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In 1968, 504 people were slaughtered in Vietnamese villages, why did the United States not even spare children?

author:Elephant talk

World War I and World War II made the United States a victorious power, and at the same time made the United States self-proclaimed "division of justice", and since then the United States has been acting brazenly in the name of "justice" around the world. But in a 1970 documentary and by journalist Moore Jose, everyone saw the true face of the "Teacher of Justice." However, this insight comes at the cost of 504 lives.

In 1968, 504 people were slaughtered in Vietnamese villages, why did the United States not even spare children?

Abuse, sexual assault, shooting, and abuse, almost all of whom were women and children, took place in my Lai village during the Vietnam War. And the devil is the American soldier who calls himself the "division of justice.". What happened at that time that made this massacre come to My Lai Village, why did the US military exterminate everyone in My Lai Village, and why did this massacre not come to light after more than ten months?

Travel back in time to the spring of 1968, when a U.S. military wandered into Vietnam's Quang Noi province and was on a sweeping mission. Captain Medina, the commander of the U.S. army, ordered all the soldiers to march towards the nearby village of My Lai on the grounds that it was the garrison of communist Vietnamese troops.

In 1968, 504 people were slaughtered in Vietnamese villages, why did the United States not even spare children?

At that time, U.S. military intelligence officers pointed out that the villagers of My Lai Village would go to the township early the next morning to catch up with the market, and without the cover of the villagers, the Viet Cong troops would have no hiding place. After receiving such information, U.S. Lieutenant Kelly led the company of soldiers to the vicinity of My Lai Village.

At that time, Kelly's company was divided into two combat groups, one in the air and one on the ground. At that time, the helicopter flight team in the air informed Kelly that the helicopter landing area was all "Vietnamese troops" and please clear it immediately. In this way, Kelly led the rest of the American troops to strafe the village of My Lai.

In 1968, 504 people were slaughtered in Vietnamese villages, why did the United States not even spare children?

In front of the U.S. military at the time was a temple, where more than 20 women and children were burning incense to pay tribute. In the sudden sound of gunfire, more than 20 women and children fell to the ground. Even two young boys passing nearby were killed on the spot by American soldiers using assault rifles.

Subsequently, the U.S. army broke into the village of My Lai and gathered about 80 or so villagers near the village square. Kelly told his deputy that killing one is also killing, killing all is killing, and you should know how to do it. However, the deputy did not massacre the villagers as Kelly suggested. This made Kelly very dissatisfied, and then personally led the massacre of the villagers.

In 1968, 504 people were slaughtered in Vietnamese villages, why did the United States not even spare children?

Aerial helicopter pilot Thompson saw the tragedy on the ground and asked from the radio what had happened, why were the two armies not at bay as expected, but hundreds of Vietnamese were killed? But Thompson never got a reply. To stop more Vietnamese from being killed, Thompson used smoke to mark the location of the Vietnamese and asked U.S. troops on the ground to avoid villagers.

But this move guided the direction for the massacre of the US military, and all the areas marked by Thompson were all patronized by the US military, and all the villagers found by the US army were slaughtered.

In 1968, 504 people were slaughtered in Vietnamese villages, why did the United States not even spare children?

The massacre seems to open the demon in the heart of the US military, or the US military itself is a demon. After massacring a group of villagers, these soldiers openly sexually abused women and children in the village, from 40-year-old women to 10-year-old girls, all of whom were poisoned by the US military.

To cover up the crime, the United States slaughtered all the living people in sight. Coupled with the suppression and cover-up of the NIXON government and the US War Department, this matter was not exposed for the first time. It was not until more than a year later, when several U.S. troops who witnessed the incident told reporters out of a disturbed conscience, that the massacre was finally exposed in 1970.

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