When the US military pushed helicopters overboard to make room for the last evacuees of the Vietnam War, 1975
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When the US military pushed helicopters overboard to make room for the last evacuees of the Vietnam War, 1975
On the last two days in April 1975, Operation Frequent Wind, the evacuation of Vietnam, ended a twenty-year agony for the United States. A trial for America was done. The last 45 days of her presence in South Vietnam may seem almost insignificant compared to the previous decades of pain.
But, in continuous effort under ever-increasing pressure, the US Embassy in Saigon, and its Defense Attache Office (DAO) there, helped plan, prepare for, and ultimately conduct, the final evacuation from South Vietnam. Operation Frequent Wind extracted 130,000 people including: Vietnamese citizens, Third Country Nationals, and US citizens — a truly important feat.
Faced with hundreds of hard decisions, enormous logistical requirements, continuous security problems, and the threat of enemy military action, American civilians and the military men conducted an efficient evacuation.
Graham Martin, the last US Ambassador to South Vietnam, and the man in overall charge of the evacuation, said that in the long run the extraction at Saigon would surely be judged as “a hell of a good job”.
At 7:53 a.m. on April 30th, the last helicopter lifted off the embassy roof and headed out to sea. U.S forces had flown more than 1,000 aircraft over Saigon this final day, rescuing thousands. Only a few hours later, North Vietnamese tanks crashed the gates of the Presidential Palace – the war was over
In Operation Frequent Wind a total of 1,373 Americans and 5,595 Vietnamese and third-country nationals were evacuated by helicopter.
The total number of Vietnamese evacuated by Frequent Wind or self-evacuated and ending up in the custody of the United States for processing as refugees to enter the United States totaled 138,869. The operation was by far the most ambitious helicopter airlift in history, which also depicted a desperate US withdrawal from Vietnam.
At 7:53 a.m. on April 30th, the last helicopter lifted off the embassy roof and headed out to sea. U.S forces had flown more than 1,000 aircraft over Saigon this final day, rescuing thousands. Only a few hours later, North Vietnamese tanks crashed the gates of the Presidential Palace – the war was over.
In Operation Frequent Wind a total of 1,373 Americans and 5,595 Vietnamese and third-country nationals were evacuated by helicopter.
The total number of Vietnamese evacuated by Frequent Wind or self-evacuated and ending up in the custody of the United States for processing as refugees to enter the United States totaled 138,869. The operation was by far the most ambitious helicopter airlift in history, which also depicted a desperate US withdrawal from Vietnam.
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