Canadian WWII Cryptography: Examination Unit

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henryk
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Canadian WWII Cryptography: Examination Unit

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Post by henryk » 07 Aug 2022, 20:27

https://www.canada.ca/en/parks-canada/n ... 11945.html
The Examination Unit (1941–1945)
From: Parks Canada
Date modified: 2021-08-03

The first in Canada and the only civilian cryptographic bureau active during the Second World War, the Examination Unit (XU) operated under the administration of the National Research Council (NRC) and reported to the Department of External Affairs from June 1941 until August 1945, laying the foundations for the Communications Branch of the NRC (1946) and its successor, the Communications Security Establishment (1975). Women comprised roughly 40 percent of the total known workforce of the XU.

The reports it generated contributed to an understanding by Canadian government officials and ministers of the value of foreign intelligence for Canadian decision-making, which had previously gone unrecognized. Its contributions to Allied efforts at breaking the codes and ciphers used in secret military and diplomatic communications, and its decryption of intercepted Vichy France and Free French (unoccupied France) messages, as well as of German, Japanese, and Spanish-language messages provided Canada with its own, independent source of foreign intelligence, and the means of building important intelligence partnerships with the United States, Britain, and the Commonwealth, which continued after the war.

The first Canadian cryptographic bureau reported to External Affairs but operated under the administration of the NRC, as a way to hide its budget and activities. By August 1941, the team of nine had successfully solved several codes and ciphers used by Germany, Japan, Vichy France, and Colombia, some of which had not been given attention by the codebreaking services of Britain and the United States. It was the first to figure out the transposition cipher used by the Vichy fleet, which it quickly shared with the British and Americans. The XU increasingly specialized in Japanese and French traffic, including attention to Free French communications after Canada and the United States severed diplomatic relations with Vichy in late 1942. Free French officials used codes and ciphers already known to the XU, making this a relatively easy transition for the Canadians. The resulting decrypts helped the Department of External Affairs broaden its understanding of events in occupied Europe and the Pacific, rather than relying exclusively on British and American assessments.

After Germany surrendered in May 1945, the XU shut down its French section and vacated the Victorian residence at 345 Laurier Avenue East in Ottawa, which had housed the cryptographic unit since March 1942. On August 1, further consolidation occurred when the Japanese section joined the Canadian Army’s Joint Discrimination Unit at the former La Salle Academy on Sussex Drive. Fearing that the Allies would be unlikely to share foreign intelligence if Canada had none to offer in return, External Affairs decided to maintain a civilian cryptographic bureau after the war. When the Joint Discrimination Unit closed in June 1945, 17 experienced XU staff joined the new Communications Research Centre, which had been renamed the Communications Branch of the NRC by the time it began operations in September 1946.

The experience of operating an independent cryptographic centre in Canada during the war opened officials’ eyes to the value of foreign intelligence. Without the wartime foundations laid by the XU, Canada’s post-war signals intelligence capacity, which eventually resulted in today’s Communications Security Establishment (established in 1975), could not have come into being. Operating the XU within a wartime alliance system also helped Canada enter into an unprecedented peacetime signals intelligence sharing system during the early years of the Cold War, which established the foundations for today’s Five Eyes alliance.

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