USSR ‘secret’ Vietnam soldiers speak out
RT, Russia Today
For years, they were the men who 'weren't there' - Soviet Vietnam veteransFebruary 16, 2008, 23:41

Russian veterans have gathered to mark the anniversary of America's withdrawal from the Vietnam War. More than 3,000 Soviet soldiers fought in the conflict despite years of government denials that they were ever involved.
It was America’s longest and most divisive war, with almost 60,000 young men dead in a conflict that killed more than five million on all sides.
Most still think of Vietnam as a war the U.S. and its South Vietnamese allies fought against the North.
But Soviet Union’s men were there, too, doing their part to advance the spread of communism. They are some of the Soviet Union’s forgotten soldiers, veterans of a war their government denied involvement in for almost twenty years.
It was only after the regime collapsed in 1991 that officials admitted more than 3,000 Soviet troops fought against the Americans in Vietnam.
Now, some of these old soldiers are together again to mark the 35th anniversary of the U.S. Withdrawal.

“Officially we were known as a group of Russian military experts. The commander was referred to simply as the senior expert. Thus, technically, there were no Russian units in Vietnam. The only thing we knew was that we were Soviet people, Soviet soldiers, and that we had to do whatever it took to stop air raids, which is what we did,” Nikolay Kolesnik, Vietnam veteran, remembers.
Soviet expertise played a vital part in training Vietnamese forces and Soviet anti-aircraft missiles to inflict heavy damage on American planes.
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