answersLogoWhite

0


Want this question answered?

Be notified when an answer is posted

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: What was the name of the machine used by the allies to decode German messages?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Continue Learning about Military History

Who were the navajocode talkers?

The code-talkers [or wind talkers] were all speakers of the same Navajo dialect who served as radio communicators in WWII. No-one could intercept and decode their secret messages,not the Germans or the allies either. they saved countless American lives.


How did the native American help the US win world war 2?

Navajo "Code-Talkers" provided their native language in radio communications in the Pacific which the Japanese could not decode because they were unfamiliar with the Navajo language .


How did the allies try to deceive the Germans of their plans for d-day?

This was actually very tricky of them. First of all it is important to know that the British had the best intelligence office in the world, and they had knowledge of every single German spy that infiltrated their ranks, but they didnt do anything about them, instead they used those German spies against Hitler and himself. While planning d-day, they had to make sure the Germans did not know the landing location, otherwise it would have been to heavily defended by German Troops. So the British mislead them by sending out hundreds of messages through the German spies about the location of d-day, in these messages were location like Italy, Turky, South-France and Scandinavia. Now comes the tricky part, they ON PURPOSE send out 1 message, just 1!!!, that the location would be Normandy, this message was (according to plan of course) intercepted by the Germans, but the wiseguys in command of the German forces did not believe this message, since there was tons of communication about other locations and only one about Normandy. The Germans were foolish enough to not see the trap and forgot about Normandy to reinforce other locations. The greatest part of the deception plan was probably FUSAG (The first US Army Group) nominally commanded by Patton, this was to cross the Channel from SE England to the Pas de Calais, the shortest, most obvious (& therefore the best defended) crossing point. Apparrently there is little substance of the Germans having any credible spying network in Britain in WW2. And, just to make it clear, FUSAG was entirely ficticious. The Allies used many different tactics in order to fool the Germans. First, they set up an entire fake army new Pas de Calais, in order to make the Germans think that that location would be the major landing point. They made inflatable boats, tanks, fake barracks, and also invited journalists to come write about the massive camp that was sent up. They also sent out fake messages that they knew the Germans would be able to decode, which made them think Pas de Calais was the real attack point. The night before the invasion, Allies sent out thousands of fake paratroopers all across the French coast, in order to cause chaos and panic in the German defenses. Some of these fake paratroopers even blew up on impact, which caused the Germans to believe they were being bombed as well as being invaded.


Why Americans won the Battle of Midway?

The American code breakers at Pearl Harbor were, at almost the last minute, able to decode enough of Japanese radio messages to know that there would be a large-scale attack on Midway. For that reason, the American carriers, support ships, and later, a submarine, were hiding behind Midway when the Japanese struck. The American forces surprised the Japanese, sunk 4 of the aircraft carriers (The Hiryu, Soryu, Kaga, and Akagi) and other ships, with the result that the Japanese turned tail and steamed for home.


How could the enigma have helped the British back then?

The Enigma was pretty much a complex machine that the British got a hold of. They got it when Germany invaded Poland and someone stole it from one of the deserted U boats and brought it back to Britain. This helped because when Hitler sent commands out to the U boats, Britain will also pick up the command so Britain would be one step ahead of the war plan. The only problem was when Britain found out one of their undefended cities were going to get bombed, they couldn't do anything because they did not want to let the Germans know that they had the Enigma. Otherwise, Britain would use it to find out Germany's plans and use it to attack one the areas that they are not covering.

Related questions

What did they use the first computer for?

The first proper computers were used to help the Allies decode German encrypted messages during World War II.


How did computer begin?

It began with trying to decode german messages in WWII.


What do you called person who decode the messages?

Reciever


16 What was the Colossus computer created to decode?

The Colossus was created to decode encrypted messages from Germany during World War Two using the infamous "Enigma" machine. For full rundown see Simon Singh's "The Code Book".


How many people used collosus?

Only a small number of people used the collosus machine because it was primarily designed to help the British decode secret German messages during World War 2. Due to the sensitivity of the information the number of users were limited.


What do Fetch Decode and Execute mean in a microprocessor?

Fetch Decode Execute. This is the cycle that processors will follow. Fetch the Instruction, Decode it into machine code, Execute the commands


What computer used to decode the Enigma?

The Enigma was used to decode the Enigma. The British decoders at Bletchley Park during the Second World War used brain-power to try to crack the German codes. That is, until they got their hands on an Enigma machine which the Polish had captured.


Who were the navajocode talkers?

The code-talkers [or wind talkers] were all speakers of the same Navajo dialect who served as radio communicators in WWII. No-one could intercept and decode their secret messages,not the Germans or the allies either. they saved countless American lives.


Is fetch decode execute cycle is used in coding?

No. Fetch-decode-execute is a machine state time paradigm, not a philosophy used in coding.


How did they get colossus to work when they had no software?

It wasn't a computer as we know it. Its sole purpose was as a decipher tool to decode German military messages. it didn't use a program - the internal switches were set by an operator each time the machine was used.


Why were the code talkers important in American history?

They spoke Navajo in messages in the Pacific theater in WW2. The Japanese couldn't decode the messages so they were very important.


Why was Alan Turing famous?

He was instrumental in the breaking of the German Enigma code in WW2 (Codename Ultra) at Station X, Bletchley Park. A computer named Colossus was built which deciphered messages: The error in the code was that no letter pressed on the keyboard would replicate itself. The British were at great pains not to let the Germans know of its ability to detect & decode messages. The Enigma machine had 3 or 4 rotors and was highly complex. Turing was one among many who made this detection possible.