General Clark: Serbian Army was afraid of the KLA

American General Wesley Clark, in the first part of his testimony in The Hague, stated that the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) was an army composed of self-organized and motivated individuals, but without clear command and control.
He stressed that the Serbian Army was afraid of these groups, but had no coordinated structure.
“The groups were independent and often acted on their own. Sometimes they would capture foreigners, but there were no clear lines of communication or centralized command. I had no doubt that the Serbian Army was afraid of them,” Clark said.
The general added that the KLA lacked command and control mechanisms, while American observers on the Albania-Kosovo border were unable to gather reliable information on their actions.
"Command implies authority, control is the way to supervise and guide. From what we saw, none of these existed," Clark said. /Telegraph/


















































