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Perhaps even more than in Egypt or Cyprus, Canadian soldiers
faced arduous and perilous conditions in Yugoslavia. This Balkan nation was
composed of a number of ethnic groups that were historically hostile to each
other. This diverse ethnic composition, and resulting rivalries, reflects
the Balkan's centuries of history as the front line of conflict between the
Islamic and Christian world. Ethnic tension in the region, never far from
the surface, has traditionally found an outlet in violence, and historic and
ongoing betrayals, real and imagined, have left the groups with a deep distrust
of their neighbours. Religious differences are also a factor. The Serbs (Orthodox),
Croats (Catholic), and Kosovars (Islamic) are, predominantly, of different
faiths. (The population of Bosnia was fairly evenly divided between these
three religions.) Under the communist rule of Marshal Tito, these tensions
had been kept in check. Yugoslavia survived the first decade of the post-Tito
era, but the pessimists proved to be correct. When civil war broke out, the
only military force was the Yugoslav National Army. It was soon fractured
as the various ethnic nations broke away and formed independent states. Those
states formed militias comprised of people with scant training and devoid
of military discipline and organization. As one historian aptly states: "Rival
militias fired weapons in the vicinity of opposing troops, more often than
not, intent on killing civilians. The result was to create a pattern of combat
where military casualties were few. The new armies knew how to kill, but not
how to wage war against other soldiers properly. Unprotected civilians were
a different matter. And so, the objective in these wars was not to defeat
the opponent's combat power but to consolidate new ethnic nation-states by
killing or driving out those who did not fit." (1)
Such ethnic cleansing, as these tactics came to be known, was practised by
all parties in the civil wars that erupted in 1992, and Canadian soldiers
became witnesses to unspeakable acts of barbarism.
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United Nations(UN 193526C, photo by Jihad El
Hassan).
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United Nations Protection Force
(UNPROFOR), Croatia, September 1993.
A Canadian soldier stands guard
amid the destruction in Croatia. On 21 February 1992, the United
Nations Security Council established UNPROFOR to create the conditions
of peace and security necessary to negotiate a settlement to the
Yugoslav crisis.
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Slovenia and Croatia declared independence in 1991. The
Yugoslavian government attempted, through force of arms, to prevent
the secession of these two would-be autonomous states. The stated reason
for this action was to protect Serbian minorities in those countries.
Slovenia separated easily after a short standoff between Slovene forces
and the Yugoslav army garrison and has quietly settled down to integrating
into mainstream western European life. In Croatia, Serb fears proved
to be well founded, and, by 1995, the Serb communities that had occupied
eastern Croatia's Krajina area for hundreds of years had been expelled.
The Croats, despite the best efforts of Canadian peacekeepers, had "ethnically
cleansed" the Serbian population. For their part, the Serbs undoubtedly
wanted to retain control of a greater Yugoslavia. The result of these
three-sided civil wars was thousands of deaths and tens of thousands
of political refugees (perhaps as many as 1.7 million according to UN
estimates).
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Bosnia, celebrated by many as a successfully integrated
multicultural society, also pushed for independence and, in the process,
a civil war erupted between Bosnia's three main ethno-religious groups:
Serbian, Bosniak (Bosnian Muslims), and Croatian. (Convenience, however,
sometimes brought the Bosniak and Croatian elements together against
Serbs seeking annexation of their territories to Yugoslavia itself.)
Canada was precipitated into the Bosnia morass in dramatic fashion in
1992. The first Canadian contingent to the UN peacekeeping mission in
Yugoslavia, UNPROFOR (United Nations Protection Force), dispatched from
Germany, was nominally based on the 1st Battalion, Le Royal 22e Régiment
(1 R22eR), with about 40 per cent coming from 3rd Battalion The Royal
Canadian Regiment (3 RCR) as well as a combat engineer squadron (company)
from 1 Combat Engineer Regiment in Lahr, a critical unit in an area
saturated with unmarked minefields. The UN had requested that this totally
mechanized battalion replace most of its M113 armoured personnel carriers
(APCs) with trucks. The Canadian commander in Germany, Brigadier-General
Clive Addy, advised by Brigadier- (soon to be Major-) General Lewis
Mackenzie who was already in Yugoslavia, refused. Canadian troops arrived
in Croatia with all their APCs including those equipped with TOW (Tube-launched,
Optically-tracked, Wire-guided) anti-tank missiles and 81mm mortars.
Addy and Mackenzie were quickly proven correct in their conviction that
the protection and firepower this equipment provided would be essential
to ensure both the success of the mission and the safety of Canada's
soldiers. The original UNPROFOR mandate was to deploy along the Serb/Croat
ceasefire line, and the Canadians, pretty much the first contingent
on the ground, were slowly starting to familiarize themselves with their
new mission in May and June, while a full-scale civil war was raging
in Bosnia. UNPROFOR was instructed to open a way for convoys of food
and medical supplies. Thanks to their robust equipment, the "Vandoos"
and "Royals" of 1 R22eR were the only real option available
to the UN in order to accomplish this task. Fittingly, on Canada Day,
1 July 1992, the world press was reporting the saga of these troops
forcing their way through Serb checkpoints and deploying around the
airport and downtown of Sarajevo. Major-General Lewis Mackenzie, the
senior UN commander in Sarajevo, and the Canadian soldiers gained worldwide
prominence due to extensive media coverage. In early August, 1 R22eR
returned to Croatia, but, later that year, Canada sent a second battalion-sized
battle group to Bosnia -- 2nd Battalion of The Royal Canadian Regiment.
This contingent included a squadron of the 12e Régiment Blindé
du Canada (12 RBC) with their Cougar armoured cars (2)
and a squadron of combat engineers from Valcartier, Quebec.
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The theoretical aim of the Canadian contingent's participation
in UNPROFOR II, the UN force in Bosnia, was to escort humanitarian relief
convoys, but it quickly became involved in trying to mitigate the impact
of the civil war. The most dramatic incident was its intervention on
behalf of the besieged Muslim communities in eastern Bosnia. At Srebenica,
French General Claude Morillon (Mackenzie's replacement as the UN commander
in Sarejevo), with a small escort of Canadians, worked out an agreement
whereby the Muslims in five United Nations "safe areas" were
to disarm but be
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| United Nations (UN 78799). |
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United Nations Operation in
the Congo, January 1963.
UN troops train Congolese soldiers
in various aspects of military activity.
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protected from the Serbs by UN soldiers. The Canadian
contingent increased eventually to as many as 175 before being replaced
by a lightly armed, 500-man Dutch battalion. Canadian soldiers were,
like the local populations, besieged for months at a time. These troops
sometimes survived on half rations, and, on being relieved, often looked
as haggard as the populations they were protecting. The cost to Canadian
peacekeepers in injuries from hostile fire and mines was a heavy one.
The Serbs eventually crushed four of these five "safe areas"
in 1995. The one exception other than Sarajevo, which was really a sixth
"safe area," was Gorazde. Unlike the other four, it had no
peacekeepers in 1994, only a team of UNMOs assisted by British Special
Air Service (SAS) patrols. The story of the role of a young Canadian
UNMO, Major Pat Stogran, in protecting Gorazde has recently come to
light. (3) The other "safe
areas" protected by UN peacekeepers later fell to Serb forces,
but the use of NATO air power saved Gorazde. The air strikes were used
on the recommendation of Major Stogran and directed to their targets
by the SAS patrols. NATO had made air power available to the UN when
evidence came to light that Yugoslavia was giving strong military support
to Bosnian Serbs. This was the first instance of its use (and the first
instance of the use of NATO air power against ground targets). Serb
forces were very near to investing the town but backed off when the
air strikes were escalated from local tactical targets (individual tanks,
etc.) to strategic targets deep in Bosnian Serb territory. British UN
peacekeepers then entered the town, which was the only one that did
not fall to Serbs in the final phase of the war in 1995.
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The Canadian contingent was able to protect the Serb enclave
in the Krajina region of eastern Croatia until 1995 when a major Croatian
offensive succeeded in expelling the entire Serb population. In 1993,
the Canadian contingent, 2 PPCLI battle group, had been able to stop
an earlier offensive. The men of 2 PPCLI did so despite the battalion
having a great deal going against it. Of its 875 soldiers, only 375
came from the unit: the remainder were augmentees, 385 militia soldiers
and 165 from other regular force units. Only a long period of intense
combat training that allowed the building of cohesive teams at section,
platoon, and company level allowed 2 PPCLI to avoid disaster. (4)
Croatian forces attacked the Canadian soldiers over a period of four
days. The Canadians returned fire, suffering several wounded but no
loss of life themselves. Croatian officials publicly admitted to losing
some 27 killed and wounded to UN fire in this action, but their actual
losses were probably much higher. (5)
Eventually, 2 PPCLI launched a full-scale assault, the first by the
Canadian army since Korea, to reoccupy the ceasefire zone. Although
its objectives were achieved without firing a shot, a tense confrontation
took place between Croatian tanks and Canadian TOW M113 APCs. This confrontation
ended only when the commanding officer of the Patricia's called forward
20 international journalists accompanying the troops to witness what
was going on. The Croatians left the Krajina region but not before inflicting
scenes of death, rape, pillage, and wanton destruction on the areas
they briefly occupied. The Canadian "peacekeepers" who witnessed
the carnage as they moved in were left with indelible scars. The experience
of Yugoslavia clearly provides the lesson that peacekeeping is best
carried out by combat trained, well-equipped troops.
Bosnia, however, is far from the only peacekeeping mission
that Canada has recently undertaken. The 1990s have seen Canadian troops
in locations as diverse as El Salvador, Cambodia, and the Israeli-Arab
border. Canada has been particularly active in Africa. Angola, Mozambique,
Rwanda-Uganda, the Sahara, and Somalia have all received Canadian peacekeepers
over the last few years. The most famous, and infamous, of these African
operations occurred in Somalia, although the UN mandate in Somalia was
one of combating military factions interfering with relief rather than
peacekeeping.
Most recently, Canadians have been attempting to keep
the peace in Kosovo. Kosovo, another province that has attempted to
break away from Yugoslavia, has also endured the wrath of the Serbian
military and the ethnic cleansing campaigns of Serbian politicians.
(1) Lee Windsor, "Professionalism
under Fire: Canadian Implementation of the Medak Pocket Agreement, Croatia
1993," Canadian Military History 9:3 (2000). Available online
at http://cda-cdai.ca/library/medakpocket2.htm. This article includes
a detailed description of the Medak Pocket action that involved 2 PPCLI.
(2) The Cougar, a six-wheeled vehicle
armed with a very good 76mm gun, was purchased as a tank trainer, that
is to say, a vehicle that would enable a squadron or regiment to convert
quickly to tanks. It was also used in Somalia where its 76mm gun was
fired at least once. It was never conceived that it would be used in
battle but, in fact, did prove reasonably effective in the convoy escort
role. TOW equipped M113s, which could match any tank in the area, often
backed up the Cougars. The infantry were mounted in the wheeled Grizzly
APC, a sister vehicle to the Cougar. The wheeled Grizzly, instead of
the tracked M113, made sense in an area where convoy escort was to be
a major focus.
(3) For more information on this
incident, please see Gillian Sandford and Chris Wattie, "Canada's
Unsung 'Superhero,'" National Post, 12 January 2002. Available
online at www.nationalpost.com/search/story.html?f=/stories/20020112/1109785.html.
Major Stogran, who was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant-Colonel, later
commanded the 3rd Battalion Princess Patricia's Light Infantry during
its deployment to Afghanistan in 2002.
(4) Ironically, time did not permit
battalion-level training as part of the three-month work up period.
Nevertheless, the intense training prior to deployment and the professionalism
of the commanding officer, Lieutenant-Colonel Jim Calvin, and his staff
was such that the battalion assault to reoccupy the Krajina ceasefire
zone was executed without a hitch.
(5) For details of this defensive
action, see Scott Taylor and Brian Nolan, Tested Mettle: Canada's
Peacekeepers at War (Ottawa: Esprit de Corps Publications, 1998),
pp. 123-41.
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