Search results
12 cze 2010 · Operation Quyet Thang (25th Infantry Division), Hoc Mon, South Vietnam - DVD Copied by Thomas Gideon - National Archives and Records Administration 1968 - AR...
12 cze 2010 · Operation Quyet Thang (25th Infantry Division), Hoc Mon, South Vietnam - DVD Copied by Thomas Gideon - National Archives and Records Administration 1968 - ARC Identifier 31886 / Local Identifier 111-LC-52704 - Department of Defense. Department of the Army. Office of the Deputy Chief of Staff for Operations. U.S. Army Audiovisual Center.
26 paź 2020 · ARVN soldiers round up suspects in village. ID cards are checked. American soldiers look on. Suspect is led away by Viet soldiers. Another suspect is roused ...
31 gru 2014 · ARC Identifier 31886 / Local Identifier 111-LC-52704 1968 Department of Defense. Department of the Army. Office of the Deputy Chief of Staff for Operations. U.S. Army Audiovisual Center. (ca. 1974 - 05/15/1984). Silent. ARVN soldiers round up suspects in village. ID cards are checked. American soldiers look on. Suspect is led away by Viet soldiers.
Three days later, a security force guarding the Hoc Mon Bridge, a vital link between Hoc Mon and points north along Highway 1, discovered a Viet Cong demolition team swimming towards the bridge. The American and Vietnamese force opened fire, driving off the enemy.
Quiet villages like Tan Phu Trung and Hoc Mon were suddenly known by many. During the first 15 days following the start of the Tet offensive, the Cav and the Wolfhounds defended the Saigon, Tan Son Nhut and Hoc Mon areas. At times they fought in the streets, block by block.
Operation Quyet Thang (transl. "Resolved to win"), was a United States Army and Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN) security operation to reestablish South Vietnamese control over the areas immediately around Saigon in the aftermath of the Tet Offensive. The operation started on 11 March 1968 and ended on 7 April 1968.