Venona


The U.S. Army's Signal Intelligence Service, the precursor to the National Security Agency, began a secret program in February 1943 later codenamed VENONA

The mission of this small program was to examine and exploit Soviet diplomatic communications but after the program began, the message traffic included espionage efforts as well.

Although it took almost two years before American cryptologists were able to break the KGB encryption, the information gained through these transactions provided U.S. leadership insight into Soviet intentions and treasonous activities of government employees until the program was canceled in 1980.

The VENONA files are most famous for exposing Julius (code named LIBERAL) and Ethel Rosenberg and help give indisputable evidence of their involvement with the Soviet spy ring.

The first of six public releases of translated VENONA messages was made in July 1995 and included 49 messages about the Soviets' efforts to gain information on the U.S. atomic bomb research and the Manhattan Project. Over the course of five more releases, all of the approximately 3,000 VENONA translations were made public.

ImageTitle
 18JAN_TSERBER.PDF"TSERBER" asks Silvermaster how to re-establish contact with GRU
 2DEC_BOND.PDF2nd reissue of: British military documents photographed for GRU: agent named BOND
 19APR_GRU_NETWORK.PDF3rd Reissue: Estimated cost of maintaining GRU network and of further development of GRU agents 19 April 1942 (Release 5)
 19APR_GRU_NETWORK_COMPLETE.PDF3rd Reissue-Estimated Cost of Maintaining GRU Network (A more complete version of British Government-excised messages previously released in fifth venona release on 1 Oct 1996) 19 April 1942 (Release 6)
 19JUL_CONTACT.PDFA GRU officer in contact with American Correspondents 19 July 1943 (Release 4)
 20JAN_GRU_RECALL_TO_SU.PDFA GRU officer is recalled to the Soviet Union.
 28JUL_BALDWIN.PDFA GRU officer reports information from a discussion with Hanson Baldwin. not a clandestine source 28 July 1943 (Release 4)
 24JUN_LIAISON.PDFA GRU personality reports some irregularities in the liaison of GRU with the American Communist Party. The apparent GRU illegal MOK departs the U.S. he is to land at Vladivostok and proceed to GRU Hq 24 June 1943 (Release 4)
 4MAY_GRU_MESSAGE.PDFA largely unreadable GRU message of 1942 4 May 1942 (Release 4)
 11AUG_COVERNAMES.PDFA list of covernames for various Naval GRU agents 11 August 1943 (Release 4)
 15APR_NAVAL_GRU.PDFA Naval GRU source has returned to Soviet Union 15 April 1943 (Release 4)
 8APR_NAVAL_GRU.PDFA new office and living quarters for Naval GRU staff 8 April 1943 (Release 4)
 11JUN_CRANK_CALL.PDFA probable crank call to the NY GRU Residency 11 June 1943 (Release 4)
 17AUG_GRU.PDFA reference to the GRU 17 August (Release 4)
 29SEP_PATON.PDFA report from covername PATON (a Naval GRU officer) 29 September 1943 (Release 4)
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