Last week I was delighted to meet Ruth Ive, ‘the woman who
censored Churchill’, as she is styled in her memoirs.[i]
As a war-time telephone censor, Ruth is probably
the last person still with us who once listened in on conversations between
Churchill and Roosevelt, but then we still don’t know for sure exactly who else
was party to the great men’s conversations. For those who have been surprised
by recent phone tapping and state surveillance revelations, it is sobering to
remember that hacking has been a recognized policy since a least the Second
World War.
In 1942, Ruth’s shorthand skills led to her being picked out
of her job at the postal-censorship offices for a role monitoring the
Transatlantic radio link between Britain and America. For three and a half
years she worked long shifts, tucked into a small office in a partly destroyed
building in St Martins Le Grand. Here Ruth listened in to conversations between
the dispersed members of European royal families, a ‘rather bad-tempered’ Mme
Chiang Kai-shek, and senior political and diplomatic staff including Churchill
and Roosevelt, or Mr Smith and Mr White as they were known over the phone.
Ruth’s job was two-fold; to note down everything that was said, and to pull the
plug, literally, on any conversation that might in any way compromise the
Allied war effort if overheard.
Churchill was ‘a natural telephoner’ Ruth told me over tea
and sandwiches in her North London care home, ‘very effusive with Roosevelt and
often unguarded in his comments’. Listening down the line, she felt that she
never knew what he might say next, and she suspects that Roosevelt did not
either. Their conversations might start with a description of Churchill’s
dinner, or Roosevelt’s polite enquiry after his opposite number’s family, but
would soon develop into often quite passionate discussions. Churchill ‘didn’t
hide his emotions’, Ruth remembered. Although he was always confident about
ultimate victory, ‘he did not have that clipped, buttoned-up quality’. On one
occasion, when he was distraught at the devastation caused by a V2 that had
landed near Holborn Circus, Ruth had to cut the line on Churchill twice in
quick succession, for fear he would reveal the exact location and extent of the
damage caused. And yet the PM only spoke to Ruth directly once, demanding ‘what
did you do that for?’ when the line went dead unexpectedly. Ruth had to explain
that this time it was her US counterpart who had cut the line on Roosevelt –
something Ruth was never allowed to do herself. The only consistent thing in
the calls was the way that Churchill always signed off saying, ‘Kaye Bee Oh’.
Eventually, unsure how to transcribe this curious farewell, Ruth asked her
boss who told her it was K.B.O. for ‘Keep Buggering On’.
The room where Churchill made his Transatlantic calls. The outside door was disguised it as a toilet, with a sign that could be moved from 'Vacant' to 'Engaged'. |
Ruth knew that all her shorthand notes on the
Churchill/Roosevelt conversations were shredded once she had transcribed them and
in any case, she told me, a few days later ‘no one could read them, not even
me’. After the war, in October 1945, Churchill was asked to attend a US Congressional hearing
with the longhand transcripts, and responded that they, too, had been
‘destroyed’. It seemed that that was end of that. Ruth married soon after the
war and raised two sons and, having signed the official secrets act, she never
spoke about her work listening in to the hottest British hotline of the war.
Ruth's July 1945 reference, noting that she was 'the best censor' and 'highly recommended for work requiring tact and discretion'. |
Fifty years later Ruth was ‘horrified’ to learn about the
existence of a German listening station at Valkenswaard, near Eindhoven in the
Netherlands, where Philips electronics are based. Up till then she had imagined
that her role had been little more than a necessary war-time precaution. ‘If I
had had any proof [that the Germans were listening] at the time, I would have
just laid down my pencil and made a run for it’ she told me laughing. Looking back, however,
she has become fascinated by just who, besides herself and the American phone
censor, was eavesdropping on ‘these two old men, talking to each other’.
In 2004 Ruth travelled to the Netherlands to search for the
Valkenswaard listening station. Major Tony Bayley, of the British Battalion of
the Irish Guards, had introduced her to members of the military team who, just
after the war, had found the abandoned Dutch farmhouse that had once served as
the German listening station hidden away in some woods. Sadly the building had
already been stripped, and all the equipment either thrown into the nearby
river or evacuated with the staff. Visiting nearly sixty years later, Ruth
found the building was still standing and used as an Arts Centre, but she met
‘a blanket of silence’ when she began asking questions at the Valkenswaard
Heritage Centre and other official archives. ‘You imagine that the Dutch are
liberal’ she sighed, ‘it is shocking that this happened there’. However she did
meet a man who remembered the high security around the building when he was a
local teenager during the war.
Post-war Valkenswaard The former German Intelligence Centre disguised as a Dutch farmhouse. |
The American historian, David Khan, has written about the
German facilities at Valkenswaard, describing the underground bunker where the
technology was kept, and the radio masts hidden among the trees.[ii]
Here the thirty-five staff, all fluent English-speakers, lived in comparative
luxury, with comfortable bedrooms, an on-site kitchen preparing fresh meals, and
a lounge with an open fireplace. ‘Apparently, the quality of the reception was
good too’, Ruth added ruefully as we spoke, thinking about her own cramped
office, lack of lunches, and sometimes terribly static lines.
On her last day in Amsterdam, ‘this little man turned up on
the doorstep’ Ruth told me. Hans Knap was a retired TV journalist who had
written a history of official postal monitoring dating back to the end of the
nineteenth century.[iii] While
researching Valkenswaard he, too, had also drawn a blank with the Dutch
authorities. Nonetheless Knap’s research led him to conclude that ‘after forty
years of German-Dutch colonial co-operation, German engineers listened to the
“hot-line” of Churchill and Roosevelt with the help of the facilities of the
Dutch PTT and Philips Electronic Industries’. David Khan, who has looked at
records in the USA and elsewhere, even asserts that translations of all the
Churchill/Roosevelt talks landed on the Fuehrer’s desk within hours of the
calls being made.
Now in her 90s, Ruth is still a woman with a mission. ‘I’ve
had a lot of fun’, she told me, ‘and I’ve got very irritated and very angry…’
In a way though, she says, it did not matter that the Germans were successfully
listening in. Given the coded nature of the conversations, and her own and her
American counterpart’s quick action to prevent any sensitive information from
being discussed, she feels sure that they ‘gained little original intelligence’ from
the Transatlantic radio line. However, her memoirs tell just one side of a
conversation, she explained, and she would still like to know just who these
‘original hackers’, as she calls them, were. ‘I am surprised at people now –
that the authorities were so amazed by the recent hacking’, she told me as we
said goodbye. ‘Why was it a scandal? We’ve all been doing it for years.’
[i]
Ruth Ive, The woman who censored
Churchill (The History Press, 2008).
[ii]
David Kahn, The Codebreakers: The
Comprehensive History of Secret Communication fro Ancient Times to the Internet
(Scribner, 1996)
[iii]
Hans Knap, Forschungsstelle Langeveld:
Duits afluisterstation in bezet Nederland (De Bataafsche leeuw, 1998)
4 comments:
What a fascinating story - thank you!
That is a wonderful story - and what an interesting woman!
Wonderful! Thank you!
Thank you, it was wonderful talking with Ruth who is extremely sharp and opinionated in the best sense. If only we could trace the hackers who were listening in!
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