Had Serbia had a nuclear arsenal, we wouldn’t be having these conversations.
Scott Taylor Bio:
A former professional soldier, Scott Taylor has been editor and publisher of Esprit de Corps since 1988.
Throughout the mid-1990s, this little independent magazine embarked on a campaign to expose crime and corruption in the upper echelons of the Canadian Forces. After exposing a number of top-level cover-ups and scandals while defending the rights of the rank and file soldiers, Scott was dubbed the Voice of the Grunts by the Globe and Mail, a Bone in the Brass Throats by the Toronto Star, and a One Man Army by the Toronto Sun.
Since the inception of Esprit de Corps, Scott has logged over one million air miles as a war correspondent reporting from such global hot spots as the Persian Gulf, Cambodia, Western Sahara, Croatia, Bosnia, Iraq, Turkey, Yugoslavia, Kosovo, Macedonia, Azerbaijan and Afghanistan.
Since August 2000, Scott has made a total of 21 trips into Iraq to report on the effects of the UN sanctions, the ravages of depleted uranium following the 1991 Gulf War, and the heightening tensions with the United States. In March 2003, during his last trip prior to the United States intervention, Scott Taylor was asked to leave Iraq for fear of his being a spy for the Israeli Mossad. Following the swift U.S. victory, Scott returned frequently to Iraq to view first-hand the ongoing humanitarian crisis plaguing this still embattled country. Then, for five harrowing days in September 2004, he experienced the rare occasion when “getting the story becomes the story.” Held captive by Ansar al-Islam mujahedeen in northern Iraq, his release generated a wave of international media coverage. He then returned to Iraq in 2005 in order to brief the U.S. soldiers on the Turkmen people of the country.
Scott regularly appears in the Canadian media as a military analyst, and is the recipient of the 1996 Quill Award for outstanding work in the field of Canadian communications. That same year, he also won the Alexander MacKenzie Award for journalistic excellence.
A weekly columnist for the Halifax Chronicle-Herald, he is also a columnist for the Osprey newspaper chain and has contributed to the Ottawa Citizen, Macleans magazine, the Globe and Mail, Toronto Sun, Readers Digest, and the Global television network as well as several international publications. He also serves as an advisor to the CBC Radio play “Afghanada.” Scott also gives presentations to The Executive Committee (TEC) and was named their 2006 Speaker of the Year.
I’m sure Putin will give the Serbs some nukes to defend themselves from the evil western civilization. Not. Bwahahahaha.
How? What would they do with it - Blow up the whole of Kosovo? Having a limited nuclear weapons capability doesn’t prevent an attack or bolster your position. Take the Falklands. Argentina invaded the Falklands knowing full well that the UK was a nuclear power able to flatten every city in Argentina. Serbia would lose completely everything if it used a nuclear arsenal.