Ho Chi Minh Trail
The Ho Chi Minh Trail was not just one trail but a series of trails. The Ho Chi Minh Trail was used by the North Vietnamese as a route for its troops to get into the South. They also used the trail as a supply route for weapons, food and equipment. The Ho Chi Minh Trail ran along the Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnam borders and was dominated by jungles.
Parts of what became the trail had existed for centuries as primitive footpaths which had failed to continue being a successful trail, due to the bombings by the Americans. The Ho Chi Minh trail had existed for many years before the war and was used to transport goods and services for the Vietnamese army. The Americans hadn't only destroyed the trail by bombings, they had to set up bases near it to watch and find its weak spots.
Parts of what became the trail had existed for centuries as primitive footpaths which had failed to continue being a successful trail, due to the bombings by the Americans. The Ho Chi Minh trail had existed for many years before the war and was used to transport goods and services for the Vietnamese army. The Americans hadn't only destroyed the trail by bombings, they had to set up bases near it to watch and find its weak spots.