http://www.independent.mk/


Jacques Hogard: British SAS Attacked Serbian Churches, Monasteries, Refugees


Jacques Hogard was one of the first Western officers who entered the territory 
of Serbia after the signing of the Kumanovo Agreement in 1999, and there he saw 
that the information he was given by NATO command does not correspond to the 
truth, InSerbia reports.

He realized that this is not a humanitarian war, in the field he saw that KLA 
soldiers were at all times under control of German and British military 
services, including attacks on Serbian churches, monasteries and refugee 
columns just after the end of the NATO bombing.

This is why his unit on several occasions entered into armed conflict with both 
KLA and British soldiers who were with their units. A decade and a half later, 
Colonel Hogard, who recently published a book “Europe died in Pristina”, spoke 
about details of the war in Kosovo for “Nedeljnik”.

“British were in close contact with KLA. Soldiers of the 20th Regiment SAS were 
actually engaged with KLA, they gave them the logistics, they trained them. 
This is what I discovered in concrete situations in the field,” said Jacques 
Hogard.

“When members of KLA ambushed a convoy of Serbian refugees, who were retreating 
in tractors – and the attack was carried out with the support of the British – 
I called a Serbian Brigade in retreat, led by Colonel Serkovic, to return and 
stop Albanian aggressors, which they did. When Serbian civilians ran from Pec, 
they were attacked by Albanian soldiers. I engaged a helicopter which dispelled 
them with gunfire from air. Several minutes after the action was over, I got a 
call from British General Mason, who asked me is it possible that a fire was 
opened against his people. I replied :’I cannot understand that your 
specialists are together with bandits who shoot at civilians’. Mason was 
quiet,” said Hogard.

He will be remembered as the officer that draw demarcation line on Ibar in 
Mitrovac, which would later become the border of northern Kosovo.

  <http://www.independent.mk/media/photos_more/201412/path_1124.jpg> 

Hogard also said that as a child of an officer he grew up with heroic stories 
from Salonika front, where his great-uncle laid down his life and that he was 
always taught that Serbia is a great friend of the French people. Therefore, he 
said, before leaving for NATO mission in 1998, he had a dilemma whether to 
avoid a mission in which he would possibly find himself on the other side, 
against Serbian army.

“I went to talk to my father about the mission in Kosovo, because my 
grandfather was already dead. My father was also a retired general, and at the 
time he was dying of cancer. He told me:’If you go there, do not be too rough 
with the Serbs’. He also told me: ’We should not question the future, by 
forgetting our past’,” said Hogard.

What marked his military career, as Hogard said, is the case of defense of the 
monastery Devic, which is why he later received Order of St. Sava from Serbian 
Orthodox Church.

“I was at the head of the group of Special French forces. This was not a big 
unit, there were only 150 of us, and we worked in teams of 6 people. When we 
came, we were welcomed by Serbian authorities, Albanians were nowhere to be 
seen, they hid. We saw a small car approaching, Yugo, from which emerged a nun. 
Her name was mother Makarija, abbess of the monastery of Sokolica. She was 
returning from Pristina, where tried to speak with the members of British 
headquarters. She was worried about the situation at the monastery Devic. She 
was trying to reach the monastery by phone for several days. And since Devic is 
in Drenica, and you know that it is extremely unsafe there, she was afraid to 
go alone. She asked British for help, by they did not react,” said Hogard.

“The monastery was demolished, the relics of St. Joanikije were also broken, 
they were engraved with KLA and things like that. There were horrific reports 
about how the bandits treated the sisterhood of the monastery. We provided the 
sisterhood of the monastery with all the necessary help. My head of department, 
who was at the scene, told me that they will certainly return. I ordered that 
we wait for them, capture them and disarm, and we would later see what to do 
with them. Of course, in case they resisted, my soldiers were given permission 
to act. And so happened. They returned, they were wearing German uniforms, 
probably given to them by BND. My soldiers ordered them to stop and lay down 
their weapons, but Albanians started shooting. And then they realized there is 
a serious army in front of them, and that my soldiers have the permission to 
return fire. The gang quickly retreated under our fire, carrying the wounded 
and the dead,” said Hogard.



Sent from my iPad

-- 
Ову поруку сте добили зато што сте пријављени на Google групу „SERBIAN NEWS 
NETWORK“.
Да бисте отказали пријаву у ову групу и престали да примате имејлове од ње, 
пошаљите имејл на [email protected].
Да бисте постављали у овој групи, пошаљите е-поруку на [email protected].
Посетите ову групу на http://groups.google.com/group/senet.
За више опција посетите https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to