My Lai: Massacre, Trial and Aftermath

Two tragedies took place in 1968 in Viet Nam.  One was the massacre by United States soldiers of as many as 500 unarmed civilians-- old men, women, children-- in My Lai on the morning of March 16.  The other was the cover-up of that massacre.

U. S. military officials suspected Quang Ngai Province, more than any other province in South Viet Nam, as being a Viet Cong stronghold.  The U. S. targeted the province for the first major U.S. combat operation of the war.  Military officials declared the province a "free-fire zone" and subjected it to frequent bombing missions and artillery attacks.  By the end of 1967, most of the dwellings in the province had been destroyed and nearly 140,000 civilians left homeless.  Not surprisingly, the native population of Quang Ngai Province distrusted Americans.  Children hissed at soldiers.  Adults kept quiet.

 

Two hours of instruction on the rights of prisoners and a wallet-sized card "The Enemy is in Your Hands" seemed to have little impact on American soldiers fighting in Quang Ngai.  Military leaders encouraged and rewarded kills in an effort to produce impressive body counts that could be reported to Saigon as an indication of progress.  GIs joked that "anything that's dead and  isn't white is a VC" for body count purposes. Angered by a local population that said nothing about the VC's whereabouts, soldiers took to calling natives "gooks."

 

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