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A pair of rare Enigma machines used in the Spanish Civil War has been
given to the head of GCHQ, Britain's communications intelligence
agency. The machines - only recently discovered in Spain - fill in a
missing chapter in the history of British code-breaking, paving the
way for crucial successes in World War II.
...

The story of how these machines on the table in Spain helped pave the
way for Britain's historic wartime achievement is largely unknown.

A non-commissioned officer found the machines almost by chance, only a
few years ago, in a secret room at the Spanish Ministry of Defence in
Madrid.

"Nobody entered there because it was very secret," says Felix Sanz,
the director of Spain's intelligence service.

"And one day somebody said 'Well if it is so secret, perhaps there is
something secret inside.' They entered and saw a small office where
all the encryption was produced during not only the civil war but in
the years right afterwards."

Inside were around two dozen historic Enigma machines.
...
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