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Clinton to get damage assessment briefing
March 25, 1999
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- As NATO prepared a second wave of bomb and missile assaults on Yugoslavia, President Clinton on Thursday declared the first night of attacks a success and said the objective was to prevent a humanitarian catastrophe or a wider war. Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic "has to choose peace .... or we make war," Clinton said at the White House just before a briefing from his senior international policy advisers. Administration officials tell CNN they were generally satisfied with public and political reaction to the mission so far, although they acknowledged persistent questions from Congress about an endgame for the U.S.-led assaults. The officials said the answer depended on Milosevic who, they said, could end the strikes by accepting the Kosovo peace plan. If he refuses, the officials said the bombing was likely to continue for more than a week, until the United States and NATO were convinced they have significantly degraded Belgrade's military capabilities. In an address to the American public on Wednesday night, Clinton said the attacks were necessary to "defuse a powder keg" that has engulfed Europe in war before. "We act to protect thousands of innocent people in Kosovo from a mounting military offensive," said Clinton.
RELATED STORIES: U.S. military 'satisfied' with airstrikes RELATED SITES: Radio B-92
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