http://www.strategicstudies.org/press.htm#Yugoslavia
NATO's "Other" Yugoslavia Losses and POWs
Still Not Acknowledged
Alexandria, Virginia: May 4, 1999
NATO forces, including the United States, have lost numerous aircraft and have already suffered significant loss-of-life among ground troops in the Yugoslavia conflict, according to a report published today by the journal which in 1994 predicted the Kosovo war.
"Strategic Policy", the monthly journal of the "Defense & Foreign
Affairs" division
of the worldwide International Strategic Studies Association (ISSA), a
non-govern-
mental organization (NGO) for senior national security officials from
some 165
countries, said that NATO forces may have lost, up until April 20, as
many as 38
fixed-wing aircraft and six helicopters in the Kosovo conflict. As well,
it said, as
many as 50 NATO ground troops - officially not acknowledged even to be
in the
conflict - may have lost their lives.
The journal, in December 1992, said that (then) President-elect Bill
Clinton "will be
tempted to take fast, populist decisions on the Balkans crisis, and
these could be
fatal for any chances for peace there."
In the February-March 1994 edition of "Strategic Policy", staff writer
T. W. (Bill)
Carr wrote: "Other areas, perhaps with even greater potential for ethnic
conflict
[than northern Serbia], are Kosovo and the Sanjak region of Yugoslavia.
Here the
problem is an explosive mixture of religion and nationalism with roots
reaching back
in remote history and the Tito era. Adjacent to Kosovo is Muslim Albania
from
whence came 95 percent of the present day population of Kosovo."
ISSA in April this year put together the fact-finding mission which took
US
Congressman Jim Saxton (R-NJ) to Belgrade.
The journal, which has been covering the Balkan wars and the Kosovo
Liberation
Army (KLA) in detail since the early 1990s, said in today's report,
written by ISSA
President Gregory Copley, who is editor of the journal: "It is clear
from the amount
and quality of intelligence received by this journal from a variety of
highly-reputable
sources that NATO forces have already suffered significant losses of
men, women
and materiel. Neither NATO, nor the US, UK or other member governments,
have
admitted to these losses, other than the single USAF F-117A Stealth
fighter which
was shown, crashed and burning inside Serbia."
"The Chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff had denied, about a month
into the
bombing, that the US had suffered the additional losses reported to
Defense &
Foreign Affairs."
"By April 20, 1999, NATO losses stood at approximately the following:
38 fixed-wing combat aircraft;
Six helicopters;
Seven unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs);
"Many" Cruise Missiles (lost to AAA or SAM fire)."
"Several other NATO aircraft were reported down after that date,
including at least
one of which there was Serbian television coverage. The aircraft
reportedly include
three F-117A Stealth strike aircraft, including the one already known.
One of the
remaining two was shot down in an air-to-air engagement with a Yugoslav
Air
Force MiG-29 fighter; the other was lost to AAA (anti-aircraft
artillery) or SAM
(surface-to-air missile) fire. Given the recovery by the Yugoslavs of
F-117A
technology, and the fact that the type has proven less than invincible,
the mystique
of the aircraft - a valuable deterrent tool until now for the US - has
been lost."
"At least one USAF F-15 Eagle fighter has been lost, with the pilot,
reportedly an
African-American major, alive and in custody as a POW."
"At least one German pilot (some sources say two men, implying perhaps a
Luftwaffe crew from a Tornado) has been captured."
"There is also a report that at least one US female pilot has been
killed."
"In one instance in the first week of the fighting, an aircraft was
downed near
Podgorica. A NATO helicopter then picked up the downed pilot, but the
helicopter
itself was then shot down, according to a number of reports."
"Losses of US and other NATO ground force personnel, inside Serbia, have
also
been extensive."
"A Yugoslav Army unit ambushed a squad climbing a ravine south of
Pristina,
killing 20 men. When the black tape was taken from their dog-tags it was
found that
12 were US Green Berets; eight were British special forces (presumably
Special Air
Service/SAS). This incident apparently occurred within a week or so of
the
bombing campaign launch."
"It is known that other US and other NATO casualties have, on some
occasions,
been retrieved by NATO forces after being hit inside Yugoslavia. At
least 30 bodies
of US servicemen have been processed through Athens, after being
transported
from the combat zone."
"At least two of the helicopters downed by the Yugoslavs were carrying
troops, and
in these two a total of 50 men were believed to have been killed, most
of them (but
not all) of US origin."
"Certainly, the US has lost to ground fire and malfunction a number of
Tomahawk
Cruise Missiles. At least some of these have been retrieved more or less
intact, and
the technology has been immediately reviewed by Yugoslav engineers. More
than
one told this writer that the technology was now readily able to be
replicated in
Yugoslavia."
The journal's 17-page report also details the extent of the drug-money
financing of
the KLA and the impact of the Cox Committee report - detailing White
House
links to Chinese intelligence funding - on the Clinton Administration's
decision to
continue the war against Yugoslavia.
As well, the report outlined the dangers to the West of a protracted
conflict in
Yugoslavia, not only from the war there, but also because of the chance
that it
would trigger other conflicts, including a Chinese invasion of Taiwan
and a North
Korean invasion of South Korea. The report said that the drawdown on US
standoff weapons and other military assets heightened the risk of
opportunistic
attacks being undertaken by countries which felt that the US could no
longer deter
their action.
The report also said that the loss of US and NATO prestige as a result
of the
Yugoslav adventure would also make future global stability more
difficult to sustain.
Ends