Ivo Skoric on Thu, 21 Nov 2002 18:52:01 +0100 (CET) |
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[Nettime-bold] Before the War |
Before the war against Iraq, just so people don't get to excited about American military superiority, after the resolute victory over Taliban (now, reports say that victory was due in large part to hefty bribes CIA delivered to Afghan warlords as an incentive for them to abandon Taliban...), maybe it is time to re-trace how well did the American military performed against those who trained Iraqis: Yugoslav Army. Yugoslav Army was a very serious military force, 4th by size in Europe, the state within a state (Yugoslavia today is a country of three entities: Serbia, ruled by Djindjic, Montenegro, ruled by Djukanovic, and the Army, ruled by Kostunica). After 70+ days of relentless bombing by the U.S./NATO in 1999 it was 'downsized' for meager 13 tanks (the T-55 ones) and 3 airplanes, as I recollect. On top of that the US lost one of its F-117 stealth aircraft, and never dared to fly an Apache helicopter or a C-130 transport plane over the country. American superiority works well against stone age dessert countries with near illiterate population. It doesn't work as well against an educated enemy. The only superiority America does have there is that of numbers - America's industry can produce by far the most bombs on planet and bomb others long enough to eventually win. As they have proven against Germany and Japan in 1945. ivo http://balkansnet.org/yugoslavery.html http://balkansnet.org/raccoon/kosova.html Tactics employed by the Yugoslav army to limit NATO air strikes effectiveness Mon Nov 18,10:49 PM ET By The Associated Press An overview of tactics employed by the Yugoslav army to limit the effectiveness of the NATO (news - web sites) air strikes: _Yugoslav air defenses tracked U.S. stealth aircraft by using old Russian radars operating on long wavelengths. This, combined with the loss of stealth characteristics when the jets got wet or opened their bomb bays, "made them shine like flying buses" on radar screens. _Radars confounded precision-guided HARM and ALARM missiles by reflecting their electromagnetic beams off heavy farm machinery, such as plows or old tractors placed around the sites. This cluttered the missiles' guidance systems which were unable to pinpoint the emitters. _Scout helicopters would land on flatbed trucks and rev their engines before being towed to camouflaged revetments several hundred meters away. Heat-seeking missiles from NATO jets would then locate and go after the residual heat on the landing sites. _Yugoslav troops used cheap heat-emitting decoys such as small gas furnaces to simulate nonexistent positions on Kosovo mountainsides. B-52 bombers, employing advanced infrared sensors, repeatedly blasted the empty hills. _The army drew up plans for covert placement of heat and microwave emitters on territory NATO troops were expected to occupy in a ground war. This was intended to trick the B-52s into carpet-bombing their own forces. _Dozens of dummy objectives, including fake bridges and airfields, were constructed. Many of the decoy planes were so good that NATO claimed that the Yugoslav air force had been decimated. After the war, it turned out most of its planes had survived unscathed. _Fake tanks were built using plastic sheeting, old tires and logs. To mimic heat emissions, cans were filled with sand and fuel and set alight. Hundreds of these makeshift decoys were bombed, leading to wildly inflated destruction claims. _Bridges and other strategic targets were defended from missiles with laser guidance systems by bonfires made of old tires and wet hay, which emit dense smoke filled with laser-reflecting particles. _U.S. bombs equipped with GPS guidance proved vulnerable to old electronic jammers that blocked their links with satellites. _Despite NATO's total air supremacy, Yugoslav jets flew combat missions over Kosovo at extremely low levels, using terrain masking to remain undetected by AWACS flying radars. _Weapons that performed well in Afghanistan (news - web sites) - Predator drones, Apache attack choppers and C-130 Hercules gunships - proved ineffective in Kosovo. Drones were easy targets for 1940s-era Hispano-Suisa anti-aircraft cannons, and C-130s and Apaches were considered too vulnerable to be deployed. _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://amsterdam.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold