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    War Remnants Museum in Ho Chi Minh City (Bảo Tàng Tội Ác Chiến Tranh)

    War Remnants Museum in Ho Chi Minh City (Bảo Tàng Tội Ác Chiến Tranh)
     

    War Remnants Museum in Ho Chi Minh City (Bảo Tàng Tội Ác Chiến Tranh)
    Through this article I think you may know more About Vietnam. So are you ready to discover more interesting things in my country? Operated by the Vietnamese government, the War Remnants Museum (Bảo Tàng Tội Ác Chiến Tranh) was opened in September 1975 as the "The House for Displaying War Crimes of American Imperialism and the Puppet Government [of South Vietnam]."
    Later it was known as the Museum of American War Crimes, then as the War Crimes Museum until as recently as 1993. Its current name follows liberalization in Vietnam and the normalization of relations with the United States, but the museum does not attempt to be politically balanced.
    Its exhibits speak for themselves, a distressing compendium of the horrors of modern warfare. Some of the perpetrators of these horrors are on display in the courtyard outside, including a 28-tonne howitzer, a ghoulish collection of bomb parts, and a renovated Douglas Skyraider plane. When mention About Vietnam, especially in Ho Chi Minh City, there still have many information you should know.
    A series of halls present a grisly portfolio of photographs of mutilation, napalm burns and torture. One gallery details the effects of the 75 million liters of defoliant sprays dumped across the country, including hideously malformed fetuses preserved in pickling jars; another looks at international opposition to the war as well as the American peace movement.

    The museum rounds off with a grisly mock-up of the tiger cages, the prison cells of Con Son Island. There's a water puppetry theatre (daily 9-11am & 2-4pm; $2) opposite the souvenir shop. A minimum of five people are required for a performance.

     
    War Remnants Museum in Ho Chi Minh City (Bảo Tàng Tội Ác Chiến Tranh) 1
    The museum is effectively a propaganda museum for the Vietnamese Communist regime, as it almost exclusively displays exhibits that are highly critical of the South Vietnamese and American war efforts during the Vietnam War, while neglecting to exhibit anything critical of the North Vietnamese or Viet Cong's war effort or atrocities, for example of the Hue Massacre, the Dak Son Massacre and the Chau Doc massacre, the many land mines scattered across rural southern Vietnam that still lay undetonated often injuring rural villagers (particularly children) today, the brutal treatment of American Prisoners of War (POWs) between 1964 and 1973, and the brutal treatment of political prisoners in labor camps (reeducation camps) run by the North Vietnamese and the Viet Cong during and after the war. This place shows really clearly the truth about the pain of people About Vietnam that time.
    The fact that the War Remnants Museum used to be known as the Museum of Chinese and American War Crimes is a good indication as to who the Vietnamese have chosen to portray as the bad guys in this exhibit.
    Although the recent name change will avoid offending Chinese and American tourists, the pamphlets passed out at the entrance pull no punches, warning stoically, "Some pictures of U.S. imperialists' aggressive war crimes in Vietnam." This is the first part of War Remnants Museum, the following parts will let you know more About Vietnam, especially this place.
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