World News : AP Photos: Iconic 'napalm girl' photo turns 40

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The Vietnam War had been raging for years. On June 8, 1972, a single photo communicated the horrors of the fighting in a way words could never describe, helping to end one of the most divisive conflicts in American history.

Huynh Cong "Nick" Ut heard the little girl's screams and couldn't turn away. In the time of film and darkrooms, the 21-year-old Vietnamese photographer didn't know the power of the image he had just taken, but he knew what he had to do. He drove the badly burned child to a small hospital. There, he was told she was too far gone to help. But Nick flashed his American press badge, demanded that doctors treat the girl and left as sured that she would not be forgotten.

In the Pulitzer Prize-winning image, children run screaming from a burning Vietnamese village. The little girl in the center of the frame, Kim Phuc, is naked and crying, her clothes and layers of skin melted away by napalm.

"I cried when I saw her running," said Ut, whose older brother was killed on assignment with the World News in the southern Mekong Delta.

Now, four decades later, Nick Ut and Kim Phuc remain close. "I knew in my dream that one day Uncle Ut could help me to have freedom," said Phuc, referring to him by an affectionate Vietnamese term.

"Most of the people, they know my picture, but there's very few that know about my life," Kim Phuc said. "I'm so thankful that ... I can accept the picture as a powerful gift. Then it is my choice. Then I can work with it for peace."

"Today, I'm so happy I helped Kim," said Ut, who still works for World News and recently returned to Trang Bang village. "I call her my daughter."

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Here are more photos taken by Nick Ut of the Vietnam War, and images of Ut and Kim Phuc reunited years later.

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Join World News today at 2 p.m. EDT for a live Facebook chat with photographer Nick Ut: http://apne.ws/MjLG1j


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