I don’t think they know,” Fonda said in a news conference when she returned home. “I appealed to them to please consider what you are doing. North Vietnamese press reported - and Fonda later confirmed - that she made several radio announcements over the Voice of Vietnam radio to implore U.S.
![jame fonda jame fonda](https://d.newsweek.com/en/full/1091121/rts1r8t7.jpg)
During her two-week stay, Fonda concluded that America was unjustly bombing farmland and areas far flung from military targets. government to this day forcefully denies. She went to tour the country’s dike system, which was rumored to have been intentionally bombed by American forces - something the U.S. POWs at a meeting arranged by her North Vietnamese guides and posed for photographs at an antiaircraft emplacement set up in a rural area just outside Hanoi: servicemen via Radio Hanoi met with international visitors and reporters who were also in North Vietnam spent about an hour chatting with seven U.S. military policy in recordings broadcast as propaganda to U.S. Fonda visited North Vietnamese villages, hospitals, schools, and factories damaged in the war, weaving her comments about what she observed at those sites with denunciations of U.S. military involvement in Vietnam, actress Jane Fonda incurred the enmity of untold thousands of Vietnam veterans and their families (as well as service members for generations to come) when she arrived in Hanoi, North Vietnam, and began a two-week tour of the country.
In July 1972, during the waning days of U.S.