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ANTIWAR, Wednesday, March 27, 2002

Balkan Meltdown

Across the Former Yugoslavias, tensions are rising spectacularly

by Christopher Deliso

UNCHARTED WATERS

March 2002 in the Balkans: how will future historians remember this
unbelievable month? Will it be for the unearthing of a mujahedin threat
in Macedonia - or for the discrediting of that threat by the US and the
BBC? Will it be for the peaceful dissolution of the Federal Republic of
Yugoslavia - or for the American spy scandal that has rocked what
remains of that fragile coalition? Will the month of March 2002 be
warmly remembered for the Macedonian donor conference, which got that
impoverished country off and running - or will the conference come to be
mocked as yet another ineffective photo-opportunity for the West to
preen and congratulate itself? Finally, will this month be remembered
for the Bosnian government's firm

handling of the residual Islamic terror threat - or as the month when
that threat spiraled out of control, and paralyzed America's diplomatic
operations in Bosnia?

No one knows, but the outlook is not promising. The scariest thing about

this month, which by all accounts has seen a dizzying whirlwind of
unending action, is that it is not yet over. There are still a few days
left of March 2002 - at the current rate, enough to upend any tentative
conclusions we may reach here.

YUGOSLAVIA IS NO MORE - UNLESS, OF COURSE, YOU'RE A PROSECUTOR

As the Milosevic trial continues to meander aimlessly through a forest
of discredited witnesses and unsubstantiated rumors, Slobo's main
antagonist - Hague prosecutor Carla del Ponte - has become increasingly
frustrated and impatient. Seeing that the wily former Yugoslav president
is in danger of speaking more intelligently than had been expected, the
inquisition has moved on to the hills of the Republika Srpska. Here,
NATO troops unsuccessfully tried twice to capture the tribunal's most
wanted criminal - Radovan Karadzic. As del Ponte astutely noted, it is
very difficult to capture one fugitive with a large body of uniformed
troops. Her solution? Plainclothes, secretive kidnap squads.

The pressure has also been mounting on Serbia to hand over Ratko Mladic,
the Bosnian Serb commander who the tribunal claims is hiding in Serbia
proper. Since it is rather more difficult to attempt putting undercover
kidnap squads in Serbia, the West has latched onto more traditional
means of coercion and extortion - the threatened to cut $135 million in
aid money. The powers that prop up the Hague are betting that the
Serbians would rather part permanently with two (or more) of their
citizens than risk being stuffed into the economic straightjacket. After
all, the tactic has worked in the past: exactly one year ago, in fact,
similar American threats provoked the extradition of Slobodan Milosevic.
Del Ponte has recruited notable personalities, such as Colin Powell, to
help pile on the pressure. Indeed, this year's edition of Balkan
intimidation cannot be distinguished from its previous incarnation:

"Senator Patrick Leahy, the Vermont Democrat who coauthored the
legislation requiring Yugoslav cooperation, said yesterday that with war
criminals at large, ''our assistance should not go forward.'' Senator
Mitch McConnell, Republican of Kentucky, joined Leahy in sponsoring the
bill.

Added Leahy: ''General Mladic is the number-one person to turn over. His

responsibility for war crimes is unquestioned."

It's not surprising that such legislation would be co-authored by two of
the most virulently anti-Serbian activists in the Senate; what is rather
strange, however, is that apparently Mladic's "-responsibility for war
crimes is unquestioned." If so, why bother trying him in a court of law?
And yet, the final destination for Mladic - like all the others the West
can't just line up and execute - is the Hague. This rather uncomfortable
contradiction begs the following question: what is to be said for a
court that selects its victims based on their pre-assumed guilt, and is
run by the same people who fund their operations, costs and, apparently
now, kidnap

squads?

The only conclusion is that the Hague is not a real court of law.
Although its procedures, powdered wigs and presentations mimic those of
real courts, the pillars on which it rests are rotten. Indeed, the fact
that Milosevic has not wilted away under the hot glare of the media, as
his inquisitors had arrogantly expected, has raised fresh doubts
regarding the tribunal's fundamental legitimacy. And that is the real
reason why Carla del Ponte and Co. are so very flustered - with no
results to show on either convictions or captures, and growing doubts
over their grandiose moral posturing, they realize that the clock is
ticking. This would be reason enough for panic
-
even without last week's hilarious disaster for the Hague.

LET THE FUN BEGIN: CIA SCANDAL UNFOLDS IN BELGRADE

Part of the fun of March 2002 has been in watching the train wreck of so

many interconnected events, all coming to a head at exactly the same
time. The apologia for the Hague cited above all came out between 20-22
March
-
just days after the breaking of the biggest American scandal to hit
Belgrade since the bombing of the Chinese Embassy in 1999. The strong PR
attack (from del Ponte, Powell, Leahy and Co.) has come in direct
proportion to the Hague's supremely embarrassing role in the scandal: as
recipients of secret documents destined for use against Milosevic,
obtained by the American chief of the CIA in the Balkans, paid for by
American dollars, given to a corrupt Serbian politician. The worst thing
about all this, however, is that the

parties involved freely admitted as much.

The blunt admission of this botched covert operation is remarkable in
two ways. First, for the incredible arrogance of the blas� Americans,
who consider secret operations in a foreign country as just part of a
day's work
- even after being caught red-handed. The second and more serious aspect
of the scandal is that the Hague, ostensibly fighting corruption and
gangsterism, resorted to the same tactics to get its way. This sickening

hypocrisy just goes to confirm what is already so obvious - that the
Hague is no court of law, but merely a playground for extortionists and
spies,

bounty hunters and dilettante barristers.

GAUGING THE FALLOUT

For Balkan intrigue, it simply doesn't get any better than this. You can

just picture it now: a nondescript roadside bar, on the anonymous
outskirts of Belgrade; the waning light of late afternoon. Subdued
tones, hunched figures; a telling silence, and a briefcase stuffed with
cash - and then, just at the moment of consummation, a rude surprise
entry by the Yugoslav military!

The dramatic arrest on 14 March of Serbian Deputy PM Momcilo Perisic and

American spook John David Neighbor, shows that Kostunica retains some
backbone. Clearly, the man has guts. Confronted with the dissolution of
the republic he ruled, faced with fewer career prospects than Al Gore,
Mr. Kostunica needed to somehow assert his authority. He did so by
denouncing the imbroglio as "a spy affair of huge proportions." Serbian
PM Zoran Djindjic had expected his rival to just roll over and give up
power. In this belief, he was sorely mistaken. Could it be coincidental
that the spy scandal blew up only days after the FRY was officially
ended? Luckily for Kostunica, his opportunity arrived, even before the
ink had dried on the

eulogists' pens.

In the ensuing furor, Perisic has resigned, and the US has turned up the

heat on "Yugoslavia." The best thing about this reaction is the
Americans' overweening hubris, in protesting that their man in Belgrade
- the CIA's

Balkan superspy - had been detained. Can we even begin to imagine what
would happen if the roles were reversed - and it had been "Serbian spy
caught in Washington?" Would any Yugoslav protest have been tolerated -
and would a Serbian spy have been quietly dismissed? The answer is an
emphatic 'no' on all counts. Mr. Neighbor, however, was "quietly
spirited back to Washington," amid apologies and overtures from the
Serbs.

BLOWBACK STRIKES: THE BOSNIAN MELTDOWN

In the wake of 9/11, no part of the Balkans has so been so embarrassing
for the US and UN as Bosnia. Since October, Islamic terrorist cells have
continually been uprooted in this UN protectorate, previously
"liberated" by US intervention. Yet the Islamic military units, which
the Americans tolerated (if not abetted) during the 1990's have now come
back to haunt

them. Middle Eastern charities and businesses have been exposed as front

organizations for terrorists, and several terrorists of Arab origin have

been detained - some even shipped to Guantanamo. That this outraged the
Bosnian authorities seemed to matter little to the US; now, however,
temperatures are running so high that the US has closed indefinitely
three major embassies in the area - in Sarajevo, Mostar, and Banja Luka
(Republika Srpska).

On 23 March a high-ranking Bosnian official declared that al Qaeda
itself had recently met in Bulgaria - to plan a major terrorist attack
in
Bosnia:
"at the Sofia meeting, members of al-Qaeda decided that "-in Sarajevo
something will happen to Americans similar to New York last September.''

These stories follow a frantic effort by Bosnian officials to crack down
on Islamic terrorists in their midst. On 19 March, Bosnian police
swooped down on charities and terror front organizations in Sarajevo and
Zenica. On 22 March, the operation resulted in the arrest on espionage
charges of one Munib Zahiragic, and the shutdown of his shady charity,
Benevolentia. A tour of the "charity" organization's headquarters
revealed "-weapons, plans for making bombs, booby-traps and bogus
passports." Elsewhere in the country, a UN official was recently
attacked with an axe. Seems like there's a lot of love going around for
the Western "liberators" in Bosnia these days!

THE MOTHER OF ALL SCANDALS: DYNCORP'S LURID "TRANSACTIONS"

If one wonders why the Bosnians might be upset with their Western
guests, one need look no further than DynCorp, an American company
providing technical support to the troops overseas. This story has been
forgotten completely - primarily because the company's activities in
Bosnia are being investigated by US military police - and not by the
Hague. And so - even

though every American should know about it - DynCorp's history of sleaze
has been totally whitewashed.

Over a year ago, the Washington Post reported about UN participation in
the Bosnian sex trade. Also involved were senior figures in DynCorp's
Bosnia

operation. Nothing happened.

A year later, in January 2002, the DynCorp story broke for real, in the
testimony of a former employee, whistle-blower Ben Johnston. Apparently,

seeing "...middle-aged men having sex with 12 - to 15-year-olds" was
"too much" for the lanky Texan to take. In his daily job for DynCorp in
Bosnia, Johnston " -witnessed coworkers and supervisors literally buying
and selling women for their own personal enjoyment, and employees would
brag about the various ages and talents of the individual slaves they
had purchased." The "game" for these American cowboys was to buy and
sell girls, weapons, and other commodities from Serbian and other
mafias. Less lurid activities were the monumentally corrupt activities
of DynCorp's daily operations. Johnston, who was fired for patriotically
objecting to these deeds, provided graphic details on both the sex ring
and the chronic ways in which DynCorp defrauded the American taxpayer:

"I wasn't too happy with them ripping off the government, either.
DynCorp is just as immoral and elite as possible, and any rule they can
break they do. There was this one guy who would hide parts so we would
have to wait for

parts and, when the military would question why it was taking so long,
he'd pull out the part and say 'Hey, you need to install this.' They'd
have us replace windows in helicopters that weren't bad just to get
paid. They had one kid, James Harlin, over there who was right out of
high school and he didn't even know the names and purposes of the basic
tools. Soldiers that are paid $18,000 a year know more than this kid,
but this is the way they [DynCorp] grease their pockets. What they say
in Bosnia is that DynCorp just needs a warm body - that's the DynCorp
slogan. Even if you don't do an eight-hour day, they'll sign you in for
it because that's how they bill the government. It's a total fraud."

The muckraking investigation of DynCorp came out in Insight Magazine; it
is a must-read for anyone who - no, it is a must-read for everyone.
However, this graphic account of the corrupt side of Balkans
intervention was instantly forgotten - and that is because the Hague
took no part in the investigation. Apparently, US-sponsored tribunals
have one goal and one goal
alone: targeting foreign citizens who come from "hostile" countries. US
spies, businessmen, and (as we saw in the Italian helicopter tragedy)
servicemen face justice only at home.

One can give many arguments on the topic of the rights of sovereign
states and international law. However, one would at least hope for
consistency, and not hypocrisy, in the US' execution of law.

LAST BUT NOT LEAST, MACEDONIA

Despite the quiet reality of Western corruption throughout the former
Yugoslavias, this phenomenon has gone largely unexplored. Instead, the
heat has recently been turned up on the corruption of the locals in
Macedonia. In this embattled Balkan state, the temperature has been
rising precipitously of late. Two NATO officers were arrested for taking
photos in Ochrid on 20 March, a bizarre fiasco that resulted in an
official protest from NATO. Meanwhile, the fallout of the donor
conference in Macedonia has resulted in bitterness from Macedonians who
feel they have been strong-armed into an

agreement with the NLA. One year on from the start of the conflict that
spawned that treaty, the BBC has again set up shop as apologist for the
NLA.

Events took a farcical turn last week at a Skopje sports arena, when
Albanian and Macedonian fans set upon each other. Macedonia, it seems,
has finally arrived: three cheers for interethnic football riots!

Simultaneously, more organized militias seem ready for the heat of
battle. The so-called ANA (Albanian National Army) has made an issue out
of the Kosovo border dispute to declare a war of liberation. This
paramilitary organization has just announced a new campaign to unite all
"Albanian territories." Yet the ANA is allegedly also "-in conflict with
the former "NLA" and the leaders of DPA and PDP, Arben Xhaferi and Imer
Imeri." Skopje's biggest newspaper, Dnevnik, has reprinted an
announcement from the ANA, which called NLA chief Ali Ahmeti and
politician Menduh Thachi "great traitors." Apparently, a dangerous
standoff, involving up to 200 Albanians, occurred between the two
groups.

Another event (of 23 March) shows again how relations are wearing thin
between former Albanian allies. In Vaksince village, Kumanovo region,
returning police were taunted, and journalists stoned. The Albanian
members of the police force were derided as traitors, a clear sign that
the Albanian "liberation" movement has fragmented.

This prompts the question: if rival Albanian factions start fighting it
out, will NATO intervene?

EPILOGUE

Even as Yugoslavia - and all the Yugoslavias - steadily become but an
afterthought, the damage of a decade of war and intervention cannot be
undone. While one nation crumbles into dust, another - one of unknown
dimensions and desires - is solidifying. One gets the sense that, as
Winter turns the corner into Spring, we are careening off of the
well-marked, signposted road - and heading into territory that is
altogether unknown.

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