![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#20
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Fred the Red Shirt" wrote in message om... "George Z. Bush" wrote in message ... Fred the Red Shirt wrote: "George Z. Bush" wrote in message ... "Fred the Red Shirt" wrote in message om... ... NATO first declared a no-fly zone onver Bosnia in October, 1992, under Bush. NATO began fighting in Bosnia in earnest in September, 1995. The Bush policy was continued and expanded under Clinton. The following was dated December 18, 1995. I wonder why they had their dates so screwed up way back then. U.S. Troops Begin Bosnia Intervention BY MAURICE WILLIAMS U.S. president Bill Clinton is moving at full steam to implement Washington's decision to send 20,000 troops to Bosnia as part of a 60,000-strong NATO occupation force. "This task force is ready to roll," he told U.S. soldiers in Germany December 2. They will be among the first of the NATO units in Bosnia. Gearing up for war, Clinton told the GIs they would be heavily armed and could respond "immediately and with decisive force" to hostilities. The White House is deploying such a massive force in a workers state for the first time in decades. The State Department's official goal is to enforce the partition of Bosnia, agreed to by the warring regimes in the former Yugoslav republics in a deal brokered by Washington on a military base in Dayton, Ohio, November 21. The masters of the U.S. empire are trying to boost their military and economic domination of the region, get one up on their European competitors, particularly Paris and Bonn, and take a stab at re-establishing capitalism in the former Yugoslavia. The first NATO unit composed of 28 soldiers landed in Sarajevo December 4 and included two GIs. Some 3,000 U.S. soldiers are imminently expected to arrive in Kaposvar, Hungary, for a brief stopover on the way to Bosnia by train. Overall, 32,000 U.S. military personnel will be involved in the action, including the 20,000 GIs in Bosnia, 5,000 in Croatia, and 7,000 support troops in Hungary and Italy. The parliament in Germany voted December 6 to approve sending 4,000 German soldiers to the Balkans - Bonn's largest military mission abroad since World War II. Judging from the words of our own Secretary of State in addressing the NATO foreign and defense ministers in Brussels, Belgium on December 5, 1995, he seems to have been under the impression that NATO was not yet involved. Take a look: "Mr. Acting Secretary-General, distinguished colleagues: It is a great privilege for Secretary Perry and me to speak with you today on behalf of the United States and President Clinton. For the first time in NATO's history, all 16 of our foreign ministers and all 16 of our defense ministers are meeting together. As we prepare to launch this historic mission in Bosnia, our Alliance has never been more united." I think I'll stick with my 1995 starting date. At least I can produce some evidence that backs it up. Thanks. It was the UN which declared the no-flight zone in October 1992. NATO first began considering enforcement of it late in 1992: http://groups.google.com/groups?q=na...uic.edu&rnum=2 The above cite was a link to an editorial from the NY Times. While the UN may have declared a no-fly zone over Bosnia, it apparently wasn't enforced by anybody, and certainly not by NATO. Here's how the editorial put it: "in defiance of a no-fly order declared by the U.N. When will the West bestir itself long enough to enforce this order?" http://groups.google.com/groups?q=na...m=1&fil ter=0 NATO airstrikes in Bosnia were reported on Nightline, Sept 12,1995: http://groups.google.com/groups?q=ai...num=1&filter=0 And here's the cruz of what is applicable from the above link: "The United States and its NATO allies formally agreed to give the United Nations military plans for enforcing a no-fly zone over Bosnia that includes shooting down Serbian warplanes." So, if that happened in 1992 and it took 3 years to get around to having NATO actually do something about it, I think I'll still stick with 1995 as the starting date. Clinton was president. My point exactly. George Z. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Juan Jiminez is a liar and a fraud (was: Zoom fables on ANN | ChuckSlusarczyk | Home Built | 105 | October 8th 04 12:38 AM |
Bush's guard record | JDKAHN | Home Built | 13 | October 3rd 04 09:38 PM |
Bush shot JFK over what he did to Barbara | Ross C. Bubba Nicholson | Home Built | 2 | August 30th 04 03:28 AM |
"W" is JFK's son and Bush revenge killed Kennedy in 1963 | Ross C. Bubba Nicholson | Aerobatics | 0 | August 28th 04 11:28 AM |