Tension marked early days
of peacekeeping effortBy Ron Jensen
Stars and Stripes

Michael Abrams / Stars and Stripes file photo
Pfc. Tom Dietz, with the 501st Military Police Company from Bad Kreuznach, Germany, keeps
a watchful eye, from his Humvee, on the streets of Bijeljina, Bosnia & Herzegovina. |
For nearly four years, a brutal and horrific war
had been waged in the southeast corner of Europe while the United States and Europe
pointed fingers and urged the other to do something about it.
Finally, in November 1995, at an Air Force base
in Dayton, Ohio, leaders of splintered Yugoslavia agreed to a deal that stopped the
fighting in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Soon 20,000 U.S. troops joined 40,000 from other
nations in Operation Joint Endeavor, a peacekeeping effort that continues to this day.
One of the first to reach Bosnia was Lt. Col.
Stephen Riese, then a major and deputy engineer for the Germany-based 1st Armored
Division.
Hitting the ground
Riese was one of the Tuzla Ten, an early
component that arrived Dec. 6, 1995, at the air base near Tuzla now known as Eagle
Base with orders to prepare it for the arrival of the multinational troops, to be
known as the Implementation Force, or IFOR.
"I remember mud," he says in a
telephone interview from Fort Leavenworth, Kan. "I remember lots of mud."
Not far behind him was Chief Warrant Officer Bob
Tisdale, now at Babenhausen, Germany. He flew into Tuzla on Dec. 18 to set up artillery
radar.
"I had a cold MRE for Christmas
dinner," he says. "It was not fun."
Master Sgt. Tommy Jackson, now of 3rd Corps
Support Command in Wiesbaden, Germany, arrived the day before Christmas at the Tuzla air
base, part of the 29th Forward Support Company of Vicenza, Italy.
"One of the real problems was just dealing
with the cold," he says. "We were in warehouses, but the warehouses had holes in
them as big as doors. Really, it was just crazy cold. There was no relief from it."
A handful of IFOR veterans were interviewed by
telephone recently and asked to recall their memories from five years ago this month when
IFOR rolled into a country so torn by war.
The mission was a delicate one. The warring
factions had to be separated and the zone of separation that resulted quickly joined the
vocabulary as the ZOS. On one side were the Bosnian Serbs and on the other were the
Bosnian Muslims and Bosnian Croats. Between them was a no-mans land in which no was
supposed to move except IFOR troops.
Building a base

Ken George / Stars and Stripes file photo
1st Armored Division soldiers caught meals wherever and whenever they can during the early
days of the IFOR deployment. |
Anyone now seeing Bosnia, and particularly Eagle
Base, for the first time would require a vivid imagination to picture the conditions when
IFOR arrived.
The former Yugoslav air base in Tuzla was
depressing. Buildings were shabby and broken. It bore no resemblance to an American base.
Much of it was off limits because of land mines and unexploded ordnance.
"There were land mines there," recalls
Riese. "There was a small crater in the road where the U.N. forces had lost a soldier
due to some shelling."
The base capacity was 400 under the United
Nations.
"We told (U.N. officers) we wanted to bring
in 2,000 and they just laughed," Riese remembers.
To ensure enforcement of the Dayton peace
accord, IFOR came with muscle. Tanks and armored vehicles were common sights on the muddy,
bumpy roads.
Brian Hodges encountered some resistance when he
tried to examine a Bosnia Serb weapons storage site.
"The next thing I knew I had two Apaches
hovering over my back," he said.
The message was clear. He was allowed to examine
the site.
Hodges, now a civilian at Fort Leavenworth, also
recalls some primitive conditions. He was with the 3rd Field Artillery. The unit went
first to Hungary and then by bus to Croatia, stopping on the way at a U.S. base in
Slavonski Brod, Croatia.
"There was my last shower for about three
months," Hodges says. "It was ice cold."
Other than flying into Tuzla, the main route
into Bosnia was across the Sava River. But this was winter and the rain was heavy and the
river was rising.
"The river started rising and rising in a
short amount of time," recalls Command Sgt. Major Johnny Fowler, now at Fort Drum,
N.Y. He was command sergeant major of the 1st Armored Division Engineer Brigade in 1995.
Then all of a sudden the water poured over its
banks, "like the dam broke," Fowler says.
Tents and the mobile field kitchen, set up on a
dry land a few days earlier, were suddenly underwater. Weapons were lost, but no soldiers
and no important equipment.
"We just had to back up and start
over," Fowler says.
Flooding wasnt the only problem facing
Fowler and his soldiers. He knew everyone knew that Bosnia was littered with
land mines. How many was anybodys guess, but millions was the most common estimate.
"Everywhere the U.S. soldiers were, the
engineers cleaned the entire area," Fowler says. "Its not something I want
to do every day."
He recalls looking at a field strewn with land
mines that had been uncovered by rain and floodwater.
"You just wondered about the ones you
couldnt see," he recalls.
Riese, too, had land mines on his mind.
"The one thing that concerned us as
engineers was the land mine situation," he says.
U.N. records examined by Riese and others
mentioned four suspected minefields in the U.S. sector of eastern Bosnia.
"In the next three months, we collected
records from the factions of over 18,000 minefields," Riese says. His staff worked
around the clock simply recording and mapping the minefields.
Another question faced by the international
force was: How would the factions respond?
IFOR arrived in Bosnia loaded for bear,
expecting its muscle and might to dissuade anyone from taking it on. That worked, for the
most part.
Protecting the troops

Michael Abrams / Stars and Stripes
1st Lt. Kevin Smith kisses his bride, 1st Lt. Kristen Reisenweber, following their
Valentine's Day, 1996, wedding on the pontoon bridge spanning the Sava river that makes up
the border between Croatia and Bosnia |
But Maj. Gen. William L. Nash, commander of the
1st Armored Division and the American sector, took no chances. He ordered his troops to
wear flak vests and helmets whenever they were awake. Foreign troops laughed and called
the U.S. soldiers "Ninja Turtles" after cartoon characters of the time.
"It was heavy," Sgt. 1st Class Terry
Bottjen, who was among those deployed to Tuzla, says of the "battle rattle."
"And it was uncomfortable walking in and
even sitting in a Humvee."
Not everyone in the first wave went to Tuzla,
however. Some troops were sent to Sarajevo, the Bosnian capital and home of the IFOR
headquarters.
Maj. Steve Larsen was then a captain and a
psychological operations officer.
"Psy ops" was responsible for
spreading the word of the IFOR mission and the mandates of the peace accords to Bosnians
throughout the country. Newspapers and broadcasts were the main avenues of communication.
"It was pretty primitive when we first got
there," says Larsen, now at Fort Stewart, Ga., recalling the city that was the victim
of a 1,000-day siege that killed thousands and destroyed hundreds of buildings.
"There was still a lot of shooting and
shelling at the time," he says. "It was really frightening, especially
traveling."
Crossing the river that slices the town in half
was especially challenging.
Two shots from a sniper were put through the
hood of a Humvee when one soldier working with Larsen crossed a bridge.
"We were fired at a half-dozen times
crossing that bridge," says Larsen.
During the first few weeks of the mission,
thousands of shots were fired at IFOR troops in Sarajevo, Larsen recalls. That number fell
as the French antisniper teams became active.
Parts of the city looked similar to many German
towns at the end of World War II. No window in the city was unbroken. Water and
electricity remained scarce for months even after peace arrived.
Rebuilding homes, lives

Effie Bathen / Stars and Stripes file photo
A Chinook of the 159th Aviation Regt. flies over a destroyed village in Bosnia early in
the IFOR mission. The scars of war were a familiar sight for IFOR soldiers in Bosnia. |
Larsen remembers visiting the home of one boy
hired to do voice-overs for radio spots about the dangers of land mines. The apartment
walls were pockmarked with bullet holes and a smelly mold was growing on walls and the
ceiling, a byproduct of the dampness of a windowless home and the lack of cleaning
solutions in the city.
Larsen and others gave the family some materials
the Army had provided.
"We came back a week later and the place
was spotless," he says.
Larsen and the boy, now 19, have remained in
touch. The boy now wants to join the U.S. Army.
Over time, the mission took shape. Base camps
were built and living conditions for the troops improved. Soldiers who had lived for weeks
in their Humvees or armored vehicles moved into tents. They were crowded, but dry and
warm.
Still, the troops had no idea how long they
might be there. And most who arrived in December 1995 did not leave Bosnia until November
1996.
"When we left, we were told it would be at
least three months," says Tisdale. "We didnt know it was going to be a
year until we were into it about six months."
Making a difference
Now, five years later, the troops interviewed
say those first few months of the Bosnia mission represent a high point in their military
lives.
"That was the highlight of my career as a
sergeant major," says Fowler.
Hodges took his camera, he says, because he knew
he was part of something important.
"Everybody had a sense of history," he
recalls.
And Larsen, who spent eight months in Sarajevo,
adds: "I look back on it as probably the most rewarding professionally and
personally experience Ive had in the military.
"We could see that, at least a family at a
time, we were making a distinct change."
Ron Jensen is a reporter in the
Stars and Stripes U.K. bureau. His first assignment to Bosnia began Dec. 1, 1995, and he
has spent more than 300 days in the country during the five-year peacekeeping mission
there.
RELATED STORIES:
Snapshot
of two cities captures country's plight
Timeline
of the mission in Bosnia and Herzegovina
Map of U.S. bases used during Bosnia mission (opens
new window)
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