There were 29 original Navajo code talkers and about 300 who learned and used the code in WWII. There were also Seminole, Meskwaki, Basque, Comanche code talkers in the European theater of combat. In WWI there were Choctaw and Cherokee who used their languages to make a code.
Most of the Navajo Code Talkers served in the best military branch, The United States Marines. A few served in the Army but not many.
nooo i dont know the answer
As of late 2007, there are less than a handful of the original code talkers left but there are reported to be about 70 living from the 400 or so code talkers who were eventually employed by the government.
Navajo Code Talkers
the general of the marines recruited them poo
Some Navajo were drafted but the Code Talkers were volunteers.
One.
wind talkers
There are 29 chapters and 240 pages in Code 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 movie you're looking for is "Code Talkers," starring Nicolas Cage. It features Code Talkers during the WWII Battle of Saipan.
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.
Most of the Navajo Code Talkers served in the best military branch, The United States Marines. A few served in the Army but not many.
It is not known exactly how many of the Native American code talkers perished in World War II but most of them survived. They are mostly dead now from old age.
500
400-500
Code Talkers were specially trained in the art of code talking in the language of the Navajo people. As I understand it, most were of Navajo descent but not all.