Does anyone know why we're bombing Yugoslavia?
Tags: BOMBARDMENT; NORTH Atlantic Treaty Organization -- Armed Forces
Related Articles
- Don't Send the Air Force to Do an Angel's Job. Ehrenreich, Barbara // Progressive;Jun99, Vol. 63 Issue 6, p18
Discusses the North Atlantic Treaty Organization's (NATO) mission in Yugoslavia. Purpose of the mission; Death of civilians from the bombing; Budget of the United States for humanitarian aid; Reason for not airlifting food to the Kosovo people hiding from Serbian forces.
- NATO vows air strikes will go the distance. Morrocco, John D.; Wall, Robert // Aviation Week & Space Technology;3/29/1999, Vol. 150 Issue 13, p30
Reports that the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) has launched its air offensive against Serbia, Yugoslavia on March 24, 1999. Comments by United States General Wesley Clark, supreme commander, Allied Forces Europe; NATO's intentions not to commit ground troops in Kosovo; Impact of the...
- Revealed: the amazing Nato plan, tabled at Rambouillet, to occupy Yugoslavia. Pilger, John // New Statesman;05/17/99, Vol. 128 Issue 4436, p17
Presents a view on the North Atlantic Treaty Organization's plan to occupy Kosovo, Serbia. Justification for the attack in Kosovo; Evidences that the bombing in Kosovo was planned; Remarks from Satish Nambiar, head of the United Nations Mission in Yugoslavia from 1992 to 1993, about the bombings.
- Air war pays off; Serbians pull out. Fulghum, David A.; Morrocco, John D. // Aviation Week & Space Technology;06/14/99, Vol. 150 Issue 24, p63
Reports that the North Atlantic Treaty Organization's gambit of employing a methodical air campaign paid off after 78 days of sustained bombing as Yugoslav military officials agreed to terms for withdrawing their forces from Kosovo. Overall assessment of the air campaign; Ramifications of the...
- SMART BOMBS, DUMB TARGETING? Arkin, William M. // Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists;May/Jun2000, Vol. 56 Issue 3, p46
Examines the decisions made by the North Atlantic Treaty Organization in its selection of targets in the bombing operations in Yugoslavia in 1999. Why the Lola Utva aircraft repair factory was targeted; Post-conflict evaluation of the damages of bombings; Effect of promiscuous claims about what...
- NATO air strikes, congestion challenge European ATC. Esler, David; Richfield, Paul // Business & Commercial Aviation;May99, Vol. 84 Issue 5, p33
Reports that Central Europe's air traffic management situation grew more complicated in late March 1999 due to airspace restrictions triggered by the North Atlantic Treaty Organization's air strikes in Yugoslavia and Kosovo. Areas closed to civil aircraft; Horizontal limits of the affected...
- Military space dominates air strikes. Covault, Craig // Aviation Week & Space Technology;3/29/1999, Vol. 150 Issue 13, p31
Reports that military and civilian spacecraft from the United States and Europe are supporting the North Atlantic Treaty Organization's (NATO) aerial bombing campaign on Kosovo in Serbia, Yugoslavia. Original purpose of the spacecraft; Involvement in NATO coordination, intelligence and strike...
- Recon, GPS operations critical to NATO strikes. Covault, Craig // Aviation Week & Space Technology;4/26/1999, Vol. 150 Issue 17, p35
Focuses on the use of space reconnaissance systems in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization's (NATO) targeting operations and bomb damage assessment of the air strikes launched by the alliance in Serbia. Increasing use of office spacecraft to image targets of political significance; Advantages...
- Sit tight. // Commonweal;05/07/99, Vol. 126 Issue 9, p5
Ponders on the question whether the intervention of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization in the ethnic cleansing in Kosovo, Serbia, has done any good. Diplomatic efforts at Rambouillet; Bombing of Yugoslavia in 1999 and its effects on ethnic cleansing; Necessity for ground troops to be sent...


