Scattering Chaff

Canadian Air Power and Censorship During the Kosovo War

By Bob Bergen
Series: Beyond Boundaries
Publisher: University of Calgary Press
Paperback : 9781773850306, 448 pages, February 2019

Table of contents

Illustrations
Abbreviations and Nomenclature
Acknowledgements

Introduction—Kosovo: Canada?s Unknown Air War

Chapter 1. A Fearsome Aerial Ballet

Chapter 2. Planning for War

Chapter 3. I Cringed Every Time it Rained

Chapter 4. Don?t Go to War Without It

Chapter 5. The Fog of War

Chapter 6. Prelude to Censorship: Media, Body Bags, and the Persian Gulf War

Chapter 7. Like an Overnight International Courier

Chapter 8. A Blanket of Secrecy

Chapter 9. Fiction and Iron Will

Chapter 10. On Body Bags and the News Media

Chapter 11. Canada Missed a Good News Story

Chapter 12. Homecomings

Chapter 13. Context-less Facts, Ambiguity, Half-Truths, and Outright Lies

Afterword

Notes
Bibliography
Index

Description

Most Canadians know little, if anything at all, about the role of the Canadian Air Force in the 1999 Kosovo Air War. Yet lives were at put at stake as mission dedication and military skill were pushed to the limit.

Some of Canada’s most prominent journalists attempted to report on the war, but came away empty handed. Daily briefings given at the National Defence Headquarters provided so little information most Ottawa journalists simply stopped going. The decision of the military to choke Canada’s news media was deliberate and based on a tactical and strategic rationale.

Scattering Chaff explores the role of the Canadian Air Force in the bombing campaigns of the Kosovo Air War while examining the military’s interference with the news media attempting to report to the Canadian public. It explores the ways in which the military has come to manage the media as an element of operational security, mission focus, and of popular opinion. Drawing on in-depth interviews with the war’s Canadian participants and a treasure-trove of unpublished photographs, this book is an unprecedented investigation of a little-known conflict and the forces that prevented it from being better known.

Reviews

 

The opening chapter of Scattering Chaff offers a riveting cockpit view of the sorties Canadian CF-18s flew over Serbia . . . What emerges is a wholly fleshed-out portrait of Canadian fighter-bombers in action. Such descriptions give Bergen?s work a drama and verisimilitude appropriate to the subject. But the compelling narrative is only a vehicle for the book?s two-pronged critique of Canadian military management.
- Geoff White, Literary Review of Canada

Compelling "inside the cockpit" reading . . . [those] who work in—or at least have appreciation for—the broader public affairs dynamics of any given operation will find it particularly interesting.

—Steven Bright, Canadian Military Journal