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My Lai 4 by Seymour M. Hersh

2023-04-03 17:42:26

My words "Lai 4 by Seymour M. Hersh" and "My Lai" will always be infamous in the history of the US military. Because they represent the most embarrassing event in the war that she rather forgets. This book is an account created by reporter Seymour Hersh of AP communication. His explanation about the case itself is entirely based on individual interviews with stakeholders, usually two or three. Naturally, given the nature of the witness's testimony, there is a big contradiction between these different stories and his credibility.

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On October 22, 1969, free investigative reporter Seymour Hersh and subsequent independent investigation answered the phone which broke the silence wall around the MỹLai massacre. Initially, Hirsch tried to sell the story to Life and Look magazine, but they refused. Hirsch then went to a small shipping news service in Washington DC and sent it to 50 major US newspapers; 30 of them accepted that publication. Reporter Henry Cham of the New York Times further investigated and found several survivors of the MỹLai massacre in South Vietnam. He estimated that the number of civilians who killed was 567 people.

Reporter Seymour Hersh took action and contacted Cali's defense team. In November 1969, Hirsch's Pulitzer Prize winner My Rye's "dull murder" appeared in the newspaper with the picture of Hebel and shocked the world. In addition to Calley, Medina, other officers and nine soldiers were indicted for a crime related to My Lai. Except for Calley, all the defendants were innocent, or the trial was dismissed before the trial. In stark contrast to being accused of Nuremberg trials after the Second World War, members of Charlie successfully discussed that they only followed the order on March 16, 1968. At the end of the Kali military court in March 1971, he was convicted of killing 22 Vietnamese civilians and being sentenced to life imprisonment. However, many observers believe that Kali became scapegoat and was paroleed in 1974.