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The German Naval Intelligence Service (German: Marinenachrichtendienst [MND]) was the naval intelligence department of the Germany Navy and had a long history, going back to the naval aspirations of German emperor Wilhelm II in 1899. [1] The department had various names throughout its existence.
Naval Intelligence Service (N, MND) (German: Marinenachrichtendienst, also Nachrichten-Abteilung): Intelligence department of the Imperial German Navy. Department IIIb (German: Abteilung III b): Military intelligence of the German General Staff of Imperial Germany. Nazi Germany. Foreign Armies East (German: Abteilung Fremde Heere Ost).
The B-Dienst (German: Beobachtungsdienst, observation service), also called xB-Dienst, X-B-Dienst and χB-Dienst, [1] was a Department of the German Naval Intelligence Service (German: Marinenachrichtendienst, MND III) of the OKM that dealt with the interception and recording, decoding and analysis of the enemy.
L: air intelligence M: naval intelligence T/lw: technical air intelligence Wi: economic intelligence Attached to Abwehr I. was Gruppe I-T for technical intelligence. Initially Abwehr I-K was a technical research unit, a small fraction the size of its British counterpart, Britain's Bletchley Park. Its importance later grew during the war to ...
Barbara Quevâtre said memories of her work in naval intelligence during WW2 stay with her 80 years on [BBC] A Guernsey woman serving as a Wren in World War Two unknowingly intercepted messages ...
The Nachrichten-Abteilung, also known as N, was the naval intelligence department of the German Imperial Admiralty Staff or Admiralstab between 1901 and 1919. It focused its efforts on France, the United States and above all the United Kingdom, whose Royal Navy was Germany's principal rival for naval supremacy.
The Type 424 fleet service ship is a new class of three signals intelligence (SIGINT/ELINT) and reconnaissance ships for the German Navy.Officially designated as "fleet service ships", they will replace the Oste class, which has been in service since the late 1980s.
The country’s security agencies have warned of an increased threat from Chinese intelligence services. Kiel houses one of the German navy’s three flotillas and a dry dock where Thyssenkrupp ...