written by his great-grandfather Thomas Tileston Wells. Wells and his family travelled through Europe in the summer of 1914 on the brink of World War I.
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Or you can purchase it on Amazon...www.amzn.com/0692767894
For my latest interview on the Surveillance Society see...vinceinthebay.com
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