Navajo code negotiators in the Pacific region of World War II, increasingly frequently corrupted code events bothered the US Marine Corps. As the Japanese became a skilled cryptographer, we can not think of codes based on mathematical algorithms to be safe for more than 24 hours at some point. In order to solve the obvious problem, the Marines decided to implement non-mathematical code; they turned to the concept of Philip Johnston using the coded Navajo language for transmission .
As President did it with insulting events, of course, he mentioned Pocahontas ... mistakenly ... Navajo Code Talkers (or respect "Woo Woo Injuns", like the cards) said it. Navajo's code negotiator informed the important intelligence activities of the United States and the forced movement in a coding language which can not be interpreted by the enemy, saving the country and someday Donald Trump can become President one day. If you are a national football league, it is called revenge of India, or Redskins' revenge. The president told the surviving members: "You have been here for a long time longer than any of us. They said that they stayed long ago, they called her ... Pocahontas. But you Do you know me? "I like you, because you are so special, you are a special person, do you know?"
Navajo's "code negotiator" played an important role in winning the war with Japan. The Marines hired hundreds of Navajos and received training to become a code talker. They developed a code based on the Navajo language for the Pacific War Theater. The Japanese can not decipher the code. This is the first time that a message is sent instead of being intercepted. Navajo Code Talkers played a very important role to win the war. Major Howard M. Connor said, "Without the Navajo, Marines would never take Iwo Jima .... The Code of Conduct is top secret and the latter half of the 1960s, after more than 25 years, Even today, during the war, some Indian veterans do not like to talk about their services.
At the forefront of the South Pacific, Navajo code speakers have achieved varying degrees of success. The Official Marine Corps records contain little battle reports on speakers of the Navajo code who listed only the activities of Guam, Palau, Okinawa and Iwo Jima. The Iwo Jima report, a typical report on previous code speakers, highlights the limitations and benefits of the program. Although the original military terminology of the Navajo code has evolved, it remains a challenge that the original Navajo vocabulary lacks military terms. Since Navajo Messenger is trained at various times and functions in various places, it is inevitable to develop certain dialects and modified vocabulary. To compensate for this, staff often replace Navajos from one department to another so that all code speakers use standard code.