Israelis den Iranischen Code knackten!
Und sowas ist wirklich ein Geheimdienst Debakel, wenn es verraten
wurde.
'The Agency Rides Again' by Michael Ledeen
National Review Online, 24 May 2004
http://www.nationalreview.com/ledeen/ledeen200405240853.asp
The article is a comment piece, framed as a mock interview with the
late James Jesus Angleton. It includes the following:
' It's fascinating to watch the anti-Chalabi campaign in Washington.
You probably can't keep up with it, but some intel officials in town
are saying two things to the journalists: 1) We broke the Iranians'
communication codes, so we were reading their mail. Chalabi found out
about this, and told the Iranian intelligence chief in Baghdad. 2)
The Iranian immediately contacted Tehran to tell them that we had
broken the code. Then they said to journalists, "you can't write
about this because it would jeopardize our people." '
And:
From 'The Deal' by Seymour Hersh (New Yorker, 1 Mar 2004):
http://www.newyorker.com/printable/?fact/040308fa_fact
"On a trip to the Middle East last month, I was told that a number of
years ago the Israeli signals-intelligence agency, known as Unit
8200, broke a sophisticated Iranian code and began monitoring
communications that included talk between Iran and Pakistan about
Iran's burgeoning nuclear-weapons program
Und sowas ist wirklich ein Geheimdienst Debakel, wenn es verraten
wurde.
'The Agency Rides Again' by Michael Ledeen
National Review Online, 24 May 2004
http://www.nationalreview.com/ledeen/ledeen200405240853.asp
The article is a comment piece, framed as a mock interview with the
late James Jesus Angleton. It includes the following:
' It's fascinating to watch the anti-Chalabi campaign in Washington.
You probably can't keep up with it, but some intel officials in town
are saying two things to the journalists: 1) We broke the Iranians'
communication codes, so we were reading their mail. Chalabi found out
about this, and told the Iranian intelligence chief in Baghdad. 2)
The Iranian immediately contacted Tehran to tell them that we had
broken the code. Then they said to journalists, "you can't write
about this because it would jeopardize our people." '
And:
From 'The Deal' by Seymour Hersh (New Yorker, 1 Mar 2004):
http://www.newyorker.com/printable/?fact/040308fa_fact
"On a trip to the Middle East last month, I was told that a number of
years ago the Israeli signals-intelligence agency, known as Unit
8200, broke a sophisticated Iranian code and began monitoring
communications that included talk between Iran and Pakistan about
Iran's burgeoning nuclear-weapons program