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The American Civil War was a civil war in the United States from 1861 to 1865, fought between northern states loyal to the Union and southern states that had seceded from the Union to form the Confederate States of America. Wikipedia
Dates: Apr. 12, 1861 – Apr. 9, 1865
Result: Dissolution
of the Confederate States U.S. territorial integrity preserved Slavery
abolished Beginning of the Reconstruction era Passage and ratification
of the 13th, 14th and 15th amendments to the Constitution of the United
States (Union victory)
Also called Freedom Day, Jubilee Day, Cel-Liberation Day, Emancipation Day
Juneteenth
is a day commemorating the end of slavery.
Theo lịch sử thì người da đen ở Phi châu đã bị người Âu châu da trắng
dùng vũ lực lùng bắt để đem bán làm nô lệ từ thế kỷ thứ 16 cho đến 19.
Hầu hết các người nô lệ da đen được bán cho Hoa Kỳ, là một quốc gia đang
mở mang về nông nghiệp trồng mía, bông vải và thuốc lá, đang cần rất
nhiều nhân công. Tệ trạng nô lệ này đã đưa đến chiến tranh Nam-Bắc, nội
chiến (Civil War), ở Hoa Kỳ từ 1861 đến 1865 với số binh lính thiệt mạng
của cả đôi bên được ước lượng là trên 600 ngàn người, và hàng triệu
người bị thương cùng với sự tàn phá của các tiểu bang miền Nam.Tu chính thứ 13 của hiến pháp Hoa Kỳ, ngày 6 tháng 12 năm 1865, tuyên bố bãi bỏ chế độ nô lệ. Đã hơn 150 năm trôi qua, thế nhưng vết thương gây nên bởi chế độ nô lệ không thể lành, sự chia cách, rạn nứt, và kỳ thị giữa hai màu da "Trắng-Đen", như ngọn lửa âm ỉ cháy, chỉ chờ một cơn gió mạnh là nó lại bùng lên thành một cơn bão lửa. Thập niên 1960 là một thời kỳ có nhiều cuộc biểu tình liên hệ đến sự kỳ thị màu da và sự bạo hành của cảnh sát đối với người da đen.
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Juneteenth (a portmanteau of June and nineteenth),[2] also known as Freedom Day,[3] Jubilee Day,[4] and Cel-Liberation Day,[5] is an American holiday celebrated annually on June 19. It commemorates June 19, 1865, when Union general Gordon Granger read federal orders in Galveston, Texas, that all previously enslaved people in Texas were free.[6] Although the Emancipation Proclamation had formally freed them almost two and a half years earlier, and the American Civil War had largely ended with the defeat of the Confederate States in April, Texas was the most remote of the slave states, with a low presence of Union troops, so enforcement of the proclamation had been slow and inconsistent.[6]
Celebrations date to 1866, at first involving church-centered community gatherings in Texas. It spread across the South and became more commercialized in the 1920s and 1930s, often centering on a food festival. During the Civil Rights movement of the 1960s, it was eclipsed by the struggle for postwar civil rights, but grew in popularity again in the 1970s with a focus on African American freedom and arts.[7] By the 21st century, Juneteenth was celebrated in most major cities across the United States. Activists are pushing Congress to recognize Juneteenth as a national holiday. Juneteenth is recognized as a state holiday or special day of observance in 47 of the 50 states.[8]
Modern observance is primarily in local celebrations. Traditions include public readings of the Emancipation Proclamation, singing traditional songs such as "Swing Low, Sweet Chariot" and "Lift Every Voice and Sing", and reading of works by noted African-American writers such as Ralph Ellison and Maya Angelou. Celebrations include rodeos, street fairs, cookouts, family reunions, park parties, historical reenactments, and Miss Juneteenth contests. The Mascogos, descendants of Black Seminoles, of Coahuila, Mexico, also celebrate Juneteenth.
19 tháng 6 1965: NGÀY QUÂN LỰC VNCH
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https://rarehistoricalphotos.com/vietnam-war-the-early-years-1965-1967/
The Drugs That Built a Super Soldier
During
the Vietnam War, the U.S. military plied its servicemen with speed,
steroids, and painkillers to help them handle extended combat.
Lukasz Kamienski
Vietnam War: The Early Years, 1965-1967

Hovering
U.S. Army helicopters pour machine gun fire into a tree line to cover
the advance of South Vietnamese ground troops in an attack on a Viet
Cong camp 18 miles north of Tay Ninh, near the Cambodian border, in
March of 1965.

An
American officer serving with the South Vietnam forces poses with group
of Montagnards in front of one of their provisionary huts in a military
camp in central Vietnam on November 17, 1962. They were brought in by
government troops from a village where they were used as labor force by
communist Viet Cong forces. The Montagnards, dark-skinned tribesmen
numbering about 700,000, live in the highlands of central Vietnam. The
government was trying to win their alliance in its war with the Viet
Cong.
Nevertheless, Diem’s political repression and attacks on Buddhist community made him more and more unpopular among ordinary South Vietnamese people. Realizing the increasingly unpopularity of Diem regime, Hanoi established the National Liberation Front (NLF), better known as the Viet Cong, on December 20, 1960, which consisted of all anti-government activists – both communists and non-communists, as a common front to fight against Diem.

Vietnamese
airborne rangers, their two U.S. advisers, and a team of 12 U.S.
Special Forces troops set out to raid a Viet Cong supply base 62 miles
northwest of Saigon, on August 6, 1963. As the H-21 helicopters hovered
six feet from the ground to avoid spikes and wires and under sniper
fire, the troops jumped out to attack.
U.S. and South Vietnamese leaders were cautiously optimistic that increased U.S. assistance finally was enabling the Saigon government to defend itself. On 2 January 1963, however, at Ap Bac on the Plain of Reeds southwest of Saigon, a Vietcong battalion of about 320 men inflicted heavy damage on an ARVN force of 3,000 equipped with troop‐carrying helicopters, new UH‐1 (“Huey”) helicopter gunships, tactical bombers, and APCs.
Ap Bac represented a leadership failure for the ARVN and a major morale boost for the antigovernment forces. The absence of fighting spirit in the ARVN mirrored the continuing inability of the Saigon regime to win political support. Indeed, many South Vietnamese perceived the strategic hamlets as government oppression, not protection, because people were forced to leave their ancestral homes for the new settlements.

A
South Vietnamese Marine, severely wounded in a Viet Cong ambush, is
comforted by a comrade in a sugar-cane field at Duc Hoa, about 12 miles
from Saigon, on August 5, 1963. A platoon of 30 Vietnamese Marines was
searching for communist guerrillas when a long burst of automatic fire
killed one Marine and wounded four others.
On 1 November 1963, the generals seized power, and Diem and his unpopular brother Ngo Dinh Nhu were murdered. Three weeks later, President Kennedy was assassinated, and U.S. policy in Vietnam was again at a crossroads. If the new government in Saigon failed to show progress against the insurgency, would the United States withdraw its support from a lost cause, or would it escalate the effort to preserve South Vietnam as an anticommunist outpost in Asia?

Napalm
air strikes raise clouds into gray monsoon skies as houseboats glide
down the Perfume River toward Hue in Vietnam on February 28, 1963, where
a battle for control of the old Imperial City ended with a Communist
defeat. Firebombs were directed against a village on the outskirts of
Hue.
The critical military questions were how much U.S. assistance was enough and what form it should take. By the spring of 1964, the Vietcong controlled vast areas of South Vietnam, the strategic hamlet program had essentially ceased, and North Vietnam’s aid to the southern insurgents had grown. In June, Johnson named one of the army’s most distinguished officers, Gen. William C. Westmoreland, then commandant of West Point, as commander U.S. MACV.
Westmoreland immediately asked for more men, and by the end of 1964 U.S. personnel in the South exceeded 23,000. Increasingly, however, the U.S. effort focused on the North. Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara, Secretary of State Dean Rusk, and other key White House aides remained convinced that the assault on South Vietnam originated in the ambitious designs of Hanoi backed by Moscow and Beijing.

Thich
Quang Duc, a Buddhist monk, burns himself to death on a Saigon street
on June 11, 1963, to protest alleged persecution of Buddhists by the
South Vietnamese government. President Ngo Dình Diem, part of the
Catholic minority, had adopted policies that discriminated against
Buddhists and gave high favor to Catholics. Read more about this picture.
Although doubts existed about these reports, the president ordered retaliatory air strikes against the North Vietnamese port of Vinh. The White House had expected that some type of incident would occur eventually, and it had prepared the text of a congressional resolution authorizing the president to use armed force to protect U.S. forces and to deter further aggression from North Vietnam. On 7 August 1964, Johnson secured almost unanimous consent from Congress (414–0 in the House; 88–2 in the Senate) for his Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, which became the principal legislative basis for all subsequent military deployment in Southeast Asia.

Flying
low over the jungle, an A-1 Skyraider drops 500-pound bombs on a Viet
Cong position below as smoke rises from a previous pass at the target,
on December 26, 1964.
A consensus formed among Johnson’s advisers that the United States would have to initiate air warfare against North Vietnam. Bombing could boost Saigon’s morale and might persuade the North to cease its support of the insurgency. The Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) favored a massive bombing campaign, but civilians in the State and Defense Departments preferred a gradual escalation.

Partially
covered, a dying Viet Cong guerrilla raises his hands as South
Vietnamese Marines search palm groves near Long Binh in the Mekong
Delta, on February 27, 1964. The guerrilla died in a foxhole following a
battle between a battalion of South Vietnamese Marines and a unit of
Viet Cong.
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As
U.S. “Eagle Flight” helicopters hover overhead, South Vietnamese troops
wade through a rice paddy in Long An province during operations against
Viet Cong guerrillas in the Mekong Delta, in December of 1964. The
“Eagle Flight” choppers were loaded with Vietnamese airborne troops who
were dropped in to support ground forces at the first sign of enemy
contact.

A
father holds the body of his child as South Vietnamese Army Rangers
look down from their armored vehicle on March 19, 1964. The child was
killed as government forces pursued guerrillas into a village near the
Cambodian border.
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Marines wade ashore with heavy equipment at first light at Red Beach near Da Nang in Saigon on April 10, 1965.
In 1967, Westmoreland made his big push to win the war. With South Vietnam’s forces assigned primarily to occupation, pacification, and security duties, massive U.S. combat sweeps moved to locate and destroy the enemy. In January, Operation Cedar Falls was a 30,000‐man assault on the Iron Triangle, an enemy base area forty miles north of Saigon. From February through April, Operation Junction City was an even larger attack on nearby War Zone C. There was major fighting in the Central Highlands, climaxing in the battle of Dak To in November 1967.

With
the persuasion of a Viet Cong-made spear pressed against his throat, a
captured Viet Cong guerrilla decided to talk to interrogators, telling
them of a cache of Chinese grenades on March 28, 1965. He was captured
with 13 other guerrillas and 17 suspects when two Vietnamese battalions
overran a Viet Cong camp about 15 miles southwest of Da Nang air force
base.
Late in 1967, with 485,600 U.S. troops in Vietnam, Westmoreland announced that, although much fighting remained, a cross‐over point had arrived in the war of attrition; that is, the losses to the NVA and Vietcong were greater than they could replace. This assessment was debatable, and there was considerable evidence that the so‐called “other war” for political support in South Vietnam was not going well. Corruption, factionalism, and continued Buddhist protests plagued the Thieu‐Ky government.
Despite incredible losses, the Vietcong still controlled many areas. A diplomatic resolution of the conflict remained elusive. Several third countries, such as Poland and Great Britain, offered proposals intended to facilitate negotiations. These formulas typically called upon the United States and DRV to coordinate mutual reduction of their military activities in South Vietnam, but both Washington and Hanoi firmly resisted even interim compromises with the other. The war was at a stalemate.

Thousands
attend a rally on the grounds of the Washington Monument in Washington
on April 17, 1965, to hear Ernest Gruening, a Democratic senator from
Alaska, and other speakers discuss U.S. policy in Vietnam. The rally
followed picketing of the White House by students demanding an end to
Vietnam fighting.

A
nurse attempts to comfort a wounded U.S. Army soldier in a ward of the
8th army hospital at Nha Trang in South Vietnam on February 7, 1965. The
soldier was one of more than 100 who were wounded during Viet Cong
attacks on two U.S. military compounds at Pleiku, 240 miles north of
Saigon. Seven Americans were killed in the attacks.

Flag-draped
coffins of eight American Servicemen killed in attacks on U.S. military
installations in South Vietnam, on February 7, are placed in transport
plane at Saigon, February 9, 1965, for return flight to the United
States. Funeral services were held at the Saigon Airport with U.S.
Ambassador Maxwell D. Taylor and Vietnamese officials attending.
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Injured
Vietnamese receive aid as they lie on the street after a bomb explosion
outside the U.S. embassy in Saigon, Vietnam, on March 30, 1965. Smoke
rises from wreckage in background. At least two Americans and several
Vietnamese were killed in the bombing.
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Four
“Ranch Hand” C-123 aircraft spray liquid defoliant on a suspected Viet
Cong position in South Vietnam in September of 1965. The four specially
equipped planes covered a 1,000-foot-wide swath in each pass over the
dense vegetation.

A
Vietnamese battalion commander, Captain Thach Quyen, left, interrogates
a captured Viet Cong suspect on Tan Dinh Island, Mekong Delta, in 1965.

A
strategic air command B-52 bomber with externally mounted, 750-pound
bombs heads toward its target about 56 miles northwest of Saigon near
Tay Ninh on November 2, 1965.

General
William Westmoreland talks with troops of first battalion, 16th
regiment of 2nd brigade of U.S. First Division at their positions near
Bien Hoa in Vietnam, in 1965.

Flares
from planes light a field covered with the dead and wounded of the
ambushed battalion of the U.S. 1st Cavalry Division in the Ia Drang
Valley, Vietnam, on November 18, 1965, during a fierce battle that had
been raging for days. Units of the division were battling to hold their
lines against what was estimated to be a regiment of North Vietnamese
soldiers. Bodies of the slain soldiers were carried to this clearing
with their gear to await evacuation by helicopter.

A
U.S. Marine, newly arrived in South Vietnam on April 29, 1965, drips
with perspiration while on patrol in search of Viet Cong guerrillas near
Da Nang air base. American troops found 100-degree temperatures a tough
part of the job. General Wallace M. Greene Jr., a Marine Corps
commandant, after a visit to the area, authorized light short-sleeved
uniforms as aid to troops’ comfort.

In Berkeley-Oakland City, California, demonstrators march against the war in Vietnam in December of 1965.

A
Vietnamese litter bearer wears a face mask to keep out the smell as he
passes the bodies of U.S. and Vietnamese soldiers killed in fighting
against the Viet Cong at the Michelin rubber plantation, about 45 miles
northeast of Saigon, on November 27, 1965.

Wounded
and shocked civilian survivors of Dong Xoai crawl out of a fort bunker
on June 6, 1965, where they survived murderous ground fighting and air
bombardments of the previous two days.

A U.S. Air Force Douglas A-1E Skyraider drops a white phosphorus bomb on a Viet Cong position in South Vietnam in 1966.

A
Vietnamese girl, 23 years old, was captured by an Australian patrol 30
feet below ground at the end of a maze of tunnels some 10 miles west of
the headquarters of the Australian task force (40 miles southeast of
Saigon). The woman was crouched over a World War II radio set. About
seven male Viet Cong took off when the Australians appeared—but the
woman remained and appeared to be trying to conceal the radio set. She
was taken back to the Australian headquarters where she told under sharp
interrogation (which included a “waterprobe”; see her wet clothes after
the interrogation) that she worked as a Viet Cong nurse in the village
of Hoa Long and had been in the tunnel for 10 days. The Australians did
not believe her because she seemed to lack any medical knowledge. They
thought that she may have possibly been the leader of the political cell
in Long Hoa. She was being led away after interrogation, clothes soaked
from the “waterprobe” on October 29, 1966.

Left:
Pilot Leslie R. Leavoy in flight with other jets in the background
above Vietnam in 1966. Right: Army nurse 2nd Lieutenant Roberta “Bertie”
Steele in South Vietnam, on February 9, 1966.

Women
and children crouch in a muddy canal as they take cover from intense
Viet Cong fire at Bao Trai, about 20 miles west of Saigon, on January 1,
1966. Paratroopers, background, of the U.S. 173rd Airborne Brigade
escorted the South Vietnamese civilians through a series of firefights
during the U.S. assault on a Viet Cong stronghold.

A
Marine, top, wounded slightly when his face was creased by an enemy
bullet, pours water into the mouth of a fellow Marine suffering from
heat during Operation Hastings along the demilitarized zone between
North and South Vietnam on July 21, 1966.

Left:
A Vietnamese child clings to his bound father who was rounded up as a
suspected Viet Cong guerrilla during “Operation Eagle Claw” in the Bong
Son area, 280 miles northeast of Saigon on February 17, 1966. The father
was taken to an interrogation camp with other suspects rounded up by
the U.S. 1st air cavalry division. Right: The body of an American
paratrooper killed in action in the jungle near the Cambodian border is
raised up to an evacuation helicopter in War Zone C, Vietnam, in 1966.

The
singing group the “Korean Kittens” appear on stage at Cu Chi, Vietnam,
during the Bob Hope USO Christmas show, to entertain U.S. troops of the
25th Infantry Division.

A
grim-faced U.S. Marine fires his M60 machine gun, concealed behind logs
and resting in a shallow hole, during the battle against North
Vietnamese regulars for Hill 484, just south of the demilitarized zone,
on October 10, 1966. After three weeks of bitter fighting, the 3rd
battalion of the 4th Marines took the hill the week of October 2.

Lieutenant
Commander Donald D. Sheppard, of Coronado, California, aims a flaming
arrow at a bamboo hut concealing a fortified Viet Cong bunker on the
banks of the Bassac River, Vietnam, on December 8, 1967.

A
U.S. Marine CH-46 Sea Knight helicopter comes down in flames after
being hit by enemy ground fire during Operation Hastings, just south of
the demilitarized zone between North and South Vietnam, on July 15,
1966. The helicopter crashed and exploded on a hill, killing one crewman
and 12 Marines. Three crewmen escaped with serious burns.

A
trooper of the U.S. 1st cavalry division aims a flamethrower at the
mouth of cave in An Lao Valley in South Vietnam, on April 14, 1967,
after the Viet Cong group hiding in it were warned to emerge.

Sergeant
Ronald Payne, 21, of Atlanta, Georgia, emerges from a Viet Cong tunnel
holding his silencer-equipped revolver with which he fired at guerrillas
fleeing ahead of him underground. Payne and others of the 196th light
infantry brigade probed the massive tunnel in Hobo Woods, South Vietnam,
on January 21, 1967, and found detailed maps and plans of the enemy.
The infantrymen who explored the complex are known as “Tunnel Rats.”
They were called out of the tunnels on January 21, and nauseating gas
was pumped in.

Military
police, reinforced by Army troops, throw back anti-war demonstrators as
they tried to storm a mall entrance doorway at the Pentagon in
Washington, D.C., on October 21, 1967.

Rick Holmes of C company, 2nd battalion, 503rd infantry, 173rd airborne brigade, sits down on January 3, 1966, in Vietnam.

U.S.
Navy Douglas A-4E Skyhawks from Attack Squadrons VA-163 Saints and
VA-164 Ghost Riders attack the Phuong Dinh railroad bypass bridge, 10
kilometers north of Thanh Hoe, North Vietnam, on September 10, 1967.
Note the attacking Skyhawk in the lower right and one directly left of
the explosions on the bridge.

U.S.
troops of the 7th and 9th divisions wade through marshland during a
joint operation on South Vietnam’s Mekong Delta, in April of 1967.
Published on: October 17, 2017
Female Viet Cong guerrilla, 1972
Her name is Lam Thi Dep (Dep means beautiful in Vietnamese), the picture was taken in 1972 at Soc Trang Province by Vietnamese journalist Minh Truong. “You could find women like her almost everywhere during the war”, said the photographer. “She was only 24 years old but had been widowed twice. Both her husbands were soldiers”. She’s wielding a M-16, the standard issue American soldier’s rifle. Usually this type of photos were taken for propaganda purposes. North Vietnamese women were deeply involved at all levels of the military campaign throughout the war, especially at the business end, fighting against the American-led forces in the jungle.
North Vietnamese women were enlisted and fought in the combat zone as well as provided manual labor to keep the Ho Chi Minh trail open, cook for the troops, and some served as “comfort women” for male communist fighters. They also worked in the rice fields in North Vietnam and Viet Cong-held farming areas in South Vietnam’s Mekong Delta region to provide food for their families and the war effort. Women were enlisted in both the North Vietnamese Army and the Viet Cong guerrilla insurgent force in South Vietnam.
Why she’s carrying an American rifle? The Viet Cong forces were very successful at acquiring and using American made arms, which led directly to most of their big successes in the early to mid-60s. The weapons weren’t necessarily from dead American soldiers. Remember, the US was propping up Diem’s South Vietnamese government, and pumping weapons into his ally extremely flawed and corrupt army. South Vietnamese local garrisons meant to protect rural areas from Viet Cong influence often simply gave arms and ammunition to the local Viet Congs to avoid being slaughtered.
Interesting fact:
- M-16s had a 30% failure rate in most of the battles. The vast majority of the early failures were due to inadequate or even no care/cleaning of the rifles (in most cases they were issued without cleaning kits). Most American soldiers that went into service with the M-16 where given virtually no training on how to care for the weapon, they assumed it would need the same amount of cleaning as the M-14, and M1-garand designs. Once cleaning kits were dispensed and troops were trained how frequent to clean the weapon, failure rates on the M16 drastically went down. Still they were high for a service weapon.