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F-117A Shot Down

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Unknown

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Mar 27, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/27/99
to
CNN is reporting that a US F-117A has been shot down.

How the hell did manage that?

rahmil

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Mar 27, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/27/99
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I saw it! There was wreckage! It was undoubtedly that of a Nighthawk! Oh my
G-D, this is terrible. I hope the pilot's ok. Oh G-D!
Adam Yoshida wrote in message <36fd6b32...@news.axion.net>...

David E. Powell

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Mar 27, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/27/99
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rahmil wrote in message <36fde...@news1.jps.net>...

>I saw it! There was wreckage! It was undoubtedly that of a Nighthawk! Oh my
>G-D, this is terrible. I hope the pilot's ok. Oh G-D!

Certain features of the wreckage appeared to look like that, including the
black paint scheme, but some F-15s have similar paint jobs. The Dutch are
now saying it was an F-15, and I share your concern for the crew/pilot. It
could be an F-15. Let's keep the speculation to a minimum. Anyone could be
reading this.

God bless our troops and keep them safe, including this crew.

David Powell

Juha Veijalainen

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Mar 27, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/27/99
to
In article <36fd6b32...@news.axion.net>, Adam Yoshida
(adam_y...@yahoo.com) says...

> CNN is reporting that a US F-117A has been shot down.
>
> How the hell did manage that?

Well, a F-117A is neither invincible nor invisible, despite some
enthusiastic claims. For example a BBC defense analyst said that on some
occasions British ships could detect it on radar from 150 km (or miles)
and that the Iraqis could sometimes detect them from 60 km. Depends of
course on the situation.


--
Juha Veijalainen, Helsinki, Finland, http://www.iki.fi/juhave/
Some random words: bomb,steganography,cryptography,reindeer
** Mielipiteet omiani ** Opinions personal, facts suspect **

David E. Powell

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Mar 27, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/27/99
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John Kirkland wrote in message
<922581167.29908.0...@news.demon.co.uk>...

>Adam Yoshida wrote in message <36fd6b32...@news.axion.net>...
>>CNN is reporting that a US F-117A has been shot down.
>>
>>How the hell did manage that?
>
>Luck, or LF (OTH) Radar.


SA-6 May be fired in visual mode, or perhaps it was a lucky grunt with an
SA-7 shoulder fired IR SAM.

>--
>
>That's all folks!
>John Kirkland | PGP RSA 0xA94DEA4F | I thought,
>Derby, England | PGP DH 0x823F7451 | therefore I was...


God bless our NATO troops and keep them safe.

David Powell

PS I agree with Andrew. Unless we are speaking of the F-117 in Naval Context
(Naval system [US/UK Radar, etc.] effectiveness regarding it, etc.)

David E. Powell

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Mar 27, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/27/99
to
Nikola Stojanovic wrote in message <7djv67$9ik$1...@SOLAIR2.EUnet.yu>...
>Why ? He is criminal


With all due respect, take a look at Afghanistan and Chechnya before you say
that about him. Actually, like those in Chechnya fighting for the Russian
Federation, this Pilot was trying to end a divisive and bloody Civil War.

David Powell

God bless and protect our NATO troops.

>rahmil wrote in message <36fde...@news1.jps.net>...
>>I saw it! There was wreckage! It was undoubtedly that of a Nighthawk! Oh
my
>>G-D, this is terrible. I hope the pilot's ok. Oh G-D!

Bigner

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Mar 27, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/27/99
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http://www.abcnews.go.com/wire/World/Reuters19990327_565.html
"Earlier Dutch Defence Minister Frank de Grave said he had received a
report
that a U.S. Air Force F-15 had been shot down over Serbia."

"David E. Powell" wrote:
>
> rahmil wrote in message <36fde...@news1.jps.net>...
> >I saw it! There was wreckage! It was undoubtedly that of a Nighthawk! Oh my
> >G-D, this is terrible. I hope the pilot's ok. Oh G-D!
>

> Certain features of the wreckage appeared to look like that, including the
> black paint scheme, but some F-15s have similar paint jobs. The Dutch are
> now saying it was an F-15, and I share your concern for the crew/pilot. It
> could be an F-15. Let's keep the speculation to a minimum. Anyone could be
> reading this.
>
> God bless our troops and keep them safe, including this crew.
>
> David Powell
>

Joe Chevere

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Mar 27, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/27/99
to
adam_y...@yahoo.com wrote:
>
> CNN is reporting that a US F-117A has been shot down.
>
> How the hell did manage that?

Golden BB

Joe Chevere

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Mar 27, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/27/99
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The networks showed a Pentagon press conference. The pilot was rescued!

Steve Hix

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Mar 27, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/27/99
to
In article <36FDD143...@propro.ru>, Vladimir Malukh <b...@propro.ru> wrote:

> "David E. Powell" wrote:
> >
> > rahmil wrote in message <36fde...@news1.jps.net>...
> > >I saw it! There was wreckage! It was undoubtedly that of a Nighthawk! Oh my
> > >G-D, this is terrible. I hope the pilot's ok. Oh G-D!
> >
> > Certain features of the wreckage appeared to look like that, including the
> > black paint scheme, but some F-15s have similar paint jobs. The Dutch are
> > now saying it was an F-15, and I share your concern for the crew/pilot. It
> > could be an F-15. Let's keep the speculation to a minimum. Anyone could be
> > reading this.
> >
>

> Common, guy - Pentagon admitted, that it was
> "super-puper-duper" F-117.

The next question being, what brought it down?

Paul Cassidy

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Mar 28, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/28/99
to
Are we sure it was an F-117. The wreckage looked wrong to me. For a start it
seemed to be grey not black. There were some markings, including the words
"Air combat...".

Juha Veijalainen wrote in message ...


>In article <36fd6b32...@news.axion.net>, Adam Yoshida
>(adam_y...@yahoo.com) says...

>> CNN is reporting that a US F-117A has been shot down.
>>
>> How the hell did manage that?
>

John Kirkland

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Mar 28, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/28/99
to
Adam Yoshida wrote in message <36fd6b32...@news.axion.net>...
>CNN is reporting that a US F-117A has been shot down.
>
>How the hell did manage that?

Luck, or LF (OTH) Radar.


Paul Cassidy

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Mar 28, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/28/99
to
OTOH, the tail numbers do match an F-117.

Not good!


Paul Cassidy wrote in message <7djsvb$b83f$1...@reader3.wxs.nl>...


>Are we sure it was an F-117. The wreckage looked wrong to me. For a start
it
>seemed to be grey not black. There were some markings, including the words
>"Air combat...".
>
>Juha Veijalainen wrote in message ...
>>In article <36fd6b32...@news.axion.net>, Adam Yoshida
>>(adam_y...@yahoo.com) says...

>>> CNN is reporting that a US F-117A has been shot down.
>>>
>>> How the hell did manage that?
>>

Brian Trosko

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Mar 28, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/28/99
to
Paul Cassidy <paul.c...@wxs.nl> writes:
: Are we sure it was an F-117. The wreckage looked wrong to me. For a start it

: seemed to be grey not black. There were some markings, including the words
: "Air combat...".

The sawtooth edged surface is a dead giveaway, and the markings HO AF
82-806 match an F-117 out of Holliman.

Juha Veijalainen

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Mar 28, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/28/99
to
In article <7djsvb$b83f$1...@reader3.wxs.nl>, paul.c...@wxs.nl says...

> Are we sure it was an F-117. The wreckage looked wrong to me. For a start it
> seemed to be grey not black. There were some markings, including the words
> "Air combat...".

Sky TV from Britain just said that Italian government sources at Aviano
had confirmed that one F-117A did not return. Neither Nato nor Pentagon
have confirmed. An embarrassing leak...

Andrew C. Toppan

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Mar 28, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/28/99
to
adam_y...@yahoo.com (AdamYoshida) was seen to write:
> CNN is reporting that a US F-117A has been shot down.

Damnit, the F-117 is not a NAVAL aircraft, so this doesn't belong in
sci.military.NAVAL!

--
Andrew Toppan --- acto...@gwi.net --- "I speak only for myself"
US Naval & Shipbuilding Museum/USS Salem Online - http://www.uss-salem.org/
Naval History, World Navies Today, Photo Features, Military FAQs, and more

Nikola Stojanovic

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Mar 28, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/28/99
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Why ? He is criminal

rahmil wrote in message <36fde...@news1.jps.net>...


>I saw it! There was wreckage! It was undoubtedly that of a Nighthawk! Oh my
>G-D, this is terrible. I hope the pilot's ok. Oh G-D!

>Adam Yoshida wrote in message <36fd6b32...@news.axion.net>...

>>CNN is reporting that a US F-117A has been shot down.
>>

Nikola Stojanovic

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Mar 28, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/28/99
to
How sad :(
Paul Cassidy wrote in message <7djtc6$anvf$1...@reader3.wxs.nl>...

>OTOH, the tail numbers do match an F-117.
>
>Not good!
>
>
>Paul Cassidy wrote in message <7djsvb$b83f$1...@reader3.wxs.nl>...
>>Are we sure it was an F-117. The wreckage looked wrong to me. For a start
>it
>>seemed to be grey not black. There were some markings, including the words
>>"Air combat...".
>>
>>Juha Veijalainen wrote in message ...
>>>In article <36fd6b32...@news.axion.net>, Adam Yoshida
>>>(adam_y...@yahoo.com) says...
>>>> CNN is reporting that a US F-117A has been shot down.
>>>>
>>>> How the hell did manage that?
>>>
>>>Well, a F-117A is neither invincible nor invisible, despite some
>>>enthusiastic claims. For example a BBC defense analyst said that on some
>>>occasions British ships could detect it on radar from 150 km (or miles)
>>>and that the Iraqis could sometimes detect them from 60 km. Depends of
>>>course on the situation.
>>>
>>>

Keith Willshaw

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Mar 28, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/28/99
to

Juha Veijalainen wrote in message ...
>
>Sky TV from Britain just said that Italian government sources at Aviano
>had confirmed that one F-117A did not return. Neither Nato nor Pentagon
>have confirmed. An embarrassing leak...
>--


Sigh what is it with people in this newsgroup tonight

Who are you hiding the data from if you don't leak

The Serbs are standing round looking the F***ing plane
burn they already know all about it. Holding back until
you inform relatives is sensible but NOT when its on CNN.

Keith

Krztalizer

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Mar 28, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/28/99
to
>>How the hell did manage that??>>

the Golden BB.

Jeff Rankin-Lowe

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Mar 28, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/28/99
to

Nikola Stojanovic wrote:

> Why ? He is criminal

Right, and the Serb army and police who get their kicks from slaughtering
unarmed civilians, including women and children, are a bunch of angels.

Jeff Rankin-Lowe


Velovich

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Mar 28, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/28/99
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>I saw it! There was wreckage! It was undoubtedly that of a Nighthawk! Oh my
>G-D, this is terrible. I hope the pilot's ok. Oh G-D!

What? you thought this would be bloodless??? Get a grip! Two rules apply
to war:

1) Men die.

2) Nobody can change Rule #1.


<*> V-Man
A Knight is sworn to Valor
His Heart knows only Virtue
His Blade defends the Weak
His Word speaks only Truth
His Wrath undoes the Wicked

Delete the ".CanDo" from my addy to reply!

Velovich

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Mar 28, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/28/99
to
> Let's keep the speculation to a minimum. Anyone could be
>reading this.

AOL news (ABC derived) quotes a defense official that an F-117 is missing.

Miroslav

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Mar 28, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/28/99
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Good! There is no joke with US! Your medias are publishing major lies
about us, now you'll get what you wanted.

Paul Cassidy wrote:
>
> Not good!
>
--
Regards from Yugoslavia,
Miroslav - miro...@gamestats.com

Stanley

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Mar 28, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/28/99
to

David E. Powell wrote:

> Nikola Stojanovic wrote in message <7djv67$9ik$1...@SOLAIR2.EUnet.yu>...

> >Why ? He is criminal
>

Nikola with all respect due you he was no more a criminal than the troops he was
attacking. As a veteran I believe most people fight for there country right or
wrong. The criminals are those politicians that send these young warriors were
they would not go themselves. I pray for peace so that the lives of civilians
and fighting men on both sides may be able to go home and watch their children
grow old.

--
Stanley

Vladimir Malukh

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Mar 28, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/28/99
to

"David E. Powell" wrote:
>
> rahmil wrote in message <36fde...@news1.jps.net>...

> >I saw it! There was wreckage! It was undoubtedly that of a Nighthawk! Oh my
> >G-D, this is terrible. I hope the pilot's ok. Oh G-D!
>

> Certain features of the wreckage appeared to look like that, including the
> black paint scheme, but some F-15s have similar paint jobs. The Dutch are
> now saying it was an F-15, and I share your concern for the crew/pilot. It

> could be an F-15. Let's keep the speculation to a minimum. Anyone could be
> reading this.
>

Common, guy - Pentagon admitted, that it was
"super-puper-duper" F-117.

Vladimir Malukh
-----------------------------------------
ProPro Group http://www.propro.ru
----------------------------------------

Vladimir Malukh

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Mar 28, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/28/99
to

"David E. Powell" wrote:
>
> Nikola Stojanovic wrote in message <7djv67$9ik$1...@SOLAIR2.EUnet.yu>...
> >Why ? He is criminal
>

> With all due respect, take a look at Afghanistan and Chechnya before you say
> that about him. Actually, like those in Chechnya fighting for the Russian
> Federation, this Pilot was trying to end a divisive and bloody Civil War.
>

Chechnya, Afganistan and Yugoslavia - all three are different matters.

1. Chechnya is part of Russian Federation, so russian government
is ALLOWED BY LOW to send troops and aircrafts over
there. I personally I disagree, that this was necessar,
but still government has this right.

2. Soviet troops in Afganistan (as US in Vietnam) were invited
by local legal governement (no matter that they were actually
puppet governments), so from low point of view it was correct.
Again, I personally disagree with position of SU governemt
in Afganistan.

3. No one, who has a legal rights, invited NATO in Yogoslavia.
No one, who has a legal rights, ordered these strikes.
This is the case of pure agression, so pilot from
Ygoslavian side is just a criminal - ordninary
prisoner of war. Did you remebered Afganistan or
Chechnya or Vietnam when serbs MiGs were shot dow
days ago?

That's it.

Paul Cassidy

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Mar 28, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/28/99
to
How do you know they are lies?

If you are Serbian, your media is state controlled. How do you explain
interviews with refugees crossing the border into the surrounding countries
who are all saying about Serb atrocities.

No one is saying that all Serbs are bad, or that all are involved.

Many Germans didn't know about the holocaust. But don't close your eyes just
because you TV station isn't agreeing with the rest of the worlds press,
Nato and the UN.


Miroslav wrote in message <36FDA25B...@gamestats.com>...

Vladimir Malukh

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Mar 28, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/28/99
to

Paul Cassidy wrote:

> If you are Serbian, your media is state controlled. How do you explain
> interviews with refugees crossing the border into the surrounding countries
> who are all saying about Serb atrocities.

So, NATO strikes have reduced the refugee number?



> No one is saying that all Serbs are bad, or that all are involved.
>
> Many Germans didn't know about the holocaust.

Still, most of them used to belive that germans are
superior nation, and this believment made possible
all those horrible things.

> But don't close your eyes just
> because you TV station isn't agreeing with the rest of the worlds press,
> Nato and the UN.

Hey, what the f..k you are talking about? The rest of the world?
What about Russia, China and India? It's almost half of
world population. What about almost half of US sitizens?


Vladimir Malukh

Velovich

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Mar 28, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/28/99
to
>3. No one, who has a legal rights, invited NATO in Yogoslavia.

Fine. Fact is, your nation signed off on teh UN Charter. In taht document,
you agreed to NOT commit crimes like this. What, you guys just liars???

Keith Willshaw

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Mar 28, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/28/99
to

Jeff Rankin-Lowe wrote in message <36FD98E7...@on.aibn.com>...

>
>Right, and the Serb army and police who get their kicks from slaughtering
>unarmed civilians, including women and children, are a bunch of angels.
>
>Jeff Rankin-Lowe
>


Jeff please replace the word Angels with Targets

Keith

Andrew P Pavacic

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Mar 28, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/28/99
to
In article <#F5H4yKe#GA....@upnetnews02.moswest.msn.net>,

David E. Powell <David_Po...@email.msn.com> wrote:
> It
>could be an F-15. Let's keep the speculation to a minimum.

It could be a UFO from Alpha Centauri.

> Anyone could be
>reading this.

Elvis could be reading this.

-Andrew Pavacic


José Herculano

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Mar 28, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/28/99
to
> How sad :(

I'd also be sad if Milosevish was my ruler and if I had to live in
yugoslavia. ;-)

José Herculano


tj1...@my-dejanews.com

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Mar 28, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/28/99
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In article <7djsvb$b83f$1...@reader3.wxs.nl>,

"Paul Cassidy" <paul.c...@wxs.nl> wrote:
> Are we sure it was an F-117. The wreckage looked wrong to me. For a start it
> seemed to be grey not black. There were some markings, including the words
> "Air combat...".
>

AAARGH! Not another one!!! All the markings are correct. The "Air Combat.."
thing is the sheild of the USAF Air Combat Command. The F-117A Nighthawk
aircraft operated by the 49th Fighter Wing - Holloman, AFB, New Mexico.
(currently operating a number of F-117s from Aviano, Italy). Within the 49th
OG these are operated by the 7th/8th/9th Fighter Squadrons. In some light
conditions the special paint can look a grey colour. This can be seen on
U-2,SR- 71s. The greying of the paint on the film footage was caused by ash
debris covering the wreckage. F-117s during their testing phase flew in both
desert camouflage and a light grey paint scheme. Aircraft number 780 has been
seen in these schemes. TJ.

-----------== Posted via Deja News, The Discussion Network ==----------
http://www.dejanews.com/ Search, Read, Discuss, or Start Your Own

Paul Cassidy

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Mar 28, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/28/99
to

tj1...@my-dejanews.com wrote in message <7dlant$vip$1...@nnrp1.dejanews.com>...

>In article <7djsvb$b83f$1...@reader3.wxs.nl>,
> "Paul Cassidy" <paul.c...@wxs.nl> wrote:
>> Are we sure it was an F-117. The wreckage looked wrong to me. For a start
it
>> seemed to be grey not black. There were some markings, including the
words
>> "Air combat...".
>>
>
>AAARGH! Not another one!!! All the markings are correct. The "Air Combat.."
>thing is the sheild of the USAF Air Combat Command. The F-117A Nighthawk
>aircraft operated by the 49th Fighter Wing - Holloman, AFB, New Mexico.
>(currently operating a number of F-117s from Aviano, Italy). Within the
49th
>OG these are operated by the 7th/8th/9th Fighter Squadrons. In some light
>conditions the special paint can look a grey colour. This can be seen on
>U-2,SR- 71s. The greying of the paint on the film footage was caused by ash
>debris covering the wreckage. F-117s during their testing phase flew in
both
>desert camouflage and a light grey paint scheme. Aircraft number 780 has
been
>seen in these schemes. TJ.
>


The post was actually made very early on, before it was confirmed. I did
actually post a retraction later, but I take your point! :)

cool_geek

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Mar 28, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/28/99
to
rahmil wrote:
>
> I saw it! There was wreckage! It was undoubtedly that of a Nighthawk! Oh my
> G-D, this is terrible. I hope the pilot's ok. Oh G-D!
> Adam Yoshida wrote in message <36fd6b32...@news.axion.net>...
> >CNN is reporting that a US F-117A has been shot down.
> >
> >How the hell did manage that?
so much to ur so called stealth technology, haha.

Stanley

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Mar 28, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/28/99
to

Vladimir Malukh wrote:

As far as the media goes both sides spin their on governments lies until forced
into telling the truth. This is the way it has been in every war, cold or hot.
The trouble with this one is the US has a leader that has proven that he is
incapable of telling the truth to his on people about anything.

It is true that only 53% of the US are for the bombing, but don't mistake this as
not backing the troops. We all understand that the sailors, soldiers and airman
of any country have to go were they are sent no matter how much they agree or
disagree with their mission. Remember it is the politicians that start the wars
and sit safely at home while the youth and sometimes naive youth are forced to
fight and die in their wars for them.

Lets be thankful that the pilot of the F-117 bomber is safe and hope that his
mission was aborted before it killed anyone.

Stanley

Robert Williams

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Mar 28, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/28/99
to

Adam Yoshida wrote in message <36fd6b32...@news.axion.net>...
>CNN is reporting that a US F-117A has been shot down.
>
>How the hell did manage that?

May not have been shot down, but crashed in some way.

Rob


gws

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Mar 28, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/28/99
to
God! The certainty of youth.

Grey Satterfield

Vladimir Malukh wrote in message <36FDD0CA...@propro.ru>...


>
>
>"David E. Powell" wrote:
>>
>> Nikola Stojanovic wrote in message
<7djv67$9ik$1...@SOLAIR2.EUnet.yu>...
>> >Why ? He is criminal
>>
>> With all due respect, take a look at Afghanistan and Chechnya
before you say
>> that about him. Actually, like those in Chechnya fighting for
the Russian
>> Federation, this Pilot was trying to end a divisive and bloody
Civil War.
>>
>
>Chechnya, Afganistan and Yugoslavia - all three are different
matters.
>
>1. Chechnya is part of Russian Federation, so russian government
>is ALLOWED BY LOW to send troops and aircrafts over
>there. I personally I disagree, that this was necessar,
>but still government has this right.
>
>2. Soviet troops in Afganistan (as US in Vietnam) were invited
>by local legal governement (no matter that they were actually
>puppet governments), so from low point of view it was correct.
>Again, I personally disagree with position of SU governemt
>in Afganistan.
>

>3. No one, who has a legal rights, invited NATO in Yogoslavia.

Patrick Pemberton

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Mar 28, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/28/99
to

Vladimir Malukh banged on the keyboard to say:


>1. Chechnya is part of Russian Federation, so russian government
>is ALLOWED BY LOW to send troops and aircrafts over
>there. I personally I disagree, that this was necessar,
>but still government has this right.

Oh I don't know...we could get into a Lockian discussion of the consent of
the governed...otherwise we here might still be British, and only bathe once
a week <g>

-Patrick
54 days left and counting...

me...@ibm.net

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Mar 28, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/28/99
to
John Kirkland wrote:
>
> Adam Yoshida wrote in message <36fd6b32...@news.axion.net>...
> >CNN is reporting that a US F-117A has been shot down.
> >
> >How the hell did manage that?
>
> Luck, or LF (OTH) Radar.
>

Not everything is radar guided. At if it was low enough a ZSU-23-4 can
pump
enough lead into the air to down one.

Shea

me...@ibm.net

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Mar 28, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/28/99
to
Vladimir Malukh wrote:
>
> Chechnya, Afganistan and Yugoslavia - all three are different matters.
>
> 1. Chechnya is part of Russian Federation, so russian government
> is ALLOWED BY LOW to send troops and aircrafts over
> there. I personally I disagree, that this was necessar,
> but still government has this right.

No government is allowed by law to slaughter its citizens, period.
Any government that suppresses those very citizens a redress of
grievances should expect an uprising and by natural law they
(the citizens) have _that_ right.

Shea

Charles Booher

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Mar 28, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/28/99
to

>CNN is reporting that a US F-117A has been shot down.
>
>How the hell did manage that?

It probably just broke. They are very delicate airplanes.

They should be using Strike Eagles.

The Incredible Goofball of War

unread,
Mar 29, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/29/99
to
In article <MPG.11679c48c...@news.inet.fi>,
juh...@zdnetmail.com (Juha Veijalainen) wrote:
> In article <36fd6b32...@news.axion.net>, Adam Yoshida
> (adam_y...@yahoo.com) says...

> > CNN is reporting that a US F-117A has been shot down.
> >
> > How the hell did manage that?
>
> Well, a F-117A is neither invincible nor invisible, despite some
> enthusiastic claims. For example a BBC defense analyst said that on some
> occasions British ships could detect it on radar from 150 km (or miles)
> and that the Iraqis could sometimes detect them from 60 km. Depends of
> course on the situation.
>
> --
> Juha Veijalainen, Helsinki, Finland, http://www.iki.fi/juhave/
> Some random words: bomb,steganography,cryptography,reindeer
> ** Mielipiteet omiani ** Opinions personal, facts suspect **
>

Stealthy aircraft are detectable using long-wavelength radar. Of course, long
wavelengths introduce large uncertainties as to the aircraft's actual
position. This can problem can be corrected using interferometry, which takes
a couple of radar sites separated by some distance illuminating the same
aircraft. Are the Yugos this advanced? Who knows?

Maybe the AA crews made visual contact, in which case it's as vulnerable as
any other plane. The shot may well have been a golden BB too.

--
The Incredible Goofball of War
Spam away. I promise never to check this e-mail address.

cxvkl;dfsioperwq-45iop4trjkl;rgsm,./sdm,./sdv

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Mar 29, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/29/99
to
On Sun, 28 Mar 1999 19:05:08 +0100, "Robert Williams" <Rs...@tesco.net>
wrote:

>
>Adam Yoshida wrote in message <36fd6b32...@news.axion.net>...

>>CNN is reporting that a US F-117A has been shot down.
>>
>>How the hell did manage that?
>

>May not have been shot down, but crashed in some way.
>
>Rob

Ditto that. Rumors are a computer screwup in the Pentagon
was noticed at the same time. Maybe related to the planes remote
destruct option... who knows.


Chuang Shyue Chou

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Mar 29, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/29/99
to
 
cxvkl;dfsioperwq-45iop4trjkl;rgsm,./sdm,./sdv <jack...@erols.com> wrote in message news:36fefc9c...@news.erols.com...

> Ditto that. Rumors are a computer screwup in the Pentagon
> was noticed at the same time. Maybe related to the planes remote
> destruct option... who knows.
 
Anyway, a reporter from the Independent reported twelve bullet holes. Whether, that is from the aftermath is unclear. The F-117A could have been hit by AAA or, through sheer bad luck, by some small calibre rounds!
 
Here's the report from the Independent.
 
 
 
Into a peasant village, falls a hi-tech
 
Robert Fisk in Budjanovci
IT FELL FROM the sky like a meteor, this piece of 21st- century state-of-the-art technology, an invisible jet from New Mexico crashing into the carefully ploughed fields of a quiet village whose peasants pray in a delicate, domed, Baroque church and keep armies of pigeons in their cottage roofs.
 
Even the grey-bearded priest stood in his cassock among the bronzed-skinned villagers as they took out big, sharp-bladed agricultural knives and hacked at the midnight-black wing with its US markings and 12 bullet holes.
 
So, yesterday morning, while Nato spokesmen were trying to explain the loss of an F-117A Stealth Nighthawk fighter-bomber over Yugoslavia, the people of Budjanovci, 25 miles north-west of Belgrade, were stuffing pieces of wing-tip and dark-plastic fabric into the drawers of old wooden cupboards. Children danced on the wing as parents took snapshots for posterity.
 
For all time - in this cold, damp corner of the Vojvodina plain - the village of Budjanovci will be The Place Where The Plane Fell Out Of The Sky.
 
Old Milica Lalosevic will never forget it, and she told her story yesterday with the kind of passion that revealed a lot about her ancient village and about war. "Every night, we in our family hear the bombings," she told me. "When we see and hear the doors slamming and the walls moving, we get dressed. But last night we heard a plane that seemed to be turning in the sky above us.
 
"I wanted to open the door and go out but my husband Gavra told me not to."
 
Mrs Lalosevic opened her arms in front of her. "There was such a fire," she said. "When we left the yard, the plane was on fire on the ground. The whole of Europe was lit up by the fire. If a needle was on the grass, we would have found it."
 
The American fighter was easy to find. It burned, according to the Yugoslav air defence men, for hours - first exploding on the ground, then bursting once more into flames as its fuel ignited. No one could explain how the pilot had escaped, although a peasant from a village 11 miles away said military equipment had been found nearby and helicopter rotor blades had been heard early in the morning. The rescue had come swiftly. It may have come from United States forces just across the border in Bosnia. However it was accomplished, the pilot is safely back at his base in Aviano.
 
But this did not spoil the Serb enthusiasm for their victory. All day, Belgrade radio and television were trumpeting the plane's loss - and yesterday was Serbian National Day, anniversary of the new constitution of Serbia created after the autonomy of Kosovo and Vojvodina was rescinded, the very act which arguably began the whole terrible tragedy of the Kosovo-Serbia war.
 
Was it true, one of the peasants asked me, that this great plane cost $45m? If it had cost $450, his surprise would have been the same.
 
One old man, his white hair blowing wildly in the wind, his mouth containing only a few worn teeth, kept rubbing a sliver of steel against his coat and looking at it as if a genie would emerge from its bright, buffed exterior. Another peasant rubbed a cloth on the American star insignia, as if trying to erase its nationality.
 
Behind him, the village men were still carving up the wing, hacking and slashing at the dark material as if it were a piece of the True Cross, something to be brought out over the years to show what Serbia could do in its battle against overwhelming odds.
 
Yugoslav officials were not slow to discover its origins. Even there in the cold fields, one told me the jet's history.
 
It was, he said, part of a US Air Combat Command F-117A unit which belonged to the 450th Tactical Group - now the 49th Fighter Wing - at Holloman Air Force Base in New Mexico, a fighter flown to Europe in October, now from the Nato base at Aviano. One could only be stunned by the detail. But how was it brought down? The burned fuselage lay behind a hedgerow a quarter of a mile from the village road, guarded by militiamen. The wing nearest the road had been punctured by 12 bullets, all of large calibre and apparently all penetrating the wing from above.
 
Either a Serb MiG had caught the Stealth above Budjanovci or anti-aircraft fire had hit the aircraft as it turned over the village, its wings visible as it banked - the only moment the plane becomes vulnerable as radar breaks through the paint on its wings.
 
More villagers arrived on tractors, some with rakes on their backs. An old, toothless woman emerged from a farmhouse carrying a broom made of straw. Pigeons fluttered over the fields. A farmer began to explain to us how simple it was to produce paint which makes things invisible. "I know about these things because I used to be a mechanic."
 
In these old Habsburg lands, nothing - not even the sudden, fiery arrival of Nato's most powerful jet - is a mystery.
 
Many of these men and women remembered the Second World War - there is a carefully polished memorial to the 1941-45 Partisan dead opposite Budjanovci's blue-and-white church - and recalled how villagers had hidden crashed American pilots from the Nazis until the Serbs could smuggle them across Yugoslavia to the Adriatic and freedom.
 
It was an odd reflection on history that the latest American pilot to land in Yugoslavia should have to be smuggled out by his own people as his former allies hunted for him in the damp fields of the Vojvodina.
 
It took just an hour to drive over the railway crossing and back down Tito's "Highway of Brotherhood and Unity" to Belgrade with an escort of Yugoslav army officers.
 
They were silent as we drove towards the Danube, passing the sealed gates of the US embassy. But I couldn't help noticing the graffiti on the American mission: a series of black swastikas painted on the locked doors.
 
 
 

 

Keith Willshaw

unread,
Mar 29, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/29/99
to

Joe Chevere wrote in message <36FDAC...@silverlink.net>...
>The networks showed a Pentagon press conference. The pilot was rescued!

Gents please trim the newsgroups in your postings
I've already had to bail from R.A.M I'd hate to lose this one
as well

Keith

Anthony de Vries

unread,
Mar 29, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/29/99
to

me...@ibm.net wrote:


>
> John Kirkland wrote:
> >
> > Adam Yoshida wrote in message <36fd6b32...@news.axion.net>...
> > >CNN is reporting that a US F-117A has been shot down.
> > >
> > >How the hell did manage that?
> >

> > Luck, or LF (OTH) Radar.
> >
>
> Not everything is radar guided. At if it was low enough a ZSU-23-4 can
> pump
> enough lead into the air to down one.

The ZSU-23 is radar guided... :-)

Anthony.

ANDREW BREEN

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Mar 29, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/29/99
to
In article <36FF7575...@arago.utwente.nl>,

During the second (or third, one loses count...) Gulf War, RN Type 42
destroyers were regularly finding their fire-control radars locking
onto F117s which were where they shouldn't have been. Comments from
out of Devonport (and no, I'm _not_ going to name sources in detail here!)
indicate that they could track them pretty reliably.
I can't recall off-hand whether the radar on all of the T42s had been
upgraded - if not, it means that F117s can be tracked with 1950s radar.
If so, you need a good late-80s set.
So the F117s are certainly not radar-invisible - a lower RCS than most
aeroplanes, certainly, but not invisible to a decent radar set with
a competant operator.

Hey, we've actually got some naval content in this thread!

--
Andy Breen ~ PPARC Advanced Research Fellow
Solar Physics Group
University of Wales, Aberystwyth
My posting, my opinions......

gws

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Mar 29, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/29/99
to
Keith Willshaw <keith_w...@compuserve.com> wrote in message
news:O3r68#Ve#GA....@nih2naaa.prod2.compuserve.com...
>
> Patrick Pemberton wrote in message
<7dm4qm$238$1...@geraldo.cc.utexas.edu>...

> >Oh I don't know...we could get into a Lockian discussion of
the consent of
> >the governed...otherwise we here might still be British, and
only bathe
> once
> >a week <g>
>
> Once a week! God no wonder you Americans are so effete
>
> Once a year whether I need it or not <grin>

I had heard we Murkins called about everything but "effete" until
Keith laid that one on us, too. The OED definition for "Effete"
in the sense I think Keith used it is: "fig Of persons in an
intellectual sense, of systems, etc.: That has exhausted its
vigour and energy; incapable of efficient action. Also, of
persons: weak, ineffectual; degenerate. More recently,
effeminate." Is that us? Just because we bathe? God, I hope
not! (>:

Grey Satterfield

wolfs...@my-dejanews.com

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Mar 29, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/29/99
to
In article <36fefc9c...@news.erols.com>,

jack...@erols.com (cxvkl;dfsioperwq-45iop4trjkl;rgsm,./sdm,./sdv) wrote:
> On Sun, 28 Mar 1999 19:05:08 +0100, "Robert Williams" <Rs...@tesco.net>
> wrote:
>
> >
> >Adam Yoshida wrote in message <36fd6b32...@news.axion.net>...
> >>CNN is reporting that a US F-117A has been shot down.
> >>
> >>How the hell did manage that?
> >
> >May not have been shot down, but crashed in some way.
> >
> >Rob
>
> Ditto that. Rumors are a computer screwup in the Pentagon
> was noticed at the same time. Maybe related to the planes remote
> destruct option... who knows.
>
>

There is a reason why the pilots nicknamed it the Wobbly Goblin.. They've
lost six of 'em to crashes already. (Not coun'ting the test prototype that
crashed a while back in Nevada)

WolfShadow
Strike from the shadows!

wolfs...@my-dejanews.com

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Mar 29, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/29/99
to
In article <36FF7575...@arago.utwente.nl>,
Anthony de Vries <Ant...@arago.utwente.nl> wrote:
>
>
> me...@ibm.net wrote:
> >
> > John Kirkland wrote:
> > >
> > > Adam Yoshida wrote in message <36fd6b32...@news.axion.net>...
> > > >CNN is reporting that a US F-117A has been shot down.
> > > >
> > > >How the hell did manage that?
> > >
> > > Luck, or LF (OTH) Radar.
> > >
> >
> > Not everything is radar guided. At if it was low enough a ZSU-23-4 can
> > pump
> > enough lead into the air to down one.
>
> The ZSU-23 is radar guided... :-)
>
> Anthony.
>
Electro-Optical and Prob Night-Vision back ups to the radar...

If you can see it, most of the time you can shoot it down...

Lloyd R. Parker

unread,
Mar 29, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/29/99
to
Vladimir Malukh (b...@propro.ru) wrote:
:
:
: Paul Cassidy wrote:
:
: > If you are Serbian, your media is state controlled. How do you explain
: > interviews with refugees crossing the border into the surrounding countries
: > who are all saying about Serb atrocities.
:
: So, NATO strikes have reduced the refugee number?


NATO isn't striking Kosovo yet.

:
: > No one is saying that all Serbs are bad, or that all are involved.


: >
: > Many Germans didn't know about the holocaust.
:
: Still, most of them used to belive that germans are
: superior nation, and this believment made possible
: all those horrible things.
:
: > But don't close your eyes just
: > because you TV station isn't agreeing with the rest of the worlds press,
: > Nato and the UN.
:
: Hey, what the f..k you are talking about? The rest of the world?
: What about Russia, China and India? It's almost half of
: world population. What about almost half of US sitizens?

:

None of which had news crews there; 2 of which don't have independent news
media at all.

--TIGGER--

unread,
Mar 29, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/29/99
to wolfs...@my-dejanews.com
Hey WolfShadow-checkout my website, read the facts please.
Oh, and I have an accurat count so you can correct those numbers also.
-Kevin Helm

------------------------------Kevin Helm------------------------------
| Homepage: http://www-scf.usc.edu/~khelm |
_______ F-117A Site: http://www-scf.usc.edu/~khelm/Shabah.html ______

On Mon, 29 Mar 1999 wolfs...@my-dejanews.com wrote:

> There is a reason why the pilots nicknamed it the Wobbly Goblin.. They've
> lost six of 'em to crashes already. (Not coun'ting the test prototype that
> crashed a while back in Nevada)
>

Patrick Pemberton

unread,
Mar 29, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/29/99
to

On Mon, 29 Mar 1999 wolfs...@my-dejanews.com wrote:

> Electro-Optical and Prob Night-Vision back ups to the radar...
>
> If you can see it, most of the time you can shoot it down...

Why is it so hard to believe that they saw the silly thing on radar and
knocked it down? Without tomohawks and HARM's knocking out everything
radiating this time, it was a far better test, and maybe the air scout's
toy just didn't work as well as they want you to believe. After all, most
of their toys are still too expensive to risk in combat (gasp). What an
excuse. I just want them to admit that illiterate farmers with older
equipment took out their silver bullet.


John Lansford

unread,
Mar 29, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/29/99
to
lpa...@emory.edu (Lloyd R. Parker) wrote:

>Vladimir Malukh (b...@propro.ru) wrote:
>:
>:
>: Paul Cassidy wrote:
>:
>: > If you are Serbian, your media is state controlled. How do you explain
>: > interviews with refugees crossing the border into the surrounding countries
>: > who are all saying about Serb atrocities.
>:
>: So, NATO strikes have reduced the refugee number?
>
>
>NATO isn't striking Kosovo yet.

They aren't? Who has been dropping all those bombs around Pristina,
then?
>:
John Lansford

The unofficial I-26 Construction Webpage:
http://users.vnet.net/lansford/a10/

me...@ibm.net

unread,
Mar 29, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/29/99
to
Anthony de Vries wrote:
>
> me...@ibm.net wrote:
> >
> > John Kirkland wrote:
> > >
> > > Adam Yoshida wrote in message <36fd6b32...@news.axion.net>...
> > > >CNN is reporting that a US F-117A has been shot down.
> > > >
> > > >How the hell did manage that?
> > >
> > > Luck, or LF (OTH) Radar.
> > >
> >
> > Not everything is radar guided. At if it was low enough a ZSU-23-4 can
> > pump
> > enough lead into the air to down one.
>
> The ZSU-23 is radar guided... :-)

And (gasp) it can also be fired without it. Iron sights and the
Mk I eyeball.

Shea

Thomas Schoene

unread,
Mar 30, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/30/99
to
ANDREW BREEN <a...@aber.ac.uk> wrote in article
> During the second (or third, one loses count...) Gulf War, RN Type
42
> destroyers were regularly finding their fire-control radars locking
> onto F117s which were where they shouldn't have been. Comments from

> out of Devonport (and no, I'm _not_ going to name sources in detail
here!)
> indicate that they could track them pretty reliably.
> I can't recall off-hand whether the radar on all of the T42s had
been
> upgraded - if not, it means that F117s can be tracked with 1950s
radar.
> If so, you need a good late-80s set.

At least one ship doing this was HMS Gloucester, which had Type 1022,
your late-80s radar. She was getting tracks at 40-80nm, and passing
them to Type 909 fire control radars at about 10nm. (Pieced together
from a couple of different Norman Friedman books.)

The key point is that Type 1022 is L-band, and thus has a very long
wavelength. It's seeing the entire airframe as a dipole, not just
any one facet, which defeats much of the shaping effort. The
downside is that it's not that precise. In a ship with an integrated
combat system it's relatively easy to pass the data from the
low-frequency search set to a higher frequency tracking set. It's
possible to do the same on land, but it usually takes more work.
(especially when your equivalent of a ship's Combat Information
Center has just been hit by a brace of 2000-lb penetrating LGBs.)


> So the F117s are certainly not radar-invisible - a lower RCS than
most
> aeroplanes, certainly, but not invisible to a decent radar set with
> a competant operator.

True enough. I don't think anyone in a position of authority has
ever claimed that F117s are really invisible to radar.

But note the 10nm is a very short range for Type 909 to acquire a
target. Against normal (non-stealthy) targets, it should be able to
guide Sea Dart to a range of 40+nm. This is the big benefit of
stealth. Quartering the fire control tracking range reduces the
effective defended area of a system by a factor of 16, and
dramatically reduces the time available for an engagement.


> Hey, we've actually got some naval content in this thread!

And now the title reflects it, so we can sort the live contacts from
the chaff.
--
--------------------------------------------------
TomSc...@worldnet.att.net
*Insert pithy quote here*

Michael P Reed

unread,
Mar 30, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/30/99
to
On 30 Mar 1999 01:19:56 GMT, "Thomas Schoene"
<TomSc...@worldnet.att.net> wrote:

It is believed that the Iraqis on atleast on occasion tracked an F-117
with a GCI radar, and attempted to guide a MiG-25 (or was it 23?) to
intercept, but the higher freq radar of the MiG could not locate the
Nighthawk. This was, I believe, the first night of the war, and IIRC
correctly, after that the F-117s had some sort of jamming support.
I'll have to go the library tomorrow to check for sure.


Michael P. Reed

Евгений Ожогин

unread,
Mar 30, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/30/99
to
Lloyd R. Parker <lpa...@emory.edu> wrote in message
7dom6m$l73$1...@paladin.cc.emory.edu...

>Vladimir Malukh (b...@propro.ru) wrote:
>:
>:
>: Paul Cassidy wrote:
>:
>: > If you are Serbian, your media is state controlled. How do you explain
>: > interviews with refugees crossing the border into the surrounding
countries
>: > who are all saying about Serb atrocities.
>:
>: So, NATO strikes have reduced the refugee number?
>
>
>NATO isn't striking Kosovo yet.

Read today's news - yesterday a few NATO missile hit the downtown Prisitina
resulting in destructions and lots of casualties, many of whom are the very
Albanians NATO vowed to protect. Some protection.

Ivan the Bear
=Nothing per-r-rsonal, just business...=


Vladimir Malukh

unread,
Mar 30, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/30/99
to

Stanley wrote:
>
>
> As far as the media goes both sides spin their on governments lies until forced
> into telling the truth. This is the way it has been in every war, cold or hot.
> The trouble with this one is the US has a leader that has proven that he is
> incapable of telling the truth to his on people about anything.

Quite right. I have no point and wish to argue.


> It is true that only 53% of the US are for the bombing, but don't mistake this as
> not backing the troops. We all understand that the sailors, soldiers and airman
> of any country have to go were they are sent no matter how much they agree or
> disagree with their mission. Remember it is the politicians that start the wars
> and sit safely at home while the youth and sometimes naive youth are forced to
> fight and die in their wars for them.

Funny (may be I use wrong word - english is not my native language),
but Mr. Clinton already did this in the past, when he evaded to
serve in Vietnam. So hes's just twice as hypocritical.



> Lets be thankful that the pilot of the F-117 bomber is safe and hope that his
> mission was aborted before it killed anyone.


BTW Did your TV showed this guy alive? I hope he is, but I've
heard from Some media, that serbs claim he isn't.

Apart of that I quite pleased with technical ability of
AA defence to shot such "invulnerable" a/c as F-117,
may be just because I'm former SAM engineer. :)

Vladimir Malukh

unread,
Mar 30, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/30/99
to

"Lloyd R. Parker" wrote:


> : So, NATO strikes have reduced the refugee number?
>
> NATO isn't striking Kosovo yet.

In average serbian mind NATO gives serbs leader to
butch Kosovo mor agressively. I do not think
that butching kosovars by serbs is forgivable thing.

I'm telling different thing - there was conflict
between serbs and kosovars. Serbs did humaliated
and butched kosovars, which is not right. But after
NATO bombing things didn't become any better! It doesn't
matter that NATO had (may be) "good intentions". It not
just didn't work, moreover id maked things
worse than before.

"We wished to do the best, but did as usual"
(c) Victor Chernomyrdin, russian ex-premier-minister.

> : Hey, what the f..k you are talking about? The rest of the world?
> : What about Russia, China and India? It's almost half of
> : world population. What about almost half of US sitizens?
> :
>
> None of which had news crews there; 2 of which don't have
> independent news media at all.

None - who? US? Quite explainable...

Russia na China both have news crew in serbia,
I watched Chinese TV couple of days ago and
see russian one very evening.

Regarding to independence - well, hard to
say about China and India, just don't know.
But russian media to me are just "too independent" -
another words - very often they say whatever they
find before proving the facts. Our there major
national TV channels have sometimes just
three orthogonal views, so hard to suspect
them in non-independecne. Still, everything
is relative.

Vladimir Malukh

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Mar 30, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/30/99
to

wolfs...@my-dejanews.com wrote:


> There is a reason why the pilots nicknamed it the Wobbly Goblin.. They've
> lost six of 'em to crashes already.

Six of 60 built? 10% lost in crashes? There is only
thing worse - F-104G.

--

Vladimir Malukh

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Mar 30, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/30/99
to

me...@ibm.net wrote:
>
> Vladimir Malukh wrote:
> >
> > Chechnya, Afganistan and Yugoslavia - all three are different matters.
> >
> > 1. Chechnya is part of Russian Federation, so russian government
> > is ALLOWED BY LOW to send troops and aircrafts over
> > there. I personally I disagree, that this was necessar,
> > but still government has this right.
>
> No government is allowed by law to slaughter its citizens, period.

If sitizens are rebels and did broken the loaw and
constitution? Surely it does in many cases. Even ordinary
policeman (who is in fact government representative) has
legal right in certain circumstances to shot criminal without
a court. Of course later the investigation should be proceed.


The amin problem in Cechnya was not illegal usage of
militray force, but POINTLESS aand NEDELESS usage
of that force. Also it was proceeded badly.

> Any government that suppresses those very citizens a redress of
> grievances should expect an uprising and by natural law they
> (the citizens) have _that_ right.

Tell this to cops in Harlem, NY-city.

Keith Willshaw

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Mar 30, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/30/99
to

Vladimir Malukh wrote in message <3700C534...@propro.ru>...

>
>
>me...@ibm.net wrote:
>>
>> No government is allowed by law to slaughter its citizens, period.
>
>If sitizens are rebels and did broken the loaw and
>constitution? Surely it does in many cases. Even ordinary
>policeman (who is in fact government representative) has
>legal right in certain circumstances to shot criminal without
>a court. Of course later the investigation should be proceed.
>

A policeman is allowed to use the necessary force to arrest
the criminal and protect himself and the public. If an armed
criminal resists arrest the Policeman does have the right
to shoot.

>
>The amin problem in Cechnya was not illegal usage of
>militray force, but POINTLESS aand NEDELESS usage
>of that force. Also it was proceeded badly.
>

On that we agree. The use of army troops who have not been
specially trained in restoring order is almost always
disastrous. We learned that in Northern Ireland on
Bloody Sunday.

But protecting society and arresting criminals does not give
the state rights to do everything. Whats is happening in
Kosovo t Serb hands is like blowing up the building a criminal is
hiding in even if it kills 100 innocent people.

Keith

R Weems Jr

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Mar 30, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/30/99
to
In rec.aviation.military Евгений Ожогин <siber...@mtu-net.ru> wrote:

: Read today's news - yesterday a few NATO missile hit the downtown Prisitina


: resulting in destructions and lots of casualties, many of whom are the very
: Albanians NATO vowed to protect. Some protection.

I've no doubt Albanians will be casualties, since the Serbs are using
them as human shields at munitions factories and barracks in Kosovo.

We're getting very close to the point when we need to take out the
power plants in Belgrade if the Serbs are going to use human shields
at legitimate military targets.

Robert

Andrew Venor

unread,
Mar 30, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/30/99
to
Vladimir Malukh wrote:

> wolfs...@my-dejanews.com wrote:
>
>
> > There is a reason why the pilots nicknamed it the Wobbly Goblin.. They've
> > lost six of 'em to crashes already.
>
> Six of 60 built? 10% lost in crashes? There is only
> thing worse - F-104G.
>

This would be the third loss of an F-117A since it entered squadron service in
1983. Two were lost in the 1980's to training accidents, and this one to
ground fire.

ALV


Velovich

unread,
Mar 30, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/30/99
to
>> The trouble with this one is the US has a leader that has proven that he is
>> incapable of telling the truth to his on people about anything.

OK, but EVERYONE esle that has got up and talked about the situation in
Kosovo, like UN delagates and inspectors, news people from the UK and Germany,
COME ON! It is one thing to dislike Clinton, which we share, but to say that
becasue he signs onto something, that MAKES THE WORLD WORLD a liar with him!?

Get a grip on your predjudice!


<*> V-Man
A Knight is sworn to Valor
His Heart knows only Virtue
His Blade defends the Weak
His Word speaks only Truth
His Wrath undoes the Wicked

Delete the ".CanDo" from my addy to reply!

Velovich

unread,
Mar 30, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/30/99
to
>If sitizens are rebels and did broken the loaw and
>constitution? Surely it does in many cases. Even ordinary
>policeman (who is in fact government representative) has
>legal right in certain circumstances to shot criminal without
>a court. Of course later the investigation should be proceed.

Fine. But civilians NOT associtated witht eh crime that happen to be nearby
or know the criminal? THAT is the problem!!!! GET GRIP!!!

NOBODY is saying that the rebels tehmselves are not taking a grave risk. No
PROBLEM! Got it? It isn't hard!

It is the Civilians that are NOT involved that are lined up and shot that
people are objecting about!

Are you *that* polarised? Or just stupid?

When somebody says teh same thing over and over, and you seems to just ignore
it, I need to ask the question.

STOP focsussing on the Rebels. They ARE NOT the ISSUE! It is the OTHER
kosovars, about 90% of teh total number, that are who everyone is worried
about. TEHY are being attacked by the Serb "Special Police" or whatever they
call the death squads now....

Carl Crosby

unread,
Mar 30, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/30/99
to

4th, remember the airshow? I also recall a training flight crash or two
since Desert Storm. Sorry, no details, just vague memories.

Andrew Venor

unread,
Mar 30, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/30/99
to
Carl Crosby wrote:

thanks for jarring my memory about the airshow crash. I don't remember any training
accidents since Desert Storm though.

ALV


me...@ibm.net

unread,
Mar 30, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/30/99
to
Vladimir Malukh wrote:

>
> me...@ibm.net wrote:

> > Any government that suppresses those very citizens a redress of
> > grievances should expect an uprising and by natural law they
> > (the citizens) have _that_ right.
>
> Tell this to cops in Harlem, NY-city.

This means what? Americans have the right to the redress of grievances.
Don't give excessively bad analogies to support you dismal authoritarian
viewpoint.

Shea

Евгений Ожогин

unread,
Mar 30, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/30/99
to
What's your source of information on human shields in Kosovo? UPI, Reuters,
the Beeb? I have not seen anything like that in their news. How come you
have? Would you share your secret with the gang?

Ivan the Bear
=Nothing per-r-rsonal, just business...=

R Weems Jr <El...@galileo.cris.com> wrote in message
7dqrbi$8...@chronicle.concentric.net...

Damien Burke

unread,
Mar 30, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/30/99
to
On Tue, 30 Mar 1999 19:28:29 +0700, Vladimir Malukh <b...@propro.ru>
wrote:

>Six of 60 built? 10% lost in crashes? There is only
>thing worse - F-104G.

Hey, you should check out the Supermarine Scimitar (1950s UK carrier
jet). Around 50% lost in accidents.
--
Damien Burke (add 'k' to end of address if replying)
British military aircraft site: http://www.totavia.com/jetman/

Keith Willshaw

unread,
Mar 30, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/30/99
to

Евгений Ожогин wrote in message <7drdt9$4k7$5...@ns.mtu.ru>...

>What's your source of information on human shields in Kosovo? UPI, Reuters,
>the Beeb? I have not seen anything like that in their news. How come you
>have? Would you share your secret with the gang?
>
>Ivan the Bear


Its a rumor nothing more .CNN reported it as a fact the BBC
reported it as an unconfirmed rumor

I wish the dammed media would just report the facts not go
looking for stories that made good headlines in the last war.
God knows theres enough real stuff happening

Ah go figure

Keith

--TIGGER--

unread,
Mar 30, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/30/99
to Vladimir Malukh
Read about them on my Losses Page:
http://www-scf.usc.edu/~khelm/Losses.html

Or if your lazy, there's a breif table on another page of mine
http://www-scf.usc.edu/~khelm/Serial.html


The answer is 7. (Out of 64)

1 cross wired. (Human error)
3 CFIT (Human error)
1 incorrect Installation of Air Duct (Human error)
1 missing support bolts (human error)
1 Unkown over Yugo (Unknown error)

How are these the aircraft's fault???
-Kevin Helm

------------------------------Kevin Helm------------------------------
| Homepage: http://www-scf.usc.edu/~khelm |
_______ F-117A Site: http://www-scf.usc.edu/~khelm/Shabah.html ______

On Tue, 30 Mar 1999, Vladimir Malukh wrote:

>
>
> wolfs...@my-dejanews.com wrote:
>
>
> > There is a reason why the pilots nicknamed it the Wobbly Goblin.. They've
> > lost six of 'em to crashes already.
>

> Six of 60 built? 10% lost in crashes? There is only
> thing worse - F-104G.
>
>
>

> --

R Weems Jr

unread,
Mar 30, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/30/99
to
In rec.aviation.military Евгений Ожогин <siber...@mtu-net.ru> wrote:
: What's your source of information on human shields in Kosovo? UPI, Reuters,

: the Beeb? I have not seen anything like that in their news. How come you
: have? Would you share your secret with the gang

Yes, it was one of those news sites on the internet I can assure you
and a specific military factory was named. I haven't memorized the
URL of the link where I read it so you can either believe me or not. I
assure you I read it and will post it against when I see a reference to
it. I don't have the time or inclination to go hunting for it on your
request.

Robert

David Bofinger

unread,
Mar 31, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/31/99
to
Vladimir Malukh wrote:

> The amin problem in Cechnya was not illegal usage of
> militray force, but POINTLESS aand NEDELESS usage
> of that force.

The Geneva convention might not make a distinction here: the
justification for violence under the Geneva protocols is
always military necessity, and if there's no necessity for
the violence (or not enough to justify the level of violence
involved) then the violence becomes a war crime. That assumes
that (a) Vladimir is right and (b) the Russians knew at the
time that the military force was pointless and needless.

----------------------------------------------------------------------
David Bofinger David.B...@dsto.defence.gov.au
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Peter Skelton

unread,
Mar 31, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/31/99
to
--TIGGER-- <kh...@nunki.usc.edu> wrote:

>Read about them on my Losses Page:
>http://www-scf.usc.edu/~khelm/Losses.html
>
>Or if your lazy, there's a breif table on another page of mine
>http://www-scf.usc.edu/~khelm/Serial.html
>
>
>The answer is 7. (Out of 64)
>
>1 cross wired. (Human error)
>3 CFIT (Human error)
>1 incorrect Installation of Air Duct (Human error)
>1 missing support bolts (human error)
>1 Unkown over Yugo (Unknown error)
>
>How are these the aircraft's fault???

A plane, or any other device, can be wasy to keep going, friendly when
mistreated, forgiving of errors and degrade gracefully when things go very
wrong. Then again, it can be bitchy.

The F117 used pretty advanced control systems for its day to make up for
the fact that nobody had figured out how to make something with reasonable
aerodynamics stealthy.

With no real knowledge o teh thing, I'll bet it's a bitch to work on and a
bit of a shrew to fly.


--
Peter Skelton
Skelton & Associates
613/634-0230
p...@kingston.net

Ken Koller

unread,
Mar 31, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/31/99
to

> > > > There is a reason why the pilots nicknamed it the Wobbly Goblin.. >
> > > > They've lost six of 'em to crashes already.
> > >
> > > Six of 60 built? 10% lost in crashes? There is only
> > > thing worse - F-104G.

> > This would be the third loss of an F-117A since it entered squadron service

> > in 1983. Two were lost in the 1980's to training accidents, and this one to
> > ground fire.

> 4th, remember the airshow? I also recall a training flight crash or two


> since Desert Storm. Sorry, no details, just vague memories.

They lost the first production aircraft at Tonapah, a second aircraft in
Tonapah, one in Bakersfield, a fourth that crashed into a mobile home in New
Mexico, the one lost at the airshow, and now this aircraft.

However, if you look at the complexity of the aircraft, the fact that it is
actually an unflyable airplane without the computer flight controls, and the
hazardous missions it flies, I find the safety record acceptable.

Also, you have to remember that the NEWEST of these aircraft are 9 years old.
This aircraft that crashed, 806, was built in 1984, 15 years ago. Not that this
makes much difference in this situation, but these are aircraft that in some
circumstances are pushing 17 years old, and with the complexity of these planes,
I'm suprised only six have crashed.

Ken Koller
kko...@earthlink.net
EMT- American Medical Response, Los Angeles, CA
http://westarm.bc.ca/Ken_Koller/fireline.html

Oleg Bazhenov

unread,
Mar 31, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/31/99
to

me...@ibm.net wrote:

> Vladimir Malukh wrote:
> >
> > Chechnya, Afganistan and Yugoslavia - all three are different matters.
> >
> > 1. Chechnya is part of Russian Federation, so russian government
> > is ALLOWED BY LOW to send troops and aircrafts over
> > there. I personally I disagree, that this was necessar,
> > but still government has this right.
>

> No government is allowed by law to slaughter its citizens, period.

> Any government that suppresses those very citizens a redress of
> grievances should expect an uprising and by natural law they
> (the citizens) have _that_ right.
>

Hi!
Those "citizenz" killed many civilians in Chechnya before the Russian
"invasion" and even more after that. Including foreign citizens. Just
remember
for telecommunication engineers from Britain and New Zealand. They lost
their heads for nothing. Don't you think that any goverment shoud stay away
from such facts? The same thing was in Yugoslavia. Federal troops just fight
agains albanian terrorist. And don't say me that it is propoganda. Just look
at the Turkey, there goverment fighting against kurds. This situation is
identical the yugoslavian one. Let's bomb Ankara and Istanbul to get fun! (
sarcastic )
Don't you understand that the true reason of bombing is NEITHER the support
of
kosovars NOR the suppresion of serbs. The true reason is to show for
everybody
who is the master of the Planet. President Reagan once said about Salvadorian

leader " He is son of the bitch, but he is OUR son of the bitch". That's why
US and NATO will protect any THEY want to protect, not the right one.

With best regards
Oleg Bazhenov


Oleg Bazhenov

unread,
Mar 31, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/31/99
to

Jeff Rankin-Lowe wrote:

> Nikola Stojanovic wrote:
>
> > Why ? He is criminal
>
> Right, and the Serb army and police who get their kicks from slaughtering
> unarmed civilians, including women and children, are a bunch of angels.
>
> Jeff Rankin-Lowe

What about ARMED civilian? And may be KLA is a myth?

Oleg Bazhenov

unread,
Mar 31, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/31/99
to

Keith Willshaw wrote:

> Jeff Rankin-Lowe wrote in message <36FD98E7...@on.aibn.com>...


>
> >
> >Right, and the Serb army and police who get their kicks from slaughtering
> >unarmed civilians, including women and children, are a bunch of angels.
> >
> >Jeff Rankin-Lowe
> >
>

> Jeff please replace the word Angels with Targets
>
> Keith

Very cinic.

Oleg Bazhenov


Oleg Bazhenov

unread,
Mar 31, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/31/99
to

Paul Cassidy wrote:

> OTOH, the tail numbers do match an F-117.
>
> Not good!
>
> Paul Cassidy wrote in message <7djsvb$b83f$1...@reader3.wxs.nl>...
> >Are we sure it was an F-117. The wreckage looked wrong to me. For a start
> it
> >seemed to be grey not black. There were some markings, including the words
> >"Air combat...".
> >
> >Juha Veijalainen wrote in message ...
> >>In article <36fd6b32...@news.axion.net>, Adam Yoshida
> >>(adam_y...@yahoo.com) says...
> >>> CNN is reporting that a US F-117A has been shot down.
> >>>
> >>> How the hell did manage that?
> >>
> >>Well, a F-117A is neither invincible nor invisible, despite some
> >>enthusiastic claims. For example a BBC defense analyst said that on some
> >>occasions British ships could detect it on radar from 150 km (or miles)
> >>and that the Iraqis could sometimes detect them from 60 km. Depends of
> >>course on the situation.
> >>
> >>
> >>--
> >>Juha Veijalainen, Helsinki, Finland, http://www.iki.fi/juhave/
> >>Some random words: bomb,steganography,cryptography,reindeer
> >>** Mielipiteet omiani ** Opinions personal, facts suspect **
> >
> >

Sorry, they didn't know it was invisible. :)

Oleg Bazhenov

unread,
Mar 31, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/31/99
to

José Herculano wrote:

> > How sad :(
>
> I'd also be sad if Milosevish was my ruler and if I had to live in
> yugoslavia. ;-)
>
> José Herculano

Really? You know once day I was really sick from Boccassa emperor.
What the pity
we did not bomb him :).

With Best regards

Oleg Bazhenov


Oleg Bazhenov

unread,
Mar 31, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/31/99
to

Keith Willshaw wrote:

> Евгений Ожогин wrote in message <7drdt9$4k7$5...@ns.mtu.ru>...

> >What's your source of information on human shields in Kosovo? UPI, Reuters,
> >the Beeb? I have not seen anything like that in their news. How come you

> >have? Would you share your secret with the gang?
> >
> >Ivan the Bear
>
> Its a rumor nothing more .CNN reported it as a fact the BBC
> reported it as an unconfirmed rumor
>
> I wish the dammed media would just report the facts not go
> looking for stories that made good headlines in the last war.
> God knows theres enough real stuff happening
>
> Ah go figure
>
> Keith

Don't listen news, listen your mind.

With Best Regards

Oleg Bazhenov


Vladimir Malukh

unread,
Mar 31, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/31/99
to

--TIGGER-- wrote:
>
> Read about them on my Losses Page:
> http://www-scf.usc.edu/~khelm/Losses.html
>
> Or if your lazy, there's a breif table on another page of mine
> http://www-scf.usc.edu/~khelm/Serial.html
>
> The answer is 7. (Out of 64)
>
> 1 cross wired. (Human error)
> 3 CFIT (Human error)
> 1 incorrect Installation of Air Duct (Human error)
> 1 missing support bolts (human error)
> 1 Unkown over Yugo (Unknown error)
>
> How are these the aircraft's fault???

> Read about them on my Losses Page:
> http://www-scf.usc.edu/~khelm/Losses.html
>
> Or if your lazy, there's a breif table on another page of mine
> http://www-scf.usc.edu/~khelm/Serial.html
>
>
> The answer is 7. (Out of 64)
>
> 1 cross wired. (Human error)
> 3 CFIT (Human error)
> 1 incorrect Installation of Air Duct (Human error)
> 1 missing support bolts (human error)
> 1 Unkown over Yugo (Unknown error)
>
> How are these the aircraft's fault???

My friends (and customers) from Sukhoy OKB
use to say - most if not all pilot errors are caused
by designer error. Also, there is such thing as
toleration of a/c to pilot errors. Another words,
if any or most of pilot error cause a/c loss - this
is problem of design but not pilots training.
This actually means that a/c is difficult to
maintain and to control.

Regards

Vladimir

Vladimir Malukh

unread,
Mar 31, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/31/99
to

Damien Burke wrote:
>
> On Tue, 30 Mar 1999 19:28:29 +0700, Vladimir Malukh <b...@propro.ru>
> wrote:
>

> >Six of 60 built? 10% lost in crashes? There is only
> >thing worse - F-104G.
>

> Hey, you should check out the Supermarine Scimitar (1950s UK carrier
> jet). Around 50% lost in accidents.
> --

Well, I have to admit - Scimitar is worse, thant two above :)

Vladimir Malukh

unread,
Mar 31, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/31/99
to

Keith Willshaw wrote:
>
> On that we agree. The use of army troops who have not been
> specially trained in restoring order is almost always
> disastrous. We learned that in Northern Ireland on
> Bloody Sunday.
>
> But protecting society and arresting criminals does not give
> the state rights to do everything. Whats is happening in
> Kosovo t Serb hands is like blowing up the building a criminal is
> hiding in even if it kills 100 innocent people.

Before writing next sentence I'd to say, that to from my
view Miloshevich and his administartion are criminlas,
BUT before butching him (not serbs but Milo gang) we
(a world community) have to prove this using THE LAW.

But, instead of that US+NATO decided to blow the whole
city, where is the building, where criminal is hiding.
So what the differnce between the NATO and serbs?

Also, there is thing, that makes situation more
complicated to sort out - these innocent people
do help to that criminal to hide.

gws

unread,
Mar 31, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/31/99
to
Velovich <velo...@aol.com.CanDo> wrote in message
news:19990330132810...@ng-cf1.aol.com...

> >> The trouble with this one is the US has a leader that has
proven that he is
> >> incapable of telling the truth to his on people about
anything.
>
> OK, but EVERYONE esle that has got up and talked about the
situation in
> Kosovo, like UN delagates and inspectors, news people from the
UK and Germany,
> COME ON! It is one thing to dislike Clinton, which we share,
but to say that
> becasue he signs onto something, that MAKES THE WORLD WORLD a
liar with him!?
>
> Get a grip on your predjudice!

Unfortunately, the claim that Bill Clinton "has proven that he is
incapable of telling the truth," while marginally overstated, is
more true than false. This fact puts Bill Clinton and the U.S.
at a terrible disadvantage. The crunch will come when the
decision has to be made to either (1) withdraw from Kosovo
without accomplishing the objective of stopping
genocide --suffering a humiliating defeat in other words -- or
(2) introduce ground troops in such overwhelming numbers that
Milosevic must capitulate or see his armed forces devastated.
Because Milosevec has raised the stakes so high -- a ghastly
mistake on his part, it seems to me -- Clinton, crippled though
he is, may be able to build enough of a consensus to introduce
enough ground troops into the struggle to win. I believe that he
has to try. If he fails, his miscalculation in attacking the
Serbs with no plan beyond air strikes will have destroyed NATO.

Grey Satterfield

Chiggie Red Baron

unread,
Mar 31, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/31/99
to
In article <7drdt9$4k7$5...@ns.mtu.ru>, =?iso-8859-1?q?=C5=E2=E3=E5=ED=E8=E
9_=CE=E6=EE=E3=E8=ED?= <siber...@mtu-net.ru> writes

>What's your source of information on human shields in Kosovo? UPI, Reuters,
>the Beeb? I have not seen anything like that in their news. How come you
>have? Would you share your secret with the gang?
>
The NATO spokesman was interviewed yesterday by BBC Radio 5 Live, and
asked about the possibility of human shields.

Jamie Shea said that he had heard of such reports, but would not comment
further on them until they were independently verified. He further
stated that NATO preferred to report facts....which is why they are
holding off reporting this until the truth is gathering.
--
The Chiggie Red Baron

"I looked at the Serb Army herding women and children into a line and thought
of 'Schindlers List' and 'Sophies Choice' " - a Dutch Lt.Col (Surgeon), part
of the UN peacekeeping forces in Bosnia

Keith Willshaw

unread,
Mar 31, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/31/99
to

Vladimir Malukh wrote in message <3701DEC6...@propro.ru>...

>
>
>Before writing next sentence I'd to say, that to from my
>view Miloshevich and his administartion are criminlas,
>BUT before butching him (not serbs but Milo gang) we
>(a world community) have to prove this using THE LAW.
>


I would like to see him brought before the law , specifically
the International court of human justice in the hague
but there are already serb criminals with international arrest
warrants signed against them . They are living in Belgrade.

If they WON'T appear and are committing more and worse
crimes they have to be stopped. The only state that could
have put real pressure on Milosevic short of war was
Russia, they declined to do so. Onve he knew that Russia
and China would veto any Security council resolutions
to use force milosevic beleived Russia was giving him
a free hand.

Milosevic won't stop at Kosovo if he wins here, who will
be next , Macedonia , Bosnia AGAIN ore Montengro
which wants to secede.

To date NATO has NOT blown up the whole city. Yes
there has been some civilian damage but the targetting
has clearly been on military and dual purpose sites.

Even infrastructure such as Road , Rail , bridges and power
have not been targeted. If you want to know what this can do
remeber Sarajevo which had no power or water for
MONTHS because the serbs destroyed pumping stations
and cut the power lines.

Keith

Velovich

unread,
Mar 31, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/31/99
to
>Unfortunately, the claim that Bill Clinton "has proven that he is
>incapable of telling the truth," while marginally overstated, is
>more true than false.

I understand what you are saying, Grey. It is just that, "Because it is a
Clinton Administration Action, it must be bad." attitude shows a COMPLETE lack
of actually paying attention to the news. That guy saw Clinton speak, and
automatically decided taht Clinton was wrong, SIMPLY because it was CLinton.
The Interviews I saw of UN officals had NO US officals in view. Sorry, but
hero needs to stop hating Clinton so much and start using his mind.

Velovich

unread,
Mar 31, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/31/99
to
>Even infrastructure such as Road , Rail , bridges and power
>have not been targeted. If you want to know what this can do
>remeber Sarajevo which had no power or water for
>MONTHS because the serbs destroyed pumping stations
>and cut the power lines.

Look over on alt.binaries.pictures.miltiary for evidence of this. There are
Serbs over there that are spamming left and right with what (almost) amounts to
propoganda...
Some of it is sick, some is cleverly done, however ineffectual...

gws

unread,
Mar 31, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/31/99
to
Velovich <velo...@aol.com.CanDo> wrote in message
news:19990331162108...@ng-cf1.aol.com...

> >Unfortunately, the claim that Bill Clinton "has proven that he
is
> >incapable of telling the truth," while marginally overstated,
is
> >more true than false.
>
> I understand what you are saying, Grey. It is just that,
"Because it is a
> Clinton Administration Action, it must be bad." attitude shows
a COMPLETE lack
> of actually paying attention to the news. That guy saw Clinton
speak, and
> automatically decided taht Clinton was wrong, SIMPLY because it
was CLinton.
> The Interviews I saw of UN officals had NO US officals in view.
Sorry, but
> hero needs to stop hating Clinton so much and start using his
mind.

Clinton has his weaknesses, God knows. Nevertheless, he is a
gifted politician and a brilliant fellow so I agree that it is a
mistake to assume that everything he does is wrong.

Grey Satterfield

gws

unread,
Mar 31, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/31/99
to
Velovich <velo...@aol.com.CanDo> wrote in message
news:19990331162339...@ng-cf1.aol.com...

> >Even infrastructure such as Road , Rail , bridges and power
> >have not been targeted. If you want to know what this can do
> >remeber Sarajevo which had no power or water for
> >MONTHS because the serbs destroyed pumping stations
> >and cut the power lines.
>
> Look over on alt.binaries.pictures.miltiary for evidence of
this. There are
> Serbs over there that are spamming left and right with what
(almost) amounts to
> propoganda...
> Some of it is sick, some is cleverly done, however
ineffectual...

Some retired general or admiral said on the News Hour the other
night, "We may have to decide to drop the bridges and turn out
the [Belgrade] lights"

Grey Satterfield

Stuart Makagon

unread,
Mar 31, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/31/99
to

Oleg Bazhenov wrote in message <3701E00A...@inp.nsk.su>...
>
>


[snip]

>Don't you understand that the true reason of bombing is NEITHER the support
>of
>kosovars NOR the suppresion of serbs. The true reason is to show for
>everybody
>who is the master of the Planet. President Reagan once said about
Salvadorian
>
>leader " He is son of the bitch, but he is OUR son of the bitch". That's
why
>US and NATO will protect any THEY want to protect, not the right one.
>


No, the true reason is revulsion at Milosovic's policy of "ethnic cleansing"
and other abuses of ethnic Albanian civilians living in Kosovo whether they
are taking part in resistance to Serb authorities or not.

BTW is was Franklin D. Roosevelt, not Ronald Reagan who made the remark
about the Central American dictator being our SOB. He was speaking of
Anastazio Somoza of Nicaragua. IIRC, FDR made that remark during the 1930s.
The world was heading toward WW II. Another dictator, I forget his name ;-),
signed a treaty of alliance with Adolf Hitler. FDR did not want a regime in
the Carribean that would play ball with either of those dictators.

--
Delete "z" from e-mail address if responding via e-mail

Евгений Ожогин

unread,
Mar 31, 1999, 3:00:00 AM3/31/99
to
Just watched the press-conference by Russian Foreign and Defence Ministers.
The former, holding a pack of papers, referred to Ge. William Walker's (OCSE
in Kosovo chief) reports whre he mentiont human rights violations, clashes,
skirmishes, etc, but no ethnic cleansing, genocide or other suchlike
nasties. And it is hard to accuse Mr. Walker of excessive love to Serbs.

Ivan the Bear
=Nothing per-r-rsonal, just business...=

Chiggie Red Baron <gra...@airnorth1.demon.co.uk> wrote in message
89zGUDAY...@airnorth1.demon.co.uk...

TMOliver

unread,
Apr 1, 1999, 3:00:00 AM4/1/99
to
gws wrote:
>
> Velovich <velo...@aol.com.CanDo> wrote in message
> news:19990331162339...@ng-cf1.aol.com...
> > >Even infrastructure such as Road , Rail , bridges and power
> > >have not been targeted. If you want to know what this can do
> > >remeber Sarajevo which had no power or water for
> > >MONTHS because the serbs destroyed pumping stations
> > >and cut the power lines.
> >
> Some retired general or admiral said on the News Hour the other
> night, "We may have to decide to drop the bridges and turn out
> the [Belgrade] lights"
>
> Grey Satterfield

The US has traditionally demonstrated an unwillingness to "turn out the
lights" in a massive civil sense, but one positive result of such a
decision would be the limitation of Serb spamming to laptop battery
life...

...and also substantial discomfort to a country which is no longer a
subsistence or agrarian economy. After the meat and milk begin to
spoil, times get tough in Beograd. Of course, we couldn't see CNN. but
who gives a shit in the grand scheme of things? I see nothing callous
or brutal about power staions, water plants or even neater your local
sewer facility as targets (nor would have GEN Sherman who comprehended
that the purpose of warfare was not to "Make a Point").
--
TMOliver, el pelon sinverguenza
From a small observatory overlooking McLennan Crossing

- VESPER ADEST IUVENES CONSURGITE -
Catullus

TMOliver

unread,
Apr 1, 1999, 3:00:00 AM4/1/99
to
gws wrote:
>

> Clinton has his weaknesses, God knows. Nevertheless, he is a
> gifted politician and a brilliant fellow so I agree that it is a
> mistake to assume that everything he does is wrong.
>
> Grey Satterfield

....which forms both a source and a grim manifestation of the problem we
face.

Having a leader whom we come to believe is not altogether (at all, a
little bit, every now and again) credible, our collective capacity for
disbelief increases, under the noted legal doctrine "puer lupo evocati"
(By Golly, it even sounds good!), the little boy who cried wolf, and
even when he's right, his task becomes enormously more difficult, the
selling of the truth to folks conditoned to hear something other than
the truth.

Thus the dismal state to which the Presidency has descended.

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