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http://www.washtimes.com/world/20020708-3102700.htm

Balkans tribunal turns to Clinton 
By Jeffrey T. Kuhner 
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
July 8, 2002

-Besides Mr. Clinton, others named in the complaint
are former National Security Adviser Anthony Lake,
former Deputy National Security Adviser Samuel Berger,
Ambassador Richard Holbrooke and former U.S.
Ambassador to Croatia Peter Galbraith.
-Secretly supported by the Clinton administration,
Croatian forces launched a massive three-day military
offensive � known as "Operation Storm" � on Aug. 4,
1995....
-He is also accused by the prosecutor's office at The
Hague of overseeing the ethnic cleansing of 150,000
Serbs in Croatia who fled the military assault.  
     

     ZAGREB, Croatia � The Balkans war crimes tribunal
is examining whether charges are warranted against
former President Clinton and his aides for supporting
a 1995 military offensive by Croatia that recaptured
territory then held by rebel Serbian forces. 
     The Croatian World Congress sent a letter last
week demanding that Carla Del Ponte, the chief
prosecutor of the International Criminal Tribunal for
the former Yugoslavia (ICTY), open a criminal
investigation into Mr. Clinton and other top officials
of his administration for "aiding and abetting
indicted Croatian Gen. Ante Gotovina in a 1995
Croatian military operation known as 'Operation
Storm.'"
     When asked if the prosecutor's office plans to
indict Mr. Clinton and U.S. officials, Florence
Hartmann, spokeswoman for Mrs. Del Ponte, said: "We
are working on the basis of an ongoing investigation."
     Besides Mr. Clinton, others named in the
complaint are former National Security Adviser Anthony
Lake, former Deputy National Security Adviser Samuel
Berger, Ambassador Richard Holbrooke and former U.S.
Ambassador to Croatia Peter Galbraith.
     Fears that American officials and soldiers will
be prosecuted for participating in U.N.-backed
peacekeeping efforts lie behind the Bush
administration's threat to scuttle the present U.N.
peacekeeping mission in Bosnia.
     The threat is part of a dispute involving a
separate but similar U.N. tribunal, the International
Criminal Court, which was modeled after the ICTY and
opened its doors last week. Both courts are based in
The Hague.
     The Balkans court angered U.S. officials two
years ago when it acknowledged it was looking into a
similar complaint against NATO commanders for their
role in the 1999 U.S.-led bombing campaign in
Yugoslavia.
     Court officials said at the time they felt
obliged to look into all complaints placed before
them, but they dropped the matter after a preliminary
investigation. 
     Gen. Gotovina was indicted by the ICTY in June
2001 on charges that he exercised "command
responsibility" over a military campaign in which 150
Serbian civilians were killed.
     Secretly supported by the Clinton administration,
Croatian forces launched a massive three-day military
offensive � known as "Operation Storm" � on Aug. 4,
1995, in which Croatia recovered territories occupied
by rebel Serbs following Zagreb's drive for
independence from Yugoslavia in 1991.
     The Croatian World Congress, a nongovernmental
organization (NGO) that advises the United Nations,
said it believes neither Gen. Gotovina nor Clinton
administration officials are guilty of war crimes.
     However, it said that if Mrs. Del Ponte insists
on prosecuting Gen. Gotovina, then American officials
should be prosecuted in the interests of "evenhanded
justice" because they played a pivotal role in aiding
the general's campaign in Operation Storm. 
     The Croatian World Congress said the U.S.
administration gave the green light for the operation
and provided diplomatic and political support for it.
     But the NGO stressed that "the most just outcome
would be to withdraw the indictment against Gen.
Gotovina."
     The possibility that the Gotovina case will lead
to U.S. officials being indicted by the ICTY worries
some lawmakers on Capitol Hill.
     Rep. Henry J. Hyde, Illinois Republican and
chairman of the House Committee on International
Relations, said in a May 29 letter to Secretary of
State Colin L. Powell that at committee hearings on
the ICTY, "Testimony was presented at our hearing
questioning the factual basis for this indictment. 
     "It was brought to our attention that the ICTY
may investigate U.S. officials for potential command
responsibility in connection with Operation Storm."
     Mr. Hyde said the ongoing investigation in the
Gotovina case poses "risks" that U.S. officials would
be prosecuted by the "U.N. tribunal for formulating or
carrying out U.S. government policy."
     Gen. Gotovina, 48, was the military commander of
Sector South of the operation that was responsible for
the capture of the city Knin.
     He is also accused by the prosecutor's office at
The Hague of overseeing the ethnic cleansing of
150,000 Serbs in Croatia who fled the military
assault. He is currently in hiding, his whereabouts
unknown.
     The United States provided military and technical
assistance to Operation Storm in order to deliver a
defeat to then-Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic's
goal of forging an ethnically pure "Greater Serbia."



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