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CU CHI
TUNNELS
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Cu Chi Tunnels
are located approximately 70km northwest of Ho Chi Minh City center in
Cu Chi Rural District. Cu Chi Tunnels consist of more than 200km of
underground tunnels. This main axis system has many branches connecting
to underground hideouts, shelters, and entrances to other tunnels. Cu
Chi District is known nationwide as the base where the Vietnamese
mounted their operations of the Tet Offensive in 1968.The tunnels are
between 0.5 to 1m wide, just enough space for a person to walk along by
bending or dragging. However, parts of the tunnels have been modified to
accommodate visitors. The upper soil layer is between of 3 to 4m thick
and can support the weight of a 50-ton tank and the damage of light
cannons and bombs. The underground network provided sleeping quarters,
meeting rooms, hospitals, and other social rooms. Visiting the Cu Chi
Tunnels provides a better understanding of the prolonged resistance war
of the Vietnamese people and also of the persistent and clever character
of the Vietnamese nation. For a place that’s physically invisible, the
Cu Chi Tunnels have sure carved themselves a celebrated niche in the
history of guerrilla warfare. Its celebrated and unseen geography
straddles – all of it underground – something, which the Americans
eventually found as much to their embarrassment as to their detriment.
They were dug, before the American War, in the late 1940s, as a
peasant-army response to a more mobile and ruthless French occupation.
The plan was simple: take the resistance briefly to the enemy and then,
literally, vanish. Now the unseen and undeclared No Man’s Land is
undergoing a revival, saluted as a Relic of National History and Culture
with its Halls of Tradition displaying pictures and exhibits. The nearby
Ben Duoc-Cu Chi War Memorial, where the reproduced tunnels have been
built, stands as an-above ground salute to a hidden war.
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