File
A U.S. B-52 bomber drops cluster bombs on Laos during the Vietnam War.
Cluster bomb
File
Aย CBU-58/B cluster bomb,ย manufactured by the Honeywell Corporation in Minneapolis, is seen beingย dropped on Laos from a U.S. B-52 bomber during the Vietnam war.
Terror from the air
CBS/Randy Schmidt
After a cluster bomb is dropped, it splits open in the airย and aboutย 670 tennis ball-sized submunitions (also known as โbombiesโ or โbombletsโ) are dispersed, raining down on the target area.
Cluster bomb
CBS/Randy Schmidt
An unexploded U.S. cluster bomb — one of millions in Laos — is seen at anย outdoor exhibit in Xieng Khouang.
Cluster “bombies”
CBS/Randy Schmidt
A close-up image shows unexploded submunitions, also known as โbombies,โ inside a U.S. cluster bomb that wasย dropped on Laos during the Vietnam War. Each one of the cluster bombs containedย 670 of theย tennis ball-sized submunitions, which would disperse over a wide area as the bombย split open in the air before landing.
“The Secret War”
CBS/Randy Schmidt
Laos is the most heavily-bombed country per-capita in the history of the world. Every eightย minutes, 24 hours a day, for nineย years from 1964 untilย 1973, a planeload of cluster bombs was dropped on Laos byย American B-52s. The bombing campaign was aimed at hemming in Americaโs enemies in neighboring Vietnam. The U.S. was never at war with the people of Laos, and the American people were largely oblivious to the bombingย campaign in the country at the time.
No ball game
CBS/Randy Schmidt
Brong Yang, 8, shows scars from the shrapnel that tore into his body in July, 2016,ย when what he thought was a ball exploded as he played with it. He had actually found one of the millions of U.S. cluster bomb submunitions that still litter his native Laos.
Shrapnel wounds
CBS/Randy Schmidt
A volunteer examines shrapnel wounds on Brong Yangโsย arm. He wasย wounded by shrapnel from a U.S. cluster bomb submunition that he found while playing near his home inย Xieng Khouang, Laos.
Cluster bomb victim
Handout
A young man who lost both hands to a submunition he found, left over from a U.S. cluster bomb dropped on Laos during the Vietnam war, is seen receiving medical treatment in Laos.
Seeking leftovers
CBS/Randy Schmidt
De-miningย teams work to find buried U.S. cluster bombs inย Xieng Khouang,ย Laos.
Boom!
CBS/Randy Schmidt
A de-miningย technician detonates a U.S. cluster bomb left over from the American bombing campaignย during theย Vietnam war, in Xieng Khouang,ย Laos.
Deadly treasure hunt
CBS/Randy Schmidt
A de-mining technicianย works to detect buried U.S. cluster bombs inย Xieng Khouang,ย Laos. ย
Deadly treasure hunt
CBS/Randy Schmidt
Search teams work to detect buried U.S. cluster bombs inย Xieng Khouang,ย Laos. ย ย
Deadly treasure hunt
CBS/Randy Schmidt
Search teams work to detect buried U.S. cluster bombs in the countryside of Laos. ย ย ย
Preparing for blast
CBS/Randy Schmidt
A technician prepares to detonate remotely a controlled explosion to destroy a U.S. cluster bomb found in Laos.
Safe disposal
CBS/Randy Schmidt
Smoke from two explosions is seen as technicians destroy two U.S. cluster bombs left over from the Vietnam War in Laos.
RS3-0539_02415202
CBS/Randy Schmidt
Channapha Khamvongsa, a Washington D.C.-basedย activist whoย runs the โLegacies of Warโ organization to raise awarenessย and get the U.S. to pledge more cleanup money for Laos,ย points at a cluster bomb submunitionย in the ground in Laos some 43 years after the U.S. war in neighboring Vietnam ended.
Bomblet
CBS/Randy Schmidt
A small cluster bomb submunition is seen partially buried in dirt where it was found in Laos.
Bomblets
CBS/Randy Schmidt
Unexploded cluster bomb submunitions are seen hanging from the ceiling as part of an exhibit at theย COPE visitor center andย museum in Vientiane,ย Laos
Powerful reminder
CBS/Randy Schmidt
Unexploded cluster bomb submunitions are seen hanging from the ceiling as part of an exhibit atย theย COPE visitor center andย museum in Vientiane,ย Laos.
Replacements
CBS/Randy Schmidt
Prosthetic legs hang from a ceiling atย theย COPE visitor center andย museum in Vientiane,ย Laos,ย as part of an exhibit showing the horrors of the U.S. cluster bombing campaign in the country during the Vietnam War.
Bomb pieces
CBS/Randy Schmidt
Various pieces of U.S. bombs, left over from the American bombing campaign in Laos during the Vietnam war,ย on display in Laos.
Cluster bomb
CBS/Randy Schmidt
An unexploded U.S. cluster bomb on display in Laos.
Recycling
CBS/Randy Schmidt
An old cluster bomb casing is seen outside theย COPE Visitor center andย museum in Vientiane, Laos, re-purposed as a flower pot.