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  • under very difficult conditions, both here and in Bosnia. Here in Taszar, our troops are providing the beans, bullets and black oil that are keeping our people in Bosnia fed, armed and ready to roll. In Tuzla, the headquarters for our troops in Bosnia
  • Bosnia Trip - Tuzla Troops 1/13/96
  • Case Number: 2006-0459-F · FOIA MARKER This is not a textual record. This is used as an administrative marker by the Clinton Presidential Library Staff. Folder Title: Bosnia Trip-Tuzla Troops 1113/96 Staff Office-Individual: Speechwriting-Blinken
  • . God bless America. 1/12/96 3 p.m. PRESIDENT WILLIAM JEFFERSON CLINTON RADIO ADDRESS TUZLA, BOSNIA JANUARY 13, 1996 2 Good morning. I am speaking to you today from Tuzla, the main base for America's soldiers in Bosnia. I have just visited
  • a company of those tanks that ate about to convoy to Tuzla. And when I look out at you, I can't help but thihk that those tanks are a good symbol for this whole operation. The Abrams is the best all around tank in the world, and you are the best all around
  • and Serbs flourished side by side in Sarajevo, in Tuzla, -in Mostar and throughout Bosnia. Some of you prayed in churches, some in mosques, some in synagogues. But you lived and worked together, building schools and libraries, trading goods and services
  • who are doing such an extraordinary job to help peace take hold there, the plane I usually fly on -- that other Air Force One -(laughter) -- was too big to land in Tuzla. And so I flew into Aviano, Italy, and took my C-17 as Air Force One for the day
  • For Immediate Release December 22, 1997 REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT AND THE FIRST LADY TO THE TROOPS Club 21 Tuzla, Bosnia-Herzegovina 5:30 P.M. (L) MRS. CLINTON: Thank you, General. I'm just glad to be back. I was here with Chelsea in March of '96
  • , I was in Tuzla, the main base for the American troops in Bosnia. Our soldiers are heavily armed and very well prepared. But they have come ~o Bosnia on a mission of peace -- together with soldiers from more than two dozen other countries. Their job
  • and Zepa. My purpose was to ?Scertain ihe dimensions af the human rights atrocities and crimes that were committAd 1n both cases, and ~o find out what committed_ s~ecific kind9 and categories of abuses were · I travelled to Tuzla and Zenica, and I
  • , where a cease-fire has ended months of shelling and fighting; or Tuzla, where the airfield is now being readied for UN relief flights; or Maglaj, where for the first time in months supplies are getting in. Yet progress remains fragile. E~hnic cleansing
  • off the field and forfeit the victory. I wish all of you could have been with us to visit with· our troops in Tuzla. They are they pride of our nation. We must make it our mission to keep our trobps well-trained and ready ... improve their quality
  • in cities such as Sarajevo, Tuzla and Zenica and with some independent local TV and r:adio stations. Under present conditions the three nationalist parties that rule their separate entities control the relevant media, giving them an unfair advantage
  • to walk offithe field and fo'rfeit the victory.· . . I . . I wish all of you could have been with us to visit w~th our troops in Tuzla. They are they pride of our nation. We must make it our mission to keep pur troops well-trained and ready
  • of· the le.ssons and legacy of those early Greek democrats. A few days ago, I was in Bosnia visiting American troops in Tuzla who, along with soldiers from many other nations, including Gre~ace, are part of NATO's peacekeeping mission. There, I saw. · what happens