Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - Numbers Stations
Episode Date: February 19, 2024If you ever stay up at night scanning through frequencies on shortwave radio, there is a good chance you might come across something very odd and kind of creepy. You will find a station that is noth...ing but a disembodied voice reading off a seemingly random string of numbers. There is often an identifying sound or song which is played on a regular basis before another recital of numbers. These stations have no call signs or other identifying information, and no one has ever publicly claimed responsibility for them. Learn more about numbers stations, what they are, and how they work on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors BetterHelp Visit BetterHelp.com/everywhere today to get 10% off your first month ButcherBox Sign up today at butcherbox.com/daily and use code daily to choose your free steak for a year and get $20 off." Subscribe to the podcast! https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Peter Bennett & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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If you ever stay up at night, scanning through frequencies on a shortwave radio,
there's a good chance you might come across something very odd and kind of creepy.
You'll find a station that is nothing but a disembodied voice reading off a seemingly
random string of numbers.
There's often an identifying sound or song which is played on a regular basis before another
recital of numbers.
These stations have no call signs or other identifying information, and no one has ever
publicly claimed responsibility for them.
Learn more about numbers stations.
what they are and how they work on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
What if your perceptions about the past were wrong?
ThruLine is a podcast that takes you back in time to uncover the parts of the story that may have gone unnoticed.
It effectively turned day into night.
And how it shaped the world now.
Time travel with us every week on the ThruLine podcast from NPR.
Back in the mid-1990s, I owned a shortwave.
radio that I would sometimes listen to at night.
At the time, before the internet became widespread, shortwave radio was a window into the rest
of the world. Shortwave radio signals can travel vast distances around the world by bouncing
off the earth's ionosphere, especially at night. I could move up and on the dial picking up any
number of stations from around the world broadcasting in different languages. However, every so often,
I came across something that was very weird. I'd find a station that was nothing but somebody reading
numbers, seemingly random numbers. Sometimes there would be a sound or an audio cue that would
break up the numbers before someone started reading them again. Listening to these stations was
really creepy. They seemed to serve no purpose. You'd just listen to someone read numbers over and
over, usually in the middle of the night because that's when you could get a good signal.
So the million dollar question was, and is, what were these numbers stations? The very first thing that
could be construed to be a numbers station appeared during the First World War.
Stations appeared in the shortwave part of the spectrum, broadcasting nothing but numbers in Morse
Code. It was said that Archduke Anton of Austria, who was a child during the war, would often
stay up listening to these stations, copying down what he heard and sending them to the Austrian
Intelligence Service. And here I should explain why these broadcasts were done on shortwave radio
and not on other more popular frequencies. Shortwave radio signals can travel long distances
due to their ability to reflect off the ionosphere,
a layer of the Earth's atmosphere filled with charged particles
located approximately 60 to 250 miles above the surface.
Unlike higher frequency signals such as FM radio,
which typically travel in straight lines
and therefore are limited by the horizon,
shortwave frequencies have the property
of being able to bounce between the ionosphere and the Earth's surface.
The ability of shortwave transmissions to travel so far
is part of the key to understanding why number stations appeared on the shortwave bands and nowhere else.
When World War II began, more number stations started to appear. There weren't a lot of them,
but they just appeared on airwaves and they used voices to read numbers, not just Morse code.
The end of the war saw a reduction in the number of stations, but they came back with a vengeance
during the Cold War. The early 1950s saw an explosion in the number of number stations.
dozens of them sprang up, each which had different identities.
They appeared on different frequencies, they were in different languages, and they had
different sound signatures.
Each station would usually do something to identify it, often a song or a sound clip.
Soon, amateur radio operators began to track and name these number stations, giving them
monikers based on their audio signals.
And it isn't often that I do an episode on an exclusively audio topic, but this is such an
episode. The following is a brief recording of a number station which was dubbed the
Lincolnshire Poacher. The Lincolnshire Poacher got its name from an English folk song it
played at the top of the hour followed by numbers. And here's a clip from the Lincolnshire Poacher
number station which was recorded in 2007 just one year before it went off the air. Other stations
were identified such as the Swedish Rhapsody, the buzzer, Yosemite Sam, the Pip and others. There were
many theories as to what these stations were. One of the more outlandish theories was that one of the
stations was a dead-hand doomsday device set up by the Soviets. In the event that the station were to
ever go off the air, it would somehow trigger a nuclear strike. The idea was rather ridiculous because
putting the fate of the world on a radio station that was subject to atmospheric conditions and
electrical outages doesn't really make sense. Amateur sluice who cataloged and followed these sites
began putting together what these stations were. For starters, none of the stations were identified
or registered as all radio stations are supposed to be. They weren't, effect, pirate radio stations.
However, unlike pirate radio stations, there was no government effort to close any of these stations
down, something which happened all the time with actual pirate radio stations. The regularity
of their broadcasts and the power at which they transmitted meant that a great deal of money had to be
behind them. Nobody was going to spend that sort of money on something with no obvious purpose.
It also turned out that it wasn't too difficult to determine the direction and ultimately the
location of a powerful radio signal. The Lincolnshire Poacher, for example, was determined to have
first been broadcast from Bletchley Park in England, home of British cryptography, and then it was
later moved to a British military base on the island of Cyprus. There were other stations discovered
in other Western countries, including in the United States.
in Australia. It was also possible to tell via the direction of the signal that there were numerous
sites in the Soviet Union, the Eastern Bloc, and Cuba as well. It soon became obvious that these stations
were part of intelligence operations for various countries. When the locations of the transmitters were
discovered, they often were immediately shut down or moved to a new location. So if these stations
are part of intelligence operations, what exactly were they doing? If you remember back to my episode
on cryptography, you can, at least in theory, crack any encryption system.
Very difficult encryption systems developed by the Germans and Japanese were cracked during
World War II. Even very secure digital systems can, in theory, be cracked.
However, there is one type of encryption system that can't even theoretically be cracked.
It's called a one-time pad. A one-time pad is the most secure form of communication possible
because it's completely random.
There is, in effect, no system to crack,
which is why it's uncrackable.
There's no message encoded in the signal which is sent.
However, such a system requires that the sender and receiver
to have a key to understand what the message means.
So long as the sender and the receiver have the same key,
they can confidently send a message publicly
without anybody knowing what the message means.
Let's use the example of this podcast.
Of the many people who listen to this podcast every day,
let's say I wanted to communicate with just a single person somewhere who listens to the show.
Ahead of time, we could agree on a code.
I would select an arbitrary number or even a phrase that if you were to hear it,
would indicate the predetermined message.
If we selected our code carefully enough,
no one would even know that there was a message.
And this is a very simple example.
You could create an elaborate numeric system that could convey very complex messages as well.
If an intelligence service puts agents in the field and needs to send them instructions,
the most secure way to do so is using a one-time pad.
However, the agent has to keep the pad secure, otherwise they would be compromised.
So why then would they use shortwave radio?
In the case of sending messages to agents in the field,
it doesn't matter if an adversary knows where the message is being broadcast from.
I'm sure every country with an intelligence service knows exactly where the numbers
stations originated from. What matters is protecting the agents in the field. A shortwave radio
transmission can be picked up literally anywhere. All that's required to pick up the signal is a cheap
shortwave radio, which can be purchased almost anywhere. I was able to find a shortwave radio
for sale on Amazon for just $10. An adversary would have no idea who listened to the signal
because the signal is available everywhere to everyone. That is what makes the system particularly
ingenious and why so many countries use it. There have been cases of countries who've tried to
jam the frequencies used by number stations, but then they just usually move to other frequencies,
probably to a predetermined frequency in such an event. Despite the very public way number
stations are operated, no intelligence service has ever publicly admitted to having operated one.
Sort of. In 1997, an anonymous source in British intelligence told the London Daily Telegraph
that the stations were not for public consumption and that they are exactly what you think they are.
So they sort of said something without really saying something.
Declassified documents from both the Czech Republic and Sweden have shown that during the Cold War,
Czechoslovakia used number stations for espionage.
Moreover, there was an espionage case in 1998 of a Cuban spy ring that was busted in the United States.
They found a spy that was using a shortwave radio receiver to get messages from a number station,
which was called the Attention Station, based on its sound signal.
The spy was found with a laptop that used a one-time pad to decode the messages.
The Attention case remains the only time a number station was used as evidence in a public espionage case.
When the Cold War ended, the number of numbers stations decreased dramatically.
However, they didn't disappear.
There are still number stations that are broadcasting today.
There are many websites that can help you find and listen to them if you have a radio,
and there are several software radio websites that you can listen to various frequencies in a web browser.
You might be thinking that number stations seem rather antiquated.
Wouldn't it be easier and safer just to communicate online?
And the answer is, not necessarily.
You certainly can communicate safely online with cryptography, even though it theoretically could be cracked.
That, however, isn't the problem.
Even if the communication can't be read, it's possible to identify the recipient.
Every sort of online action involves what's known as an IP address.
Given the resources of a state actor, let's say something like the NSA, it's at least
possible to figure out who received a message and get an idea where they're located.
Even using things like a VPN or Onion routing can still be figured out if you have enough
resources.
However, there's nothing to track with a radio receiver.
The only possible evidence would be catching a person with a radio, and even then, lots of people
have radios.
Number stations remain one of the most open and public secrets in the world.
Anyone can listen to them, but nobody really knows who their intended audiences.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
The associate producers are Peter Bennett and Cameron Kiefer.
Today's review comes from listener Sparkfire on Apple Podcasts in the United States.
They write,
Gary, I can't believe how a podcast can change my life.
Yours has.
My family is tired of hearing what the facts I bring up every day.
Thank you for doing what you do.
Well, thank you, Sparks Fire.
I'm always glad to hear when I make an impact on someone.
However, in your case, I'm hoping that the life change you're referring to isn't the same thing as annoying your family with facts.
Remember, if you leave a review or send me a boostogram, you two can have it read on the show.
