MAITREYA PREDICTIONS
Student: “Commander Orlov told us about “the Art of War”, written by a Chinese warlord Szun Chu. General Chu advises to study the enemy. His weaknesses, his power, its plans, the morale of the soldiers and the potential problems between allies.”
Master: “During World War 2 information about the enemy was essential. Long before the war the British listened in to the radio-communications of the opposite forces; as did the Germans.
To hide intentions, battleplans and commands by the Nazis their radio-communication was encrypted by a complex mechanical device, called the Enigma-machine. With this device, which was updated during the war, the transmissable data were translated into a code, only to be decoded by another Enigma-machine at the other end of the line.
The Germans did not know, that the British had an Enigma-machine in their possession. In 1939, days before the German invasion, Polish scientists handed over their decoding apparatus.
And it worked. At Blentchley Park proto-computers were used to translate and analyze the continous flow of German military information. During the whole of the war the British knew the planned moves of every Nazi- submarine, Juncker-bomber or Wehrmacht-regiment. Because of the possession of the unbreakable Enigma Code, which the Nazis used till the end of the war, England was triumphant.
But without the help of Polish scientists, this victory could have been a defeat.”
Student: “Master, at which moments Enigma-information was vital to the British?
Master: “During the Battle of Britain, the aerial confrontation between the RAF and the Luftwaffe in the early years of the war. The RAF was so succesfull, that Churchill did let Coventry be bombed by the German planes, even though they knew the attack was imminent. The British prime-minister was afraid, that the enemy would become suspicious and change the code.
The Nazis, to their doom, did not.
Early 1943 Russian leader Stalin was informed about the coming Nazi-attack at Kursk. The Soviets had months to build up anti-tank defences, over 100 miles deep. The Germans won the battle, but lost the war in the East, at the same time.”
Student: “Thank you, Master”.