The Demilitarised Zone (DMZ) was created in April, 1954 as a result of the
Geneva Conference ending the war between the Viet Minh and the French. The DMZ
extends 5 km north and south of the Ben Hai River and ru ns approximately 100 km
from the South China Sea to the Laos border. Originally proposed as a temporary demarcation line between the
communist controlled north and the "democratic" south, the DMZ became the
permanent border between North Vietnam and South Vietnam when the 1956
nationwide elections were cancelled due to the obvious imminent victory of Ho
Chi Minh and the Communists. Fearing the downfall of the South Vietnamese
government to the powerful Communist Army of the North, the United States began
sending military advisors, troops, supplies and weapons to the South Vietnamese
government headed by president Ngo Dinh Diem. In an effort to supply the Viet
Cong (South Vietnamese Communists) with troops and armaments, the North
Vietnamese Army (NVA) created a series of interconnecting roads and trails
(approximately 20,000 km in total) popularly known as the Ho Chi Minh Trail,
which extended from North Vietnam to the South. In an attempt to stop this flow
of munitions, the United States and the Army of the Republic of Vietnam (ARVN,
the South Vietnamese Army) created a series of bases along Route 9 (which
parallels the DMZ approximately 10 km to the south). This series of bases,
mines and electrified fencing became known as the McNamara Line, named for the
U.S. Secretary of Defense, Robert McNamara. Some of the fiercest and bloodiest
battles of the American War in Vietnam occurred along this line at places such
as Khe Sanh Combat Base, The Rockpile, Camp Carroll, Con Thien Firebase and Doc
Mieu Base. We spent our first day in Vietnam visiting the remains of these and
other sites along the DMZ. It was an educational and sobering experience best
summed up by our Vietnamese guide, "A war with no winners."
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