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Here is a mystery.. number stations
The first time i ever heard a number station was while on a canoe trip in northern Ontario. Me and a friend both had radios in case we got separated, or needed to call the (great lakes) coast guard in case of an emergency. While tying to find the coast guard frequency I came across a distant monotone female voice, reading and endless stream numbers in a slow robotic rhythm...
7..22..54..12..87..23..12..45..76..5..78..12..54..96..4..23..87..8..23..66..23..98..45 ....
it was haunting, considering our extreme isolation, and it had no explanation. My friend said it was a number station... something to to do with government activity... not sure what. There is speculation online about what number stations are for... but I have yet to here a definitive answer....
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I blame growing up in the 80's during the Red Scare!
Jeez. NewBuddhist turned into SpookyBuddhist tonight.
This bothers me...
And why wasn't I invited.....?
What can I say... it woke me up, haha.
I remember some of the transmissions coming in so strong that the little portable shortwave I had would actually be buzzing in my hands. Lots of Slavic stations; funny, I don't recall ever hearing a Chinese one. Tons of Spanish stations.
http://numberstations.co.uk/the-lincolnshire-poacher/
I had never heard of Numbers Stations till now. Fascinating. @RichardH your story reminds me of a painting by Peter Doig:
http://www.saatchi-gallery.co.uk/artists/artpages/doig_Canoe-Lake.htm
Oh....
Hang on......
It was actually a pretty disturbing situation. We were in a wilderness area bounded by white quartzite mountains.... a long paddle and portage from the access road to the south.
We had a cargo canoe with a kayak in tow. Once setting up camp we agreed that we would each do our own thing. I painted in camp, and he took the kayak to do some freehand cliff climbing several miles to the east. We were supposed to check in with each other by radio every two hours. Apart from the elements and the confusing bush, it isn't that dangerous, bears for instance are still scared of people and do not harass. But, after the second check-in I could not reach him.. and as the sun began to set an autumn gale moved in and I got worried. Being left alone with the cargo canoe I was windbound. I made a big fire and started to consider calling for assistance from the coastguard... imagining my friend lying injured in the hills somewhere. That's when I began searching for the frequency and encountered the number voice... it was... odd. I listen for a while thinking it might have nautical info, conditions on nearby Georgian Bay... but it just went on all spooky . I eventually found the coast guard frequency and was just about to make the call when my friend stumbled into camp covered in scratches and abrasions. He and dropped his radio down a mountain notch, then had his GPS go all screwy. It was in an interesting trip.
27.. 30.. 23.. 28.. 99.. 38.. 12!!!!!!
Even though the numbers could be considered "encryption" it is still not scrambled in a data encryption method that would imply privacy, it is still in the clear... so even if someone could break the number station codes, if that is the purpose, they would have nothing to worry about, and it may even look good on a resume if they had a desire to work in the Intel business as a Crypt Analyst or something.
7..22..54..12..87..23..12..45..76..5..78..12..54..96..4..23..87..8..23..66..23..98..45 ....
it was..
7..22..54..12..87..23..12..45..76..5..78..12..54..97..4..23..87..8..23..66..23..98..45 ....
sorry..
converted to alphabetic characters using a cyclic alphabet where a follows z etc...
gives: GVBLIWLSXEZLBSDWIHWNWTS
reducing multiple same characters gives:
GVBLIWSXEZDWNHT
VWXZ are freak letters, lets set them aside.
leaving us with:
GBLISEDHTN
trough rearranging we get:
BLIGHT ENDS
or
LIGHT BENDS
which are both true statements.
so... which one is it?
German number station.
"Attention attention. We are calling crokodile. Polish denture."
hahaha.
I think.
Know anyone we can ask.....?
mmm. the translation I got is...
TELL THE MELON IT IS RAINING IN DUSSELDORF.
In 2001, the United States tried the Cuban Five on the charge of spying for Cuba. That group had received and decoded messages that had been broadcast from a Cuban numbers station. (Sokol, Brett (February 8, 2001). "Espionage Is in the Air". Miami New Times. Archived from the original on 2001-02-21.)
"The one-way voice link (OWVL) described a covert communications system that transmitted messages to an agent's unmodified shortwave radio...The transmissions were contained in a series of repeated random number sequences...As long as the agent's cover could justify possessing a shortwave radio and he was not under technical surveillance, high-frequency OWVL was a secure and preferred system for the CIA during the Cold War." (H. Keith Melton, Spycraft, p. 438)
According to some, numbers stations are attested since WWI. I've never understood why, in the age of cellphones, this method of communication would still be relied upon, but it certainly is, judging by the sheer number of stations operating. And judging by the still-scarce info on these stations, this method really does guarantee more anonymity.
Shortwave signals are also capable of traveling very, very far, and other than attempted jamming, can't be "turned off" at either end by any government in the way cellphone service can. But shortwave is also so susceptible to interference, that it just boggles the mind to think it would be the preferred medium. Again, maybe the anonymity makes it worth the risk. And of course the indecipherability. But why not use the numbers/one-time pads over relatively clearer cellphone connections, at least in some cases? I suppose because, no matter how "anonymous" the cellphone, there's still a number assigned to it which gives away country-of-origin?
"Zero. Uno. Cinco. Ocho. Dos"...I can still hear her voice, decades later.