At the beginning of the Second World War, Winston Churchill quickly learned that successfully decrypting German messages, including those to and from Adolf Hitler, would be instrumental in defeating the Third Reich. Churchill also understood the diplomatic value of such decryption. His decision to share the Ultra technology with the United States subsequently blossomed into the Five Eyes intelligence alliance that exists today.
A Short History of Ultra
Churchill’s understanding of the importance of intelligence was unique among world leaders at the time because of the government roles he had prior to becoming prime minister. He was, for instance, the Royal Navy’s First Lord of the Admiralty from 1911 to 1915, a period that overlapped with the outbreak of the First World War. Then, from 1919 to 1921, he served as the Secretary of State for War while simultaneously serving as the Secretary of State for Air. During this period, Churchill helped to create, then later redesign, the United Kingdom’s intelligence program.1
Under Churchill as prime minister, in May 1940, the UK’s Government Code and Cypher School (GCCS) at Bletchley Park first successfully decrypted Enigma-enciphered messages, which were used as a major source of intelligence throughout the Second World War. While Alan Turing is the most widely recognized GCCS figure, hundreds 195).