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@Rus1974
prijatelju, ja sam bio u ratu u bosni, pripadnik 2. oklopne brigade. i sad prvi put cujem da je u bosni bilo leopard tenkova
a sto se tice kacnja kojecega na
t55 to je uglavnom radjeno radi odbrane od RPG zolja osa i ostalih RB
a ko imas neku informaciju gdje su ti leopardi bili
hvala
Bili su kod Tuzle a tvrde da su se sukobili sa Srpskim tenkovima 1994. Ako su nešto izmislili u vezi toga onda je to strašno jer je ta bitka proglašena u Danskim medijima kao najslavnija bitka u njihovoj bogatoj istoriji.
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Operation Bøllebank
On the night of 29 April 1994, however, alarms sounded in the Danish camp and seven out of the total ten Leopard 1 A5 tanks were called into action.[7] Accounts from several of the tank commanders tell that the tank divisions were mobilised and sent out without clear orders or assignment, but informed that the lives of UN personnel were at risk.[6] It was soon relayed to the tank commanders, however, that they were to rescue the observation post TANGO 2, manned by Norwegian and Swedish troops, had come under heavy fire by the Bosnian-Serb forces they were surveilling on a nearby mountaintop.
As the column of tanks neared the village of Sarači 8 kilometres east of Tuzla, they came under heavy shelling by Bosnian-Serb forces using mortars and anti-tank rockets, amongst other forms of artillery.[6] While parts of the column sought shelter in Sarači, a pair of tanks was sent on in an attempt to save the TANGO 2 post. While parts of the column awaited further orders in Sarači, the first two tanks again come under heavy artillery fire as they reached the outskirts of the village Kalešija, the closest settlement to the observation post, as they were caught in an ambush. Although Danish commanders requested NATO support in the form of an airstrike, these requests were ultimately denied.
The exact sequence events which followed have been heavily disputed as official accounts of the operation have been challenged by details and alternate accounts brought forth by tank commanders and other Danish troops who took part in the operation. Disputes have centred around two critical details, namely, if explicit orders for the forces waiting in Sarači to assume a defensive position and orders to return Bosnian-Serb fire were ever given, and if so, by whom. According to several sources, losses on the Bosnian-Serb side reached up to 150 men and an ammo depot. These numbers remain, however, unofficial as Bosnian-Serbs commanders officially cite having suffered only nine losses in the event.[5] What is known with certainty, however, is that the Danish forces did return fire on their attackers, firing in total 72 rounds at the Bosnian-Serb troops: 44 brisance rounds, 19 phosphorus rounds, and 19 armour piercing rounds.[8] Rounds struck three Bosnian-Serb tanks, as well as an ammunition depot and several bunkers[9]
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_B%C3%B8llebank
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