dimanche 23 novembre 2014

Bộ ảnh lịch sử chiến tranh Việt Nam những năm trước 1975 trích từ trang báo chí của Mỹ.

Kính gửi quý anh chị vào đọc Blog của tôi những hình ảnh lịch sử  chiến tranh Việt Nam những năm trước 1975 trích từ trang báo chí của Mỹ.
Caroline Thanh Hương
Description of  A South Vietnamese father carries his son and a bag of household possessions as he leaves his village near Trang Bom on Route 1 northwest of Saigon April 23, 1975. The area was becoming politically and militarily unstable as communist forces advanced, just days before the fall of Saigon.  (AP Photo/KY Mhan)

Photos: A Look Back at the Vietnam War on the 35th Anniversary of the Fall of Saigon

Posted Apr 30, 2010      
Editor’s Warning: The following photo collection contains some graphic violence and depictions of dead bodies.
(AP) Today, April 30th, marks the 35th Anniversary of the fall of Saigon, when communist North Vietnamese forces drove tanks through the former U.S.-backed capital of South Vietnam, smashing through the Presidential Palace gates. The fall of Saigon marked the official end of the Vietnam War and the decadelong U.S. campaign against communism in Southeast Asia. The conflict claimed some 58,000 American lives and an estimated 3 million Vietnamese.
The war left divisions that would take years to heal as many former South Vietnamese soldiers were sent to Communist re-education camps and hundreds of thousands of their relatives fled the country.
In Vietnam, today is called Liberation Day and the government staged a parade down the former Reunification Boulevard that featured tank replicas and goose-stepping soldiers in white uniforms. Some 50,000 party cadres, army veterans and laborers gathered for the spectacle, many carrying red and gold Vietnamese flags and portraits of Ho Chi Minh, the father of Vietnam’s revolution. In a reminder of how the Communist Party retains a strong grip on the flow of information despite the opening of the economy, foreign journalists were forbidden from conducting interviews along the parade route. The area was sealed off from ordinary citizens, apparently due to security concerns.
The photos below offer a look back at the Vietnam War from the escalation of U.S. involvement in the early 1960’s to the Fall of Saigon in 1975.

Additional Plog entries that may be of interest:
Captured: The Pacific and Adjacent Theaters in WWII
Captured: The 65th Anniversary of D-Day on the Normandy Beaches
On War: Joe Rosenthal and Iwo Jima

http://blogs.denverpost.com/captured/2010/04/30/captured-a-look-back-at-the-vietnam-war-on -the-35th-anniversary-of-the-fall-of-saigon-2/

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