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Timeline of key events
Time Event
September 1939 War breaks out in Europe.
Second half of 1940 First non-Morse transmissions intercepted.
June 1941 First experimental SZ40 Tunny link started with alphabetic indicator.
August 1941 Two long messages in depth yielded 3700 characters of key.
January 1942
  • Tunny diagnosed from key.
  • August 1941 traffic read.
July 1942
  • Turingery method of wheel breaking.
  • Testery established.
  • First reading of up-to-date traffic.
October 1942
  • Experimental link closed.
  • First two of eventual 26 links started with QEP indicator system.
November 1942 The "1+2 break in" invented by Bill Tutte.
February 1943 More complex SZ42A introduced.
May 1943 Heath Robinson delivered.
June 1943 Newmanry founded.
December 1943 Colossus I working at Dollis Hill prior to delivery to Bletchley Park.
February 1944 First use of Colossus I for a real job.
March 1944 Four Colossi (Mark 2) ordered.
April 1944 Order for further Colossi increased to 12.
June 1944
August 1944 Cam settings on all Lorenz wheels changed daily.
May 1945

Cryptanalysis of the Lorenz cipher was the process that enabled the British to read high-level German army messages during World War II. The British Government Code and Cypher School (GC&CS) at Bletchley Park decrypted many communications between the Oberkommando der Wehrmacht (OKW, German High Command) in Berlin and their army commands throughout occupied Europe, some of which were signed "Adolf Hitler, Führer". These were intercepted non-Morse radio transmissions that had been enciphered by the Lorenz SZ teleprinter rotor stream cipher attachments. Decrypts of this traffic became an important source of "Ultra" intelligence, which contributed significantly to Allied victory.

For its high-level secret messages, the German armed services enciphered each character using various online Geheimschreiber (secret writer) stream cipher machines at both ends of a telegraph link using the 5-bit International Telegraphy Alphabet No. 2 (ITA2). These machines were subsequently discovered to be the Lorenz SZ (SZ for Schlüssel-Zusatz, meaning "cipher attachment") for the army, the Siemens and Halske T52 for the air force and the Siemens T43, which was little used and never broken by the Allies.

Bletchley Park decrypts of messages enciphered with the Enigma machines revealed that the Germans called one of their wireless teleprinter transmission systems "Sägefisch" (sawfish), which led British cryptographers to refer to encrypted German radiotelegraphic traffic as "Fish". "Tunny" (tunafish) was the name given to the first non-Morse link, and it was subsequently used for the cipher machines and their traffic.

As with the entirely separate cryptanalysis of the Enigma, it was German operational shortcomings that allowed the initial diagnosis of the system, and a way into decryption. Unlike Enigma, no physical machine reached allied hands until the very end of the war in Europe, long after wholesale decryption had been established. The problems of decrypting Tunny messages led to the development of "Colossus", the world's first electronic, programmable digital computer, ten of which were in use by the end of the war, by which time some 90% of selected Tunny messages were being decrypted at Bletchley Park.

Albert W. Small, a cryptanalyst from the US Army Signal Corps who was seconded to Bletchley Park and worked on Tunny, said in his December 1944 report back to Arlington Hall that:

Daily solutions of Fish messages at GC&CS reflect a background of British mathematical genius, superb engineering ability, and solid common sense. Each of these has been a necessary factor. Each could have been overemphasised or underemphasised to the detriment of the solutions; a remarkable fact is that the fusion of the elements has been apparently in perfect proportion. The result is an outstanding contribution to cryptanalytic science.

German Tunny machines