URL for this article is http://emperors-clothes.com/docs/spie.htm
Send this article to a friend!
www.tenc.net
[Emperor's Clothes]

'Der Spiegel': How Kostunica Was Chosen 

Below are excerpts from an article that appeared in the German
publication, 'Der Spiegel,' on 9 October 2000. The article can be read
in German at http://www.spiegel.de/spiegel/0,1518,97117,00.html . The
excerpts were kindly translated for Emperor's Clothes by George
Pumphrey, an American writer living in Germany. The question of how Mr.
Kostunica was chosen to run for President of Yugoslavia is of heightened
interest given his leading role in the campaign to extradite Slobodan
Milosevic to The Hague (1), a campaign which culminated in the
kidnapping of Mr. Milosevic on 28 June, a very special day for Serbian
people. (2)

"Helping the Revolution"

'Der Spiegel' 41/2000 (9.10.2000) 

"December 17 last year, [German Minister of Foreign Affairs]Fischer and
[US Secretary of State] Albright met the most well known Yugoslav
opposition figures in a windowless room of the Interconti Hotel on
Budapest St. in Berlin on the fringes of the G-8 meeting. Among the
participants was Zoran Djindjic and Vuk Draskovic, both Milosevic
opponents who had never been able to unite for any length of time. A
participant of the meeting says now, 'the opposition was given a
thorough balling out.' 

"The Milosevic opponents who were really willing to cooperate agreed on
Kostunica, until then largely unknown, as the presidential candidate.
The discussion group withdrew any support for the unpredictable populist
Draskovic." (From the text below)

"For months the federal government of Germany has discretely and
purposefully supported the Serbian opposition against Milosevic." 

(...) "Massive political and material support from Berlin - as well as
other western capitals - contributed to the fact that opposition groups
and parties could develop the strength to force Milosevic to give up and
take the government themselves." 

(...) "December 17 last year, [German Minister of Foreign
Affairs]Fischer and [US Secretary of State] Albright met the most well
known Yugoslav opposition figures in a windowless room of the Interconti
Hotel on Budapest St. in Berlin on the fringes of the G-8 meeting. Among
the participants was Zoran Djindjic and Vuk Draskovic, both Milosevic
opponents who had never been able to unite for any length of time. A
participant of the meeting says now, 'the opposition was given a
thourough balling out.' 

"The Milosevic opponents who were really willing to cooperate agreed on
Kostunica, until then largely unknown, as the presidential candidate.The
discussion group withdrew any support for the unpredictable populist
Draskovic." 

(...) "On election day the opposition was so well equipped and organized
that it was in a better position to supervise the results than
Milosevic. Election helpers monitored the counting of the votes in 180
of approximately 9,200 polling stations and sent the results over their
own radio network to the head office of the opposition." (2)

"Approximately $30 million, predominantly from America, were channeled
into the country via an office in Budapest, in order to equip the
opposition for the election campaign with computers, telephones and
office materials. Hundreds of election helpers were trained abroad for
these tasks." (3) (4) 

"On a large scale and "very very clandestinely" according to
[BalkanStability Pact director] Bodo Hombach, the oppositional media was
also supported. Journals were given paper so that they could even be
published. Smaller publications were even furnished a new printing press
in the publishing houses. Radio and TV stations were furnished modern
broadcasting equipment. (...) 

"Officially the aid to the media was carried by the Deutsche Welle, the
Zweite Deutsche Fernsehen (Channel 2) and the Bayrische
Rundfunk(Bavarian Broadcasting). The financial aid was furnished mostly
from the Federal Press Office in Berlin. Approx. 4 million DM has been
given by Germany since the end of last year for outfitting the
oppositional and independent [sic!] media in Yugoslavia. The Deutsche
Welle invested another 10 million DM alone in 1999 in order to further
enhance their program in the local Yugoslav languages. (...)" (5)

***

Further reading:

1) The mass media has been virtually unanimous in telling us that Mr.
Kostunica was uninvolved in kidnapping President Milosevic, indeed, that
he was opposed. Not so, says the public record, inconveniently recalled
in 'The treason of Vojislav Kostunica,' at
http://emperors-clothes.com/analysis/treas.htm 

2) Petar Makara says it was quite significant that the 'international
community' set its so-called Donors Conference for 28 June and that they
and the DOS leaders kidnapped Slobodan Milosevic on that day, which has
great significance for Serbian people. See, "The Theft of the Serbs'
Only Treasure" at
http://emperors-clothes.com/articles/makara/disgust.htm 

3) The 'monitoring' of the Sept. 23 Yugoslav Presidential elections was
a large-scale operation administered by US agencies operating out of
Bulgaria. The goal was to create the impression that a grass-roots
citizens' campaign was standing up to fraud by the Milosevic government
and thus portray Kostunica as the champion of clean government. Three
articles deal with this U.S. operation:

* 'Bulgaria Meddles in Yugoslav Vote.' From the Bulgarian newspaper,
'Monitor.' Translated by Blagovesta Doncheva, at
http://emperors-clothes.com/articles/doncheva/bulgmed.htm 

* 'Election Day' In which Ms. Doncheva discussed the significance of the
'Monitor' article, at
http://emperors-clothes.com/articles/doncheva/electionday.htm 

* 'The Election Story They Pulled' by Max Sinclair at
http://emperors-clothes.com/articles/sinclair/andnow.htm 

4) Otpor was one of the groups most active in backing Kostunica's
candidacy. In 'Otpor is an American Tragedy,' Jared Israel argued that
Otpor was a group financed and manipulated by Washington. This view was
attacked in some quarters. (Mr. Israel's article can be read at
http://emperors-clothes.com/articles/jared/otpor.htm )

But recently the National Endowment for Democracy, a U.S. government
organization set up to finance and control pro-U.S. groups in other
countries, boasted that it had funded Otpor since the summer of 1999. 

See George' Szamuely's report, 'Eviscerating Democracy' at
http://emperors-clothes.com/articles/szamuely/neda2.htm 

5) Mr. Kostunica has a remarkable facility for recovering from
outrageous admissions. During the September Presidential elections in
Yugoslavia he admitted that 'some' people involved in his campaign took
who took lots of U.S. cash might be furthering U.S. Imperial goals; yet
everyone continued to salute Kostunica's unblemished record. 

See 'Kostunica: some backers 'work for American Imperial goals'' at
http://emperors-clothes.com/news/erlang.htm 


TARGETS - Independent monthly paper on international affairs Sloterkade
20 1058 HE Amsterdam The Netherlands Ph.  ++ 31 20 615 1122
Fax: ++ 31 20 615 1120

STOP NOVOM SVETSKOM PORETKU

==^================================================================
EASY UNSUBSCRIBE click here: http://topica.com/u/?bUrBE8.bVKZIq
Or send an email To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
This email was sent to: archive@jab.org

T O P I C A -- Register now to manage your mail!
http://www.topica.com/partner/tag02/register
==^================================================================

Одговори путем е-поште