| Mentor Cana on Wed, 4 Aug 1999 03:49:41 +0200 (CEST) |
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| <nettime> [kcc-news] The Sunday Times: Nato chief tried to block Russians, Jackson refused to risk Armageddon (fwd) |
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http://www.sunday-times.co.uk/news/pages/tim/99/08/02/timkoskos01002.html?1996766
Nato chief tried to block Russians, Jackson refused to risk Armageddon
Generals at war over Kosovo raid
FROM IAN BRODIE
IN WASHINGTON
LIEUTENANT-GENERAL Sir Michael Jackson's
refusal to risk Armageddon was at the heart of his
tensions with General Wesley Clark, Nato supreme
commander, as the occupation of Kosovo began.
"I'm not going to start the Third World War for you," the
British general was reported to have told General Clark
after refusing his orders to send assault troops and
helicopters into Pristina airport to block the Russian
forces.
The clash, in which the British Government backed
General Jackson, and the American Government did not
support General Clark, surfaced just days after the Nato
commander had been abruptly told in a midnight call that
he would be replaced next April.
Trouble between the generals started immediately after the
air war had ended and General Jackson had been made
commander on the ground in Kosovo. Talks on Russia's
role had broken down in Moscow and 200 Russian
troops entered Pristina at 1.30am on June 12.
According to Newsweek, General Clark was so anxious
to stop the Russians from stealing a march to Pristina
airport that he ordered an airborne assault by British and
French troops to take the field. But General Jackson
would not carry out General Clark's orders, not believing
that an assault was necessary.
General Clark was not mollified. He asked Admiral James
Ellis, the American in charge of Nato's Southern
Command, to order helicopters to land on the runways at
Pristina so that Russian Ilyushin transports could not land.
This time Admiral Ellis balked, saying General Jackson
would not like it. The Ilyushins were in fact blocked by the
intervention of American officials who persuaded Hungary
to deny overflight rights to the Russians.
Both General Jackson and General Clark appealed to
their political leadership back home for support. General
Jackson got all the help he needed. General Clark did not,
meaning effectively that his orders had been overruled.
General Clark eventually arrived in Kosovo on June 24,
saying he had come to consult General Jackson as the
commander of Kfor on the progress of Nato's
deployment.It was at this meeting that General Clark
complained that his orders were not being followed and
General Jackson made his remark about the Third World
War. General Clark apparently also complained about
General Jackson having gone through political channels.
The two generals could not be more different, according
to David Hackworth, America's most decorated soldier
and now a commentator and frequent critic of General
Clark and the Pentagon. Last night he said: "Clark is one
of those 'Perfumed Princes' at the top of the American
military leadership. These are the guys who are totally out
of touch with the guys at the bottom.
"Mike Jackson has spent his career not worrying about
getting his ticket punched but in leading troops. He is the
ultimate warrior. Clark has only got eight years of leading
troops. Jackson had that before he was a major."
The irony for General Clark is that he won the air war in
78 days without a single casualty.
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