JAMES SPRINGER: Remembering the Fall of Saigon, 45 years on
NB: On April 30, 1975, after listening to the news on radio, I went to the DRV embassy in New Delhi and embraced the first diplomat I saw; saying: We won! Even now I get deeply moved by the memory of Vietnam. To the heroic Vietnamese people: Salaam. You will never know how much the word Vietnam meant to our generation. Respect and solidarity. DS
JAMES SPRINGER: Remembering the Fall of Saigon, 45 years on
JAMES SPRINGER: Remembering the Fall of Saigon, 45 years on
When I think back to
Vietnam in April 2019, Reunification Day opened with a bang across the country.
For a week prior, Saigon’s District 1 was abuzz with activity. Stages and
booths lined the promenade in front of the Rex Hotel as far as the eye could
see from the hotel’s rooftop bar, filled with the echoes of five o’clock
follies tinkling in the background.
The last helicopter: evacuating Saigon 30 April, 1975. Newsweek
In the week following
30 April 2019, I travelled up to Hanoi. There, the ring road surrounding Hoan
Kiem Lake had closed to become a amusement arcade for
pedestrians. Late at night, in a crowd watching a music performance, a father
held his small child in his arms, the young boy dressed in his pyjamas and
sporting a hat embroidered with ‘USA’.
An era passes: legendary Vietnamese General Vo Nguyen Giap Dies at 102
On 30 April 1975, both
Saigon and Hanoi looked very different – they were very different. As Army of
the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN) and American personnel fled Saigon, scrambling
into Huey helicopters poised on the tops of buildings like dragonflies,
People’s Army of Vietnam (PAVN) troops closed in on the city from all sides,
meeting little resistance. In Hanoi, centre of the Democratic Republic of
Vietnam’s (DRV) resistance to French colonialism followed by American
imperialism, the population waited in the wreckage of a city fatigued by 30
years of war....
https://southeastasiaglobe.com/the-fall-of-saigon-anniversary/The Photos That Caused Americans To Ask ‘What Are We Doing In Vietnam?’
William Calley, convicted for the My Lai massacre, served only 3 and a half years
Pentagon Papers and time when media was trusted
An era passes: legendary Vietnamese General Vo Nguyen Giap Dies at 102