The U.S. Marines maintained a base at Khe Sanh, about fourteen miles south of the Demilitarized Zone and ten miles east of the Laotian border. In late 1967 Americans noted that the North Vietnamese were building up their forces in the region. The fighting began in January 1968 as the North Vietnamese troops encircled Khe Sanh. The United States committed some 6,000 troops to defend the base. In addition, B-52s rained down some 100,000 tons of bombs around Khe Sanh, the most massive bombing campaign in history. U.S. reinforcement arrived in April, bringing the battle to an end. The base was closed soon thereafter.
Khe Sanh garnered a great deal of attention in the American press; President Johnson obsessed over the battle, fearing a major American defeat. Historians note, however, that the North Vietnamese assault was in all likelihood a diversion as their troops prepared for the Tet Offensive, tying up U.S. troops.
All the services did their jobs well in Khe Sanh. God Bless America.
foneBro 4 months ago
Khe Sanh is just the fake attack of North VN in order to draw attention from South VN and US army
vhpkhanh 2 years ago
Department of the Air Force documentary film. Every Jarhead who ever lived had better worship every airmen he sees. Khe Sanh was a USAF victory, the marines at the firebase were just a target reference for the air strikes. Without the Air Force, there wouldn't have been enough live Marines to bury the dead ones.
mnpd007 2 years ago