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  2. Lima Site 85 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lima_Site_85

    Lima Site 85 (LS-85 alphanumeric code of the phonetic 1st letter used to conceal this covert operation [3]) was a clandestine military installation in the Royal Kingdom of Laos guarded by the Hmong "Secret Army", the Central Intelligence Agency, and the United States Air Force used for Vietnam War covert operations against communist targets in ostensibly neutral Laos under attack by the ...

  3. Hmong people - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hmong_people

    The Hmong in Vietnam also receive cultural and political incentives from the government, [102] which led to the Vietnamese Hmong further diverging from the Laotian Hmong, since the latter are strongly anti-Vietnamese due to the Secret War and Communism.

  4. Ban Phou Pheung Noi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ban_Phou_Pheung_Noi

    The first American helicopter of the Vietnam War landed in Ban Phou Pheung Noi in 1961. When the hill tribes of the village saw the pilot and the co-pilot sitting with dark glasses in the helicopter, they believed they were Martians (Nyav-noj-neeg in Hmong). They also believed that the flying machine was a metal dragonfly.

  5. Hmong customs and culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hmong_customs_and_culture

    In the 1960s and 1970s, many Hmong were secretly recruited by the American CIA to fight against communism during the Vietnam War. After American armed forces pulled out of Vietnam the Pathet Lao , a communist regime, took over in Laos and ordered the prosecution and re-education of all those who had fought against its cause during the war.

  6. Hmong culture in 1960s war-torn Laos documented by California ...

    www.aol.com/hmong-culture-1960s-war-torn...

    “If history isn’t documented, then it’s forgotten,” a librarian involved in creating Fresno State’s Hmong history repository said. Hmong culture in 1960s war-torn Laos documented by ...

  7. Yellow rain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yellow_rain

    T-2 mycotoxin. The charges stemmed from events in Laos and North Vietnam beginning in 1975, when the two governments, which were allied with and supported by the Soviet Union, fought against Hmong tribes, peoples who had sided with the United States and South Vietnam during the Vietnam War.

  8. Vietnam's "landmine girls" on mission to clear old bombs

    www.aol.com/news/vietnams-landmine-girls-mission...

    Lan is part of an all-women explosive disposal team working to rehabilitiate over 60,000 hectares of farmland pitted with bombs left behind from the war with the United States that ended in 1975.

  9. Hmong Americans have felt invisible for decades. Then along ...

    www.aol.com/news/im-hmong-american-heres-why...

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