Udbina air strike | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Part of Operation Deny Flight | |||||||
A French Jaguar over the Adriatic Sea | |||||||
| |||||||
Belligerents | |||||||
Serbian Krajina | |||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Leighton W. Smith | Milan Martić Ratko Dopuđa | ||||||
Units involved | |||||||
United States Air Force United States Marine Corps Royal Air Force French Air Force Royal Netherlands Air Force | Serbian Army of Krajina | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
39 attack aircraft 16 aircraft in supporting role | Anti-aircraft defenses | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
None | 2 killed Several wounded 2 anti-aircraft batteries 1 SA-6 missile site airstrip destroyed |
On 21 November 1994, NATO aircraft taking part of Operation Deny Flight carried out an airstrike on the airbase of Udbina, Croatia, then part of the self-proclaimed Serbian Republic of Krajina. The Serbian Army of Krajina, through its 105th Aviation Brigade, had been launching air attacks on neighbour Bosnia and Herzegovina from the base in support of allied Serbian forces there, especially during the siege of Bihać. NATO forces intervened in order to deter further attacks. Two anti-aircraft SA-2 missile sites that the Serbs had used to attack Bihac in the ground-to-ground mode and to engage NATO aircraft were also destroyed in the following days. The bombing of Udbina was the largest air combat operation in Europe since World War II, and the largest combat operation in NATO's history up to that time.
In October and November 1994, allied Muslim-Croat forces launched a major offensive around the town of Bihać, in far northwestern Bosnia, which had been declared a safe zone for refugees by the UN. The Serbs soon launched a counterattack, and in support of their operations, they carried out air strikes with aircraft based at a former JNA military airport in Udbina, southwest of Bihać, within the boundaries of the Serbian Krajina. [1]
The Serb aircraft dropped napalm and cluster bombs on Bosnian positions in the Bihać pocket. [2] The majority of the sorties released their bombs without flying on Bosnia's air space, and the jets perfected the tactic of flying below the radar screen, but the attacks were a clear violation of the no-fly zone anyway, and a challenge to NATO. [3] The Krajina Serbs attacks began on 10 November on Cazin and Bihać itself, but these ones only involved the use of heavy artillery and SA-2 surface-to-air missiles in a ground-to-ground role. [3] [4] [5]
On 18 November, two Orao ground attack aircraft dropped napalm and cluster bombs, while on the following day, other two aircraft launched four bombs on civilian facilities at Cazin. One of the jets, an Orao, was shot down and its pilot, identified as Boro Nović, was killed. Three of the bombs did not explode, but nine civilians lost their lives. [3] Two Royal Air Force (RAF) Tornados pursued two Galeb after they attacked Bosnian positions around Bihać, but were forced to stop the chase when the Serb pilots flew into Croatian airspace, where NATO forces had no mandate. [6]
As a response to the deteriorating situation in Bihać, the Security Council passed Resolution 958, which allowed NATO aircraft to operate over Croatia. [7] On 21 November, NATO acted under its new authority by planning a strike on the Udbina airfield. [8]
The attack on Udbina airfield was originally planned for 20 November, but the operation was aborted due to poor weather conditions. [9]
On Monday 21 November, NATO eventually carried out what became the biggest air attack in its 45-year history. [10] The operation involved 39 attack aircraft and another 16 in charge of pre-strike surveillance, resupply, early warning, command and control, post-strike surveillance and electronic countermeasures. According to British sources, only French Air Force and RAF Jaguar [11] fighters actually dropped bombs on the airbase and anti-aircraft sites in the area. [10] The aircraft took off from five Italian air bases, and the airstrike lasted from 13:00 to 13:45 local time. [12] F-16A Fighting Falcons from the Royal Netherlands Air Force provided protection to the strike force, while reconnaissance and electronic jamming was carried out by French Mirage 2000s, United States Air Force (USAF) EF-111 Ravens, F-15E Strike Eagles, F-16s and United States Marine Corps (USMC) F/A-18 Hornets. [11]
The first targets to be engaged were the SA-6 battery and the anti-aircraft artillery defending the base. NATO fighters dropped cluster bombs on them. The Serb crews manning the equipment were alerted in advance, in order to avoid major casualties. [3] Precision guided ordnance and gravity bombs were then used to strike the airfield. In a show of self-restraint, the bombers spared some 20 Serbian ground-attack aircraft parked on the runway's end. A damage assessment at dusk revealed that the airstrip had been badly hit in five places. [10] The commander of the Serb airbase, Colonel Ratko Dopudja, acknowledged the loss of two military personnel (Branko Jerković and Darko Galović) [13] and several wounded. [3]
On 22 November, two Royal Navy Sea Harriers from the carrier HMS Invincible were engaged by Serb anti-aircraft missiles. [14] The British aircraft managed to outmaneuver the missiles and escaped unscathed. [15]
The next day, NATO launched a reconnaissance air package including RAF Jaguars, French Mirage 2000s and USAF F-16s to search the area. The air patrol was escorted by two U.S. Navy EA-6B Prowlers, armed with AGM-88 HARM anti-radiation missiles. When a Serb SA-2 radar from Otoka illuminated one of the surveillance aircraft, the EA-6Bs fired two HARMs at the anti-aircraft position. Both missiles hit home. A third missile was launched at a second SA-2 missile site at Dvor, in Croatia. [16] After a damage assessment, Otoka's missile site was once again the subject of an airstrike later in the day [9] when USAF F-15Es dropped GBU-12 laser-guided bombs on the area. [17]
The airbase at Udbina was put out of commission for nearly a month. [14] The air raid, however, had no immediate effect on the military situation on the ground around Bihać. On the contrary, the Bosnian 5th Bosnian Army Corps stopped their offensive and withdrew to their original positions, followed by thousands of refugees. [3]
Elsewhere, Serb authorities in Bosnia reacted by taking 500 UNPROFOR hostages by early December, including three that were forced to remain on the tarmac of Banja Luka airstrip as human shields. [18] Serb ground forces also continued to hampered NATO air patrols by locking down and firing anti-aircraft missiles at them; two RAF Tornados evaded radar-guided missiles on 24 November, while two F-16s were fired at the next day. [19]
The Serbian seizure of hostages and escalating harassment of NATO aircraft compelled the alliance to suspend flights over Bosnia and Croatia by 2 December. [18] After former U.S. president Jimmy Carter brokered a four-month ceasefire agreement, NATO operations were scaled down and Serbs forces released all UNPROFOR hostages. [18] Notwithstanding, NATO surveillance continued, and on 17 December a French navy Super Etendard from the aircraft carrier Foch was hit by a shoulder-launched anti-aircraft missile. The damaged fighter managed to return to Foch. [20]
The airbase was eventually overrun by Croatian forces on 7 August 1995, during Operation Storm. [21]
The Yugoslav People's Army, also called the Yugoslav National Army, was the military of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and its antecedents from 1945 to 1992.
This is a list of aviation-related events from 1995.
The United Nations Protection Force was the first United Nations peacekeeping force in Croatia and in Bosnia and Herzegovina during the Yugoslav Wars. The force was formed in February 1992 and its mandate ended in March 1995, with the peacekeeping mission restructuring into three other forces.
Operation Deliberate Force was a sustained air campaign conducted by NATO, in concert with the UNPROFOR ground operations, to undermine the military capability of the Army of Republika Srpska, which had threatened and attacked UN-designated "safe areas" in Bosnia and Herzegovina during the Bosnian War with the Srebrenica genocide and Markale massacres, precipitating the intervention. The shelling of the Sarajevo marketplace on 28 August 1995 by the VRS is considered to be the immediate instigating factor behind NATO's decision to launch the operation.
Operation Deny Flight was a North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) operation that began on 12 April 1993 as the enforcement of a United Nations (UN) no-fly zone over Bosnia and Herzegovina. The United Nations and NATO later expanded the mission of the operation to include providing close air support for UN troops in Bosnia and carrying out coercive air strikes against targets in Bosnia. Twelve NATO members contributed forces to the operation and, by its end on 20 December 1995, NATO pilots had flown 100,420 sorties.
The Banja Luka incident was an air-to-air action that took place over Bosnia on 28 February 1994 when six Republika Srpska Air Force J-21 Jastreb single-seat light attack jets were engaged, and five of them shot down or crashed during escape, by NATO warplanes from the United States Air Force. In response to an attack on a Bosnian weapons factory, U.S. F-16 fighters operating southwest of Banja Luka successfully intercepted and destroyed the Bosnian Serb warplanes. The engagement resulted in no U.S. casualties. It marked the first active combat action, air-to-air or otherwise, in NATO's history.
The Mrkonjić Grad incident took place on 2 June 1995 during the Bosnian war. On that day, the Army of Republika Srpska shot down an American F-16C aircraft near Mrkonjić Grad with an SA-6 missile. The pilot, Scott O'Grady, ejected from the cockpit and was rescued six days later. The incident was the subject of the 2001 American film Behind Enemy Lines and a 2007 National Geographic documentary about the incident was aired on the channel as part of the series Situation Critical - Downed Pilot.
Željava Air Base, situated on the border between Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina under the Gola Plješevica mountain, near the city of Bihać, was the largest underground hangar and military air base in the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (SFRY), and one of the largest in Europe. The facilities are shared by the local governments of Bihać and Lika-Senj County of Croatia.
Operation Sana was the final military offensive of the Army of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina in western Bosnia and Herzegovina and the last major battle of the Bosnian War. It was launched from the area of Bihać on 13 September 1995, against the Army of Republika Srpska, and involved advances towards Bosanski Petrovac, Sanski Most and Bosanska Krupa. At the same time, the Croatian Army and the Croatian Defence Council were engaging the VRS in Operation Maestral 2 further to the southeast. After an initial 70-kilometre (43 mi) advance, VRS reinforcements managed to stop the ARBiH short of Sanski Most and Bosanski Novi, and reversed some of the ARBiH's territorial gains in a counterattack. After a part of the ARBiH 5th Corps was threatened with defeat around the town of Ključ, the ARBiH requested assistance from the HV.
Operation Summer '95 was a joint military offensive of the Croatian Army (HV) and the Croatian Defence Council (HVO) that took place north-west of the Livanjsko Polje, and around Bosansko Grahovo and Glamoč in western Bosnia and Herzegovina. The operation was carried out between 25 and 29 July 1995, during the Croatian War of Independence and the Bosnian War. The attacking force of 8,500 troops commanded by HV's Lieutenant General Ante Gotovina initially encountered strong resistance from the 5,500-strong Army of Republika Srpska (VRS) 2nd Krajina Corps. The HV/HVO pushed the VRS back, capturing about 1,600 square kilometres of territory and consequently intercepting the Knin—Drvar road—a critical supply route of the self-declared Republic of Serbian Krajina (RSK). The operation failed to achieve its declared primary goal of drawing VRS units away from the besieged city of Bihać, but it placed the HV in position to capture the RSK's capital Knin in Operation Storm days later.
Operation Mistral 2, officially codenamed Operation Maestral 2, was a Croatian Army (HV) and Croatian Defence Council (HVO) offensive in western Bosnia and Herzegovina on 8–15 September 1995 as part of the Bosnian War. Its objective was to create a security buffer between Croatia and positions held by the Bosnian Serb Army of Republika Srpska (VRS). The operation also spearheaded a Herzeg-Croat led move to compromise the occupation of the largest Bosnian Serb-held city, Banja Luka, by capturing the towns of Jajce, Šipovo and Drvar. Thus jeopardizing the operations capacity of Banja Luka and ultimately leading to its recapture. The combined HV and HVO forces were under the overall command of HV Major General Ante Gotovina.
The NATO intervention in Bosnia and Herzegovina was a series of actions undertaken by NATO whose stated aim was to establish long-term peace during and after the Bosnian War. NATO's intervention began as largely political and symbolic, but gradually expanded to include large-scale air operations and the deployment of approximately 60,000 soldiers of the Implementation Force.
United Nations Security Council resolution 958, adopted unanimously on 19 November 1994, after recalling all resolutions on the situation in the former Yugoslavia including Resolution 836 (1993), the council, acting under Chapter VII of the United Nations Charter, determined that the situation in the former Yugoslavia continued to constitute a threat to international peace and security and in its support of the United Nations Protection Force (UNPROFOR), authorised the use of air strikes in Croatia in addition to Bosnia and Herzegovina by member states, in order for UNPROFOR to carry out its mandate. UNPROFOR was authorised to use air force independently, via direct member states support or via regional organizations. Subsequent air force interventions in Udbina airfield and other locations in Croatia and Bosnia, were conducted with NATO support.
The siege of Bihać was a three-year-long siege of the northwestern Bosnian town of Bihać by the Army of the Republika Srpska, the Army of the Republic of Serbian Krajina and Bosnian Muslim dissenters led by Fikret Abdić during the 1992–95 Bosnian War. The siege lasted for three years, from June 1992 until 4–5 August 1995, when Operation Storm ended it after the Croatian Army (HV) overran the rebel Serbs in Croatia and northwest of the besieged town.
The 105th Aviation Brigade was formed from the disbanded Yugoslav 105th Fighter-Bomber Aviation Regiment in the spring of 1993 by the Serbian Army of Krajina at Udbina Airport. Its accurate organization is unknown, and it's not exactly clear whether the brigade was part of Republika Srpska Air Force due to the aircraft had same roundels.
The Split Agreement or Split Declaration was a mutual defence agreement between Croatia, the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina and the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, signed in Split, Croatia on 22 July 1995. It called on the Croatian Army (HV) to intervene militarily in Bosnia and Herzegovina, primarily in relieving the siege of Bihać.
Operation Shader is the operational code name given to the contribution of the United Kingdom in the ongoing military intervention against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant. The operation involves the British Army providing ground support and training to allied forces fighting against ISIL, the Royal Air Force providing humanitarian aid airdrops, reconnaissance and airstrikes, and the Royal Navy providing reconnaissance and airstrikes from the UK Carrier Strike group and escort to allied carrier battle groups.
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The Vrsar airport bombing was a Yugoslav Air Force strike on the Crljenka airport near Vrsar—an air sports airport in the Istrian peninsula. The airstrike occurred on 21 December 1991, possibly as an attempt to stop the training of Croatian pilots, who had deserted the Yugoslav Air Force and were being trained in Vrsar. Other than being a training facility, the airport had a significant logistical value. However, since an attack was expected only on the strategically more important Pula Airport the airport had little defences, and the Croatians were caught unaware, with the alarm sounding ten minutes after the attack. Two people were killed in the raid, while the airport was damaged.
Goražde incident took place during VRS Operation Zvezda '94, NATO intervened to stop the Serbian offensive on Goražde, Bosnia, but two NATO planes were hit, one of them shot down. One Special Air Service British soldier was killed on the ground and another wounded, while 150 UN soldiers were taken hostage. In the end NATO was forced to stop the airstrikes and Serbs to stop the offensive on Goražde.