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- Newsgroups: soc.culture.british
- Path: sparky!uunet!elroy.jpl.nasa.gov!sdd.hp.com!think.com!unixland!sharon
- From: sharon@unixland.natick.ma.us (Sharon Machlis Gartenberg)
- Subject: British Troops in Bosnia
- Message-ID: <1992Dec31.011409.2782@unixland.natick.ma.us>
- Summary: Troops say they can defend themselves against Serbs
- Organization: Unixland Public Access Unix (508) 655-3848
- Date: Thu, 31 Dec 1992 01:14:09 GMT
- Lines: 100
-
-
- Excerpted from the Monday, December 28, 1992 Washington Post
-
- ``No Panic in Britain's Thin Red Bosnian Line; U.N. Support Troops
- Dispute Their Vulnerability to Serb Attacks'' by Peter Maass
-
- VITEZ, Bosnia--It was, as a British officer might say, a cracking
- good show.
-
- During a recent patrol near the northeast Bosnian city of Tuzla, a
- convoy of British ``Warrior'' armored fighting vehicles was ambushed
- by Serb militia forces. The Serbs opened fire with everything they
- had--mortars, rocket-propelled grenades and other heavy weapons.
-
- The Serbs never made a dent. The 45 tracked British Warriors in
- Bosnia weigh 30 tons each, have reinforced armor plating, are
- armed with 30mm rapid-fire cannon and can race across the
- countryside at more than 50 mph. The next best thing to being in
- a bunker on a Balkan battlefield is to be in a Warrior.
-
- The Serb grenades ricocheted off the British armor, making
- ``poing'' sounds and leaving, at worst, small burn marks on the
- white paint identifying the Warriors as being under United Nations
- command. Instead of firing back, the British plowed ahead and did
- not stop until they reached the local Serb militia headquarters.
-
- ``We got out and shook their hands,'' said a British military
- spokesman. ``The Serbs couldn't believe it; they were amazed.''
- There was no immediate explanation of why the Serbs opened fire
- on the clearly market U.N. vehicles, but Serb commanders have
- explained such incidents in the past as regrettable accidents,
- or as the understandable reaction of Serb militiamen believing
- they were under attack.
-
- Nevertheless, that engagement--in which Serb pride was the
- only casualty--may have been the best demonstration yet that
- the U.N. troops most at risk in Bosnia's bloody factional war
- may not be as vulnerable as some Western leaders contend. ...
-
- [British Prime Minister John] Major's contention--as well as,
- to lesser extent, that of the French--has been that the
- destruction of Bosnian Serb aircraft, or their bases, could
- provoke Serb militia forces to launch revenge attacks against
- British and French ground troops helping deliver U.N.
- humanitarian aid to suffering Bosnian civilians.
-
- But British troops operating near the frontline here seem more
- than a bit bemused by such hand-wringing. Veterans of the Persian
- Gulf War and sectarian conflict in Northern Ireland, they don't
- quite understand what the fuss is about, and they especially
- don't like politicians portraying them as frightened, defenseless
- Boy Scouts. ``We don't feel so vulnerable,'' said the spokesman,
- who asked that his name not be used. ``We could give [the Serbs]
- a nasty headache if we wanted.''
-
- Indeed, officials of Bosnia's embattled Slavic Muslim-led government
- and some Western diplomats in the region argue that the continued
- focus on the vulnerability of U.N. relief troops is merely an excuse
- to put off intervention. ...
-
- Muslim advocates of intervention propose Western air strikes against
- Serb air bases, artillery batteries and other military targets in
- Serb-held Bosnia, and perhaps on their support bases in neighboring
- Serbia as well.
-
- This, the argument goes, would allow the Muslim-led government's
- lightly armed ground forces to engage the Serbs on more even
- terms; all the U.N. relief troops would have to do is hunker down and
- curtail their civilian aid operations. Bosnian government leaders
- have said repeatedly that they would gladly swap the relief
- operation for Western military intervention against the Serbs.
-
- The main threat to British and other U.N. ground forces would
- come from heavy artillery fire, according to the military
- spokesman. The frontline is about nine miles from the base here at
- Vitez, well within range of the Serbs' 155mm howitzers, and an accurate
- salvo could cause heavy casualties.
-
- But British officers here say that in a hostile situation, the
- Serbs would have to be precisely on target with their first shot,
- because their batteries would likely be silenced before a second
- or third round could be fired. The British army, like the U.S.
- Army, has advanced radar and thermal-sensing equipment that can
- quickly locate smoking artillery pieces and target them for
- retaliation.
-
- Serb artillery could be taken out in several ways, military
- officers say. The easiest method would be with air strikes, and although
- the British now have no long-range guns in place with which
- to return Serb artillery fire, such weapons could speedily be shipped
- here.
-
- ``The Serbs would be pretty stupid to take us on,'' boasted one
- British soldier as he relaxed here at an off-hours cafe where the
- video machine was playing an action movie called ``Beasts of War.''
- --
- Note: My current address (sharon@unixland.natick.ma.us) will be invalid
- as of 6 p.m. Dec. 31 because unixland is shutting down. My new address is
- sharon@world.std.com
- --
-