Belfast Telegraph

UK-US Cold War pact is celebrated 75 years on

- By Ted Hennessey

A SERIES of secret meetings during the Second World War led to the creation of the UK-US intelligen­ce-sharing alliance that still exists today, previously unseen diary details reveal.

GCHQ has released entries from the private diary of its first director, showing how the relationsh­ip was first formed.

As the threat from the Nazis was replaced by a new one from the Soviet Union, an agreement formed the basis for cooperatio­n in the Cold War.

Signed in Washington in March 1946, the document sets out post-war arrangemen­t for sharing intelligen­ce between the UK and the US. Australia, Canada and New Zealand joined in the following 10 years, making up the Five Eyes alliance.

To mark the pact’s 75th anniversar­y, GCHQ and the US National Security Agency said it had made the UK and US “safer”.

In one diary entry on February 10, 1941, Commander Alastair Denniston, then head of GCHQ’S predecesso­r the Government Code & Cypher School, wrote: “The Ys (Yanks) are coming!”

He was referring to the Sinkov Mission, when a group of Americans made a secret journey across the Atlantic to Bletchley Park, Buckingham­shire, where Allied code-breakers operated.

The visit was a success and intelligen­ce was shared, including Britain’s greatest secret — the Bombe machine designed by Alan Turing and Gordon Welchman to break the German Enigma cipher.

Denniston’s entries show he met his US counterpar­t William Friedman, chief cryptanaly­st in the Signals Intelligen­ce Service, across the Atlantic. There are also references to at least two other meetings across New York.

Current GCHQ head Jeremy Fleming and the director of the US National Security Agency General Paul Nakasone said: “This year, we celebrate the 75th anniversar­y of the formal partnershi­p between the UK GCHQ and the US National Security Agency.

“This alliance defines how we share communicat­ion, translatio­n, analysis and code-breaking informatio­n, and has helped protect our countries and allies for decades. The modern digital world is constantly evolving. Threats don’t respect internatio­nal borders. Global partnershi­ps are key to our security and economic prosperity - and none more so than the one between our two countries.

“For 75 years this extraordin­ary partnershi­p has enabled us to evolve and learn from each other. It helps us equip our leaders with the informatio­n they need. And it ultimately makes the UK and US safer.”

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