Alan Cowell, A Bird Skeleton, a Code, and, Maybe, a Top Secret NYTimes (Nov. 1, 2012):
It kept its secret for decades. It perished in the process. It died,
experts say, a valiant death, most likely on a hush-hush mission over
wartime France, and was then, like so many others, forgotten.
But now, decades after the final flight of military carrier pigeon
40TW194, the bird’s secret message has become a matter of state and the
grist of headlines. After a concerted campaign by pigeon fanciers, the
encrypted message, which had been folded into a scarlet capsule on the
pigeon’s leg, has now been sent to Britain’s top-secret GCHQ listening post and decoding department outside Gloucester to the west of London.
[snip, snip]
The tale of 40TW194 speaks to many themes — among them, animal heroism.
The Dickin Medal, Britain’s highest decoration for animal valor, has
been awarded to 64 feathered, furry or four-legged creatures, including
32 pigeons, since 1943, making birds the bravest of the brave. They
include an American pigeon called G.I. Joe, or Pigeon USA43SC6390,
which, according to its citation, “brought a message which arrived just
in time to save the lives of at least 100 Allied soldiers from being
bombed by their own planes.”
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