From “napalm girl” to “tank man,” we’ve all seen these powerful photos, but how many of us actually know the true stories behind them?
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On June 8 , 1972 , a nine - yr - old Vietnamese daughter name Phan Thi Kim Phuc run screaming through Trang Bang as napalm cauterise through her clothes and then her pelt . Because lensman Nick Ut was there to enamor the outcome , Phuc will constantly be known informally as " napalm young woman , " thanks to what has become one of the most powerful photos ever drive .
Of of course , it has become one of history ’s most sinewy photograph not only because of what it depicts , but what it represents : the witless revulsion of U.S. involvement in the Vietnam War . This has permit the photo to remain absolutely unerasable decades after it was taken and helped hasten , as many nowsuggest , the pulling out of American troops from Vietnam .

This photo depicting the execution of Viet Cong soldier Nguyễn Văn Lém by South Vietnamese officer Nguyễn Ngọc Loan in Saigon on Feb. 1, 1968 became a symbol of the Vietnam War’s senseless brutality and helped turn American sentiment against the war. However, while the photo does indeed depict a sudden, violent, summary execution, few realize that Lém was no innocent civilian or even a prisoner of war, but instead a guerrilla terrorist who had just been caught murdering the wife, children, and 80-year-old mother of a South Vietnamese officer, a friend of Loan’s, by slicing their throats.
Upon the fortieth day of remembrance of the event , NPRrecountedthe torturing account in a way of life that aptly summarise its impact for most multitude :
Whatever your age , you ’ve probably seen this photograph . It ’s a hard image to forget . A young female child , naked , runs squall toward the tv camera in excruciation after a napalm plan of attack incinerated her village , her clothes , and then , her cutis .
That girl is Kim Phuc . She was 9 years sometime in 1972 when she was photographed , screaming in pain , after a U.S. commanding officer order South Vietnamese planes to drop napalm near her settlement .

However , that summary simply is n’t true . And as haunting as the photo remain , the fact is that many the great unwashed do n’t know the actual story behind it .
Despite whatNPRas well as unnumberable others ( includingUSA Today ) have written , the truth is that the cowcatcher that drop the napalm on Trang Bang on June 8 , 1972 was South Vietnamese , not acting under any orders from U.S. personnel , and was targeting North Vietnamese military targets in the area , only dropping napalm on civilian by mistake .
Everyone fromTIMEto theGuardianhas recounted the truth of the story — and have beensince it first happened — but the myths nevertheless stay .

And this is hardly the only universally - love historic paradigm to remain mired in myth and misapprehension . In fact , many of recent history ’s most hefty photo have fallen victim to this .
See those photos , and get wind the truth behind them , in the gallery above .
After this face at the surprising stories behind some of account ’s most powerful photos , see some otherinfluential photographs that changed our world . Then , see some of the most iconic images of the1940s,1950s,1960s,1970s,1980s,1990s , and2000s .


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