Zonnie Gorman remembers the first time she saw an old photo of a group of young, sleek, clean-cut Navajo men — men who would ...
The move Wednesday came after tribes across the country objected to the removal of their histories. The Pentagon scrubbed ...
The Marine Corps has removed more than a dozen videos, photos and stories about Navajo Code Talkers as part of an ongoing ...
The Pentagon has restored webpages detailing the contributions of Navajo Code Talkers and other Native American veterans ...
Late last year one of the last Navajo Code Talkers, John Kinsel, died at 107.
The Department of Defense and U.S. Army have scrubbed articles on the Navajo Code Talkers and their contribution to America's ...
The U.S. Marine Corps initially recruited 29 Navajo men to develop a code based on the unwritten Navajo language in World War II. Using Navajo words for red soil, war chief, clan, braided hair ...
"To dishonor these men, the Navajo Code Talkers, and World War II, and Code Talkers that served in other branches of the service, to dishonor their service to the United States is unconscionable." ...
It was Navajo Code Talkers Day, and Crane was there to honor the Navajo men whose unbreakable code proved essential to defeating Japan in World War II. “I really appreciate all the men and women ...
Using their native language, the Navajo Code Talkers developed the ‘unbreakable code’ to help the U.S. win World War II.
The U.S. Marine Corps initially recruited 29 Navajo men to develop a code based on the unwritten Navajo language in World War II. Using Navajo words for red soil, war chief, clan, braided hair ...