Operation Lam Son 719

32. South Vietnam, 1971 - LAM SON 719

Cambodia Invasion 1971

ACAV's OF SOUTH VIETNAMESE 1ST ARMORED BRIGADE ON ROUTE 9 IN LAOS, 1971.

QLVNCH chạy khỏi căn cứ Khe Sanh, 20-3-1971
A U.S. Air Force Lockheed C-130 Hercules of The 29th Tactical Airlift Squadrom, Detachment 1. 463rd Tactical Airlift Wing delivering cargo to Khe Sanh during "Operation Lam Son 719" in February-March 1971.
CH-53 Sea Stallion helicopter from HMH-463 takes off from Lang Vei Combat Base, Operation Lam Son 719

U.S. Army photo from Joel D. Meyerson when Fire Support Base Lolo falls to PAVN forces
Khe Sanh reoccuppied, Operation Lam Son 719, 12 February 1971

Lam Son 719 operation ending

Operation Lam Son 719

RED DEVIL ROAD, an engineering feat that opened enemy areas never before penetrated.
Mortar impacts near two 1st Marine Aircraft Wing AH-1G Cobra helicopters from Marine Light Helicopter Squadron 367, Khe Sanh Combat Base, Operation Lam Son 719

PAVN troops, Laos 1971

U.S. Army Bell AH-1G HueyCobra attack helicopters over Laos.

U.S. propaganda leaflet dropped on Ho Chi Minh Trail warning PAVN troops that their trucks were doomed. The leaflet asks "How do support the South when the ARVN has already blocked the Ho Chi Minh Trail" referencing the 1971 South Vietnamese Lam Son 719 campaign against NVA infiltration routes in southern Laos.
Historische Übersicht
Südvietnamesische Invasion in Laos gegen den Ho-Chi-Minh-Pfad.
Fakten auf einen Blick
Nordvietnam (PAVN)
- Befehlshaber: Lê Trọng Tấn
- Truppenstärke: 60.000 Mann
- Verluste: ca. 2.000
Südvietnam (ARVN)
- Befehlshaber: Hoàng Xuân Lãm
- Truppenstärke: 20.000 Mann
- Verluste: 9000
Strategischer Kontext
Test der "Vietnamisierung" des Krieges.
Weiterführende Literatur
Historische Orte
Genaue Lage nicht in historischen Quellen überliefert




