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Peace Plan Highlights | Photo Gallery | Strike Assessment | News Video Archive | Strike at a Glance | Who's Who | Roots of the Conflict | Story Archive | Links | Discussion Snags threaten mission to free U.S. soldiers
Cypriot envoy arrives in Belgrade
April 8, 1999
BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (CNN) -- A mission that held hope for the quick release of three U.S. Army soldiers captured by Yugoslavia appeared to hit snags on Thursday as night fell and NATO threatened to resume airstrikes it temporarily halted while a Cypriot envoy flew to Belgrade. Although Spyros Kyprianou, speaker of the Cypriot parliament, would not be meeting with Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic until Friday, he said the Americans might be freed during the long Orthodox Easter weekend now under way. "I expect to have very friendly and constructive negotiations," Kyprianou told reporters. "I hope to have good discussions with President Milosevic on humanitarian aspects." But as Kyprianou arrived in the Yugoslav capital under a NATO safe-passage promise -- and the Greek C-130 Hercules transport plane that had flown him to Belgrade returned to Athens without him -- there were several developments that made the release of the soldiers seem less promising:
"The United States is leading an undeclared war against Yugoslavia," Seselj was quoted by The Associated Press as saying. Instead, he said the Americans should be tried as terrorists.
"We don't view (the release of the soldiers) as a done deal," a U.S. official told CNN. "This could drag out. This may go nowhere."
Both U.S. and NATO officials have said that the air war against Yugoslavia, now in its 16th day, would not be halted in order to secure the soldiers' release. In addition, the United States had said it refused to make any concessions to gain the soldiers' release. On Thursday, however, the Pentagon revealed that NATO had arranged that no allied bombing missions would interfere with the Cypriot lawmaker's flight to Belgrade. Kyprianou had asked for a 24-hour NATO cease-fire while he pursued his mission. "What Mr. Kyprianou has asked (for) is safe passage to Belgrade and this has been given, so he is flying safely," Erato Marcoullis, the Cypriot ambassador to the United States, told CNN. "During his stay, it was assured that he will be safe until his return, hopefully with the three GIs," she told CNN from Washington. Kyprianou arrived in Athens Wednesday -- en route to Belgrade -- after saying the Yugoslav government was willing to turn over the three American soldiers. His flight from Athens, which left at 3:20 p.m. (8:20 a.m. EDT/1220 GMT) on Thursday, was delayed about four hours as he awaited clearance from the Yugoslav military to fly into Belgrade. Kyprianou was traveling to Yugoslavia on a humanitarian mission and not as a negotiator, Marcoullis said.
If necessary, the ambassador said, Kyprianou would stay overnight. It will "depend on developments," she said. Staff Sgt. Andrew Ramirez, 24, of Los Angeles; Spc. Steven Gonzales, 21, of Huntsville, Texas; and Staff Sgt. Christopher Stone, 25, of Smiths Creek, Michigan; were captured March 31 near the border of Macedonia and Kosovo. Macedonia is an independent country that was once part of Yugoslavia. Kosovo is a province in the Yugoslav republic of Serbia. NATO says the soldiers were noncombat troops under its command and were on a routine border patrol. Belgrade says they were captured on Yugoslav territory. RELATED STORIES: U.S. may increase attack helicopters in Yugoslavia RELATED SITES: Extensive list of Kosovo-related sites
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