| U.S. troops join NATO in Kosovo
June 14, 1999
SOJEVO, Yugoslavia (CNN) -- Minor confrontations, but no serious incidents, were reported Monday as the first of more than 1,200 U.S. Marines entered Kosovo to take up positions in what will become the U.S.-controlled zone of the Yugoslav province. From 100 to 150 U.S. Army soldiers in armored vehicles crossed into Kosovo hours earlier. The first mission for the U.S. forces and thousands of other NATO peacekeepers is to help make Kosovo safe enough for hundreds of thousands of ethnic Albanians refugees to return to their homes. Despite the potential for danger from land mines or renegade Yugoslav soldiers, a steady trickle of refugees were observed crossing over the Macedonian border into Kosovo. Some stopped to kiss the ground as they entered Kosovo. Others cheered or tossed flowers as vehicles containing NATO peacekeepers rolled past. For some refugees, though, the exuberance turned to despair as they returned to their burned and looted homes. Clinton, Yeltsin talk again on Russian roleNATO says it has sent about 14,300 troops into Kosovo since the international peacekeeping mission began on Saturday.
Spokesman Jamie Shea said the deployment -- from five countries, so far -- was slightly ahead of schedule, and played down the standoff with Russian soldiers who have taken control of the airport in Pristina, the provincial capital of Kosovo. For a second day, President Clinton spoke by telephone with Russian President Boris Yeltsin about Russia's role in the Kosovo peace operation. They agreed that U.S. Defense Secretary William Cohen and Russia's defense minister will meet in Helsinki, Finland, "in the next few days" to discuss Kosovo, Secretary of State Madeleine Albright announced. Albright said she and her Russian counterpart would join the discussions. Clinton had hoped to resolve differences with Moscow before he departs Tuesday night for Germany for a meeting of the leaders of the major seven industrialized nations and Russia. The two leaders are trying to find common ground on a role for the 200 Russian troops already in Kosovo while talks continue on command arrangements for a larger Russian contingent. U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Strobe Talbott, returning home after three days of negotiations in Moscow, said the United States was considering giving the Russians "a zone of responsibility" under NATO command. Russia, which is not a NATO member, refuses to allow its peacekeepers to be under the alliance's command and wants to control its own sector in northern Kosovo, where ethnic Serbs are concentrated. But NATO fears that would lead to the partition of Kosovo. 'A little edgy'The Marine convoy moved at first light Monday morning from its position in Macedonia toward southeastern Kosovo, the base of U.S. operations. Armored units from the Army deployed a few miles away in the village of Sojevo. Army soldiers told CNN they encountered no difficulties en route, although retreating Serb soldiers shouted verbal insults and made obscene finger gestures. During one tense moment, a retreating Yugoslav soldier who pulled a gun was subdued by fellow soldiers. No shots were fired. In a separate incident, Marines on the main road to Pristina ducked into combat position behind their vehicles when they heard gunfire coming from houses 500 meters (a quarter-mile) away. They said they didn't believe they were the targets. "We were all a little edgy going in. We've got our guard up," said Cpl. Will Rapier, 20, of Paintsville, Kentucky, with the 3rd Battalion, 8th Marines. "We just hope to get this thing over so we can all go home."
Mass gravesThirty miles south of Pristina, in the town of Kacanik, U.S. forces guarding suspected mass graves awaited the arrival of war-crimes investigators for verification. Earthen mounds with numbered wooden markers were first discovered by British troops, who led the NATO peacekeeping force (KFOR) advance into Kosovo. The odor of decay hung heavily over the area. Local residents said the graves contained the bodies of about 100 villagers killed in a two-day-long rampage by Serb paramilitary forces. Correspondents Christiane Amanpour, Matthew Chance and John King contributed to this report. RELATED STORIES: U.S. tanks rumble to Pristina RELATED SITES: Yugoslavia:
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