- published: 31 May 2007
- views: 5514
8:19
1967 Glassboro Summit
Forty years ago, in the Hollybush Mansion on the grounds of Glassboro State College, U.S. ...
published: 31 May 2007
1967 Glassboro Summit
Forty years ago, in the Hollybush Mansion on the grounds of Glassboro State College, U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson and Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin met face to face for an historic two-day summit.
http://www.rowan.edu/hollybush/
On June 23 and 25, 1967, the world leaders, who favored opposing sides in the Arab-Israeli Six-Day War, addressed the crisis and other world matters as hundreds jammed the lawn outside Hollybush and hundreds of thousands watched around the globe.
- published: 31 May 2007
- views: 5514
2:09
Death of a Cosmonaut - Soyuz 1 - Vladimir Komarov
The last radio transmission - , "cursing the people who had put him inside a botched space...
published: 24 Mar 2011
Death of a Cosmonaut - Soyuz 1 - Vladimir Komarov
The last radio transmission - , "cursing the people who had put him inside a botched spaceship." - Vladimir Komarov, is about to, literally, crash full speed into Earth, his body turning molten on impact.
Convinced he will never make it back to Earth; he's talking to Alexei Kosygin — then a high official of the Soviet Union.
The space vehicle is shoddily constructed, running dangerously low on fuel; its parachutes — though no one knows this — won't work
U.S. listening posts in Turkey hear him , angry, desperate, in tears - .the end was closing in on him.
The Cosmonauts, Vladimir Kamarov and Soviet hero Yuri Gagarin, the first human to reach outer space. The two men were close; they socialized, hunted and drank together.
In 1967, both men were assigned to the same Earth-orbiting mission, and both knew the space capsule was not safe to fly. Komarov told friends he knew he would probably die. But he wouldn't back out because he didn't want Gagarin to die. Gagarin would have been his replacement.
The story begins around 1967, when Leonid Brezhnev, leader of the Soviet Union, decided to stage a spectacular midspace rendezvous between two Soviet spaceships.
The plan was to launch a capsule, the Soyuz 1, with Komarov inside. The next day, a second vehicle would take off, with two additional cosmonauts; the two vehicles would meet, dock, Komarov would crawl from one vehicle to the other, exchanging places with a colleague, and come home in the second ship. It would be, Brezhnev hoped, a Soviet triumph on the 50th anniversary of the Communist revolution. Brezhnev made it very clear he wanted this to happen.
The problem was Gagarin. Already a Soviet hero, the first man ever in space, he and some senior technicians had inspected the Soyuz 1 and had found 203 structural problems — serious problems that would make this machine dangerous to navigate in space. The mission, Gagarin suggested, should be postponed.
He'll die instead of me. We've got to take care of him.
- Komarov talking about Gagarin
The question was: Who would tell Brezhnev? Gagarin wrote a 10-page memo and gave it to his best friend in the KGB, Venyamin Russayev, but nobody dared send it up the chain of command. Everyone who saw that memo, including Russayev, was demoted, fired or sent to diplomatic Siberia. With less than a month to go before the launch, Komarov realized postponement was not an option. He met with Russayev, the now-demoted KGB agent, and said, "I'm not going to make it back from this flight."
Russayev asked, Why not refuse? According to the authors, Komarov answered: "If I don't make this flight, they'll send the backup pilot instead." That was Yuri Gagarin. Vladimir Komarov couldn't do that to his friend. "That's Yura," the book quotes him saying, "and he'll die instead of me. We've got to take care of him." Komarov then burst into tears.
On launch day, April 23, 1967, a Russian journalist, Yaroslav Golovanov, reported that Gagarin showed up at the launch site and demanded to be put into a spacesuit, though no one was expecting him to fly. Golovanov called this behavior "a sudden caprice," though afterward some observers thought Gagarin was trying to muscle onto the flight to save his friend. The Soyuz left Earth with Komarov on board.
Once the Soyuz began to orbit the Earth, the failures began. Antennas didn't open properly. Power was compromised. Navigation proved difficult. The next day's launch had to be canceled. And worse, Komarov's chances for a safe return to Earth were dwindling fast.
All the while, U.S. intelligence was listening in. The National Security Agency had a facility at an Air Force base near Istanbul. Previous reports said that U.S. listeners knew something was wrong - VERY wrong!
Source: - NPR
- published: 24 Mar 2011
- views: 308705
44:07
Pandora's Box, E1: The Engineers' Plot
Pandora's Box, subtitled A Fable From the Age of Science, is a six part 1992 BBC documenta...
published: 28 Apr 2012
Pandora's Box, E1: The Engineers' Plot
Pandora's Box, subtitled A Fable From the Age of Science, is a six part 1992 BBC documentary television series written and produced by Adam Curtis, which examines the consequences of political and technocratic rationalism.
The episodes deal, in order, with communism in The Soviet Union, systems analysis and game theory during the Cold War, economy in the United Kingdom during the 1970s, the insecticide DDT, Kwame Nkrumah's leadership in Ghana during the 1950s and 1960s and the history of nuclear power.
The series was awarded a BAFTA in the category of "Best Factual Series" in 1993.
The Engineers' Plot
This episode details how the Bolshevik revolutionaries who came into power in 1917 attempted to industrialize and control the Soviet Union with rational scientific methods. The Bolsheviks wanted to turn the Soviet people into scientific beings. Aleksei Gastev used social engineering, including a social engineering machine, to make people more rational. Gastev founded the Central Institute of Labour (TsIT), Soviet think tank dedicated to the improvement of industrial efficiency.
But Bolshevik politicians and bourgeois engineers came into conflict. Lenin said: "The communists are not directing anything, they are being directed." Stalin arrested 2000 engineers in 1930, eight of whom were convicted in the Industrial Party show trial. Engineering schools gave those loyal to the party only limited training in engineering, to minimize their potential political influence. Industrialized America was used as a template to develop the Soviet Union. Magnitogorsk was built to closely replicate the steel mill city Gary, Indiana. A former worker describes how they went so far as to create metal trees since trees could not grow on the steppe.
By the late 1930s, Stalin faithful engineers like Leonid Brezhnev, Alexei Kosygin and Nikita Khrushchev grew in influence, due to Stalin eliminating many earlier Bolshevik engineers. They aimed to use engineering in line with Stalin's policies to plan the entire country. At Gosplan, the head institution of central planning, engineers predicted future rational needs. Vitalii Semyonovich Lelchuk, from the USSR Academy of Sciences, describes the level of detail as absurd: "Even the KGB was told the quota of arrests to be made and the prisons to be used. The demand for coffins, novels and movies was all planned." The seemingly rational benchmarks began to have unexpected results. When the plan measured tonnes carried per kilometers, trains went long distances just to meet the quota. Sofas and chandeliers increased in size to meet measurements of material usage.
When Nikita Khrushchev took over after Stalin he tried to make improvements, including considering prices in the plan. The head of the USSR State Committee for Organization and Methodology of Price Creation is shown with a tall stack of price logbooks declaring that "This shows quite clearly that the system is rational." Academician Victor Glushkov proposed the use of cybernetics to control people as a remedy for the problems of planning. In the 60s computers began being used to process economic data. Consumer demand was calculated by computers from data gathered by surveys. But the time delay in the system meant that items were no longer in demand by the time they had been produced.
When Leonid Brezhnev and Alexei Kosygin took over in the mid 60s, the economy of the Soviet Union was stagnating. By 1978 the country was in full economic crisis. Production had devolved to "pointless, elaborate ritual" and endeavours to improve the plan had been abandoned. Quote the narrator: "What had begun as a grand moral attempt to build a rational society ended by creating a bizarre, bewildering existence for millions of Soviet people".
- published: 28 Apr 2012
- views: 21534
1:10
Indo Pakistan Declaration at Taskhkent 1966
Location: Tashkent, Uzbekistan, USSR / Soviet Union.
Story about India and Pakistan reach...
published: 24 Dec 2012
Indo Pakistan Declaration at Taskhkent 1966
Location: Tashkent, Uzbekistan, USSR / Soviet Union.
Story about India and Pakistan reaching agreement in Tashkent.
GV. of conference in session at Tashkent, with MS of President Ayub Khan of Pakistan and Indian Prime Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri.
MS. Alexei Kosygin, Chairman of the USSR Council of Ministers, speaking. GV. pan around conference table. LS of Kosygin speaking. MS. group of reporters standing taking notes.
CU. plaque in English and Russian reading "India". MS. Shastri signing the declaration. CU. plaque in English and Russian reading "Pakistan". MS. Ayub Khan signing the declaration.
GV. of conference table as all the delegates rise after the signing. MS. Shastri, Kosygin and Ayub Khan shaking hands.
(Dupe Negative).
Note: Prime Minister Shastri was to die in Tashkent soon after signing this agreement with Pakistan.
- published: 24 Dec 2012
- views: 23
9:21
Lal Bahadur Shastri - Meeting in Tashkent 1966
The Tashkent Declaration of 10 January 1966 was a peace agreement between India and Pakist...
published: 22 Jul 2011
Lal Bahadur Shastri - Meeting in Tashkent 1966
The Tashkent Declaration of 10 January 1966 was a peace agreement between India and Pakistan. In September 1965 before the two had engaged in the short run Indo-Pakistani War of 1965. Peace had been achieved on 23 September by the intervention of the great powers who pushed the two nations to a cease fire for fears the conflict could escalate and draw in other powers.
A meeting was held in Tashkent in the Uzbek SSR, USSR (now in Uzbekistan) beginning on 4 January 1966 to try to create a more permanent settlement. The Soviets, represented by Premier Alexei Kosygin moderated between Indian Prime Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri and Pakistani President Muhammad Ayub Khan. The day after the declaration Indian Prime Minister Shastri died of a sudden heart attack. There are many conspiracy theories regarding the death of Lal Bahadur Shastri. The agreement was criticized in India because it did not contain a no-war pact or any renunciation of guerrilla warfare in Kashmir. The two countries would again be at war in 1971, leading to division of Pakistan.
- published: 22 Jul 2011
- views: 7336
1:05
Second Indian PM Watch Stolen
A watch gifted to former Indian Prime Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri by his Russian counterp...
published: 09 Sep 2009
Second Indian PM Watch Stolen
A watch gifted to former Indian Prime Minister Lal Bahadur Shastri by his Russian counterpart, Alexei Kosygin, has been stolen from a museum in New Delhi.
Unidentified troublemakers made off with the watch, belonging to country's second PM.
The watch holds great significance because of its historical importance; it was gifted to Shastri during the momentous 1966 Tashkent conference.
[Kundan Singh, Lal Bahadur Shastri Museum]:
"The historical importance of that watch is too much. It was gifted to him by the Russian president and is thus, priceless...I'm from the field of history; I'm not here to determine its cost it is as I told you, priceless."
Authorities discovered the theft on September 3rd but only reported the theft four days later.
Investigations are continuing to locate the stolen watch.
- published: 09 Sep 2009
- views: 1144
13:59
U.S. Marine Corps in Vietnam, Viet Cong, Vietnamese Farmers (1965)
The Viet Cong (Vietnamese: Việt cộng), or National Liberation Front (NLF), was a political...
published: 24 Jun 2012
U.S. Marine Corps in Vietnam, Viet Cong, Vietnamese Farmers (1965)
The Viet Cong (Vietnamese: Việt cộng), or National Liberation Front (NLF), was a political organization and army in South Vietnam and Cambodia that fought the United States and South Vietnamese governments during the Vietnam War (1959--1975), and emerged on the winning side. It had both guerrilla and regular army units, as well as a network of cadres who organized peasants in the territory it controlled. Many soldiers were recruited in South Vietnam, but others were attached to the People's Army of Vietnam (PAVN), the regular North Vietnamese army. During the war, communists and anti-war spokesmen insisted the Viet Cong was an insurgency indigenous to the South, while the U.S. and South Vietnamese governments portrayed the group as a tool of Hanoi. This allowed writers to distinguish northern communists from the southern communists. However, northerners and southerners were always under the same command structure.
Southern Vietnamese communists established the National Liberation Front in 1960 to encourage the participation of non-communists in the insurgency. Many of the Viet Cong's core members were "regroupees," southern Vietminh who had resettled in the North after the Geneva Accord (1954). Hanoi gave the regroupees military training and sent them back to the South along the Ho Chi Minh trail in the early 1960s. The NLF called for Southerners to "overthrow the camouflaged colonial regime of the American imperialists" and to make "efforts toward the peaceful unification." The Viet Cong's best-known action was the Tet Offensive, a massive assault on more than 100 South Vietnamese urban centers in 1968, including an attack on the US embassy in Saigon. The offensive riveted the attention of the world's media for weeks, but also overextended the Viet Cong. Later communist offensives were conducted predominately by the North Vietnamese. The group was dissolved in 1976 when North and South Vietnam were officially unified under a communist government.
A landmark party meeting was held in December 1963, shortly after a military coup in Saigon in which Diệm was assassinated. North Vietnamese leaders debated the issue of "quick victory" vs "protracted war" (guerrilla warfare). After this meeting, the communist side geared up for a maximum military effort and PAVN troop strength increased from 174,000 at the end of 1963 to 300,000 in 1964. The Soviets cut aid in 1964 as an expression of annoyance with Hanoi's ties to China. Even as Hanoi embraced China's international line, it continued to follow the Soviet model of reliance on technical specialists and bureaucratic management, as opposed to mass mobilization. The winter of 1964--1965 was a high water mark for the Viet Cong, with the Saigon government on the verge of collapse. Soviet aid soared following a visit to Hanoi by Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin in February 1965. Hanoi was soon receiving up-to-date surface-to-air missiles. The U.S. would have 200,000 soldiers in South Vietnam by the end of the year. In January 1966, Australian troops uncovered a tunnel complex which had been used by COSVN. Six thousand documents were captured, revealing the inner workings of the Viet Cong. COSVN retreated to Mimot in Cambodia. As a result of an agreement with the Cambodian government made in 1966, weapons for the Viet Cong were shipped to the Cambodian port of Sihanoukville and then trucked to Viet Cong bases near the border along the "Sihanouk Trail", which replaced the Ho Chi Minh Trail.
Many Viet Cong units operated at night, and employed terror as a standard tactic. Rice procured at gunpoint sustained the Viet Cong. Squads were assigned monthly assassination quotas. Government employees, especially village and district heads, were the most common targets. But there were a wide variety of targets, including clinics and medical personnel. Notable Viet Cong atrocities include 48 killed in the bombing of My Canh floating restaurant in Saigon in June 1965 and a massacre of 252 Montagnards in the village of Đắk Sơn in December 1967 using flamethrowers.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vietcong
- published: 24 Jun 2012
- views: 1127
1:47
Shastri's wristwatch stolen from city memorial.
Antique thieves have made away with a piece of India's post-Independence history. Unidenti...
published: 10 Sep 2009
Shastri's wristwatch stolen from city memorial.
Antique thieves have made away with a piece of India's post-Independence history. Unidentified persons have stolen a golden wristwatch from the Lal Bahadur Shastri Memorial in Lutyens' Delhi. Shastri, the country's second Prime Minister, had received the watch as a gift from Russian counterpart Alexei Kosygin during the historic Tashkent conference in 1966. The police have hinted that scores of antique items in the memorial may not be safe because of lax security. Authorities of the memorial, located next to Sonia Gandhi's house, discovered the theft on September 3. But they seem to have wasted valuable time by trying to locate the watch by themselves before approaching police on September 7.
- published: 10 Sep 2009
- views: 144
15:30
Taxi and takeoff from Manas Airport, Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan (FRU)
The taxi was a bit long and the runway a little rough, but it was a beautiful day at Manas...
published: 20 Apr 2012
Taxi and takeoff from Manas Airport, Bishkek, Kyrgyzstan (FRU)
The taxi was a bit long and the runway a little rough, but it was a beautiful day at Manas. The Kyrgyz countryside is really breathtaking from the air!
Some information about Manas Airport from Wikipedia:
Manas International Airport (Kyrgyz: «Манас» эл-аралык аэропорту) (IATA: FRU, ICAO: UAFM) is the main international airport in Kyrgyzstan located 25 kilometres (16 mi) north-northwest of the capital Bishkek.
The airport is operational 24 hours and its ILS system is ICAO CAT 2. Fog can cause heavy delays especially for long haul flights.
It is also the site of the Transit Center at Manas, formerly known as Manas Air Base, a US Air Force base supporting Operation Enduring Freedom and the International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan.
In 2007, 625,500 passengers passed through the airport, an increase of 21% over the previous year. 23,172 tonnes of cargo were also processed in 2007.
The airport was constructed as a replacement for the old Bishkek airport that was located to the south of the city, and named after the Kyrgyz epic hero, Manas, at the suggestion of country's most prominent writer and intellectual, Chinghiz Aitmatov. The first plane landed at Manas in October 1974, with Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin on board. Aeroflot operated the airport's first scheduled flight to Moscow-Domodedovo on 4 May 1975.
When Kyrgyzstan gained independence from the Soviet Union in 1991, the airport began a slow but steady decline as its infrastructure remained neglected for almost ten years and a sizable aircraft boneyard developed; approximately 60 derelict aircraft from the Soviet era, ranging in size from helicopters to full-sized airliners, were left in mothballs on the airport ramp at the Eastern end of the field.
With the beginning of Operation Enduring Freedom, the United States and its coalition partners immediately sought permission from the Kyrgyz government to use the airport as a military base for operations in Afghanistan. Coalition forces arrived in late December 2001 and immediately the airport saw unprecedented expansion of operations and facilities.The derelict aircraft were rolled into a pasture next to the ramp to make room for coalition aircraft, and large, semi-permanent hangars were constructed to house coalition fighter aircraft. Additionally, a Marsden Matting parking apron was built along the Eastern half of the runway, along with a large cargo depot and several aircraft maintenance facilities. A tent city sprang up across the street from the passenger terminal, housing over 2,000 troops. The American forces christened the site "Ganci Air Base", after New York Fire Department chief Peter J. Ganci, Jr., who was killed in the September 11 terrorist attacks. It was later given the official name of Manas Air Base.
In 2004, a new parking ramp was added in front of the passenger terminal to make room for larger refueling and transport aircraft such as the KC-135 and C-17.
Around the same time the Kyrgyz government performed a major expansion and renovation of the passenger terminal, funded in part by the sizable landing fees paid by coalition forces. Several restaurants, gift shops, and barber shops sprang-up in the terminal catering to the deployed troops.
The airport terminal underwent renovation and redesign in 2007.The contemporary IATA codename FRU originates from the Soviet name of the city of Bishkek called then Frunze.
During its existence Kyrgyzstan Airlines had its head office on the airport property. On 2 January 2002 the airline moved its head office to the Kyrgystan Airlines Sales Agency building of Manas International Airport. Previously the head office was also on the grounds of the airport.
- published: 20 Apr 2012
- views: 3712
0:29
1927 24TH STREET W CIR PALMETTO Florida
http://instatour.propertypanorama.com/instaview/mfr/T2506696 is the place to go if you are...
published: 19 Oct 2012
1927 24TH STREET W CIR PALMETTO Florida
http://instatour.propertypanorama.com/instaview/mfr/T2506696 is the place to go if you are seeking homes for sale near PALMETTO Florida. The address of this home is 1927 24TH STREET W CIR .
- published: 19 Oct 2012
- views: 3
1:33
Guile's Backward Theme Goes With Everything (First Space Walk)
The Russian Voskhod 2 mission, which had the world's 1st ever spacewalk (EVA), by pilot Al...
published: 06 Apr 2011
Guile's Backward Theme Goes With Everything (First Space Walk)
The Russian Voskhod 2 mission, which had the world's 1st ever spacewalk (EVA), by pilot Alexey Leonov on 18 March 1965. Commander Pavel Belyaev was on board.
The Voskhod 3KD spacecraft was designed by Sergei Korolev and engineered by Kerim Kerimov of СССР, with the space suit being a Berkut ("Golden Eagle").
It followed on from Sputnik, and Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin's historic Vostok mission. Premier Alexei Kosygin made both men a Hero of the Soviet Union, and gave them the Order of Lenin and Order of the Red Star. Zangief and Necro would be proud!
It goes with Eliug's theme (Guile backwards) from Street Fighter II The World Warrior, released by Capcom in 1991. Composed by Yoko Shimomura and Alph Lyra (Isao Abe et al). Arranged by Yoshihiro Sakaguchi and Tetsuya Nishimura.
GTGWE mashup concept inspired by guilethemefitsall
- published: 06 Apr 2011
- views: 1678
1:53
Raw Video: Restored Video of Apollo 11 Moonwalk
NASA released Thursday newly restored video from the July 20, 1969, live television broadc...
published: 16 Jul 2009
Raw Video: Restored Video of Apollo 11 Moonwalk
NASA released Thursday newly restored video from the July 20, 1969, live television broadcast of the Apollo 11 moonwalk. The release commemorates the 40th anniversary of the first mission to land astronauts on the moon. (July 16)
- published: 16 Jul 2009
- views: 206310
Youtube results:
97:57
Our World
Our World was the first live, international, satellite television production, which was br...
published: 14 Apr 2012
Our World
Our World was the first live, international, satellite television production, which was broadcast on 25 June 1967. Creative artists, including opera singer Maria Callas, The Beatles and painter Pablo Picasso, representing nineteen different nations were invited to perform or appear in separate segments featuring their respective countries. The two-and-half-hour event had the largest television audience ever up to that date: an estimated 400 million people around the globe watched the broadcast. Today, it is most famous for the segment from the United Kingdom starring The Beatles. They sang their specially composed song "All You Need Is Love" to close the broadcast.
The project was conceived by BBC producer Aubrey Singer. It was transferred to the European Broadcasting Union, but the master control room for the broadcast was still at the BBC in London. The satellites used were Intelsat I (Early Bird), Intelsat II and ATS-1.
It took ten months to bring everything together. One hitch was the sudden pull-out of the Eastern bloc countries headed by the Soviet Union in the week leading up to the broadcast. Apparently it was a protest at the Western nations' response to the Six Day War.
The ground rules included that no politicians or heads of state could participate in the broadcast. In addition, everything had to be 'live', so no use of videotape or film was permitted. Ten thousand technicians, producers, and interpreters took part in this massive broadcast. Each country would have its own announcers, due to language issues, and interpreters would voice-over the original sound when not in a country's native language. In the end 14 countries participated in the production that was transmitted to 31 countries with an estimated audience between 400 to 700 million people.
The opening credits were accompanied by the Our World theme sung in 22 different languages by the Vienna Boys Choir.
Canada's CBC Television had Marshall McLuhan being interviewed in a Toronto television control room. At 7:17 pm GMT, the show switched to the United States' segment about the Glassboro, New Jersey, conference between American president Lyndon Johnson and Soviet premier Alexei Kosygin; since Our World insisted that no politicians be shown, only the house where the conference was being held was televised. National Educational Television's (NET) Dick McCutcheon ended up talking about the impact of the new television technology on a global scale.
The show switched back to Canada at 7:18 pm GMT. Segments that were beamed worldwide were from a Ghost Lake, Alberta ranch, showing a rancher, and his cutting horse, cutting out a herd of cattle. The last Canadian segment was from Kitsilano Beach, located in Vancouver, British Columbia's Point Grey district at 7:19 pm GMT.
At 7:20 pm GMT, the program shifted continents to Asia, with Tokyo, Japan being the next segment. It was 4:20 a.m. local time and NHK showed the construction of the Tokyo Subway system.
The equator was crossed for the first time in the program when it switched to the Australian contribution, which was at 5:22 a.m. Australian Eastern Standard Time (AEST). This was the most technically complicated point in the broadcast, as both the Japanese and Australian satellite ground stations had to reverse their actions: Tokyo had to go from transmit mode to receive mode, while Melbourne had to switch from receive to transmit mode. The segment dealt with Trams leaving the Hanna Street Depot in Melbourne with Australian Broadcasting Commission's Brian King explaining that sunrise was many hours away as it was winter there. A scientific segment, later on in the broadcast, was also included that dealt with the Parkes Observatory tracking a deep space object.
Transmitted: 25 June 1967
This film footage is from the Archive Collection held and administered by the Alexandra Palace Television Society.
~ APTS ~
Preserving the televisual past for the digital future
www.apts.org.uk
- published: 14 Apr 2012
- views: 5022
16:03
Vietnam War: Behind the Viet Cong Lines - Documentary Film (1965)
http://thefilmarchive.org/
The Vietcong (Vietnamese: Việt cộng, About this sound listen...
published: 05 Nov 2011
Vietnam War: Behind the Viet Cong Lines - Documentary Film (1965)
http://thefilmarchive.org/
The Vietcong (Vietnamese: Việt cộng, About this sound listen), or National Liberation Front (NLF), was a political organization and army in South Vietnam and Cambodia that fought the United States and South Vietnamese governments during the Vietnam War (1959--1975). It had both guerrilla and regular army units, as well as a network of cadres who organized peasants in the territory it controlled. Many soldiers were recruited in South Vietnam, but others were attached to the People's Army of Vietnam (PAVN), the regular North Vietnamese army. During the war, communists and anti-war spokesmen insisted the Vietcong was an insurgency indigenous to the South, while the U.S. and South Vietnamese governments portrayed the group as a tool of Hanoi. This allowed writers to distinguish northern communists from the southern communists. However, northerners and southerners were always under the same command structure.
Southern Vietnamese communists established the National Liberation Front in 1960 to encourage the participation of non-communists in the insurgency. Many of the Vietcong's core members were "regroupees," southern Vietminh who had resettled in the North after the Geneva Accord (1954). Hanoi gave the regroupees military training and sent them back to the South along the Ho Chi Minh trail in the early 1960s. The NLF called for Southerners to "overthrow the camouflaged colonial regime of the American imperialists" and to make "efforts toward the peaceful unification." The Vietcong's best-known action was the Tet Offensive, a massive assault on more than 100 South Vietnamese urban centers in 1968, including an attack on the US embassy in Saigon. The offensive riveted the attention of the world's media for weeks, but also overextended the Vietcong. Later communist offensives were conducted predominately by the North Vietnamese. The group was dissolved in 1976 when North and South Vietnam were officially unified under a communist government.
The level of violence in the South jumped dramatically in the fall of 1961, from 50 guerrilla attacks in September to 150 in October. U.S President John F. Kennedy decided in November 1961 to substantially increase American military aid to South Vietnam. The USS Core arrived in Saigon with 35 helicopters in December 1961. By mid-1962, there were 12,000 U.S. military advisors in Vietnam. The "special war" and "strategic hamlets" policies allowed Saigon to push back in 1962, but in 1963 the Vietcong regained the military initiative. The Vietcong won its first military victory against South Vietnamese forces at Ấp Bắc in January 1963.
A landmark party meeting was held in December 1963, shortly after a military coup in Saigon in which Diệm was assassinated. North Vietnamese leaders debated the issue of "quick victory" vs "protracted war" (guerrilla warfare). After this meeting, the communist side geared up for a maximum military effort and PAVN troop strength increased from 174,000 at the end of 1963 to 300,000 in 1964. The Soviets cut aid in 1964 as an expression of annoyance with Hanoi's ties to China. Even as Hanoi embraced China's international line, it continued to follow the Soviet model of reliance on technical specialists and bureaucratic management, as opposed to mass mobilization. The winter of 1964-1965 was a high water mark for the Vietcong, with the Saigon government on the verge of collapse. Soviet aid soared following a visit to Hanoi by Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin in February 1965. Hanoi was soon receiving up-to-date surface-to-air missiles. The U.S. would have 200,000 soldiers in South Vietnam by the end of the year. In January 1966, Australian troops uncovered a tunnel complex which had been used by COSVN. Six thousand documents were captured, revealing the inner workings of the Vietcong. COSVN retreated to Mimot in Cambodia. As a result of an agreement with the Cambodian government made in 1966, weapons for the Vietcong were shipped to the Cambodian port of Sihanoukville and then trucked to Vietcong bases near the border along the "Sihanouk Trail", which replaced the Ho Chi Minh Trail.
Many Vietcong units operated at night, and employed terror as a standard tactic. Rice procured at gunpoint sustained the Vietcong. Squads were assigned monthly assassination quotas. Government employees, especially village and district heads, were the most common targets. But there were a wide variety of targets, including clinics and medical personnel. Notable Vietcong atrocities include 48 killed in the bombing of My Canh floating restaurant in Saigon in June 1965 and a massacre of 252 Montagnards in the village of Đắk Sơn in December 1967 using flamethrowers.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viet_Cong
- published: 05 Nov 2011
- views: 7821