17 Năm Trong Các Trại Cải Tạo – Hồi ký KALE

Giới Thiệu Về Tác Giả KALE:

  • Tên thật là Lê Anh Kiệt
  • Sinh năm 1945, đã trãi qua gần như cả tuổi trẻ trong chiến tranh và tù đày.
  • Không có tham vọng viết văn chỉ viết để diển tả những suy nghĩ, những quan sát về thân phận mình và vận mạng đất nước sau những biến đổi thăng trầm của lịch sử.
  • Tốt nghiệp trường Đại Học Khoa Học Sài Gòn, từng làm giáo sư Toán Lý Hoá đệ nhị cấp tại các trường trung học tư thục như Nguyễn Bá Tòng (Sài Gòn và Gia Định), Hoàng Gia Huệ (Trung Chánh), Khiết Tâm (Biên Hoà), Trần Hưng Đạo (Tổng Tham Mưu).
  • Phục vụ tại Phủ Đặc Ủy Trung Ương Tình Báo VNCH.
  • Sau ngày 30 tháng 4 năm 1975, đi tù cải tạo của cho đến năm 1992.
  • Sang Mỹ năm 1993 và hiện định cư ở tiểu bang Indiana.
  • Về hưu từ năm 2012

17 Năm Trong Các Trại Cải Tạo CSVN >>

Battlefield Vietnam – Chiến trường VN – PBS series (1994)

Battlefield: Vietnam (Part 1/12) – Dien Bien Phu – The Legacy
Chiến trường Việt Nam: Phần 1: Điện Biên Phủ – Sự kế thừa

Tiếp tục đọc “Battlefield Vietnam – Chiến trường VN – PBS series (1994)”

Vietnam War in photos, Part III: Hands of a Nation

Part I: Early Years and Escalation
Part II: Losses and Withdrawal
Part III: Hands of a Nation

The Atlantic, Alan Taylor, Apr 1, 2015
26 Photos

The photojournalist Eddie Adams, who covered the Vietnam War for the Associated Press, not only captured the action and chaos but took the time to get up close to the Vietnamese people whenever he could. In 1968, he undertook a project called “Hands of a Nation,” taking intimate photos of the hands of Vietnamese soldiers and civilians. Their hands were busy doing so many things then: reaching out for medicine, grasping weapons, straining against bindings, soothing, praying, rebuilding. Adams photographed hands young and old, belonging to the healthy and the wounded, the living and the dead.
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Vietnam War in photos, Part II: Losses and Withdrawal

Part I: Early Years and Escalation
Part II: Losses and Withdrawal
Part III: Hands of a Nation

The Attlantic, Alan Taylor, Mar 31, 2015.
50 Photos

Early in 1968, North Vietnamese troops and the Viet Cong launched the largest battle of the Vietnam War, attacking more than 100 cities simultaneously with more than 80,000 fighters. After brief losses, U.S. and South Vietnamese forces regained lost territory, and dealt heavy losses to the North. Tactically, the offensive was a huge loss for the North, but it marked a significant turning point in public opinion and political support, leading to a drawdown of U.S. troop involvement, and eventual withdrawal in 1973. This photo essay, part two of a three-part series, covers the war years between 1968 and 1975.

Warning: Several of these photographs are graphic in nature.

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  • A young South Vietnamese woman covers her mouth as she stares into a mass grave where victims of a reported Viet Cong massacre were being exhumed near Dien Bai village, east of Hue, in April of 1969. The woman’s husband, father, and brother had been missing since the Tet Offensive, and were feared to be among those killed by Communist forces.

    Tiếp tục đọc “Vietnam War in photos, Part II: Losses and Withdrawal”

Vietnam War in photos, Part I: Early Years and Escalation

Part I: Early Years and Escalation
Part II: Losses and Withdrawal
Part III: Hands of a Nation

The Atlantic, Alan Taylor, Mar 30, 2015.
46 Photos

Fifty years ago, in March 1965, 3,500 U.S. Marines landed in South Vietnam. They were the first American combat troops on the ground in a conflict that had been building for decades. The communist government of North Vietnam (backed by the Soviet Union and China) was locked in a battle with South Vietnam (supported by the United States) in a Cold War proxy fight. The U.S. had been providing aid and advisors to the South since the 1950s, slowly escalating operations to include bombing runs and ground troops. By 1968, more than 500,000 U.S. troops were in the country, fighting alongside South Vietnamese soldiers as they faced both a conventional army and a guerrilla force in unforgiving terrain. Each side suffered and inflicted huge losses, with the civilian populace suffering horribly. Based on widely varying estimates, between 1.5 and 3.6 million people were killed in the war. This photo essay, part one of a three-part series, looks at the earlier stages of U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War, as well as the growing protest movement, between the years 1962 and 1967.

Warning: Several of these photographs are graphic in nature.

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21 Iconic Photos of the Vietnam War

An American 1st Air Cavalry Skycrane helicopter, during Operation Pegasus in Vietnam in 1968, delivering ammunition and supplies into a US Marine outpost besieged by North Vietnamese troops at the forward base of Khe Sanh. (Larry Burrows—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images).

HISTORY

See 21 Iconic Photos of the Vietnam War

TIME Photo
Apr 30, 2015

It has been 40 years since the spring day when the last U.S. helicopters lifted up and, shortly after, the North Vietnamese army entered Saigon, deciding a conflict that had raged for years. News photographs from the time showed the world what was going on, from a country full of death in all its gruesome forms to peaceful protests across the ocean. Despite their age, those images have not lost their impact. Tiếp tục đọc “21 Iconic Photos of the Vietnam War”

1965-1975 Another Vietnam: Unseen images of the war from the winning side

1972

Activists meet in the Nam Can forest, wearing masks to hide their identities from one another in case of capture and interrogation. From here in the mangrove swamps of the Mekong Delta, forwarding images to the North was difficult. “Sometimes the photos were lost or confiscated on the way,” said the photographer.

Image: Vo Anh Khanh/Another Vietnam/National Geographic Books

Tiếp tục đọc “1965-1975 Another Vietnam: Unseen images of the war from the winning side”

Cambodia ‘shocked’ by ‘disrespectful’ U.S. aid cut, says democracy intact

PHNOM PENH (Reuters) – Cambodia said on Wednesday it was saddened and shocked by a “disrespectful” U.S. decision to rein back aid programmes because of perceived democratic setbacks and defended its record on democracy.


Cambodia’s national flags are seen as labourers work at a construction site in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, October 7, 2016. REUTERS/Samrang Pring

The White House said on Tuesday it was suspending or curtailing several Treasury, USAID and military assistance programmes that support Cambodia’s military, taxation department and local authorities – all of which, it said, shared blame for recent instability.

Tiếp tục đọc “Cambodia ‘shocked’ by ‘disrespectful’ U.S. aid cut, says democracy intact”

U.S. turns to music in bid to woo Cambodians

PHNOM PENH (Reuters) – With U.S.-Cambodian relations at a low and Chinese influence growing, Washington is trying a new way to win hearts and minds: sponsoring a well-known Cambodian musician to sing positive songs about America.


Singer Yorn Young poses for a picture before a news conference in Phnom Penh, Cambodia, March 6, 2018. REUTERS/Samrang Pring

“When there is tension, countries seek ways to ease it so arts and culture can help,” said 37-year-old Yorn Young, who launched his “Lovin’ USA” album in Phnom Penh on Tuesday. He was not worried if people thought it was propaganda, he added.

Tiếp tục đọc “U.S. turns to music in bid to woo Cambodians”

What it means that the Russians-hacking-US-energy-grid story is being leaked in a big way now

DailyKos.com

US_power_grid_night.JPG

This morning, Associated Press (AP) had the story that Russians have succeeded in hacking into the US energy grid, though they were then expelled.  From the CNBC version:

U.S. national security officials said the FBI, the Homeland Security Department and American intelligence agencies determined that Russian intelligence and others were behind the attacks on the energy sector. The officials said the Russians deliberately chose U.S. energy industry targets, obtaining access to computer systems and then conducting “network reconnaissance” of industrial control systems that run American factories and the electricity grid. Tiếp tục đọc “What it means that the Russians-hacking-US-energy-grid story is being leaked in a big way now”

Vietnam marks 50 years since U.S. massacre at My Lai

QUANG NGAI, Vietnam (Reuters) – Vietnam marked 50 years since the My Lai massacre on Friday in a memorial ceremony at the site of the killings that was attended by survivors of the massacre, their families, and around 60 U.S. Vietnam War veterans and anti-war activists.


Performers take part during the 50th anniversary of the My Lai massacre in My Lai village, Vietnam March 16, 2018. REUTERS/Kham

American soldiers killed 504 people on March 16, 1968, in Son My, a collection of hamlets between the central Vietnamese coast and a ridge of misty mountains, in an incident known in the West as the My Lai Massacre.

Tiếp tục đọc “Vietnam marks 50 years since U.S. massacre at My Lai”

Powerful Images From the National Walkout – Học sinh toàn nước Mỹ biểu tình đòi an ninh

The adults act like kids, and the kids act like adults
Người lớn hành động như trẻ em, trẻ em hành động như người lớn.

Truyền thông Mỹ đang nói câu đó. Nước Mỹ thường xuyên xảy ra sát nhân giết người hằng loạt bằng súng, đặc biệt là trong các trường học. Tổng tống Mỹ và các nghị sĩ đảng cầm quyền Cộng Hòa ở Thượng Viên và Hạ Viện Mỹ ngồi yên không dám nhúc nhích vì sợ làm mất lòng National Rifle Association (NRA – Hội Súng Trường Quốc Gia) với tiền bạc đổ vào mọi cuộc bầu cử ủng hộ ứng viên Cộng Hòa và hệ thống lobbying vĩ đại của hội (vận động hành lang Quốc hội và các cơ quan chính phủ). Vì vậy, các em học sinh trung học tự đứng dậy đòi hỏi giải quyết vấn đề.

Ngày thứ tư 17/3/2018, đúng một tháng từ ngày 17 học sinh bị bắn chết ở trường Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School ở bang Florida, học sinh từ nhiều trường trên khắp nước Mỹ làm cuộc walkout (bước ra khỏi lớp học), biểu tình, đòi hỏi chính quyền thay đổi luật về mua bán súng để trường học an ninh hơn. Các em tuyên bố sẽ không ngừng đòi hỏi cho đến khi luật thay đổi, và nói rằng các em 18 tuổi trở lên nhất định sẽ đi bầu để bầu những người hỗ trợ tăng kiểm soát mua bán súng (thường là người của đảng Dân Chủ).

TĐH

Thousands of students are participating in Wednesday’s protest
Posted Mar 14, 2018 11:54 AM CDT

Shrink
Gabe Martin, 17, center, a senior at Erie High School, speaks to fellow students during a student walkout on Wednesday, March 14, 2018 to protest gun violence in schools in Eire, Pa.   (Jack Hanrahan/Erie Times-News via AP)
Tiếp tục đọc “Powerful Images From the National Walkout – Học sinh toàn nước Mỹ biểu tình đòi an ninh”

U.S. sailors visit Vietnamese shelter for victims of Agent Orange

Reuters
WED MAR 7, 2018 Minh Nguyen

U.S. sailors perform with victims of Agent Orange at a hospice, as part of the U.S aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson visit in Danang, Vietnam March 7, 2018. REUTERS/Kham

DANANG, Vietnam (Reuters) – Sailors from a U.S. aircraft carrier on Wednesday visited a Vietnamese shelter for people suffering from the effects of Agent Orange, a chemical used by the U.S. military during the Vietnam War to destroy foliage. Tiếp tục đọc “U.S. sailors visit Vietnamese shelter for victims of Agent Orange”

Những hình ảnh siêu dễ thương của hải quân Mỹ ở Đà Nẵng

(PLO)- Ngày 6-3, trong khuôn khổ chuyến thăm TP Đà Nẵng (Việt Nam), đoàn thủy thủ tàu sân bay USS Carl Vinson thuộc Hạm đội 7 (Hải quân Hoa Kỳ) đã có buổi giao lưu với các em nhỏ tại Làng trẻ em SOS Đà Nẵng.

 

Tham dự có Phó Đô đốc Philip G. Sawyer (Tư lệnh Hạm đội 7, Hạm đội Thái Bình Dương Hoa Kỳ, Hải quân Hoa Kỳ); ông Lâm Quang Minh (Giám đốc Sở Ngoại vụ) cùng lãnh đạo các cơ quan ban, ngành TP Đà Nẵng.

Những hình ảnh siêu dễ thương của hải quân Mỹ ở Đà Nẵng - ảnh 1
Nữ ca sĩ của ban nhạc hải quân Hoa Kỳ trổ tài hát nhạc Việt với hai ca khúc “Hello Việt Nam” và “Nối vòng tay lớn”. Ảnh: TÂM AN

Tiếp tục đọc “Những hình ảnh siêu dễ thương của hải quân Mỹ ở Đà Nẵng”