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by empath75 3473 days ago
Let's imagine you've figured out that the codes were broken in Hitler's Germany. The only solution is replacing an expensive encryption system with another, equally expensive system, including all the training that goes along with it.

Who do you tell? And who is the guy that going to go to Hitler to tell him that their unbreakable system is broken?

1 comments

You go to Admiral Doenitz, who already suspected it was broken, and was talked into not changing it by underlings, not Hitler.

BTW, my reading books about it suggests that one was not executed in the military for questioning orders. One reason the German military was so effective is much discretion was allowed by underlings, as well as listening to them.

I'm not well versed on the subject, but I assume it was just another of those large-scale intelligence failures, like the https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Englandspiel only with the boot on the other foot. Groupthink in action again. Also, given the large number of important ciphers which were broken during the war, I'd guess wildly that the pre-war crypto communities (such as they were) were generally much too complacent about the risks from cryptanalysis, likely because ciphers had never been subjected to state attack on a Manhattan Project scale before. Comparable to the long time it apparently took for people to become generally aware of C buffer overflows as a serious security problem, maybe.