code talkers
Wind Talkers.
The idea to use the Navajo language as a code during World War II was proposed by Philip Johnston, a World War I veteran and the son of a missionary who worked with the Navajo people. Johnston recognized that the Navajo language was complex and unwritten, making it an ideal choice for secure military communications. He suggested using Navajo speakers as code talkers, leading to the recruitment of many Navajo Marines who developed a code based on their language that was never broken by enemy forces.
If there is, no one knows it. Navajo is a unknown language used in the world war.
They were young Navajo men from the Navajo tribe in the United States recruited to learn the Navajo code and conduct radio communications on the war front.
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.
The Navajo language was used as a secret code during World War II because it is a complex and unwritten language that was not known to the enemy. The U.S. military recruited Navajo speakers, known as "code talkers," to create and transmit messages that could not be easily decoded by Japanese forces. This utilization of the Navajo language provided secure communication on the battlefield and played a crucial role in several key operations, contributing significantly to the success of the U.S. military efforts in the Pacific Theater.
NAVAJO
indians
They were called "wind talkers" or simply code talkers. They took advantage of the fact that Navajo was a spoken language that practically no one outside the tribe was fluent in. Messages sent in Navajo or other language codes presented another level of difficulty to anyone trying to break the code.
Navajo is a very difficult language and impossible for the Japanese to decipher
destroyer
The Navajo and 11 Hopi soldiers used the the easiest of the Navajo language, to help America defeat the Japanese.