Data encryption is the communications between allies, and the decryption has provided for some of the most useful warfare wins. This story goes back to 1956 the Viet-Cong were winning and communicating on non-secure channels as if no one could hear them. The problem since the interpreters could not understand the encryption whatsoever. The US entered the war with their technology assuming that their supercomputers and interpreters could understand the language. They could not. The military was at wits' end trying to figure out the code. The Chinese watched and learned a thing or two from the United States example the Navajo speakers. Anyway, the military after spending millions of dollars trying to break the code came up with some rather large ideas. One was to send Americans into the world to learn all foreign languages. To do this the military thought up an idea for a peaceful way of learning instead of speaking money or worrying the countries about CIA spooks. The president was talked into starting a program for volunteers to trace the globe in search of the language that could be used to interpret the Viet-Cong. This started out as a national program named Peace Corps. The world was the Peace Corps volunteers place to learn and exchange ideas about how the United States was working. Anyway, a group of volunteers were placed in Bolivia. Their job was to help the Bolivians. The national language of Spanish was easy to understand but what is nowadays called trade languages was the people lived in the country were of the most use. Little did the Peace Corps know that their help was being watched carefully by the Chinese government who had used a native language of Quechua with a certain dialect not heard in university to confuse and belittle the technologies of the United States. The Peace Corps volunteers were happily going about their business in from 1964 to 1969 when a volunteer accidentally got lost in the Altiplano region and ended up in a village where the dialect was spoken and Chinese officers were staying. The volunteer was extremely friendly, and the people of the town invited him back. The Chinese initiated their Plan to scorch Peace Corps. They hired a movie company in Bolivia to make a make-believe movie called the Condor about how the Peace Corps volunteers were involuntarily sterilizing the women. Needless to say Peace Corps was asked to leave the country in 1971 and never provided the United States with the needed knowledge that the Chinese and Viet-Cong instead of using encrypted communication were using a dialectic of Quechua from the south of Bolivia.