ad info




CNN.com
 MAIN PAGE
 WORLD
   africa
   americas
   asianow
   europe
   middle east
 U.S.
 LOCAL
 POLITICS
 WEATHER
 BUSINESS
 SPORTS
 TECHNOLOGY
 NATURE
 ENTERTAINMENT
 BOOKS
 TRAVEL
 FOOD
 HEALTH
 STYLE
 IN-DEPTH

 custom news
 Headline News brief
 daily almanac
 CNN networks
 CNN programs
 on-air transcripts
 news quiz

  CNN WEB SITES:
CNN Websites
 TIME INC. SITES:
 MORE SERVICES:
 video on demand
 video archive
 audio on demand
 news email services
 free email accounts
 desktop headlines
 pointcast

 DISCUSSION:
 message boards
 chat
 feedback

 SITE GUIDES:
 help
 contents
 search

 FASTER ACCESS:
 europe
 japan

 WEB SERVICES:

 

World - Europe

Yugoslavs send mixed message about peace plan

Even as G-8 members discuss possible Kosovo peace plans NATO operations continue -- A Harrier hovers over the deck of the USS Kearsarge during evening flight operations

related videoRELATED VIDEO
Montenegro, a member of the Yugoslav Federation, remains neutral during this conflict. The government credits its police with helping maintain the peace. CNN's Mike Hanna explains. (May 6)
Real 28K 80K
Windows Media 28K 80K

CNN's Rome Bureau Chief Gayle Young reports on Rugova's first trip to the West since the start of NATO bombing (May 5)
Real 28K 80K
Windows Media 28K 80K

       Windows Media Real

       28 K 80 K
InteractiveIMAGE GALLERY
Latest from Kosovo

The Kosovo refugees

The Serbs and Kosovo
 ALSO:
U.S.: Serbs destroying bodies of Kosovo victims

Jackson renews call for bombing pause, negotiations

 THE DELUGE OF REFUGEES:
Where are they going?
 CNN WORLD REPORT CONFERENCE:
Follow CNN's 1999 World Report Conference this week in Atlanta and New York
 MESSAGE BOARD:
Crisis in Kosovo
 MAPS:
NATO officials describe the air campaign
 IN-DEPTH SPECIAL:
NATO at 50

Strike on Yugoslavia
 

Would have U.N.-backed force

May 6, 1999
Web posted at: 9:37 p.m. EDT (0137 GMT)


In this story:

Key Serb hard-liner rejects proposal

U.N. Security Council to review plan

Albright: Russian agreement significan

Military equipment, oil supplies hit

Rugova in Rome

RELATED STORIES, SITES icon



BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (CNN) -- Yugoslav officials are responding with mixed signals to a peace plan for Kosovo put forward Thursday by foreign ministers of the Group of Eight countries, which calls for an international "civil and security presence" in Kosovo.

Government sources in Belgrade suggest that the Yugoslavs might accept an international force split three ways -- between NATO, Russia and a group of other countries.

But Yugoslav officials insist they cannot withdraw their own forces from Kosovo until NATO bombing stops and until NATO pulls its forces from neighboring Albania and Macedonia.

While agreeing on a peace plan during their summit in Germany, G-8 ministers reached no agreement about ending the air war against Yugoslavia, now in its seventh week.

Key Serb hard-liner rejects plan

Deputy Prime Minister Vojislav Seselj, considered a hard-liner in the Serbian government, said his government "will never accept" an international force that is armed, or one that contains troops from NATO "aggressor countries."

In New York, Vladislav Jovanovic, Yugoslavia's charge d'affaires at the United Nations, said he "disagrees with the approach" set force in the G-8 peace plan but added that it hasn't been rejected outright by Yugoslavia.

Even as the peace plan was being put on the table, the Pentagon announced Thursday that it was sending an additional 176 U.S. warplanes to Europe for use in the air campaign against Yugoslavia.

Many of the planes will be stationed in Hungary, the first time the country has been used as a base during the campaign, giving NATO another angle of attack on Yugoslavia, Pentagon officials told CNN.

Hungary is the only NATO member that borders Yugoslavia.

U.N. Security Council to review plan

The G-8 plan would allow the safe return of hundreds of thousands of refugees who fled the strife-torn Serbian province; preserve the current borders of Yugoslavia and its neighboring states; and disarm the Kosovo Liberation Army -- the ethnic Albanian guerrilla movement that has fought for independence for Kosovo for more than a year. It would also set up a U.N. administration for Kosovo and a framework for its autonomy.

The G-8 countries -- the United States, Britain, France, Germany, Japan, Russia, Italy and Canada -- will soon present their plan to the U.N. Security Council for its authorization, which the plan is expected to receive.

"Today we have agreed on these principles. Much is left to do," said German Foreign Minister Joschka Fischer. "There are differences of opinion on whether to stop the bombings."

"We have discussed the principles today," Russian Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov added. "Now we will start to go to the practice."

G-8 representatives
The U.S. and Britain gave up any formal reference to NATO in the tentative peace agreement for Kosovo  

Russian envoy Viktor Chernomyrdin is expected to return to Yugoslavia at some point after the G-8 meeting to present the peace formula to Milosevic.

Albright: Russian agreement significant

Thursday's talks were the first between G-8 member Russia and NATO powers, which make up most of the group, since the conflict began in late March.

U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright said Russia's agreement was the most significant point of Thursday's proposal.

In return for Russia's acceptance that a military force is needed in Kosovo, the agreement drops any reference to NATO's role in the proposed military contingent, dubbed "KFOR." Albright said she expected the Russians to be included "in the way they have participated in Bosnia."

However, ministers from NATO countries made it clear that their troops will make up the core of the force. British Foreign Secretary Robin Cook said ethnic Albanian refugees would not agree to return to the province without the protection of a peacekeeping force with "teeth."

"Those teeth will be supplied by the NATO countries," Cook said.

The international force will be set up under Chapter 7 of the U.N. charter, which allows a "robust" force and denies a veto to the host country.

"It will be a Chapter 7, and it will have NATO at its core, and it will have other countries associated with it," Albright said.

All Yugoslav troops and Serbian special police must withdraw from Kosovo under the agreement, she said. NATO sources told CNN that they will retain the option to strike at all times during this process, to attack when threatened and to hit any targets they still perceive as "legitimate."

Military equipment, oil supplies hit

Despite bad weather, NATO strikes Wednesday and Thursday hit oil supplies in Nis and Pozega, in southern Serbia. Other strikes focused on airfields around Serbia, a missile site near Novi Sad and Yugoslav troops in Kosovo, said Maj. Gen. Walter Jertz, NATO's military spokesman. Bridges, roads and radio relay stations were pounded as well.

Jertz said long field duty, lack of sleep, poor food and fear of attacks are taking their toll on the morale of Yugoslav troops in Kosovo.

"As for commanders, they live with the growing knowledge that they are on the losing side," he added.

Jertz outlined a pattern of damage NATO has inflicted on Yugoslav forces. NATO attacks have cut all but one link across the Danube River in Belgrade, and only two other bridges remain standing over the river, he said.

NATO says all four major road and rail lines into Kosovo have been cut by allied attacks; about half the Yugoslav army's ammunition stocks have been destroyed; 70 percent of its oil supplies have been destroyed, and all of its refining capacity has been shut down.

NATO says its strikes have hit about 300 pieces of equipment, including tanks, trucks, armored troop carriers and artillery -- about 20 percent of what NATO estimates was in Kosovo. Jertz said the fielded forces are now dispersing into smaller units and digging in to protect their equipment.

"Far from moving with impunity, they can now move only furtively and with fear," he said.

Rugova in Rome

Meanwhile, in Italy on Thursday, ethnic Albanian leader Ibrahim Rugova said he wants to go home -- but only when there is an international military force in Kosovo to protect returning refugees.

At a news conference in Rome, Rugova endorsed U.S. calls for NATO participation in an international peacekeeping force for Kosovo. He said all Kosovars were seeking a peaceful solution to the conflict, including the KLA.

But he avoided saying whether he supported the NATO bombing campaign. Nor did he say whether meetings he had held with Serb leaders had been conducted under duress.

Rugova also said Serb forces had to withdraw from Kosovo so that all ethnic Albanian refugees could return safely.

Rugova arrived in Italy unexpectedly Wednesday with members of his family. After NATO airstrikes began, he appeared occasionally on Serbian television with Yugoslav officials in events NATO dismissed as staged or faked.

The French-educated Rugova is the elected "president" of the self-declared Republic of Kosovo. A pacifist, he has never openly backed the KLA's armed uprising against Belgrade.

In Tirana, a KLA spokesman said the organization was suspicious of Rugova's peace efforts, and said it would not disarm even if a peace deal was reached with Belgrade.

Correspondents Brent Sadler, Ralph Begleiter and Alessio Vinci contributed to this report.


RELATED STORIES:
G-8 countries endorse Kosovo plan
May 6, 1999
Kosovo Albanian leader Rugova in Rome for talks
March 5, 1999
Clinton heads to Europe for NATO bombing update
May 4, 1999
NATO pounds Yugoslav targets after flurry of diplomacy
May 4, 1999
NATO strikes knock out Serb electrical power
May 3, 1999
NATO airstrikes press on despite prisoner release
May 2, 1999

RELATED SITES:
Extensive list of Kosovo-related sites:
  • Kosovo

Yugoslavia:
  • Federal Republic of Yugoslavia official site
      • Kesovo and Metohija facts
  • Serbia Ministry of Information
  • Serbia Now! News

Kosovo:
  • Kosova Crisis Center
  • Kosovo - from Albanian.com

Military:
  • F-117s arrive at Aviano to support possible NATO operations
  • NATO official site
  • BosniaLINK - U.S. Dept. of Defense
  • U.S. Navy images from Operation Allied Force
  • U.K. Ministry of Defence - Kosovo news
  • U.K. Royal Air Force - Kosovo news
  • Jane's Defence - Kosovo Crisis


Relief:
  • U.S. Agency for International Development (Kosovo aid)
  • Doctors of the World
  • The IOM Migration Web
  • InterAction
  • International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies
  • International Committee of the Red Cross
  • Kosovo Humanitarian Disaster Forces Hundreds of Thousands from their Homes
  • Catholic Relief Services
  • Kosovo Relief
  • ReliefWeb: Home page
  • The Jewish Agency for Israel
  • Mercy International


Media:
  • Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
  • Independent Yugoslav radio stations B92
  • Institute for War and Peace Reporting
  • United States Information Agency - Kosovo Crisis


Other:
  • Expanded list of related sites on Kosovo
  • 1997 view of Kosovo from space - Eurimage
Note: Pages will open in a new browser window
External sites are not endorsed by CNN Interactive.

 LATEST HEADLINES:
SEARCH CNN.com
Enter keyword(s)   go    help

Back to the top   © 2001 Cable News Network. All Rights Reserved.
Terms under which this service is provided to you.
Read our privacy guidelines.