Gwido Langer

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Biuro Szyfrów
Cipher Bureau edit
Cryptologic methods and technology:
Enigma "doubles"GrillClockCyclometerCard catalogCryptologic bombZygalski sheetsLacida
Location:
Saxon PalaceKabaty Woods
PC BrunoCadix
Personnel:
Maksymilian CiężkiJan GralińskiJan KowalewskiGwido LangerStanisław LeśniewskiStefan MazurkiewiczWiktor MichałowskiAntoni PalluthFranciszek PokornyMarian RejewskiJerzy RóżyckiWacław SierpińskiPiotr SmoleńskiHenryk Zygalski

Lt. Col. Karol Gwido Langer (died March 30, 1948) was chief of the Polish General Staff's Cipher Bureau from at least mid-1931. By then, according to Polish military historian Władysław Kozaczuk, the Bureau had been formed by merger of the Radio Intelligence Office and the Polish-Cryptography Office. Langer remained at the head of the Cipher Bureau and its successor field agency until the latter was effectively disbanded in November 1942 upon the German occupation of southern France's Vichy "Free Zone."

Lt. Col. Gwido Langer (left) with French Major Gustave Bertrand (center) and British liaison officer Capt. Kenneth McFarlan at PC Bruno, outside Paris, France, during the Phony War (October 1939 – May 1940).
Lt. Col. Gwido Langer (left) with French Major Gustave Bertrand (center) and British liaison officer Capt. Kenneth McFarlan at PC Bruno, outside Paris, France, during the Phony War (October 1939 – May 1940).

Major Langer had on January 15, 1929, after a tour of duty as chief of staff of the First Infantry Division, become chief of the General Staff's Radio Intelligence Office, and subsequently of the Cipher Bureau.

As the Cipher Bureau's chief, Langer was ultimately responsible for Polish cryptography; Polish military-intelligence radio communications; radio intelligence and tracking down of clandestine enemy intelligence radio transmitters operating in Poland; Russian-cryptogram interception and decryption; and German-cryptogram interception and decryption.

Langer's Cipher Bureau has become famous for having in December 1932 broken the German Enigma cipher and read it until the German invasion of France in May-June 1940, and perhaps after that.

In March 1943, as Lt. Col. Langer, his deputy, Major Maksymilian Ciężki, head of the prewar B.S.-4 (the Bureau's German section), Lt. Antoni Palluth and civilians Edward Fokczyński and Kazimierz Gaca were attempting to cross from German-occupied France into Spain, they were betrayed by their French-provided guide and captured by the Germans.

Interrogated about work on Enigma, Langer "decided [to] mix truth with lies, and [...] present my lies in such a way that they had the veneer of truth." He told the Germans that before the war the Bureau had sporadically solved Enigma ciphers, but that during the war they had no longer been able to. Langer advised the panel of his interrogators that, since Major Ciężki knew more about the subject than he, they should summon Ciężki. "They agreed, and Ciężki managed to convince them that the changes [that the Germans had] made [to the machine and its operating procedures] before the war made decryption during the war impossible." The two Polish officers had thus succeeded in protecting the secret of Allied Enigma decryption, thereby enabling Ultra to continue doing its vital work for Allied victory.

Langer, after he and Ciężki had been liberated by the Allies and had reached Britain, was crushed to find himself blamed for his men's capture by the Germans. He died at the Polish Army Signals camp at Kinross, Scotland, on March 30, 1948.

[edit] References

  • Władysław Kozaczuk, Enigma: How the German Machine Cipher Was Broken, and How It Was Read by the Allies in World War Two, edited and translated by Christopher Kasparek, Frederick, MD, University Publications of America, 1984.
  • Hugh Sebag-Montefiore, Enigma: the Battle for the Code, London, Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2000.