Henri Braquenié

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17

Who is Henri Braquenié?

Henri Braquenié was an interbellum and World War II French Air Force officer and cryptanalyst.

Captain Braquenié attended, with French Major Gustave Bertrand and another French Army officer, the January 9–10, 1939, Paris meeting of French, Polish and British military intelligence officers convened to discuss progress on decryption of German Enigma ciphers.

Braquenié also participated with Bertrand in the trilateral July 25, 1939, Warsaw meeting at which the Polish Cipher Bureau disclosed its achievements in breaking Enigma ciphers.

During the period of the Phony War Braquenié served as deputy to the French chief, Bertrand, of "PC Bruno," the Franco-Polish radio-intelligence and cryptology center outside Paris.

On December 3–7, 1939, Braquenié accompanied the chief of the Polish cryptologic team, Lt. Col. Gwido Langer, to London and Bletchley Park. At Bletchley, Braquenié established the procedures for mutual teleprinter exchange of information, especially of solved daily Enigma keys. In 1975, shortly before his death, he disclosed that, to ensure the absolute security of the information exchanges, the allied cryptologic services used Enigma itself as their cipher. Braquenié, personally responsible for the Bruno-Bletchley correspondence, followed the standard procedure of padding messages with innocuous verbiage, and habitually closed them with a "Heil Hitler!"

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  • Henri Braquenie

Submitted
on July 23, 2013

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