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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:05,000 --> 00:00:10,000 - Original file by zfeet - - Resynced by Ornlu Wolfjarl - 2 00:00:23,400 --> 00:00:26,066 TIM O'BRIEN: They shared the weight of memory. 3 00:00:27,566 --> 00:00:31,431 They took up what others could no longer bear. 4 00:00:33,732 --> 00:00:38,930 Often, they carried each other, the wounded or weak. 5 00:00:39,031 --> 00:00:40,597 They carried infections. 6 00:00:40,697 --> 00:00:42,798 They carried chess sets, basketballs, 7 00:00:42,898 --> 00:00:45,031 Vietnamese-English dictionaries, 8 00:00:45,131 --> 00:00:48,696 insignia of rank, Bronze Stars, and Purple Hearts, 9 00:00:48,797 --> 00:00:52,829 plastic cards imprinted with the Code of Conduct. 10 00:00:52,929 --> 00:00:55,562 (thunder rumbles) 11 00:00:55,661 --> 00:00:59,462 They carried diseases, among them malaria and dysentery. 12 00:01:03,296 --> 00:01:07,827 They carried lice and ringworm and leeches and paddy algae 13 00:01:07,927 --> 00:01:10,228 and various rots and molds. 14 00:01:12,094 --> 00:01:13,394 (rain pouring) 15 00:01:14,560 --> 00:01:18,127 They carried the land itself... 16 00:01:18,227 --> 00:01:20,060 Vietnam. 17 00:01:34,625 --> 00:01:38,025 ("My Country 'Tis of Thee" playing) 18 00:01:38,125 --> 00:01:41,024 (mouths): Thank you. 19 00:01:44,457 --> 00:01:47,391 (indistinct chatter) 20 00:01:47,491 --> 00:01:50,956 (applause) 21 00:01:56,523 --> 00:02:02,022 I can tell you, as I look back over those months and years, 22 00:02:02,122 --> 00:02:05,421 that we have met with the wives and the mothers 23 00:02:05,522 --> 00:02:09,954 of those of you who were prisoners of war, 24 00:02:10,054 --> 00:02:15,787 they were and are the bravest, most magnificent women 25 00:02:15,887 --> 00:02:17,352 I have ever met in my life. 26 00:02:18,953 --> 00:02:21,162 And now, if they will give me my official toasting glass, 27 00:02:21,186 --> 00:02:22,519 I will propose the toast. 28 00:02:24,018 --> 00:02:25,018 Tonight... 29 00:02:25,119 --> 00:02:28,351 NARRATOR: On May 24, 1973, 30 00:02:28,452 --> 00:02:30,252 President Nixon invited 31 00:02:30,351 --> 00:02:33,550 all the returned prisoners of war and their families 32 00:02:33,650 --> 00:02:35,417 to Washington. 33 00:02:35,518 --> 00:02:38,485 Among them was Everett Alvarez, 34 00:02:38,585 --> 00:02:42,916 the first pilot shot down over North Vietnam. 35 00:02:43,017 --> 00:02:45,137 EVERETT ALVAREZ: Sometimes, I feel too much attention 36 00:02:45,183 --> 00:02:48,149 was being paid to us, the P.O.W.s. 37 00:02:48,250 --> 00:02:50,949 And what about the poor guys that fought the war, those kids? 38 00:02:51,049 --> 00:02:56,182 You know, that came home, um, you know, amputees... 39 00:02:56,283 --> 00:03:02,215 Uh, wounded with the injuries of war. 40 00:03:02,314 --> 00:03:04,381 What about them? 41 00:03:04,482 --> 00:03:07,015 We had our own challenges, 42 00:03:07,114 --> 00:03:09,581 and the key was to, to face these 43 00:03:09,680 --> 00:03:12,413 and yet maintain our, our honor. 44 00:03:12,514 --> 00:03:14,314 That's what it was. 45 00:03:16,214 --> 00:03:18,746 NARRATOR: Dr. Hal Kushner, 46 00:03:18,845 --> 00:03:21,580 who had been a prisoner for more than five years, 47 00:03:21,679 --> 00:03:24,112 was unable to attend. 48 00:03:24,213 --> 00:03:28,245 He was reunited with his family at Valley Forge. 49 00:03:28,344 --> 00:03:32,344 HAL KUSHNER: We flew to Valley Forge, Pennsylvania. 50 00:03:32,445 --> 00:03:36,444 And I came off the helicopter and I saw my wife... 51 00:03:39,444 --> 00:03:42,143 ...and my daughter, 52 00:03:42,244 --> 00:03:43,944 who I hadn't seen since she was 2 1/2 53 00:03:44,042 --> 00:03:46,010 And she was born in 1963. 54 00:03:52,477 --> 00:03:57,175 So she was ten years old. 55 00:03:57,276 --> 00:03:58,976 And my son, who I had never seen, 56 00:03:59,076 --> 00:04:01,276 a week before his fifth birthday. 57 00:04:01,375 --> 00:04:05,041 And he had on a little tie and a little coat. 58 00:04:08,575 --> 00:04:10,275 And my mom and dad. 59 00:04:10,374 --> 00:04:15,240 And my mother was just overcome with emotion. 60 00:04:18,474 --> 00:04:22,138 And I just... 61 00:04:22,239 --> 00:04:25,872 It was just an incomprehensible moment. 62 00:04:25,973 --> 00:04:28,206 And we hugged everybody. 63 00:04:28,306 --> 00:04:31,104 And my little boy had a flag, American flag. 64 00:04:34,205 --> 00:04:37,472 NARRATOR: Like many P.O.W. marriages, 65 00:04:37,571 --> 00:04:41,737 Hal Kushner's would not survive. 66 00:05:01,868 --> 00:05:05,800 On March 29, 1973, 67 00:05:05,900 --> 00:05:09,900 the last American troops left South Vietnam. 68 00:05:10,001 --> 00:05:13,632 Fewer than 200 Marines would remain, 69 00:05:13,733 --> 00:05:16,332 assigned to guard consular offices 70 00:05:16,433 --> 00:05:18,000 and the American Embassy 71 00:05:18,099 --> 00:05:21,300 and other installations in Saigon. 72 00:05:21,399 --> 00:05:27,131 Thousands of other Americans, including C.I.A. agents, 73 00:05:27,232 --> 00:05:29,266 diplomats, and contractors, 74 00:05:29,365 --> 00:05:31,265 stayed behind, as well. 75 00:05:33,731 --> 00:05:35,630 Over the next two years, 76 00:05:35,731 --> 00:05:38,030 the forces of North and South Vietnam 77 00:05:38,130 --> 00:05:42,163 would continue to savage one another. 78 00:05:42,264 --> 00:05:46,663 And the Vietnamese people would find themselves 79 00:05:46,764 --> 00:05:48,764 back where they were at the beginning, 80 00:05:48,863 --> 00:05:53,395 engulfed in an apparently endless civil war 81 00:05:53,496 --> 00:05:58,094 and struggling over what kind of future they would have. 82 00:06:01,794 --> 00:06:06,262 For the United States, combat did end, 83 00:06:06,361 --> 00:06:11,494 but controversy over the war did not. 84 00:06:11,593 --> 00:06:14,294 TIM O'BRIEN: The best you could say about Vietnam 85 00:06:14,393 --> 00:06:17,793 was that certain blood was being shed 86 00:06:17,892 --> 00:06:20,193 for uncertain reasons. 87 00:06:20,293 --> 00:06:22,092 The blood was for sure... 88 00:06:22,193 --> 00:06:23,726 the bodies, the widows, the orphans... 89 00:06:23,825 --> 00:06:25,225 they were certain. 90 00:06:25,324 --> 00:06:29,992 Nobody disputed it, the dead people were dead. 91 00:06:30,091 --> 00:06:34,657 But the rectitude of the war was in great dispute. 92 00:06:34,758 --> 00:06:36,290 Smart people in pinstripes 93 00:06:36,390 --> 00:06:38,323 couldn't make their minds up about the war. 94 00:06:47,057 --> 00:06:49,622 And I remember asking myself... 95 00:06:54,656 --> 00:06:57,888 "Was it worth it?" 96 00:06:57,989 --> 00:07:03,254 Maybe it was all a big mistake, and, you know, 97 00:07:03,354 --> 00:07:05,988 what, what was it all about? 98 00:07:06,088 --> 00:07:09,021 We answered the call, 99 00:07:09,120 --> 00:07:11,987 me and probably 2 1/2 million other young Americans 100 00:07:12,087 --> 00:07:14,253 who went over there. 101 00:07:14,353 --> 00:07:20,119 It was a cause worth the effort. 102 00:07:20,218 --> 00:07:23,718 And sometimes, things just don't turn out 103 00:07:23,818 --> 00:07:26,086 and the guys in the white hats don't win. 104 00:07:26,185 --> 00:07:28,552 But that doesn't make it, uh, 105 00:07:28,652 --> 00:07:31,952 or doesn't basically take away 106 00:07:32,052 --> 00:07:34,952 from the rectitude of the cause. 107 00:07:59,281 --> 00:08:01,814 Subcommittee will come to order. 108 00:08:01,915 --> 00:08:04,113 NARRATOR: Night after night during the spring, summer, 109 00:08:04,213 --> 00:08:06,648 and fall of 1973, 110 00:08:06,747 --> 00:08:09,548 Americans watched the Nixon administration 111 00:08:09,648 --> 00:08:11,947 slowly come apart. 112 00:08:12,047 --> 00:08:13,580 Blackmail, 113 00:08:13,679 --> 00:08:15,513 enemies lists, 114 00:08:15,613 --> 00:08:17,580 dirty tricks, 115 00:08:17,679 --> 00:08:20,778 a vice president forced to resign, 116 00:08:20,878 --> 00:08:23,811 perjury, cover-up, 117 00:08:23,912 --> 00:08:27,211 abuse of presidential power, 118 00:08:27,311 --> 00:08:30,511 secret White House tapes. 119 00:08:30,611 --> 00:08:31,987 FRED THOMPSON: Mr. Butterfield, are you aware 120 00:08:32,011 --> 00:08:34,045 of the installation of any listening devices 121 00:08:34,145 --> 00:08:36,011 in the Oval Office of the president? 122 00:08:39,776 --> 00:08:43,843 I was aware of listening devices. 123 00:08:43,944 --> 00:08:45,577 Yes, sir. 124 00:08:45,676 --> 00:08:47,109 Good evening. 125 00:08:47,209 --> 00:08:49,775 The country tonight is in the midst of what may be 126 00:08:49,875 --> 00:08:52,342 the most serious constitutional crisis 127 00:08:52,443 --> 00:08:53,943 in its history. 128 00:08:54,043 --> 00:08:55,875 I told the president about the fact 129 00:08:55,976 --> 00:08:58,241 that there were money demands being made 130 00:08:58,341 --> 00:09:00,274 by the seven convicted defendants. 131 00:09:00,374 --> 00:09:02,475 He asked me how much it would cost. 132 00:09:02,575 --> 00:09:04,774 I told him I could only make an estimate 133 00:09:04,874 --> 00:09:08,340 that it might be as high as a million dollars or more. 134 00:09:08,441 --> 00:09:11,340 He told me that that was no problem. 135 00:09:11,441 --> 00:09:15,372 I had no prior knowledge of the Watergate break-in. 136 00:09:15,473 --> 00:09:18,705 I neither took part in nor knew about 137 00:09:18,805 --> 00:09:21,640 any of the subsequent cover-up activities. 138 00:09:23,671 --> 00:09:25,031 The one frustrating thing about... 139 00:09:25,072 --> 00:09:26,371 about going to Canada was, 140 00:09:26,472 --> 00:09:29,072 it left me outside the debate here. 141 00:09:29,171 --> 00:09:31,870 I felt about... frustrated with that till this day. 142 00:09:31,971 --> 00:09:36,170 NARRATOR: As the Watergate scandal unfolded, Jack Todd, 143 00:09:36,270 --> 00:09:38,471 who had deserted the United States Army 144 00:09:38,571 --> 00:09:39,604 and fled to Canada, 145 00:09:39,703 --> 00:09:42,037 had never felt so bitter, 146 00:09:42,137 --> 00:09:44,570 so disenchanted, so out of touch 147 00:09:44,669 --> 00:09:47,570 with what the United States seemed to have become. 148 00:09:47,669 --> 00:09:53,402 He asked himself, "How did we let this gang take charge?" 149 00:09:53,502 --> 00:09:58,901 Then he made a decision he would always regret: 150 00:09:59,001 --> 00:10:03,100 he renounced his American citizenship. 151 00:10:03,200 --> 00:10:05,167 JACK TODD: I thought it was a political act, 152 00:10:05,267 --> 00:10:08,166 renouncing my American citizenship. 153 00:10:08,266 --> 00:10:12,766 And it was the stupidest thing I have ever done in my life. 154 00:10:12,866 --> 00:10:15,199 I'm a Canadian citizen and I'm proud of it. 155 00:10:15,299 --> 00:10:19,033 It's a wonderful country, but in here, I'm an American. 156 00:10:26,831 --> 00:10:28,240 JOHN NEGROPONTE: Well, the agreement was called 157 00:10:28,264 --> 00:10:30,231 "The Agreement to End the War 158 00:10:30,331 --> 00:10:32,932 and Restore Peace in Vietnam." 159 00:10:33,032 --> 00:10:36,763 And, of course, that was a huge euphemism. 160 00:10:36,863 --> 00:10:40,064 It neither ended the war nor did it restore peace. 161 00:10:40,163 --> 00:10:42,597 And if you look at the substance of it, 162 00:10:42,696 --> 00:10:44,106 it really was a withdrawal agreement. 163 00:10:44,130 --> 00:10:45,963 We were withdrawing our forces 164 00:10:46,063 --> 00:10:48,963 in exchange for prisoners of war. 165 00:10:49,063 --> 00:10:53,828 Those are the two matters that were definitively settled 166 00:10:53,929 --> 00:10:55,429 by the peace agreement. 167 00:10:55,529 --> 00:11:00,562 We got our troops out and we got our prisoners back. 168 00:11:00,661 --> 00:11:07,128 The rest is just all a model of nebulosity and vagueness 169 00:11:07,227 --> 00:11:09,593 and didn't resolve a darn thing. 170 00:11:41,656 --> 00:11:43,723 NARRATOR: Neither North nor South Vietnam 171 00:11:43,823 --> 00:11:47,088 had had any intention of observing the cease-fire 172 00:11:47,188 --> 00:11:49,655 called for in the peace treaty signed in Paris 173 00:11:49,755 --> 00:11:54,056 on January 27, 1973. 174 00:11:54,155 --> 00:11:56,455 Even before the ink was dry, 175 00:11:56,555 --> 00:12:00,922 each side had sought to claim as much territory as it could 176 00:12:01,022 --> 00:12:05,253 in what became known as "the War of the Flags." 177 00:12:05,353 --> 00:12:07,786 Within three weeks of the ceasefire, 178 00:12:07,887 --> 00:12:13,219 there were already some 3,000 violations by both sides. 179 00:12:13,319 --> 00:12:16,685 South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu, 180 00:12:16,785 --> 00:12:20,285 who now commanded the fifth-largest army on Earth, 181 00:12:20,386 --> 00:12:25,818 insisted the ARVN take and hold every inch of South Vietnam, 182 00:12:25,919 --> 00:12:27,885 something they had been unable to do 183 00:12:27,985 --> 00:12:33,350 even with the help of nearly 600,000 American troops. 184 00:12:33,451 --> 00:12:35,183 (explosion) 185 00:12:35,283 --> 00:12:38,384 Meanwhile, the North Vietnamese had attacked Tay Ninh, 186 00:12:38,484 --> 00:12:40,649 near the Cambodian border, 187 00:12:40,749 --> 00:12:43,583 hoping to establish a rival capital of their own 188 00:12:43,682 --> 00:12:45,617 in the South. 189 00:12:45,716 --> 00:12:50,215 Hanoi installed surface-to-air missiles near Khe Sanh, 190 00:12:50,315 --> 00:12:53,449 just below the DMZ. 191 00:12:53,549 --> 00:12:56,981 At the same time, ARVN troops attacked enclaves 192 00:12:57,080 --> 00:12:59,548 seized by the North Vietnamese. 193 00:12:59,647 --> 00:13:03,780 The fighting went on for months. 194 00:13:03,881 --> 00:13:07,079 Hanoi built a new paved highway 195 00:13:07,179 --> 00:13:09,514 within South Vietnam itself, 196 00:13:09,614 --> 00:13:13,813 down which convoys of 200 to 300 vehicles 197 00:13:13,914 --> 00:13:15,678 soon began streaming: 198 00:13:15,778 --> 00:13:21,613 trucks, tanks, and heavy guns moving in broad daylight. 199 00:13:21,712 --> 00:13:25,545 And they began laying down a giant oil pipeline 200 00:13:25,644 --> 00:13:30,012 to fuel their vehicles in the South. 201 00:13:30,112 --> 00:13:33,444 Nixon had privately promised President Thieu 202 00:13:33,544 --> 00:13:36,611 that he would retaliate with American airpower 203 00:13:36,710 --> 00:13:40,944 if Saigon ever seemed seriously threatened. 204 00:13:41,044 --> 00:13:42,576 (gavel banging) 205 00:13:42,675 --> 00:13:45,043 But in Washington, week by week, 206 00:13:45,142 --> 00:13:48,175 as the secrets of Watergate kept tumbling out, 207 00:13:48,275 --> 00:13:54,475 Nixon's influence on Capitol Hill steadily weakened. 208 00:13:54,574 --> 00:13:59,174 In June of 1973, an energized Congress, 209 00:13:59,274 --> 00:14:02,441 reflecting the views of a majority of Americans, 210 00:14:02,541 --> 00:14:05,740 voted to stop all military operations 211 00:14:05,840 --> 00:14:10,639 in or over Vietnam, Laos, or Cambodia 212 00:14:10,739 --> 00:14:12,473 by August 15, 213 00:14:12,572 --> 00:14:14,907 and insisted that they not be resumed 214 00:14:15,007 --> 00:14:17,838 without congressional approval. 215 00:14:17,939 --> 00:14:20,039 "America wants peace," 216 00:14:20,138 --> 00:14:23,638 Senator Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts declared. 217 00:14:23,738 --> 00:14:29,405 "Congress is strong in its resolve to end the killing." 218 00:14:29,505 --> 00:14:32,670 LEWIS SORLEY: To abandon the South Vietnamese, 219 00:14:32,770 --> 00:14:36,504 when all we were providing them at the end was money, 220 00:14:36,604 --> 00:14:38,504 was reprehensible, 221 00:14:38,604 --> 00:14:42,269 and disrespected the sacrifices of all soldiers, 222 00:14:42,370 --> 00:14:44,903 ours and the South Vietnamese. 223 00:14:45,003 --> 00:14:46,603 I think the moral obligation, 224 00:14:46,702 --> 00:14:49,768 that doesn't stem from a philosophical commitment 225 00:14:49,869 --> 00:14:51,103 to stopping communism. 226 00:14:51,202 --> 00:14:54,167 Now it stems from our keeping our promises 227 00:14:54,267 --> 00:14:58,234 to this erstwhile, unfortunate ally. 228 00:14:58,334 --> 00:15:00,102 That they had us as the ally 229 00:15:00,201 --> 00:15:02,434 where the other guys had the Soviet Union 230 00:15:02,534 --> 00:15:05,001 and communist China. 231 00:15:05,101 --> 00:15:06,766 Most Americans, I think, 232 00:15:06,867 --> 00:15:08,776 would not like to hear it said that the communists 233 00:15:08,800 --> 00:15:11,000 were more faithful allies than the United States. 234 00:15:11,100 --> 00:15:14,265 But that is, in fact, what the case was. 235 00:15:14,366 --> 00:15:17,765 ROBERT GARD: While one regrets that we pulled the rug out, 236 00:15:17,865 --> 00:15:19,631 in some respects, 237 00:15:19,732 --> 00:15:23,764 I think the ultimate outcome would've been the same. 238 00:15:23,864 --> 00:15:28,531 Had we continued, it would have cost 239 00:15:28,630 --> 00:15:31,430 probably more lives in the long term 240 00:15:31,531 --> 00:15:34,098 with no change in the outcome. 241 00:15:34,197 --> 00:15:36,398 NARRATOR: In the 18 bloody months 242 00:15:36,496 --> 00:15:38,862 that followed the signing of the peace accords, 243 00:15:38,963 --> 00:15:43,996 South Vietnam's position became more and more precarious. 244 00:15:44,097 --> 00:15:47,428 But by the summer of 1974, 245 00:15:47,529 --> 00:15:50,296 few Americans were paying attention. 246 00:15:50,396 --> 00:15:54,962 They were riveted by what was happening to their own country. 247 00:15:55,061 --> 00:15:57,595 ...to investigate fully and completely 248 00:15:57,694 --> 00:16:00,395 whether sufficient grounds exist 249 00:16:00,494 --> 00:16:02,694 for the House of Representatives 250 00:16:02,795 --> 00:16:05,894 to exercise its constitutional power 251 00:16:05,993 --> 00:16:08,326 to impeach Richard M. Nixon, 252 00:16:08,426 --> 00:16:11,660 president of the United States of America. 253 00:16:11,759 --> 00:16:14,393 SPEAKER: Mr. Danielson? -Aye. 254 00:16:14,492 --> 00:16:18,526 SPEAKER: Mr. Drinan? -Aye. 255 00:16:18,625 --> 00:16:21,459 SPEAKER: Mr. Rangel? -Aye. 256 00:16:21,558 --> 00:16:23,458 SPEAKER: Ms. Jordan? -Aye. 257 00:16:23,557 --> 00:16:26,092 SPEAKER: Mr. Lott? -No. 258 00:16:26,191 --> 00:16:29,958 NARRATOR: On July 27, 1974, 259 00:16:30,057 --> 00:16:32,791 the House Judiciary Committee recommended 260 00:16:32,891 --> 00:16:37,690 that the president be impeached for abusing his office. 261 00:16:37,791 --> 00:16:41,456 On August 9, rather than face impeachment, 262 00:16:41,555 --> 00:16:45,390 Richard Nixon became the first president in American history 263 00:16:45,489 --> 00:16:47,322 to resign. 264 00:16:47,422 --> 00:16:49,254 NIXON: Always remember, 265 00:16:49,354 --> 00:16:51,522 others may hate you, 266 00:16:51,621 --> 00:16:55,289 but those who hate you don't win 267 00:16:55,389 --> 00:16:58,253 unless you hate them, 268 00:16:58,353 --> 00:17:01,187 and then you destroy yourself. 269 00:17:01,288 --> 00:17:04,454 NARRATOR: At the presidential palace in Saigon, 270 00:17:04,553 --> 00:17:07,252 President Thieu closed his office door 271 00:17:07,352 --> 00:17:09,653 and refused to see anyone. 272 00:17:09,752 --> 00:17:12,419 He had staked South Vietnam's survival 273 00:17:12,520 --> 00:17:14,686 on Nixon's personal pledge 274 00:17:14,787 --> 00:17:16,952 that North Vietnamese aggression would be met 275 00:17:17,051 --> 00:17:20,219 by renewed American airpower. 276 00:17:20,318 --> 00:17:24,885 Just a few days after the new president, Gerald Ford, 277 00:17:24,984 --> 00:17:26,518 moved into the White House, 278 00:17:26,617 --> 00:17:28,585 Congress cut in half the funds 279 00:17:28,684 --> 00:17:31,550 for military and economic assistance 280 00:17:31,651 --> 00:17:35,150 Nixon had promised to deliver to Saigon. 281 00:17:36,650 --> 00:17:40,717 Conditions in South Vietnam continued to deteriorate. 282 00:17:40,816 --> 00:17:43,315 With the American military presence gone, 283 00:17:43,415 --> 00:17:47,949 one out of every five civilian workers was jobless. 284 00:17:48,048 --> 00:17:50,748 Prices soared. 285 00:17:54,614 --> 00:17:57,515 DUONG VAN MAI ELLIOTT: There were many mistakes made by the Americans, 286 00:17:57,614 --> 00:17:59,582 but the biggest mistake 287 00:17:59,681 --> 00:18:03,913 was in creating the sense of dependency. 288 00:18:04,014 --> 00:18:07,480 Another mistake was in creating an army in their own image, 289 00:18:07,581 --> 00:18:13,880 an army that was used to fighting a rich man's war. 290 00:18:13,979 --> 00:18:15,446 And South Vietnam was too poor 291 00:18:15,545 --> 00:18:18,279 to be able to sustain that kind of war. 292 00:18:18,379 --> 00:18:22,478 NARRATOR: Thieu had steadily grown more authoritarian, 293 00:18:22,579 --> 00:18:26,579 closing newspapers, restricting opposition parties, 294 00:18:26,678 --> 00:18:31,444 selling political and military appointments. 295 00:18:31,543 --> 00:18:35,543 A coalition of Catholics and Buddhists charged him 296 00:18:35,644 --> 00:18:39,042 with corrupting every aspect of South Vietnamese life, 297 00:18:39,143 --> 00:18:42,210 and demanded his resignation. 298 00:18:42,309 --> 00:18:44,143 Thousands of demonstrators 299 00:18:44,242 --> 00:18:47,209 poured into the streets of Saigon. 300 00:18:50,076 --> 00:18:54,208 Meanwhile, the chronically underpaid South Vietnamese Army 301 00:18:54,307 --> 00:18:57,540 had its pay cut further. 302 00:18:57,641 --> 00:19:00,775 It began to disintegrate. 303 00:19:00,875 --> 00:19:04,806 As many as 20,000 men were deserting each month, 304 00:19:04,906 --> 00:19:08,339 most heading home to try to help their families survive 305 00:19:08,440 --> 00:19:11,274 in such hard times. 306 00:19:11,374 --> 00:19:14,472 Those ARVN who stood and fought 307 00:19:14,573 --> 00:19:17,873 often had to do so without the sophisticated weaponry 308 00:19:17,972 --> 00:19:21,705 they'd been trained by the Americans to use. 309 00:19:21,804 --> 00:19:24,572 Much of the equipment Nixon had provided 310 00:19:24,671 --> 00:19:28,705 was ill-suited to the war the South was now waging, 311 00:19:28,804 --> 00:19:31,670 aircraft for which there were no trained pilots 312 00:19:31,771 --> 00:19:33,504 or ground crews, 313 00:19:33,603 --> 00:19:35,836 artillery and military vehicles 314 00:19:35,937 --> 00:19:38,735 for which there were no spare parts. 315 00:19:38,835 --> 00:19:43,835 And the U.S. Congress was in no mood to provide more. 316 00:19:43,936 --> 00:19:46,270 Fuel ran low. 317 00:19:46,370 --> 00:19:49,301 So did ammunition. 318 00:19:49,401 --> 00:19:53,135 Before long, artillerymen in the Central Highlands 319 00:19:53,234 --> 00:19:56,434 could fire just four shells a day, 320 00:19:56,533 --> 00:20:02,134 and infantrymen were limited to 85 bullets a month. 321 00:20:20,566 --> 00:20:22,665 NARRATOR: In November of 1974, 322 00:20:22,766 --> 00:20:27,097 the Politburo and the Central Military Committee met in Hanoi 323 00:20:27,198 --> 00:20:29,464 to discuss strategy. 324 00:20:29,565 --> 00:20:32,163 Some members urged caution. 325 00:20:32,264 --> 00:20:34,264 They worried that if they tried 326 00:20:34,364 --> 00:20:37,163 to push Saigon to the point of collapse too quickly, 327 00:20:37,264 --> 00:20:39,963 the Americans would return. 328 00:20:40,064 --> 00:20:45,763 Final victory, they calculated, would come in 1976. 329 00:20:45,863 --> 00:20:50,428 Party First Secretary Le Duan didn't agree. 330 00:20:50,527 --> 00:20:53,461 "Now that the United States has pulled out," he said, 331 00:20:53,562 --> 00:20:57,262 "it will be hard for them to jump back in." 332 00:20:57,362 --> 00:20:59,627 He ordered a test attack 333 00:20:59,726 --> 00:21:03,127 to see if the Americans would intervene with airpower 334 00:21:03,226 --> 00:21:05,226 as they had during the Easter Offensive 335 00:21:05,326 --> 00:21:08,025 2 1/2 years earlier. 336 00:21:08,126 --> 00:21:09,560 (artillery fire) 337 00:21:09,659 --> 00:21:11,993 In December 1974, 338 00:21:12,092 --> 00:21:14,360 North Vietnamese forces attacked Phuoc Long, 339 00:21:14,459 --> 00:21:16,391 northeast of Saigon. 340 00:21:20,425 --> 00:21:24,391 Within three weeks, they had overrun the entire province 341 00:21:24,492 --> 00:21:29,691 and had killed or captured thousands of ARVN defenders. 342 00:21:29,790 --> 00:21:34,757 The United States did nothing in response. 343 00:21:34,857 --> 00:21:40,123 President Ford, preoccupied with other problems... 344 00:21:40,222 --> 00:21:44,221 inflation, unemployment, tensions in the Middle East... 345 00:21:44,321 --> 00:21:45,922 held a press conference 346 00:21:46,021 --> 00:21:50,056 that offered the South Vietnamese no comfort. 347 00:21:50,155 --> 00:21:51,521 REPORTER: Are you considering 348 00:21:51,622 --> 00:21:53,430 any additional measures, beyond a supplemental, 349 00:21:53,454 --> 00:21:56,421 of assistance to the South Vietnamese government? 350 00:21:56,520 --> 00:22:00,055 I am not anticipating 351 00:22:00,154 --> 00:22:03,054 any further action beyond that supplemental 352 00:22:03,153 --> 00:22:04,453 at this time. 353 00:22:04,554 --> 00:22:07,153 NARRATOR: Washington seemed to have no interest 354 00:22:07,254 --> 00:22:09,219 in fulfilling the secret pledges 355 00:22:09,319 --> 00:22:12,553 Nixon had repeatedly made to Thieu. 356 00:22:12,652 --> 00:22:15,585 He was stunned. 357 00:22:15,686 --> 00:22:17,652 STUART HERRINGTON: With the communist flag 358 00:22:17,753 --> 00:22:21,985 planted in a provincial capital just to the north of Saigon, 359 00:22:22,084 --> 00:22:24,717 to me, the handwriting was on the wall. 360 00:22:24,817 --> 00:22:28,184 I then communicated with my family, and told them 361 00:22:28,283 --> 00:22:31,484 that even though my tour was supposed to take me till August, 362 00:22:31,583 --> 00:22:33,484 that I would be home sooner. 363 00:22:33,583 --> 00:22:38,215 And then I began to quietly, one little box at a time, 364 00:22:38,315 --> 00:22:41,715 mail my possessions out of Vietnam. 365 00:22:41,815 --> 00:22:46,214 ("Kashmir" by Led Zeppelin playing) 366 00:22:46,314 --> 00:22:48,448 NARRATOR: The North Vietnamese now undertook 367 00:22:48,549 --> 00:22:51,615 a new assault on cities in the Central Highlands, 368 00:22:51,714 --> 00:22:54,014 including Ban Me Thuot, 369 00:22:54,115 --> 00:22:57,313 where their forces outnumbered the over-extended ARVN 370 00:22:57,414 --> 00:22:59,481 nearly six to one. 371 00:22:59,580 --> 00:23:03,181 ("Kashmir" continues) 372 00:23:05,579 --> 00:23:09,946 Ban Me Thuot fell in two days. 373 00:23:10,047 --> 00:23:13,746 JAMES WILLBANKS: And here is the second province to fall, 374 00:23:13,846 --> 00:23:17,412 and it falls fairly quickly. 375 00:23:17,511 --> 00:23:18,979 At that point, they realize, 376 00:23:19,078 --> 00:23:20,554 "Well, we don't have to wait till 1976, 377 00:23:20,578 --> 00:23:21,810 we can go for it now." 378 00:23:21,911 --> 00:23:23,845 NARRATOR: Hanoi was delighted 379 00:23:23,944 --> 00:23:27,010 by the Americans' lack of response. 380 00:23:27,111 --> 00:23:32,244 But all the previous offensives Le Duan had set in motion... 381 00:23:32,344 --> 00:23:34,244 in 1964, 382 00:23:34,344 --> 00:23:37,044 in 1968, 383 00:23:37,143 --> 00:23:39,275 in 1972... 384 00:23:39,375 --> 00:23:43,176 had ended in failure. 385 00:23:43,275 --> 00:23:46,875 This time, he turned to General Vo Nguyen Giap, 386 00:23:46,976 --> 00:23:49,842 the architect of the great victory over the French 387 00:23:49,941 --> 00:23:51,408 at Dien Bien Phu, 388 00:23:51,507 --> 00:23:56,675 who had been sidelined during the Tet Offensive. 389 00:24:18,771 --> 00:24:20,472 NARRATOR: For weeks, the ARVN top command 390 00:24:20,571 --> 00:24:23,637 had warned Thieu that his already weakened forces 391 00:24:23,738 --> 00:24:25,538 were spread too thinly; 392 00:24:25,637 --> 00:24:29,703 that it was no longer possible to defend the entire country. 393 00:24:29,803 --> 00:24:32,470 He had angrily resisted. 394 00:24:32,569 --> 00:24:36,936 But now, suddenly, he changed his mind. 395 00:24:37,037 --> 00:24:40,670 Thieu ordered his troops to abandon the highlands, 396 00:24:40,769 --> 00:24:42,536 to withdraw under fire 397 00:24:42,635 --> 00:24:46,368 and then regroup in order to retake Ban Me Thuot. 398 00:24:46,469 --> 00:24:48,969 It would have been a near-impossible task 399 00:24:49,068 --> 00:24:51,700 with a carefully worked-out plan. 400 00:24:51,800 --> 00:24:53,835 Thieu had none. 401 00:24:53,934 --> 00:24:55,535 (gunfire) 402 00:24:57,835 --> 00:24:59,534 (explosion) 403 00:24:59,633 --> 00:25:02,034 The result would be disaster. 404 00:25:20,098 --> 00:25:21,564 NARRATOR: Within a week, 405 00:25:21,665 --> 00:25:25,264 Pleiku and Kon Tum were in enemy hands. 406 00:25:26,630 --> 00:25:31,496 BAO NINH: 407 00:25:42,495 --> 00:25:45,061 According to Western diplomats here in Saigon, 408 00:25:45,162 --> 00:25:47,729 the South Vietnamese are quitting the Central Highlands 409 00:25:47,829 --> 00:25:50,628 because they hope to avoid a complete rout. 410 00:25:50,729 --> 00:25:52,289 The withdrawal is said to be an attempt 411 00:25:52,361 --> 00:25:55,293 to save men and equipment that may become sorely needed 412 00:25:55,394 --> 00:25:58,293 in other, more heavily populated parts of the country. 413 00:26:25,257 --> 00:26:28,290 NARRATOR: As the ARVN fled south, 414 00:26:28,390 --> 00:26:31,689 400,000 civilians fled with them. 415 00:26:38,355 --> 00:26:40,956 The enemy blocked the main roads 416 00:26:41,055 --> 00:26:44,323 so that they had to take a disused back road. 417 00:26:44,422 --> 00:26:46,455 Thousands died, 418 00:26:46,554 --> 00:26:49,022 killed by North Vietnamese shells 419 00:26:49,121 --> 00:26:50,787 and machine gun fire, 420 00:26:50,888 --> 00:26:53,388 trampled by fellow refugees, 421 00:26:53,487 --> 00:26:56,021 run over by retreating tanks, 422 00:26:56,120 --> 00:26:59,353 blown apart by South Vietnamese bombs 423 00:26:59,454 --> 00:27:04,021 dropped by pilots who mistook them for the enemy. 424 00:27:04,119 --> 00:27:08,119 Reporters called it the "Convoy of Tears." 425 00:27:10,220 --> 00:27:13,984 Then, Hue fell. 426 00:27:28,151 --> 00:27:31,950 NARRATOR: On March 29, 1975, 427 00:27:32,049 --> 00:27:35,049 the North Vietnamese entered Danang, 428 00:27:35,150 --> 00:27:37,416 South Vietnam's second-largest city. 429 00:27:39,650 --> 00:27:43,082 Civilians and soldiers alike tried to flee. 430 00:27:49,448 --> 00:27:52,215 (crowd clamoring) 431 00:27:52,315 --> 00:27:56,515 "Danang was not captured," an American reporter remembered. 432 00:27:56,614 --> 00:28:00,746 "It disintegrated in its own terror." 433 00:28:00,846 --> 00:28:02,613 (plane engine starting) 434 00:29:17,538 --> 00:29:20,404 NARRATOR: On the same beach where the U.S. Marines 435 00:29:20,505 --> 00:29:23,037 had landed nearly ten years earlier, 436 00:29:23,138 --> 00:29:26,705 beginning America's combat involvement in Vietnam, 437 00:29:26,804 --> 00:29:30,870 16,000 ARVN soldiers fought for space 438 00:29:30,969 --> 00:29:34,304 with 75,000 terrified civilians 439 00:29:34,403 --> 00:29:38,235 aboard an improvised fleet of freighters and fishing boats 440 00:29:38,335 --> 00:29:43,168 headed south for Cam Ranh Bay, Vung Tau, and Saigon; 441 00:29:43,268 --> 00:29:48,435 anywhere they thought Northern troops might not follow. 442 00:29:54,333 --> 00:29:58,266 Thousands drowned struggling to reach the boats. 443 00:29:58,367 --> 00:30:01,634 Thousands more were killed by enemy shells 444 00:30:01,733 --> 00:30:04,399 raining down on the beach. 445 00:30:20,730 --> 00:30:23,230 NARRATOR: Danang, Tam Ky, 446 00:30:23,330 --> 00:30:25,597 Quang Ngai, Qui Nhon, 447 00:30:25,698 --> 00:30:29,662 Nha Trang, Cam Ranh Bay. 448 00:30:29,762 --> 00:30:33,029 The North Vietnamese kept moving closer and closer 449 00:30:33,130 --> 00:30:34,829 to Saigon. 450 00:30:34,930 --> 00:30:40,062 It was stunning to sit there in Saigon, 451 00:30:40,161 --> 00:30:42,761 writing the daily ledes 452 00:30:42,862 --> 00:30:46,562 on the fall of all these places. 453 00:30:46,661 --> 00:30:49,660 You just were overwhelmed 454 00:30:49,760 --> 00:30:52,527 with ten years' worth of history 455 00:30:52,628 --> 00:30:56,726 and seeing all of it come unglued. 456 00:30:56,826 --> 00:30:58,026 (explosion) 457 00:30:58,127 --> 00:30:59,694 FRANK SNEPP: At the end of March, 458 00:30:59,794 --> 00:31:03,593 18 North Vietnamese divisions, 459 00:31:03,694 --> 00:31:06,025 with five in reserve, 460 00:31:06,126 --> 00:31:07,293 were now arrayed 461 00:31:07,392 --> 00:31:12,293 against, basically, six South Vietnamese divisions. 462 00:31:12,392 --> 00:31:15,224 The manpower imbalance 463 00:31:15,324 --> 00:31:19,024 was about three or four to one, in favor of the communists. 464 00:31:19,125 --> 00:31:21,157 This was breathtaking. 465 00:31:21,257 --> 00:31:23,991 NARRATOR: The North Vietnamese now decided 466 00:31:24,090 --> 00:31:25,890 to move against Saigon 467 00:31:25,991 --> 00:31:30,756 and take it before Ho Chi Minh's birthday on May 19. 468 00:31:30,857 --> 00:31:33,522 It became clear to Thomas Polgar, 469 00:31:33,623 --> 00:31:36,589 the C.I.A. station chief in Saigon, 470 00:31:36,690 --> 00:31:40,356 that the time had come to begin preparing for an evacuation. 471 00:31:40,455 --> 00:31:44,221 There were still some 5,000 Americans in Saigon, 472 00:31:44,321 --> 00:31:46,055 and there were also as many 473 00:31:46,154 --> 00:31:49,653 as 200,000 South Vietnamese and their families 474 00:31:49,753 --> 00:31:53,421 who had cooperated with the United States. 475 00:31:53,520 --> 00:31:57,354 But Ambassador Graham Martin disagreed. 476 00:31:57,453 --> 00:31:59,752 He was a resolute Cold Warrior, 477 00:31:59,853 --> 00:32:02,053 who had been appointed to reassure Thieu 478 00:32:02,152 --> 00:32:04,787 of continuing American backing, 479 00:32:04,886 --> 00:32:07,486 and his feelings had only been intensified 480 00:32:07,585 --> 00:32:10,286 by the death of his son in Vietnam. 481 00:32:10,385 --> 00:32:12,552 He had not been appointed ambassador, 482 00:32:12,651 --> 00:32:14,286 he had told an aide, 483 00:32:14,385 --> 00:32:17,918 to "give Vietnam away to the communists." 484 00:32:18,017 --> 00:32:21,518 The C.I.A. was being alarmist, he said. 485 00:32:21,618 --> 00:32:23,785 There would be no attack on Saigon, 486 00:32:23,884 --> 00:32:27,117 and, therefore, no evacuation. 487 00:32:27,216 --> 00:32:32,349 President Thieu also continued to insist all was not lost. 488 00:32:32,450 --> 00:32:35,516 The ARVN were ready to "fight on to the last bullet 489 00:32:35,616 --> 00:32:38,415 and the last grain of rice," he said. 490 00:32:40,315 --> 00:32:43,147 Just 40 miles east of Saigon, 491 00:32:43,247 --> 00:32:45,381 North Vietnamese forces attacked 492 00:32:45,481 --> 00:32:48,647 the town of Xuan Loc on Highway One, 493 00:32:48,747 --> 00:32:52,880 the last obstacle on their way to Saigon. 494 00:32:52,980 --> 00:32:55,681 Although they were outnumbered and outgunned, 495 00:32:55,781 --> 00:32:59,913 the South Vietnamese commander refused to retreat. 496 00:33:00,014 --> 00:33:04,680 He was determined to keep the enemy from his capital. 497 00:33:04,780 --> 00:33:07,479 REPORTER: You're certain that you can hold Xuan Loc? 498 00:33:07,580 --> 00:33:09,013 Surely, surely. 499 00:33:09,113 --> 00:33:10,744 I am certain to you. 500 00:33:10,844 --> 00:33:13,545 I am sure with you I can hold Xuan Loc. 501 00:33:13,644 --> 00:33:16,679 Even the enemies uses, you know, the double forces 502 00:33:16,779 --> 00:33:19,611 or maybe three time more than my forces. 503 00:33:19,710 --> 00:33:20,944 But no problem, sir. 504 00:33:21,044 --> 00:33:22,477 No problem. 505 00:33:23,843 --> 00:33:26,444 FORD: A vast human tragedy 506 00:33:26,544 --> 00:33:31,242 has befallen our friends in Vietnam and Cambodia. 507 00:33:31,342 --> 00:33:32,943 NARRATOR: On April 10, 508 00:33:33,043 --> 00:33:36,609 President Ford appealed to a joint session of Congress 509 00:33:36,708 --> 00:33:39,408 for emergency aid to Saigon. 510 00:33:39,509 --> 00:33:42,009 If they refused and Saigon fell, 511 00:33:42,109 --> 00:33:45,640 Congress, not the White House, should take the blame. 512 00:33:45,740 --> 00:33:48,407 Under five presidents and 12 Congresses, 513 00:33:48,508 --> 00:33:52,740 the United States was engaged in Indochina. 514 00:33:52,840 --> 00:33:56,306 Millions of Americans served, 515 00:33:56,406 --> 00:33:58,406 thousands died, 516 00:33:58,507 --> 00:34:03,238 and many more were wounded, imprisoned, or lost. 517 00:34:03,338 --> 00:34:07,738 NARRATOR: The president asked Congress for $722 million 518 00:34:07,838 --> 00:34:09,539 in military aid. 519 00:34:09,638 --> 00:34:11,405 There was no applause. 520 00:34:11,506 --> 00:34:14,837 Most legislators, and their constituents, 521 00:34:14,938 --> 00:34:18,005 thought it was too late to make any difference. 522 00:34:18,105 --> 00:34:23,136 In the end, Congress voted against any military aid. 523 00:34:23,236 --> 00:34:25,771 BUI DIEM: I didn't think that it is good 524 00:34:25,870 --> 00:34:30,070 for a big nation like the U.S. to behave like that. 525 00:34:30,170 --> 00:34:31,770 Because by that time, 526 00:34:31,869 --> 00:34:35,635 we didn't ask for the blood of American soldiers. 527 00:34:35,735 --> 00:34:40,069 I mean, the last minute, they washed their hands like that. 528 00:34:40,169 --> 00:34:43,102 It is not up to a diplomat to use strong words 529 00:34:43,201 --> 00:34:44,569 against the American, 530 00:34:44,669 --> 00:34:47,934 but I felt deeply sorry about it. 531 00:34:50,534 --> 00:34:53,367 SNEPP: We broke every rule in the book to get people out, 532 00:34:53,467 --> 00:34:56,434 the young officers did, 533 00:34:56,534 --> 00:35:01,767 while the ambassador continued to stonewall 534 00:35:01,866 --> 00:35:04,000 both the embassy and Washington. 535 00:35:04,100 --> 00:35:07,965 NARRATOR: Evacuation plans were finally drawn up. 536 00:35:08,066 --> 00:35:11,231 There were four options: 537 00:35:11,331 --> 00:35:16,730 sealift by cargo ships anchored in the port of Saigon, 538 00:35:16,830 --> 00:35:20,098 airlift by commercial airliner, 539 00:35:20,197 --> 00:35:22,931 a military airlift, 540 00:35:23,031 --> 00:35:25,296 and, as a last resort, 541 00:35:25,396 --> 00:35:27,829 evacuation by flights of helicopters 542 00:35:27,930 --> 00:35:31,030 to a flotilla of U.S. Navy ships 543 00:35:31,129 --> 00:35:33,895 in the South China Sea. 544 00:35:33,996 --> 00:35:38,263 Ambassador Martin continued to show little interest. 545 00:35:38,362 --> 00:35:40,228 The slightest sign that the United States 546 00:35:40,328 --> 00:35:43,162 would abandon South Vietnam, he said, 547 00:35:43,262 --> 00:35:46,995 would produce panic in the streets. 548 00:35:47,095 --> 00:35:48,162 (gunfire and explosions) 549 00:35:48,262 --> 00:35:49,961 On April 21, 550 00:35:50,062 --> 00:35:53,527 Xuan Loc finally fell to the North Vietnamese. 551 00:35:53,626 --> 00:35:58,726 The ARVN had valiantly held on for 12 bloody days. 552 00:35:58,826 --> 00:36:04,593 Highway One was now open all the way to Saigon. 553 00:36:04,692 --> 00:36:09,858 That evening, President Thieu resigned. 554 00:36:09,958 --> 00:36:14,992 Four days later, the C.I.A. would spirit Thieu to Taiwan, 555 00:36:15,092 --> 00:36:17,024 where an American emissary brought him 556 00:36:17,123 --> 00:36:19,823 a private message from President Ford. 557 00:36:19,924 --> 00:36:23,723 It was not a good time for him to visit America. 558 00:36:23,823 --> 00:36:27,523 Antiwar feelings were too strong. 559 00:36:27,622 --> 00:36:30,956 "It is so easy to be an enemy of the United States," 560 00:36:31,057 --> 00:36:32,456 Thieu said, 561 00:36:32,557 --> 00:36:36,156 "but so difficult to be a friend." 562 00:36:36,256 --> 00:36:39,121 News of Thieu's resignation 563 00:36:39,221 --> 00:36:42,089 had sent thousands of panicked Vietnamese 564 00:36:42,188 --> 00:36:44,320 rushing to Tan Son Nhut Airport, 565 00:36:44,421 --> 00:36:47,021 hoping to get out of their country. 566 00:36:47,120 --> 00:36:52,555 Some had exit visas; many did not. 567 00:36:52,654 --> 00:36:57,219 Marines did what they could to establish order. 568 00:36:57,319 --> 00:37:01,753 Master Sergeant Juan Valdez was the noncommissioned officer 569 00:37:01,852 --> 00:37:06,253 in charge of Marine Corps Security Guards in Saigon. 570 00:37:06,352 --> 00:37:08,385 He had been one of the first Marines 571 00:37:08,486 --> 00:37:12,451 to land in Vietnam in 1965. 572 00:37:12,552 --> 00:37:15,585 VALDEZ: People were trying to bribe the Marines. 573 00:37:15,684 --> 00:37:19,085 You know, they were bringing money out there, jewelry, 574 00:37:19,184 --> 00:37:21,283 to get them out of the country. 575 00:37:21,383 --> 00:37:23,227 I think just about every Marine that was at the gate 576 00:37:23,251 --> 00:37:25,216 encountered this type of bribes. 577 00:37:25,316 --> 00:37:27,651 But they had to refuse them, yeah, yeah. 578 00:37:27,751 --> 00:37:31,016 NARRATOR: Duong Van Mai Elliott's family 579 00:37:31,115 --> 00:37:33,815 had fled Hanoi in 1954, 580 00:37:33,916 --> 00:37:36,916 leaving behind her older sister, Thang, 581 00:37:37,016 --> 00:37:39,848 who had joined Ho Chi Minh's forces. 582 00:37:39,948 --> 00:37:42,249 Now, 20 years later, 583 00:37:42,348 --> 00:37:45,281 with the North Vietnamese closing in on Saigon, 584 00:37:45,381 --> 00:37:47,148 they were faced with the prospect 585 00:37:47,248 --> 00:37:50,313 of fleeing once again. 586 00:37:50,414 --> 00:37:53,680 DUONG VAN MAI ELLIOTT: My mother didn't want to leave. 587 00:37:53,780 --> 00:37:56,513 She said she didn't want to be a refugee again. 588 00:37:56,612 --> 00:37:59,247 She had been a refugee too many times. 589 00:37:59,346 --> 00:38:02,147 Plus, my sister Thang was about to arrive 590 00:38:02,247 --> 00:38:05,678 and meet us after all these years. 591 00:38:05,778 --> 00:38:10,711 She said she wanted to stay and see Thang. 592 00:38:10,811 --> 00:38:14,177 My father was determined to leave, 593 00:38:14,277 --> 00:38:18,277 because he was afraid that if we stayed, we'd be killed. 594 00:38:18,377 --> 00:38:22,910 He got mad at my mother, and they argued, 595 00:38:23,010 --> 00:38:25,209 but in the end, my mother yielded 596 00:38:25,309 --> 00:38:28,843 to his, uh, insistence that we should... they should leave. 597 00:38:30,477 --> 00:38:32,909 PHAN QUANG TUE: I knew that the end was approaching. 598 00:38:33,009 --> 00:38:36,108 When you are at the center of the storm, 599 00:38:36,208 --> 00:38:38,275 you have to get out. 600 00:38:38,375 --> 00:38:43,508 When I myself and my immediate family, 601 00:38:43,607 --> 00:38:45,508 and my father and his immediate family, 602 00:38:45,607 --> 00:38:48,142 went to the Tan Son Nhut Airport, 603 00:38:48,242 --> 00:38:52,106 through the whole thing I said, "This is crazy, you know. 604 00:38:52,206 --> 00:38:55,673 Why, why do we have to leave under these conditions?" 605 00:38:55,773 --> 00:38:57,241 It was so humiliating. 606 00:38:57,340 --> 00:39:02,573 And I carry that humiliation with me to the United States. 607 00:39:02,672 --> 00:39:05,372 When I get in line to sign up for a job, 608 00:39:05,473 --> 00:39:07,371 you know, I was a... 609 00:39:07,472 --> 00:39:10,838 I remind them of the war in Vietnam, 610 00:39:10,938 --> 00:39:13,505 which the Americans hate. 611 00:39:13,604 --> 00:39:16,538 You have to lose a nation and a dream 612 00:39:16,638 --> 00:39:20,138 to feel... to feel that humiliation. 613 00:40:40,495 --> 00:40:43,729 JEAN-MARIE CROCKER: We have always sent a wreath 614 00:40:43,828 --> 00:40:47,894 to his grave at Arlington. 615 00:40:47,994 --> 00:40:50,961 Partly in remembrance, of course, of him, 616 00:40:51,061 --> 00:40:54,960 but also thinking, if other grieving people are there, 617 00:40:55,060 --> 00:40:59,127 or just people that are visiting to pay their respects, 618 00:40:59,227 --> 00:41:03,459 that it's good for them to know that people are, 619 00:41:03,559 --> 00:41:05,858 that the soldiers are remembered. 620 00:41:20,256 --> 00:41:22,656 FORD: Today... 621 00:41:22,756 --> 00:41:26,724 America can regain the sense of pride 622 00:41:26,823 --> 00:41:29,588 that existed before Vietnam. 623 00:41:29,688 --> 00:41:34,456 But it cannot be achieved by refighting a war 624 00:41:34,556 --> 00:41:38,555 that is finished as far as America is concerned. 625 00:41:38,654 --> 00:41:41,555 (applause) 626 00:41:43,388 --> 00:41:44,388 (explosion) 627 00:41:44,488 --> 00:41:47,686 NARRATOR: On April 27, 1975, 628 00:41:47,786 --> 00:41:50,954 rockets landed in the heart of Saigon. 629 00:41:51,054 --> 00:41:54,153 It was the signal for the North Vietnamese to begin 630 00:41:54,253 --> 00:41:56,553 their main assault on the city. 631 00:41:56,652 --> 00:42:00,020 They attacked from five sides, 632 00:42:00,120 --> 00:42:03,120 "like a hurricane," their commander said. 633 00:42:03,220 --> 00:42:06,784 The White House ordered all American cargo ships 634 00:42:06,885 --> 00:42:09,251 to sail out to sea without waiting 635 00:42:09,351 --> 00:42:11,584 to take on any passengers. 636 00:42:11,684 --> 00:42:15,384 There now could be no organized sealift. 637 00:42:15,484 --> 00:42:19,750 (Jimi Hendrix Experience's "All Along the Watchtower" playing) 638 00:42:27,082 --> 00:42:29,550 NARRATOR: When the communists began shelling 639 00:42:29,649 --> 00:42:33,716 the seaside town of Vung Tau, just southeast of Saigon, 640 00:42:33,815 --> 00:42:35,681 thousands of terrified people 641 00:42:35,781 --> 00:42:38,181 clambered into any vessel they could find 642 00:42:38,281 --> 00:42:41,115 in hope of rescue by the Americans. 643 00:42:41,215 --> 00:42:43,715 Before the exodus ended, 644 00:42:43,814 --> 00:42:46,847 more than 60,000 refugees from Vung Tau 645 00:42:46,948 --> 00:42:48,580 would be picked up. 646 00:42:48,680 --> 00:42:51,880 But thousands more were left behind, 647 00:42:51,980 --> 00:42:55,646 floating helplessly at sea. 648 00:42:55,746 --> 00:42:57,679 At the American Embassy, 649 00:42:57,779 --> 00:43:00,745 Ambassador Martin cabled Henry Kissinger, 650 00:43:00,845 --> 00:43:02,412 now secretary of state, 651 00:43:02,513 --> 00:43:04,713 that "It is the unanimous opinion 652 00:43:04,812 --> 00:43:06,678 "of the senior personnel here 653 00:43:06,778 --> 00:43:11,777 that there will be no direct or serious attack on Saigon." 654 00:43:11,878 --> 00:43:14,045 SNEPP: A lot of us began to wonder 655 00:43:14,144 --> 00:43:17,211 whether he had lost grip on reality. 656 00:43:17,310 --> 00:43:22,111 He had come down with pneumonia in the final days. 657 00:43:22,211 --> 00:43:24,576 He was terribly enfeebled. 658 00:43:24,676 --> 00:43:27,642 And it's possible this affected his judgment. 659 00:43:27,742 --> 00:43:31,710 NARRATOR: Evacuation planners had quietly designated 660 00:43:31,809 --> 00:43:33,575 two spots within the embassy 661 00:43:33,675 --> 00:43:36,241 as potential helicopter landing zones... 662 00:43:36,341 --> 00:43:39,542 a courtyard that could accommodate large choppers, 663 00:43:39,641 --> 00:43:41,942 and the helipad on the embassy roof, 664 00:43:42,042 --> 00:43:44,508 meant for smaller ones. 665 00:43:44,608 --> 00:43:48,874 An old tamarind tree stood in the center of the courtyard. 666 00:43:48,974 --> 00:43:52,440 Again and again, the Marines asked Ambassador Martin 667 00:43:52,540 --> 00:43:54,507 for permission to cut it down 668 00:43:54,607 --> 00:43:57,772 so as not to interfere with the lift-offs and landings 669 00:43:57,873 --> 00:44:00,838 they were certain would soon have to begin. 670 00:44:00,939 --> 00:44:03,671 He always refused. 671 00:44:03,771 --> 00:44:07,338 That tree was a symbol of American resolve, he said. 672 00:44:07,439 --> 00:44:11,371 Cutting it down would send the wrong message. 673 00:44:11,471 --> 00:44:14,337 Meanwhile, General Duong Van Minh, 674 00:44:14,438 --> 00:44:16,005 who had been part of the coup 675 00:44:16,105 --> 00:44:19,704 that overthrew President Diem 12 years earlier, 676 00:44:19,803 --> 00:44:23,504 was sworn in as the new president of South Vietnam. 677 00:44:23,604 --> 00:44:26,403 He called for an immediate cease-fire 678 00:44:26,504 --> 00:44:32,469 and asked that Americans leave within 24 hours. 679 00:44:32,568 --> 00:44:33,768 (explosion) 680 00:44:33,869 --> 00:44:36,868 NARRATOR: On April 29, at 3:58 in the morning, 681 00:44:36,968 --> 00:44:39,702 North Vietnamese rockets began falling 682 00:44:39,801 --> 00:44:42,002 on Tan Son Nhut Airport. 683 00:44:42,102 --> 00:44:44,334 The North Vietnamese were just... 684 00:44:44,435 --> 00:44:46,001 walking these shells... 685 00:44:46,101 --> 00:44:48,266 these big 130-millimeter artillery shells 686 00:44:48,367 --> 00:44:49,833 all over the airfield, 687 00:44:49,934 --> 00:44:51,701 destroying the runway, basically. 688 00:44:51,800 --> 00:44:53,066 It was close enough 689 00:44:53,166 --> 00:44:54,775 that you could hear the incoming go overhead. 690 00:44:54,799 --> 00:44:55,866 (whistling, explosion) 691 00:44:55,966 --> 00:44:58,165 NARRATOR: Two Marine guards, 692 00:44:58,265 --> 00:45:02,065 Lance Corporal Darwin Judge, of Marshalltown, Iowa, 693 00:45:02,165 --> 00:45:06,365 and Corporal Charles McMahon, Jr., of Woburn, Massachusetts, 694 00:45:06,465 --> 00:45:08,599 were killed in the barrage... 695 00:45:08,699 --> 00:45:12,998 the last American servicemen to die in Vietnam. 696 00:45:13,098 --> 00:45:16,098 d All along the watchtower... 697 00:45:16,198 --> 00:45:18,297 VALDEZ: I still blame the ambassador. 698 00:45:18,397 --> 00:45:19,630 This shouldn't have happened. 699 00:45:19,730 --> 00:45:21,796 You know, if the ambassador had taken action 700 00:45:21,896 --> 00:45:25,062 and gotten people out of there, which he was supposed to, 701 00:45:25,162 --> 00:45:28,129 this would have never happened. 702 00:45:28,229 --> 00:45:30,628 NARRATOR: The runways were cratered 703 00:45:30,728 --> 00:45:32,429 and blocked by wrecked planes, 704 00:45:32,529 --> 00:45:36,661 littered with jettisoned bombs and fuel tanks. 705 00:45:36,761 --> 00:45:41,327 The Americans had run out of evacuation options. 706 00:45:41,428 --> 00:45:44,361 It was time to call in the helicopters 707 00:45:44,461 --> 00:45:46,760 from the offshore fleet. 708 00:45:46,861 --> 00:45:48,126 There was no way 709 00:45:48,226 --> 00:45:50,226 all of the remaining South Vietnamese 710 00:45:50,326 --> 00:45:52,527 could be evacuated. 711 00:45:54,326 --> 00:45:56,427 (chain saws buzzing) 712 00:45:56,527 --> 00:45:59,193 The tamarind tree in the embassy compound 713 00:45:59,292 --> 00:46:01,158 was finally hacked down 714 00:46:01,258 --> 00:46:04,158 so helicopters could begin landing. 715 00:46:04,258 --> 00:46:07,391 VALDEZ: So they had to chop this big tamarind tree down, 716 00:46:07,492 --> 00:46:09,891 cut it in pieces, tow it away. 717 00:46:09,992 --> 00:46:11,891 And then they had to get the fire department 718 00:46:11,992 --> 00:46:14,656 to wash all the debris and everything 719 00:46:14,756 --> 00:46:16,056 so when the choppers land, 720 00:46:16,156 --> 00:46:17,756 they wouldn't suck up all those debris 721 00:46:17,857 --> 00:46:20,290 into the, uh, into the engines. 722 00:46:20,390 --> 00:46:23,191 NARRATOR: Just after 11:00 a.m., 723 00:46:23,289 --> 00:46:25,923 a prearranged signal to evacuate was broadcast 724 00:46:26,023 --> 00:46:29,923 over a special radio frequency in the capital: 725 00:46:30,023 --> 00:46:34,654 "The temperature in Saigon is 105 degrees and rising." 726 00:46:34,754 --> 00:46:36,364 ("White Christmas" by Tennessee Ernie Ford playing) 727 00:46:36,388 --> 00:46:38,121 d I'm dreaming... 728 00:46:38,221 --> 00:46:40,621 NARRATOR: It was supposed to be followed by Bing Crosby 729 00:46:40,721 --> 00:46:42,854 singing "White Christmas." 730 00:46:42,954 --> 00:46:45,521 But the disc jockey couldn't find the record 731 00:46:45,620 --> 00:46:50,752 and played Tennessee Ernie Ford's version instead. 732 00:46:50,853 --> 00:46:54,719 Americans and Vietnamese with proper papers 733 00:46:54,819 --> 00:46:57,552 gathered at pre-arranged collection points 734 00:46:57,652 --> 00:47:00,151 and boarded convoys of buses. 735 00:47:00,251 --> 00:47:04,086 Angry South Vietnamese beat on the sides of the vehicles 736 00:47:04,186 --> 00:47:06,551 as they moved through the crowded streets 737 00:47:06,651 --> 00:47:08,685 to the airport. 738 00:47:08,784 --> 00:47:13,217 Philip Caputo, now covering the fall of Saigon, 739 00:47:13,317 --> 00:47:16,050 was among the evacuees. 740 00:47:16,150 --> 00:47:19,216 PHILIP CAPUTO: We were evacuated from Tan Son Nhut Air Base. 741 00:47:19,316 --> 00:47:23,283 But we drove past the embassy, and you just saw this scrum, 742 00:47:23,383 --> 00:47:28,148 this horde of people pressing up against the walls, 743 00:47:28,248 --> 00:47:31,083 and Marines standing on the wall 744 00:47:31,183 --> 00:47:36,448 and gun-butting people to, uh, to keep them... 745 00:47:36,547 --> 00:47:38,881 to keep them from pouring over the walls. 746 00:47:38,982 --> 00:47:41,848 NARRATOR: The evacuees at the airport were divided 747 00:47:41,948 --> 00:47:44,780 into helicopter teams of 50 each, 748 00:47:44,880 --> 00:47:48,014 and led down a long hallway to the tarmac. 749 00:47:48,113 --> 00:47:50,514 Someone in Caputo's group joked 750 00:47:50,613 --> 00:47:55,680 about finally seeing "light at the end of the tunnel." 751 00:47:55,779 --> 00:47:57,745 The choppers take off. 752 00:47:57,846 --> 00:48:01,312 And they're flying, uh... flying toward the coast. 753 00:48:01,412 --> 00:48:04,945 And you could look down and all you could see, 754 00:48:05,044 --> 00:48:07,211 all around Saigon, all around the airfield, 755 00:48:07,311 --> 00:48:10,777 were just these plumes of smoke from burning buildings, 756 00:48:10,877 --> 00:48:13,210 from exploding artillery shells. 757 00:48:13,310 --> 00:48:16,110 And I'll never forget going over that coastline, 758 00:48:16,210 --> 00:48:20,142 seeing the entire 7th Fleet... dozens and dozens... 759 00:48:20,242 --> 00:48:23,242 and this enormous fleet out there like that. 760 00:48:23,343 --> 00:48:28,208 And I just remember this sense of, of disbelief, completely. 761 00:48:28,308 --> 00:48:31,375 Disbelief and relief at the same time. 762 00:48:34,476 --> 00:48:36,716 VALDEZ: There were anywhere from 10,000 to 12,000 people 763 00:48:36,741 --> 00:48:38,975 surrounding the embassy. 764 00:48:39,075 --> 00:48:42,374 We're supposed to get Americans out of there. 765 00:48:42,475 --> 00:48:44,707 And we were supposed to get South Vietnamese 766 00:48:44,807 --> 00:48:47,574 that worked for us in the embassy. 767 00:48:47,674 --> 00:48:49,907 The C.I.A. was behind us, 768 00:48:50,007 --> 00:48:51,282 and they were pointing at the people 769 00:48:51,306 --> 00:48:53,139 who were supposed to get out. 770 00:48:53,239 --> 00:48:55,939 But every time you reached out to grab a specific individual, 771 00:48:56,038 --> 00:48:57,805 other people were grabbing your hands 772 00:48:57,906 --> 00:48:59,872 and trying to pull you down with them, you know, 773 00:48:59,973 --> 00:49:01,372 so that you could help them out. 774 00:49:01,473 --> 00:49:05,037 SNEPP: Some Americans had left so rapidly, 775 00:49:05,137 --> 00:49:07,704 they'd left the radios behind. 776 00:49:07,804 --> 00:49:11,838 So their Vietnamese friends were on the radios 777 00:49:11,938 --> 00:49:13,703 begging to be rescued. 778 00:49:13,803 --> 00:49:16,071 "I'm Han, the driver." 779 00:49:16,171 --> 00:49:19,303 "I'm Mr. Ngoc, your translator." 780 00:49:19,404 --> 00:49:24,135 I realized what the Americans had often done in Vietnam. 781 00:49:24,235 --> 00:49:29,170 They had forgotten that these were human beings. 782 00:49:31,301 --> 00:49:33,601 My experience in Vietnam 783 00:49:33,701 --> 00:49:39,834 had often been like a B-52 strike from on high. 784 00:49:39,934 --> 00:49:43,767 I never had to confront the consequences of my action. 785 00:49:43,867 --> 00:49:47,001 I could just let the bomb doors open 786 00:49:47,100 --> 00:49:51,333 and still remain detached. 787 00:49:51,433 --> 00:49:53,667 NARRATOR: Elsewhere in the embassy, 788 00:49:53,766 --> 00:49:57,832 Marines frantically destroyed classified documents. 789 00:49:57,932 --> 00:50:00,932 VALDEZ: The top of the roof had two big incinerators 790 00:50:01,031 --> 00:50:03,466 right underneath the helicopter pad. 791 00:50:03,566 --> 00:50:06,031 And the Marines burned classified material 792 00:50:06,131 --> 00:50:08,097 around the clock. 793 00:50:08,197 --> 00:50:10,264 But to my understanding, even when we left, 794 00:50:10,364 --> 00:50:13,998 there was still classified material left behind. 795 00:50:14,097 --> 00:50:17,664 SNEPP: Well, when the choppers finally began coming in, 796 00:50:17,763 --> 00:50:20,497 the downdraft ripped open those bags 797 00:50:20,596 --> 00:50:22,897 and there was classified material 798 00:50:22,997 --> 00:50:26,262 all over the parking lot. 799 00:50:26,362 --> 00:50:28,195 When the North Vietnamese arrived, 800 00:50:28,295 --> 00:50:33,995 they apparently Scotch-taped that material back together 801 00:50:34,094 --> 00:50:36,261 and it became a blood list that they could use 802 00:50:36,361 --> 00:50:39,594 to track down people, Vietnamese, who'd worked for us. 803 00:50:39,694 --> 00:50:43,461 NARRATOR: Embassy officials dumped bags of currency 804 00:50:43,561 --> 00:50:44,927 into an oil drum 805 00:50:45,026 --> 00:50:46,693 and set it afire. 806 00:50:46,793 --> 00:50:49,461 Millions of dollars in contingency funds 807 00:50:49,561 --> 00:50:51,660 went up in smoke. 808 00:50:51,759 --> 00:50:55,393 "This will be the final message from Saigon station," 809 00:50:55,493 --> 00:50:59,560 the C.I.A. chief Thomas Polgar wired to Washington. 810 00:50:59,660 --> 00:51:04,492 "It has been a long fight and we have lost. 811 00:51:04,591 --> 00:51:07,425 "Those who fail to learn from history 812 00:51:07,524 --> 00:51:09,491 "are forced to repeat it. 813 00:51:09,590 --> 00:51:13,824 "Let us hope that we will not have another Vietnam experience 814 00:51:13,924 --> 00:51:16,590 "and that we have learned our lesson. 815 00:51:16,690 --> 00:51:20,022 Saigon signing off." 816 00:51:23,589 --> 00:51:26,289 More than 50 U.S. helicopters 817 00:51:26,390 --> 00:51:29,456 now crisscrossed the sky over Saigon, 818 00:51:29,556 --> 00:51:32,989 picking up evacuees from designated rooftops, 819 00:51:33,088 --> 00:51:35,322 as well as the embassy, 820 00:51:35,421 --> 00:51:38,655 ferrying them to the fleet far out at sea, 821 00:51:38,754 --> 00:51:40,555 then returning for more. 822 00:51:42,287 --> 00:51:45,019 Some desperate South Vietnamese officers 823 00:51:45,119 --> 00:51:46,954 also commandeered helicopters 824 00:51:47,054 --> 00:51:49,320 for themselves and their families, 825 00:51:49,420 --> 00:51:51,353 dangerously crowding the decks 826 00:51:51,454 --> 00:51:53,953 of the American aircraft carriers. 827 00:51:54,053 --> 00:51:56,886 There was no room for them. 828 00:51:56,986 --> 00:51:59,585 WILLBANKS: The image that remains in my mind 829 00:51:59,685 --> 00:52:01,618 is the picture of the helicopter 830 00:52:01,718 --> 00:52:04,452 being pushed over the side of the carrier. 831 00:52:04,552 --> 00:52:07,684 The helicopter was everything in Vietnam. 832 00:52:07,784 --> 00:52:10,584 I mean, it was dust-off, it was resupply, 833 00:52:10,684 --> 00:52:13,016 it was fire support, it was everything. 834 00:52:13,116 --> 00:52:18,151 All I could think of was: what a waste, what a waste. 835 00:52:18,250 --> 00:52:20,682 As I watched that all unfold, 836 00:52:20,782 --> 00:52:24,782 I, I felt responsible. 837 00:52:24,883 --> 00:52:26,015 I was ashamed. 838 00:52:26,115 --> 00:52:28,082 We had told these people 839 00:52:28,182 --> 00:52:30,348 that we would be there to support them 840 00:52:30,449 --> 00:52:31,949 and we were not. 841 00:52:37,049 --> 00:52:40,814 SNEPP: About 9:15 on the last night, 842 00:52:40,914 --> 00:52:44,048 Polgar came and he said, "We've got to all leave. 843 00:52:44,148 --> 00:52:45,756 "We've been ordered by headquarters to leave. 844 00:52:45,780 --> 00:52:47,380 Let's go." 845 00:52:47,480 --> 00:52:51,579 NARRATOR: Ambassador Martin had wanted to be the last man to leave. 846 00:52:51,679 --> 00:52:55,380 But at about 4:00 in the morning of April 30, 847 00:52:55,480 --> 00:52:59,745 a CH-46 touched down on the embassy roof. 848 00:52:59,845 --> 00:53:03,778 Its pilot carried orders from the president himself. 849 00:53:03,879 --> 00:53:07,677 Martin was to leave, now. 850 00:53:07,777 --> 00:53:10,177 "I guess this is it," he said. 851 00:53:10,277 --> 00:53:12,344 As Martin was helped aboard, 852 00:53:12,445 --> 00:53:15,009 he was handed the furled American flag 853 00:53:15,109 --> 00:53:19,276 that had flown from the flagstaff the previous day. 854 00:53:19,377 --> 00:53:25,275 He lifted off at 4:58 a.m. and headed out to sea. 855 00:53:25,376 --> 00:53:29,342 President Ford had also ordered that from then on, 856 00:53:29,443 --> 00:53:33,741 only Americans would be evacuated. 857 00:53:33,841 --> 00:53:37,642 Tens of thousands of South Vietnamese 858 00:53:37,741 --> 00:53:39,607 would be left behind, 859 00:53:39,707 --> 00:53:42,340 and more than 400 were still waiting 860 00:53:42,441 --> 00:53:44,041 in the embassy courtyard. 861 00:53:44,141 --> 00:53:46,773 Time and again, they had been assured 862 00:53:46,874 --> 00:53:50,739 helicopters were on the way to pick them up. 863 00:53:50,839 --> 00:53:53,406 HERRINGTON: I was directed 864 00:53:53,505 --> 00:53:56,705 to stay with the Vietnamese and keep them warm, 865 00:53:56,806 --> 00:53:59,405 meaning, "Don't give any hint 866 00:53:59,504 --> 00:54:05,071 that all these promises we made to them are for naught." 867 00:54:05,171 --> 00:54:07,270 I felt sick at heart, I had a hard time. 868 00:54:07,371 --> 00:54:09,237 It was dark out, so I didn't have to worry 869 00:54:09,337 --> 00:54:12,371 about looking these folks in the eye. 870 00:54:12,471 --> 00:54:15,503 But I made my excuse and, um, (speaks Vietnamese)... 871 00:54:15,603 --> 00:54:17,470 "I have to go to the bathroom." 872 00:54:17,569 --> 00:54:20,836 And left into the landscaping, 873 00:54:20,937 --> 00:54:23,736 circuitous route to the back door of the embassy, 874 00:54:23,836 --> 00:54:25,469 to the chancery building, 875 00:54:25,568 --> 00:54:27,869 and made my way to the roof. 876 00:54:27,969 --> 00:54:32,735 NARRATOR: Some 129 Marines remained in the compound. 877 00:54:32,835 --> 00:54:34,035 They did their best 878 00:54:34,135 --> 00:54:37,468 to pull back into the embassy and up onto the roof 879 00:54:37,567 --> 00:54:39,035 without alerting the Vietnamese 880 00:54:39,135 --> 00:54:42,200 that they were about to be left behind. 881 00:54:42,301 --> 00:54:45,333 VALDEZ: We locked ourselves inside the embassy 882 00:54:45,434 --> 00:54:48,733 and found ourselves up on the roof. 883 00:54:48,833 --> 00:54:51,199 It was actually after we got up on top of the roof 884 00:54:51,300 --> 00:54:53,241 that we started seeing all these masses of people. 885 00:54:53,265 --> 00:54:55,633 Some of them had already come on the embassy compound. 886 00:54:55,732 --> 00:54:57,232 And they broke those doors. 887 00:54:57,332 --> 00:55:00,133 And that's how those, uh, South Vietnamese 888 00:55:00,232 --> 00:55:03,664 were able to get inside the embassy. 889 00:55:05,997 --> 00:55:10,596 RON NESSEN: This action closes a chapter in the American experience. 890 00:55:10,696 --> 00:55:15,163 The president asks all Americans to close ranks, 891 00:55:15,263 --> 00:55:19,463 to avoid recriminations about the past, 892 00:55:19,562 --> 00:55:22,396 and to work together on the great tasks 893 00:55:22,495 --> 00:55:25,495 that remain to be accomplished. 894 00:55:25,595 --> 00:55:29,994 Now, to, uh, give you details of the events of the past few days 895 00:55:30,094 --> 00:55:31,862 and to answer your questions, 896 00:55:31,962 --> 00:55:33,328 Secretary of State Kissinger. 897 00:55:33,429 --> 00:55:34,737 REPORTER: Mr. Secretary, are you confident 898 00:55:34,761 --> 00:55:36,961 that all the Americans that wanted to come out 899 00:55:37,060 --> 00:55:38,760 are out of Saigon, 900 00:55:38,861 --> 00:55:40,361 and do you have any idea 901 00:55:40,461 --> 00:55:42,236 of the number of Americans who remain behind? 902 00:55:42,260 --> 00:55:44,894 I have no idea of the number of Americans 903 00:55:44,993 --> 00:55:46,559 that remain behind. 904 00:55:46,659 --> 00:55:50,092 Uh, I am confident that every American 905 00:55:50,192 --> 00:55:51,460 who wanted to come out, 906 00:55:51,559 --> 00:55:54,658 uh, is, is out. 907 00:55:54,758 --> 00:55:57,658 What we need now in this country 908 00:55:57,758 --> 00:56:01,758 is to heal the wounds and to put Vietnam behind us. 909 00:56:03,458 --> 00:56:06,525 NARRATOR: An aide handed Kissinger a note. 910 00:56:06,625 --> 00:56:09,557 It said that the 129 Marines 911 00:56:09,657 --> 00:56:13,823 had somehow been left behind on the embassy roof. 912 00:56:13,924 --> 00:56:17,290 Helicopters were dispatched to pick them up. 913 00:56:17,390 --> 00:56:20,290 Eventually, only Sergeant Valdez 914 00:56:20,390 --> 00:56:25,088 and his ten-man embassy security unit remained. 915 00:56:25,188 --> 00:56:27,655 But then, an hour went by 916 00:56:27,755 --> 00:56:30,254 with no sign of any more helicopters. 917 00:56:30,355 --> 00:56:32,821 Their radio was dead. 918 00:56:32,922 --> 00:56:36,022 The Marines had no way to contact the fleet 919 00:56:36,122 --> 00:56:39,454 to see if anyone was on the way. 920 00:56:39,553 --> 00:56:41,253 VALDEZ: Everything stopped. 921 00:56:41,354 --> 00:56:43,053 We're being left behind. 922 00:56:43,153 --> 00:56:45,954 People are sitting around in their own little thoughts, 923 00:56:46,053 --> 00:56:48,752 uh, not doing too much talking. 924 00:56:48,853 --> 00:56:51,853 We pretty much decided that we were going to fight it out, 925 00:56:51,953 --> 00:56:53,286 use these small arms that we had 926 00:56:53,386 --> 00:56:55,719 and just fight it to the end. 927 00:56:55,819 --> 00:57:00,584 We started seeing two puffs of smoke coming from out at sea. 928 00:57:00,684 --> 00:57:03,818 As they got closer, then we were able to determine 929 00:57:03,919 --> 00:57:05,550 that they were helicopters. 930 00:57:05,650 --> 00:57:07,817 It was a relief. 931 00:57:07,918 --> 00:57:10,293 One of the Marines, I believe it was Staff Sergeant Sullivan, 932 00:57:10,317 --> 00:57:11,384 my assistant, 933 00:57:11,483 --> 00:57:13,083 grabbed me and started pulling me in 934 00:57:13,183 --> 00:57:14,649 as the ramp's going up. 935 00:57:14,749 --> 00:57:21,216 NARRATOR: At 7:53 a.m., April 30, 1975, 936 00:57:21,316 --> 00:57:25,616 the last helicopter lifted off the embassy roof. 937 00:57:25,715 --> 00:57:28,248 Master Sergeant Juan Valdez 938 00:57:28,349 --> 00:57:32,980 was the last American to climb aboard. 939 00:57:33,080 --> 00:57:35,480 (sirens wailing) 940 00:57:35,580 --> 00:57:37,881 The government of South Vietnam 941 00:57:37,980 --> 00:57:40,515 had less than five hours to live. 942 00:57:44,780 --> 00:57:49,679 President Minh spoke from the palace at mid-morning. 943 00:57:49,780 --> 00:57:53,478 He urged what was left of the South Vietnamese Army 944 00:57:53,578 --> 00:57:55,312 to stop fighting. 945 00:57:55,413 --> 00:57:59,977 "We are here waiting," he said, "to hand over the authority 946 00:58:00,077 --> 00:58:04,244 in order to stop useless bloodshed." 947 00:59:25,603 --> 00:59:27,436 NARRATOR: At noon, 948 00:59:27,535 --> 00:59:31,368 North Vietnamese tanks flying Viet Cong flags 949 00:59:31,467 --> 00:59:33,268 smashed their way through the gates 950 00:59:33,368 --> 00:59:35,301 of the presidential palace. 951 00:59:37,566 --> 00:59:40,633 Within hours, victorious soldiers 952 00:59:40,733 --> 00:59:44,533 were calling Saigon "Ho Chi Minh City." 953 00:59:47,433 --> 00:59:51,866 All over town, ARVN soldiers tore off their uniforms 954 00:59:51,965 --> 00:59:55,631 and did their best to melt into the crowds. 955 00:59:55,731 --> 00:59:57,899 Families burned their photo albums 956 00:59:57,999 --> 00:59:59,765 so there would be no evidence 957 00:59:59,865 --> 01:00:04,764 that their sons or husbands had ever fought for South Vietnam. 958 01:00:07,063 --> 01:00:11,197 Colonel Tran Ngoc Toan had been fighting the communists 959 01:00:11,297 --> 01:00:13,296 for more than 12 years, 960 01:00:13,397 --> 01:00:15,263 and had survived terrible wounds 961 01:00:15,363 --> 01:00:18,029 suffered at the Battle of Binh Gia. 962 01:00:18,129 --> 01:00:20,430 He was leading what was left 963 01:00:20,529 --> 01:00:23,695 of the 4th South Vietnamese Marine Battalion 964 01:00:23,795 --> 01:00:28,795 near Bien Hoa, 20 miles east of Saigon. 965 01:00:28,896 --> 01:00:31,595 His commanding general had long since 966 01:00:31,694 --> 01:00:35,960 bribed his way aboard a ship and fled the country. 967 01:00:36,060 --> 01:00:40,760 An American friend had urged Toan to get out, too. 968 01:00:40,860 --> 01:00:42,760 He refused. 969 01:01:25,489 --> 01:01:28,454 NARRATOR: A South Vietnamese police officer 970 01:01:28,554 --> 01:01:30,654 walked to a memorial built to honor 971 01:01:30,755 --> 01:01:34,187 those who had fallen defending South Vietnam. 972 01:01:34,287 --> 01:01:37,321 He saluted it, stood there for a time, 973 01:01:37,421 --> 01:01:40,921 and then shot himself in the head. 974 01:01:41,020 --> 01:01:44,286 DUONG VAN MAI ELLIOTT: It was a very messy ending 975 01:01:44,387 --> 01:01:47,219 to a very messy war. 976 01:01:47,320 --> 01:01:49,652 I felt a sense of relief, 977 01:01:49,753 --> 01:01:53,551 but also a sense of sadness when it ended. 978 01:01:53,651 --> 01:01:58,518 I felt relief that the killing, destruction, 979 01:01:58,618 --> 01:02:00,784 finally came to an end, 980 01:02:00,885 --> 01:02:02,985 and I didn't care which side won. 981 01:02:03,085 --> 01:02:05,450 To me, Vietnam won. 982 01:02:05,550 --> 01:02:07,418 Vietnamese people won 983 01:02:07,517 --> 01:02:10,750 because they finally could live normally. 984 01:02:10,850 --> 01:02:16,384 And sad because I saw that my family was again fleeing, 985 01:02:16,484 --> 01:02:18,448 and this time from their homeland, 986 01:02:18,548 --> 01:02:21,916 and their future was very uncertain. 987 01:02:22,015 --> 01:02:25,048 And I knew that with the communists taking over, 988 01:02:25,148 --> 01:02:29,547 Vietnamese society would be changed drastically. 989 01:02:29,647 --> 01:02:32,147 NARRATOR: Lo Khac Tam had been fighting 990 01:02:32,248 --> 01:02:35,881 in the North Vietnamese Army for nearly ten years now, 991 01:02:35,981 --> 01:02:39,280 beginning with the bloody clash in the la Drang Valley, 992 01:02:39,381 --> 01:02:43,481 the first full-scale battle of the American war. 993 01:02:43,581 --> 01:02:48,012 Now he was watching that war's end. 994 01:03:21,641 --> 01:03:25,141 In Vietnam, we finally have reached the end of the tunnel, 995 01:03:25,242 --> 01:03:27,476 and there is no light there. 996 01:03:27,576 --> 01:03:31,075 What is there, perhaps, was best said by President Ford, 997 01:03:31,174 --> 01:03:33,507 "a war that is finished." 998 01:03:33,607 --> 01:03:37,140 LEWIS SORLEY: I happened to be at a conference 999 01:03:37,241 --> 01:03:38,606 at Tufts University, 1000 01:03:38,706 --> 01:03:41,307 and the dean there was a former ambassador 1001 01:03:41,407 --> 01:03:43,273 who spoke to us late on that day, 1002 01:03:43,374 --> 01:03:45,673 as it turned out, the fateful day. 1003 01:03:45,773 --> 01:03:49,005 And he said he had just come back from Washington, 1004 01:03:49,105 --> 01:03:52,739 where the spring weather was beautiful 1005 01:03:52,839 --> 01:03:55,438 and the daffodils were in bloom, 1006 01:03:55,537 --> 01:04:01,838 to Boston, where it was gloomy and gray as it was in his heart. 1007 01:04:03,738 --> 01:04:06,871 And people hissed him and booed him. 1008 01:04:06,971 --> 01:04:10,270 I was there in uniform. 1009 01:04:10,371 --> 01:04:12,636 One of my great regrets was that I did not get up 1010 01:04:12,737 --> 01:04:14,669 and start laying waste to those people 1011 01:04:14,769 --> 01:04:16,070 who disrespected the ambassador 1012 01:04:16,169 --> 01:04:19,135 and his sorrow at the fall of South Vietnam. 1013 01:04:19,236 --> 01:04:21,635 I got a call from the V.V.A.W. national office 1014 01:04:21,736 --> 01:04:24,302 from some friends of mine from the old days. 1015 01:04:24,402 --> 01:04:26,402 They were having a big celebration, 1016 01:04:26,501 --> 01:04:29,534 drinking booze and, "Ah, well, it's a great day, isn't it?" 1017 01:04:29,634 --> 01:04:32,568 And I said, "Are you nuts?" 1018 01:04:32,667 --> 01:04:35,568 I said, "No, it's not a great day." 1019 01:04:35,667 --> 01:04:38,568 To see America leaving like that, 1020 01:04:38,667 --> 01:04:43,333 after we'd given almost 60,000 of our sons and daughters, 1021 01:04:43,432 --> 01:04:46,932 that wasn't something to celebrate. 1022 01:04:47,032 --> 01:04:48,900 I knew we were abandoning 1023 01:04:48,999 --> 01:04:52,466 millions of South Vietnamese that had trusted us, 1024 01:04:52,566 --> 01:04:55,366 thrown in their lot with us. 1025 01:04:55,466 --> 01:04:58,597 That wasn't anything to celebrate. 1026 01:04:58,697 --> 01:05:01,065 I thought it was just one of the saddest moments 1027 01:05:01,164 --> 01:05:04,798 I'd ever seen in American history. 1028 01:05:04,898 --> 01:05:06,929 So when some future politician, for some reason, 1029 01:05:07,029 --> 01:05:11,029 feels the need to drag this country into a war, 1030 01:05:11,129 --> 01:05:12,929 he might come out here to Arlington, 1031 01:05:13,029 --> 01:05:15,129 and stand maybe right over there somewhere, 1032 01:05:15,230 --> 01:05:19,095 to make his announcement and to tell what he has in mind. 1033 01:06:48,818 --> 01:06:51,519 (cheering) 1034 01:06:51,618 --> 01:06:54,984 TOM VALLELY: In Vietnam, the Communist Party is triumphant. 1035 01:06:55,085 --> 01:06:57,751 And they have exceptionalism, too. 1036 01:06:57,852 --> 01:07:01,617 And their exceptionalism gets in their way 1037 01:07:01,718 --> 01:07:05,383 just like our exceptionalism got in our way. 1038 01:07:05,483 --> 01:07:09,284 So they unify the country in a military sense, 1039 01:07:09,383 --> 01:07:13,749 and then they, they don't really unify the country after that. 1040 01:07:13,850 --> 01:07:18,350 They, they try, but they fail. 1041 01:07:18,449 --> 01:07:21,215 NARRATOR: In the end, there was no bloodbath 1042 01:07:21,314 --> 01:07:24,282 on the scale many had feared, 1043 01:07:24,381 --> 01:07:28,849 but hundreds, perhaps thousands, of people in the countryside 1044 01:07:28,948 --> 01:07:30,548 are thought to have been killed 1045 01:07:30,648 --> 01:07:35,880 in individual acts of revenge or political retaliation. 1046 01:07:35,980 --> 01:07:39,047 Those who had served the Thieu regime, 1047 01:07:39,147 --> 01:07:41,713 from generals to ordinary clerks, 1048 01:07:41,812 --> 01:07:45,446 were required to undergo re-education. 1049 01:07:45,547 --> 01:07:47,378 Enlisted men were assured 1050 01:07:47,478 --> 01:07:51,046 they would only have to submit to three days of "study." 1051 01:07:51,146 --> 01:07:55,678 Officers needn't attend for more than a month. 1052 01:08:27,607 --> 01:08:29,741 NARRATOR: A million and a half people 1053 01:08:29,842 --> 01:08:34,541 are believed to have undergone some form of indoctrination. 1054 01:08:34,641 --> 01:08:39,106 ARVN cemeteries were bulldozed or padlocked, 1055 01:08:39,207 --> 01:08:42,105 as if the memory of an independent South Vietnam, 1056 01:08:42,206 --> 01:08:45,006 and those who had died for that cause, 1057 01:08:45,105 --> 01:08:48,239 could both be obliterated. 1058 01:08:48,340 --> 01:08:49,859 DUONG VAN MAI ELLIOTT: The communists, 1059 01:08:49,938 --> 01:08:53,272 in their effort to erase vestiges 1060 01:08:53,371 --> 01:08:54,971 of the former regime, 1061 01:08:55,072 --> 01:08:59,071 have not allowed the South Vietnamese 1062 01:08:59,170 --> 01:09:02,571 who lost their sons in the war 1063 01:09:02,670 --> 01:09:08,137 to mourn, to have their graves and to honor their memory. 1064 01:09:08,236 --> 01:09:11,802 It caused a division that lasts to this day, 1065 01:09:11,902 --> 01:09:16,801 that the winners would not accommodate the losers 1066 01:09:16,901 --> 01:09:18,836 in some way. 1067 01:09:31,967 --> 01:09:37,299 NARRATOR: After 30 years of war, much of Vietnam lay in ruins. 1068 01:09:37,399 --> 01:09:40,034 Three million people are thought to have died, 1069 01:09:40,134 --> 01:09:42,334 North and South. 1070 01:09:42,433 --> 01:09:46,098 Still more had been wounded. 1071 01:09:46,199 --> 01:09:50,432 Thousands of children fathered by American servicemen 1072 01:09:50,533 --> 01:09:53,364 had been left behind. 1073 01:09:53,464 --> 01:09:59,797 Villages needed to be rebuilt, land had to be reclaimed. 1074 01:09:59,897 --> 01:10:03,264 Cities were choked with refugees. 1075 01:10:03,363 --> 01:10:06,163 Millions were without work. 1076 01:10:06,264 --> 01:10:10,530 President Ford imposed an economic embargo. 1077 01:10:10,630 --> 01:10:16,496 Washington refused to recognize the new government of Vietnam. 1078 01:10:16,595 --> 01:10:19,329 But Le Duan and his allies on the Politburo 1079 01:10:19,428 --> 01:10:21,762 remained optimistic. 1080 01:10:21,861 --> 01:10:25,094 "Nothing more can happen," one committee member said. 1081 01:10:25,195 --> 01:10:27,794 "The problems we face now are trifles 1082 01:10:27,893 --> 01:10:31,160 compared to those in the past." 1083 01:10:31,261 --> 01:10:34,028 Le Duan resolved, with Soviet help, 1084 01:10:34,128 --> 01:10:37,092 to turn all of Vietnam into what he called 1085 01:10:37,193 --> 01:10:41,993 an "impregnable outpost of the socialist system." 1086 01:10:42,092 --> 01:10:46,291 Hanoi forcibly collectivized agriculture in the South, 1087 01:10:46,391 --> 01:10:48,759 virtually abolished capitalism, 1088 01:10:48,858 --> 01:10:51,358 nationalized industries, 1089 01:10:51,458 --> 01:10:53,891 and appointed planners to run it all 1090 01:10:53,992 --> 01:10:57,424 along strict communist lines. 1091 01:10:57,525 --> 01:11:01,558 The result would be economic disaster. 1092 01:11:01,657 --> 01:11:06,524 Inflation rose as high as 700% a year. 1093 01:11:06,624 --> 01:11:09,289 People starved. 1094 01:11:38,286 --> 01:11:41,152 NARRATOR: To compound its problems, 1095 01:11:41,253 --> 01:11:44,820 Vietnam found itself, once again, at war, 1096 01:11:44,919 --> 01:11:48,451 caught between the interests of the two communist powers 1097 01:11:48,552 --> 01:11:51,451 that had once been its staunchest allies, 1098 01:11:51,552 --> 01:11:54,084 China and the Soviet Union. 1099 01:11:54,185 --> 01:11:55,418 (gunshot, man yells) 1100 01:11:55,519 --> 01:11:58,583 After the brutal Maoist regime in Cambodia 1101 01:11:58,684 --> 01:12:00,184 raided border areas, 1102 01:12:00,283 --> 01:12:04,350 Vietnamese troops, with Soviet arms and encouragement, 1103 01:12:04,450 --> 01:12:09,050 crossed the frontier in 1978 and overthrew it. 1104 01:12:09,149 --> 01:12:11,282 A frustrating ten-year 1105 01:12:11,382 --> 01:12:13,882 counterinsurgency campaign followed 1106 01:12:13,983 --> 01:12:18,616 that some called "Vietnam's Vietnam." 1107 01:12:18,715 --> 01:12:20,549 Before it was over, 1108 01:12:20,648 --> 01:12:24,447 the Vietnamese would lose some 50,000 more men, 1109 01:12:24,548 --> 01:12:29,615 almost as many as the Americans had lost in their war. 1110 01:12:29,714 --> 01:12:31,015 (explosions and gunfire) 1111 01:12:31,115 --> 01:12:32,980 Meanwhile, communist China, 1112 01:12:33,079 --> 01:12:36,946 determined to punish Vietnam for invading Cambodia, 1113 01:12:37,047 --> 01:12:39,646 and to show Moscow it would not have a free hand 1114 01:12:39,747 --> 01:12:41,446 in Southeast Asia, 1115 01:12:41,547 --> 01:12:46,046 sent 85,000 troops storming into northern Vietnam. 1116 01:12:46,145 --> 01:12:49,412 They devastated areas along the border 1117 01:12:49,513 --> 01:12:53,312 before the Vietnamese pushed them back. 1118 01:12:55,312 --> 01:12:58,877 ED BRADLEY: The South China Sea, 1978. 1119 01:12:58,978 --> 01:13:02,611 They come ashore at the rate of 10,000 a month, 1120 01:13:02,710 --> 01:13:05,177 much faster than the United States or any other nation 1121 01:13:05,276 --> 01:13:07,076 is willing to accept them. 1122 01:13:07,177 --> 01:13:11,176 They come chasing an elusive memory: 1123 01:13:11,275 --> 01:13:13,375 the promise of America. 1124 01:13:13,476 --> 01:13:18,774 NARRATOR: A million and a half people would eventually flee Vietnam: 1125 01:13:18,874 --> 01:13:21,874 supporters of the old Saigon regime, 1126 01:13:21,975 --> 01:13:23,908 refugees from the renewed fighting 1127 01:13:24,009 --> 01:13:25,975 along the Cambodian border, 1128 01:13:26,074 --> 01:13:28,840 and ethnic Chinese residents of Vietnam, 1129 01:13:28,940 --> 01:13:33,340 whom the new government had treated especially harshly. 1130 01:13:33,440 --> 01:13:37,607 Hundreds of thousands of the boat people died. 1131 01:13:37,706 --> 01:13:39,939 Others suffered in refugee camps 1132 01:13:40,040 --> 01:13:42,339 throughout Southeast Asia. 1133 01:13:46,606 --> 01:13:51,638 Some 400,000 eventually made it to America, 1134 01:13:51,739 --> 01:13:54,471 where they settled in nearly every state, 1135 01:13:54,570 --> 01:13:57,370 industrious, entrepreneurial, 1136 01:13:57,471 --> 01:14:01,204 more eager to take part in American political life 1137 01:14:01,305 --> 01:14:04,804 and more likely to become American citizens 1138 01:14:04,903 --> 01:14:08,304 than other immigrant groups from Asia. 1139 01:14:08,403 --> 01:14:12,368 But for that first generation of Vietnamese Americans, 1140 01:14:12,469 --> 01:14:17,503 memories of their homeland could never be erased. 1141 01:15:04,629 --> 01:15:06,362 KARL MARLANTES: I remember I was 1142 01:15:06,463 --> 01:15:08,497 with one of my daughters, uh... (chuckles) 1143 01:15:08,597 --> 01:15:10,829 at an intersection and some guy came up behind me 1144 01:15:10,929 --> 01:15:13,962 and blasted the horn. 1145 01:15:14,061 --> 01:15:16,162 When I came to my senses, 1146 01:15:16,261 --> 01:15:18,195 I was on the hood of his car, 1147 01:15:18,296 --> 01:15:21,261 about to, trying to kick his windshield in. 1148 01:15:21,361 --> 01:15:23,600 And I went... and there's people all over looking at me. 1149 01:15:23,627 --> 01:15:25,295 I mean, this is crazy. This is crazy. 1150 01:15:25,394 --> 01:15:27,236 And then I started going, "Well, this is weird." 1151 01:15:27,260 --> 01:15:29,560 I sort of slinked back to my car and, you know, 1152 01:15:29,661 --> 01:15:31,335 my daughter, she's about four, looking at me, 1153 01:15:31,359 --> 01:15:32,470 "Wow, what's that all about?" 1154 01:15:32,494 --> 01:15:33,894 And I go, "What is that all about?" 1155 01:15:33,926 --> 01:15:35,059 I had no idea. 1156 01:15:35,160 --> 01:15:37,527 I had no idea that it was even related to the war. 1157 01:15:39,626 --> 01:15:43,425 NARRATOR: It is as old as war itself. 1158 01:15:43,526 --> 01:15:46,493 The ancient Greeks called it "divine madness." 1159 01:15:49,292 --> 01:15:54,357 It was "soldier's heart" in the Civil War, 1160 01:15:54,458 --> 01:15:59,056 "shell shock" during the First World War 1161 01:15:59,157 --> 01:16:01,491 and "combat fatigue" in the Second. 1162 01:16:05,457 --> 01:16:08,523 Following Vietnam, it was given a new name, 1163 01:16:08,622 --> 01:16:11,956 Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder... 1164 01:16:12,055 --> 01:16:14,689 PTSD. 1165 01:16:14,790 --> 01:16:19,421 MARLANTES: And what you learn is that PTSD doesn't go away. 1166 01:16:19,522 --> 01:16:22,789 But now if someone honks the horn, 1167 01:16:22,888 --> 01:16:24,289 and it startles me, I'm still... 1168 01:16:24,388 --> 01:16:25,988 My heart rate's still going to go up, 1169 01:16:26,088 --> 01:16:28,096 and it'll be there for five minutes and I'm like this. 1170 01:16:28,120 --> 01:16:30,753 But, "Ten, nine, it's just some asshole, 1171 01:16:30,853 --> 01:16:32,954 "he's had a bad day at work, eight, seven, six, 1172 01:16:33,053 --> 01:16:34,895 "it's not... no one's shooting at you, you're safe, 1173 01:16:34,919 --> 01:16:36,528 it's seven, six, five, four, three, two, one." 1174 01:16:36,552 --> 01:16:38,087 And I can control it, 1175 01:16:38,186 --> 01:16:39,453 whereas I couldn't do it before 1176 01:16:39,552 --> 01:16:41,619 because I didn't understand what was going on. 1177 01:16:43,219 --> 01:16:45,652 NARRATOR: Adding to the pain many veterans felt 1178 01:16:45,751 --> 01:16:49,918 was their country's eagerness to forget the war. 1179 01:16:50,019 --> 01:16:52,550 There were few parades. 1180 01:16:54,050 --> 01:16:59,651 In many ways, everyone came home from Vietnam alone. 1181 01:17:01,450 --> 01:17:03,049 When I got home, 1182 01:17:03,150 --> 01:17:04,517 and my mom and dad were there, 1183 01:17:04,616 --> 01:17:07,084 my brothers and sisters, my wife. 1184 01:17:07,183 --> 01:17:08,883 And we're embracing and... 1185 01:17:11,583 --> 01:17:16,182 I couldn't relate to my wife or my mother what I had seen, 1186 01:17:16,283 --> 01:17:19,582 what I had done in Vietnam. 1187 01:17:19,681 --> 01:17:21,914 I could've talked to my brothers about it, 1188 01:17:22,015 --> 01:17:25,181 but they, they knew I didn't want to. 1189 01:17:25,282 --> 01:17:28,113 And so it just, uh, something unsaid, you know. 1190 01:17:28,214 --> 01:17:30,180 "Welcome back, Vince. 1191 01:17:30,281 --> 01:17:33,246 You've been through the, the wringer, but welcome back." 1192 01:17:36,179 --> 01:17:38,446 NARRATOR: In April 1981, 1193 01:17:38,545 --> 01:17:41,112 a panel of eight architects and sculptors 1194 01:17:41,213 --> 01:17:43,179 gathered in an airplane hangar 1195 01:17:43,280 --> 01:17:46,844 at Andrews Air Force Base outside Washington. 1196 01:17:46,945 --> 01:17:49,779 They were there to choose the winning design 1197 01:17:49,878 --> 01:17:52,945 for a Vietnam memorial for the nation's capital 1198 01:17:53,044 --> 01:17:55,778 from more than 1,400 submissions. 1199 01:17:59,578 --> 01:18:03,609 The memorial was the brainchild of a single stubborn veteran, 1200 01:18:03,710 --> 01:18:06,643 a former rifleman named Jan Scruggs, 1201 01:18:06,742 --> 01:18:10,143 who, after suffering a frightening flashback, 1202 01:18:10,242 --> 01:18:13,009 told his wife he wanted to "build a memorial 1203 01:18:13,108 --> 01:18:16,341 "to all the guys who served in Vietnam. 1204 01:18:16,442 --> 01:18:19,476 It'll have the name of everyone killed." 1205 01:18:19,576 --> 01:18:21,075 With other veterans, 1206 01:18:21,174 --> 01:18:24,008 he established a nonprofit organization, 1207 01:18:24,107 --> 01:18:26,708 the Vietnam Veterans Memorial Fund, 1208 01:18:26,807 --> 01:18:30,873 and went to work collecting money and making plans. 1209 01:18:30,974 --> 01:18:35,539 In the end, some 650,000 Americans 1210 01:18:35,640 --> 01:18:39,105 would contribute more than $8 million. 1211 01:18:39,206 --> 01:18:43,872 The judges chose submission number 1026. 1212 01:18:43,973 --> 01:18:45,105 (applause) 1213 01:18:45,206 --> 01:18:47,105 SUSAN PETERSON: 21-year-old Maya Ying Lin, 1214 01:18:47,206 --> 01:18:49,272 an architect student at Yale University, 1215 01:18:49,371 --> 01:18:51,537 got the $20,000 prize. 1216 01:18:51,638 --> 01:18:53,472 Her winning design is comprised 1217 01:18:53,572 --> 01:18:56,037 of two elongated triangles of black granite, 1218 01:18:56,138 --> 01:18:58,603 inset into a hill and inscribed with the names 1219 01:18:58,704 --> 01:19:03,471 of the 57,692 men and women who died in the war. 1220 01:19:03,571 --> 01:19:07,869 Lin, whose parents emigrated from China in the 1940s to Ohio, 1221 01:19:07,970 --> 01:19:09,436 thought she wouldn't win 1222 01:19:09,535 --> 01:19:11,970 because her design was too strange and too strong. 1223 01:19:12,070 --> 01:19:15,202 I had a general idea that I wanted to describe a journey, 1224 01:19:15,301 --> 01:19:18,469 a journey that would make you experience death 1225 01:19:18,569 --> 01:19:21,034 and where you'd have to be an observer, 1226 01:19:21,135 --> 01:19:23,800 where you could never really fully be with the dead. 1227 01:19:23,900 --> 01:19:25,944 It wasn't going to be something that was going to say, 1228 01:19:25,968 --> 01:19:27,733 "It's all right, it's all over," 1229 01:19:27,833 --> 01:19:28,900 because it's not. 1230 01:19:29,001 --> 01:19:31,800 NARRATOR: Differences about the war 1231 01:19:31,899 --> 01:19:35,967 colored people's feelings about the proposed design. 1232 01:19:36,067 --> 01:19:39,467 Some who believed that the war had been unjust and immoral 1233 01:19:39,567 --> 01:19:43,132 feared the monument was somehow meant to glorify it. 1234 01:19:44,598 --> 01:19:48,066 Others feared its stark design failed to do justice 1235 01:19:48,165 --> 01:19:52,030 to the cause for which Americans had fought. 1236 01:19:52,131 --> 01:19:54,730 The writer Tom Wolfe dismissed it 1237 01:19:54,830 --> 01:19:57,830 as "a tribute to Jane Fonda." 1238 01:19:57,931 --> 01:19:59,906 TOM CARHART: I don't care about artistic perceptions. 1239 01:19:59,930 --> 01:20:01,964 One needs no artistic education 1240 01:20:02,064 --> 01:20:04,529 to see this memorial design for what it is: 1241 01:20:04,630 --> 01:20:07,130 a black scar. 1242 01:20:07,229 --> 01:20:09,063 Black, the universal color 1243 01:20:09,162 --> 01:20:11,563 of sorrow and shame and degradation 1244 01:20:11,662 --> 01:20:14,395 in all races and all societies worldwide. 1245 01:20:14,496 --> 01:20:17,495 In a hole, hidden as if out of shame. 1246 01:20:17,594 --> 01:20:20,262 JANICE CONNALLY: Mr. Chairman, members of the commission, 1247 01:20:20,361 --> 01:20:21,962 I speak as an individual, 1248 01:20:22,062 --> 01:20:24,562 a member from the general public. 1249 01:20:24,661 --> 01:20:29,194 What are the memorable images from the war in Vietnam? 1250 01:20:29,293 --> 01:20:30,793 A guerrilla, 1251 01:20:30,893 --> 01:20:33,393 shot at point-blank range. 1252 01:20:33,494 --> 01:20:36,025 A naked girl, afire, running, 1253 01:20:36,126 --> 01:20:38,260 screaming down a dusty road. 1254 01:20:39,792 --> 01:20:41,825 I think Maya Lin was right 1255 01:20:41,926 --> 01:20:45,224 in going beyond these kinds of images. 1256 01:20:45,324 --> 01:20:50,091 She resolved all the pain and conflict of that unhappy time 1257 01:20:50,192 --> 01:20:54,857 in a simple message of sacrifice and quiet heroism. 1258 01:20:54,958 --> 01:20:59,758 NARRATOR: In an official vote of support for Maya Lin's design, 1259 01:20:59,857 --> 01:21:03,490 the American Gold Star Mothers spoke for many. 1260 01:21:03,589 --> 01:21:05,389 "Nowadays," they said, 1261 01:21:05,490 --> 01:21:08,356 "patriotism is a complicated matter. 1262 01:21:08,457 --> 01:21:10,489 "But perhaps that is why 1263 01:21:10,588 --> 01:21:12,489 "the V-shaped, black granite lines 1264 01:21:12,588 --> 01:21:15,956 "merging gently with the sloping earth 1265 01:21:16,056 --> 01:21:18,489 "convey the only point about the war 1266 01:21:18,588 --> 01:21:20,654 "on which people may agree: 1267 01:21:20,755 --> 01:21:23,988 that those who died should be remembered." 1268 01:21:24,087 --> 01:21:27,421 ("Bridge Over Troubled Water" by Simon and Garfunkel playing) 1269 01:21:46,185 --> 01:21:50,017 d When you're weary 1270 01:21:52,618 --> 01:21:54,917 d Feeling small 1271 01:21:57,551 --> 01:22:04,882 d When tears are in your eyes 1272 01:22:04,983 --> 01:22:12,982 d I'll dry them all. 1273 01:22:13,148 --> 01:22:17,714 RION CAUSEY: As you got out of the car and you approached the wall, 1274 01:22:17,814 --> 01:22:22,380 the intensity of which, it grabs you... 1275 01:22:23,647 --> 01:22:25,048 You go up... 1276 01:22:28,347 --> 01:22:29,780 You see the names, 1277 01:22:29,880 --> 01:22:31,180 you touch the names... 1278 01:22:33,846 --> 01:22:35,812 (crying): It's intense. 1279 01:22:35,913 --> 01:22:42,845 d Bridge over troubled water 1280 01:22:42,946 --> 01:22:46,479 d I will lay me down. 1281 01:22:55,577 --> 01:22:56,745 SORLEY: I did not like 1282 01:22:56,844 --> 01:22:58,576 the Vietnam wall. 1283 01:22:58,677 --> 01:23:02,444 I considered it an ugly, black ditch 1284 01:23:02,544 --> 01:23:06,208 and that it said the only people that, uh... 1285 01:23:06,308 --> 01:23:08,443 to be commemorated are the dead, 1286 01:23:08,543 --> 01:23:13,008 not because they're heroes, but because they're victims. 1287 01:23:14,508 --> 01:23:17,442 I didn't go. 1288 01:23:17,542 --> 01:23:20,707 Until... 1289 01:23:20,807 --> 01:23:22,908 one year... 1290 01:23:23,007 --> 01:23:26,041 they were going to put the wreath in front of... 1291 01:23:26,140 --> 01:23:28,174 the name of my roommate. 1292 01:23:28,273 --> 01:23:30,907 (voice breaking): I had, I had to go. 1293 01:23:31,006 --> 01:23:34,339 So I've gone every year since then 1294 01:23:34,440 --> 01:23:38,240 to remember those we, we lost. 1295 01:23:38,339 --> 01:23:40,240 And, um... 1296 01:23:40,339 --> 01:23:41,871 I walk down to the far left 1297 01:23:41,972 --> 01:23:46,771 and I run my fingers over that name. 1298 01:23:53,503 --> 01:23:55,671 You go to that wall, 1299 01:23:55,770 --> 01:23:58,870 and even my son, who was nine years old when I first took him, 1300 01:23:58,971 --> 01:24:02,002 and you see over 58,000 names, 1301 01:24:02,103 --> 01:24:07,369 and you know that unwritten behind or beside each name, 1302 01:24:07,470 --> 01:24:11,568 there's a mother or a father or a wife or a daughter 1303 01:24:11,669 --> 01:24:15,768 whose lives were forever shattered 1304 01:24:15,868 --> 01:24:18,535 by that damn war. 1305 01:24:22,935 --> 01:24:27,467 NANCY BIBERMAN: I've been to the wall, more than once. 1306 01:24:27,566 --> 01:24:29,434 When I look back at the war and, you know, 1307 01:24:29,534 --> 01:24:31,534 think of the horrible things, you know, 1308 01:24:31,633 --> 01:24:35,033 we said to, you know, vets who were returning, 1309 01:24:35,132 --> 01:24:38,899 you know, calling them "baby killers" and worse, 1310 01:24:38,998 --> 01:24:44,831 I, you know... I feel very sad about that. 1311 01:24:44,932 --> 01:24:48,497 I can only say that, you know, we were kids, too, 1312 01:24:48,598 --> 01:24:50,932 you know, just like they were. 1313 01:24:51,032 --> 01:24:53,763 It grieves me, it grieves me today. 1314 01:24:53,863 --> 01:24:57,397 It pains me to think of the things that I said 1315 01:24:57,496 --> 01:24:58,964 and that we said. 1316 01:24:59,063 --> 01:25:02,562 And I'm sorry. 1317 01:25:04,896 --> 01:25:06,963 I'm sorry. 1318 01:25:14,029 --> 01:25:15,229 (bird calling) 1319 01:25:18,095 --> 01:25:19,827 CAROL CROCKER: I didn't want to go. 1320 01:25:21,161 --> 01:25:27,793 And it was a beautiful summer morning. 1321 01:25:27,894 --> 01:25:33,192 Went to the Lincoln Memorial first. 1322 01:25:33,292 --> 01:25:37,526 A comforting place to be. 1323 01:25:37,625 --> 01:25:39,659 And... 1324 01:25:39,758 --> 01:25:44,691 And then crossed the street and walked in towards the entrance. 1325 01:25:44,791 --> 01:25:48,091 And, as you know, at first, you can't really see the wall, 1326 01:25:48,190 --> 01:25:51,790 and you're coming down into the grassy hill. 1327 01:25:51,891 --> 01:25:56,689 And when I caught sight of it, 1328 01:25:56,789 --> 01:25:59,924 I literally lost my breath. 1329 01:26:01,056 --> 01:26:03,724 Of course, I wept. 1330 01:26:05,822 --> 01:26:10,188 I had help getting lifted up so I could touch it. 1331 01:26:10,288 --> 01:26:12,988 I found my brother's name. 1332 01:26:17,155 --> 01:26:19,155 I looked at my brother's name 1333 01:26:19,254 --> 01:26:23,454 in the company of all those other people. 1334 01:26:25,553 --> 01:26:28,154 There was sadness. 1335 01:26:28,253 --> 01:26:32,720 But now he wasn't alone, either. 1336 01:26:32,819 --> 01:26:36,319 He was in the company of people. 1337 01:26:36,420 --> 01:26:39,020 And he was there 1338 01:26:39,119 --> 01:26:43,484 for people to know and to think about. 1339 01:26:43,585 --> 01:26:45,251 And he wasn't forgotten. 1340 01:26:45,351 --> 01:26:47,051 And he wasn't lost. 1341 01:26:47,152 --> 01:26:51,451 It was incredibly healing and freeing for me. 1342 01:26:59,316 --> 01:27:01,450 As I was walking towards it from the reflecting pool, 1343 01:27:01,549 --> 01:27:04,349 there were so many names on those walls. 1344 01:27:04,450 --> 01:27:08,382 And all of a sudden, my throat swole up, 1345 01:27:08,481 --> 01:27:10,315 and I thought, "I can't do this. 1346 01:27:10,416 --> 01:27:12,516 I can't do this right now." 1347 01:27:12,615 --> 01:27:15,847 And I collapsed. 1348 01:27:19,215 --> 01:27:23,314 And all the tears I'd been holding back... 1349 01:27:25,380 --> 01:27:27,346 I didn't cry, I sobbed. 1350 01:27:27,447 --> 01:27:31,346 I was on my knees, sobbing. 1351 01:27:31,447 --> 01:27:34,913 I couldn't stop, I couldn't get my breath. 1352 01:27:37,678 --> 01:27:42,677 And I was so grateful to God that it was there. 1353 01:27:42,777 --> 01:27:45,611 I thought, 1354 01:27:45,712 --> 01:27:48,344 "This is going to save lives. 1355 01:27:48,445 --> 01:27:51,343 This is going to save lives." 1356 01:28:35,472 --> 01:28:37,805 VALLELY: I was struck by its beauty 1357 01:28:37,906 --> 01:28:40,771 and how at peace Vietnam looked from the air. 1358 01:28:40,872 --> 01:28:43,471 I had a sense of anticipation in my body. 1359 01:28:43,572 --> 01:28:45,804 I had worked hard for many months with others 1360 01:28:45,905 --> 01:28:50,337 to organize this trip and to negotiate our arrival 1361 01:28:50,438 --> 01:28:51,547 with the Vietnamese government. 1362 01:28:51,571 --> 01:28:52,604 How do you do? 1363 01:28:52,705 --> 01:28:53,836 Toi ten Tom Vallely. 1364 01:28:53,937 --> 01:28:56,669 VALLELY: I came back to Vietnam as a veteran 1365 01:28:56,769 --> 01:28:58,904 to learn from history, 1366 01:28:59,004 --> 01:29:01,969 and to see how the place had changed. 1367 01:29:02,070 --> 01:29:03,968 (laughter) 1368 01:29:04,069 --> 01:29:06,136 There had only been 200 Americans 1369 01:29:06,235 --> 01:29:07,802 that had been to Vietnam since 1975, 1370 01:29:07,903 --> 01:29:09,503 and most of them had been correspondents 1371 01:29:09,535 --> 01:29:11,102 and had been in the South. 1372 01:29:11,203 --> 01:29:13,702 (clamoring, horn honking) 1373 01:29:13,801 --> 01:29:16,667 Many of the kids, you'd walk down the street, 1374 01:29:16,767 --> 01:29:18,467 and they'd go, "Lien Xo, lien Xo," 1375 01:29:18,568 --> 01:29:19,967 which means "Russian." 1376 01:29:20,068 --> 01:29:21,434 And you'd go, "Nolien Xo, 1377 01:29:21,533 --> 01:29:24,001 toi la nguoi My"... "I'm an American." 1378 01:29:24,100 --> 01:29:26,666 And their face would light up, and they'd go, "American!" 1379 01:29:26,766 --> 01:29:28,666 And it would spread like wildfire 1380 01:29:28,766 --> 01:29:30,700 through the schoolyard, or the street 1381 01:29:30,799 --> 01:29:32,665 that Americans were here. 1382 01:29:32,765 --> 01:29:35,165 And they'd come out and they'd be very, very friendly. 1383 01:29:35,265 --> 01:29:38,831 (laughter) 1384 01:29:38,932 --> 01:29:40,031 Goodbye. 1385 01:29:40,132 --> 01:29:42,632 Goodbye! Goodbye! 1386 01:29:42,731 --> 01:29:44,199 (laughter) 1387 01:29:47,631 --> 01:29:52,498 NARRATOR: Tom Vallely had served with the Marines in Vietnam. 1388 01:29:52,597 --> 01:29:58,197 16 years later, the country drew him back. 1389 01:29:58,296 --> 01:30:00,762 He founded the Vietnam Program 1390 01:30:00,863 --> 01:30:03,162 of the Kennedy School at Harvard, 1391 01:30:03,262 --> 01:30:09,461 and helped educate some of the country's future leaders. 1392 01:30:09,562 --> 01:30:12,629 I got very, very involved in the reconnecting 1393 01:30:12,728 --> 01:30:14,995 between the United States and Vietnam, 1394 01:30:15,094 --> 01:30:17,760 and how that reconnection takes place, 1395 01:30:17,861 --> 01:30:22,826 I spent a decade of my life putting those pieces together. 1396 01:30:22,927 --> 01:30:25,127 NARRATOR: Although the United States 1397 01:30:25,226 --> 01:30:28,394 did not have diplomatic relations with Vietnam, 1398 01:30:28,494 --> 01:30:32,359 veterans had begun coming back on their own, 1399 01:30:32,458 --> 01:30:37,525 revisiting places where they had fought... 1400 01:30:38,658 --> 01:30:41,724 ...meeting old foes... 1401 01:30:43,824 --> 01:30:47,558 ...planting trees and building schools, 1402 01:30:47,657 --> 01:30:51,624 trying to put the war behind them. 1403 01:30:53,156 --> 01:30:56,090 Vallely worked closely with other veterans, 1404 01:30:56,191 --> 01:30:59,722 including three United States senators, 1405 01:30:59,822 --> 01:31:03,556 who became among the most influential American advocates 1406 01:31:03,655 --> 01:31:06,322 for normalizing relations: 1407 01:31:06,423 --> 01:31:09,122 John McCain from Arizona, 1408 01:31:09,221 --> 01:31:14,088 who had endured six years as a prisoner of war; 1409 01:31:14,189 --> 01:31:17,220 John Kerry from Massachusetts, 1410 01:31:17,320 --> 01:31:20,720 the ex-commander of a Swift Boat; 1411 01:31:20,820 --> 01:31:23,921 and Bob Kerrey of Nebraska, 1412 01:31:24,020 --> 01:31:27,452 a former Navy SEAL. 1413 01:31:27,553 --> 01:31:30,719 Their task would not be easy. 1414 01:31:30,819 --> 01:31:34,086 Hanoi insisted the United States make good 1415 01:31:34,186 --> 01:31:38,718 on a promise to provide funds for reconstruction. 1416 01:31:38,818 --> 01:31:41,785 For its part, the United States demanded 1417 01:31:41,886 --> 01:31:43,551 a complete accounting 1418 01:31:43,650 --> 01:31:46,784 of the 2,500 Americans whose remains 1419 01:31:46,885 --> 01:31:49,385 had never been recovered. 1420 01:31:49,485 --> 01:31:54,884 Hanoi, which had more than 300,000 missing of its own, 1421 01:31:54,984 --> 01:31:59,550 refused to cooperate. 1422 01:31:59,649 --> 01:32:04,483 But events both within Vietnam and far beyond its borders 1423 01:32:04,582 --> 01:32:08,883 slowly moved things along. 1424 01:32:36,546 --> 01:32:41,879 NARRATOR: Le Duan died in 1986. 1425 01:32:41,979 --> 01:32:46,277 His successors adopted what they calleddoi moi, 1426 01:32:46,378 --> 01:32:49,943 a more pragmatic reformist economic policy. 1427 01:32:52,478 --> 01:32:56,610 As the Cold War ended, Soviet aid disappeared, 1428 01:32:56,709 --> 01:33:01,809 and Hanoi finally began to help U.S. military teams 1429 01:33:01,910 --> 01:33:05,641 search for American remains. 1430 01:33:05,741 --> 01:33:10,275 VALLELY: The architects of normalization 1431 01:33:10,376 --> 01:33:12,574 are the Vietnamese. 1432 01:33:12,675 --> 01:33:15,707 It's not the Americans. 1433 01:33:15,807 --> 01:33:18,041 And the normalization of Vietnam 1434 01:33:18,140 --> 01:33:23,174 is a strategy of the Vietnamese Communist Party 1435 01:33:23,273 --> 01:33:25,540 to join the world. 1436 01:33:25,639 --> 01:33:27,139 They want to join the world. 1437 01:33:27,239 --> 01:33:30,406 And the United States makes it hard for them to join the world. 1438 01:33:30,505 --> 01:33:33,373 So John McCain insists, 1439 01:33:33,473 --> 01:33:35,339 "Yeah, you want to have normalization? 1440 01:33:35,438 --> 01:33:38,705 All your prisoners need to be out of re-education camp." 1441 01:33:38,805 --> 01:33:41,172 "You want normalization?" 1442 01:33:41,271 --> 01:33:44,338 John Kerry... "I need all the information about the missing." 1443 01:33:46,338 --> 01:33:48,837 NARRATOR: In 1994, 1444 01:33:48,936 --> 01:33:51,770 after the Vietnamese met the Americans' demands, 1445 01:33:51,871 --> 01:33:56,104 the United States lifted its trade embargo. 1446 01:33:56,203 --> 01:34:00,836 Full normalization came the following year. 1447 01:34:00,935 --> 01:34:04,269 The new American ambassador was Pete Peterson, 1448 01:34:04,370 --> 01:34:09,501 who had spent six years in Hanoi as a P.O.W. 1449 01:34:11,969 --> 01:34:14,134 In November of 2000, 1450 01:34:14,234 --> 01:34:17,401 President Bill Clinton traveled to Vietnam, 1451 01:34:17,500 --> 01:34:21,401 the first American president to visit that country 1452 01:34:21,500 --> 01:34:25,066 since Richard Nixon reviewed U.S. troops there 1453 01:34:25,167 --> 01:34:28,066 31 years earlier. 1454 01:34:29,999 --> 01:34:31,867 BARACK OBAMA: Now we can say something 1455 01:34:31,967 --> 01:34:33,666 that was once unimaginable: 1456 01:34:33,765 --> 01:34:37,832 Today, Vietnam and the United States are partners. 1457 01:34:37,931 --> 01:34:42,564 We have shown that hearts can change, 1458 01:34:42,665 --> 01:34:44,331 and that a different future is possible 1459 01:34:44,430 --> 01:34:48,264 when we refuse to be prisoners of the past. 1460 01:35:53,323 --> 01:35:56,090 MIKE HEANEY: I went back to Vietnam. 1461 01:35:56,189 --> 01:35:59,989 I got in touch with a provincial vets organization. 1462 01:36:04,288 --> 01:36:06,621 This is a huge organization of Vietnamese vets, 1463 01:36:06,721 --> 01:36:10,121 all former enemies. 1464 01:36:10,221 --> 01:36:11,687 All former enemies. 1465 01:36:11,787 --> 01:36:14,588 But now, mellowed quite a bit, like me. 1466 01:36:14,687 --> 01:36:17,155 You know, they're guys my age, grandpas. 1467 01:36:17,254 --> 01:36:23,154 And after we got past the initial checking each other out, 1468 01:36:23,253 --> 01:36:26,686 and is this a political thing or not, 1469 01:36:26,786 --> 01:36:34,485 they could not have been more gracious and more loving. 1470 01:36:34,586 --> 01:36:39,551 They took me under their wing like a brother soldier. 1471 01:36:39,652 --> 01:36:45,251 We exchanged painful memories, stories. 1472 01:36:48,283 --> 01:36:52,384 And I did a little ceremony honoring the guys I'd lost, 1473 01:36:52,483 --> 01:36:55,915 honoring the Vietnamese enemies that we'd killed. 1474 01:36:56,016 --> 01:36:59,982 And just telling them, you know, they could be at peace now. 1475 01:37:05,414 --> 01:37:09,315 It was a wonderful, wonderful trip. 1476 01:37:11,382 --> 01:37:13,113 You know, you don't... 1477 01:37:13,213 --> 01:37:15,913 You don't get closure, but you get some peace. 1478 01:37:16,014 --> 01:37:18,381 You get some peace... I got some peace. 1479 01:37:28,479 --> 01:37:33,278 NARRATOR: In Vietnam, the land has largely healed. 1480 01:37:33,379 --> 01:37:37,111 Old animosities have mostly been buried. 1481 01:37:39,178 --> 01:37:41,878 But ghosts remain. 1482 01:37:44,511 --> 01:37:45,945 Americans and Vietnamese 1483 01:37:46,044 --> 01:37:48,110 work together to clean up places 1484 01:37:48,210 --> 01:37:51,543 where Agent Orange has poisoned the earth. 1485 01:37:51,644 --> 01:37:55,909 Unexploded ordnance, half-hidden in the ground, 1486 01:37:56,010 --> 01:38:00,208 still takes lives each year. 1487 01:38:00,309 --> 01:38:04,175 Aged mothers and fathers from northern Vietnam 1488 01:38:04,275 --> 01:38:06,541 still roam the south, 1489 01:38:06,642 --> 01:38:07,808 seeking to discover 1490 01:38:07,907 --> 01:38:10,442 what happened to their sons and daughters. 1491 01:40:07,362 --> 01:40:11,727 SAM WILSON: As we finally came lurching out of Vietnam... 1492 01:40:13,093 --> 01:40:18,361 We were beginning to doubt ourselves. 1493 01:40:18,460 --> 01:40:23,026 And, uh, that's a foreign feeling for an American. 1494 01:40:23,127 --> 01:40:27,092 We, we seldom doubt ourselves. 1495 01:40:27,192 --> 01:40:32,191 This turned out to be the most bitter, the most divisive... 1496 01:40:32,292 --> 01:40:35,025 or second-most bitter and second-most divisive... 1497 01:40:35,126 --> 01:40:37,691 war in our entire history. 1498 01:40:37,792 --> 01:40:42,291 And we still hurt because of it. 1499 01:40:44,524 --> 01:40:48,290 We have feelings of guilt about Vietnam. 1500 01:40:50,389 --> 01:40:53,824 NARRATOR: More than four decades after the war ended, 1501 01:40:53,924 --> 01:40:57,155 the divisions it created between Americans 1502 01:40:57,255 --> 01:41:00,722 have not yet wholly healed. 1503 01:41:00,823 --> 01:41:05,021 Lessons were learned and then forgotten; 1504 01:41:05,122 --> 01:41:10,021 divides were bridged and then widened; 1505 01:41:10,122 --> 01:41:16,354 old secrets were revealed and new secrets were locked away. 1506 01:41:16,453 --> 01:41:20,586 The Vietnam War was a tragedy, 1507 01:41:20,686 --> 01:41:24,585 immeasurable and irredeemable. 1508 01:41:27,620 --> 01:41:30,952 But meaning can be found in the individual stories 1509 01:41:31,053 --> 01:41:33,419 of those who lived through it, 1510 01:41:33,518 --> 01:41:36,651 stories of courage and comradeship 1511 01:41:36,751 --> 01:41:38,718 and perseverance, 1512 01:41:38,819 --> 01:41:42,217 of understanding and forgiveness 1513 01:41:42,318 --> 01:41:47,183 and, ultimately, reconciliation. 1514 01:41:52,550 --> 01:41:55,983 O'BRIEN: "They shared the weight of memory. 1515 01:41:56,082 --> 01:41:59,349 "They took up what others could no longer bear. 1516 01:41:59,448 --> 01:42:03,148 "Often, they carried each other, the wounded or weak. 1517 01:42:03,248 --> 01:42:07,049 "They carried infections. 1518 01:42:07,148 --> 01:42:09,281 "They carried chess sets, 1519 01:42:09,380 --> 01:42:11,815 "basketballs, 1520 01:42:11,915 --> 01:42:15,447 "Vietnamese-English dictionaries, 1521 01:42:15,548 --> 01:42:22,146 "insignia of rank, Bronze Stars and Purple Hearts, 1522 01:42:22,246 --> 01:42:28,913 "plastic cards imprinted with the Code of Conduct. 1523 01:42:29,012 --> 01:42:31,979 "They carried diseases, 1524 01:42:32,078 --> 01:42:35,412 "among them malaria and dysentery. 1525 01:42:35,511 --> 01:42:41,845 "They carried lice and ringworm and leeches, 1526 01:42:41,944 --> 01:42:47,977 "paddy algae and various rots and molds. 1527 01:42:48,076 --> 01:42:54,442 "They carried the land itself... Vietnam, 1528 01:42:54,543 --> 01:42:58,375 "the place, the soil... 1529 01:42:58,476 --> 01:43:00,874 "a powdery orange-red dust 1530 01:43:00,975 --> 01:43:07,542 "that covered their boots and fatigues and faces. 1531 01:43:07,641 --> 01:43:10,908 "They carried the sky. 1532 01:43:11,007 --> 01:43:13,974 "The whole atmosphere, 1533 01:43:14,073 --> 01:43:16,774 "they carried it... 1534 01:43:16,873 --> 01:43:20,672 "the humidity, the monsoons, 1535 01:43:20,773 --> 01:43:24,907 "the stink of fungus and decay, all of it. 1536 01:43:25,006 --> 01:43:27,139 "They carried gravity. 1537 01:43:27,239 --> 01:43:30,005 "They moved like mules. 1538 01:43:30,106 --> 01:43:32,705 "By daylight, they took sniper fire; 1539 01:43:32,806 --> 01:43:34,606 "at night, they were mortared. 1540 01:43:34,705 --> 01:43:38,204 "They crawled into tunnels and walked point 1541 01:43:38,305 --> 01:43:40,637 "and advanced under fire. 1542 01:43:40,737 --> 01:43:43,570 "But it was not battle, 1543 01:43:43,670 --> 01:43:46,604 "it was just the endless march, 1544 01:43:46,703 --> 01:43:49,604 "village to village. 1545 01:43:49,703 --> 01:43:54,104 "They marched for the sake of the march. 1546 01:43:54,203 --> 01:43:57,935 "They plodded along slowly, dumbly, 1547 01:43:58,036 --> 01:44:02,202 "leaning forward against the heat, unthinking, 1548 01:44:02,303 --> 01:44:05,902 "all blood and bone, simple grunts, 1549 01:44:06,001 --> 01:44:08,434 "soldiering with their legs, 1550 01:44:08,535 --> 01:44:11,001 "toiling up the hills and down into the paddies 1551 01:44:11,102 --> 01:44:15,933 "and across the rivers and up again and down, just humping, 1552 01:44:16,034 --> 01:44:21,699 "one step and then the next and then another. 1553 01:44:21,800 --> 01:44:23,365 "They made their legs move. 1554 01:44:25,466 --> 01:44:27,333 They endured." 1555 01:44:29,565 --> 01:44:31,332 ("Let It Be" by The Beatles playing) 1556 01:44:41,363 --> 01:44:44,663 d When I find myself in times of trouble d 1557 01:44:44,764 --> 01:44:47,897 d Mother Mary comes to me 1558 01:44:47,996 --> 01:44:50,297 d Speaking words of wisdom 1559 01:44:50,397 --> 01:44:53,629 d Let it be 1560 01:44:53,729 --> 01:44:56,530 d And in my hour of darkness 1561 01:44:56,629 --> 01:45:00,396 d She is standing right in front of me d 1562 01:45:00,495 --> 01:45:03,029 d Speaking words of wisdom 1563 01:45:03,128 --> 01:45:06,127 d Let it be 1564 01:45:06,227 --> 01:45:09,427 d Let it be, let it be 1565 01:45:09,528 --> 01:45:12,761 d Let it be, let it be d 1566 01:45:12,860 --> 01:45:16,294 d Whisper words of wisdom 1567 01:45:16,394 --> 01:45:19,726 d Let it be 1568 01:45:19,827 --> 01:45:22,693 d And when the brokenhearted people d 1569 01:45:22,794 --> 01:45:26,558 d Living in the world agree 1570 01:45:26,658 --> 01:45:29,393 d There will be an answer 1571 01:45:29,492 --> 01:45:32,724 d Let it be 1572 01:45:32,825 --> 01:45:35,924 d For though they may be parted d 1573 01:45:36,025 --> 01:45:40,157 d There is still a chance that they will see d 1574 01:45:40,258 --> 01:45:42,524 d There will be an answer 1575 01:45:42,623 --> 01:45:45,757 d Let it be 1576 01:45:45,856 --> 01:45:49,190 d Let it be, let it be 1577 01:45:49,291 --> 01:45:53,189 d Let it be, let it be d 1578 01:45:53,290 --> 01:45:55,989 d Yeah, there will be an answer d 1579 01:45:56,090 --> 01:45:59,121 d Let it be 1580 01:45:59,221 --> 01:46:02,522 d Let it be, let it be 1581 01:46:02,621 --> 01:46:06,921 d Let it be, yeah, let it be d 1582 01:46:07,022 --> 01:46:09,853 d Whisper words of wisdom 1583 01:46:09,954 --> 01:46:14,220 d Let it be 1584 01:46:14,321 --> 01:46:16,754 d And when the night is cloudy 1585 01:46:16,853 --> 01:46:21,219 d There is still a light that shines on me d 1586 01:46:21,320 --> 01:46:24,186 d Shine until tomorrow 1587 01:46:24,287 --> 01:46:27,886 d Let it be 1588 01:46:27,985 --> 01:46:31,452 d I wake up to the sound of music d 1589 01:46:31,551 --> 01:46:34,885 d Mother Mary comes to me 1590 01:46:34,984 --> 01:46:37,984 d Speaking words of wisdom 1591 01:46:38,085 --> 01:46:41,085 d Let it be 1592 01:46:41,184 --> 01:46:44,149 d Yeah, let it be, let it be 1593 01:46:44,250 --> 01:46:49,049 d Let it be, yeah, let it be 1594 01:46:49,149 --> 01:46:51,716 d There will be an answer 1595 01:46:51,817 --> 01:46:55,182 d Let it be 1596 01:46:55,283 --> 01:46:58,383 d Let it be, let it be 1597 01:46:58,482 --> 01:47:02,882 d Let it be, yeah, let it be 1598 01:47:02,981 --> 01:47:05,948 d There will be an answer 1599 01:47:06,047 --> 01:47:09,047 d Let it be 1600 01:47:09,147 --> 01:47:12,281 d Let it be, let it be 1601 01:47:12,381 --> 01:47:17,046 d Let it be, yeah, let it be 1602 01:47:17,146 --> 01:47:19,712 d Whisper words of wisdom 1603 01:47:19,813 --> 01:47:27,813 d Let it be. 1604 01:47:30,813 --> 01:47:34,813 Preuzeto sa www.titlovi.com 123921

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