Cracking the enemy's radio code is a task so urgent and so
difficult that it demands the military's best minds and most
sophisticated technology. But when the coded messages are in a
language as complex as Japanese, decoding problems multiply
dramatically.
It took the U.S. Army a full two years after the attack on Pearl
Harbor to break the codes of the Japanese Imperial Army. But by
1944 the U.S. was decoding more than 20,000 messages a month filled
with information about enemy movements, strategy, fortifications,
troop strengths, and supply convoys.
In "MacArthur's ULTRA," historian Edward Drea recounts the story
behind the Army's painstaking decryption operation and its dramatic
breakthrough. He demonstrates how ULTRA (intelligence from
decrypted Japanese radio communications) shaped MacArthur's
operations in New Guinea and the Philippines and its effect on the
outcome of World War II.
From sources on both sides of the Pacific and national security
agency declassified records, Drea has compiled a detailed listing
of the ULTRA intelligence available to MacArthur. By correlating
the existing intelligence with MacArthur's operational decisions,
Drea shows how MacArthur usedand misusedintelligence information.
He tells for the first time the story behind MacArthur's bold leap
to Hollandia in 1944 and shows how ULTRA revealed the massive
Japanese mobilization for what might have been (had it occurred)
the bloodiest and most protracted engagement of the entire war the
Allied invasion of Japan. Drea also clarifies the role of ULTRA in
Truman's decision to drop atomic bombs on Japan in 1945, and
concludes that ULTRA shortened the war by six to ten months.
General
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