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Official development blog for the PARANOIA roleplaying game. No description is available at your security clearance. The Computer is your friend.

Saturday, October 18, 2008

Bomb-sniffing dry cleaner 

Via Jason Kottke (who nabbed the link from security consultant Bruce Schneier), a jaw-dropping Washington Post story (October 5, 2008) by Tom Ricks about the British government's successful efforts to track IRA terrorists using bomb-sniffing dry cleaners.
One of the most interesting operations was the laundry mat [sic]. Having lost many troops and civilians to bombings, the Brits decided they needed to determine who was making the bombs and where they were being manufactured. One bright fellow recommended they operate a laundry, and when asked "what the hell he was talking about," he explained the plan, and it was incorporated -- to much success.

The plan was simple: Build a laundry and staff it with locals and a few of their own. The laundry would then send out "color coded" special discount tickets, to the effect of "get two loads for the price of one," etc. The color coding was matched to specific streets and thus when someone brought in their laundry, it was easy to determine the general location from which a city map was coded.

While the laundry was indeed being washed, pressed and dry cleaned, it had one additional cycle -- every garment, sheet, glove, pair of pants, was first sent through an analyzer, located in the basement, that checked for bomb-making residue. The analyzer was disguised as just another piece of the laundry equipment; good OPSEC [operational security]. Within a few weeks, multiple positives had shown up, indicating the ingredients of bomb residue, and intelligence had determined which areas of the city were involved. To narrow their target list, [the laundry] simply sent out more specific coupons [numbered] to all houses in the area, and before long they had good addresses. After confirming addresses, authorities with the SAS teams swooped down on the multiple homes and arrested multiple personnel and confiscated numerous assembled bombs, weapons and ingredients. During the entire operation, no one was injured or killed. [...]

The Israelis have a term for this type of thinking, "Embracing the Meshugganah," which literally translated means, embrace the craziness, because the crazier the plan, the less likely the adversary will have thought about it, and thus, not have implemented a counter-measure.

Boy, no kidding. When Warren Spector and I wrote the early PARANOIA adventure Send in the Clones (reprinted in Flashbacks), we included a whimsical battle in a replica of an Old Reckoning laundromat. I guess we thought a laundromat was just inherently funny. If we'd Embraced the Meshugganah, maybe we'd have seen the brilliant intelligence-gathering possibilities in dry cleaning.

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