Serb discusses 1999 downing of stealth 

SKORENOVAC, Serbia-Montenegro (AP) — Col. Zoltan Dani was behind one of the
most spectacular losses ever suffered by the U.S. Air Force: the 1999
shooting down of an F-117A stealth fighter.

By Ellis Neel, Alamogordo Daily News via AP     

Now, for the first time since that night six years ago, the former Serbian
commander of an anti-aircraft missile battery has consented to speak
publicly to Western media about the circumstances surrounding the
unprecedented downing of a U.S. stealth plane.

The hit on the radar-evading plane on March 27, 1999, during the 78-day NATO
campaign over Serbia, triggered doubts not only about the F-117s, but also
about the entire concept of stealth technology on which the U.S. Air Force
has based its newest generation of warplanes.

Military analysts debated how the planes would fare in a war against a
militarily sophisticated opponent if an obsolescent air defense such as
Serbia's could manage to track and destroy them.

In an interview this week with The Associated Press, Dani said the F-117 was
detected and shot down during a moonless night — just three days into the
war — by a Soviet-made SA-3 Goa surface-to-air missile.

"We used a little innovation to update our 1960s-vintage SAMs to detect the
Nighthawk," Dani said. He declined to discuss specifics, saying the exact
nature of the modification to the warhead's guidance system remains a
military secret.

It involved "electromagnetic waves," was all that Dani — who now owns a
small bakery in this sleepy village just north of Belgrade — would divulge.

The F-117 was developed in great secrecy in the 1970s. It entered service in
1983 but was not revealed officially until 1988. It saw its first combat in
the 1989 invasion of Panama and was a star of the 1991 Gulf War.

"Long before the 1999 war, I took keen interest in the stealth fighter and
on how it could be detected," said Dani, who has been hailed in Serbia as a
war hero. "And I concluded that there are no invisible aircraft, but only
less visible."

The F-117 was one of only two allied aircraft shot down in the war. The
other was an F-16 fighter, which the U.S. Air Force said was also hit by an
SA-3. Both pilots bailed out and were rescued by NATO helicopters.

Dani said his anti-aircraft missile regiment, tasked with the anti-aircraft
defense of the Serbian capital, Belgrade, downed the F-16.

Several other NATO warplanes were damaged by missile hits but managed to
struggle back to bases in neighboring Bosnia, Macedonia or Croatia. At least
one is said to have ditched into the Adriatic Sea as it attempted to regain
its base in Italy.

Despite NATO's near-total air supremacy, the alliance never succeeded in
knocking out Dani's batteries.

The Serb SAMs remained a potent threat throughout the conflict, forcing
attacking warplanes to altitudes above 15,000 feet, where they were safe
from surface-to-air missiles but far less effective in a ground attack role.

NATO won the war in June 1999, after President Slobodan Milosevic decided to
withdraw his largely intact army from Kosovo, following the destruction of
numerous government buildings, bridges and other infrastructure targets
throughout Serbia.

"The Americans entered the war a bit overconfident," Dani said. "They
thought they could crush us without real resistance."

"At times, they acted like amateurs," Dani said, listing some ways the Serbs
managed to breach NATO communications security, including eavesdropping on
pilots' conversations with AWACS surveillance planes.

"I personally listened to their pilots' conversations, learning about their
routes and bombing plans," Dani said.

Dani said that his unit has had annual reunions on every March 27 since 1999
when a cake in the shape of the F-117 is served.

________________________________

Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may
not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. 
http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/2005-10-26-serb-stealth_x.htm


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