Le Van Cho was a North Vietnamese Army (NVA) special forces scout who served from 1966-1970 during the Vietnam War. Van Cho recounted that he served at the boundary of the McNamara Line intended to keep North Vietnamese forces from crossing into South Vietnam, either from the north or from Laos. Van Cho stated that the line "was nothing to us. Every night we would cross it." During the prelude to the Tet Offensive, Van Cho and other NVA soldiers conducted daylight operations in the south by dressing like farmers, South Vietnamese officials, or women with weapons hidden under their dresses. During the offensive Le Van Cho was part of a 600-strong unit that seized the Quang Tri Citadel for a period of 24 hours. Ultimately the unit lost 400 soldiers, 300 of whom were killed and 100 captured.<ref name=burns /> In 2017, Le Van Cho was interviewed about his experiences by filmmaker Ken Burns for his television series The Vietnam War.<ref name="ellsworth" />
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