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As there were only around 300 code talkers and the operation was kept secret for years after the war, casualties are hard to come by. The stats are 13, but I never put much faith in stats or percentages. There were also other tribes as "Code Talkers": 17 Chippewa and Oneida, 17 Comanche, 19 Sac and Fox (Mesquakie) and later in 1941, 11 Hopi. The Code Talkers came from mainly the Northwest part of Arizona; the largest Reservation in America. (Here's a kicker you may enjoy.): Years ago most of the outside world considered the Indians in the U.S. to be ignorant, red savages. In fact, the gov't placed the Navao Indian Tribe in this area bringing them up from Oklahama! The gov't hoped that the harsh environment would destroy them completely. Little did the U.S. Gov't know it was giving the Navajo nation their ancestral homeland back! It was a civil engineer named Philip Johnson who lived in L.A. California. He grew up on the Navajo Indian Reserv because his parents were Protestant missionaries there. Johnson knew enough about the Navajo language to believe it would make a complex code to send important military messages safely. Johnson went to the Marine Corp signal office and the rest is history. Most of the Navajos were in their early teens and military regulations required 18, but they were in such great need they accepted some who were only 14 years old. 400 Navajo Indians were trained as "Code Talkers." The Navajos served on most of the U.S. island invasions, including Guadalcanal, Tinian, Saipan, Bouqanville, Tarawa, and Iwo Jima. Without the Code Talkers the U.S. would never have captured Iwo Jima. There, 6 code talker networks operated around the clock, sending and receiving over 800 critical messages without errors. Each code talker was assigned a "Belakana" (white man) for a body guard. No code talker was ever captured by the Japanese, but because of their somewhat Oriental appearing features, they were often mistaken for the enemy by their own troops. Japanese soldiers would sometimes take uniforms off dead U.S. soldiers, put them on, and tried to infiltrate the U.S. lines. Seven of the Navajo Code Talkers were killed in combat and many received Purple Heart Medals for being wounded in action. After the war was over, the Navajo code was classified as "Top Secret" and kept that way for 23 years. Not until 1968 was the secret classification dropped. It is a remarkable feat, forever recorded in history, that these so-called primitive, ignorant, red savages invented the only unbreakable military war code. Remember, most of them were just teenage school boys. The Navajo Code Talkers were certainly WW2 heroes.. How did the U.S. gov't reward these gallant Native American Navajo Indians? They were denied all their G.I. benefits under the G.I. Bill that covered all other veterans! The governments excuse: Because the Navajo Indians live on the Indian Reservation they are occupying Federal land. Therefore, that "somehow" nullifies their G.I. Bill of Rights. by: Cecil Owen (WW2 Vet)

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Q: How many Navajo Code Talkers were killed in World War 2?
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What effect did world war 2 have on 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.


What did the Navajo Soldiers do in World War 2?

The Code Talkers were Navajo. The Germans had no linguists trained to translate Navajo so, the Code Talkers could pass sensitive information by speaking 'in the clear'.


Who the Choctaws code-talker?

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.


Why was there a need to assign bodyguards to the Navajo Code Talkers?

The "bodyguards" for the Navajo Code Talkers had the responsibility to see that they never fell into Japanese hands. This responsibility was handled in two ways:protect the Navajo Code Talker during battlekill the Navajo Code Talker if he was captured or was about to be captured by Japanese (the Navajo Code Talkers were never informed of this)Effectively the US Military treated the Navajo Code Talkers as they would any other classified high security cypher machine they might use to send and receive secret messages. If you were responsible for a cypher machine your responsibilities for handling the machine were identical: protect it from the enemy in battle and destroy it should there be a chance of the enemy capturing it.


What tribe did the code talkers come from?

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.

Related questions

What effect did world war 2 have on 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.


Name of Navajo speakers in world war 2?

code talkers


Who were the first Code Talkers?

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.


How many original code talkers are left?

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.


How many Navajo code talkers served in the military?

Some Navajo were drafted but the Code Talkers were volunteers.


What is the exposition of code talkers?

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.


Which part of World War 2 did the Navajo code talkers become beneficial to?

The Navajo Code Talkers took part in, and contributed to the success of, the island campaigns in the south and central Pacific between the US and Japan.


What name was given to the Navajo radio operators?

Navajo Code Talkers


Why were the Navajo code talkers so effective in World War 2?

Navajo is a very difficult language and impossible for the Japanese to decipher


What has the author S McClain written?

S. McClain has written: 'Search for the Navajo code talkers' -- subject(s): Armed Forces, Cryptography, Navajo language, Navajo code talkers, Indian Participation, World War, 1939-1945, History, Indian troops


How many Navajo code talkers were eventually used in World War 2?

400-500


What native American tribe assisted the us in world war 2?

Navajo as code talkers