1972
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JAN 72
The 1st Brigade, 101st Airborne Div. is tacticly withrawn from Vietnam. [MYER]
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FEB 72
The 2nd Brigade, 101st Airborne Div. is tacticly withdrawn from Vietnam. [MYER]
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9 APR 72
At 1400 hours, C Battery, 2nd Battalion 94th Field Artillery fired the last American heavy artillery round in Vietnam. Hill 34, RVN (AT989714). [Ntl. Archives]
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26 APR 72
The 101st NVA Regiment left the Ho Bo woods and occupied Trung Lap & Phuoc Hiep. They were driven out by the South Vietnamese Army.
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JUN 72
Trung Lap village is again occupied.
The 3rd Brigade, 1st Cavalry Division and 196th (Light) Infantry Brigade are tacticly withdrawn from Vitnam. [MYER]
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8 JUN 72
Trang Bang is attacked and the Associated Press' Nick Ut snaps his famous photograph of "the girl in the picture."
[For the true story go to http://www.digitaljournalist.org/issue0008/ng2.htm ]
1996 UPDATE: "I am not famous, my photo is. If the photographer had taken it two minutes earlier or two minutes later, there would have been no photo. Millions are hurt in war, they just don't have their photo taken, so they don't exist. I must speak for them. Why fight? For what? People who are fighting are just destroying. We live in love and we should live in peace."
– Kim Phuc [' Kim Phuc Visits with VVAW ' The Veteran Vol._ No._.]
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11 AUG 72
THE LAST AMERICAN GROUND COMBAT UNIT TO LEAVE VIET-NAM, THE 3rd BATTALION, 21st INFANTRY, LEAVES.
Besides the cost in young lives, the Viet-Nam war cost America treasure – $61 BILLION DOLLARS EVERY YEAR (in 2006 dollars) – 488 billion dollars.
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12 OCT 72
The 101st PAVN – joined by the 271st NVA Regt. & 7th National Liberation Division – invade Trang Bang, Hau Nghia Province.
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28 OCT 72
SAIGON (UPI) ...... Communists also lobbed eight 122mm rockets into the old Cu Chi Base camp, formerly occupied by the U.S. 25th Infantry Division – under cver ofthe barrage aimed at the base, now occupied by the South Vietnamese 25th Division, they invaded three hamlets, within four miles northwest of Cu Chi District Town, militay sources said. Cu Chi is 21 miles northwest of Saigon.
It brought to five the number of hamlets near Highway 1 in the Cu Chi area into which the Communists have moved in 36 hours, military sources said.
Government regulars and militamen were moving in to try to drive the Communists out of the area but Highway 1, the main road between Saigon and Phnom Penh, remained cut between Cu Chi and Trang Bang, 30 miles northwest of Saigon, military sources said.
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