SЕRBIA: Awakening of Russia

in Deep Dives17 hours ago (edited)

Beograd 1999-66003d542030270bab32c9f5.jpg
Building ablaze after the NATO bombing on April 2, 1999, Belgrade, Yugoslavia. Source / Извор: Yannis Kontos/Getty Images


Аутоматски превод на српски


Exactly 27 years ago, NATO emerged from its sheepskin coat and showed its true face as a rabid wolf. The echoes of the relentless bombing of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia finally woke Russia from its Western hypnosis…



The text before you by Yevgeny Norin was written on the 25th anniversary of NATO aggression against the FRY, that is, Serbia and Montenegro – precisely at the moment when the Russian special military operation entered its third year. Despite some weaknesses, it is perhaps even more relevant today than it was two years ago. Therefore, it is understandable that Russia Today is republishing it:


* * *  Ruins of Yugoslavia:  * * *
How Russia learned that NATO poses a threat

The US-led military bloc’s illegal strikes on Belgrade in the spring of 1999 forever changed relations between the West and Moscow

— By Evgeny Norin —

Published 24 Mar, 2024 15:07 | Updated 9 Oct, 2025 22:14

On March 24, 1999, student Elena Milinčić was at home with her sister and a friend in Belgrade. Suddenly, the quiet evening was interrupted by an air-raid siren. The girls quickly hid under a table. It wasn’t the safest place, but they had gotten lucky – their part of the city wasn’t attacked.

Over the next 77 days, these girls and other Belgrade residents became better at hiding from the bombs which threatened to kill them every day. The raids were part of NATO’s military operation against Yugoslavia – a campaign that shook up the world order, and not just in the Balkans.

Preconditions for bloodshed

The Kosovo problem goes back many centuries. Located in the southwest of Serbia on the border with Albania, the Kosovo region was historically inhabited by two Balkan peoples: Serbs and Albanians. The Serbs consider the region a major part of the country’s history and culture. However, Albanians have also lived there for centuries.

By the mid-19th century, there were about as many Albanians as Serbs in Kosovo. Ethnic strife was a common problem in the Balkans. Retaining their particular cultural characteristics, Serbs, Albanians, Croats, Gypsies, and Muslim Serbs lived side by side for centuries. Conflicts between them, nonetheless, resulted in brutal massacres.

During WWII, the Balkans were occupied by Germany and Italy, and a brutal regime was established in Kosovo. Serbs were expelled from the region and many were killed. After the war, Josip Broz Tito came to power in Yugoslavia and put more wood on the fire. He did not allow Serbian refugees to return to the region and wanted to use Kosovo to pressure Albania. He hoped that the region would become a “bridge” between the two countries. However, the plan fell through and the area continued to become more “Albanian”.

By the time Yugoslavia collapsed, Kosovo’s population consisted of about 75% Albanians and 20% Serbs. The rest were Gypsies and other minorities.

Many Albanian nationalist organizations emerged in the 1980s. At first, they committed minor offenses against the Serbian population, like arson, beatings, threats, graffiti, and so on. However, from the ‘90s, Kosovo undertook active attempts to break away from Yugoslavia, and Kosovo Albanians gravitated towards Albania. During Tito’s rule (1945-80), the region’s nationalist intelligentsia considerably increased in number and laid the ideological grounds for secession projects. Ibrahim Rugova became a prominent Kosovo Albanian leader. He graduated from the University of Prishtina, which was established under Yugoslavia and became the headquarters of nationalist-minded Kosovo Albanian intellectuals. Rugova himself didn’t advocate political violence but became the face of a movement that eventually turned radical and violent.

In 1991, Kosovo held an independence referendum and presidential elections. Yugoslavia did not recognize the new state but, factually, the region had broken away. In 1996, an army was formed called the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA), which launched a full-fledged guerrilla-terrorist war against the Serbs. By 1998, Belgrade realized that it had lost control over the situation and launched a military operation against Kosovo.

Guerrilla warfare

Western media covered this small-scale yet brutal war in a surprisingly one-sided manner. The operation conducted by Serbian security forces was indeed violent, but we need to keep in mind that they fought against a terrorist group. However, people in Europe and the US were only shown how violent Serbian nationalists killed peaceful Albanian peasants. EU and US officials pressured Belgrade to stop the bloodshed. No one made the same demands in regard to KLA militants or complained that Albania was pumping Kosovo with weapons and training militants. The West was determined to dismantle Yugoslavia, so it supported the separatists. The MPRI Private Military Company, which had earlier helped train Croatian armed forces in their fight against the Serbs, soon took over the training of terrorists.

The President of Yugoslavia Slobodan Milosevic saw that he was backed into a corner, but could not just hand over Kosovo. Meanwhile, the war gained momentum. Acts of violence against civilian Serbs became widespread, and the operations of the Serbian security forces became more violent. The Serbs tried to deport many Albanians, but this was convenient for Albania, since KLA recruiters were waiting for the newcomers to draft them into the army.

One incident that became known as the Račak Massacre clearly demonstrates just how confusing the war was, and how hard it was to tell who was right and who was wrong. In January 1999 a Serbian policeman was killed near the village of Račak. Soon afterwards, Serbian special police forces entered the village. EU observers and journalists were warned about the situation in advance. An hours-long battle began, in the course of which 45 Albanians died. KLA fighters acknowledged the loss of eight fighters but the Serbs insisted that most or even all of the dead were militants, and that they’d died in combat and were not victims of ethnic cleansing. Expert opinions were divided.

The battle in Račak is an example of the tragic drama that unfolds in the course of guerilla warfare, and is quite common for counter-insurgency (COIN) operations. In such situations, there’s no way to establish the truth. However, in the spring of 1999, Western politicians presented the tragedy in Račak as a massacre that demanded an immediate response from the international community.

At negotiations in Rambouillet, Serbian and Albanian delegations were not able to come to an agreement. The Serbs were ready for a ceasefire and agreed to grant Kosovo autonomous status, but did not want a foreign military contingent on its territory. In response, NATO accused the Serbs of disrupting the negotiations. Yugoslavia and Milosevic were vilified in the press, and NATO started preparing a military operation. The UN Security Council did not sanction the use of military force but, most likely, one of the goals of the operation was to demonstrate NATO’s readiness to act without the approval of the international community. Milosevic was told to immediately withdraw Serbian forces from Kosovo and transfer control of the region to NATO’s international contingent. This time, the demands were backed by military force.

Air and ground

NATO bombings of Yugoslavia started on March 24, 1999. Of course, the US played the key role in the operation, but a total of 13 countries were involved in it. The Alliance did not plan to conduct a ground operation, but made extensive use of its air force and cruise missiles to attack the country.

The forces were incomparable: NATO utilized over 1,000 planes and helicopters, mainly from military bases in Italy and the aircraft carrier USS Theodore Roosevelt. The KLA had several thousand fighters, but the combat capability of these units was quite low.

Compared to NATO’s air fleet, Yugoslavia’s forces were quite weak. The air force had only 11 relatively modern fighter aircraft and several outdated missile defense systems that had been supplied by the USSR a long time ago.

The Alliance started the operation by launching several dozen Tomahawk cruise missiles. Then the attack aircraft started dropping bombs. The first goal was to suppress the Yugoslav missile defense system. The strikes were successful. Serbian anti-aircraft gunners tried their best to fight enemy forces. For example, air defense officer Zoltan Dani was able to shoot down an inconspicuous and theoretically “invisible” F117 stealth-attack aircraft. However, these minor victories could not change the course of the operation. The Serbs could only act from the ground and sporadically attacked enemy aircraft using air defense systems. Serbian pilots even tried to attack the enemy using fighter aircraft – this was indeed a courageous feat, but practically useless from a military point of view. In the entire course of the operation, NATO lost only three aircraft and two helicopters.

After the missile defense systems were suppressed, NATO resorted to terrorist-style bombings. The attacks on the troops weren’t very effective and the Yugoslav units retained their combat capability until the end of the war. About thirty combat vehicles were destroyed and several hundred Serbian soldiers and officers were killed and wounded. Considering the fact that over 90,000 servicemen and police officers were stationed in Kosovo and another 65,000 defended the rest of the country, the losses were not very great. In other words, NATO strikes disabled the Air Force and air defense systems, but didn’t affect the combat capability of the troops in a major way.

Civilian infrastructure, however, suffered major damage as a result of the NATO bombings, since it was a lot harder to conceal a bridge or a TV tower than a tank. Bridges, industrial facilities, and telecommunications systems were attacked every day. Even targets that were not considered strategically important for NATO were often hit by mistake. For example, on April 14, an F16 fighter jet attacked a convoy of civilian Albanian refugees near Gjakove. Another time, a sniper strike killed 73 people. And when an intelligent munitions system tried to find military equipment at the Chinese embassy, three people were killed. According to various sources, the number of victims varies from 500 to 5,700 people. Many buildings in Belgrade remain ruined to this day.

Throughout this time, battles between Serbian troops and KLA fighters continued on the ground. Several dozen volunteers from Russia participated in the fighting, and at least three died. Despite NATO’s superiority in the air, the Serbs managed to defeat the Kosovo Liberation Army on the ground. The victory was impressive but, alas, it was totally useless.

Dubious achievements

At the time, Russia was undergoing very difficult economic times and its support of Yugoslavia was reduced to symbolic gestures. After the start of the air raids, the Parliament of Yugoslavia wanted to join the union between Russia and Belarus, but Russian President Boris Yeltsin blocked this initiative. Thousands of people protested at the US Embassy in Moscow every day. Once, an activist even brought a grenade launcher and tried to (unsuccessfully) attack the embassy. Unfortunately, apart from protesting and loudly condemning the events, there was nothing Russia could do.

In those years, Russia’s economy was in shreds and, unlike today, this wasn’t just a story made up by Western politicians and media. At that time, the economic crisis was real, and the army had suffered a humiliating defeat in Chechnya. There was really nothing Russia could do to prevent NATO’s operation.

On June 1, Milosevic agreed to all of NATO’s demands. The Alliance’s peacekeeping forces entered Kosovo and Serbian troops withdrew from the region.

As Yugoslav troops withdrew from Kosovo, ethnic cleansing began. In the coming months, over 1,700 people (almost all of them Serbs or representatives of other national minorities) were killed by militants or went missing. The majority of the remaining Serbs fled – according to various sources, between 200,000 and 350,000 people left the region, including Serbs and the remaining Gypsies. KLA militants smashed cultural monuments, burned down churches, and destroyed anything that reminded them of the enemy.

As for NATO troops, they did not prevent or stop this purge in any way. Today, some Serbs still remain in Kosovo, most living in a small enclave by the Serbian border.

Negotiations on the status of the region did not yield any results for several years. In 2008, Kosovo declared independence, and has been recognized as an independent republic by most Western states.

Unsurprisingly, problems in the region did not end with the expulsion of the Serbs. To this day, Kosovo is a poor country with major corruption issues. The US took an active part in the reconstruction of Kosovo, but the region was mostly used by businessmen and officials for personal enrichment. Many of them have profited from murky schemes, including former US Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, who owned a share of the only private mobile network operator in the region, and later tried to grab a piece of a state-owned company. Coincidentally, Albright’s daughter is the executive director of a corporation that distributes development grants to poor countries (including Kosovo). In Kosovo, there are 800,000 migrant workers per 1,800,000 inhabitants. Moreover, the republic has turned into a stronghold of the Albanian mafia. Even the Western press was forced to admit the failed state-building attempt in Kosovo.

A few years after the events of 1999, Montenegro peacefully broke away from Yugoslavia, and the latter ceased to exist. President Slobodan Milosevic was overthrown in 2000 as a result of unrest in Belgrade and was secretly extradited to the international criminal tribunal in the Hague. In 2006, before the trial’s conclusion, he died age 64 in the UN prison there and immediately suspicions were raised, which have persisted, over how he died.

What conclusions did the world draw?

The bombing of Yugoslavia was an important and, apparently, highly underestimated turning point in relations between Russia and the West. Both the Russian elite and society painfully reacted to the tragic events in Yugoslavia. This may sound strange, but Russia once harbored idealistic sentiments about the great Western democracies. When the Cold War ended, it seemed that the US and NATO were unfairly slandered by Soviet propaganda. Unfortunately, there was a lot of truth to the Soviet propaganda. For Russia, it was quite painful to realize that world politics still resembled an aquarium full of hungry sharks. Moreover, Russia traditionally had close and friendly relations with Serbia and the Serbian people. But now the Serbs were publicly attacked and humiliated.

The elites had their own reasons for concern. The Kremlin regarded Russia-US and Russia-West relations in an idealistic way. But, in 1999, Moscow clearly saw that international law doesn’t provide any guarantees on the global arena. Yugoslavia was destroyed without any serious grounds, simply because Western politicians had decided so. The country lost part of its territory and the cut-off enclave was subjected to ethnic cleansing while the world turned a blind eye. And all this was done under the guise of a “rules-based international order.” Territorial integrity was considered one of the inviolable principles of international law but it, too, was trampled. Moreover, in the general context of the Balkan wars and conflicts, all the blame was put on Yugoslavia/Serbia, regardless of whether the Serbs were rebels who fought against the government or vice versa. None of this resembled justice or law. It became clear that neither agreements nor international law could protect any country, including Russia, from external military force, and that countries could only rely on the political situation and their own ability to cope with threats.

This realization was doubly important since Russia had a similar problem with Islamist insurgents in Chechnya. The Kremlin could not help but think that, if the West could use this pretext to attack Yugoslavia, it could use the same strategy against Russia. On the other hand, Moscow came to the reasonable conclusion that if an arbitrator twists the rules as he likes, he loses authority. The sarcastic expression “You don’t understand, this case is different” – which implies the hypocrisy of those who condemn others for certain actions while engaging in condemned behavior – remains popular on Russian internet to this day. For the Russian political elite, Kosovo became a classic example of a “different case.” Western journalists and politicians often emphasized that the situation in Kosovo was unique. However, the ill-fated region was obviously no different from dozens of other hotspots. Why was Kosovo a “special case”? Why weren’t Transnistria, South Ossetia, Abkhazia, Nagorno-Karabakh, Serbian Krajina, or Catalonia just as exceptional? What other situations will be considered “special,” and what other conflicts between authorities and separatists will be sufficient grounds for NATO to carry out bombings and allow ethnic cleansing?

The bombing of Belgrade destroyed the image of a new “rules-based international order.” Of course, it wasn’t the last time that the rule of law and the demands of justice were ignored by the Western countries after the collapse of the Soviet Union – in fact, the bloody Iraq war followed only four years later. However, the events in Yugoslavia had clearly demonstrated that a country that wants to protect its sovereignty from external threats can only rely on its own strength and on proven allies.

* * *   End of Text   * * *


As every rabid beast, NATO is waiting to be put out. For 27 years already. Has its time finally run out?






* * *

Related posts / Повезани текстови:

СРБИЈА: Истина је кћи времена
(26. фебруар 2026)

СРБИЈА: Сурово буђење
(15. фебруар 2026)

СРБИЈА: Истина и акција
(13. јануар 2026)

СРБИЈА: Нивои манипулације
(30. новембар 2025)

СРБИЈА: Геополитика и веома блиска будућност
(10. новембар 2025)

СРБИЈА: Ни држава, ни колонија, већ – лудница!
(8. новембар 2025)

KILLING THE PEACE – Will Bosnia explode? (Documentary, 2025) [eng/срп] Убијање мира – хоће ли Босна експлодирати? (Документарац, 2025)
(1. новембар 2025)

СРБИЈА: Фудбал као мера понижења
(13. октобар 2025)

СРБИЈА: Снага НАТО јединства
(12. октобар 2025)

СРБИЈА: Ескалација насиља
(12. септембар 2025)

СРБИЈА: Усијање
(20. август 2025)

СРБИЈА: Капацитет за велеиздају – Реализација
(7. август 2025)

СРБИЈА: Жртвована колонија
(25. јул 2025)

СРБИЈА: Британска технологија изазивања рата
(23. јул 2025)

SERBIA: Are there Russians in the Russian Embasy? [eng/срп] СРБИЈА: Има ли Руса у руској амбасади?
(5. јул 2025)

SERBIA: Saint Vitus Day 2025 [eng/срп] СРБИЈА: Видован 2025.
(29. јун 2025)

BREAKING ⚡️ Russia finally admits mistake in Serbia [eng/срп] УДАРНО ⚡️ Русија најзад признаје грешку у Србији
(30. мај 2025)

SERBIA: War in the Shadows [eng/срп] СРБИЈА: Рат у сенкама
(26. мај 2025)

Easter of Serbia 2025 [eng/срп] Васкрс Србије 2025.
(20. април 2025)

СРБИЈА: 15. март – највећи антирежимски скуп у историји Србије!
(18. март 2025)

СРБИЈА: 15. март и ванредно стање
(13. март 2025)

SERBIA: Serbian Matrix [eng/срп] СРБИЈА: Матрица српска
(10. март 2025)

SERBIA: No retreat! [eng/срп] СРБИЈА: Нема одступања!
(27. фебруар 2025)

SERBIA: The Great Awakening [eng/срп] СРБИЈА: Велико буђење
(21. фебруар 2025)

SERBIA: Search for Justice [eng/срп] СРБИЈА: Тражење правде
(13. фебруар 2025)

СРБИЈА: Опсада тврђаве зла
(28. јануар 2025)

СРБИЈА: Народноослободилачки рат
(27. јануар 2025)

СРБИЈА: Капацитет за велеиздају
(25. јануар 2025)

СРБИЈА: Убиствена корупција
(12. јануар 2025)

СРБИЈА: Обојена контрареволуција
(28. децембар 2024)

СРБИЈА… и Сирија
(10. децембар 2024)

СРБИЈА: Отворено писмо руском народу
(3. децембар 2024)

СРБИЈА: Скупштина – десети круг пакла!
(2. децембар 2024)

СРБИЈА: Макиш. Кад никакви аларми више не помажу…
(13. новембар 2024)

СРБИЈА: Потпуни распад
(3. октобар 2024)

Chilandar in Smederevo! [eng/срп] Хиландар у Смедереву!
(13. септембар 2024)

СРБИЈА: Врхунац велеиздаје
(2024)

СРБИЈА: Северни ток и геополитика Јадра за почетнике
(21. август 2024)

СРБИЈА: И ШТА САД, НАРОДЕ?
(13. август 2024)

СРБИЈА: Збогом, Врзићу!
(12. август 2024)

СРБИЈА: Протест против Рио Тинта у Смедереву и лекција о колонијализму
(5. август 2024)

Jasenovac, by Danko R. Vasović (Documentary, 2022) [eng/срп] Јасеновац, Данка Р. Васовића (Документарац, 2022)
(23. јул 2024)

СРБИЈА: Зашто Рио Тинто неће донети ништа добро
(10. јул 2024)

СРБИЈА: Историја велеиздајничког бешчашћа
(27. мај 2024)

СРБИЈА: Злочиначка ревизија историје као увод у формални распад УН
(24. мај 2024)

СРБИЈА: Сребреница није геноцид!
(10. мај 2024)

Easter in Serbia 2024 [eng/срп] Васкрс у Србији 2024.
(5. мај 2024)

СРБИЈА: Обнављање историјског градива
(29. април 2024)

THE WAR: NATO terrorism [eng/срп] РАТ: НАТО тероризам
(25. април 2024)

Fatal Dust: U-238 (Documentary, 2024) [eng/срп] Смртоносна прашина (Документарац, 2024)
(27. март 2024)

The Weight of Chains (Documentary, 2010) [eng/срп] Тежина ланаца (Документарац, 2010)
(26. март 2024)

THE WAR: The Day Multipolar World was born [eng/срп] РАТ: Дан кад је рођен мултиполарни свет
(24. март 2024)

Слободан Рељић: Горе од издаје
(11. фебруар 2024)

Smederevo High School Day 2023 [eng/срп] Дан школе 2023 – Гимназија у Смедереву
(30. децембар 2023)

СРБИЈА: ‘Изборни’ дан и дан после…
(17. децембар 2023)

СРБИЈА: Пре него што потрчите на изборе… (Део други)
(4. децембар 2023)

СРБИЈА: Пре него што потрчите на изборе…
(3. децембар 2023)

СРБИЈА: Изборна фарса 2023.
(28. новембар 2023)

СРБИЈА: Ванредни ‘избори’ 2023.
(7. новембар 2023)

Петар Кочић: Јазавац пред судом (II део)
(25. октобар 2023)

Петар Кочић: Јазавац пред судом (I део)
(24. октобар 2023)

ЦРНА ГОРА: ПОНОСНИ НА СВОЈЕ СРПСКО
(10. октобар 2023)

SERBIA: Kosovo and Metohia – Unfinished Business [eng/срп] СРБИЈА: Косово и Метохија – незавршени посао
(3. октобар 2023)

SERBIA: Jasenovac – A Hidden Genocide [eng/срп] СРБИЈА: Јасеновац – скривани геноцид
(22. септембар 2023)

Србија и БРИКС
(9. септембар 2023)

SERBIA: Supercell Scam [eng/срп] СРБИЈА: Суперћелијска превара
(14. август 2023)

Цивилизација против антицивилизације: Комитет 300
(11. август 2023)

СРБИЈА: Народни проглас са Косова и Метохије
(21. јул 2023)

SERBIA: The final act of high treason [eng/срп] СРБИЈА: Завршни чин велеиздаје
(30. мај 2023)

СРБИЈА: Крвави театар
(27. мај 2023)

SERBIA: Are there Serbs in this room? [eng/срп] СРБИЈА: Има ли овде Срба?
(24. мај 2023)

SERBIA: Jasenovac yesterday, today, tomorrow… [eng/срп] СРБИЈА: Јасеновац јуче, данас, сутра…
(6. мај 2023)

SERBIA: The opening tragedy [eng/срп] СРБИЈА: Уводна трагедија
(4. мај 2023)

СРБИЈА: Психоанализа народа
(30. април 2023)

SERBIA: 24 years since NATO Aggression [eng/срп] СРБИЈА: 24 године од НАТО агресије
(24. март 2023)

СРБИЈА: Народна издаја Косова и Метохије
(23. март 2023)

СРБИЈА: Завршни чин пузајуће велеиздаје
(11. март 2023)

СРБИЈА: Курти и Мурта
(6. март 2023)

SERBIA: High treason of Kosovo and Metohija as a phase of the destruction of the state
(3. март 2023)

СРБИЈА: Велеиздаја КиМ као фаза разарања државе
(28. фебруар 2023)

Immortal heroes: Zoran Radosavljević [eng/срп] Бесмртни хероји: Зоран Радосављевић
(26. фебруар 2023)

SERBIA: Destruction of UN and High Treason [eng/срп] СРБИЈА: Разарање УН и велеиздаја
(22. фебруар 2023)

Smederevo High School – St Sava Academy 2023 [eng/срп] Смедеревска Гимназија – Светосавска академија 2023
(3. фебруар 2023)

SERBIA: Reluctant warriors [eng/срп] СРБИЈА: Невољни ратници
(31. јануар 2023)

WednesdayWalk – Tsarina Day 2023 [eng/срп] Шетња средом – Дан Царине 2023
(19. јануар 2023)

SERBIA: Sale of children [eng/срп] СРБИЈА: Продаја деце
(24. децембар 2022)

Проф. др Милош Ковић
у смедеревској Гимназији 6. децембра 2022.
(6. децембар 2022)

СРБИЈА: Окидач
(2. децембар 2022)

СРБИЈА: Заблуда о интелектуалцима
(4. октобар 2022)

SERBIA: The Day After [eng/срп] СРБИЈА: Дан после
(19. септембар 2022)

SERBIA: Government with a liar at its helm securing sodomites [eng/срп] СРБИЈА: Власт са лажовом на челу обезбеђује содомите
(17. септембар 2022)

Great Belgrade Procession “For Salvation of Serbia” (Part III of III) [eng/срп] Велика београдска литија „За спас Србије“ (Део III од III)
(16. септембар 2022)

Great Belgrade Procession “For Salvation of Serbia” (Part II of III) [eng/срп] Велика београдска литија „За спас Србије“ (Део II од III)
(15. септембар 2022)

Great Belgrade Procession “For Salvation of Serbia” (Part I of III) [eng/срп] Велика београдска литија „За спас Србије“ (Део I од III)
(14. септембар 2022)

SERBIA: Smederevo Procession “For Salvation of Serbia” [eng/срп] СРБИЈА: Смедеревска литија „За спас Србије“
(6. септембар 2022)

SERBIA: A direct threat [eng/срп] СРБИЈА: Директна претња
(3. септембар 2022)

СРБИЈА: Злокобни знаци
(2. септембар 2022)

Fringe Majority in Serbia [eng/срп] Маргинална већина у Србији
(31. август 2022)

SERBIA: Belgrade Procession “For Salvation of Serbia” [eng/срп] СРБИЈА: Београдска литија „За спас Србије“
(28. август 2022)

SERBIA: The Procession “For Salvation of Serbia” [eng/срп] СРБИЈА: Литија „За спас Србије“
(26. август 2022)

SERBIA: Sodom, Gomorrah and Belgrade [eng/срп] СРБИЈА: Содома, Гомора и Београд
(8. август 2022)

Memorial 31st Street Soccer Tournament 2022 – Finals [eng/срп] Меморијални 31. турнир у малом фудбалу 2022 – Финале
(24. јун 2022)

Memorial 31st Street Soccer Tournament 2022 [eng/срп] Меморијални 31. турнир у малом фудбалу 2022.
(22. јун 2022)

СРБИЈА: Македонски раскол
(9. јун 2022)

SERBIA: Procession for saving the Serbian Orthodox Church [eng/срп] СРБИЈА: Литија за спас СПЦ
(8. јун 2022)

Monastery of Sopoćani, Serbia [eng/срп] Манастир Сопоћани, Србија
(20. јун 2022)

Лидери четврте индустријске револуције и њихови планови
(1. јун 2022)

Србија у канџама СЗО
(28. мај 2022)

Христос Воскрес! [рус/срп] Христос Воскресе!
(24. април 2022)

March 24th 1999 – NATO Aggression on FRY [eng/срп] 24. март 1999 – НАТО напада СРЈ
(24. март 2022)

Коронапревара и биолабораторије у Србији
(17. март 2022)

SERBIA: Towards the April elections [eng/срп] СРБИЈА: У сусрет априлским изборима
(11. март 2022)

СРБИЈА: Кловн деценије
(6. фебруар 2022)

SERBIA: Disunion by Forgery [eng/срп] СРБИЈА: Изазивање раздора фалсификатима
(22. јануар 2022)

Новак Ђоковић, повез преко српских очију
(6. јануар 2022)


СРБИЈА: Архива текстова јул–децембар 2021.

• Озваничено: Живимо у нацистичком свету
• Коронапревара: Понуда која се не може одбити
• РАТ против популације (Рио Тинто)
• Документарац из 2011. године ‘Фармакомафија – Купопродаја здравља’
• Приватизација Института „Јарослав Черни“
• Протести против ковид пасоша
• Фалсификовање историје
• Шапић и политичка промоција
• Одбијање лечења невакцинисаних пацијената – злочин у пракси


СРБИЈА: Архива текстова јануар–јун 2021.

• Агенда 2030 УН: Корпоративни пакао који долази
• Интервју са Борисом Јекнићем
• Загрљај
• Срећно Ново 7529. Лето!
• Црни биланс коронапреваре у 2020.
• Бесплатни уџбеници професора Алека Кавчића


СРБИЈА: Архива текстова 2018–2020.

• Велеиздаја
• Саветодавно мишљење Суда правде у Хагу
• Писмо Вилија Вимера Герхарду Шредеру
• Вашингтонски споразум
• Разваљивање институција и предаја најважнијих националних ресурса
• О чистоћи воде на Балкану
• Најстарији календар на свету
• ТЛН: Уједињена Европа и разједињена Југославија
• Судбина Александара


(2026)





Steemit follow gif.gif

e-vizitka - 2017-10-28_131026-mala.jpg



1GZQG69sEKiMXKgGw9TcGcUCBoC4sC1ZYp



Bastyon.com



Google detox starts here!



Universal Basic Income




Check out ABRA and easily invest in 28 cryptocurrencies or BIT10, an index of the top cryptos. Use this link to sign up and get $25 in free bitcoin after your first Bank/Amex deposit, or 1.5% cash back when you exchange cryptos



Get Emoji quickly

Coin Marketplace

STEEM 0.06
TRX 0.31
JST 0.057
BTC 71724.02
ETH 2186.09
USDT 1.00
SBD 0.50