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In the history of cryptography, the ECM Mark II was a rotor machine used by the United States from World War II (WWII) until the 1950s. The machine was also known as the SIGABA or Converter M-134 by the Army, or CSP-889 by the Navy, and a modified Navy version was termed the CSP-2900.

Like many machines of the era it used an electromechanical system of rotors in order to encipher messages. No successful cryptanalysis of the machine during its service lifetime is publicly known.

1 History

It was clear to US cryptographers well before WWII that the single-stepping mechanical motion of new rotor machines (e.g. the Hebern machine) introduced patterns into the resulting cyphertext that could be exploited by attackers. William Friedman, director of the US Army's Signals Intelligence Service , devised a system to correct for this by randomizing the motion of the rotors. His modification consisted of a paper tape reader from a teletype machine attached to a small device with metal "feelers" positioned to pass electricity through the holes. For any given letter pressed on the keyboard, not only would the machine scramble the letters in a fashion largely identical to other rotor machines, but any holes in the tape at that location would advance the corresponding rotors, before the tape itself was advanced one location. The resulting design went into limited production as the M-134, and in addition to the message settings it had in common with, among others, the Enigma machines, it added the positioning of the tape and the settings of a plugboard that said which line of holes on the tape controlled which rotors.

The M-134 had one distinct disadvantage compared to the Enigma – that the tape had to be identical for any machines hoping to decypher messages from other machines. If this tape were intercepted the number of potential settings remaining was large, but not infinite. And there were problems for any machine using fragile paper tapes under field conditions.

Friedman's associate, Frank Rowlett, then came up with a different way to advance the rotors, using another set of rotors. This is not as trivial as it may seem. The Enigma rotors each take one input signal (current from a battery) and create one output signal, but in Rowlett's design each rotor must be constructed such that between one and five output signals were generated, advancing one or more of the rotors.

There was little money for encryption development in the US before the war, so Friedman and Rowlett built a series of "add on" devices called the SIGGOO (or M-229) that were used with the existing M-134s in place of the paper tape reader. These were external boxes containing a three rotor setup in which five of the inputs were live, as if someone had pressed five keys at the same time on an Enigma, and the outputs were "gathered up" into five groups as well – that is all the letters from A to E would be wired together for instance. That way the five signals on the input side would be randomized through the rotors, and come out the far side with power in one of five lines. Now the movement of the rotors could be controlled with a day code, and the paper tape was eliminated. They referred to the combination of machines as the M-134-C.

In 1935 they showed their work to a US Navy cryptographer in OP-20-G, Wenger. He found little interest for it in the Navy until early 1937, when he showed it to Commander Laurence Safford, Friedman's counterpart in the Navy's Office of Naval Intelligence. He immediately saw the potential of the machine, and he and Cmdr. Seiler then added a number of features to make the machine easier to build, resulting in the Electric Code Machine Mark II (or ECM Mark II), which the Navy then produced as the CSP-889 (or 888).

Oddly the Army was unaware of either the changes or the mass production of the system, but were "let in" on the secret in early 1940. In 1941 the Army and Navy joined in a joint cryptographic system, based on the machine. The Army then started using it as the SIGABA.



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