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To: absentee

In my opinion, Jane Fonda was complicit in this:

“The first discovery of Communist victims came in the Gia Hoi High School yard, on February 26 ; eventually 170 bodies were recovered.

“In the next few months 18 additional grave sites were found, the largest of which were Tang Quang Tu Pagoda (67 victims), Bai Dau (77), Cho Thong area (an estimated 100), the imperial tombs area (201), Thien Ham (approximately 200), and Dong Gi (approximately 100). In all, almost 1,200 bodies were found in hastily dug, poorly concealed graves.

“At least half of these showed clear evidence of atrocity killings: hands wired behind backs, rags stuffed in mouths, bodies contorted but without wounds (indicating burial alive). The other nearly 600 bore wound marks but there was no way of determining whether they died by firing squad or incidental to the battle.

“The second major group of finds was discovered in the first seven months of 1969 in Phu Thu district-the Sand Dune Finds and Le Xa Tay-and Huong Thuy district-Xuan Hoa-Van Duong-in late March and April. Additional grave sites were found in Vinh Loc district in May and in Nam Hoa district in July. The largest of this group were the Sand Dune Finds in the three sites of Vinh Luu, Le Xa Dong and Xuan 0 located in rolling, grasstufted sand dune country near the South China Sea. Separated by salt-marsh valleys, these dunes were ideal for graves. Over 800 bodies were uncovered in the dunes.

“In the Sand Dune Find, the pattern had been to tie victims together in groups of 10 or 20, line them up in front of a trench dug by local corvee labour and cut them down with submachine gun (a favourite local souvenir is a spent Russian machine gun shell taken from a grave). Frequently the dead were buried in layers of three and four, which makes identification particularly difficult.

“In Nam Hoa district came the third, or Da Mai Creek Find, which also has been called the Phu Cam death march, made on September 19, 1969. Three Communist defectors told intelligence officers of the 101st Airborne Brigade that they had witnessed the killing of several hundred people at Da Mai Creek, about 10 miles south of Hue, in February of 1968. The area is wild, unpopulated, virtually inaccessible. The Brigade sent in a search party, which reported that the stream contained a large number of human bones.

“By piecing together bits of information, it was determined that this is what happened at Da Mai Creek: On the fifth day of Tet in the Phu Cam section of Hue, where some three-quarters of the City’s 40,000 Roman Catholics lived, a large number of people had taken sanctuary from the battle in a local church, a common method in Vietnam of escaping war. Many in the building were not in fact Catholic.

“A Communist political commissar arrived at the church and ordered out about 400 people, some by name and some apparently because of their appearance (prosperous looking and middle-aged businessmen, for example). He said they were going to the “liberated area” for three days of indoctrination, after which each could return home.

“They were marched nine kilometres south to a pagoda where the Communists had established a headquarters. There 20 were called out from the group, assembled before a drumhead court, tried, found guilty, executed and buried in the pagoda yard. The remainder were taken across the river and turned over to a local Communist unit in an exchange that even involved banding the political commissar a receipt. It is probable that the commissar intended that their prisoners should be re-educated and returned, but with the turnover, matters passed from his control.

“During the next several days, exactly how many is not known, both captive and captor wandered the countryside. At some point the local Communists decided to eliminate witnesses: Their captives were led through six kilometres of some of the most rugged terrain in Central Vietnam, to Da Mai Creek. There they were shot or brained and their bodies left to wash in the running stream. The 101st Airborne Brigade burial detail found it impossible to reach the creek overland, roads being non-existent or impassable. The creek’s foliage is what in Vietnam is called double-canopy, that is, two layers, one consisting of brush and trees close to the ground, and the second of tall trees whose branches spread out high above. Beneath is permanent twilight. Brigade engineers spent two days blasting a hole through the double-canopy by exploding dynamite dangled on long wires beneath their hovering helicopters. This cleared a landing pad for helicopter hearses. Quite clearly this was a spot where death could be easily hidden even without burial.

“The Da Mai Creek bed, for nearly a hundred yards up the ravine, yielded skulls, skeletons and pieces of human bones. The dead had been left above ground (for the animists among them, this meant their souls would wander the lonely earth forever, since such is the fate of the unburied dead), and 20 months in the running stream had left bones clean and white.

“Local authorities later released a list of 428 names of personswhom they said had been positively identified from the creek bed remains. The Communists’ rationale for their excesses was elimination of “traitors to the revolution.” The list of 428 victims breaks down as follows: 25 per cent military: two officers, the rest NCO’s and enlisted men; 25 per cent students; 50 per cent civil servants, village and hamlet officials, service personnel of various categories, and ordinary workers.

“The fourth or Phu Thu Salt Flat Finds came in November, 1969, near the fishing village of Luong Vien some ten miles east of Hue, another desolate region. Government troops early in the month began an intensive effort to clear the area of remnants of the local Communist organization. People of Luong Vien, population 700, who had remained silent in the presence of troops for 20 months apparently felt secure enough from Communist revenge to break silence and lead officials to the find. Based on descriptions from villagers whose memories are not always clear, local officials estimate the number of bodies at Phu Thu to be at least 300 and possibly 1,000. “

http://ngothelinh.tripod.com/Hue.html

Just my opinion.


28 posted on 03/23/2014 9:34:14 PM PDT by BenLurkin (This is not a statement of fact. It is either opinion or satire; or both.)
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To: BenLurkin

I have a list of over 3,000 victims from the Hue Massacre by the Communists during the Tet Offensive, 1968. Hopefully it will be put on the Texas Tech Un. Virtual Vietnam Archives this year.

I also have another book of over 62,000 names of “Govt Cadre” killed or kidnapped (same thing) by the Communists between 1954 and early 1973. Over 3 inches thick. Will try to have TTU also scan it for the public.

Won’t even mention the 1.7 million+ killed in Cambodia including friends of one, nor the hundreds of thousands of Laotians and Meo tribesmen killed by Hanoi in Laos.

I hope that the second Fonda gets her blood certificate, she has a major stroke and takes years to die, unable to say a thing, to move, or to wipe her red ass.

One can wish and pray.

Not enough soap in the world to wash all the blood off her hands.


42 posted on 03/24/2014 12:15:30 AM PDT by MadMax, the Grinning Reaper
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To: BenLurkin

I have a list of over 3,000 victims from the Hue Massacre by the Communists during the Tet Offensive, 1968. Hopefully it will be put on the Texas Tech Un. Virtual Vietnam Archives this year.

I also have another book of over 62,000 names of “Govt Cadre” killed or kidnapped (same thing) by the Communists between 1954 and early 1973. Over 3 inches thick. Will try to have TTU also scan it for the public.

Won’t even mention the 1.7 million+ killed in Cambodia including friends of one, nor the hundreds of thousands of Laotians and Meo tribesmen killed by Hanoi in Laos.

I hope that the second Fonda gets her blood certificate, she has a major stroke and takes years to die, unable to say a thing, to move, or to wipe her red ass.

One can wish and pray.

Not enough soap in the world to wash all the blood off her hands.


43 posted on 03/24/2014 12:15:43 AM PDT by MadMax, the Grinning Reaper
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