Find the word definition

Wikipedia
B-Dienst

The B-Dienst (German:Beobachtungsdienst, English:observation service), also called xB-Dienst, X-B-Dienst and χB-Dienst was a Department of the Naval Intelligence Service (German:Marinenachrichtendienst) (MND III) of the OKM, that dealt with the interception and recording, decoding and analysis of the enemy, in particular British radio communications before and during World War II. B-Dienst dealt with the cryptanalysis and de-ciphering of enemy and neutral states message traffic and security control of Kriegsmarine key processes and machinery.

"The ultimate goal of all evaluation was recognizing the opponents goal by pro-active identification of data."

B-Dienst was instrumental in molding Wehrmacht forces operations during the Battles of Norway and France in the spring of 1940, primarily due to the cryptanalysis successes it had achieved against early and less secure British Naval Cyphers.

B-Dienst broke British Naval Combined Cypher No. 3 in October 1941, which was used to encrypt all communications between naval personnel, for Allied North Atlantic convoys, providing intelligence for the Battle of the Atlantic, until the British Admiralty introduced Naval Cypher No. 5 on 10 June 1943 and became effectively secure with the introduction of the stencil subtractor system on January 1944.