"Sorry, we didn't know it was invisible."
The retired colonel of the Air Force of the SR Yugoslavia, Zoltan Dani, who was at the head of the unit that shot down the American F-117 stealth plane on March 27, 1999,
together with his comrades "congratulated" NATO on its 75th anniversary with a postcard from 1999. which shows the F-117.
Serbian veterans signed a postcard with the text "Sorry, we didn't know it was invisible" and sent the postcard to the NATO headquarters in Brussels with the stamp of the Post of Serbia,
on which the famous Russian statue "Mother of the Fatherland" by sculptor Yevgeni Vučetić is illustrated.
Replies
THEN HE FIRES and straight away, his smoke is spotted from the target camp and they return fire.....
So yes, it's only after the attack, that your position becomes known, in many cases...
but, you know Drekx, as long as the F-117 do not open the hatch to drop bombs it is invisible, but then, its useless LOL
And Drekx, I think Serbia can not stay peaceful and watch while Serbian people are killed, be it in Republica Srpska (Bosnian entity), be it in Kosovo. There is very little chance Serbia is going to stay neutral in such a scenario, but time will tell. We must stand peaceful 7 more months, till Trump is in office, then the cabal will have other concerns
Also, after the USSR fell, NATO has adopted an expansionist approach, which is making WW3 more possible....Not a good organisation...
And those F-117 stealth planes are not as stealthy, as it might suggest, on the manufacturer's sales literature... 😏