Footnote [15]:
This was my first time when I started getting interested in global telecommunication
networks. I learned that the telex system from Sidney, Australia went to
Hong Kong, to Singapore, to India, to London, and then to New York across
the Atlantic. I then wondered why it did not come from Sidney to the West
Coast of the U.S. across the Pacific and then to New York. I further learned
later that the global telex system was mostly laid out by Cable & Wireless
Company of the Great Britain for their colonial governance, e.g., Hong Kong
as a hub of telex in Far Eastern Asia, instead of Japan. This was why Kokusai
Denshin Denwa (KDD), Japanese overseas telecommunication authority, considered
Cable & Wireless in Hong Kong as their arch-rival for their desire to
make Tokyo as the financial center in Asia. This rivalry was one of the
factors when I tried to extend the U.S. packet-switching network to Japan
-- more later.
According to The New York Times a few years ago, Kaiser of Germany sent a telex message to the German Embassy in Washington, D.C. as soon as the World War I started, saying that if Mexico would ally with Germany and if Germany would win the war, Mexico could have their old territories of California, Arizona, New Mexico, and a part of Texas. The telex was eavesdropped by British in London. However, British could not send it directly to President Wilson with fear of infringing privacy of telecommunication. British forged it as if it was found at the German Embassy in Mexico City, and submitted to President Wilson.
This incidence showed how important global telecommunication system
is, especially for international affairs.