Code Talkers Ingenious-clever, original, and inventive. The Navajo Code Talkers and the creators of the code were all ingenious. During World War II, the Allied forces were having terrible communication problems, and the Japanese forces on the Pacific were cracking codes faster than new ones could be made. This all changed with an idea from a man who grew up with the Navajo Indian Tribe, and he eventually formed a group known as the “Navajo Code Talkers”. The Navajo Code Talkers were vital to an Allied victory in World War II, because the Japanese couldn’t break the code, it allowed the Allies to quickly set up battle plans, and it also allowed them to never change their codes again. Philip Johnston was born into a religious family, and his father was a missionary on the Navajo Reservation that Philip grew up in. Although he wasn’t a Navajo, he did know their language and customs as a result from growing up there. Johnston began reading a newspaper one day. According to the American National Biography online article titled “Creating a Code”, the newspaper talked about “…Native Americans in the army in Louisiana using their own language as a code...” He had an idea, and the next day he went to Camp Elliot, a military base close to San Diego. His idea for a new military code got through. After the first twenty-nine were …show more content…
Before this new code, the Japanese were cracking codes and quickly defeating the Allied Nations in battle. This code turned the tide and baffled the Japanese. A book, The Navajo Code Talkers, written by Doris A. Paul, states: “For three years, wherever the Marines landed, the Japanese got an earful of strange gurgling noises interspersed with other sounds resembling the call of a Tibetan monk and the sound of a hot water bottle being emptied” (99). This made the Japanese forces in the Pacific angry. Instead of obliterating the Allies in battle, they were now