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[13]: 356 A pontoon bridge had been built across the Phu Cam Canal, restoring the road access that had been lost when the An Cuu Bridge was blown up. [ 13 ] : 370 On 11 February Company H, 2/5 Marines secured a bridge over the Phu Cam Canal ( 16°27′25″N 107°34′41″E / 16.457°N 107.578°E / 16.457; 107.578 ) and the block ...
MACV announced that the number of American casualties in Vietnam in the week of May 15–21 marked the highest up to that time in the war, with 146 Americans killed and 820 wounded. The 966 casualties was 36% higher than the previous record of 710 in the week of November 14–20, 1965, when 86 were killed and 565 wounded. [85] 30 May
[17]: 222 [8]: 202–3 228 1st Cavalry soldiers were killed and another 46 died in an airplane crash; 834 were wounded. 24 U.S. Marines were killed and 156 wounded in Operation Double Eagle and several additional Americans from other units were killed. 11 ROK were reported killed; South Vietnamese casualties are not known. The U.S. claimed to ...
The Battle of A Shau (Vietnamese: trận A Sầu) was waged in early 1966 during the Vietnam War between the People's Army of Vietnam (PAVN) and the forces of the United States and South Vietnam. The battle began on March 9 and lasted until March 10 with the fall of the U.S. Army's Special Forces camp of the same name.
American soldiers killed 504 people on March 16, 1968, in Son My, a collection of hamlets between the central Vietnamese coast and a ridge of misty mountains, in an incident known in the West as ...
Victor DeWalt, 21, died in 1970 while serving in Vietnam. A bridge in Riegelsville now has his name. Upper Bucks County bridge dedicated to Vietnam solider killed in Vietnam
The year was the most expensive in the Vietnam War with America spending US$77.4 billion (US$ 678 billion in 2025) on the war. The year also became the deadliest of the Vietnam War for America and its allies with 27,915 ARVN soldiers killed and the Americans suffering 16,592 killed compared to around two hundred thousand PAVN/VC killed.
It contains the graves of PAVN soldiers killed during the Ho Chi Minh Campaign and during the Cambodian–Vietnamese War. Bình An Cemetery , the former ARVN National Cemetery ( 10°53′22″N 106°48′34″E / 10.88944°N 106.80944°E / 10.88944; 106.80944 ) is located near the PAVN Cemetery