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The code talkers were native American from the Navajo tribe. They used their native language to send messages that the Japanese couldn't decode or understand.
They spoke Navajo in messages in the Pacific theater in WW2. The Japanese couldn't decode the messages so they were very important.
You could be talking about the Navajo Indians or British Intelligence / Bletchley Park.
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Code talkers were Navajo Indians used in WWII. What the Navajo did was they developed a special code inside of the Navajo language to disguise what items they were talking about. Only trained code talkers could understand what they were saying. The language and codes that they made up were so complex that not even other Navajos' could understand. They did this mainly because instead of sending long coded messages that took up to an hour to decode, the Navajo's could send a message in 40 seconds via radio. This way it was more quicker and reliable to send messages.
It began with trying to decode german messages in WWII.
The code-talkers [or wind talkers] were all speakers of the same Navajo dialect who served as radio communicators in WWII. No-one could intercept and decode their secret messages,not the Germans or the allies either. they saved countless American lives.
Because they were patriots, had a warrior tradition and were good Americans. __________________________________________________ The U.S. military wanted the help of Navajo Code Talkers because their language was sophisticated and was a good candidate for coding messages without the Japanese being able to crack it easily.
visit director d; he'll give you a message decoder kit.
Navajo "Code-Talkers" provided their native language in radio communications in the Pacific which the Japanese could not decode because they were unfamiliar with the Navajo language .
The codes that were made using Navajo language to encode English word was useful because it enabled the US military to direct attacks against the Japanese in real time over open radios. It worked largely because Navajo had not been internationally described. The code itself was a fairly simple alphabet substitution code. Navajo is very very different than Japanese or English and many of the sounds are almost impossible for a Japanese speaker. The Navajo could speak it rapidly and decode it without using a code book or machine. It is thought that it was essential to many of the successes in the war in the Pacific.
The Colossus was created to decode encrypted messages from Germany during World War Two using the infamous "Enigma" machine. For full rundown see Simon Singh's "The Code Book".