Stealing America'sRadar SecretsFrom: SECRET WEAPONSof World War IIPage 10-12 |
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Stealing America's Radar Secrets
AT CAFE
HINDENBURG in the German-American section called Yorkville in New York
City, a raucous celebration was ushering in New Year 1939.
As the night wore on and as copious amounts of schnapps, cognac, beer,
and wine were consumed, the din grew deafening.
At one table,
Karl Schlueter, a steward on the German luxury ocean liner Europa, then
docked in the Hudson River, was host to a group of friends and vying for
the honor of being the drunkest and the loudest. Between hefty belts
of schnapps, Schlueter pawed amorously at his attractive girlfriend, twenty-seven-year-old
Johanna "Jenni" Hofman, a hairdresser on the ship.
Actually, Schlueter
was a spy, the Orstgruppenfuhrer (Nazi party official) who had total control
of Europa under the cover of being a lowly steward. Jenni Hofman
was his courier.
During the boisterous
merrymaking at Cafe Hindenburg, Schlueter engaged in periodic conversation
with a guest at his table whom he called Theo. A medium-sized man
with black hair brushed straight back, Theo was the code name for Gunther
Gustav Rumrich, one of the slickest and most productive Nazi spies in the
United States.
Rumrich was
born in Chicago, where his father, Alphonse, had been secretary of the
Austro-Hungarian consulate. When Gunther was two years old, his father
was transferred to a post in Bremen, Germany, and the boy grew up in a
Europe ravaged by the Great War. At age eighteen he learned that
because of his birth in Chicago, he was an American citizen. So on
September 28, 1929, he arrived by ship in New York City to seek his fortune.
A curious mixture
of shiftlessness, arrogance, cunning, and brilliance, Rumrich drifted from
job to job around the country, including a hitch in the peacetime U.S.
Army. Discharged from the service in 1936, he came to New York City
and was recruited as an agent by the Abwehr, the German intelligence agency.
Finally Rumrich had found his calling: he could live by his brains without
having to exert much energy.
When Adolf Hitler
had begun rearming Germany in the mid-1930s, he concluded that the United
States, with its gigantic industrial potential, would be the "decisive
factor" in any future war. So his secret intelligence service in
the years ahead clandestinely established in America the most massive espionage
penetration of a major power that history had known.
In the late 1930s,
the United States was a spy's paradise. No single federal agency
was charged with fighting subversive activities, so spies roamed at will.
Security at military installations was almost nonexistent. When one
U.S. general commanding a large post in the East was asked what steps he
had taken to guard against espionage, he said with a snort, "Don't you
think I'd know it if there was a Nazi spy running around here?"
Now, amid the
hubbub of the New Year's festivities at Cafe Hindenburg, Orstgruppenfuhrer
Schlueter took Gunther Rumrich into a side room and handed him his new
assignment: he was to obtain detailed intelligence about secret research
that scientists with the Signal Corps were conducting at Fort Monmouth,
New Jersey. Reputedly, these experiments involved techniques
for detecting aircraft at night, in fog, and through thick clouds-a process
that later would be known as radar.
Neither Schlueter
nor Rumrich knew that German scientists in Berlin had secretly been making
great progress in developing radar, so any information on the topic extracted
from the American camp would be of enormous benefit. Already the
international scientific coterie had become convinced that radar would
play a decisive role in any future war.
A few days later,
Rumrich crossed the Hudson River and drove up to the main gate at Fort
Monmouth, where supposedly top-secret experiments were being conducted.
A bored sentry simply waved the Nazi spy through the entrance and went
back to reading a comic book.
Rumrich, a friendly,
engaging fellow, meandered around the post unchallenged, striking up conversations
with army officers and scientists alike. He had no trouble locating
the site of the secret experiments: he had merely asked a captain where
the radar tests were taking place.
Rumrich continued
his sleuthing at Fort Monmouth in the days ahead, and he was able to collect
an enormous amount of intelligence on radar research and experiments.
Moreover, he obtained information on other secret tests: infrared detection,
and an antiaircraft detector for searchlight control and automatic gun
sighting.
When Karl Schlueter
returned to New York City on Europa a month later, Rumrich handed him a
thick packet of scientific intelligence he had collected at Fort Monmouth.
Schlueter was delighted and handed over a present from the spymasters in
Germany: a one-hundred-dollar bill, more money than Rumrich had made in
an entire year as a soldier in the U.S. Army.2