The Japanese never broke the Navajo Code Talkers code. We Americans and other allied forces would like to thank the Navajo tribe and other tribes for allowing us to use their patriotic American Natives and for the use of their languages. We know it was a major part of the victory of the Allied Forces and in World War 1, the Korean War and in the Vietnamese War. Thanks for using answers com and wikianswers.
Wind Talkers.
A lot of code talkers were killed off because when the Japanese saw them in the planes, they would kill the code talkers right away because the code talkers were the main source of communication.
The code talkers of WWII were from the Navajo tribe. Navajo has no alphabet or symbols, and is spoken only on the Navajo lands of the American Southwest. One estimate indicates that less than 30 non-Navajos, none of them Japanese, could understand the language at the outbreak of World War II. The idea to use Navajo for secure communications came from Philip Johnston, the son of a missionary to the Navajos.
Few people know that before the Navajo code talkers, there were Choctaw code talkers. They were a group of fourteen Choctaws employed by the Army during WWI to transmit information safely. They played a big role in the final defeat of the Germans. Then, again during world war II, they were used along with other tribes such as the Commanche, Kiowa and Seminole as well as the Navajo code talkers.
The Navajo "Code Talkers" spoke in their native language and could not be understood by any enemy that were listening to their conversations .
The Navajo and 11 Hopi soldiers used the the easiest of the Navajo language, to help America defeat the Japanese.
Navajo is a very difficult language and impossible for the Japanese to decipher
through radio transformation of catching them off guard on the radio.
Navajo , which is a Native American language that is unwritten . Members of the Navajo Tribe were used during the second World War primarily in the Pacific Theatre to frustrate Japanese Intelligence Services .The Navajo Code Talkers , as they were known , were able to communicate with each other concerning military matters that would have benefited the Japanese had they known what the Navajo code meant .
No code talkers were captured. There was a Navajo man who was captured by the Japanese in the Bataan Death March group. They interrogated him. He could not give them the code because he had not been trained in the code. He may have been able to figure it out if they Japanese had not tortured him.
They were the "Wind Talkers". They worked in communications in the Pacific. Because they used their native language, the Japanese could not break their code as they did with our other codes.
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Wind Talkers.
The Navajo Code Talkers were people who used a spoken code in the Navajo language to communicate between US units on the battlefield in the Pacific Theater of War during World War 2.
code talkers
The navajo were stationed in 29 nine palms for a while then were transported to the san diego marine corp base during world war two.urah
The code-talkers of World War II mostly refer to the Native Americans who used parts of their indigenous languages to translate secret tactical messages into code, then decipher the code back into the message. They were used in the Pacific Theater of World War II, and, to a lesser extent, in the European Theater. The most decorated Native American code-talkers were Navajo, but Native Americans of the Comanche and Meskwaki people also served as code-talkers during the war.