Veteran news anchor Connie Chung offered her support on Wednesday to Dr. Christine Blasey Ford, saying: “I, too, was sexually assaulted.”

“The exact date and year are fuzzy. But details of the event are vivid — forever seared in my memory,” Chung wrote in an emotional open letter to Ford, which was published in the Washington Post.

“Am I sure who did it? Oh yes, 100 percent,” she said. “I wish I could forget this truthful event, but I cannot because it is the truth … Bravo, Christine, for telling the truth.”

Ford told the Senate Judiciary Committee last week that she was sexually assaulted by Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh in the early 1980s, when the two were in high school.

Chung, 72, said her assault came at the hands of a family doctor sometime in “the 1960s.” The longtime broadcaster wrote that, much like Ford, she “kept my dirty little secret to myself” for roughly 50 years.

“At the time, I think I may have told one of my sisters. I certainly did not tell my parents,” she wrote. “I did not report [the doctor] to authorities. It never crossed my mind to protect other women. Please understand, I was actually embarrassed about my sexual naïveté. I was in my 20s and knew nothing about sex. All I wanted to do was bury the incident in my mind and protect my family.”

Chung said she had gone to the doctor “to ask for birth-control pills, an IUD or a diaphragm.” His office was inside his home.

“It was a large room divided by a curtain he could draw,” she explained. “Half the room was his office, the other half his examination space. Again, I cannot remember the exact date or even year. Yet I can still describe the following in detail. He drew the curtain, asking me to remove my clothes below the waist while he sat at his desk by the bay window.”

The doctor went on to assault Chung, who had never had a gynecological exam. He later died in his 80s — “almost 30 years ago,” according to Chung.

“I don’t remember saying anything to him,” she wrote. “I could not even look at him. I quickly dressed and drove home.”

Ford has been getting blasted by Republicans and others for not knowing exact years and dates, along with other details pertaining to the alleged incident.

“I am writing to you because I know that exact dates, exact years are insignificant,” Chung said. “We remember exactly what happened to us and who did it to us. We remember the truth forever.”