Herbert O. Yardley: eyewitnessing a legacy

Gregory J. Nedved
{"title":"Herbert O. Yardley: eyewitnessing a legacy","authors":"Gregory J. Nedved","doi":"10.1080/16161262.2023.2237793","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"ABSTRACTA Japanese cryptologist claimed that he attended a meeting between Japanese diplomats and controversial US cryptologist Herbert O. Yardley in 1929 at the Japanese Embassy. Since this eyewitness account has not been previously known to Yardley researchers, it deserves to be reviewed objectively to see if it contributes anything of substance to the further shaping of the Yardley legacy. This article scrutinizes the written evidence as provided in two accounts of the meeting, one of which is recorded in the memoirs of senior Japanese diplomat Kase Toshikazu. The author of this article, who had been skeptical of a Yardley-Japan meeting, now believes that it most likely did occur.KEYWORDS: David KahnHerbert O. yardleythe American black chamberthe broken sealKase Toshikazu Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1 Ladislas Farago, The Broken Seal: The Story of “Operation Magic”and the Pearl Harbor Disaster, New York: Random House (1967), 56–60; J. F. Dooley, “Was Herbert O. Yardley a Traitor?” Cryptologia 35, no. 1 (2010): 1–3.2 Dooley, 4–5; National Security Agency, Herbert O. Yardley Document Collection, Memo to D33 from J.R. Chiles, S1, “State Department Messages. 3 January 1968,” Publication Number 6,650,860, https://www.nsa.gov/Helpful-Links/NSA-FOIA/Declassification-Transparency-Initiatives/Historical-Releases/Yardley-Collection/, accessed February 22, 2023; Theodore M. Hannah, “The Many Lives of Herbert O. Yardley,” Spectrum [of the National Security Agency] (fall 1981): 26, https://www.nsa.gov/Portals/70/documents/news-features/declassified-documents/cryptologic-spectrum/many_lives.pdf, accessed February 22, 2023.3 Gregory J. Nedved, “The Impact of Herbert O. Yardley: A Glass Half Full,” The Intelligencer: Journal of U.S. Intelligence Studies 28, no. 1 (Winter-Spring 2023), 55.4 Kase Toshikazu, Kase Toshikazu Kaisōroku, Tōkyō: Yamate Shobō, Shōwa 61 (1986), https://lccn.loc.gov/86209603, author’s translated copy; S. Tomokiyo, “Japanese Reaction to Yardley’s The American Black Chamber,” http://cryptiana.web.fc2.com/code/yardley_jp.htm, accessed February 22, 2023.5 Tomokiyo.6 Kase.7 Farago, 56–60; Tomokiyo, Kase.8 Kase.9 Tomokiyo; Kase.10 Tomokiyo; Kase.11 Dooley, 3–4; Herbert O. Yardley Material, Doc. #207, Herbert O. Yardley Collection, Record Group (RG) 457, Box 100, Accession Number 47,079, National Archives, College Park, MD.12 Dooley, 12–13.13 Dooley, 4; Hannah, 26; Memo to D33 from J.R. Chiles.14 Kase, Farago, 56.15 Dooley, 12–13.16 Dooley, 12; Kahn, 95; Author correspondence with J.F. Dooley, April 14, 2023.17 Kase, Tomokiyo.18 Farago, 56.19 L. Kruh, letter, Cryptologia 19, no. 4 (1995): 378.20 “Gregory J. Nedved, “Herbert O. Yardley Revisited: What Does the New Evidence Say?,” Cryptologia 45, no. 2 (2021): 113.21 Author correspondence with J.F. Dooley, April 14, 2023; Nedved, “Herbert O. Yardley Revisited,” 110.Additional informationNotes on contributorsGregory J. NedvedGregory J. Nedved has been a historian at the Center for Cryptologic History since 2011 with a specialty in China. Prior to this, he spent much of his professional career (military and government) working with the Chinese language in various capacities, e.g., analyst, translator, instructor. He has a B.A from Saint Vincent College (Latrobe, PA) and M.A. from Hawaii Pacific University. He is also a graduate of the Naval War College Fleet Seminar Program and has a Certificate in Advanced Translation from the University of Chicago. He is a two-time winner of NSA’s Cryptologic Literature Award and is the author of many books and articles on topics as diverse as flags to presidential trivial. He also is president-emeritus (2018-2023) of the National Museum of Language.","PeriodicalId":37890,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Intelligence History","volume":"301 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-10-05","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Intelligence History","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/16161262.2023.2237793","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

ABSTRACTA Japanese cryptologist claimed that he attended a meeting between Japanese diplomats and controversial US cryptologist Herbert O. Yardley in 1929 at the Japanese Embassy. Since this eyewitness account has not been previously known to Yardley researchers, it deserves to be reviewed objectively to see if it contributes anything of substance to the further shaping of the Yardley legacy. This article scrutinizes the written evidence as provided in two accounts of the meeting, one of which is recorded in the memoirs of senior Japanese diplomat Kase Toshikazu. The author of this article, who had been skeptical of a Yardley-Japan meeting, now believes that it most likely did occur.KEYWORDS: David KahnHerbert O. yardleythe American black chamberthe broken sealKase Toshikazu Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1 Ladislas Farago, The Broken Seal: The Story of “Operation Magic”and the Pearl Harbor Disaster, New York: Random House (1967), 56–60; J. F. Dooley, “Was Herbert O. Yardley a Traitor?” Cryptologia 35, no. 1 (2010): 1–3.2 Dooley, 4–5; National Security Agency, Herbert O. Yardley Document Collection, Memo to D33 from J.R. Chiles, S1, “State Department Messages. 3 January 1968,” Publication Number 6,650,860, https://www.nsa.gov/Helpful-Links/NSA-FOIA/Declassification-Transparency-Initiatives/Historical-Releases/Yardley-Collection/, accessed February 22, 2023; Theodore M. Hannah, “The Many Lives of Herbert O. Yardley,” Spectrum [of the National Security Agency] (fall 1981): 26, https://www.nsa.gov/Portals/70/documents/news-features/declassified-documents/cryptologic-spectrum/many_lives.pdf, accessed February 22, 2023.3 Gregory J. Nedved, “The Impact of Herbert O. Yardley: A Glass Half Full,” The Intelligencer: Journal of U.S. Intelligence Studies 28, no. 1 (Winter-Spring 2023), 55.4 Kase Toshikazu, Kase Toshikazu Kaisōroku, Tōkyō: Yamate Shobō, Shōwa 61 (1986), https://lccn.loc.gov/86209603, author’s translated copy; S. Tomokiyo, “Japanese Reaction to Yardley’s The American Black Chamber,” http://cryptiana.web.fc2.com/code/yardley_jp.htm, accessed February 22, 2023.5 Tomokiyo.6 Kase.7 Farago, 56–60; Tomokiyo, Kase.8 Kase.9 Tomokiyo; Kase.10 Tomokiyo; Kase.11 Dooley, 3–4; Herbert O. Yardley Material, Doc. #207, Herbert O. Yardley Collection, Record Group (RG) 457, Box 100, Accession Number 47,079, National Archives, College Park, MD.12 Dooley, 12–13.13 Dooley, 4; Hannah, 26; Memo to D33 from J.R. Chiles.14 Kase, Farago, 56.15 Dooley, 12–13.16 Dooley, 12; Kahn, 95; Author correspondence with J.F. Dooley, April 14, 2023.17 Kase, Tomokiyo.18 Farago, 56.19 L. Kruh, letter, Cryptologia 19, no. 4 (1995): 378.20 “Gregory J. Nedved, “Herbert O. Yardley Revisited: What Does the New Evidence Say?,” Cryptologia 45, no. 2 (2021): 113.21 Author correspondence with J.F. Dooley, April 14, 2023; Nedved, “Herbert O. Yardley Revisited,” 110.Additional informationNotes on contributorsGregory J. NedvedGregory J. Nedved has been a historian at the Center for Cryptologic History since 2011 with a specialty in China. Prior to this, he spent much of his professional career (military and government) working with the Chinese language in various capacities, e.g., analyst, translator, instructor. He has a B.A from Saint Vincent College (Latrobe, PA) and M.A. from Hawaii Pacific University. He is also a graduate of the Naval War College Fleet Seminar Program and has a Certificate in Advanced Translation from the University of Chicago. He is a two-time winner of NSA’s Cryptologic Literature Award and is the author of many books and articles on topics as diverse as flags to presidential trivial. He also is president-emeritus (2018-2023) of the National Museum of Language.
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赫伯特·欧·亚德利:亲眼目睹一份遗产
一位日本密码学家声称,他参加了1929年在日本大使馆举行的日本外交官和备受争议的美国密码学家赫伯特·欧·亚德利之间的会议。由于亚德利的研究人员之前并不知道这个目击者的描述,因此值得客观地审查一下,看看它是否对亚德利遗产的进一步塑造有任何实质性的贡献。本文仔细研究了两份会议记录提供的书面证据,其中一份记录在日本高级外交官Kase Toshikazu的回忆录中。这篇文章的作者曾经对亚德利和日本的会面持怀疑态度,现在他相信这种会面很可能确实发生过。关键词:David KahnHerbert O. yardley美国黑室破碎的海ase Toshikazu披露声明作者未报告潜在的利益冲突。注1:拉迪斯拉斯·法拉戈:《封印破裂:“魔法行动”与珍珠港灾难的故事》,纽约:兰登书屋(1967),第56-60页;j·f·杜利,《赫伯特·欧·亚德利是叛徒吗?》《密码学》第35卷,没有。Dooley, 4-5;国家安全局,Herbert O. Yardley文件收集,J.R. Chiles给D33的备忘录,S1,“国务院信息,1968年1月3日”,出版号6,650,860,https://www.nsa.gov/Helpful-Links/NSA-FOIA/Declassification-Transparency-Initiatives/Historical-Releases/Yardley-Collection/, 2023年2月22日访问;西奥多·m·汉娜,“赫伯特·欧·亚德利的许多人生”,频谱[国家安全局](1981年秋季):26,https://www.nsa.gov/Portals/70/documents/news-features/declassified-documents/cryptologic-spectrum/many_lives.pdf, 2023年2月22日访问。1 (Winter-Spring 2023), 55.4 Kase Toshikazu, Kase Toshikazu Kaisōroku, Tōkyō: Yamate shobawa, Shōwa 61 (1986), https://lccn.loc.gov/86209603,作者翻译本;S. Tomokiyo,“日本人对Yardley的《美国黑室》的反应”,http://cryptiana.web.fc2.com/code/yardley_jp.htm,于2023.5 Tomokiyo.6 kas.7 Farago, 56-60;8 . Kase.9 . Tomokiyo;Kase.10 Tomokiyo;Kase.11 Dooley, 3-4;赫伯特·欧·亚德利材料,博士。#207,赫伯特O.亚德利收藏,记录组(RG) 457, 100箱,编号47,079,国家档案馆,大学公园,12杜利,12-13.13杜利,4;汉娜,26岁;J.R. chiles给D33的备忘录。14 Kase, Farago, 56.15 Dooley, 12 - 13.16 Dooley, 12;卡恩,95;作者与J.F. Dooley的通信,2023年4月14日。17 Kase, Tomokiyo.18 Farago, 56.19 L. Kruh,信件,Cryptologia 19, no. 14。《重新审视赫伯特·欧·亚德利:新证据说明了什么?》(1995):378.20《密码学》第45期,没有。2(2021): 113.21作者与J.F. Dooley通信,2023年4月14日;内德维德,《重新审视赫伯特·欧·亚德利》,110页。gregory J. ned韦德gregory J. ned韦德自2011年以来一直是密码学历史中心的一名历史学家,专门研究中国。在此之前,他的大部分职业生涯(军事和政府)都与汉语打交道,担任过各种职务,如分析师、翻译、讲师。他拥有圣文森特学院(Latrobe, PA)的学士学位和夏威夷太平洋大学的硕士学位。他也是海军战争学院舰队研讨会项目的毕业生,并拥有芝加哥大学高级翻译证书。他曾两次获得美国国家安全局的密码学文学奖,并撰写了许多书籍和文章,主题从国旗到总统琐事都有。他也是国家语言博物馆名誉主席(2018-2023)。
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来源期刊
Journal of Intelligence History
Journal of Intelligence History Arts and Humanities-History
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期刊介绍: The Journal of Intelligence History is the official publication of the International Intelligence History Association (IIHA). It is an international peer-reviewed journal that aims to provide a forum for original research on the history of intelligence services, activities and their wider historical, political and social contexts. The journal aims to publish scholarship on all aspects of the history of intelligence, across all continents, countries and periods of history. We encourage submissions across a wide range of topics, methodologies and approaches.
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