AUSTRALIAN MILITARY HISTORY
In December 1944 General Blamey, the commander-in-chief of the Australian Military Forces, was handed a file. It contained decrypted radio intercepts which proved that the Imperial Japanese Army was receiving top secret information – US and Australian war plans. Material that could lead to the death of Allied servicemen in the Pacific.
The most likely source: Canberra.
So began a hunt that took five years, involved the world’s most secret intelligence organisations and resulted in the exposure and neutralisation of a Soviet espionage network in Australia.
Breaking the Codes is a story of international counter-espionage and signals intelligence. It tells of a secret war which sowed the seeds of suspicion in Moscow, Washington and London, seeds which flowered in the Cold War and led to the creation of ASIO.
The most likely source: Canberra.
So began a hunt that took five years, involved the world’s most secret intelligence organisations and resulted in the exposure and neutralisation of a Soviet espionage network in Australia.
Breaking the Codes is a story of international counter-espionage and signals intelligence. It tells of a secret war which sowed the seeds of suspicion in Moscow, Washington and London, seeds which flowered in the Cold War and led to the creation of ASIO.
- xix, 468 p. : ill. ; 23 cm. #120224
- Includes bibliographical references (p. 430-444) and index.
- Soviet Union. Komitet gosudarstvennoi bezopasnosti — History
- Espionage, Soviet — Australia — History
- National security — Australia
- Australia — Foreign relations
- Australia — Strategic aspects
- (Gift inscription on prelim.)