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Deep in the jungles of Vietnam,
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soldiers from both sides
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battled heat exhaustion and each other
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for nearly 20 long years.
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But the key to Communist victory
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wasn't weapons or stamina,
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it was a dirt road.
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The Ho Chi Minh Trail,
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winding through Vietnam, Laos, and Cambodia,
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started as a simple network of dirt roads
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and blossomed into the centerpiece
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of the winning North Vietnamese strategy
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during the Vietnam War,
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supplying weapons,
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troops,
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and psychological support to the South.
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The trail was a network of tracks,
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dirt roads,
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and river crossings
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that threaded west out of North Vietnam
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and south along the Truong Son Mountain Range
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between Vietnam and Laos.
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The journey to the South originally took six months.
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But, with engineering and ingenuity,
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the Vietnamese expanded and improved the trail.
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Towards the end of war,
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as the main roads detoured through Laos,
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it only took one week.
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Here is how it happened.
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In 1959, as relations deteriorated
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between the North and the South,
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a system of trails was constructed in order to infiltrate
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soldiers, weapons, and supplies into South Vietnam.
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The first troops moved in single-file
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along routes used by local ethnic groups,
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and broken tree branches at dusty crossroads
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were often all that indicated the direction.
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Initially, most of the Communist cadres
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who came down the trail
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were Southerners by birth who had trained in North Vietnam.
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They dressed like civilian peasants
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in black, silk pajamas with a checkered scarf.
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They wore Ho Chi Minh sandals on their feet,
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cut from truck tires,
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and carried their ration of cooked rice
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in elephants' intestines,
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a linen tube hung around the body.
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The conditions were harsh
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and many deaths were caused by exposure,
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malaria,
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and amoebic dysentery.
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Getting lost,
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starving to death,
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and the possibility of attacks by wild tigers or bears
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were constant threats.
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Meals were invariably just rice and salt,
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and it was easy to run out.
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Fear, boredom, and homesickness
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were the dominant emotions.
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And soldiers occupied their spare time
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by writing letters,
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drawing sketches,
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and drinking and smoking with local villagers.
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The first troops down the trail
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did not engage in much fighting.
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And after an exhausting six month trip,
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arriving in the South was a real highlight,
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often celebrated by bursting into song.
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By 1965, the trip down the trail could be made by truck.
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Thousands of trucks supplied by China and Russia
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took up the task amidst ferocious B-52 bombing
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and truck drivers became known as pilots of the ground.
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As traffic down the trail increased,
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so did the U.S. bombing.
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They drove at night or in the early morning
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to avoid air strikes,
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and watchmen were ready
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to warn drivers of enemy aircraft.
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Villages along the trail organized teams
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to guarantee traffic flow
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and to help drivers repair damage caused by air attacks.
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Their catch cries were,
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"Everything for our Southern brothers!"
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and, "We will not worry about our houses
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if the vehicles have not yet gotten through."
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Some families donated their doors
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and wooden beds to repair roads.
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Vietnamese forces even used deception
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to get the U.S. aircraft to bomb mountainsides
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in order to make gravel for use
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in building and maintaining roads.
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The all-pervading red dust seeped into every nook and cranny.
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The Ho Chi Minh Trail had a profound impact
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on the Vietnam War
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and it was the key to Hanoi's success.
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North Vietnamese victory was not determined by the battlefields,
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but by the trail,
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which was the political,
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strategic,
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and economic lynchpin.
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Americans recognized its achievement,
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calling the trail,
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"One of the great achievements
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in military engineering of the 20th century."
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The trail is a testimony to the strength of will
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of the Vietnamese people,
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and the men and women who used the trail
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have become folk heros.