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Code talker

A code talker was a person employed by the military during wartime to use a little-known language as a means of secret communication. The term is most often used for United States service members during the World Wars who used their knowledge of Native American languages as a basis to transmit coded messages. In particular, there were approximately 400 to 500 Native Americans in the United States Marine Corps whose primary job was to transmit secret tactical messages. Code talkers transmitted messages over military telephone or radio communications nets using formally or informally developed codes built upon their Indigenous languages. The code talkers improved the speed of encryption and decryption of communications in front line operations during World War II and are credited with a number of decisive victories. Their code was never broken.

Choctaw soldiers in training in World War I for coded radio and telephone transmissions

There were two code types used during World War II. Type one codes were formally developed based on the languages of the Comanche, Hopi, Meskwaki, and Navajo peoples. They used words from their languages for each letter of the English alphabet. Messages could be encoded and decoded by using a simple substitution cipher where the ciphertext was the Native language word. Type two code was informal and directly translated from English into the Indigenous language. If there was no corresponding word in the Indigenous language for the military word, code talkers used short, descriptive phrases. For example, the Navajo did not have a word for submarine, so they translated it as iron fish.[1][2]

The term Code Talker was originally coined by the United States Marine Corps and used to identify individuals who completed the special training required to qualify as Code Talkers with their service records indicating "642 – Code Talker" as a duty assignment. Today, the term Code Talker is still strongly associated with the bilingual Navajo speakers trained in the Navajo Code during World War II by the US Marine Corps to serve in all six divisions of the Corps and the Marine Raiders of the Pacific theater. However, the use of Native American communicators pre-dates WWII. Early pioneers of Native American-based communications used by the US Military include the Cherokee, Choctaw and Lakota peoples during World War I.[3] Today the term Code Talker includes military personnel from all Native American communities who have contributed their language skills in service to the United States.

Other Native American communicators—now referred to as code talkers—were deployed by the United States Army during World War II, including Lakota,[4] Meskwaki, Mohawk,[5][6] Comanche, Tlingit,[7] Hopi,[8] Cree, and Crow soldiers; they served in the Pacific, North African, and European theaters.[9]

Languages edit

Assiniboine edit

Native speakers of the Assiniboine language served as code talkers during World War II to encrypt communications.[10] One of these code talkers was Gilbert Horn Sr., who grew up in the Fort Belknap Indian Reservation of Montana and became a tribal judge and politician.[10]

Basque edit

In November 1952, Euzko Deya magazine[11] reported that in May of that year, upon meeting a large number of US Marines of Basque ancestry in a San Francisco camp, Captain Frank D. Carranza had thought of using the Basque language for codes.[12][13][14] His superiors were concerned about risk, as there were known settlements of Basque people in the Pacific region, including: 35 Basque Jesuits in Hiroshima, led by Pedro Arrupe; a colony of Basque jai alai players in China and the Philippines; and Basque supporters of Falange in Asia. Consequently, the US Basque code talkers were not deployed in these theaters, instead being used initially in tests and in transmitting logistics information for Hawaii and Australia.

According to Euzko Deya, on August 1, 1942, Lieutenants Nemesio Aguirre, Fernández Bakaicoa, and Juanana received a Basque-coded message from San Diego for Admiral Chester Nimitz. The message warned Nimitz of Operation Apple to remove the Japanese from the Solomon Islands. They also translated the start date, August 7, for the attack on Guadalcanal. As the war extended over the Pacific, there was a shortage of Basque speakers, and the US military came to prefer the parallel program based on the use of Navajo speakers.

In 2017, Pedro Oiarzabal and Guillermo Tabernilla published a paper refuting Euzko Deya's article.[15] According to Oiarzabal and Tabernilla, they could not find Carranza, Aguirre, Fernández Bakaicoa, or Juanana in the National Archives and Records Administration or US Army archives. They did find a small number of US Marines with Basque surnames, but none of them worked in transmissions. They suggest that Carranza's story was an Office of Strategic Services operation to raise sympathy for US intelligence among Basque nationalists.

Cherokee edit

The first known use of code talkers in the US military was during World War I. Cherokee soldiers of the US 30th Infantry Division fluent in the Cherokee language were assigned to transmit messages while under fire during the Second Battle of the Somme. According to the Division Signal Officer, this took place in September 1918 when their unit was under British command.[16][17]

Choctaw edit

During World War I, company commander Captain Lawrence of the US Army overheard Solomon Louis and Mitchell Bobb having a conversation in Choctaw. Upon further investigation, he found that eight Choctaw men served in the battalion. The Choctaw men in the Army's 36th Infantry Division were trained to use their language in code and helped the American Expeditionary Forces in several battles of the Meuse-Argonne Offensive. On October 26, 1918, the code talkers were pressed into service and the "tide of battle turned within 24 hours ... and within 72 hours the Allies were on full attack."[18][19]

Comanche edit

 
Comanche code talkers of the 4th Signal Company

German authorities knew about the use of code talkers during World War I. Germans sent a team of thirty anthropologists to the United States to learn Native American languages before the outbreak of World War II.[20] However, the task proved too difficult because of the large array of Indigenous languages and dialects. Nonetheless, after learning of the Nazi effort, the US Army opted not to implement a large-scale code talker program in the European theater.

Initially, 17 code talkers were enlisted but three were unable to make the trip across the Atlantic when the unit was finally deployed.[21] A total of 14 code talkers using the Comanche language took part in the Invasion of Normandy and served in the 4th Infantry Division in Europe.[22] Comanche soldiers of the 4th Signal Company compiled a vocabulary of 250 code terms using words and phrases in their own language.[23] Using a substitution method similar to that of the Navajo, the code talkers used descriptive words from the Comanche language for things that did not have translations. For example, the Comanche language code term for tank was turtle, bomber was pregnant bird, machine gun was sewing machine, and Adolf Hitler was crazy white man.[24][25]

Two Comanche code talkers were assigned to each regiment, and the remainder were assigned to the 4th Infantry Division headquarters. Shortly after landing on Utah Beach on June 6, 1944, the Comanche began transmitting messages. Some were wounded but none killed.[24]

In 1989, the French government awarded the Comanche code talkers the Chevalier of the National Order of Merit. On November 30, 1999, the United States Department of Defense presented Charles Chibitty with the Knowlton Award, in recognition of his outstanding intelligence work.[24][26]

Cree edit

In World War II, the Canadian Armed Forces employed First Nations soldiers who spoke the Cree language as code talkers. Owing to oaths of secrecy and official classification through 1963, the role of Cree code talkers were less well-known than their US counterparts and went unacknowledged by the Canadian government.[27] A 2016 documentary, Cree Code Talkers, tells the story of one such Métis individual, Charles "Checker" Tomkins. Tomkins died in 2003, but was interviewed shortly before his death by the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian. While he identified some other Cree code talkers, "Tomkins may have been the last of his comrades to know anything of this secret operation."[28][29]

Hungarian edit

In 2022 during the Russo-Ukrainian War, the Hungarian language is reported to be used by the Ukrainian army to relay operational military information and orders to circumvent being understood by the invading Russian army without the need to encrypt and decipher the messages.[30][31] Ukraine has a sizeable Hungarian population of over 150,000 people, who live mainly in the Kárpátalja (in Hungarian) or Zakarpatska Oblast (in Ukrainian) division of the Ukraine, adjacent to Hungary. As Ukrainian nationals, men of enlistment age are also subject to military service, hence the Ukrainian army has a Hungarian-speaking capability. It's one of the most spoken and official languages of this region in present-day Ukraine. The Hungarian language is not an Indo-European language like the Slavic Ukrainian or Russian, but a Uralic language. For this reason it is distinct and incomprehensible for Russian speakers.

Meskwaki edit

A group of 27 Meskwaki enlisted in the US Army together in January 1941; they comprised 16 percent of Iowa's Meskwaki population. During World War II, the US Army trained eight Meskwaki men to use their native Fox language as code talkers. They were assigned to North Africa. The eight were posthumously awarded the Congressional Gold Medal in 2013; the government gave the awards to representatives of the Meskwaki community.[32][33]

Mohawk edit

Mohawk language code talkers were used during World War II by the United States Army in the Pacific theater. Levi Oakes, a Mohawk code talker born in Canada, was deployed to protect messages being sent by Allied Forces using Kanien'kéha, a Mohawk sub-set language. Oakes died in May 2019; he was the last of the Mohawk code talkers.[34]

Muscogee (Seminole and Creek) edit

The Muscogee language was used as type two code (informal) during World War II by enlisted Seminole and Creek people in the US Army.[35] Tony Palmer, Leslie Richard, Edmund Harjo, and Thomas MacIntosh from the Seminole Nation of Oklahoma and Muscogee (Creek) Nation were recognized under the Code Talkers Recognition Act of 2008.[36] The last survivor of these code talkers, Edmond Harjo of the Seminole Nation of Oklahoma, died on March 31, 2014, at the age of 96. His biography was recounted at the Congressional Gold Medal ceremony honoring Harjo and other code talkers at the US Capitol on November 20, 2013.[37][38][39]

Navajo edit

 
Navajo code talkers, Saipan, June 1944

Philip Johnston, a civil engineer for the city of Los Angeles,[40] proposed the use of the Navajo language to the United States Marine Corps at the beginning of World War II. Johnston, a World War I veteran, was raised on the Navajo reservation as the son of missionaries to the Navajo. He was able to converse in what is called "Trader's Navajo" - a pidgin language. He was among a few non-Navajo who had enough exposure to it to understand some of its nuances. Many Navajo men enlisted shortly after the attack on Pearl Harbor and eagerly contributed to the war effort.

Because Navajo has a complex grammar, it is not mutually intelligible with even its closest relatives within the Na-Dene family to provide meaningful information. At the time, it was still an unwritten language, and Johnston believed Navajo could satisfy the military requirement for an undecipherable code. Its complex syntax and phonology, not to mention its numerous dialects, made it unintelligible to anyone without extensive exposure and training. One estimate indicates that at the outbreak of World War II, fewer than 30 non-Navajo could understand the language.[41]

In early 1942, Johnston met with the commanding general of the Amphibious Corps, Major General Clayton B. Vogel, and his staff. Johnston staged simulated combat conditions which demonstrated that Navajo men could transmit and decode a three-line message in 20 seconds, compared to the 30 minutes it took the machines of the time.[42] The idea of using Navajo speakers as code talkers was accepted; Vogel recommended that the Marines recruit 200 Navajo. However, that recommendation was cut to one-platoon to use as a pilot project to develop and test the feasibility of a code. On May 4, 1942, twenty-nine Navajo men were sworn-into service at an old US Army Fort that had been converted into a BIA Boarding School: Fort Wingate. They were organized as platoon 382. The first 29 Navajo recruits attended boot camp in May 1942. This first group created the Navajo code at Camp Pendleton.[43]

The First Twenty-Nine and the creation of the code edit

One of the key features of the Navajo Code Talkers is that they employed a coded version of their language. Other Navajos who were not trained in the Navajo Code could not decipher the messages being sent.

Platoon 382 was the Marine Corps' first "all-Indian, all-Navajo" Platoon. The members of this platoon would become known as The First Twenty-Nine. Most were recruited from near the Fort Wingate, NM area. The youngest was William Dean Yazzie (aka Dean Wilson) who was only 15 when he was recruited. The oldest was Carl N. Gorman—who with his son, R.C. Gorman, would go on to become an artist of great acclaim and who would design the Code Talkers' logo—at age 35.

Names of the First Twenty-Nine and areas of birth[44]
Code talker's name Area of birth Other notes to service
Samuel Begay Toadlena, AZ
John Brown, Jr Chinle, AZ
Lowell Damon Fort Defiance, AZ
James Dixon Shiprock, NM
Carl Gorman Chinle, AZ
Alfred Leonard Lukachukai, AZ
Johnny Manuelito Sheep Springs, NM
William McCabe Ganado, AZ Purple Heart
Balmer Slowtalker (aka Joe Palmer) Leupp, AZ
Nelson Thompson Leupp, AZ Purple Heart
Benjamin Cleveland Fort Defiance, AZ Purple Heart
Jack Nez Canyon del Muerto, AZ
Oscar Ilthma Lupton, AZ Purple Heart
George Dennison Fort Defiance, AZ
Chester Nez Two Wells, AZ
Roy Begay Black Mountain, AZ
Cozy Brown Chinle, AZ
Eugene Crawford Tohatchi, NM
John Benally Fort Defiance, AZ
Lloyd Oliver Fruitland, NM
John Willie Shonto, AZ
Charlie Begay Tocito, NM Purple Heart
Wilsie Bitsie Rehoboth, NM
Frank Denny Pete Fruitland, NM Purple Heart
John Chee Tocito, NM
Allen Dale June Kaibito, AZ
Harry Tsosie Rough Rock, AZ Purple Heart, KIA
David Curley Phoenix, AZ
Bill Yazzie (aka Dean Wilson) TeecNosPos, AZ

The Navajo code was formally developed and modeled on the Joint Army/Navy Phonetic Alphabet that uses agreed-upon English words to represent letters. Since it was determined that phonetically spelling out all military terms letter by letter into words while in combat would be too time-consuming, some terms, concepts, tactics, and instruments of modern warfare were given uniquely formal descriptive nomenclatures in Navajo. For example, the word for shark referred to a destroyer, while silver oak leaf indicated the rank of lieutenant colonel.[45]

Deployment and evolution of the code and post-war code talkers edit

A codebook was developed to teach the many relevant words and concepts to new initiates. The text was for classroom purposes only and was never to be taken into the field. The code talkers memorized all these variations and practiced their rapid use under stressful conditions during training. Navajo speakers who had not been trained in the code work would have no idea what the code talkers' messages meant; they would hear only truncated and disjointed strings of individual, unrelated nouns and verbs.[46][47]

 
Code Talkers Monument Ocala, Florida Memorial Park

The Navajo code talkers were commended for the skill, speed, and accuracy they demonstrated throughout the war. At the Battle of Iwo Jima, Major Howard Connor, 5th Marine Division signal officer, had six Navajo code talkers working around the clock during the first two days of the battle. These six sent and received over 800 messages, all without error. Connor later said, "Were it not for the Navajos, the Marines would never have taken Iwo Jima."[43]

After incidents where Navajo code talkers were mistaken for ethnic Japanese and were captured by other American soldiers, several were assigned a personal bodyguard whose principal duty was to protect them from their own side. According to Bill Toledo, one of the second group after the original 29, they had a secret secondary duty: if their charge was at risk of being captured, they were to shoot him to protect the code. Fortunately, none was ever called upon to do so.[48][49]

To ensure a consistent use of code terminologies throughout the Pacific theater, representative code talkers of each of the US Marine divisions met in Hawaii to discuss shortcomings in the code, incorporate new terms into the system, and update their codebooks. These representatives, in turn, trained other code talkers who could not attend the meeting. As the war progressed, additional code words were added and incorporated program-wide. In other instances, informal shortcut code words were devised for a particular campaign and not disseminated beyond the area of operation. Examples of code words include the Navajo word for buzzard, jeeshóóʼ, which was used for bomber, while the code word used for submarine, béésh łóóʼ, meant iron fish in Navajo.[50] The last of the original 29 Navajo code talkers who developed the code, Chester Nez, died on June 4, 2014.[51]

Four of the last nine Navajo code talkers used in the military died in 2019: Alfred K. Newman died on January 13, 2019, at the age of 94.[52] On May 10, 2019, Fleming Begaye Sr. died at the age of 97.[53] New Mexico State Senator John Pinto, elected in 1977, died in office on May 24, 2019.[54] William Tully Brown died in June 2019 aged 96.[55] Joe Vandever Sr. died at 96 on January 31, 2020.[56] Samuel Sandoval died on 29 July 2022, at the age of 98.[57][58] Only three remaining members are still living as of 2024, John Kinsel Sr., Thomas H. Begay, and Peter MacDonald.[59]

Some Code Talkers such as Chester Nez and William Dean Yazzie (aka Dean Wilson) continued to serve in the Marine Corps through the Korean War. Rumors of the deployment of the Navajo Code into the Korean War and after have never been proven. The Code remained classified until 1968. The Navajo code is the only spoken military code never to have been deciphered.[45]

Nubian edit

In the 1973 Arab–Israeli War, Egypt employed Nubian-speaking Nubian people as code talkers.[60][61][62][63][64]

Tlingit edit

During World War II, American soldiers used their native Tlingit as a code against Japanese forces. Their actions remained unknown, even after the declassification of code talkers and the publication of the Navajo code talkers. The memory of five deceased Tlingit code talkers was honored by the Alaska legislature in March 2019.[65][66]

Welsh edit

A system employing the Welsh language was used by British forces during World War II, but not to any great extent. In 1942, the Royal Air Force developed a plan to use Welsh for secret communications, but it was never implemented.[67] Welsh was used more recently in the Yugoslav Wars for non-vital messages.[68]

Wenzhounese edit

China used Wenzhounese-speaking people as code talkers during the 1979 Sino-Vietnamese War.[69][70]

Post-war recognition edit

The Navajo code talkers received no recognition until 1968 when their operation was declassified.[71] In 1982, the code talkers were given a Certificate of Recognition by US President Ronald Reagan, who also named August 14, 1982 as Navajo Code Talkers Day.[72][73][74]

On December 21, 2000, President Bill Clinton signed Public Law 106–554, 114 Statute 2763, which awarded the Congressional Gold Medal to the original 29 World War II Navajo code talkers and Silver Medals to each person who qualified as a Navajo code talker (approximately 300). In July 2001, President George W. Bush honored the code talkers by presenting the medals to four surviving original code talkers (the fifth living original code talker was unable to attend) at a ceremony held in the Capitol Rotunda in Washington, DC. Gold medals were presented to the families of the deceased 24 original code talkers.[75][76]

Journalist Patty Talahongva directed and produced a documentary, The Power of Words: Native Languages as Weapons of War, for the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian in 2006, bringing to light the story of Hopi code talkers. In 2011, Arizona established April 23, as an annual recognition day for the Hopi code talkers.[8] The Texas Medal of Valor was awarded posthumously to 18 Choctaw code talkers for their World War II service on September 17, 2007, by the Adjutant General of the State of Texas.[77]

The Code Talkers Recognition Act of 2008 (Public Law 110–420) was signed into law by President George W. Bush on November 15, 2008. The act recognized every Native American code talker who served in the United States military during WWI or WWII (with the exception of the already-awarded Navajo) with a Congressional Gold Medal. The act was designed to be distinct for each tribe, with silver duplicates awarded to the individual code talkers or their next-of-kin.[78] As of 2013, 33 tribes have been identified and been honored at a ceremony at Emancipation Hall at the US Capitol Visitor Center. One surviving code talker was present, Edmond Harjo.[79]

On November 27, 2017, three Navajo code talkers, joined by the President of the Navajo Nation, Russell Begaye, appeared with President Donald Trump in the Oval Office in an official White House ceremony. They were there to "pay tribute to the contributions of the young Native Americans recruited by the United States military to create top-secret coded messages used to communicate during World War II battles."[80] The executive director of the National Congress of American Indians, Jacqueline Pata, noted that Native Americans have "a very high level of participation in the military and veterans' service." A statement by a Navajo Nation Council Delegate and comments by Pata and Begaye, among others, objected to Trump's remarks during the event, including his use "once again ... [of] the word Pocahontas in a negative way towards a political adversary Elizabeth Warren who claims 'Native American heritage'."[80][81][82] The National Congress of American Indians objected to Trump's use of the name Pocahontas, a historical Native American figure, as a derogatory term.[83]

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

External links edit

  • United States. Code Talkers Recognition Act of 2008
  • National Museum of the American Indian exhibition on Code Talkers, entitled Native Words/Native Wisdom
  • Northern Arizona University Cline Library Special Collections Code Talkers exhibition
  • Official website of the Navajo Code talkers
  • Images of gold medals awarded to the participating tribes

code, talker, codetalkers, redirects, here, band, codetalkers, metal, gear, solid, phantom, pain, character, list, characters, metal, gear, series, code, talker, code, talker, person, employed, military, during, wartime, little, known, language, means, secret,. Codetalkers redirects here For the band see The Codetalkers For the Metal Gear Solid V The Phantom Pain character see List of characters in the Metal Gear series Code Talker A code talker was a person employed by the military during wartime to use a little known language as a means of secret communication The term is most often used for United States service members during the World Wars who used their knowledge of Native American languages as a basis to transmit coded messages In particular there were approximately 400 to 500 Native Americans in the United States Marine Corps whose primary job was to transmit secret tactical messages Code talkers transmitted messages over military telephone or radio communications nets using formally or informally developed codes built upon their Indigenous languages The code talkers improved the speed of encryption and decryption of communications in front line operations during World War II and are credited with a number of decisive victories Their code was never broken Choctaw soldiers in training in World War I for coded radio and telephone transmissionsThere were two code types used during World War II Type one codes were formally developed based on the languages of the Comanche Hopi Meskwaki and Navajo peoples They used words from their languages for each letter of the English alphabet Messages could be encoded and decoded by using a simple substitution cipher where the ciphertext was the Native language word Type two code was informal and directly translated from English into the Indigenous language If there was no corresponding word in the Indigenous language for the military word code talkers used short descriptive phrases For example the Navajo did not have a word for submarine so they translated it as iron fish 1 2 The term Code Talker was originally coined by the United States Marine Corps and used to identify individuals who completed the special training required to qualify as Code Talkers with their service records indicating 642 Code Talker as a duty assignment Today the term Code Talker is still strongly associated with the bilingual Navajo speakers trained in the Navajo Code during World War II by the US Marine Corps to serve in all six divisions of the Corps and the Marine Raiders of the Pacific theater However the use of Native American communicators pre dates WWII Early pioneers of Native American based communications used by the US Military include the Cherokee Choctaw and Lakota peoples during World War I 3 Today the term Code Talker includes military personnel from all Native American communities who have contributed their language skills in service to the United States Other Native American communicators now referred to as code talkers were deployed by the United States Army during World War II including Lakota 4 Meskwaki Mohawk 5 6 Comanche Tlingit 7 Hopi 8 Cree and Crow soldiers they served in the Pacific North African and European theaters 9 Contents 1 Languages 1 1 Assiniboine 1 2 Basque 1 3 Cherokee 1 4 Choctaw 1 5 Comanche 1 6 Cree 1 7 Hungarian 1 8 Meskwaki 1 9 Mohawk 1 10 Muscogee Seminole and Creek 1 11 Navajo 1 11 1 The First Twenty Nine and the creation of the code 1 11 2 Deployment and evolution of the code and post war code talkers 1 12 Nubian 1 13 Tlingit 1 14 Welsh 1 15 Wenzhounese 2 Post war recognition 3 See also 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksLanguages editAssiniboine edit Native speakers of the Assiniboine language served as code talkers during World War II to encrypt communications 10 One of these code talkers was Gilbert Horn Sr who grew up in the Fort Belknap Indian Reservation of Montana and became a tribal judge and politician 10 Basque edit In November 1952 Euzko Deya magazine 11 reported that in May of that year upon meeting a large number of US Marines of Basque ancestry in a San Francisco camp Captain Frank D Carranza had thought of using the Basque language for codes 12 13 14 His superiors were concerned about risk as there were known settlements of Basque people in the Pacific region including 35 Basque Jesuits in Hiroshima led by Pedro Arrupe a colony of Basque jai alai players in China and the Philippines and Basque supporters of Falange in Asia Consequently the US Basque code talkers were not deployed in these theaters instead being used initially in tests and in transmitting logistics information for Hawaii and Australia According to Euzko Deya on August 1 1942 Lieutenants Nemesio Aguirre Fernandez Bakaicoa and Juanana received a Basque coded message from San Diego for Admiral Chester Nimitz The message warned Nimitz of Operation Apple to remove the Japanese from the Solomon Islands They also translated the start date August 7 for the attack on Guadalcanal As the war extended over the Pacific there was a shortage of Basque speakers and the US military came to prefer the parallel program based on the use of Navajo speakers In 2017 Pedro Oiarzabal and Guillermo Tabernilla published a paper refuting Euzko Deya s article 15 According to Oiarzabal and Tabernilla they could not find Carranza Aguirre Fernandez Bakaicoa or Juanana in the National Archives and Records Administration or US Army archives They did find a small number of US Marines with Basque surnames but none of them worked in transmissions They suggest that Carranza s story was an Office of Strategic Services operation to raise sympathy for US intelligence among Basque nationalists Cherokee edit The first known use of code talkers in the US military was during World War I Cherokee soldiers of the US 30th Infantry Division fluent in the Cherokee language were assigned to transmit messages while under fire during the Second Battle of the Somme According to the Division Signal Officer this took place in September 1918 when their unit was under British command 16 17 Choctaw edit Main article Choctaw code talkers During World War I company commander Captain Lawrence of the US Army overheard Solomon Louis and Mitchell Bobb having a conversation in Choctaw Upon further investigation he found that eight Choctaw men served in the battalion The Choctaw men in the Army s 36th Infantry Division were trained to use their language in code and helped the American Expeditionary Forces in several battles of the Meuse Argonne Offensive On October 26 1918 the code talkers were pressed into service and the tide of battle turned within 24 hours and within 72 hours the Allies were on full attack 18 19 Comanche edit nbsp Comanche code talkers of the 4th Signal CompanyGerman authorities knew about the use of code talkers during World War I Germans sent a team of thirty anthropologists to the United States to learn Native American languages before the outbreak of World War II 20 However the task proved too difficult because of the large array of Indigenous languages and dialects Nonetheless after learning of the Nazi effort the US Army opted not to implement a large scale code talker program in the European theater Initially 17 code talkers were enlisted but three were unable to make the trip across the Atlantic when the unit was finally deployed 21 A total of 14 code talkers using the Comanche language took part in the Invasion of Normandy and served in the 4th Infantry Division in Europe 22 Comanche soldiers of the 4th Signal Company compiled a vocabulary of 250 code terms using words and phrases in their own language 23 Using a substitution method similar to that of the Navajo the code talkers used descriptive words from the Comanche language for things that did not have translations For example the Comanche language code term for tank was turtle bomber was pregnant bird machine gun was sewing machine and Adolf Hitler was crazy white man 24 25 Two Comanche code talkers were assigned to each regiment and the remainder were assigned to the 4th Infantry Division headquarters Shortly after landing on Utah Beach on June 6 1944 the Comanche began transmitting messages Some were wounded but none killed 24 In 1989 the French government awarded the Comanche code talkers the Chevalier of the National Order of Merit On November 30 1999 the United States Department of Defense presented Charles Chibitty with the Knowlton Award in recognition of his outstanding intelligence work 24 26 Cree edit In World War II the Canadian Armed Forces employed First Nations soldiers who spoke the Cree language as code talkers Owing to oaths of secrecy and official classification through 1963 the role of Cree code talkers were less well known than their US counterparts and went unacknowledged by the Canadian government 27 A 2016 documentary Cree Code Talkers tells the story of one such Metis individual Charles Checker Tomkins Tomkins died in 2003 but was interviewed shortly before his death by the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian While he identified some other Cree code talkers Tomkins may have been the last of his comrades to know anything of this secret operation 28 29 Hungarian edit In 2022 during the Russo Ukrainian War the Hungarian language is reported to be used by the Ukrainian army to relay operational military information and orders to circumvent being understood by the invading Russian army without the need to encrypt and decipher the messages 30 31 Ukraine has a sizeable Hungarian population of over 150 000 people who live mainly in the Karpatalja in Hungarian or Zakarpatska Oblast in Ukrainian division of the Ukraine adjacent to Hungary As Ukrainian nationals men of enlistment age are also subject to military service hence the Ukrainian army has a Hungarian speaking capability It s one of the most spoken and official languages of this region in present day Ukraine The Hungarian language is not an Indo European language like the Slavic Ukrainian or Russian but a Uralic language For this reason it is distinct and incomprehensible for Russian speakers Meskwaki edit A group of 27 Meskwaki enlisted in the US Army together in January 1941 they comprised 16 percent of Iowa s Meskwaki population During World War II the US Army trained eight Meskwaki men to use their native Fox language as code talkers They were assigned to North Africa The eight were posthumously awarded the Congressional Gold Medal in 2013 the government gave the awards to representatives of the Meskwaki community 32 33 Mohawk edit Mohawk language code talkers were used during World War II by the United States Army in the Pacific theater Levi Oakes a Mohawk code talker born in Canada was deployed to protect messages being sent by Allied Forces using Kanien keha a Mohawk sub set language Oakes died in May 2019 he was the last of the Mohawk code talkers 34 Muscogee Seminole and Creek edit The Muscogee language was used as type two code informal during World War II by enlisted Seminole and Creek people in the US Army 35 Tony Palmer Leslie Richard Edmund Harjo and Thomas MacIntosh from the Seminole Nation of Oklahoma and Muscogee Creek Nation were recognized under the Code Talkers Recognition Act of 2008 36 The last survivor of these code talkers Edmond Harjo of the Seminole Nation of Oklahoma died on March 31 2014 at the age of 96 His biography was recounted at the Congressional Gold Medal ceremony honoring Harjo and other code talkers at the US Capitol on November 20 2013 37 38 39 Navajo edit nbsp Navajo code talkers Saipan June 1944Philip Johnston a civil engineer for the city of Los Angeles 40 proposed the use of the Navajo language to the United States Marine Corps at the beginning of World War II Johnston a World War I veteran was raised on the Navajo reservation as the son of missionaries to the Navajo He was able to converse in what is called Trader s Navajo a pidgin language He was among a few non Navajo who had enough exposure to it to understand some of its nuances Many Navajo men enlisted shortly after the attack on Pearl Harbor and eagerly contributed to the war effort Because Navajo has a complex grammar it is not mutually intelligible with even its closest relatives within the Na Dene family to provide meaningful information At the time it was still an unwritten language and Johnston believed Navajo could satisfy the military requirement for an undecipherable code Its complex syntax and phonology not to mention its numerous dialects made it unintelligible to anyone without extensive exposure and training One estimate indicates that at the outbreak of World War II fewer than 30 non Navajo could understand the language 41 In early 1942 Johnston met with the commanding general of the Amphibious Corps Major General Clayton B Vogel and his staff Johnston staged simulated combat conditions which demonstrated that Navajo men could transmit and decode a three line message in 20 seconds compared to the 30 minutes it took the machines of the time 42 The idea of using Navajo speakers as code talkers was accepted Vogel recommended that the Marines recruit 200 Navajo However that recommendation was cut to one platoon to use as a pilot project to develop and test the feasibility of a code On May 4 1942 twenty nine Navajo men were sworn into service at an old US Army Fort that had been converted into a BIA Boarding School Fort Wingate They were organized as platoon 382 The first 29 Navajo recruits attended boot camp in May 1942 This first group created the Navajo code at Camp Pendleton 43 The First Twenty Nine and the creation of the code edit One of the key features of the Navajo Code Talkers is that they employed a coded version of their language Other Navajos who were not trained in the Navajo Code could not decipher the messages being sent Platoon 382 was the Marine Corps first all Indian all Navajo Platoon The members of this platoon would become known as The First Twenty Nine Most were recruited from near the Fort Wingate NM area The youngest was William Dean Yazzie aka Dean Wilson who was only 15 when he was recruited The oldest was Carl N Gorman who with his son R C Gorman would go on to become an artist of great acclaim and who would design the Code Talkers logo at age 35 Names of the First Twenty Nine and areas of birth 44 Code talker s name Area of birth Other notes to serviceSamuel Begay Toadlena AZJohn Brown Jr Chinle AZLowell Damon Fort Defiance AZJames Dixon Shiprock NMCarl Gorman Chinle AZAlfred Leonard Lukachukai AZJohnny Manuelito Sheep Springs NMWilliam McCabe Ganado AZ Purple HeartBalmer Slowtalker aka Joe Palmer Leupp AZNelson Thompson Leupp AZ Purple HeartBenjamin Cleveland Fort Defiance AZ Purple HeartJack Nez Canyon del Muerto AZOscar Ilthma Lupton AZ Purple HeartGeorge Dennison Fort Defiance AZChester Nez Two Wells AZRoy Begay Black Mountain AZCozy Brown Chinle AZEugene Crawford Tohatchi NMJohn Benally Fort Defiance AZLloyd Oliver Fruitland NMJohn Willie Shonto AZCharlie Begay Tocito NM Purple HeartWilsie Bitsie Rehoboth NMFrank Denny Pete Fruitland NM Purple HeartJohn Chee Tocito NMAllen Dale June Kaibito AZHarry Tsosie Rough Rock AZ Purple Heart KIADavid Curley Phoenix AZBill Yazzie aka Dean Wilson TeecNosPos AZThe Navajo code was formally developed and modeled on the Joint Army Navy Phonetic Alphabet that uses agreed upon English words to represent letters Since it was determined that phonetically spelling out all military terms letter by letter into words while in combat would be too time consuming some terms concepts tactics and instruments of modern warfare were given uniquely formal descriptive nomenclatures in Navajo For example the word for shark referred to a destroyer while silver oak leaf indicated the rank of lieutenant colonel 45 Deployment and evolution of the code and post war code talkers edit A codebook was developed to teach the many relevant words and concepts to new initiates The text was for classroom purposes only and was never to be taken into the field The code talkers memorized all these variations and practiced their rapid use under stressful conditions during training Navajo speakers who had not been trained in the code work would have no idea what the code talkers messages meant they would hear only truncated and disjointed strings of individual unrelated nouns and verbs 46 47 nbsp Code Talkers Monument Ocala Florida Memorial ParkThe Navajo code talkers were commended for the skill speed and accuracy they demonstrated throughout the war At the Battle of Iwo Jima Major Howard Connor 5th Marine Division signal officer had six Navajo code talkers working around the clock during the first two days of the battle These six sent and received over 800 messages all without error Connor later said Were it not for the Navajos the Marines would never have taken Iwo Jima 43 After incidents where Navajo code talkers were mistaken for ethnic Japanese and were captured by other American soldiers several were assigned a personal bodyguard whose principal duty was to protect them from their own side According to Bill Toledo one of the second group after the original 29 they had a secret secondary duty if their charge was at risk of being captured they were to shoot him to protect the code Fortunately none was ever called upon to do so 48 49 To ensure a consistent use of code terminologies throughout the Pacific theater representative code talkers of each of the US Marine divisions met in Hawaii to discuss shortcomings in the code incorporate new terms into the system and update their codebooks These representatives in turn trained other code talkers who could not attend the meeting As the war progressed additional code words were added and incorporated program wide In other instances informal shortcut code words were devised for a particular campaign and not disseminated beyond the area of operation Examples of code words include the Navajo word for buzzard jeeshooʼ which was used for bomber while the code word used for submarine beesh looʼ meant iron fish in Navajo 50 The last of the original 29 Navajo code talkers who developed the code Chester Nez died on June 4 2014 51 Four of the last nine Navajo code talkers used in the military died in 2019 Alfred K Newman died on January 13 2019 at the age of 94 52 On May 10 2019 Fleming Begaye Sr died at the age of 97 53 New Mexico State Senator John Pinto elected in 1977 died in office on May 24 2019 54 William Tully Brown died in June 2019 aged 96 55 Joe Vandever Sr died at 96 on January 31 2020 56 Samuel Sandoval died on 29 July 2022 at the age of 98 57 58 Only three remaining members are still living as of 2024 John Kinsel Sr Thomas H Begay and Peter MacDonald 59 Some Code Talkers such as Chester Nez and William Dean Yazzie aka Dean Wilson continued to serve in the Marine Corps through the Korean War Rumors of the deployment of the Navajo Code into the Korean War and after have never been proven The Code remained classified until 1968 The Navajo code is the only spoken military code never to have been deciphered 45 Nubian edit In the 1973 Arab Israeli War Egypt employed Nubian speaking Nubian people as code talkers 60 61 62 63 64 Tlingit edit During World War II American soldiers used their native Tlingit as a code against Japanese forces Their actions remained unknown even after the declassification of code talkers and the publication of the Navajo code talkers The memory of five deceased Tlingit code talkers was honored by the Alaska legislature in March 2019 65 66 Welsh edit A system employing the Welsh language was used by British forces during World War II but not to any great extent In 1942 the Royal Air Force developed a plan to use Welsh for secret communications but it was never implemented 67 Welsh was used more recently in the Yugoslav Wars for non vital messages 68 Wenzhounese edit China used Wenzhounese speaking people as code talkers during the 1979 Sino Vietnamese War 69 70 Post war recognition editThe Navajo code talkers received no recognition until 1968 when their operation was declassified 71 In 1982 the code talkers were given a Certificate of Recognition by US President Ronald Reagan who also named August 14 1982 as Navajo Code Talkers Day 72 73 74 On December 21 2000 President Bill Clinton signed Public Law 106 554 114 Statute 2763 which awarded the Congressional Gold Medal to the original 29 World War II Navajo code talkers and Silver Medals to each person who qualified as a Navajo code talker approximately 300 In July 2001 President George W Bush honored the code talkers by presenting the medals to four surviving original code talkers the fifth living original code talker was unable to attend at a ceremony held in the Capitol Rotunda in Washington DC Gold medals were presented to the families of the deceased 24 original code talkers 75 76 Journalist Patty Talahongva directed and produced a documentary The Power of Words Native Languages as Weapons of War for the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian in 2006 bringing to light the story of Hopi code talkers In 2011 Arizona established April 23 as an annual recognition day for the Hopi code talkers 8 The Texas Medal of Valor was awarded posthumously to 18 Choctaw code talkers for their World War II service on September 17 2007 by the Adjutant General of the State of Texas 77 The Code Talkers Recognition Act of 2008 Public Law 110 420 was signed into law by President George W Bush on November 15 2008 The act recognized every Native American code talker who served in the United States military during WWI or WWII with the exception of the already awarded Navajo with a Congressional Gold Medal The act was designed to be distinct for each tribe with silver duplicates awarded to the individual code talkers or their next of kin 78 As of 2013 33 tribes have been identified and been honored at a ceremony at Emancipation Hall at the US Capitol Visitor Center One surviving code talker was present Edmond Harjo 79 On November 27 2017 three Navajo code talkers joined by the President of the Navajo Nation Russell Begaye appeared with President Donald Trump in the Oval Office in an official White House ceremony They were there to pay tribute to the contributions of the young Native Americans recruited by the United States military to create top secret coded messages used to communicate during World War II battles 80 The executive director of the National Congress of American Indians Jacqueline Pata noted that Native Americans have a very high level of participation in the military and veterans service A statement by a Navajo Nation Council Delegate and comments by Pata and Begaye among others objected to Trump s remarks during the event including his use once again of the word Pocahontas in a negative way towards a political adversary Elizabeth Warren who claims Native American heritage 80 81 82 The National Congress of American Indians objected to Trump s use of the name Pocahontas a historical Native American figure as a derogatory term 83 See also editNative Americans and World War II United States Army Indian Scouts Windtalkers a 2002 American war film on Navajo radio operators in World War IIReferences edit Code Talking Native Words Native Warriors americanindian si edu Archived from the original on January 12 2019 Retrieved January 27 2019 American Indian Code Talkers The National WWII Museum New Orleans Archived from the original on January 27 2019 Retrieved January 27 2019 Kent Jim March 17 2017 Lakota WWI Code Talkers Receive Congressional Gold Medal South Dakota Public Broadcasting Retrieved June 21 2023 Meyer Holly June 18 2010 Last Lakota code talker Clarence Wolf Guts dies at 86 Rapid City Journal Archived from the original on June 23 2010 Deer Ka nhehsi io December 4 2018 Last WWII Mohawk code talker honoured by Assembly of First Nations House of Commons CBC ca Archived from the original on December 8 2018 Retrieved December 7 2018 Mohawk Code Talkers Honored in Washington DC CKON FM November 20 2013 Archived from the original on May 11 2015 Retrieved February 6 2019 D Oro Rachel March 27 2019 Alaska Native servicemen finally honored as Code Talkers Fox News Associated Press Archived from the original on April 22 2019 Retrieved April 21 2019 a b Magahern Jimmy September 2014 Humble Pride Phoenix magazine Phoenix AZ Cities West Media ISSN 1074 1429 Archived from the original on July 31 2019 Retrieved August 1 2019 Lyle Amaani June 28 2015 Word Power How Code Talkers Helped to Win Wars archive defense gov Washington D C U S Department of Defense Archived from the original on September 30 2017 Retrieved August 1 2019 a b Murray David March 29 2016 Decorated war hero code talker Gilbert Horn Sr dies Great Falls Tribune Archived from the original on September 9 2017 Retrieved April 24 2016 En Euzkera se dio la orden del desembarco de Guadalcanal Ramon de Arrieta Euzko Deya La Voz de los Vascos en Mexico 149 November 1952 p 22 Mexico D F Arguello Xabier G August 1 2004 Egon arretaz egunari Stay tuned for the day El Pais in Basque Archived from the original on October 11 2012 La orden de desembarco en Guadalcanal se dio en vascuence para que no lo descubrieran los nipones Juan Hernani El Diario Vasco December 26 1952 it quotes Revista general de marina Bibliographic reference in Euskomedia org Archived May 5 2008 at the Wayback Machine Based on Criptografia Revista General de Marina 143 November 1952 pp 551 552 Ministerio de Marina Madrid Rodriguez Mikel May 2005 Los vascos y la II Guerra Mundial La guerra aerea de los Aldecoa The Basques and World War II The Aldecoa air war euskonews eus in Basque Archived from the original on February 7 2012 Retrieved December 14 2007 Hernandez Jesus J June 25 2017 Un estudio desmiente que el euskera se usara en codigo en la Segunda Guerra Mundial A study denies that Basque was used in code in the Second World War El Correo in Basque Archived from the original on August 29 2017 Stanley Captain John W Personal Experience of a Battalion Commander and Brigade Signal Officer 105th Field Signal Battalion in the Somme Offensive September 29 October 8 1997 U S Army 1932 Cherokee Code Talkers and Allied Success in WWI NC DNCR www ncdcr gov August 21 2016 Archived from the original on July 21 2018 Retrieved July 21 2018 Choctaw Code Talkers of World War II Archived from the original on May 9 2008 Retrieved January 26 2019 Greenspan Jesse World War Ia s Native American Code Talkers History com Archived from the original on January 27 2019 Retrieved January 26 2019 Code Talkers Exhibit NSA gov Archived from the original on January 14 2009 Connole Joseph A Nation Whose Language You Will Not Understand The Comanche Code Talkers of WWII Whispering Wind Magazine March 2012 Vol 40 5 p 24 Comanche Code Talkers Comanche Language amp Cultural Preservation Elgin Oklahoma Comanche Language amp Cultural Preservation Archived from the original on February 8 2019 Retrieved January 26 2019 Connole Joseph A Nation Whose Language You Will Not Understand The Comanche Code Talkers of WWII Whispering Wind Magazine March 2012 Vol 40 5 p 23 a b c Seelinger Matthew J January 28 2015 124th Signal Battalion The Campaign for the National Museum of the United States Army Archived from the original on January 27 2019 Retrieved January 26 2019 Williams Rudi November 8 2002 Last WWII Comanche Code Talker Visits Pentagon Arlington Cemetery American Forces Press Service Archived from the original on September 30 2017 Comanche Code Talker Charles Chibitty Dies Washingtonpost com Archived from the original on November 8 2012 Retrieved March 12 2014 Cree Code Talkers Documentary Explores Role of Canada s Unsung WWII Heroes IndianCountryMediaNetwork com Archived from the original on January 27 2019 Retrieved January 26 2019 About Cree Code Talker Archived from the original on November 7 2017 Retrieved November 4 2017 Scott Peter Cree Code Talkers The Canadian Encyclopedia Archived from the original on January 27 2019 Retrieved January 26 2019 Karpataljai navajok ugy hasznalja az ukran hadsereg a magyarul beszelo katonainak szuperkepesseget mint az amerikaiak a legendas kodbeszelok nyelvtudasat Subcarpathian Navajos the Ukrainian army uses the superpowers of its Hungarian speaking soldiers in the same way that the Americans use the language skills of the legendary code talkers 444 hu in Hungarian Retrieved August 8 2022 Ugorska mova najkrasha dlya shifruvannya na vijni Hungarian is the best for encryption in war www facebook com in Hungarian Retrieved August 8 2022 Last Meskwaki code talker remembers USA Today July 4 2002 Archived from the original on May 5 2008 Retrieved February 13 2008 Lynch James Q November 20 2013 Meskwaki code talkers receive Congressional Gold Medal The Gazette Archived from the original on January 27 2019 Retrieved January 27 2019 Deer Jessica May 29 2019 Louis Levi Oakes last WW II Mohawk code talker dies at 94 CBC News Archived from the original on May 30 2019 Retrieved June 8 2019 Code Talkers The Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture Archived from the original on January 27 2019 Retrieved January 27 2019 An Honor Long Overdue The 2013 Congressional Gold and Silver Medal Ceremonies in Honor of Native American Code Talkers Retrieved January 27 2019 Attocknie Dana April 7 2014 Last living Seminole Code Talker walks on loved ones pay respects honor hero Native American Times Archived from the original on April 27 2014 Retrieved April 27 2014 Seminole code talker Edmond Harjo dies at 96 Tulsa World April 13 2014 Archived from the original on March 11 2017 Retrieved April 27 2014 Peterson Dick November 21 2013 Treasury and Mint Join Congress to Honor Native American Code Talkers United States Department of the Treasury Archived from the original on April 27 2014 Retrieved April 27 2014 Holm Tom 2007 Code Talkers and Warriors Chelsea House Pub ISBN 978 0791093405 Retrieved November 28 2012 Vogel Clayton Johnston Philip Letter to Commandant USMC Demonstration in California 1942 Northern Arizona University Cline Library Archived from the original on July 5 2014 Retrieved July 20 2011 Native Words Native Warriors americanindian si edu Retrieved March 9 2021 a b Navajo Code Talkers World War II Fact Sheet Naval Historical Center September 17 1992 Archived from the original on November 4 2017 Retrieved March 12 2014 Our Fathers Our Grandfathers Our Heroes The Navajo Code Talkers of World War II A Photographic Exhibit Gallup New Mexico Circle of Light Navajo Educational Project 2004 a b Fox Margalit June 5 2014 Chester Nez 93 Dies Navajo Words Washed From Mouth Helped Win War The New York Times Archived from the original on August 5 2014 Retrieved August 4 2014 Durrett Deanne 2009 Unsung Heroes of World War II The Story of the Navajo Code Talkers University of Nebraska Press p 78 ISBN 978 0803224568 The code was designed so that even a person who spoke Navajo as his native language would not understand the coded messages Only those who has received Code Talker training could decode the messages Holiday Samuel McPherson Robert S 2013 Under the Eagle Samuel Holiday Navajo Code Talker University of Oklahoma Press pp 120 122 ISBN 978 0806151014 McKay Mary Jayne May 29 2002 The Code Talkers CBS News Retrieved July 7 2020 Navajo Code Talkers UCSD Retrieved July 7 2020 McLellan Dennis July 24 2011 Joe Morris Sr dies at 85 Navajo code talker during World War II Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on December 21 2013 Retrieved July 29 2011 Kolb Joseph June 4 2014 Last of Navajo code talkers dies in New Mexico reuters com Archived from the original on June 4 2014 Retrieved June 4 2014 Levenson Eric January 16 2019 Alfred Newman one of the last remaining Navajo Code Talkers dies at 94 CNN Archived from the original on January 21 2019 Retrieved January 21 2019 Zaveri Mihir May 11 2019 Fleming Begaye Navajo Code Talker Honored at White House Dies at 97 The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on May 13 2019 Retrieved May 13 2019 Lyman Andy May 24 2019 NM mourns long time state senator John Pinto NM Political Report Archived from the original on May 25 2019 Retrieved May 25 2019 Navajo Code Talker William Tully Brown dies at 96 3rd death from group in past month WSET Associated Press June 4 2019 Archived from the original on June 6 2019 Retrieved June 7 2019 Colbert Claire February 2 2020 Joe Vandever Sr Navajo Code Talker dies at 96 CNN Archived from the original on February 2 2020 Retrieved February 2 2020 Navajo Code Talker Samuel Sandoval dies 3 left from group ABC News July 31 2022 Retrieved July 31 2022 WWII Navajo Code Talker Samuel Sandoval Dead at 98 a Loving and Courageous Person July 31 2022 People Kelly David January 28 2024 One man is preserving the legacy of the code talkers America s secret weapon in WWII Los Angeles Times Retrieved January 30 2024 Changing Egypt Offers Hope to Long Marginalized Nubians News nationalgeographic com December 17 2013 Archived from the original on February 3 2015 Retrieved December 16 2015 Remembering Nubia the Land of Gold Al Ahram Weekly April 18 2012 Archived from the original on February 3 2015 Retrieved December 16 2015 El Nuba April 2 2014 El Nuba Cairo West Magazine Cairowestmag com Archived from the original on February 3 2015 Retrieved December 16 2015 Peaceful Societies Peaceful Societies February 13 2014 Archived from the original on October 17 2014 Retrieved December 16 2015 Code Talkers Native American Languages in the Military Alpha Omega Translations June 17 2015 Archived from the original on January 22 2016 Retrieved December 16 2015 D Oro Rachel March 28 2019 Alaska Native servicemen finally honored as Code Talkers Associated Press AP News Archived from the original on May 25 2019 Retrieved May 25 2019 McCarthy Alex March 20 2019 Silent in life Tlingit code talkers finally getting recognition Juneau Empire Archived from the original on May 25 2019 Retrieved May 25 2019 Chapman H S 1987 Welsh as a Secret Language Transactions of the Caernarvonshire Historical Society 48 113 117 Heath Tony August 26 1996 Welsh speak up for their ancient tongue The Independent p 6 Archived from the original on November 2 2012 Retrieved August 25 2017 Nanlai Cao 2010 Constructing China s Jerusalem Christians Power and Place in Contemporary Wenzhou Stanford University Press pp 195 ISBN 978 0804773607 Zhang Zhixiong 2015 Chinese Education in Singapore An untold story of conflict and change Zhixiong Zhang pp 38 ISBN 978 9810939526 Fonseca Felicia February 11 2008 Navajo Code Talker dead at age 82 The Denver Post Associated Press Archived from the original on March 30 2008 Retrieved March 19 2008 National Navaho Code Talkers Day Lapahie com August 14 1982 Archived from the original on February 6 2011 Retrieved March 12 2014 Navajo Code Talkers and the Unbreakable Code Central Intelligence Agency November 6 2008 Archived from the original on March 27 2010 Retrieved March 12 2014 The Warrior Tradition pbs org Archived from the original on November 15 2019 Retrieved March 13 2020 Navajo code talkers honored after 56 years CNN July 27 2001 Archived from the original on August 10 2014 Retrieved August 3 2014 P L 106 554 see 114 Stat 2763A 311 PDF gpo gov Archived PDF from the original on September 25 2012 Retrieved September 9 2012 Mendez Kendra September 17 2007 Texas military honors Choctaw code talkers Archived from the original on June 1 2008 Retrieved May 2 2008 P L 110 420 PDF gpo gov Archived PDF from the original on September 21 2012 Retrieved September 9 2012 Treasury and Mint Join Congress to Honor Native American Code Talkers treasury gov Archived from the original on April 27 2014 Retrieved September 12 2015 a b Davis Julie Hirschfeld November 27 2017 Trump Mocks Warren as Pocahontas at Navajo Veterans Event The New York Times Archived from the original on November 27 2017 Retrieved November 28 2017 Statement in response to remarks by President Trump Window Rock Arkansas The Navajo Nation November 27 2017 archived from the original on May 21 2019 retrieved November 28 2017 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Navajo Nation Statement November 27 2017 November 27 2017 Archived from the original on December 1 2017 Retrieved December 1 2017 via Wikisource Fonseca Felicia November 28 2017 Families of Navajo Code Talkers Slam President Trump for Pocahontas Slur Time Associated Press Archived from the original on February 7 2019 Retrieved March 12 2021 via Yahoo News Further reading editAaseng Nathan Navajo Code Talkers America s Secret Weapon in World War II New York Walker amp Company 1992 ISBN 0802776272 OCLC 672012184 Connole Joseph A Nation Whose Language You Will Not Understand The Comanche Code Talkers of WWII Whispering Wind Magazine March 2012 Vol 40 No 5 Issue 279 pp 21 26 Durrett Deanne Unsung Heroes of World War II The Story of the Navajo Code Talkers Library of American Indian History Facts on File Inc 1998 ISBN 0816036039 OCLC 38067688 Gawne Jonathan Spearheading D Day Paris Histoire et Collections 1999 ISBN 2908182793 OCLC 45700217 Holm Tom Code Talkers and Warriors Native Americans and World War II New York Infobase Publishing 2007 ISBN 0791093409 Kahn David The Codebreakers The Story of Secret Writing 1967 ISBN 0684831309 McClain Salley Navajo Weapon The Navajo Code Talkers Tucson Arizona Rio Nuevo Publishers 2001 ISBN 1887896325 OCLC 48584920 Meadows William C The Comanche Code Talkers of World War II Austin University of Texas Press 2002 ISBN 0292798504 OCLC 55896749 Singh Simon The Code Book The Science of Secrecy from Ancient Egypt to Quantum Cryptography 2000 ISBN 978 0385495325External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Code talkers United States Code Talkers Recognition Act of 2008 National Museum of the American Indian exhibition on Code Talkers entitled Native Words Native Wisdom Northern Arizona University Cline Library Special Collections Code Talkers exhibition Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture Code Talkers Official website of the Navajo Code talkers Images of gold medals awarded to the participating tribes Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Code talker amp oldid 1207585766, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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