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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsA Mysterious Code Is Being Broadcast on Shortwave Radio. Is It Iran?
The Atlantic. Gift link.
On February 28, the day that bombs started falling on the Islamic Republic, a mans voice began broadcasting in Farsi on a shortwave-radio frequency. He announced himselfTavajjoh! Tavajjoh! (Attention! Attention!)and then read a string of seemingly random numbers. Anyone with a shortwave radio could hear him. But the announcers intended audience was likely no more than a handful of people using a centuries-old system to decipher his otherwise incoherent message.
The eerie and still-unattributed radio transmission came from a numbers station. You dont hear them much anymore. But when the CIA and the KGB needed to communicate with their spies working undercover, such broadcasts were convenient and safe ways to send orders around the world. The intended recipient turns on their radio at a set time to a specific station and writes down the numbers they hear. Using a technique called a one-time pad, they convert each number into a letter, eventually revealing a message. The transmission is out in the open. But if only the sender and the recipient have the padwhich is written down and destroyed immediately after the message is sentonly they can understand the message.
The trackers reported that they heard the numbers clearly in their various locations across Europe and the Middle East. They tried different methods to locate the transmissions origin, without success. We listened for ambient noises that might give us some hint as to who was reading. Some trackers thought they heard a fan blowing. Others said they heard the sound of a Microsoft Windows prompt. Not especially revealing clues, but ones that offered more information than wed had about V32 when the broadcast started. After about 90 minutes, the reader stopped, and we heard only static.
We still dont know whos sending the messages, who theyre meant for, or what they mean. Even the jamming might be an unreliable clue. I found myself wondering if Iranian intelligence broadcast the message and then jammed it to make the Americans and the Israelis think it wasnt them.
https://www.theatlantic.com/national-security/2026/03/asymmetric-warfare-iran-numbers-stations-cyber/686289/?gift=j8JiJIlliWfcdD_mDVMd9xKaluhLQaKRSCuVjEN8rG0
yellow dahlia
(5,586 posts)NewHendoLib
(61,809 posts)You can find recordings of many of them in the web.
TxGuitar
(4,338 posts)So fun to listen to. It's so cool
NewHendoLib
(61,809 posts)John1956PA
(4,919 posts). . .

TxGuitar
(4,338 posts)EX500rider
(12,470 posts)...I dial it in and tune the station
They talk about the u.s. inflation
I understand just a little
No comprende--it's a riddle!
John1956PA
(4,919 posts)2naSalit
(102,097 posts)I lived close to the Mexican border when this came out AND I was lisetning to a radio station that broadcast from Tijuana. 91X! Call letters XTRA - I can still hear it in Spanish.
harumph
(3,209 posts)The shared key must be truly random - but decent randomness can be obtained from the emissions of radioisotopes. A Geiger counter, an Arduino or raspberry pi and a sample of a mildly radioactive element will do. Shared key is as long as the message. Learn more here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/One-time_pad#
Back in the 70's and early 80's I liked to tune into the "numbers stations" from Cuba, Colombia and other SA countries.
Very relaxing.
This smart young man explains how to get your random numbers which is the first step - then move on to the one-time pad article.
We may all need to know this someday.
underpants
(196,080 posts)Ham radio short wave CBs all fascinate me.
Maru Kitteh
(31,618 posts)Okay funny not funny but lets face it . . .
electric_blue68
(26,727 posts)a code leading to co-ordinates.