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Roto O Operation in Kosovo

Heroes Remember

Roto O Operation in Kosovo

Transcript
Well Roto O to Kosovo when the UN decided to go in and make peace into Kosovo. It was a little bit different, I went last minute because somebody else was sick so I only had a few weeks’ notice I was going over. So I was one of the last flights in, we got in the country, FYROM, Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia So we were going from there up north into Kosovo. I wasn’t with the front line troops I was with the re-supply groups, the service battalion. So we set up in different camps and we were going in there the day like within hours of them going across these bridges and stuff to take over Kosovo and you could see all the holes in the wall with the wires still hanging out of them from the engineers who had just gone through and removed the bombs and the bridges that would have blown up and everything else and refugees on the camp all around there that we had all seen on tv before we went, it was true. You could see it all around the border, hundreds and hundreds of tents with all the people and they are all fenced in. We’re going through at night in blackouts; you can’t see, you don’t know where you are; very had to see where you are going in the dark and everything like that and you’re following the vehicle in front of you about thirty or forty kilometres an hour at about ten, fifteen feet and stuff like that and all of a sudden the Americans show up and stop you and look all over and make sure everyone is who they are and what we’re doing, because we are resupplying the battle as it moves forward in the middle of the night. So that was a real experience in heightened security, you’re really, really nervous because you realize you could be shot. Who knows who’s hiding in the hills, even though they’ve pushed the fighting forces up to Serbia, they could still be there because maybe they didn’t get out in time. And you realize that when the light comes up and you look around you, you see how decimated the place is. Like I said, all these holes from the engineers clearing the bombs and stuff out of the tunnels and the bridges, they were all wired to explode when people drove over but we just got to them in time and we cleared them. And there are still Soviet tanks everywhere. We were actually caught in one place when probably fifty to seventy five tanks and armoured vehicles rolled underneath the road being escorted out of the country and we were stuck watching them as they rolled right past us.
Description

Mr. Williams talks of a very tense tour re-supplying the troops in the north.

Andy Williams

Mr. Williams was born June 24, 1964 in Trenton, Ontario. His father being in the Air Force, Mr. Williams had the strong desire to join, however, when his time came, the decision for service would be army and began his training career as an army medic. In 1985 he joined as a reservist and spent 25 years with the Regular Force. In 1997, Mr. Williams was deployed to Bosnia with the Lord Strathcona’s Horse Royal Canadians holding rank of master corporal. Another opportunity for a posting was exercised in 1998 when he deployed to Kosovo, this time with the 1 Service Battalion, Royal Canadian Regiment. Mr. William’s army career as a medic took him to many In-Canada posting serving with the Canadian military and upon retirement resides in Berwick, Nova Scotia with his wife and family.

Meta Data
Medium:
Video
Owner:
Veterans Affairs Canada
Recorded:
March 19, 2014
Duration:
2:08
Person Interviewed:
Andy Williams
War, Conflict or Mission:
Canadian Armed Forces
Location/Theatre:
Kosovo
Battle/Campaign:
Bosnia
Branch:
Army
Units/Ship:
Lord Strathcona’s Horse
Rank:
Master-Corporal
Occupation:
Medic

Copyright / Permission to Reproduce

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