Tet Offensive 1968, US Embassy Saigon fighting.flv
Saigon's historic rooftop - following the famous photo of the fall of Saigon with Larry Berman
We recently revisited the building made famous in Hu van Es's 29 April 1975 image of the helicopter evacuation of Saigon.
Read the blog and watch the video here -
The image of a helicopter landing on the elevator shaft of what was the Pittman Building (now 22 Ly Tu Trong St), came to symbolise the humiliating end of America's long war in Vietnam. And the rooftop has barely changed. It's a profound experience - even after many visits.
On this occasion we headed up with author Larry Berman. Larry wrote the biography of Pham Xuan An - Perfect Spy. Xuan An worked at the highest levels of the international press in South Vietnam and was communist spy throughout. On April 29, he assisted a friend to leave from the Pittman building.
Vietnam War Documentary | SAIGON HAS FALLEN
This collection focuses specifically on the final years of the Vietnam War: 1968-1975.
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The End of the Tunnel shows the desperation in the final days before Saigon fell and details the evacuation led by the U.S.; Peace Is at Hand looks at the diplomatic struggle in Paris in four years leading to the accord; and Homefront USA examines the shift in American opinion at home after years of violence, as casualties mounted and victory remained elusive.
USA: VIDEO STORE ORDERED TO REMOVE PORTRAIT OF HO CHI MINH
Eng/Viet/Nat
A judge has ordered the owner of a video store in Westminster, California's Little Saigon neighborhood to remove a wall-sized portrait of the late Vietnamese communist leader.
The courts are regarding it as a shrine to North Vietnam's Communist founder, Ho Chi Minh.
The picture of Ho Chi Minh and a North Vietnamese flag sparked a four-day protest in the de facto capitol of Vietnamese immigrants in America.
Protesters are outraged that a local video store owner would trivialise their suffering under the Communists by setting up a virtual shrine to the communist leader in his shop.
Anti-Communist chants that seemed to belong to another era rang out in the small Los Angeles neighborhood of Little Saigon Thursday afternoon.
Hundreds of outraged Vietnamese refugees are for the fourth straight day protested outside a neighbourhood video store.
The store's owner displayed a large portrait of Ho Chi Minh and a North Vietnamese flag on his wall and these people want them taken down.
The shop's owner has not been seen since Monday when he was beaten up by some of the protesters outside his store.
Many of these immigrants say they fled Communist Vietnam for the U-S after spending years in prison camps and having several family members killed by the Communists.
And that's why a virtual shrine to Ho Chi Minh has unleashed deep-seated sentiments from a war that ended more than twenty years ago.
SOUNDBITE: (English)
Ho Chi Minh killed about two (m) million Vietnamese and Ho Chi Minh killed over fifty eight -- Americans so today we don't want a picture of Ho Chi Minh hanging here. We don't
want the Communist flag hanging here. We're looking for freedom we come here. We don't want Communist being here. Truong Tran, he (the store's owner) is Communist.
SUPER CAPTION: Cu Tran, Vietnamese Refugee
This veteran lost a leg fighting the Vietcong before seeking refuge in the United States.
He's offended by the Ho Chi Minh shrine.
SOUNDBITE: (Vietnamese)
I was in the army and fought against the Vietcong. That's why I lost my leg and now I don't want to see any Communists over here.
SUPER CAPTION: Khon Nguyen, ARVN Veteran
The protesters are signing a petition they'll send to the U-S immigration service to have the store owner expelled from the country.
They believe his Communist sympathies should strip him of his status as a political refugee.
The landlord of the marketplace, meanwhile, has placed an eviction notice on the shop and is seeking a court order to enter the store and take down the Communist paraphernalia.
Until that happens, community leaders say the protest should continue.
SOUNDBITE: (English)
When the Communist took over South Vietnam, my relatives spent over ten or fifteen years in prison, that is the reason why you come here and you say look at those kinds of
pictures of the flag. It provokes our anger.
SUPER CAPTION: Thang Tran, President, Vietnamese Community of Southern California
SOUNDBITE: (Vietnamese)
He and the Communist party ruled the Vietnamese people for fifty years and the only thing they brought to the Vietnamese people is poverty and torture so today we don't
want to see his picture and the Communist blood flag.
SUPER CAPTION: Cu Tran, Vietnamese Refugee
Civil rights activists say the shop's owner has every right under U-S law to have the photo and flag hung prominently in his shop.
But with emotions running this high, the standoff in Little Saigon will likely continue until these images from the war return to the past.
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'Saigon: The Final Hours'
A special WBUR documentary. On the 40th anniversary of the fall of Saigon, four Massachusetts Marines detail the final evacuation of U.S. and South Vietnamese troops and civilians.
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IMAGES
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Saigon in Vietnam on April 30, 1975 - Smoke on the airport Tan Son Nhut from Saigon (Photo by Herve GLOAGUEN/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images)
Entry to Tan Son Nhut
cổng vào đường Cộng Hòa, trước 1975 là trục đường chính của Căn cứ Không quân Tân Sơn Nhứt
tommy japan
Saigon 1975 - TanSonNhut - Photograph William E. LeGro Collection
tommy japan
Saigon 1975 - TanSonNhut - Photograph William E. LeGro Collection (5)
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Fall of Saigon
DA NANG, VIETNAM - MARCH 28, 1975: The hold of the ship is cramped with refugees. (Jack Cahill/Toronto Star via Getty Images)
FALL OF SAIGON 1975 - CH-53 Door Gunner During Evacuation
The Fall of Saigon: A Correspondent Remembers
source: j-hawker.blogspot.com/2012_04_01_archive.html
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Fall of Saigon - Operation Frequent Wind
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Fall of Saigon
The Fall of Saigon in Vietnam on April 30, 1975 - Arrival of the North Vietnamese troops. (Photo by Herve GLOAGUEN/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images)
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Fall of Saigon
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Fall of Saigon
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FALL OF SAIGON 1975 - Crowds forming at U.S. Embassy early April 29
The Fall of Saigon: A Correspondent Remembers
source: j-hawker.blogspot.com/2012_04_01_archive.html
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Evacuees aboard the USS Hancock.
Jim Stanitz Collection - Vietnam Center and Archive
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FALL OF SAIGON 1975
As Saigon falls to the communist rule of North Vietnamese, US Marines evacuate Americans and Vietnamese April, 1975 at Tan Son Nhut Airbase, in South Vietnam. The people run as to escape fire from troops from the North. (Photo by Dirck Halstead/Liaison)
ronan crowley
Ho Chi Minh (Saigon), Vietnam
The evacuation of USA Staff from the roof of their embassy - War Remnants Museum
MUSIC
Chris Zabriskie
Alex Mason
The fall of Saigon
Former CBC correspondent, Mike Duffy, reports on the American evacuation of Saigon 40 years ago
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Vietnam - Empty & Overgrown American Embassy
T/I: 10:57:34
Twenty years ago, the U.S. embassy in Saigon was the scene of a
frantic scramble: the Communist north Vietnamese army was
advancing and American and South Vietnamese nationals were being
evacuated. Now, the embassy is empty and overgrown. Children play
around its walls and tourist buses pay brief calls so veterans can
look around the embassy and remember the past. James Kimsey, who
served two tours in Vietnam, last saw the embassy compound 26
years ago. He's sad and a little shocked to see it so run down.
The embassy was formally handed back to Washington in 1994.
America has yet to announce what it will do with it.
SHOWS:
SAIGON, VIETNAM (27/4/1995, RECENT & FILE)
SAIGON RECENT
0.00 WS U.S. embassy building
0.04 Overgrown compound
0.07 PAN down from deteriorated ceiling to pavement and doors
0.14 Derelict roof
0.16 PAN across helipad
0.24 Incinerator inside
0.27 PAN across incinerator
FILE
0.31 People around compound trying to escape
0.32 CU of same
0.35 People clamber over wall
0.38 More of same
0.41 People around embassy
27/4
0.31 American veteran, James Kimsey, SOT (in vision at 0.42)
The last time I saw this 26 years ago, it was a far
different kind of a place and it was the central point of
our organisation. To come back now and see it deserted
and obviously in some disrepair is a little bit shocking.
0.50 Tourists alight bus
0.54 Children climbing embassy wall
0.58 Children looking through gate
1.00 Children over wall
RECENT
1.02 Overgrown compound
1.04 PAN from helipad to sky
1.13 ENDS
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Vietnam - 20th Anniversary Of Fall Of Saigon
T/I 10:15:39
STORY: HO CHI MINH CITY
LOCATION: VIETNAM
DATE: 28 APRIL 1995 - FILE
DURATION: 1.45
20th anniversary of fall of Saigon
Vietnam on Friday (28/4) began celebrating with a military parade the 20th anniversary of the fall of Saigon, when Communist forces rolled into the South Vietnamese capital to secure victory. The fall of Saigon, now renamed Ho Chi Minh City, marked the end of an intensive North Vietnamese campaign which began in March 1975. In the week before the communists' arrival, frightened South Vietnamese troops and civilians desperately tried to escape. US helicopters began ferrying to 40 warships offshore the last Americans and those Vietnamese whose fate was tied to the US. Others crammed into boats to be transported to the waiting fleet. Thousands gathered outside the US Embassy, hoping to be air-lifted out. The Americans feared the embassy would be over-run. Only Vietnamese recognised by Americans were hauled over the wall. Some South Vietnamese soldiers escaped by flying their army's helicopters to the fleet, crowding the decks so that several choppers had to be pushed into the sea to allow more to land.
SHOWS:
(HO CHI MINH CITY 28/4) Military parade to mark 20th anniversary of the fall of Saigon. High-ranking Vietnamese officer. His medals. Old Vietnamese soldier. Soldiers parading. Civilian audience. Ho Chi Minh cut-out figure on float.
(FILE VIETNAM 1975) Aerial view of North Korean trucks advancing
toward Saigon. Tanks. US Embassy surrounded by South Vietnamese.
Soldier proferring arm toward Vietnamese clambering up wall.
Helicopter on embassy roof.
(HO CHI MINH CITY 28/4) Roof of former US Embassy.
(FILE VIETNAM 1975) Refugees scrambling onto boat. Helicopter
landing on aircraft carrier. South Vietnamese walking on carrier
deck. Vietnamese pushing South Vietnamese helicopter overboard.
Helicopter plunging into water. North and South Vietnamese
fighting on Newport Bridge, an entrance to Saigon. North
Vietnamese tanks rolling into Saigon. North Vietnamese soldiers
arriving at Presidential Palace. North Vietnamese soldiers waving
victory flag at palace.
(HO CHI MINH CITY 28/4) Presidential Palace exterior. Palace with
flag. Tank that crashed through gates on 30 April 1975. Vietnamese
cycling across bridge. Vietnamese on bridge. Billboard in city
centre advertising celebrations.
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Ho Chi Minh City Airport - Arriving at Tan Son Nhat International Airport in Vietnam - Airport info
Arriving at Ho Chi Minh City Airport called Tan Son Nhat International Airport (SGN). If this is your first visit to the Ho Chi Minh City Airport (Tân Sơn Nhất International Airport) you should find this video helpful for getting an idea of the airport procedures when you arrive at Tan Son Nhat International Airport in Vietnam.
This Ho Chi Minh City Airport footage is filmed from the disembarkation of our flight, through the walk to Immigration / Passport Control (Vietnam Visa clearance etc. is not included in the footage as filming is not allowed in this part of Tan Son Nhat International Airport - quite normal at all airports in the world), from Immigration to the Baggage Claim Area (in the Baggage Claim Area of this airport we explain how to find out from which baggage belt you flights luggage will be offloaded on), after we receive our luggage we proceed towards the airport customs area. There is not an area of Something to declare Nothing to Declare like most other international arrivals customs areas at airports. At Ho Chi Minh City Airport all passengers instead have to run all their luggage through another security scanner from where airport customs officials van see what the luggage contains. After clearing customs we reach Ho Chi Minh City Airports main arrival area. From this area we recommend travelers to use the money exchange desks, Telephone card desks (SIM Cards) and taxi services, airport shuttle services and limousines or get information about Airport buses to Ho Chi Minh City. We advice that you shop around for the best exchange rate as exchange rates are negotiable and there can be a large difference in pricing. We also ordered a taxi to Ho Chi Minh City from the airport. The taxi service from the airport was a fixed price of 200 000 Vietnamese Dong which is a fair price although the taxi trip from Ho Chi Minh Airport to the city would probably have been cheaper by taxi meter (we did not want to take that chance as this was our first visit to Tan Son Nhat International Airport and Ho Chi Minh City and we had been warned that some taxi company taxi meters could not be trusted. The video footage from this airport ends with us walking out of the Airport and finding the taxi that will drive us into Ho Chi Minh City.
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#TanSonNhatInternationalAirport
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Wiki writes about Tân Sơn Nhất International Airport, Tân Sơn Nhất International Airport (Vietnamese: Sân bay quốc tế Tân Sơn Nhất, Vietnamese: Cảng hàng không quốc tế Tân Sơn Nhất) is the busiest airport in Vietnam with more than 23 million passenger movements per year. As of November 2016, it had a total capacity of only 20 million passengers, which has caused constant congestion and sparked debate for expanding or building a new airport. It was also among the top 50 busiest airports in the world in terms of passengers handled in 2015, serving Ho Chi Minh City as well as the rest of southeastern Vietnam. Its IATA code, SGN, is derived from the city's former name of Saigon. The airport is expected to handle 32 million passengers in 2016...
This footage is filmed inside and outside of Ho Chi Minh City Airport (SGN) called Tan Son Nhat International Airport (Tân Sơn Nhất International Airport). Ho Chi Minh City is located in Vietnam.
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The Fall of Saigon: 40 years later
Former Air America pilot Tony Coalson and Retired Marine Col. Gerry Berry reflect on the last days of the Vietnam War, and the role they played in Operation Frequent Wind, the largest helicopter evacuation in history.
Lãnh sự quán Hoa Kỳ, Saigon US Embassy VietNam
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Vietnam celebrates 40 years since the fall of Saigon
Vietnam is marking 40 years since the end of a war which killed at least three million of its citizens.
The country's political and military powers attend a colourful parade in Ho Chi Minh City.
Formerly known as Saigon, the then capital of South Vietnam fell to the north in 1975, setting the wheels in motion for the nation's reunification under Communist rule.
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Why U.S. Servicemen in Vietnam Loved Saigon
During the Vietnam War, Saigon more than lived up to its nickname as the 'Paris of the Orient.' It was safe, busy and a favorite hangout spot for servicemen looking for a little R&R.
From the Series: The Lost Tapes: The Tet Offensive
Vietnam - 20 Anniversary Celebrated Of US Withdraw
T/I: 10:56:51
It's 20 years since the final remnants of the us presence in
Vietnam beat an ignominious retreat from Saigon as Communist
forces rolled into the South Vietnamese capital and secured their
victory. The fall of Saigon, now renamed Ho Chi Minh City, marked
the end of an intensive campaign which began in March 1975. Twenty
years on, a military parade was held in the city.
SHOWS
HO CHI MINH CITY, 28/4
0:00 military parade commemorating 20th anniversary
0:03 cu of above
0:06 cu high ranking Vietnamese soldier
0:08 cu medals on above
0:11 cu old vietnamese soldier
0:13 soldiers parading
0:16 cutaway civilian audience
0:18 cu ho chi minh cut-out figure on float
0:20 ws of above
FILE, VIETNAM, 1975
0:23 aerial of north vietnamese trucks advancing towards Saigon
0:26 ms tanks
0:30 US embassy surrounded by vietnamese
0:32 soldier proffers arm towards vietnamese clambering up walls
0:43 helicopter on embassy roof
HO CHI MINH CITY, 28/4
0:46 ws old US embassy roof
0:48 cu of roof
FILE, VIETNAM 1975
0:52 refugees scrambling on boat
0:55 cu of same
0:58 helicopter landing on carrier
1:02 vietnamese walking on carrier
1:04 ws vietnamese pushing south vietnamese helicopter over board
1:07 cu above helicopter descending into water
1:10 north and south vietnamese fighting on Newport bridge,
entrance to Saigon
1:16 tanks rolling in to Saigon
1:19 ms soldiers arriving at presidential palace
1:25 north vietnamese soldiers waving victory flag at palace
HO CHI MINH CITY, 28/4
1:29 exterior presidential palace
1:31 ls Palace with flag
1:33 ms tank that crashed through gates on April 30, 1975
1:36 vietnamese cycling across
1:38 cu vietnamese on bridge
1:41 hoarding in centre of city advertising celebrations in centre
of city
1:45 ENDS
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Deja Vu Vietnam: Pt12 (Saigon-City Center)
In this series of videos, we visit Saigon's past and present, including the Basilica, Post Office, former US Embassy (now US Consulate), Saigon Zoo and Independence/Presidential (Reunification) Palace.
VIETNAM : 2004 Saigon-US Embassy & War Museum
Am 29. April 1975 wurden vom Gelände der US-Botschaft während der Operation Frequent Wind mehrere hundert US-Bürger und tausende vietnamesischer Flüchtlinge per Hubschrauber vom Hubschrauberlandeplatz auf dem Dach vor der heranrückenden Nordvietnamesischen Armee auf Schiffe der US-Marine vor der Küste evakuiert. Am Morgen des 30. April verließ Botschafter Graham Martin als letzter US-Botschafter in Südvietnam das Gebäude und wurde auf die USS Blue Ridge ausgeflogen.
VIETNAM: 20TH ANNIVERSARY PREPARATIONS: THE FALL OF SAIGON
English/Nat
Vietnam is busy preparing for the 20th anniversary Sunday of the fall of Saigon - the moment that marked the end of the Vietnam War.
Today, the city bears little trace of the past. It has been renamed Ho Chi Minh City and American companies are flocking there to do business.
But, though Saigon has reinvented itself, the abandoned American Embassy still stands in the middle of the city, derelict and empty - a bleak reminder of the war.
The communist Vietnamese government is busy sprucing up the capital for the 20th anniversary this Sunday.
Red billboards and posters of Ho Chi Minh, the Communist leader who gave his name to the capital after its capture in 1975, are springing up along the main streets.
But among the Communist paraphernalia, are signs that capitalism is creeping into the city.
Under the banners, a dance group sponsored by American-owned Pepsi Cola gathers to rehearse dances in honour of the Communist victory.
Just down the street, the abandoned American Embassy - scene of the final dramatic airlift out of the country 20 years ago - is a reminder of the bitter history that haunts both America and Vietnam.
Tourists gawk outside the embassy gates where thousands of desperate South Vietnamese who had collaborated with the Americans, gathered for the promised airlift. Most never got through the gates.
Inside, the hallways where diplomats, military officers and CIA agents once roamed are dark and empty. Cobwebs hang deep in the stairwells.
Even the office of the last American ambassador, Graham Martin, has been stripped of furniture.
On the Embassy roof, the helipad where the last Americans lifted off to US navy ships waiting offshore, is exactly as it was left 20 years ago when America bowed out of the war.
It was a humiliation that America has found hard to forget.
One of the millions of American war veterans who is still struggling to come to terms with the past is Jack Cardoza.
Jack, from Santa Fe in California, was a crew chief on US helicopters during the war. He says he has come back to Vietnam to try to come to terms with his past.
SOUNDBITE:
I had to come back. There's something deep in me that's unsettled, even now about Vietnam. I feel a lot better after being here a few days. Things are starting to shift. It's done. It's a healing.
SUPER CAPTION: Jack Cardoza, Vietnam veteran
From his helicopter, Jack witnessed US aircraft loading up with the defoliant 'Agent Orange'. Now at the Ho Chi Minh war crimes museum he is coming face to face with its effects on Vietnam's children.
SOUNDBITE:
Friends that died here - for what cause? Why in the hell were we here? Why did they die and why were so many affected by this war?
SUPER CAPTION: Jack Cardoza, US Helicopter veteran from Vietnam war
But for the Vietnamese children playing on the wreck of a Huey helicopter, Jack's ghost-ridden war has become a lesson in history.
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American Embassy Bomb Outrage In Saigon Kills 20 AKA Bomb Outrage - Saigon (1965)
Unissued / unused material - dates and locations may be unclear / unknown.
Saigon / Ho Chi Minh City , South Vietnam / Vietnam
MS Pan up exterior of bombed American Embassy in Saigon with blown out windows where 20 people were killed and United States military personnel are among the injured. MS Badly damaged building and wrecked cars. MS Four severely wounded Vietnamese people lying in the street, some moving slightly, hit by the bomb placed outside the entrance to the Embassy. MS Man attending to wounded man in the street. Various shots of the immediate aftermath of the bomb, a man attends to the four people lying in the street, whilst fire burns in the background, a fireman races to attend. MS A Red Cross ambulance arrives. Various shots, two American Embassy staff with head wounds stand by the building holding cloths to their faces and are ushered into cars. CU A young American woman with blood coming from her ear, walks past. MS A bomb victim is carried to an ambulance. MS A man with bandaged eyes is helped across the road. Various shots, the walking wounded are led to ambulances, others are stretchered. Various shots, firemen hosing down burning vehicles. MS Pan across Embassy offices on the ground floor destroyed by the bomb. Various shots, rescue workers working in the debris and hosing out the building, a dark liquid runs out on to the pavement. MS Pan up Embassy building to a tattered US flag above.
Note: Date on original record: 30/03/1965.
FILM ID:3106.07
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Pham Ngu Lao nightlife is also one of Ho Chi Minh’s finest, with throngs of street vendors, bia hoi stalls, lively bars, and downtown clubs filling up the lively scene. Interesting nightlife entertainment spots include The View Rooftop Bar, Seventeen Saloon, Go 2 and Crazy Buffalo Nightclub as well as many smaller pubs that are known for their cheap drinks and happy hour promos. It’s also common around here to meet friendly expats who are more than happy to share a few tips about travelling in and beyond Vietnam. If you want to immerse yourself in the local culture, we highly suggest getting up early and visit the parks within the area. It is interesting to see (and even to join in on) the elders participating in Tai Chi-like exercise sessions. Another must-do is heading to the morning markets such as Ben Tanh Market, where local vendors sell a wide array of fresh produce, household supplies, and Vietnamese street food at attractive prices. As Pham Ngu Lao is not such a large area, it’s the perfect place to explore on foot - the best time to do this is in the morning and late afternoon as the weather can be rather scorching at the height of the day. If you’re feeling adventurous, there are also travel agencies that can help arrange for day trips within the city centre and beyond...
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Hello, I'm Suresh IDEA .
I like walking around new countries of the world, and through this channel I will try to show you this beautiful world , how incredible the world is! I always try to travel on a budget. I make videos in Hindi to make aware people in India and South-Asia that travelling is not a costly affair. I wish everyone explore this beautiful world and learn the best things to make our world a better place to live.
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Saigon, Vietnam: US Embassy (1967-1975, demolished)
US Embassy in Saigon, South Vietnam, built in 1967. Located at the corner of Thống Nhứt (now Lê Duẩn) and Mạc Đĩnh Chi. Attacked by 19 Việt Cộng infiltrators shortly after midnight on January 31, 1968. By 9 am, 18 had been killed and the remaining one captured. Abandoned on April 30, 1975. Building demolished in 1998, replaced by the newly-built U.S. Consulate-General in Ho Chi Minh City. Video taken in 1994.