jamie shay was a senior nato official, the alliance spokesman during the kosovo war in 1999. the bombing went on for $78.00 days. the crane was now lasted longer than that. and he said it's presenting many more colleges when we had the crisis in kosovo. we didn't have an energy crisis, we didn't have inflation. or we didn't have petrol going up at the pump and the food crisis across the world. and all of these ripple effects that we're seeing now, we did have to impose to quite a sanctions on serbia that were imposing on russia or the economy. of course with which were closely intertwined. so in that way, the economic pie and a ripple effect a much greater than what we saw a then at both the g 7 summit here in the bavarian alps and at the nato meeting in madrid. leaders will once again try to ramp up the pressure on russia, but the plan to green light, finland, and sweden as new nato members, is still being held up by objections from turkey. president zalinski got a symbolic boost in recent days when the e, you said his country could become a candidate for membership, bought