My
step father (everyone called him “Pop”) had served as a Marine in the South
Pacific during World War Two. I remember how I couldn’t wait until I had grown
sufficiently to be able to wear his “rough-out” boots, made specifically for
the rigors of coral and beach landings. The term “rough-out” is a precise
description of these boots. The rough side of the leather was on the outside of
the boot. I also had a black-and-white 8”X10” portrait photo of him in his
Marine green “Alphas” sporting his corporal chevrons. Pop also gave me his
metal Marine emblems from that uniform. So you can see how I might gravitate to
all-things Marine!
With
the advent of the telephone (Thank you, Alexander Graham Bell!) virtually
instant communication revolutionized the way everything was done in daily life.
The military was one of the earliest users of the telegraph wire and its
cousin, the telephone. Little wonder then that speaking to someone who is removed
by miles through this electronic device was exciting, to say the least. Bell
and his assistant, Watson, held the first transcontinental conversation in
1915. Bell was in New York and Watson was in San Francisco.
Two
years later the United States would find itself immersed in World War One. The
telegraph was still in use, but now there was also the telephone. Because
electric wires could be tapped, messages could be intercepted requiring special
means of communicating so the enemy could not figure out what was being said.
This is where the Code Talkers come in. The most famous of these special
warriors are the Navajo Code Talkers from WWII.
The
first Code Talkers were the Choctaw and Cherokee who were used in WWI by the
U.S. Army. An American Army officer overheard some of his men speaking in
Choctaw. He surveyed his command and discovered he had eight men from the
Choctaw tribe. Six more were brought in from other commands to form the first
trained unit for combat. These men were so effective in communicating critical information
on the front lines in the midst of hellish combat that they were credited with
saving the day. “They helped the
American Expeditionary Forces win several key battles in the Meuse-Argonne
Offensive in France, during the final big German push of the war. Within 24
hours after the Choctaw language was pressed into service, the tide of the
battle had turned. In less than 72 hours the Germans were retreating and the Allies
were in full attack.”
Following
the success of Native American languages in WWI, several tribes were called
upon to provide code talkers for WWII. In the European Theater the use of code
talkers by American forces was stifled because leading up to the war Hitler had
sent a gaggle of anthropologists to the United States to study the various
Indian languages. It proved too difficult, and so the project was scrapped.
However, the United States did not know this to be true, so they adopted a
non-use approach. The one highly effective exception was during the Invasion of
Normandy, June 6, 1944. “Fourteen Comanche code talkers took part in the Invasion
of Normandy, and continued to serve in the 4th Infantry Battalion during
further European operations. Comanches of the 4th Signal Company compiled a
vocabulary of over 100 code terms using words or phrases in their own language.
Using a substitution method similar to the Navajo, the Comanche code word for
tank was ‘turtle’, bomber was ‘pregnant airplane’, machine gun was ‘sewing
machine’ and Adolf Hitler became ‘crazy white man.’”
Perhaps
the best known were the Navajo code talkers. “Philip Johnston, a
civil engineer for the city of Los Angeles, proposed the use of Navajo 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 a missionary to
the Navajos, and was one of the few non-Navajos who spoke their language
fluently.” A 2002
movie, Windtalkers, starring Nicholas
Cage and Christian Slater, focuses in on the Navajo code talkers during the numerous
battles in the Pacific. “The Navajo Code, as it was known, was a code based on two
parts: 1) the Navajo language (notoriously difficult to learn or to
understand); and 2) a code embedded in the language, meaning that even native
speakers would be confused by it. Supposedly, this code was close to
unbreakable, but so difficult only a few people could actually learn it.” It has
been reported that throughout the war, the Navajo Code was never broken. Also, Navajo
was an unwritten language at the outbreak of WWII, and fewer than 30
non-Navajos could understand the language.
A missionary kid (MK) was
responsible for the formation and implementation of the amazing Navajo Code
Talkers.
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