Behind Enemy Lines: Scott O’Grady’s Incredible Survival Story

In ‘This Week in History,’ as Bosnia and Herzegovina’s civil war rages, an American fighter pilot is shot down, stranding him behind enemy lines for six days.
Behind Enemy Lines: Scott O’Grady’s Incredible Survival Story
Capt. Scott F. O'Grady at a press conference. Capt. O'Grady's F-16 Fighting Falcon was shot down over Bosnia on June 2, 1995, while he was flying in support of Operation Deny Flight. Public Domain
Dustin Bass
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On Oct. 18, 1990, a report conducted by the United States’s intelligence community was issued predicting the breakup of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and its inevitable violent aftermath.

“Yugoslavia will cease to function as a federal state within one year, and will probably dissolve within two,” the report claimed. “Economic reform will not stave off the breakup. … [S]erious intercommunal conflict will accompany the breakup and will continue afterward. The violence will be intractable and bitter. There is little the United States and its European allies can do to preserve Yugoslav unity.”
Dustin Bass
Dustin Bass
Author
Dustin Bass is the creator and host of the American Tales podcast, and co-founder of The Sons of History. He writes two weekly series for The Epoch Times: Profiles in History and This Week in History. He is also an author.