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The Battle of Huế (31 January 1968 – 2 March 1968), was a major battle in the Tết Offensive launched by North Vietnam and the Việt Cộng during the Vietnam War. Initially losing control of most of Huế and its surroundings, the combined forces of South Vietnam and the United States gradually recaptured the city after a little over one ...
On March 2, the battle for Hue, the longest sustained infantry battle of the war to that point, was officially declared over. Losses were high. In 26 days of fighting, the ARVN lost 384 men killed, more than 1,800 wounded, and 30 missing.
in January 1968, North Vietnamese Army and Viet Cong forces launched the Tet Offensive, a series of coordinated attacks aimed at demonstrating to the governments in Washington and Saigon that continuing the war was futile. One of the offensives chief targets was the city of Hue.
On Jan. 30, 1968, Hue became the site of one of the longest, bloodiest battles the Americans would fight against the North Vietnamese Army, or NVA, and its Viet Cong guerrillas living in South...
The battle for Quang Tri City, a textbook example of a vertical envelop- ment, resulted in a quick allied victory. The fight for Hue turned into a slow, grinding campaign
The epic battle for Hue left much of the ancient city a pile of rubble as 40 percent of its buildings were destroyed, leaving some 116,000 civilians homeless. Among the population, 5,800 civilians were reported killed or missing.
I. Hue: The city of Hue (pronounced Way) was in the northern end of South Vietnam situated along the Perfume (or Huong) River. The river reached the South China Sea seven kilometers to the northwest of the city, and about the same distance to the west was the north/south running Annamite Mountains.
The Battle of Hue. Particularly intense fighting took place in the city of Hue, located on the Perfume River some 50 miles south of the border between North and South Vietnam.
After initially losing control of most of Hue, and its surroundings, the combined South Vietnamese and American forces, led by the 1st and 5th Marines, gradually recaptured the city over one month of intense street-by-street fighting. The battle was one of the longest and bloodiest of the war.
As a war story, Hue 1968 is a quite compelling and moving account of its participants—the US Marines and Army, the communist fighters, and the Hue citizens in the middle of the fight. As a larger history of the Tet offensive and Vietnam War, the book is flawed and facile.