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In the Enemy's House

Page 31

by Howard Blum


  Petsamo codebooks and, 97

  Sasha returns to, 174–75, 235–37

  Moscow Institute of Chemical-Machine Building, 62

  Moscowitz, Miriam, 240

  Moscow Rules, 199

  Mount Holyoke College, 36

  MSN series, 185

  Mussolini, Benito, 54

  Nagasaki, 169, 256

  National Law School, 14

  National Personnel Records Center, 257

  Naval Intelligence, 147

  Naval Ordnance Department, 164

  Navy “Blue Caesar” investigation, 47

  Nazi Germany, 16, 39, 49, 197, 287

  atom bomb and, 61, 189

  Finland and, 97–98

  invasion of Soviet Union and, 59, 96–97

  scientist from, 186, 189

  Neff, Paul, 98–99

  New Deal, 15

  New Haven field office (FBI), 57

  New Mexico field office (FBI), 210, 211

  New York

  Greenglass (Kalibre) and, 257

  Sasha sent to, 70–72

  “Tyre” as code for, 243–44

  New York field office (FBI), 21–26, 48, 56, 89. See also Soviet Espionage squad

  New York rezidentura (Soviet diplomatic mission), 73–74, 77, 122, 135, 154–55, 172–73

  KGB station at, 63, 65

  New York Times, 60–62, 233

  Nil (code name), 108, 161

  Noisette, Sam, 91–92

  Norton, William, 262, 267–68

  Oak Ridge, Tennessee, 121, 172, 186

  Office of Strategic Services (OSS), 109

  Official Secrets Acts (Britain), 200

  One Hundredth Infantry, 98

  175th Weather Reconnaissance Squadron, 168–69

  On Leong Tong, 24

  “On the Use of Uranium for a Bomb” (British Cabinet report), 63

  Oppenheimer, J. Robert, 185–86

  Osa. See Greenglass, Ruth

  Pearl Harbor attack, 18, 31, 39

  Peierls, Eugenia, 189

  Peierls, Rudolf, 189–92

  Perl, William (Gnome), 278–79

  Petsamo (KOD 14) codebook, 96–104

  Philby, Kim, 62

  Phillips, Cecil, 83–86

  Pitt Machine Products, 252

  plutonium, 78

  plutonium bomb, 181, 249–50, 256

  Principles of Chemical Engineering, The (textbook), 230

  Progressive Party, 248

  proximity fuse, 272

  Purple code, 35

  Quakers, 190

  Quantico, 16–17

  Raymond. See Gold, Harry

  RCA, 38–39, 46, 75

  Report SN-12 “Efferent Fluctuations in a Steam Diffusion Method,” 172, 182–85

  Reeves Instrument Company, 147, 164

  “Review of the Uranium Problem” (classified paper), 77–78

  “Revised Translation of Message on Antenna—Liberal’s wife Ethel” (Meredith memo on KGB cable of November 27, 1944), 160–61

  Reynolds, Wes, 112–13

  Robbins, Joseph Arnold, 213–15

  Roosevelt, Franklin D., 105

  Rosenberg, Ethel, 108, 142, 160–63, 173, 269–70, 272–74

  execution of, 1–7, 283–87

  Rosenberg, Julius (Antenna, Liberal, Libi), 108, 275

  Barr and Sarrant (Meter and Hughes) and, 157–58, 279–80

  code names and, 282

  Elitcher and, 143–44, 165–66, 275–76

  Fuchs arrest and, 254

  Gold (Raymond) and, 214, 256, 258–59, 266–67

  grave site of, 289–90

  Greenglass (Kalibre) and, 252–56, 258–59, 261, 265, 269–70

  interrogation and arrest of, 267–75

  KGB cables on network of, 151–62, 173, 244

  KGB recruitment of, 132–37

  network of, 265, 278

  Perl (Gnome) and, 278–79

  Sasha as handler of, 137–44, 254–55, 289–90

  Sobell (Senya) and, 149, 277

  trial and execution of, 5–6, 281–89

  wife Ethel and, 160–61, 271

  Rosenberg, Michael, 273

  Rowlett, Frank, 112–14, 116, 119, 122

  Royal Canadian Air Force, 52

  Royal Canadian Mounted Police, 53

  Russia. See KGB; Soviet Union

  Russian code and cipher system, 38–46, 51, 79–84, 94

  Bentley and, 84

  Blue Problem force and, 47, 80

  bookbreaking and, 101, 104–5

  Corby Affair and, 51–52

  Cyrillic letters and, 102, 104

  design of, 38–47

  discrimination and, 79–80

  en clair names and numbers and, 85, 133, 152, 243

  English spell codes and, 102–6

  Fibonacci series and, 45

  IBM processing system and, 81, 85, 102

  Index and, 102–3

  Inverse Frequency List and, 102

  item cycling, 85–86

  key page, 84–85

  Lane Log and, 102

  Meredith breaks, 100–108

  Meredith memos on, 107–8

  Meredith re-creates codebook, 127–29

  message prints, 101–2

  one-time pads, 44–45, 82–85, 226

  one-time pads reused, 82–83, 100

  Petsamo codebook and, 96–104

  plaintext cables and, 118–23

  repetitions and, 80–81, 103–4

  spell and end spell indicators discovered, 104–5

  TICOM and, 99–100

  Russian Voice, 243

  Santa Fe meetings, 210–11, 225, 230–32, 240–42, 260

  Sarant, Alfred (Hughes), 154–61, 278–80

  Sarnoff, David, 38

  Savchenko, Sergei Romanovich, 175

  Sax, Saville (Star), 243–44, 247–51, 280–81

  School of Special Assignment (KGB training school), 67–69, 149, 180

  SCR-584 device, 159

  Selective Service, 1, 23–26

  “Semasiological History of High German, A” (Gardner), 30

  Senya. See Sobell, Morton

  “Shibey Curr and Lindsay” tag, 230

  Signals Intelligence Service (sigint), 39, 41, 113

  Signal Security Agency. See Army Security Agency), 32

  Skardon, William, 197–202, 210, 218–19, 238

  Slack, Alfred Dean (Martin), 240

  Sobell, Morton (Senya), 147–50, 152–53, 164–66, 173, 276–78, 279

  trial of, 281, 283–85, 287

  sonar technology, 149

  Soviet Central Committee, 59

  Soviet consulate (New York), 59–60, 73, 138. See also New York rezidentura

  FBI listening devices in, 94

  Soviet consulate (Petsamo, Finland), 97

  Soviet Council of Ministers, 197, 255

  Soviet embassy (Ottawa), Cipher Room 12, 51

  Soviet embassy (Washington, D.C.), 50

  Soviet Espionage (SE) squad (FBI), 26, 48–50, 53, 56–57, 75, 89–90, 109–13, 135, 171

  Soviet Foreign Ministry, 46

  Soviet General Staff, 82

  Soviet Government Purchasing Commission, 94, 119

  Soviet Ministry of Trade, 46

  Soviet (Red) Army, 39, 98, 100

  Soviet State Defense Committee, 64

  Soviet Trade Delegation (Berlin), 189

  Soviet Union, 26

  atom bomb detonated by, 169–71, 274

  atomic research and, 64, 78

  Barr travels to, 156

  Corby affair and, 50–53

  Finland and, 96–98

  Nazi invasion of, 59, 82, 96–98

  “Special Analysis Report Number 1: Cover Names in Diplomatic Traffic” (Meredith memo), 107

  Special Committee on the Atomic Bomb (Soviet Union), 122–23

  “Special Study” (Meredith document), 130

  spectrographic method, 243

  Sperry Gyroscope, 154–55

&nb
sp; Spillane, Lawrence, 252–53

  Spindel, William, 245

  spy tradecraft

  black-bag jobs, 90, 94, 119, 216

  brush pass, 149

  dead letter box (DLB), 181

  fallback dates, 199

  hatbox operation, 247

  honey trap, 158

  mail cover, 148, 247

  Stagg Field, 247

  Stalin, Joseph, 59, 62, 64, 68, 82–83, 189

  Stalingrad, battle of, 41, 64

  Star. See Sax, Saville

  State Department, 205

  “Storks Fly Away, The” (song), 6

  STOTT (British intelligence officer), 194–95

  Sudoplatov, Pavel, 68

  Target Identification Committee (TICOM), 98–100

  Tass (Soviet news agency), 283

  Teller, Edward, 245–46

  Tennessee army base, 20

  Tenth Directorate for Scientific and Technical Intelligence (KGB), 175, 235

  thermal diffusion, 216, 243

  Tolson, Clyde, 94, 206–7, 219

  Tolstoy, Leo, 62

  Treasury Department, 14, 24–25, 55

  Trotsky, Leon, 68

  Truman, Harry S., 128, 135, 169–71, 173

  “Tyre” (New York), 243–44

  Ulam, Stanislaw, 245

  U.S. Congress, 39

  U.S. Post Office, 148

  University of California, Berkley, 121

  University of Chicago, 80, 121, 247–48

  University of Edinburgh, 190

  University of Leipzig, 196

  University of North Carolina, 83

  University of Ohio, 31

  University of Texas, 30

  University of Wisconsin, 30, 36

  uranium-235 (U-235), 61, 65, 78, 121, 171–72, 171–72 186

  uranium-238 (U-238), 171–72

  ashtray made of, 253, 260, 268

  uranium research, 62, 64, 249

  V-2 rocket, 159

  Van Loon, Ernie, 190–91, 194, 213–16

  Venona, 193–94, 202, 209, 243, 247, 272, 281. See also Army Security Agency; Gardner, Meredith; Russian code and cipher system

  Veterans Administration, 288

  Viktor. See Fitin, Pavel

  Vlasov, Andrei, 71

  Volodya (London Soviet embassy chauffeur), 175–76

  War and Peace (Tolstoy), 62

  Ward, John, 165

  War Department, 133

  Wasp. See also Greenglass, Ruth

  Weisskopf, Victor, 245

  Western Electric, 154

  Western Union, 75

  Whelan, Dick, 265

  Whelan, Thomas John, 24–26

  Whitman, Walt, 249

  Whitson, Lish, 91, 170

  Wilcox, Mr., 15

  Winter War, 96

  Women’s Flying Training Detachment, 22

  Woodcock, Bruce, 178

  Worker, The, 248

  World War II, 18, 22, 96–98

  wranglers. See cryptanalysts

  Wyly, Percy, 245–46

  XY line, 136

  Yatskov, Anatoly (Russian John), 67–69, 73–74, 76–77, 122, 235–36, 256, 284, 287

  Young Communist League (Gymnasts), 243

  Zelman, Franklin, 63

  Zhukov, Georgy, 82

  Zubilin, Elizabeth, 50

  Zubilin, Vassily, 50

  Zubko, Leonard, 41, 46–47

  Photos Section

  Arlington Hall. Once a girls’ finishing school, Arlington Hall became the top-secret headquarters for the government’s attack on Russian codes. Wikimedia Commons

  The Arlington Hall bowling team. After a long day of trying to crack the Soviet codes, many of the young code breakers would relax on the lanes. Wikimedia Commons

  The Lamphere children: Bob, Art, and Alice on a snowy winter’s day in Mullano, Idaho, in 1922. Bob grew up as the overlooked middle child. There was nothing he liked better than heading up into the hills with his rifle and hunting dog to be “out of sight of people from dawn to dusk.” Lamphere Family Collection, courtesy of Theo Schaad

  The Lamphere children: Bob, Alice, and Art. Growing up in the hardscrabble mining town of Mullano, left Bob, he’d say, “always ready to put up a fight.” Lamphere Family Collection, courtesy of Theo Schaad

  A twelve-year-old Bob. He was both of his parents’ son. He inherited his temper from his dad, Joe, and his fondnesss for books from his mother, Lilly. Lamphere Family Collection, courtesy of Theo Schaad

  Bob and Sarah’s wedding day photo. Bob met Sarah Hosch when he was a young, footloose, novice FBI field agent in Birmingham, Alabama, and she became his second wife. Lamphere Family Collection, courtesy of Theo Schaad

  Meredith Gardner was a long, lanky, ascetic man, partial to a deliberately donnish attire. A man whose very thinness seemed to suggest that all the fun had been squeezed out of him. Gardner Family Collection, courtesy of Michele and Arthur Gardner

  Meredith Gardner at Arlington Hall. Gardner worked amid a “sea of women” at Arlington Hall, but he was not just the rare man—he was the only legend. Gardner Family Collection, courtesy of Michele and Arthur Gardner

  Blanche Hatfield, a Mount Holyoke Phi Beta Kappa grad and a code wrangler at Arlington Hall, introduced herself to fellow code breaker Meredith Gardner with a flirty, “I thought you were just a legend!” And in German, to boot. It was pretty much love at first sight. Gardner Family Collection, courtesy of Michele and Arthur Gardner

  Gene Grabeel. A high school home economics teacher, Grabeel went to wartime Washington to “shuffle papers” and wound up at Arlington Hall working on “the Blue Problem.” Wikimedia Commons

  After a thirty-six-year career for the Army Security Agency (which later became the National Security Agency), Gene Grabeel was recognized as “an American hero” by the CIA. Wikimedia Commons

  The KGB seal. While the Soviet Union was an ally of the United States in WWII, the spies of Moscow Center were already waging a covert war against America. “The Russians were operating all around us,” Lamphere finally realized. YAY Media AS/Alamy Stock Vector

  Harry Gold, the Soviet courier known as Raymond. When he broke, Moscow Center presciently feared, all the dominoes would start to fall. nsf/Alamy Stock Photo

  Bob Lamphere (right) heading off to London with Hugh Clegg, the assistant FBI director he called “Trout Mouth,” to interview atomic spy Klaus Fuchs. “The whole pressures of the world were on my shoulders,” Lamphere moaned. Bettmann/Contributor

  Ethel and Julius Rosenberg after their arraignment for conspiracy to commit espionage, August 1951. Julius, as the Soviet spy code-named “Liberal,” ran a network of productive agents. Ethel, according to the cable Gardner had decrypted, “does not work.” Yet both died in the Sing Sing prison electric chair. Everett Collection Inc/Alamy Stock Photo

  Bob, nearly forty, after he had left the FBI. He had written a memo to FBI director J. Edgar Hoover arguing that Ethel Rosenberg should not be executed, and Hoover had shared it with the judge—to no avail. After that, Bob’s heart was no longer in the hunt for spies. Lamphere Family Collection, courtesy of Theo Schaad

  Meredith and his daughter, Ann, on the boat to England. After the execution of the Rosenbergs, he felt a deep guilt that his puzzle-solving had culminated in their deaths. He went to work at Cheltenham, the British code-breaking facility, because he wanted to get away from America for a while. Gardner Family Collection, courtesy of Michele and Arthur Gardner

  Arthur Gardner and his sister, Ann, when the family was living in England. Years earlier a mischievous Arthur, mystified by his parents’ conversations, had constructed an electric chair to give Ann the shock of her life. Gardner Family Collection, courtesy of Michele and Arthur Gardner

  About the Author

  HOWARD BLUM is the author of the New York Times bestsellers The Last Goodnight and Dark Invasion, as well as the Edgar Award–winning American Lightning, Wanted!, The Gold of Exodus, Gangland, and The Floor of Heaven. Blum is a contri
buting editor at Vanity Fair and a former reporter for the New York Times, where he was twice nominated for a Pulitzer Prize for investigative reporting. He is the father of three children and lives in Connecticut.

  Discover great authors, exclusive offers, and more at hc.com.

  Also by Howard Blum

  NONFICTION

  The Last Goodnight

  Dark Invasion

  The Floor of Heaven

  American Lightning

  The Eve of Destruction

  The Brigade

  The Gold of Exodus

  Gangland

  Out There

  I Pledge Allegiance

  Wanted!

  FICTION

  Wishful Thinking

  Copyright

  IN THE ENEMY’S HOUSE. Copyright © 2018 by Howard Blum. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the nonexclusive, nontransferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse-engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

  COVER DESIGN BY JAMES IACOBELLI

  COVER PHOTOGRAPH © AP IMAGES

  FIRST EDITION

  Digital Edition FEBRUARY 2018 ISBN: 978-0-06-245827-8

  Version 01292018

  Print ISBN: 978-0-06-245824-7

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