I love your information Lewis, but could you get your wife/partner to do the voice- overs? Sounding like Gary Nevillle dropping off a 36 hour speed rush is just... well crap actually and detracts from the research you conducted. Most international readers would have no idea of the GN remark anyway, but you get it... Boost your ratings = cash Lewis! 😊
Yes because Gary Neville has hardly been a success has he? He's amassed a fortune on and off the pitch, noted to be worth in excess of 20 million quid a man who continues to make a very nice addition to this sum by using his voice? It's always the people who make no content who say stuff like this.
In 2002, I was deployed in Kosovo as part of the NATO mission. To pass the time, I brought my Ten Tec RX-320 and spent hours scanning between bands. One night, I stumbled upon a female voice with a vaguely British accent reading letters in the standard phonetic alphabet. As the chief of plans operations and security for Area Support Group Falcon, I recorded the transmission on a mini-CD and checked in with the G2 of the MNB-East headquarters, which was led by the British. However, he had no idea what it meant and assured me that a British number station wouldn't have a British-sounding voice reading the code. He even suggested it could be the Mossad. Listening to your recordings, I realized that the transmission sounded almost exactly the same. The voice would interject administrative instructions like "Message begins" or "Message repeats." It later dawned on me that Kosovo was a hub of spying activity at that time, which made this experience one of the most surreal moments I had during my time in the Army. It was strange to realize that there was a secret and clandestine world operating around us while I listened to this peculiar transmission in a Seahut.
Strange clandestine world!? Of course there is! This week the pentagon leak revealed Mossad participation in the attempt to oust their prime minister while the cia attempting a color revolution in Israel! Heads up there’s one going on here!
Awesome story. It is almost surreal. The world of espionage is all around us. Even in civvy street. To wit, back when I was doing my articles I had to collect files from another attorney's office. Him and I shot the shit for a bit but I noticed he had a ton of cccp militaria in his office which struck me as peculiar. Months later I can't remember how I came across it, but this guy had picture posted of him shaking hands with RU officials like ambassadors or attachés etc and I have no doubt over the years that he had some connection to them.
Very informative video of the MOSSAD message stations. One thing to point out which I observed in its final years of transmission on short wave. They were constantly targeted by jamming presumed to be from Iran. The most common type I noticed was the bubble type jammer which was also used to target other stations from outside Iran transmitting in the national Farsi language. I think the constant jamming was too much for the recipients to get a clear signal for decoding messages which might be why the shortwave transmissions eventually ended.
About 20 years ago I was sitting at home in my quiet apartment, had my computer off but speakers were still on. About 4am local time a very faint message starts going through my speakers, was able to make it a little louder by turning up the volume. Something about a guy had just arrived in town and was on his way to drop something off. Then another guy came on and said come on by right now. It was as if something in the frequency of my speakers had intercepted a radio transmission from the mob. Never had anything strange like that happen since and its something I wont forget. This video kinda reminds me of that.
Strong radio frquency nearby will often get into powered computer speakers. I'm guessing it would've been someone right near you in your apartment building. Happens to me frequently when I transmit hf radio signals. I even had a paper shredder with an automatic feature that would be activated by strong rf signals from my radio getting onto the shredder circuit.
It's called audio circuit rectification. A portion of the amplifying transistor acts as a diode detector and the speaker wire as an antenna tuned to the length of the wire. As state below, the signal would have to be quite close, certainly within a few hundred feet at most.
@@Superacerc Ha, what you typed reminded me of the Nokia-era mobile phones, and just how much "DOODOO-DOO DOODOO-DOO DRRRRRRR" noise they could shove out of most electronic devices with a speaker, sometimes even if the speakers themselves were turned to the lowest volume setting..
@AcuraLvR 82 @@joelashdod7712 I used to hear Deutsche Welle in Russian in winter afternoons on my Modecom PC speakers muted. They had a very strong signal on 7145 kHz, and that's what the speakers were picking up. Off shortwave. To be clear, I'm in Poland, relatively close to Polish-Belarusian border, and I believe the transmitter was in Germany (Wertachtal?).
I was at Ft. Bragg in the mid 90s. I have a small table top shortwave radio and I heard a similar voice to E10. The difference was the group contained a numeral and was an EXTREMELY strong signal. IIRC, "Kilo Papa Alpha Two" was often and strong.
Fascinating subject, I have a small SW Radio, haven’t listened in a minute, but this so cool to me. The Cold War spy operations were just awesome to hear how it was operated, and what they had to do to receive messages in a phone booth, a dead rat, etc. They had to drive in a maze in a city to make sure that they weren’t followed. Just awesome!
Possibly one of the most famous stations, of course, after Wilco used the "Yankee Hotel Foxtrot" transmission in the song "Poor Places," and as the inspiration for the title of the album.
Excellent video, Lewis, that is some fascinating stuff! I didn't even know Mossad was in the numbers game, but I guess why wouldn't they be? You're making me want to start scanning the bands again, cheers!
I would venture that false-starting the message some minutes before the planned time may have been a way to wake-up any operative that might have dozed off while waiting for his assignment.
I enjoy your content on a regular basis, so thanks very much! could you perhaps do a video explanation of the differences and reasons for using suppressed carriers vs the opposite and modulation methods and so on? I know there's always Wikipedia, but that's way too technical in many ways. anyway, thanks 😊
As a former IDF soldier, I have many friends who have worked on collecting information from foreign number stations during SIGINT operations on a Beechcraft type aircraft. They don’t know anything about E05 but they were military intelligence and not Mossad.
Hey I've asked before but Ill do it one more time. Can you make a video outlining the basics of getting into radio like tips and equipment for someone on a budget?
I think most Mossad messages could actually be rashei teivot (1st letter of each word in a phrase) using NATO alphabet. Hebrew uses it a lot. It can get quite confusing as it is in Hebrew, and can get even worse if you take it to Latin script.
Isnt it the Mossad antenna located in Sarona Complex? Im just throwing the guess since i go past it almost everyday. If not i would still like you to talk about it once
This brought back memories of listening to my Globe Patrol shortwave set or my Realistic DX400 in the 70s and 80s. I live near DC, and I’m very sure I heard this station way back in the day.
Someone already asked this in a post. If they are not using these "number stations" now how are they communicating? Also, in the old days, I went to Washington, D.C. and noticed that many embassies had antennaes and microwave antennaes up on their roofs. Now, there is nothing up on those roofs that I can see from Google. Are they communicating by a hidden method or by satellite uplink? Someone please answer. I am very curious. Thank you.
I imagine most of what used to be done by numbers stations is done on the Internet these days. Probably not even using secret squirrel stuff like Tor - there are a million ways field agents could receive one-way communications by knowing which line to read on some completely innocuous website somewhere that's maintained by Mossad or whatever relevant agency they work for.
There are now so many ways of communicating these messages that SW seems extremely archaic and expensive. Interesting that 2006 coincided with the increasing popularity of Skype and other voice services where it would be trivial to leave recordings of encoded messages to be accessed via telephony or computer-based communication services
WhatsApp, Signal, TOR, custom VPN and a live OS. Take your pick of any two and you have what the NSA call (according to the Snowden leaks) a "near total loss of ability" to be monitored. Even if you do want to go the old radio route, SDR means you can listen in from your smartphone, no need for any big fancy antenna or radio equipment that makes you stick out.
@@TheCptES So then, let us say that the American Embassy in Moscow wants to communicate with the State Department in Washington, D.C. They are essentially communicating by encrypted email servers. I can't imagine they use TOR or WhatsApp! I think that is unbelievable. In the old days you would see these spy movies and the embassy was sending messages by Telex terminals. Can anyone direct me to a video which shows how they communicate. Thanks!
Text Text. That is what I copied. Also, many of the lower frequency schedules were intended for local countries. Lebanon, Syria, Iran, Egypt, and the Saini desert. Spent thousands of hours when living in The Buffer Zones recording and analyzing the signals. Troop movements and ships traveling up the Suez were of great interest to Israel and others.
Used to hear these all the time in the early 90's when I was in England. I'd be tuning around and often hear the lady with "Ooniform, leema, Xray" or "Yankee, hotel fokestrot."
Wow, E10 was the 1st numbers station I've ever found on shortwave! You could only imagine how spooky it was to stumble upon that lady reading strange "codewords" on & on 😆 Certainly their H3E/CUSB modulation helped 😉 I do remember a few of their identifiers but very few frequencies sadly. I know ULX was on 4880 kHz, colliding with SW Radio Africa which beamed to Zimbabwe in late 2000s, and there even was a period it was jammed with a cacophonous 8-note music sample. Unfortunately my searches on that jammer never resulted in any recordings of that jammer 😢 although there were articles about VOA broadcasts to Zimbabwe also suffering from jamming. Another E10 frequency I remember was 7540 kHz. This one collided with one of Firedrake frequencies deployed against Radio Free Asia Mandarin Chinese service. There was a time I used to listen to Firedrake a lot, just didn't know other shortwave radio enthusiasts were calling it Firedrake... By the way, the 2 after the ID normally indicated NO message was to follow - as opposed to what you said in the video. The ID would've been repeated twice every couple of seconds from 5 minutes to TOH/BOH to maybe a minute to, and if there was no 2 in that ID, this callup would resume at TOH/BOH, this time repeating the ID continuously, until a message began. At least that's how I remember these things 😉 I'm surely missing E10. It made the SW bands so much spookier, more interesting, and, well... more addictive 😅
I think that a "number station" has a peculiar problem: it is not fully "lawful" and so it cannot obtain an "exclusive" frequence and so it is necessary to shift frequencies very often and, by doing so, it cannot declare its own name in a jingle ( f. e, "Radio one o one, Radio Montecarlo, RAI radio televisione italiana"). So the broadcasters must find a way to be rapidly identified by a "due" listener, but at the same time without revealing in open form their identity
Maybe all females sound similar broadcasting on numbers stations, but am I alone in thinking this sounds very like the ‘Lost Cosmonaut’ recording made by the Battista brothers in 1961? I know it’s rumoured to be a forgery, and listening to these I am relieved to think that it is so. Any information people have on this subject is greatly appreciated. 🙏
GIven the possibility , already feasible in the '80-ies, of recognizing human voices and connecting them to precise identities (with the risk of abductions and harsh interrogations...) , these radios have been using electronically synthetized voices, more often female because they can be better heard
Wasn't it sharing frequencies with the maritime station 4XZ Haifa Radio ? Just like the French number station using the frequencies of FAV22 morse training station.
Regarding the other topic on accent, what I find funny is your pronunciation of sxedule, instead of my usual hearing of skedule. Btw, sxedule would be a more intuitive pronunciation for a brazilian, because for us, ch sounds exactly as x does.
Yeah that's actually something that's slightly contentious here in the UK! Most people say 'shed-ule' and others say 'sked-ule'. I think the sked- variant is actually an Americanism, but it has crept into some British English speakers' vocabulary. As far as I know, the 'shed' variant is the 'official' British English way to say it.
@@simonmason8582 I've also noticed things like that, and some younger people at my workplace even say 'zee' instead of 'zed' now. A personal pet hate of mine is British people saying 'season' instead of 'series' when referring to a TV series.
@@goose300183 it looks like I kicked a hornet's nest. Also, thanks for reminding me of the shed, something that all radio aficcionados should know, hahaha
E10 is probably best known outside of SWL circles for being sampled on the Wilco album “Yankee Hotel Foxtrot” which obviously gets its name from one of the station identifiers.
Don't even need 10kW for that. In theory, one could do that. People with amateur equipment have intercepted and interfered with russian transmitters operating in or near the amateur bands...
Pgp, deepweb, actually meeting irl,or my favorite hiding a little paper inside their penis and having the other person suck it out and with a series of snowballing until it reaches the right person
If we knew that, they'd be pretty bad at the whole spycraft thing. Realistically, with the rise of smartphones, secure VPN's and Tor you could handle any and all transmissions through the internet. What's more out of place in a house these days, a large FM radio and antenna or a tablet computer? HM01, the Cuban spy station uses digital data transmissions to send out the message (encrypted via OTP) in a plain text document anyone with DIGTRX can download.
@@weedfreer if I'm referring to the actual place Quebec I would pronounce it kwee bek or kwuh bek but the NATO (or ICAO or ITU) phonetic for Q is normally kee bek or keh beck
I think if I was running a spy outfit: 1) I would have some new "number stations" transmitting random nonsense to keep the other guys busily listening in. 2) I would want to hide messages in what seemed to be uninteresting content like radio plays and classical music. 3) I would hire some fake psychics (are there any other kind) and prime them to mention the other guys secret stuff now and then just to weird out the other side a bit.
Unlikely, these messages use one time pads and should never be reused which then gives unbreakable security as long as the receiving agent is not physically compromised.
There is almost nothing that is more secure than a one time pad. It's why numbers stations transmit in the red instead of encrypted. Even computer encryption is more easily cracked than a set of well made one time pads.
yes, the mohel rabbis suck blood from circumsied d🍌ck, known as mezizsh b'peh. there is a video on the net where a rabbi explains the importance thereof, i've seen that video yeaes ago and havent forgotten my breakfast comming back up.
no there is a very very big error here : austria always cooperated with the CIA and the Mossad and the french number station of the HnA in austria was very probable a numbber station sent from austria exklusivve for the mossad. the mossad did have numberstation sent from sender fleckendorf near ansfelden upper austria... these number stations miss in your video" !!! but veryy good video what is presented in the video.. bti the austria mossad coopperatiion on number stations misses !
I love your information Lewis, but could you get your wife/partner to do the voice- overs? Sounding like Gary Nevillle dropping off a 36 hour speed rush is just... well crap actually and detracts from the research you conducted. Most international readers would have no idea of the GN remark anyway, but you get it... Boost your ratings = cash Lewis! 😊
What a shame….
How entitled can you get Colin? It's his channel, his work, and his voice. Pin of shame
Seriously? His narration is very clear and understandable.
Yes because Gary Neville has hardly been a success has he? He's amassed a fortune on and off the pitch, noted to be worth in excess of 20 million quid a man who continues to make a very nice addition to this sum by using his voice?
It's always the people who make no content who say stuff like this.
oh no, Colin can't take this..call the whaaambulance at once!
In 2002, I was deployed in Kosovo as part of the NATO mission. To pass the time, I brought my Ten Tec RX-320 and spent hours scanning between bands. One night, I stumbled upon a female voice with a vaguely British accent reading letters in the standard phonetic alphabet. As the chief of plans operations and security for Area Support Group Falcon, I recorded the transmission on a mini-CD and checked in with the G2 of the MNB-East headquarters, which was led by the British. However, he had no idea what it meant and assured me that a British number station wouldn't have a British-sounding voice reading the code. He even suggested it could be the Mossad. Listening to your recordings, I realized that the transmission sounded almost exactly the same. The voice would interject administrative instructions like "Message begins" or "Message repeats." It later dawned on me that Kosovo was a hub of spying activity at that time, which made this experience one of the most surreal moments I had during my time in the Army. It was strange to realize that there was a secret and clandestine world operating around us while I listened to this peculiar transmission in a Seahut.
Cool story. But I'd argue with that guy; the Lincolnshire Poacher as far as I know always had a lady speaking in a British accent.
Strange clandestine world!? Of course there is! This week the pentagon leak revealed Mossad participation in the attempt to oust their prime minister while the cia attempting a color revolution in Israel! Heads up there’s one going on here!
Very cool. Goes to show that you never know what you might pick up flipping through these shortwave bands.
It's what I love about radio, you don't know what you're going to get.
Awesome story. It is almost surreal. The world of espionage is all around us. Even in civvy street.
To wit, back when I was doing my articles I had to collect files from another attorney's office. Him and I shot the shit for a bit but I noticed he had a ton of cccp militaria in his office which struck me as peculiar. Months later I can't remember how I came across it, but this guy had picture posted of him shaking hands with RU officials like ambassadors or attachés etc and I have no doubt over the years that he had some connection to them.
This is my favorite numbers station of all time!
Test, test? More like Text, text in my ears. Love your work!
Very informative video of the MOSSAD message stations. One thing to point out which I observed in its final years of transmission on short wave. They were constantly targeted by jamming presumed to be from Iran. The most common type I noticed was the bubble type jammer which was also used to target other stations from outside Iran transmitting in the national Farsi language. I think the constant jamming was too much for the recipients to get a clear signal for decoding messages which might be why the shortwave transmissions eventually ended.
Morse cod is much better to withstand jamming but it required some skills.
@@sergeygalayda2931
I prefer Morse cod with chips, plus plenty of salt and vinegar.
Wonder if that was the time Fordo was "disintegrated"?
Just a little pet peeve of mine but it's Mossad not MOSSAD. Mossad is not an acronym like CIA or MI6 it's just the first word in their full name.
Rare Iran W
About 20 years ago I was sitting at home in my quiet apartment, had my computer off but speakers were still on. About 4am local time a very faint message starts going through my speakers, was able to make it a little louder by turning up the volume. Something about a guy had just arrived in town and was on his way to drop something off. Then another guy came on and said come on by right now. It was as if something in the frequency of my speakers had intercepted a radio transmission from the mob. Never had anything strange like that happen since and its something I wont forget. This video kinda reminds me of that.
Strong radio frquency nearby will often get into powered computer speakers. I'm guessing it would've been someone right near you in your apartment building. Happens to me frequently when I transmit hf radio signals. I even had a paper shredder with an automatic feature that would be activated by strong rf signals from my radio getting onto the shredder circuit.
It's called audio circuit rectification. A portion of the amplifying transistor acts as a diode detector and the speaker wire as an antenna tuned to the length of the wire. As state below, the signal would have to be quite close, certainly within a few hundred feet at most.
@@Superacerc
Ha, what you typed reminded me of the Nokia-era mobile phones, and just how much "DOODOO-DOO DOODOO-DOO DRRRRRRR" noise they could shove out of most electronic devices with a speaker, sometimes even if the speakers themselves were turned to the lowest volume setting..
@AcuraLvR 82 @@joelashdod7712 I used to hear Deutsche Welle in Russian in winter afternoons on my Modecom PC speakers muted. They had a very strong signal on 7145 kHz, and that's what the speakers were picking up. Off shortwave. To be clear, I'm in Poland, relatively close to Polish-Belarusian border, and I believe the transmitter was in Germany (Wertachtal?).
Hey you think that’s weird, my dad used to wonder why we were getting what appeared to be soviet radio coming through the TV speaker 🤷🏻♀️
Lewis, I love your work!! I'm from Michigan. You started my path to getting my tech license. I love the accent and don't ever change!!
Take tech and general at the same time. Most find general test easier and general opens the world to you.
Thats is the cutest sounding numbers station I've ever heard.
I was at Ft. Bragg in the mid 90s. I have a small table top shortwave radio and I heard a similar voice to E10. The difference was the group contained a numeral and was an EXTREMELY strong signal. IIRC, "Kilo Papa Alpha Two" was often and strong.
Fascinating subject, I have a small SW Radio, haven’t listened in a minute, but this so cool to me. The Cold War spy operations were just awesome to hear how it was operated, and what they had to do to receive messages in a phone booth, a dead rat, etc. They had to drive in a maze in a city to make sure that they weren’t followed. Just awesome!
Possibly one of the most famous stations, of course, after Wilco used the "Yankee Hotel Foxtrot" transmission in the song "Poor Places," and as the inspiration for the title of the album.
Goodnight, and thank you.
Never forget the USS Liberty and the brave men and women who served on it.
🫡
Yep, and the people in the twin towers.
Im glad this is here
Well done. Used to hear them a lot in the 1980's and 1990's...
fascintating as ever - thoroughly enjoy these videos !
Excellent video, Lewis, that is some fascinating stuff! I didn't even know Mossad was in the numbers game, but I guess why wouldn't they be? You're making me want to start scanning the bands again, cheers!
Thank you for the video. Are there still many numbers stations to day? From Kristian in Denmark
Plenty Kristian, check the link the description :)
@@RingwayManchester thank you. I really love secret stuff 👍
I would venture that false-starting the message some minutes before the planned time may have been a way to wake-up any operative that might have dozed off while waiting for his assignment.
Never had the pleasure of catching this one.cheers lewis
Fascinating! Nice Job. Thanks.
I enjoy your content on a regular basis, so thanks very much! could you perhaps do a video explanation of the differences and reasons for using suppressed carriers vs the opposite and modulation methods and so on? I know there's always Wikipedia, but that's way too technical in many ways. anyway, thanks 😊
As a former IDF soldier, I have many friends who have worked on collecting information from foreign number stations during SIGINT operations on a Beechcraft type aircraft. They don’t know anything about E05 but they were military intelligence and not Mossad.
The very first numbers station I heard, late one night on a Vega radio.
Hey I've asked before but Ill do it one more time. Can you make a video outlining the basics of getting into radio like tips and equipment for someone on a budget?
I think most Mossad messages could actually be rashei teivot (1st letter of each word in a phrase) using NATO alphabet. Hebrew uses it a lot. It can get quite confusing as it is in Hebrew, and can get even worse if you take it to Latin script.
what a great video, thanks for the research on this its really informative.
Interesting. I recently heard a number station around 10 mhz. I found out later it was in Cuba. H10 I think.
Isnt it the Mossad antenna located in Sarona Complex? Im just throwing the guess since i go past it almost everyday. If not i would still like you to talk about it once
The central part, yes. The extended "arms" were dismantled as they were simply too big.
This brought back memories of listening to my Globe Patrol shortwave set or my Realistic DX400 in the 70s and 80s. I live near DC, and I’m very sure I heard this station way back in the day.
Someone already asked this in a post. If they are not using these "number stations" now how are they communicating? Also, in the old days, I went to Washington, D.C. and noticed that many embassies had antennaes and microwave antennaes up on their roofs. Now, there is nothing up on those roofs that I can see from Google. Are they communicating by a hidden method or by satellite uplink? Someone please answer. I am very curious. Thank you.
I imagine most of what used to be done by numbers stations is done on the Internet these days. Probably not even using secret squirrel stuff like Tor - there are a million ways field agents could receive one-way communications by knowing which line to read on some completely innocuous website somewhere that's maintained by Mossad or whatever relevant agency they work for.
There are now so many ways of communicating these messages that SW seems extremely archaic and expensive. Interesting that 2006 coincided with the increasing popularity of Skype and other voice services where it would be trivial to leave recordings of encoded messages to be accessed via telephony or computer-based communication services
WhatsApp, Signal, TOR, custom VPN and a live OS. Take your pick of any two and you have what the NSA call (according to the Snowden leaks) a "near total loss of ability" to be monitored. Even if you do want to go the old radio route, SDR means you can listen in from your smartphone, no need for any big fancy antenna or radio equipment that makes you stick out.
The antennas on the embassy were to intercept telephone conversations
@@TheCptES So then, let us say that the American Embassy in Moscow wants to communicate with the State Department in Washington, D.C. They are essentially communicating by encrypted email servers. I can't imagine they use TOR or WhatsApp! I think that is unbelievable. In the old days you would see these spy movies and the embassy was sending messages by Telex terminals. Can anyone direct me to a video which shows how they communicate. Thanks!
Interesting different format of numbers station. I love that with goodnight message.
After the group count, the YL says "text text".
Text Text. That is what I copied. Also, many of the lower frequency schedules were intended for local countries. Lebanon, Syria, Iran, Egypt, and the Saini desert. Spent thousands of hours when living in The Buffer Zones recording and analyzing the signals. Troop movements and ships traveling up the Suez were of great interest to Israel and others.
You are correct. It is "text" and not "test." I have been following and monitoring these transmissions for decades.
Nice research, thanks again
New to short wave listening. Are there any go to books and resources to learn about the history short wave, its application and culture?
Fascinating stuff.
Used to hear these all the time in the early 90's when I was in England. I'd be tuning around and often hear the lady with "Ooniform, leema, Xray" or "Yankee, hotel fokestrot."
Wow, E10 was the 1st numbers station I've ever found on shortwave! You could only imagine how spooky it was to stumble upon that lady reading strange "codewords" on & on 😆 Certainly their H3E/CUSB modulation helped 😉
I do remember a few of their identifiers but very few frequencies sadly. I know ULX was on 4880 kHz, colliding with SW Radio Africa which beamed to Zimbabwe in late 2000s, and there even was a period it was jammed with a cacophonous 8-note music sample. Unfortunately my searches on that jammer never resulted in any recordings of that jammer 😢 although there were articles about VOA broadcasts to Zimbabwe also suffering from jamming.
Another E10 frequency I remember was 7540 kHz. This one collided with one of Firedrake frequencies deployed against Radio Free Asia Mandarin Chinese service. There was a time I used to listen to Firedrake a lot, just didn't know other shortwave radio enthusiasts were calling it Firedrake...
By the way, the 2 after the ID normally indicated NO message was to follow - as opposed to what you said in the video. The ID would've been repeated twice every couple of seconds from 5 minutes to TOH/BOH to maybe a minute to, and if there was no 2 in that ID, this callup would resume at TOH/BOH, this time repeating the ID continuously, until a message began. At least that's how I remember these things 😉
I'm surely missing E10. It made the SW bands so much spookier, more interesting, and, well... more addictive 😅
Record the DTMF and then play it back
Your videos are always super interesting even though I can do nothing with the info.
I think that a "number station" has a peculiar problem: it is not fully "lawful" and so it cannot obtain an "exclusive" frequence and so it is necessary to shift frequencies very often and, by doing so, it cannot declare its own name in a jingle ( f. e, "Radio one o one, Radio Montecarlo, RAI radio televisione italiana"). So the broadcasters must find a way to be rapidly identified by a "due" listener, but at the same time without revealing in open form their identity
Maybe all females sound similar broadcasting on numbers stations, but am I alone in thinking this sounds very like the ‘Lost Cosmonaut’ recording made by the Battista brothers in 1961?
I know it’s rumoured to be a forgery, and listening to these I am relieved to think that it is so.
Any information people have on this subject is greatly appreciated. 🙏
GIven the possibility , already feasible in the '80-ies, of recognizing human voices and connecting them to precise identities (with the risk of abductions and harsh interrogations...) , these radios have been using electronically synthetized voices, more often female because they can be better heard
@@simonecanepa721 Interesting. Thankyou.
They know! Shut it down! *stereotype cartoon goes here*
Look up OPERATION TALPIOT.
Best commemt yet.
ruclips.net/video/iKVcUx08pTQ/видео.html
Wasn't it sharing frequencies with the maritime station 4XZ Haifa Radio ?
Just like the French number station using the frequencies of FAV22 morse training station.
Regarding the other topic on accent, what I find funny is your pronunciation of sxedule, instead of my usual hearing of skedule.
Btw, sxedule would be a more intuitive pronunciation for a brazilian, because for us, ch sounds exactly as x does.
Yeah that's actually something that's slightly contentious here in the UK! Most people say 'shed-ule' and others say 'sked-ule'. I think the sked- variant is actually an Americanism, but it has crept into some British English speakers' vocabulary. As far as I know, the 'shed' variant is the 'official' British English way to say it.
@@goose300183 "Harassment" has gone American as well as "schedule", sadly.
@@simonmason8582 I've also noticed things like that, and some younger people at my workplace even say 'zee' instead of 'zed' now. A personal pet hate of mine is British people saying 'season' instead of 'series' when referring to a TV series.
@@goose300183 it looks like I kicked a hornet's nest.
Also, thanks for reminding me of the shed, something that all radio aficcionados should know, hahaha
I believe it was GBS who said "two countries divided by a common language" - one of the differences of English v American.
E10 is probably best known outside of SWL circles for being sampled on the Wilco album “Yankee Hotel Foxtrot” which obviously gets its name from one of the station identifiers.
I guess, the message GOODNIGHT was meant to notify the recipients, the station is going down.
But it continued for 2 months after
@@RingwayManchester I'm guessing that the mossad is a terrorist group like isis
@@RingwayManchester They might have switched to another media, like encrypted emails, and left the station for a backup.
Are you familiar with Unit 8200?
No Christopher
@@RingwayManchester are you familiar with NSO Group and Pegasus Spyware? Or Robert Maxwell, Mossad, and "Promise" software? There's more!
Is IT possible that the goodnight was sent by an amateur with a 10kW SW?
Lol
Hahaha
Don't even need 10kW for that. In theory, one could do that. People with amateur equipment have intercepted and interfered with russian transmitters operating in or near the amateur bands...
Thanks RM. Great Information Again. Take Care****
@RingwayManchester >>> FWIW: I do not have a true _"bucket list."_
That said, I would love to visit Israel sometime during my remaining years...👍
Hey Lewis, are hams keeping an eye open for E10 and company with everything that's happening right now in israel? Greetings!
Great series, very enjoyable. One correction here: Israel’s capital is Jerusalem.
Is that what Thay told you
I thought Jerusalem was the capital of Palestine
@@damienconnor2370 should check your facts, there is no such sovereign state that goes by that name nor was there ever one (nor will there ever be)
no it is tel aviv
Illegally!!!!
thx
I've heard this station!
"Novem-beer"... (burrrrp!)
Love how they spell that
I challenge you to investigate the "stingray" listening devices discovered in 2017-18 near the United States White House in Washington, D.C., USA.
So… not a deadhand for the space laser?
Am I the only one thinking:
THATS EVE!!!
Wall-E must have a station to!!
So if all these number stations have gone how do they communicate now ?
Pgp, deepweb, actually meeting irl,or my favorite hiding a little paper inside their penis and having the other person suck it out and with a series of snowballing until it reaches the right person
If we knew that, they'd be pretty bad at the whole spycraft thing.
Realistically, with the rise of smartphones, secure VPN's and Tor you could handle any and all transmissions through the internet. What's more out of place in a house these days, a large FM radio and antenna or a tablet computer?
HM01, the Cuban spy station uses digital data transmissions to send out the message (encrypted via OTP) in a plain text document anyone with DIGTRX can download.
Interesting they use kwee-bek rather than Key-bek
But, that's how it's meant to be said though?
Which other way you know of to say it...and from where, in which country?
🤔
@@weedfreer if I'm referring to the actual place Quebec I would pronounce it kwee bek or kwuh bek but the NATO (or ICAO or ITU) phonetic for Q is normally kee bek or keh beck
American and Canadian military often say KAY-BEK
Any Quebec pronunciation is better than Q Cuba. Yes, I once had a dispatcher use that.
I think if I was running a spy outfit:
1) I would have some new "number stations" transmitting random nonsense to keep the other guys busily listening in.
2) I would want to hide messages in what seemed to be uninteresting content like radio plays and classical music.
3) I would hire some fake psychics (are there any other kind) and prime them to mention the other guys secret stuff now and then just to weird out the other side a bit.
שלום
Fascinating!! DE 4X5WB,Israel.
Was there any messeges ever cracked/decoded by outsiders?
Yes - once said GOODNIGHT in plaintext. ruclips.net/video/z-gtit50bms/видео.html
Unlikely, these messages use one time pads and should never be reused which then gives unbreakable security as long as the receiving agent is not physically compromised.
@@BrianMorrison Which is why AES-256 is superior
@@MrCarGuy Rubber hose cryptanalysis always wins when someone's pain threshold is exceeded.
I guess thath LIMA LIMA word says thath group 1 and 3 call us by Landline and I guess ODRBTFAB means they are asking where about and their location
dude wrote about the same per letter to the numberstation I work at...
Turn on any Hollywood movie or television programming or hip hop radio channel for messages from Mossad
Yes
Should have got Cote de Pablo for the dictation!
By Way of Deception
There is almost nothing that is more secure than a one time pad. It's why numbers stations transmit in the red instead of encrypted.
Even computer encryption is more easily cracked than a set of well made one time pads.
The xor cipher is similar to a one time pad, if the key is as long as the message it cannot be cracked, ever
Alpha Romeo Tango 1 Charlie 2 Oscar 3 Oscar 4 Lima 5 Charlie 6 Hotel 7 Alpha 8 November 9 November 10 Echo 11 Lima
So what is used today...twitter should be a good place
Indeed, and you can OTP emojis and all sorts of other characters
novembier
Why would they broadcast in English and not Hebrew?
I’d guess that with like many intelligence agencies, spies etc may not all have been Israeli. Plus broadcasting in Hebrew would indicate the source.
@@RingwayManchester yes indeed.
Many spy stations use English and automated voices. It helps disguise the source.
@@RingwayManchester It's pretty easy to triangulate the source. Broadcasting in Hebrew would add a layer of obfuscation.
These messages should be sent in the voice of Jackie Mason.
Does it have a 'The'? I thought it was just called 'MOSSAD'
Yes it does
@@RingwayManchester I was impressed with the use of the definite article, and also the correct plural form of Syan. Well done!
Very interesting!
She pronounced "three" wrong, it should be "tree" in phonetic alphabet.
This why they shouldn't let girls in the army!
No, it's thrEE in phonetic alphabet. Yes, with the capital letters
@@maikelfeskens9322 It's "Tree, Foh-Wer, Fife"
LP records spin at dirty-tree & a turd.
German number stations use some substitutes for clarity. Noyyun = Neun, Zvo = Zwei, Funnuf = Funf, and Nul for Zero.
Are there any numbers stations (or other oddities) that operate currently, or is this strictly something from a bygone era? 🤔
👍👍👍👍👍👍
shut it down :P
Oy vey, Sir! The G0y1m know.
Quick fact: Israel’s capitol is Jerusalem…
Wow, 11 months yet no angry Palestine supporters. That's what I call an achievement.
Is this like the CIA for Israel ?
Exactly
Yeah but M-squad are HECTIC.
01:00 Are you sure that's the capital of Israel?
Yerushalaim (Jerusalem) 🇮🇱
You've already pissed off the fcc, are you determined to get assassinated 😅
Great video! Just one nit: Israel's capital is Jerusalem, not Tel Aviv.
Jerusalem is the capital of Palestine
YHF
YF6
E10….
DEEZ NUTS
Mossad? Talking about mossad is like talking about Clintons.......people go missing. Hope your "will" is up to date. hahaha. 😆
It's almost the end of Passover time.
Everyone is totally fed up with Matzo.
The agents will be itching to go...
Funny that Trump never did anything about the Clintons 🤔
Alright, so can someone tell me what a metzitzah b'peh is
It's what makes your 3 inches become 2.
yes, the mohel rabbis suck blood from circumsied d🍌ck, known as mezizsh b'peh. there is a video on the net where a rabbi explains the importance thereof, i've seen that video yeaes ago and havent forgotten my breakfast comming back up.
He plays on the wing for Athletic Madrid
Sickness and perversion that shouldn't be legal in any sane country.
its what adds an additional 2 zeros to your bank account
Jerusalem is the CAPITAL city., not Tel Aviv.
Remember when Israel attacked a US Navy ship "by accident"?
And when they 'accidentally' attacked the twin towers by proxy
Nah man, they were just there to “document the event”
@@JEJAK5396 lmao, dancing Israelis
@@MattyEngland Just Movers and Shakers. Nothing to see, get back to your Corn Syrup, Netflix, and Debauchery.
Lol these were not real transmission they were there to waste time.
Sloppy job, Mossad.
no there is a very very big error here : austria always cooperated with the CIA and the Mossad and the french number station of the HnA in austria was very probable a numbber station sent from austria exklusivve for the mossad. the mossad did have numberstation sent from sender fleckendorf near ansfelden upper austria... these number stations miss in your video" !!! but veryy good video what is presented in the video.. bti the austria mossad coopperatiion on number stations misses !
What’s the name of the French number station?
Hmmm there’s no evidence to suggest it was Mossad run, except speculation… it was determined to be Austrian
Jerusalem is the capital of Israel.
You’re right Simon my mistake
And the world apparently
@@RingwayManchester Not to worry - the BBC thinks the capital of Netherlands is The Hague!
Tel-Aviv was the capital at the time of those transmissions.
*palestine
Just for the record, the capital of Israel is Jerusalem, not Tel Aviv.
Jerusalem is the capital. Not Tel-Aviv.
Great video. Only thing I have to say is: FREE PALESTINE.