Cryptologic Hall of Honor

The Cryptologic Hall of Honor was created in 1999 to pay special tribute to the pioneers and heroes who rendered distinguished service to American cryptology.

The standards are high for induction into this great hall. The individuals honored were innovators over their entire careers or made major contributions to the structure and processes of American cryptology. The men and women who have been inducted to the Cryptologic Hall of Honor are all greats in the once silent world of cryptology.

In the early days of America's cryptologic effort, many of the "giants" did both Signals Intelligence and Information Assurance. They made important contributions to both offensive and defensive cryptology. As such, they were among the first inducted into the Cryptologic Hall of Honor. 

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Lester K. Myers, 2020 Hall of Honor inductee
Lester K. Myers
By | Dec. 15, 2020
About Lester K. Myers, former NSA Senior Language Analyst, mentor, and 2020 Hall of Honor inductee.

Dr. Whitfield Diffie, 2020 Hall of Honor inductee
Dr. Whitfield Diffie
By | Dec. 15, 2020
About Dr. Whitfield Diffie, computer security pioneer and 2020 Hall of Honor inductee.

Barbara A. McNamara, 2020 Hall of Honor inductee
Barbara A. McNamara
By | Dec. 15, 2020
About Barbara A. McNamara, former NSA Executive Assistant to the Director, former NSA representative to the Department of Defense, former Deputy Director NSA, and 2020 Hall of Honor inductee.

Dr. David Kahn, 2020 Hall of Honor inductee
Dr. David Kahn
By | Dec. 15, 2020
About Dr. David Kahn, Journalist, Author, former NSA Scholar-in-Residence, and 2020 Hall of Honor inductee.

George R. Cotter 2020 Hall of Honor inductee
George R. Cotter
By | Dec. 15, 2020
About George R. Cotter, former NSA Chief of Staff, NSA Chief Scientist, and 2020 Hall of Honor inductee.

Dr. Richard A. Leibler

2002 Hall of Honor Inductee

Dr. Richard Leibler's contributions to mathematical practice and theory were crucial to America's national security. His technical knowledge and managerial abilities helped transform an NSA-related "think tank" into an institution that kept NSA in the forefront of mathematical and cryptologic capability in the 1960s and 1970s.

Richard Leibler was born in March 1914. He received his A.M. in mathematics from Northwestern University and his Ph.D. from the University of Illinois in 1939. After a short stint in teaching, he entered the Navy in World War II - as an aviation ordnance officer, he saw action on carriers in the Iwo Jima and Okinawa invasions. After the war, he worked for the Department of the Navy and in private industry, and he spent a year at the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton University.

Dr. Leibler came to NSA in 1953, with assignment to the Research and Development Organization. In the early years, he joined pioneer computer scientists in developing programs and practical applications for newly developed computers. Some of his theoretical work enabled NSA cryptolinguists to solve previously unexploitable Soviet espionage messages in the project codenamed VENONA. Working together, Dr. Solomon Kullback and Dr. Leibler devised a new method of measuring similarity between populations; this statistical function bears their names and is still widely used.

In 1957, Dr. Leibler became chief of the Mathematical Research Division in R&D.

In 1958, Dr. Leibler was appointed Deputy Director of the Communications Research Division (CRD) of the Institute for Defense Analysis at Princeton and became CRD's director in 1962.

CRD had been founded as an NSA-related "think tank" for mathematics and cryptology as the result of a presidential study, but initially it was given little to do by NSA.

Dr. Leibler, using knowledge and contacts gained during his years in R&D, successfully lobbied NSA for important research projects to be sent to CRD. Under his guidance, CRD successfully solved "real world" questions, and it took on the challenge of theoretical exercises in advanced mathematical problems.

The practical and theoretical work done under his direction at CRD was a crucial factor in maintaining mathematical and cryptologic excellence at NSA for at least the following two decades.

Dr. Leibler returned to NSA in 1977 to head the Office of Research in the Research and Engineering Organization, and he retired in 1980. The Exceptional Civilian Service Award presented at his retirement noted that his accomplishments were of the "highest order" and "profoundly influenced" cryptologic research for three decades.

Dr. Leibler passed away 25 October 2003.


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