Why Is Code Breaking Important In Ww2

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World War II was a war like the world had never seen. Not only was there new weapons and fighting techniques, there was something new on the horizon. Countries used radio signals to transmit messages. The signals were easily intercepted by other countries, so everyone looked for new ways to protect their messages. The solution, the birth of code. Codes and code breaking was significant to every side of World War II and was an important part of ending World War II. The world used codes and code breaking for many reasons. First, all sides of the war needed to hide their messages. Radio signals were becoming very easy to intercept, so people looked for a way to hide and protect their messages. As a result of codes, others looked for ways to break those coded messages and figure out the enemy plans. When machines were made to hide messages, everyone else needed a way to find out what was going on. Later, people began to find out how challenging codebreaking would be. Not only were codes being used, ciphers began to become a popular tool. Codes and ciphers were a new and efficient way to disguise messages.…show more content…
Arthur Sherbius invented the first cipher machine, and named it Enigma (World Book Online 34). The German’s demanded he hand over the machine, Sherbius did without a fight. Enigma looked like a typewriter, its keyboard was connected electrically to a series of rotors, so each time a key was struck the rotors substituted another letter. The Germans had one of the most challenging, and unbreakable cipher machines in the world, but the Germans were unbelievable code breakers. Germany broke British code twice throughout the war. Germany was a powerful code

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