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- Path: sparky!uunet!dtix!darwin.sura.net!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!malgudi.oar.net!chemabs!jac54
- From: jac54@cas.org
- Newsgroups: sci.crypt
- Subject: Re: Every Spy Should Carry a Bible
- Message-ID: <1992Oct12.152002.1180@cas.org>
- Date: 12 Oct 92 15:20:02 GMT
- References: <PHR.92Oct2170309@napa.telebit.com> <1992Oct5.192000.17421@rz.uni-karlsruhe.de> <BvpEx7.7Iq@fulcrum.bt.co.uk>
- Sender: Alec Chambers
- Organization: Chemical Abstracts Service, Columbus, Ohio
- Lines: 37
-
-
- I have been one of those who has been unenthusiastic about book
- codes in the past, but I have just read "Handbook for Spies" by
- Alexander Foote and in one of the appendices he described the
- cipher system he used whilst working for the Soviets in Switzerland
- in WWII in the legendary Lucy ring. Briefly:
-
- 1. Rearrange alphabet by the Playfair keyword method.
- The alphabet includes the figures @ and .
-
- 2. Assign numerical values to letters as follows:
-
- E 1
- T 2
- A 3
- S 5
- O 6
- R 7
- I 8
- N 9 (not 01, 02 etc.)
-
- 3. In the order of the rearranged alphabet, assign the values 01-09,
- and 40-49 and encrypt the message, rearrange into five figure groups.
-
- 4. Take a passage from a book of the same length as the message and
- encrypt using the same substitution. Rearrange into five-figure
- groups and add to the corresponding groups of the original message.
-
- 5. Two groups including a check group and page-line-first word
- identifier are buried at specific groups in the body of the message.
-
-
- Decryption is then a matter of arithmetic. If it was good enough
- for the Soviets, it must be stronger than I thought. Apologies
- to anybody I may have flamed.
-
- Alec Chambers.
-