NATO Losses 

[ Follow Ups ] [ Post Followup ] [ Message Board ]

Posted by TheGolem on May 11, 1999 at 23:15:03: 
What they're not telling us. This is from The International Strategic Studies
Association. 

NATO Losses and the Military Costs: 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 war has cost Alliance members in other ways, too. There is enormous
disaffection with the US
Armed Forces. For a start, to prosecute even the smallest expansion of the war
requires the call-up
of Reserve and National Guard units. The personnel from these units have
civilian jobs, and, as with
the US involvement in S-FOR in Bosnia-Herzegovina, being called up for active
duty in the Balkans
seems to be an open-ended thing. This is not the type of national emergency for
which most of them
signed-on. 
On top of that, there are questions about the wisdom of the orders they are
receiving, and a total
lack of clear strategic (let alone military) objectives. One serving career
mid-level military officer in
the US told this writer: “I am incredibly appalled at this war, or whatever it
is, and the lack of
strategic thought; the bungling, stumbling blind policies which have led to
this [situation], and the
murderous impact on not just the Serbs and Kosovars, but on the concepts of
conflict resolution and
sovereignty.” 
The officer continued: “I am very upset, and while I have been vocal in my
small world, and many
agree with me, I am part of a system that is stumbling as best it can to
implement the failed
brainwork of the NCA [National Command Authority; the President] and SecState
[Secretary of
State], and General [Wes- ley] Clark [Supreme Allied Commander, Europe, for
NATO], too. Why
haven’t the military leadership stepped up and put their job on the line for
common sense.” 
The problem is not confined to the US forces. In Britain, a near mutiny was
reported aboard the
carrier HMS Invincible. And as news of very real NATO casualties emerge, morale
will decline.
Meanwhile, those who have any knowledge of the facts know that since 1948,
Yugoslavia,
particularly under Tito, has been preparing to fight, literally, World War III.
NATO heavy armor
may indeed roll easily across the Albanian border, or down across the fertile
plains of Vojvodina
from Hungary, right into Belgrade. But most of Yugoslavia is mountainous, and
the mountains filled
with underground fuel supplies, ammunition factories, probably oil refineries,
buried hangars and
roads which become airstrips. 
And those in the US Armed Forces believe that the Clinton White House, from the
President — an
anti-Vietnam War protester and conscription dodger — and First Lady down to the
young
Clintonite staffers, hate the US Armed Forces with a passion. It is clear that
the determination of the
Yugoslavs to defend their country has strengthened; after all, they have
nowhere else to go. But
already the morale of the NATO forces is declining. 



Reply via email to