STEPHEN BUDIANSKY was the national security correspondent and foreign editor of U.S. News & World Report, Washington editor of Nature, and editor of World War II magazine. He is the author of six books of military and intelligence history, including Blackett’s War, a Washington Post Notable Book. He has served as a Congressional Fellow, he frequently lectures on intelligence and military history, and his articles have appeared in The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, The Atlantic, The Economist, and other publications. He is a member of the editorial board of Cryptologia, the leading academic journal of codes, codebreaking, and cryptologic history.
One of the Wall Street Journal's Top Ten Nonfiction
Books of the year
A Washington Post Notable Book
“This is a balanced, authoritative portrait of an institution in
which brilliant innovation in mathematics, computing and technology
has coexisted with gross invasions of societal privacy.”
—Nature
“Budiansky ably guides readers through the technical details of
code breaking and the bureaucratic wrangling that so often bedevils
intelligence work.” —Foreign Affairs
“Admirable.... The NSA became a vast and powerful intelligence
agency in the digital age. This book illuminates the early years.”
—Washington Post
“An exciting...account of the National Security Agency’s efforts to
discover the Soviet Union’s secrets.” —Wall Street Journal
“The dysfunctions and overreach of the total surveillance state
were present at its birth, according to this engrossing history of
the National Security Administration. Journalist Budiansky traces
the development of American signals intelligence... [and] is lucid
in describing the science and art of breaking complex ciphers,
which helped drive advances in electronics and computing… Budiansky
leavens the history and technology with colorful profiles of
crytographers and spies; the results is a lively account of how
today’s information controversies emerged.”
—Publishers Weekly
“A skillful history of America's World War II code-breaking and the
rise of the National Security Agency.” —Kirkus
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