The war will not be forgotten for many many years
Mountain range around Phonsavan
Plain of Jars
Plain of Jars
Using grenade shells as house piles
Sad view down to the Laotian landscape
The "helter-skelter-unit" made in China
Some animals they should not sell for cooking!!!
Group photo in front of the Kuang Si Falls
Laotian monks in a monastery beside the Mekong
Young Lao girl guides us on the river
On the friendship bridge Laos/Thailand
The entrance to the Golden Stupa in Vientiane
The Golden Stupa
Pha That Luang - The Golden Stupa
Monks enter the Golden Pagoda complex
The Golden Stupa in the evening light
Patuxai in Vientiane
Inside decoration in the triumph monument
The south-westside of Vientiane and Thanon Lane Xa…
Haw Phra Kaew in Vientiane
Bronze Buddha statue at Haw Phra Kaew
The side front from the Wat Si Saket
Plain of Jars
Welcome to Visit Laos Year 2000
Other village beside the highway
Tham Piew - Cave with a tragic history
Houamuang at the (river) Maenam Neun
Landscape near the border of Viet Nam
Fresh water fish and field rats
Viengxay village
An hill tribes village near Xam Neua
Water buffalos face
Guard-room in the cave
Tunnel to Lao leader Keysone Phomvihane's living a…
Khaysone Phomvihane's working room
Khaysone Phomvihane's bedroom
Keysone Phomvihane's cave
Khaysone Phomvihane's cave
Khaysone Phomvihane's cave
Khaysone Phomvihane's cave entrance
Khaysone Phomvihane's cave
Xaiburi village near Viengxay
Laotian heros statue
Keysone Phomvihane's cave
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Bomb impacts the memory of USA
![Bomb impacts the memory of USA Bomb impacts the memory of USA](https://cdn.ipernity.com/105/16/74/1831674.d0aff75c.640.jpg?r2)
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Most people are very aware of the war in Vietnam, and America's involvement there, but fewer are aware that a very large part of the war was fought in Laos. Called 'The Secret War' by many due to US denial of any involvement.
The Communist forces in Laos were building, and the US was threatened by their ties with Vietnam, so it moved in to help protect the royal family from falling to the communists. It enlisted the help of the Hmong people, a hilltribe group who lived high in the mountains. It is now widely known that the CIA's 'Air America' air force were used to transport the Hmong people's prime crop: the poppy from which both opium and heroin are derived. This was then sold overseas to raise funds to fight the war.
From 1963 to 1974, the equivalent of one bomb was dropped every eight minutes. Two million tones of ordinance was dropped on Laos, more than the US dropped on Germany and Japan combined during World War II.
Bombs were dropped on this area for a couple of reasons. Firstly, because it was part of the Ho Chi Minh Trail, where troops, supplies and artillery were smuggled out of northern Vietnam and through the mountains on the eastern edge of the country, and into southern Vietnam. Secondly, American aircraft flying out of their Thai air bases were sometimes unable to launch their bombs at the 'primary target', due to bad weather or other circumstances. Unwilling to land safely back at the base while still carrying bombs, they dropped them on Laos.
The most common bombs at this time had a rocket shaped outside, filled with up to 600 small 'bombies'. The rocket casing split open as it fell, launching the smaller bomblets, which in turn were filled with hundreds of ball bearings. Up to around a third failed to explode on impact, leaving up to 30 million bombs lying on or beneath the ground to this day. Bombs lie under houses and roads, in school playgrounds and rice fields.
These bombs were not designed to maim, so there is not an enormous amputee rate in the country. Instead there is a disproportionately large death rate from the exploding bombs, as inquisitive young children find them lying around and whole families work to hoe their land for farming. In 2001 there were more than 12,000 casualties.
The Communist forces in Laos were building, and the US was threatened by their ties with Vietnam, so it moved in to help protect the royal family from falling to the communists. It enlisted the help of the Hmong people, a hilltribe group who lived high in the mountains. It is now widely known that the CIA's 'Air America' air force were used to transport the Hmong people's prime crop: the poppy from which both opium and heroin are derived. This was then sold overseas to raise funds to fight the war.
From 1963 to 1974, the equivalent of one bomb was dropped every eight minutes. Two million tones of ordinance was dropped on Laos, more than the US dropped on Germany and Japan combined during World War II.
Bombs were dropped on this area for a couple of reasons. Firstly, because it was part of the Ho Chi Minh Trail, where troops, supplies and artillery were smuggled out of northern Vietnam and through the mountains on the eastern edge of the country, and into southern Vietnam. Secondly, American aircraft flying out of their Thai air bases were sometimes unable to launch their bombs at the 'primary target', due to bad weather or other circumstances. Unwilling to land safely back at the base while still carrying bombs, they dropped them on Laos.
The most common bombs at this time had a rocket shaped outside, filled with up to 600 small 'bombies'. The rocket casing split open as it fell, launching the smaller bomblets, which in turn were filled with hundreds of ball bearings. Up to around a third failed to explode on impact, leaving up to 30 million bombs lying on or beneath the ground to this day. Bombs lie under houses and roads, in school playgrounds and rice fields.
These bombs were not designed to maim, so there is not an enormous amputee rate in the country. Instead there is a disproportionately large death rate from the exploding bombs, as inquisitive young children find them lying around and whole families work to hoe their land for farming. In 2001 there were more than 12,000 casualties.
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