ith an area of only 5,333
sq miles (13,812km) and
a population of around
635,000, Montenegro (Crna Gora)
is the smallest Balkan nation.
Ruled from the capital Podgorica,
Montenegro has access to the
Adriatic Sea to the south and
shares borders with Croatia to the
west, Bosnia and Herzegovina
to the northwest, Serbia to the
northeast, Kosovo to the east
and Albania to the southeast.
Under Ottoman rule since 1496,
the then province of Crna Gora
won its most important victory
over the Ottomans
during the Battle of
Grahovac in April
- Consequently,
it was formally
recognised as the
Principality of
Montenegro in - It became
a kingdom in
1910 and was
occupied by
Austro-Hungary in
1916, before being
liberated by the Allies
in 1918. The same year,
the government voted for
unification with the neighbouring
Kingdom of Serbia, which was
renamed only days later as the
Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and
Slovenes. In 1929, this became
the Kingdom of Yugoslavia, which
in April 1941 was occupied and
partitioned by the Axis powers.
In 1943, Montenegro became the
smallest constituent republic of
the communist-controlled, multi-
ethnic and multi-faith Yugoslavia.
With the break-up of Yugoslavia
from the early 1990s, Montenegro
opted to sacrifice its independence
and remain together with Serbia in
a new and much smaller federation
- the Federal Republic
of Yugoslavia.
Montenegro finally
regained sovereignty
after a referendum on
May 21, 2006 followed
by a declaration
of Montenegrin
independence on June
3 the same year. Newly
independent Montenegro joined
NATO’s Partnership for Peace
(PfP) programme in December
2006 and began to increase
its ties with the alliance.
Recognising growing Kremlin
influence in the Balkans, NATO
offered the tiny nation a fast-
track integration into the alliance - a formal invitation was issued
on December 2, 2015. Final
accession talks began the following
February and Montenegro officially
joined NATO as its 29th member
state on June 5 last year.
Golubovci –
Montenegro’s
aviation nest
The Vojska Crne Gore (VCG,
Armed Forces of Montenegro)
are a fully professional force
of 1,900 members organised
as an army, navy and air force.
The military lacks
combat aircraft,
main battle tanks or
submarines and is
orientated towards
national defence.
Additional missions
include supporting
civilian institutions in
case of natural and man-
made disasters and other crises,
including terrorist activities, and
contributions to building and
preserving regional and global
peace. The VCG is now in a
process of modernisation and
is working quickly to replace –
and in some cases modernise
- the military equipment
inherited from Yugoslavia.
The Montenegrin Air Force,
officially the Vazduhoplovstvo
Vojske Crne Gore (VVCG,
Aviation of the Armed Forces of
Montenegro) is dominated by
helicopters and operates from
Golubovci air base – an integral
part of Podgorica Airport.
Directly subordinated to
the VCG’s General Staff, the
VVCG is led by Lt Col Nenad
Pavlović and currently employs
225 personnel organised into
a headquarters, helicopter
Small, but valuable
W
Small, but valuable
http://www.airforcesmonthly.com #369 DECEMBER 2018 // 57
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