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GCHQ (Hardback)

The Secret Wireless War, 1900–1986

Military > Frontline Books > Frontline: WWI Military > Frontline Books > Frontline: WWII Military > Post-WWII Warfare Military > Pre-WWI WWI WWII > Espionage & the SOE

By Nigel West
Frontline Books
Pages: 294
Illustrations: 8 page mono plate section
ISBN: 9781526755780
Published: 18th November 2019

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Signal intelligence is the most secret, and most misunderstood, weapon in the modern espionage arsenal. As a reliable source of information, it is unequalled, which is why Government Communications Headquarters, almost universally known as GCHQ, is several times larger than the two smaller, but more familiar, organisations, MI5 and MI6. Because of its extreme sensitivity, and the ease with which its methods can be compromised, GCHQ’s activities remain cloaked in secrecy.

In GCHQ: The Secret Wireless War, the renowned expert Nigel West traces GCHQ’s origins back to the early days of wireless and gives a detailed account of its development since that time. From the moment that Marconi succeeded in transmitting a radio signal across the Channel, Britain has been engaged in a secret wireless war, first against the Kaiser, then Hitler and the Soviet Union.

Following painstaking research, Nigel West is able to describe all GCHQ’s disciplines, including direction-finding, interception and traffic analysis, and code-breaking. Also explained is the work of several lesser known units such as the wartime Special Wireless Groups and the top-secret Radio Security Service.

Laced with some truly remarkable anecdotes, this edition of this important book will intrigue historians, intelligence professionals and general readers alike.

British Intellence Services was blindsided by the swift German advance across Europe in 1937. Its hierarchy was weak, performance poor and was taken by surprise by the NAZI invasion of France, Belgium, and Denmark, which left it without agents in German occupied Europe. Nigel West well-resourced book on GCHQ is a page turner.

'GCHQ: Secret Wireless War 1900-1986' takes the reader through wireless intelligence gathering from its inception when Guglielmo Marconi persuaded the Royal Navy that it had potential. Initially as means of communication. It soon became a source of intelligence, which led to signals cypher, bi-lingual operators, codebreakers, and analysts.

Richard Gough - Historian, writer, author of the Escape from Singapore, The jungle was Red, Outpost of the Empire, SOE Singapore 1941-42. Waiting publication Tony Poe, CIA Paramilitary in SE Asia.

Signal intelligence is the most secret – and most misunderstood, – weapon in the modern espionage arsenal. As a reliable source of information, it is unequalled, and the Government Communications Headquarters, GCHQ, is several times larger than the two smaller, but more familiar, organisations, MI5 and MI6. Because of its extreme sensitivity, and the ease with which its methods can be compromised, GCHQ’s activities have remained largely cloaked in secrecy. West traces GCHQ’s origins back to the early days of wireless and gives a detailed account of its development since that time. From the moment that Marconi succeeded in transmitting a radio signal across the Channel, Britain has been engaged in a secret wireless war, first against the Kaiser, then Hitler and the Soviet Union. West describes all GCHQ’s disciplines, including direction-finding, interception and traffic analysis, and code-breaking. Peppered with fascinating anecdotes, ‘GCHQ’ is a well-written and engaging treatment.

Read the full review here

Julian Stockwin

"West is both an exceptional historian of British intelligence and an engaging writer."

International Journal of Intelligence and Counter Intelligence

“CCHQ: The Secret Wireless War” is rich in the kind of detail from which all students of radio and military history can learn.

The Spectrum Monitor, July 2020

I would say if you’re into the intelligence services you would love this book and his other books he has authored. Whilst the Second World War and the cold war dominate this book they certainly don’t over power it. To me this seems like a technically excellent book by a man who knows his stuff, it would certainly get my recommendation.

UK Historian

The author has been responsible for an extensive portfolio of intelligence books to the extent that he has been described as the official historian of the British Secret Service. The secret wireless war is one of the most important aspects of modern state craft and military posture. – Most Highly Recommended.

Read the full review here

Firetrench

I loved reading about the origins of GCHQ, which was probably being built in the area between Gloucester and Cheltenham just a few miles from where I lived from 1946-1963, and the development of wireless technology that remains paramount to our defence and our allies' defence to this day. Nigel West is an acknowledged expert in this field of literature and his latest book is fascinating and intriguing.

Books Monthly

As ever, the Author has applied his considerable knowledge of this subject and has produced a very good account of the history and circumstances of what is now GCHQ, and its predecessors. The stories flow and the book can be picked up anytime and the story continues. It is not heavy on statistics but it draws together the core history and the events that evolved around it and indeed the many tangential issues that were impacted. I was particularly taken by the background to wireless tracking of Zeppelin flights and the extend to which they predicted the events at Jutland in 1916. This is a good read that can be absorbed over several reading sessions.

Michael McCarthy. Battlefield Guide

Michael McCarthy

About Nigel West

NIGEL WEST is an intelligence expert and critically-acclaimed author. Such is his depth of knowledge in these fields that The Sunday Times noted that, ‘His information is often so precise that many people believe he is the unofficial historian of the secret services. His books are peppered with deliberate clues to potential front-page stories.’ In 1989 Nigel was voted ‘The Experts’ Expert’ by The Observer.

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