![]() “The Balkan Line” is a fictionalized account of a June 1999 standoff between a small contingent of Russian forces and their counterparts at the Slatina air base at Pristina Airport in Kosovo. The daily goes on to say that “The Balkan Line” is an action blockbuster set in wartime Kosovo that has topped the box office in Serbia and Russia, adding that the viewers expecting an accurate depiction of historical events will come away disappointed. “Everything is against our heroes but the joint forces of the Russians and Serbs can do this incredible endeavour,” reads the blurb”, the Times wrote. A Kosovo-Albanian warlord snatches control of the airbase and it is only Russian intervention that restores peace to the region. “The film depicts Kosovo, a region inhabited by ethnic Serbs and Albanians, descending into anarchy as the NATO campaign starts. ![]() ![]() It's vital Western democracies fight fakery back. That method is now being extended to a region of Europe which has experienced appalling suffering in the past generation. The article states that "in pursuit of the brutal foreign policy of Russia, the regime of Vladimir Putin deploys what is euphemistically termed soft power but more accurately described as fraudulent propaganda. The movie is an action drama inspired by the actual event that took place on June 12th, 1999, when the battalion of Russian paratroopers captured Slatina Airport in Pristina. The renowned British daily The Times has published a scathing review of the film 'The Balkan Line' (in Serbian, 'Balkanska Medja'), in which it says the film, with its pro-Russian propaganda, undermines the peace in the area. The movie Balkanska Medja (The Balkan Line) will have its premiere on the 20 th anniversary of NATO bombing of Serbia.
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