Sunday, April 30, 2006

Secret War in Laos

Doing some reading up on Laos, felt the below was worth sharing. This is where my path takes me. I'll be back in a week. Love and peace or else!

Between 1964 and 1973, the United States conducted a "secret" war, dropping over two million tons of bombs on the mountains and jungles of Laos. Many of these bombs - especially a newly developed weapon called a "cluster bomb" - failed to explode when they hit the ground, leaving the landscape littered with millions of unexploded bombs, as dangerous today as when they fell from the sky three decades ago. Dubbed "bombies" by Laotian villagers, these eye-catching but deadly orbs, as brightly colored as exotic fruit, are still found by children playing in shallow dirt, in the clefts of bamboo branches, or in the furrows of fields where farmers still till the soil by striking the earth with a hoe.

In 1964, as the Vietnam War was intensifying, the United States attempted to staunch the flow of North Vietnamese people and supplies moving along the Ho Chi Minh Trail, which detoured through Laos before heading into South Vietnam. Laotian Communists, backed by North Vietnam, were fighting in a civil war against the U.S.-supported Royal Lao government. Because the United States signed the 1962 Geneva Accords prohibiting American military involvement in Laos, the bombing, organized by President Kennedy, the CIA and the Air Force, was kept secret, both from Congress and from the American people, to pursue a covert strategy for ridding the countryside of Communists. Initial targets were Communists troops, supply depots and lines of communication. Later, to prevent the soldiers from having access to men and materials, the U.S. began to bomb farms, villages and towns.

The consequences for Lao civilians were devastating. American planes delivered the equivalent of a B-52 planeload of bombs every eight minutes, 24 hours a day, for nine years. More bombs were dropped on Laos at that time than on Germany and Japan combined during World War II.(wikipedia)

5 Comments:

Sheila Z. said...

I love Laos even more than I love Thailand. Enjoy the country, it's a beaut! And enjoy Luang Prabang...such an awesome place! Eat some good French bread for me!

3:12 PM, April 30, 2006  
Mart'a said...

I am pleased you made this post...

5:38 PM, April 30, 2006  
lish17 said...

Let me know how Laos is, you guys have a week off dont you?

9:03 PM, April 30, 2006  
sakit said...

Thanks for keeping up the historical and cultural sensitive aspect of your blog.

"The consequences for Lao civilians were devastating. American planes delivered the equivalent of a B-52 planeload of bombs every eight minutes, 24 hours a day, for nine years."

Hmm... had no idea. Gut-wrenching notion for a beautiful place with such peaceful people.

7:09 PM, May 07, 2006  
Devrim said...

Alisha,
Laos is awesome... the perfect place to disappear into the mountains and forests. Will definitely go back again.

Saki,
Yeah it's tragic what was done to those people. Here is another comment on Laos' terrible legacy

Sheila,
For once we can agree on something;, Luang Prabang is simply incredible, arguably the most beautiful city in SE Asia.

10:34 AM, May 08, 2006  

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