Vietnam War Pictures - So We Remember

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Collection of Vietnam War Photos

American involvement in the Vietnam War started as early as 1950 with military advisors sent to Vietnam. American troops were in Vietnam from 1965-1975. The United States became involved with the purpose of assisting the Republic of Vietnam (South Vietnam) in their battle against a North Vietnamese communist takeover. The strategy was initially containment.

Also known as the Vietnam Conflict and the Second Indochina War, millions of lives were lost. The war was mostly in Vietnam, but also included Laos and Cambodia.

Gathered here is a collection of images from the Vietnam War. I think it is important that we remember our veterans - men and women who fought for us.

Home for the Soldiers Fighting in Vietnam 

"Home is where you dig" was the sign over a fighting bunker, 1968.

Marine Standing Watch During Mass 

A Marine stands watch in an observation tower as a chaplain holds mass on Hill 950, July 31, 1967.

Punji-staked Walk for Marines 

Marines of Company H walk through a punji-staked gully, January 28, 1966. The Punji sticks or stakes were set up as booby traps. Not always meant to kill, the sticks were mainly set up in areas that would cause injury to one or more soldiers in the lower leg area. With an injured soldier, the unit would be slowed down until the injured soldier could be removed from the area.

Battery Pack Must Stay Dry 

Wet going - A Marine keeps a battery pack dry as he wades through a muddy hole while on a search mission.

Marines on an M-48 Tank 

Marines riding atop an M-48 tank, covering their ears, April 3, 1968. The M48s saw extensive action during the Vietnam War. Over 600 Pattons would be deployed with US Forces during the war.

Flamethrower Used in Da Nang 

Sergeant Robert E. Fears clears an area using his flamethrower in Da Nang, Vietnam. 05/22/1970

Operation Oregon 

Operation "Oregon," a search and destroy mission conducted by infantry platoon of Troop B. An infantryman is lowered into a tunnel by members of the reconnaissance platoon, April 24, 1967. The multi-company operation is conducted by the U.S. 4th Marine Regiment about 17 miles northwest of Phu Bai in Thua Thien Province, terminating on 23 March 1966.

Operation Yellowstone 

Operation "Yellowstone" Vietnam. Following a hard day, a few members of Company A gather around a guitar and play a few songs, January 18, 1968. Operation Yellowstone: the 25th Infantry Division operation in War Zone C (Tay Ninh Province) that claimed 1,254 known enemy casualties. It proved again that War Zone C was still being used as a major VC logistical base.

Viet Cong Suspect 

A Marine from 1st Battalion, 3rd Marines, moves a Viet Cong suspect to the rear during a search and clear operation held by the battalion 15 miles west of Da Nang Air Base.

Vietnamese Peasants 

Vietnamese Peasants suspected of being communists under detention of U.S. army.

Dear America - Letters Home from Vietnam 

A well produced documentary type film that consists of letters that were written by soldiers. Read by renowned actors, the letters provide a different slant to the war then what was presented to the American public via the news media. These letters reveal the human story behind the headlines.

Woven in to the background is music from the 60's, reminding us all the more how real the letters are.

Dear America - Letters Home from Vietnam

Amazon Price: $15.49 (as of 12/05/2009)Buy Now

This reviewer, who was a 5 year old boy living in Saigon in 1972 writes, "I have watched, read a lot about this war from many different perspectives, but nothing has come close to truthfully provide personal experiences, heartfelt losses, and devastated destructions this war has caused as this documentary movie does."

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Vietnam War - Controversy on all Sides 

The Vietnam war was filled with controversy. Did we do the right thing by getting involved in the Second Indochinese War? That question is still asked, still debated, and still there is no answer that makes sense. What would the outcome have been if we had chosen to remain "neutral"?

Our soldiers were not prepared for the guerrilla warfare techniques used by the North Vietnamese. And the American people were no longer willing to tolerate the cost of the war.

War Memorial - Vietnam Veterans 

Thanks to Meutia Chaerani - Indradi Soemardjan for making this photo available for use.
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License.

Women's Vietnam War Memorial 

The sculpture depicts three women, one caring for a soldier. The monument honors the 265,500 American women who served in the military at locations around the world during the time of the Vietnam war.

Thanks to Geoff Plourde for this image of the Women's War Memorial.Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License

Veterans Day Honor 

Free Album from Amazon

For a short time, you can get this album that honors Veterans free from Amazon.
1. To The Colors US Navy Band
2. Star Spangled Banner (The National Anthem) US Coast Guard Band
3. Man Behind the Gun US Marine Band
4. American Pageant (America, Yankee Doodle, Battle Hymn of the Republic, Dixie, America the Beautiful, Columbia the Gem of the Ocean) US Air Force Band of Flight
5. Garry Owen US Army Strings
6. When Johnny Comes Marching Home US Air Force Airmen Of Note
7. Here's to America US Army Band
8. Eternal Father, Strong to Save (The U.S. Navy Hymn) US Navy and Sea Chanters Chorus
9. Lord, Guard and Guide (The U.S. Air Force Hymn) US Air Force Band & Singing Sergeants
10. Holding the Flag for America US Air Force Band, Steve Ward
11. Retreat US Marine Band
12. Taps (with Orchestration) US Marine Band

Larry Burrows: Vietnam 

Burrows was the only photographer allowed to take the doors off a fighter-bomber so he could lean out to snap some of his most extraordinary images of the Vietnam War. When other photojournalists objected because they were denied the same favor, the Vietnamese army told them, "Mr. Burrows's request was granted not because he is a photographer but because he is an artist."

Larry Burrows: Vietnam

Amazon Price: $31.50 (as of 12/05/2009)Buy Now

In the heat of battle, in the devastated countryside, among troops and civilians equally hurt by the
savagery of war, Larry Burrows photographed the conflict in Vietnam from 1962, the earliest days of American involvement, until 1971, when he died in a helicopter shot down on the Vietnam-Laos border. His images, published in Life magazine, brought the war home, scorching the consciousness of the public and inspiring much of the anti-war sentiment that convulsed American society in the 1960s.

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During the Vietnam War

58,193 Americans died
153,452 Americans wounded
1,740 Americans missing

Indochina War Timeline 

1840s-1890s - Wars of French colonization in Indochina.

1940 - French colonial government collaborates with Japanese aggression in Southeast Asia. Japanese military forces occupy bases in Vietnam while French colonial government continues to govern. Ho Chi Minh emerges as a leader of anti-Japanese resistance.

1945 - Japanese briefly assume direct rule in Indochina and recognize the independence of Vietnam. Following the end of hostilities, British and U.S. military forces assist the French attempt to reestablish colonial rule in Indochina.

1946 - The Vietminh resist. First Indochina War begins.

1950 - The Korean War indicates a big threat in Asia. The United States begins to cover 75% of French military expenses of the war in Indochina. China begins to provide North Vietnam with modern military weapons.

1953 - Ho Chi Minh introduces a land reform program that classifies the population into five categories, and collectivization begins in North Vietnam.

1954 - French are defeated at Dien Bien Phu after the United States refuses to send air support. The Geneva accords are signed by French and Vietminh, establishing the International Control Commission, deciding that the 17th parallel will be the temporary dividing line between the two, and creating plans for a free election in Vietnam no later than July 1956. Ngo Dinh Diem gains power in South Vietnam. United States sends technical and financial aid in expectation of social and land reform. SEATO formed by Pakistan, Thailand, Philippines, Australia, New Zealand, France, United Kingdom, and United States. South Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia join later. The nations agree to consult regarding military affairs; the commitment is not as strict or as binding as that required by NATO.

1960 - Political opposition in South Vietnam goes underground. Sporadic terrorism occurs; NLF ask for, and obtain, help from North Vietnam.

1960 - NLF conduct a campaign to assassinate village chiefs appointed by Diem.

1961 - John F. Kennedy sends 1,364 American advisors to South Vietnam. Still no land reform. An operation of U.S. military pilots and planes were ordered to bomb targets in South Vietnam. The operation is cancelled moments before takeoff.

1962 - The number of U.S. advisers increases to 9865. U.S. pilots are clandestinely bombing North Vietnam in an attempt to destabilize the Ho Chi Minh government. "The U.S. did not want to harm relations with Diem, and he was the last political stronghold in Vietnam facing the communists. This 'fact' is debatable..."

1963 - 15,500 Americans in Vietnam. Diem is losing his grip on the Buddhist revolutionaries. Kennedy agrees with South Vietnamese generals to remove Diem. With the CIA's conveying Kennedy's approval, Diem is assassinated in a military coup and succeeded by a series of military commanders. John F. Kennedy is assassinated in Dallas. He had reconsidered the Vietnam strategy -hundreds of soldiers were on route to the US at the time of his assassination.

1964 - Situation in South Vietnam deteriorates rapidly. In August, Gulf of Tonkin Incident occurs. The Gulf of Tonkin Resolution passed by the United States Congress gives Lyndon B. Johnson a free hand to protect American forces in Vietnam, the pretext for deepening the U.S. military commitment. Publicly, Johnson had taken a mild position during his election campaign regarding the Vietnam issue, but privately agrees to proceed with the escalated Vietnam policy, now seemingly an entrenched policy.

1965 - In February, the United States begins to bomb North Vietnam on a steady basis after the Pleiku attacks. In March, Marines land at Da Nang to begin full scale U.S. military action. In May, a 6-day bombing pause occurs. In August, 125,000 American troops are in Vietnam. In December, American bombing pauses again, with no apparent reaction from the Vietnamese.

1966 - 400,000 American troops are now in Vietnam. In September, South Vietnam elects Thieu and Ky under their new constitution. One of Thieu's first acts after being put in power is to arrest the leader of his opposition.

1967 - 500,000 American troops in Vietnam. U.S. conducts demonstration election and claims Saigon government is legitimate based on voter turnout.

1968 - Tet offensive occurs. The U.S. embassy is occupied for a short while. On March 12, the state of New Hampshire gives strong support to Eugene McCarthy, running on a campaign to end the war. On March 16, 1968, U.S. Army troops murder 347 civilians in My Lai. News of the massacre does not reach the U.S. public until November, 1969. On March 31, Lyndon Johnson calls for a partial bombing halt, and announces "I will not seek or accept my party's nomination for President of the United States." In April, the United States and North Vietnam begin talks in Paris. In October, Johnson halts all bombing north of the 17th parallel. Four-way talks begin.

1969 - In March, Richard Nixon announces secret talks have been taking place. As of April, 33,000 American troops have been killed in Vietnam. Meanwhile, Secret bombings in Cambodia begin. On November 15th, there is a massive peace demonstration in Washington. Seymour Hersh breaks the My Lai massacre story. The Anti-war movement gained steam upon the evidence of atrocities by U.S. forces. The first draft lottery is instituded since World War II.

1970 - President Nixon announces during a TV address, the withdrawal of 150,000 troops over the next 12 months. However, most people believe this not to be true and that it is merely a tactic to stop the massive anti-war movement. President Nixon sends US forces into Cambodia, causing widespread war protest in the streets, and plunging Congress into a session-long debate over Congressional war powers. Four Kent State college students were shot to death by Ohio National Guardsmen during an anti-war protest on the campus. This led to mass protests on campuses and city streets.

1971 - As of February, approx. 325,000 American troops remain in Vietnam. South Vietnam invades Laos with support from the U.S. About 45,000 American soldiers have died in Vietnam thus far.

1972 - In October, Nixon and Henry Kissinger announces that "peace is at hand", with an agreement to end the war. In December, the U.S. begins to bomb North Vietnam again, with the famous Christmas day raids. Demonstrations in the U.S. begin anew.

1973 - U.S. involvement in Vietnam finally ends. Kissinger wins Nobel Peace Prize. The U.S. lost about 50,000 soldiers in Vietnam, and suffered more than 300,000 wounded. Later estimates put the figure of Vietnamese deaths up to nearly 5 million, 4 million civilians killed. The war cost nearly 150 billion U.S. dollars.

1975 - On April 30th, Saigon falls to North Vietnam and becomes Ho Chi Minh City. President Gerald Ford, in the days shortly preceding the collapse of Saigon, asked for $750 million from Congress to help the U.S. ally.

1975 - Conflict begins right after the fall of Saigon between the Communist governments of Vietnam and Cambodia, culminating in the Vietnamese invasion and subsequent occupation of Cambodia and the removal of the Khmer Rouge regime from power.

1975 - Since 1975 as many as 1.5 million people have fled Vietnam, many in unseaworthy boats risking storms and pirates to reach an uncertain haven. Perhaps 500,000 of them died at sea.

1979 - (February-March) Sino-Vietnamese War begins and ends. Vietnam establishes the People's Republic of Kampuchea in Cambodia.

1989 - Vietnam withdraws from Cambodia, ending nearly constant warfare in Indochina for half a century.

Article originally posted on Indochina War Timeline
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Recommended Resources 

During my research, I came across numerous sites that are worth mentioning. If you want more information about the Vietnam War, please check out this list.
Articles and reviews from Time Magazine
These cover issues relating to involvement in the Vietnam war from an American perspective. They include coverage of the battles, draft and American peace protests against the war; discussion of the tactics and use of weapons by the American generals, the role of Vietnamese leaders such as Ho Chi Min and the eventual fall of Saigon. Copyright information is displayed on the website.
Pictures from the Vietnam War
Here you can find many more images related to the Vietnam War.
One Nurse's Account
Read the story of one former Australian Nurse who served in Vietnam. She talks about the crowded conditions in the wards and lack of medical supplies. Sometimes the doctors had to improvise for medical tools prior to surgeries. The nurses had two days off every three weeks.
Vietnam War
Historical account of the Indochinese wars and how America became involved.

Do You Have Any Comments on the Vietnam War? 

Do you have any thoughts on the political aspect of the war or general comments? Please share them. I would love to know what you are thinking.

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