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NATO's advance guard reaches Pristina
June 12, 1999
PRISTINA, Yugoslavia (CNN) -- The advance guard of NATO's peacekeeping force arrived Saturday in Kosovo's provincial capital, where a small Russian force awaited them at the city's airport. British armored units arrived at the airport at Pristina at 3:50 p.m. (9:50 a.m. EDT). The airfield will be a staging ground for supply shipments to the peacekeeping force, known as KFOR. "Our forces are entering difficult territory, but they know their cause is a right one," Gen. Wesley Clark, NATO's supreme commander, told reporters at allied headquarters in Brussels, Belgium. But NATO's entrance into the Yugoslav province was upstaged by the arrival early Saturday of a Russian contingent in Pristina, its purpose uncertain. The British- and French-led NATO force went into Kosovo at dawn Saturday, escorted by U.S. helicopter gunships. The forward units headed for Pristina, which NATO plans to use as a staging point for supply shipments. Chinook and Puma helicopters carried members of Britain's elite Gurka rifle regiment and paratroopers across the border as Operation Joint Guardian -- one of the biggest military undertakings in Europe since World War II -- got under way. A convoy of British and French military vehicles and infantry followed. But hours earlier, a small force of Russians arrived in Pristina unannounced -- and in direct conflict with Moscow's assurances to Washington that it had no plans to upstage NATO's deployment. A massive convoy of British and French military vehicles rolled into Kosovo around the same time, transporting the first NATO footsoldiers to step into into the province since the 19-member military alliance began a bomb campaign that was halted this week after 79 days. CNN's Nic Robertson, who entered Kosovo with the NATO vanguard from Macedonia, said light mortar fire could be heard in the distance near the NATO convoy and that the troops had taken a defensive position. He reported the mortar fire shortly after the convoy ground to a halt after two sets of explosives were found at the first tunnel about four miles (7 km) inside Kosovo. Minutes before, the peacekeepers encountered three Yugoslav troops who were in a vehicle driving toward them, Robertson said. The peacekeepers ordered them to stop and then disarmed the three, before sending them on their way. The NATO convoy then passed through a number of villages and did not see a single civilian, Robertson said. CNN's Tom Mintier, also in Kosovo, said signs of human tragedy were evident, following the massive exodus of Kosovo refugees over the past few months: Hundreds of abandoned cars, pieces of clothing and shoes strewn about. NATO stunned by Russian troop movementNATO's entry followed a night of considerable surprise and embarrassment for NATO after Russian troops entered Kosovo ahead of NATO peacekeepers -- a move that stunned the alliance, the White House, Pentagon and even high-level Moscow officials. At dawn on Saturday, the Russian troops were still in Kosovo, despite reports that they had been ordered out. It was also reported that Russian forces were present at the Pristina Airport, where NATO forces hoped to set up a staging area. Smiling and waving, Russian soldiers in camouflage fatigues had entered Pristina hours before NATO troops moved in. Russian soldiers perched atop their military vehicles as residents lined the streets cheering, chanting and tossing flowers onto the convoy of trucks and armored personnel carriers, which were marked with the bold letters "KFOR," the symbol for the international peacekeeping force. At one point, a group of residents climbed onto a vehicle and unfurled a Yugoslav flag, joyfully waving its blue, white and red stripes. "The situation is sheer madness," CNN's Jim Clancy reported from the Kosovo capital. "This has awakened the entire city." The residents had begun gathering in the streets hours before the column of about 200 Russian troops reached Pristina -- as if they knew the soldiers were on the way.
Who ordered the Russians in?Russian President Boris Yeltsin returned to the Kremlin for meetings with his top advisers Saturday about the early arrival of Russian troops in Kosovo, declaring "Russia is prepared to participate" in the peacekeeping operation, a spokesman said. A delegation of military leaders left Moscow for Macedonia on Saturday to discuss Russia's role in the Kosovo peacekeeping mission as the Russian contingent received a heroes' welcome from the minority ethnic Serb population in Pristina. Shortly after the troops arrived, Russian Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov, surprised at the news, called it an "unfortunate mistake" and said the troops had been ordered to leave. "The reasons for this are being determined. They have been ordered to leave Kosovo immediately and to await further orders," said Ivanov, who just hours earlier assured U.S. officials that Russian troops would wait to enter until NATO peacekeepers arrived in Kosovo. NATO had no official comment, but a spokesman in Macedonia said: "Of course, it was a surprise." In Washington, White House officials told CNN the administration is "pleased" with Ivanov's statement but wants more answers as to how it happened. However, some sources said they did not believe the Russian entry was a mistake -- as one source put it, soldiers don't march without orders. A senior Pentagon source said the Russian Constitution states that Russia's president or prime minister must act to officially deploy troops outside of Russia. Russia's Interfax news agency, quoting an unnamed military source, said the Russian entry into Kosovo had been sanctioned by the Kremlin -- but there was no independent confirmation of that report. U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Strobe Talbott was meeting in Moscow with officials there for further explanations. State Department spokesman James Rubin, on a plane headed back to Washington, said "we will take (Ivanov's) statement at face value" and "will wait to see" if the troops withdraw. Russia has said it does not want its troops placed under NATO command in Kosovo. Instead, it wants a Russian sector of the province to oversee. Many Russians have expressed strong opposition to the Kosovo peace plan, charging that Russia yielded to NATO's demands during peace talks and failed to defend Yugoslavia, its ally. British transport plane crashesThe NATO-led multinational peacekeeping force is expected to eventually number at least 45,000 on the ground in Kosovo, with another 10,000 backup troops across the borders in Macedonia and Albania. The Russian contingent could include as many as 800 troops ultimately. But it was not immediately clear if the Russians early entry into Kosovo would affect those plans. The Pentagon source called the entry of the Russian troops "militarily insignificant" but cautioned the unexpected move could pose political problems. In another development, a British C-130 military transport plane carrying 12 people crash-landed late Friday in northern Albania and burst into flames after the ammunition it was carrying ignited, seriously injuring one passenger. The C-130 Hercules touched down on a dirt airstrip near the northern Albanian town of Kukes and taxied down the runway when one of its engines caught fire, a NATO spokesman told CNN. A massive orange fireball lit up the nighttime sky and repeated explosions jolted the area. A nearby Kosovar Albanian refugee camp was evacuated shortly after the crash. NATO said it had launched an investigation. Correspondents Nic Robertson, Tom Mintier, Matthew Chance, Jill Dougherty and Chris Burns contributed to this report. RELATED STORIES: Russian troops enter Kosovo; Moscow orders them to leave RELATED SITES: Yugoslavia:
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