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- A No-Fly Zone (NFZ) as a concept was introduced in the 1990s.
- In an NFZ, a military power prohibits certain aircraft types from entering designated airspace.
- This designated airspace could be a region in a country or the whole country.
- An NFZ is enforced by the threat of force.
- This means deploying surveillance aircraft to monitor the airspace and fighters to shoot down the “prohibited” aircraft.
- It also means destroying the enemy’s ground-based anti-aircraft systems that could attack the country’s surveillance or fighter aircraft.
- The modern NFZ was first used in the 1990s after Saddam Hussein, Iraq’s then-dictator, attacked Kurds in the north of his country and Shias in the south.
- The US, Britain and France alliance had then declared NFZs in these regions.
- To enforce it, they flew around 225,000 aircraft between 1991 and 2003 (France pulled out in 1996).
- The Ukrainian President had requested the US and NATO to create an NFZ over Ukraine around a month ago.
- This would have meant the US/UK attacking Russian planes, potentially leading to a direct military conflict with Russia (a world-war like situation).
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