HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK
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http://www.washtimes.com/world/20020917-1171473.htm


[The Velvet Monarch, who has in recent years reclaimed
his family's ancestral domains in real estate rich
downtown Prague, is NATO's preeminent booster in
Eastern Europe and a longtime paladin of the former
social democratic human rights crowd.
With the collapse of their bogeyman some eleven years
ago, the post-social democratic Third Way, Die Neue
Mitte, Die Neue Fascismus brigades turned their
attention to the Balkans, where they briefly posed and
pontificated as the self-appointed defenders of the
Muslim peoples of the world.
That is until their humaniartian dream was realized in
Kosovo and the Muslim Roma, Goranci, Turks, Aeskalis,
Egyptians, Bosnians and non-KLA Albanians were
murdered or expelled virtually to a person, a
discomforting fact not remarked upon by the
humanitarian interventionists and moral imperialists,
and until their newfound allies in the State
Department, Pentagon and CIA moved on to Afghanistan,
Palestine, Iraq, Yemen, Somalia, Syria, Lebanon, Iran,
the Philippines and Libya.
Vaclav Havel has been second to none in deploying
Czech military personnel to the Bakans, the Persian
Gulf, South and Central Asia and the Horn of Africa. 
As might have been predicted.]  
 


 
September 17, 2002
Havel endorses U.S. line on Iraq 
By Bruce I. Konviser
THE WASHINGTON TIMES
�����PRAGUE � Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein is a menace
to his neighbors and pre-emptive military action may
be warranted against him, Czech President Vaclav Havel
said in an interview ahead of a visit to Washington
beginning today. 
�����"Saddam Hussein's regime poses a major threat to
many nations and to his own people," Mr. Havel said.
"The right thing for [President] Bush is not to go in
alone. There should be an international intervention."
�����The visit, which includes a meeting with Mr. Bush
tomorrow and talks with leaders of the Senate and the
House of Representatives, will be Mr. Havel's final
one to Washington before his scheduled retirement in
January.
�����But in an interview late last week, the one-time
dissident playwright expressed more interest in
current issues than in nostalgic memories of 13 years
as Czech president.
�����The Bush administration doctrine of pre-emptive
military action could be justified on a case-by-case
basis, said the often-ailing Mr. Havel, who turns 66
next month.
�����He said World War II might have been avoided had
Western powers � Britain and France, in particular �
not pursued a policy of appeasement with Adolf Hitler.
�����One of Mr. Havel's last official acts will be to
preside over a NATO summit in the Czech capital in
November that is expected to sharply change the
alliance. Meeting for the first time in a former
Warsaw Pact territory, delegates will invite as many
as seven more countries to join the alliance.
�����Mr. Havel said NATO enlargement is critical to
stabilizing Eastern Europe and would lay to rest an
ugly chapter of European history.
����� "It will finally show there are no more spheres
of influence," he said.
�����His life-long struggle for human rights � he
spent five years as a political prisoner under the
communist regime � has won him praise and friendship
from world figures such as former President Bill
Clinton and Nobel laureate Elie Wiesel.
�����But despite having joined NATO in 1999 � along
with Poland and Hungary � and the prospect of joining
the European Union, possibly as early as 2004, the
post-communist years have been difficult ones for Mr.
Havel and his country.
�����He has waged a long battle against powerful
political forces that scoff at the notion of civil
society being a necessary component for a vibrant
democracy even as they advocate what Mr. Havel has
called mafia capitalism.
�����Now, the man who led the Velvet Revolution in
1989, which brought about the bloodless overthrow of
the communist regime, says he wants a break.
�����"I would like to withdraw from public view for a
certain amount of time, to read and write," Mr. Havel
said. He declined to say whether he wants to do a
memoir, a play or something else.
�����He intends to remain an active voice on the
political scene. But he said power is overrated and he
has no plans to hold office again.
�����"I can't find much empathy for those who yearn
for power," he said. "I never aspired to it but it
came to me, and has been a very interesting
experience."
�����Jan Urban, a fellow dissident during the
communist days and now a commentator for Czech Radio,
hasn't always seen eye to eye with the president, but
he said Mr. Havel has come full circle.
�����"He finishes exactly as he started," Mr. Urban
said, "as a moral authority hated by a large part of
the political class but admired by a large part of the
population."
   

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