Timothy C. May says:
An interesting article by Seymour Hersh is cited below. It says that NSA had transcripts of the 1991 coup plotters (and presumably other Russian leaders) and that Bush passed these on to Yeltsin to warn him.
If true, a serious compromise of NSA's listening capabilities.
If true, it is seriously disturbing. The KGB is presumably the only entity on earth with cryptography expertise in the range of the NSAs. The notion that in spite of the advances of the last twenty years it is still possible for a few years technical lead to make that much of a difference likely means that what we don't know about conventional cryptosystems is likely still extremely important. I had been running on the assumption for a while that the NSA was slowly losing its capacity to break codes as ones with inherently better and better theoretical underpinnings arrived. If the story is true, it means that the NSA can break some classes of conventional cryptosystems very fast -- fast enough to be of use in this case, for instance. We are all very dependent on things like MD5 and IDEA, which may or may not actually be secure. We should bear this in mind. Perry