Russian tanks in Kosovo: 1 of 3 / NATO crimes in Yugoslavia
How Russians tried in 1999 to defend Kosovo Serbs from ehtnic cleansing by Albanians supported by NATO, which had been bombing Belgrade for several weeks to force Serbs out of Kosovo - their historical motherland. A documentary by Alexey Borzenko
Фильм-репортаж посвящен тому, как моторизованный батальон российских миротворческих сил в Боснии совершил в 1999 году, во время массированных бомбежек Югославии силами НАТО, бросок в Косово, чтобы продемонстрировать поддержку сербов и решимость России защищать их интересы в вопросе Косово. Насколько известно, команду о передислокации отдал один из начальников Генштаба, не согласовывая ее с руководством страны, за что этот начальник потом, по слухам, и пострадал. Ельцинское руководство не смогло и не захотело воспользоваться тактическими преимуществами, полученными в результате действий военных, и в скором времени сдало все позиции, в очередной раз "кинув" сербов. Тем не менее дерзкая акция, проведенная нашими миротворцами, вошла в историю, не в последнюю очередь благодаря этому репортажу. Это и не мудрено, поскольку больше нам гордиться в 1990-е годы было нечем.
Автор репортажа - Алексей Борзенко
Attack on Dubrovnik: City during the Yugoslavia Army attacks
Siege of Dubrovnik (Croatian: Opsada Dubrovnika) is a term marking the battle and siege of the city of Dubrovnik and the surrounding area in Croatia as part of the Croatian War of Independence. The siege was marked by severe bombardment of civilian targets, drawing much international attention.
Dubrovnik is an old city located in the southernmost part of Dalmatia. It is a well-known tourist destination (a UNESCO World Heritage site), and was therefore demilitarized during the Communist Yugoslavia because it was considered that military presence does not go hand to hand with tourism. Because of this, when Croatia voted for independence in 1991, it was one of the few major cities in Croatia not to have major JNA military forces in the area, which spared it during the September's Battle of the barracks.
Croatian military forces in the area at September were virtually non-existent [4] and were severely outgunned as the heaviest weapons available to them were two Soviet 76 millimeter artillery guns from 1942. [5]
The defenders included just one locally conscripted unit - the 163rd Infantry Brigade, which - along with local police forces and volunteers - numbered less than 1,500 men and had no tanks or heavy guns. Towards the end of the year, the defenders were reinforced with the IX (9th) HOS Infantry Battalion of less than 300 men.
The siege had immediately raised attention, as western reporters took pictures of the shelling (especially the Old City of Dubrovnik - a UNESCO World Heritage Site) - which drew international criticism of the JNA forces. The siege was heavily present in the international media, which pushed the pivotal and much more brutal Battle of Vukovar into second plan. Even before the siege, international Community attempted several treaties to limit JNA advances into overwhelmingly Croat areas, but these were broken by JNA without regard. [1]
International reactions did nothing to quell the brutal bombardment, however, and the shelling continued to the end of the year. Croatian Navy and coastal artillery had successfully repelled JNA Navy forces along Dalmatia, and the Navy withdrew to Montenegro naval base of Boka Kotorska, but the situation on the ground was still unfavorable. Towards the end of the year, Croatian defenders managed a small counterattack that was aimed at displacing the JNA from the surrounding mountains, but this did not end the shelling entirely.
Noted poet Milan Milišić became the first casualty of the shelling on October 5. On 6 December 1991, the heaviest shelling was reported on what came to be known as the St. Nicholas day bombardment, during which 13 civilians were killed and 60 wounded [4].
The last ceasefire went into effect at the end of the year and the shelling ended by 1992.
It was besieged and attacked by JNA and Montenegro forces in late 1991, with the major fighting ending in early 1992 and the Croatian counterattack finally lifting the siege and liberating the area in mid-1992.
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dubrovnik croatia balkan hrvatska yugoslavia serbia srbija bosnia bosna germany italy greece macedonia russia war rat
Dubrovnik War Yugoslavia Croatia Hrvatska Army Serbia Srbija Rat JNA Croatian Serbian Balkan Europe Chetniks Serbs Bosna
Yugoslavia:Prison of Croats, Udba:Titos killing machine 1/5
Death of Yugoslavia: The Struggle for Bosnia (3 of 3)
Beginning of War in Yugoslavia - Pocetak Rata u Jugoslaviji
Yellow Wasps
Anatomy of a War Crime
A Film by Ilan Ziv
This program chronicles the Yellow Wasps, a Serbian paramilitary unit operating in Bosnia in 1992. They called themselves volunteer patriots defending their people against its many enemies. But to their victims they are criminals, sent to pillage and murder as part of a long-standing plan of naked Serbian aggression. Now refugees, these people "cleansed" from their homes recount chilling tales of torture and massacre by the Yellow Wasps.
Filmed over two years, YELLOW WASPS documents a spurious war crimes trial held in Serbia itself. The trial of the Yellow Wasps provides a unique window into the roots of "ethnic cleansing." The film also examines in detail what high officials, from Serbian President Slobodan Milosovic to American Secretary of State Lawrence Eagleburger to United Nations special envoys, knew about the atrocities - and what they did with that knowledge.
The trial has since been concluded with the leaders of the Yellow Wasps receiving light sentences, but the questions remain: Can the victims of ethnic cleansing expect to find justice in a post-Cold War world, where morality and "realpolitik" often collide? And what did the world powers mean after the Holocaust when they vowed "Never Again?"
"A monument to the capacity for evil that we humans seem all too willing, even eager, to demonstrate."—New York Daily News
70 minutes / color
Release Date: 1996
Copyright Date: 1995
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