|
|
- NEWSLETTERS
- MOBILE APPS
-
ADD TIME NEWS
World: Grappling for Normalcy
Giap's new barrages came while South Viet Nam was grappling to regain a measure of normalcy amid the death and devastation from the first at tacks on 35 population centers. Though some fighting still went on in Saigon's environs and even heightened in the old imperial capital of Hué, the roar and whine of bombs and bullets had faded from most other cities before last week's assault. As the toll of the first attack continued to rise day by daynearly 4,000 civilians dead and another 337,000 made homelessthe allies stepped up relief and rehabilitation efforts while waiting for General Giap's next move.
Crowded Streets. Continuing skirmishes in the capital failed to root out stubbornand embarrassingpockets of Viet Cong guerrillas holed up in the honeycomb hovels and alleys of the Chinese quarter of Cholon. But Communist resistance had slackened to the point where Saigon resumed relatively routine patterns. Nightmarish traffic again snarled streets nearly empty for two weeks, and patrolling soldiers no longer had the wary, Gary Cooper glint in their eyes.
An estimated 200 V.C. commandos held out in Cholon and near the Phu
Tho race track, apparently mixing with civilians to avoid detection. Allied mopping up around Saigon may have yielded an important catch. The government professed "80% certainty" that one enemy body found was that of North Vietnamese Major General Tran Do, 48, political chief and second deputy commander of the Liberation Army. A final fingerprint check was awaited to determine if it really was Do.
Tattered Treasures. Writhing in the agony of prolonged battle, once-lovely Hue remained the only city in South Viet Nam where the V.C. flag still flew. Ten days of bitter street fighting cleared at least temporarilythe modern residential section south of the Perfume River, but the battle raged with full fury in the rubble-strewn Citadel, the early 19th century imperial fortress that holds much of Viet Nam's architectural and cultural treasure. As thousands of refugees huddled under a grey pall from countless fires, 1,000 U.S. Marines crossed the river to help the 2,500 South Vietnamese infantrymen and Marines fighting to recapture the former royal enclosure, once known as "the Forbidden City."
Their heavily entrenched quarry-some 500 regulars of the 6th NVA Regiment and Viet Cong unitsseemed almost as much hunter as prey because of its formidable position. With their backs to the river at the Citadel's south ern end, the Communists fought from ramparts and arches protected by massive stone walls more than eight feet thick. Because of the Citadel's symbolic value to the Vietnamese, the allies first tried to retake it without the fire power punch of artillery and air strikes, but the dug-in Communists repelled wave after wave of assaults.
- 1
- 2
- NEXT PAGE »
Most Popular »
- Five Things the U.S. Can Learn from China
- The H1N1 Pandemic: Is a Second Wave Possible?
- Facebook's Secret Code
- Tiger Gets Mulligan from the TV Networks
- Protests Mount Against Israel's Settlement Freeze
- Why Is SNL's Andy Samberg Nominated for a Rap Grammy?
- The Growing Backlash Against Overparenting
- The Troubles at Kroger: Frugal Consumers
- The FBI Probe: What Went Wrong at Fort Hood?
- Uganda's Anti-Gay Bill: Inspired by the U.S.
- The H1N1 Pandemic: Is a Second Wave Possible?
- Remarks of President Barack Obama: Acceptance of the Nobel Peace Prize
- Tiger Gets Mulligan from the TV Networks
- The Troubles at Kroger: Frugal Consumers
- Should Wild Animals Become Pets to Ward Off Extinction?
- Facebook's Secret Code
- Obama Shrinks the War on Terrorism
- Uganda's Anti-Gay Bill: Inspired by the U.S.
- The Job Market: Is a College Degree Worth Less?
- Why Is SNL's Andy Samberg Nominated for a Rap Grammy?





RSS