PEACE DEAL FINALLY SIGNED; NATO BOMBING TO END ONCE SERBS START LEAVING.Byline: Lori Montgomery, John Donnelly John W. Donnelly was born September 23 1906 in Iowa. He is a National Senior Games Champion and a gold medal winner in Florida Senior Games State Championships in table tennis. He began playing the game in high school. and Richard Parker Richard Parker may refer to: People
Knight Ridder (IPA: /ˈrɪdɚ/) was an American media company, specializing in newspaper and Internet publishing. Newspapers Declaring an end to fighting in Kosovo, NATO NATO: see North Atlantic Treaty Organization. NATO in full North Atlantic Treaty Organization International military alliance created to defend western Europe against a possible Soviet invasion. and Yugoslav military commanders signed an agreement Wednesday that calls for all Serb troops to leave the devastated dev·as·tate tr.v. dev·as·tat·ed, dev·as·tat·ing, dev·as·tates 1. To lay waste; destroy. 2. To overwhelm; confound; stun: was devastated by the rude remark. province and all routed ethnic Albanians to return home. NATO's bombs could stop by this morning, if the Serb troops start leaving. International troops prepared to enter Kosovo, and U.S. Marines were landing in Greece today, on their way toward the province. ``It means that the war ended,'' Yugoslav Col. Gen. Svetozar Marjanovic said Wednesday night at this military base. On NATO's 78th and perhaps final day of bombing, the alliance's officials turned their attention overnight for signs that Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic had ordered a full withdrawal from Kosovo of 40,000 Yugoslav military and police forces, as well as the special police who were known as the worst offenders in the violent spree to drive ethnic Albanians from the Serb province. The Serbs have 11 days to pull out all their troops, an extension of four days from NATO's original demands. ``If the Serbs live up to what they have signed, this will end the killing and begin the peace,'' said Defense Secretary William Cohen For other persons named William Cohen, see William Cohen (disambiguation). William Sebastian Cohen (born 28 August 1940) is an author and American politician from the U.S. state of Maine. , adding that the agreement ``meets all of NATO's demands.'' The cease-fire in Kosovo took effect immediately, and the agreement calls for the first Serb troops to leave the province within 24 hours, by 3:05 p.m. EDT EDT abbr. Eastern Daylight Time EDT Eastern Daylight Time EDT n abbr (US) (= Eastern Daylight Time) → hora de verano de Nueva York EDT today. ``I would not be surprised'' at a bombing pause early today, said Undersecretary of Defense Walter Slocombe, ``if we see clear indications that they are moving out and the fighting has stopped.'' Once the bombing stops, the U.N. Security Council is expected to take up a resolution outlining the steps to end the war. The Security Council is expected to pass the measure - the Chinese government Ever since Republic of China founded in January 1st, 1912, China has had several regional and national governments. List
`Immediate' deployment NATO Secretary-General Javier Solana told reporters in Brussels, Belgium, where the North Atlantic Council Noun 1. North Atlantic Council - a council consisting of permanent representatives of all the member countries of NATO; has political authority and powers of decision NAC approved the military agreement, that peacekeeper troops could enter Kosovo ``almost immediately'' once NATO commanders verified withdrawal of Serb troops. In Macedonia, 17,500 British, French and German troops stand ready. The British troops likely would be the first, their mission to seize the high ground along the main road from Skopje, Macedonia, to Pristina, Kosovo's provincial capital Noun 1. provincial capital - the capital city of a province capital - a seat of government city, metropolis, urban center - a large and densely populated urban area; may include several independent administrative districts; "Ancient Troy was a great city" , in order to protect NATO troops from snipers. Following these soldiers will be 1,900 U.S. Marines from the 26th Marine Expeditionary Unit A Marine air-ground task force (MAGTF) that is constructed around an infantry battalion reinforced, a helicopter squadron reinforced, and a task-organized combat service support element. It normally fulfills Marine Corps forward sea-based deployment requirements. , based at Camp Lejeune Camp LeJeune (ləzh n`), U.S. marine corps base, 82,969 acres (33,576 hectares), SE N.C., SE of Jacksonville; est. 1941. , N.C., and 1,700 U.S. Army troops now moving to the Macedonian border from Albania. The Clinton administration Noun 1. Clinton administration - the executive under President Clinton executive - persons who administer the law has committed 7,000 American soldiers as part of a 50,000-troop peacekeeping force. In Washington, President Clinton released a brief statement saying he was pleased with the agreement. He carefully characterized it not as the end of war, but as ``another important step toward achieving our objectives in Kosovo.'' Clinton said the agreement guarantees that the international force will have ``NATO at its core, which means a unified NATO chain of command.'' NATO, he said, ``will watch carefully to see whether the Serb forces are peacefully leaving Kosovo in accordance with the agreed timetable.'' Clinton warns KLA KLA Kosovo Liberation Army KLA Key Learning Area (NSW Department of Education) KLA Kansas Livestock Association (Topeka, KS) KLA Kentucky Library Association KLA Kansas Library Association Clinton also made a pointed statement toward the ethnic Albanian guerrilla force inside Kosovo that is fighting for independence: ``We have made clear to the leaders of the Kosovo Liberation Army The Kosovo Liberation Army or KLA (Albanian: Ushtria Çlirimtare e Kosovës or UÇK) was an ethnic Albanian paramilitary extremist group which sought independence for the province of Kosovo from Yugoslavia and Serbia in the late 1990s. that we expect them not to hinder the Serb withdrawal.'' The seven-page agreement between the NATO and Yugoslav militaries gave specific details on the withdrawal of Belgrade's 3rd Army and Interior Ministry forces. Serb troops in the north must withdraw first. Six days later, troops from southern areas bordering Macedonia and the area surrounding Pristina were to leave. Nine days later, on June 18, troops from the eastern and western halves of Kosovo were to depart. As the troops withdraw, the agreement allows the international force to take control of Kosovo's borders. By 3:05 p.m. EDT today, Belgrade's aircraft will be forbidden over Kosovo and the peacekeepers will take control of the airspace. Within three days, all aircraft, radar, surface-to-air missiles and anti-aircraft artillery must leave the province and a 15-mile buffer zone around it. Yugoslavia also must provide the international forces with maps and descriptions of all mines, unexploded ordnance and booby traps in the province in the next two days. NATO estimates that the Serbs have seeded the province with millions of mines, capable of maiming peacekeepers and civilians alike. If Serb forces fail to adhere to the timetable, bombing would resume, Cohen cohen or kohen (Hebrew: “priest”) Jewish priest descended from Zadok (a descendant of Aaron), priest at the First Temple of Jerusalem. The biblical priesthood was hereditary and male. said. NATO's representative, British Lt. Gen. Sir Michael Jackson, strode to a microphone, statement in hand. ``It has not been easy going,'' he said of the talks, blaming ``political as well as military'' roadblocks. Peace parameters set The agreement, he said, ``details how the army, the interior police and all other forces should conduct a phased, verifiable and orderly withdrawal from Kosovo. It also provides a clear legal basis for the deployment of the international security force'' into the province ``to establish a secure environment in Kosovo.'' Jackson left without taking questions from reporters. As his Yugoslav counterpart, Col. Gen. Svetozar Marjanovic, began speaking, Jackson's helicopter lifted into the air, making reporters strain to hear the Yugoslav officer and delivering a message that the victor would not show respect to the vanquished. Marjanovic, in a viewpoint designed mainly for a Serbian audience, said the talks were done ``under the auspices of the United Nations,'' an important point because Yugoslav leaders do not want to be portrayed as capitulating to NATO. CAPTION(S): photo PHOTO (color) Lt. Gen. Sir Michael Jackson, NATO commander in Macedonia, speaks Wednesday. Brennan Linsley/Associated Press |
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