http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2009/11/28/geopolitical-crossroads-pentagon-nato-complete-conquest-of-balkans/


Stop NATO
November 28, 2009


Geopolitical Crossroads: Pentagon, NATO Complete Conquest Of Balkans
Rick Rozoff


----------
Bosnia and Montenegro being incorporated as full NATO members and Macedonia 
following suit would expand the world's only military bloc to 31 nations, 
almost twice that of ten years ago when it first began its drive into Eastern 
Europe. And with Serbia and Kosovo, which even before becoming a member is the 
world's first NATO political entity, included the Alliance's numbers will have 
more than doubled since 1999, a decade after the dismantling of the Berlin Wall 
and the end of the Cold War. All seventeen new acquisitions would be in Eastern 
Europe, and the majority of NATO member states would be former Warsaw Pact 
members or Yugoslav republics and a province. 
----------


NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen visited the capital of Montenegro 
on November 26 and that of Bosnia the following day.

A Balkans news source wrote of the visits that Rasmussen would "discuss the 
possibility of approving Montenegro’s action plan for NATO membership" and 
"discuss strengthening NATO and BiH [Bosnia and Herzegovina] cooperation." [1]

Ahead of the Balkans tour Rasmussen was in Germany to meet with Chancellor 
Angela Merkel and recruit more troops for the war in Afghanistan.

The NATO chief has been even busier than usual of late, simultaneously 
recruiting troops from nations throughout Europe for Afghanistan on 
Washington's behalf, working on the bloc's new Strategic Concept, drumming up 
support for a continent-wide, U.S.-led interceptor missile system and preparing 
for a NATO foreign ministers meeting on December 3-4.

The Balkans fit into all the above aspects of what has in recent years 
routinely been referred to as 21st Century, global and expeditionary NATO, one 
feverishly seeking new "third millennium challenges" and invoking "a myriad 
deadly threats" [2] as pretexts for increasing its already widening role in 
five continents and the Middle East.

Several days before Rasmussen arrived in the world's newest (recognized) 
nation, Montenegro, the U.S. Assistant Secretary of Defense for International 
Security Alexander Vershbow was in the Bosnian capital of Sarajevo to preside 
over the fifth meeting of defense chiefs of the US-Adriatic Charter, set up by 
Washington in 2003 to fast-track Balkans nations into NATO.

The first three members enlisted by the U.S. were Albania, Croatia and 
Macedonia. The first two were formally inducted into full NATO membership at 
the bloc's sixtieth anniversary summit this April and Macedonia also would have 
been dragged into the Alliance except for the lingering dispute with Greece 
over its name. Bosnia and Montenegro were added to the Charter last year and 
Serbia - and breakaway Kosovo - are to be next. With Bulgaria, Romania and 
Slovenia becoming full member states at the Istanbul summit in 2004 and Greece 
and Turkey members for decades, all of Southeast Europe has been transformed 
into NATO territory, from the Adriatic to the Black and from the Aegean to the 
Ionian Seas.

The November 17 meeting in Bosnia was attended by, in addition to the 
Pentagon's Vershbow (who was U.S. ambassador to NATO during the 1999 war 
against Yugoslavia), the deputy defense minister of Albania and the defense 
chiefs of Bosnia, Croatia, Macedonia and Montenegro. Also present were the 
defense ministers of Serbia and Slovenia, Dragan Sutanovac and Ljubica Jelisic, 
the last two nations in a category labeled "guest and observer countries." 

"Vershbow reiterated US support for the early approval of BiH and Montenegro's 
applications for the Membership Action Plan (MAP). He also said full NATO 
membership for Macedonia will be backed, as soon as the issue of its name is 
resolved." Additionally, the defense chiefs "agreed to sign a joint statement 
on enhancing co-operation through regional centres in the Western Balkans."  [3]

An Associated Press dispatch at the time of the Adriatic Charter meeting 
mentioned of the December 3-4 assembly in Brussels (which will also be a forum 
for enlisting thousands of more NATO troops for the Afghan war) that "An 
upcoming meeting of NATO foreign ministers will provide a boost for Bosnia and 
Montenegro to become the 29th and 30th members of the trans-Atlantic alliance." 
[4]

Bosnia and Montenegro being incorporated as full NATO members and Macedonia 
following suit would expand the world's only military bloc to 31 nations, 
almost twice that of ten years ago when it first began its drive into Eastern 
Europe. And with Serbia and Kosovo, which even before becoming a member is the 
world's first NATO political entity, included the Alliance's numbers will have 
more than doubled since 1999, a decade after the dismantling of the Berlin Wall 
and the end of the Cold War. All seventeen new acquisitions would be in Eastern 
Europe, and the majority of NATO member states would be former Warsaw Pact 
members or Yugoslav republics and a province. 

The Pentagon has already secured seven new military bases in Bulgaria and 
Romania [5] which border the Black Sea in the Northern Balkans, including the 
Graf Ignatievo and Bezmer airbases in the first country and the Mihail 
Kogalniceanu Air Base in the second. The airfields have been used for 
"downrange" military operations in Afghanistan and Iraq and the Romanian 
installation now hosts the Pentagon's Joint Task Force – East.

The U.S.'s colossal Camp Bondsteel in Kosovo is now ten years old and the use 
and upgrading of Croatian and Montenegrin Adriatic harbors for U.S. Navy 
deployments is an imminent possibility.

The further the fragmentation of former Yugoslavia proceeds, the more 
thoroughly the region will be transformed into a string of so-called forward 
operating bases and "lily pads" (Donald Rumsfeld's term) for military action to 
the east and south.

The 2006 Western-supported dissolution of the State Union of Serbia and 
Montenegro, itself a transitional mechanism devised by Javier Solana, NATO 
Secretary General during the 1999 war and since then the European Union's High 
Representative for the Common Foreign and Security Policy, completed the 
breakup of the former Yugoslavia into its six federal republics. The unilateral 
declaration of independence from Serbia by Kosovo in 2008, not only backed but 
engineered by NATO and its civilian complements, the government of the United 
States and the European Union, began the second phase of the dismemberment of 
the nation: The breaking apart of former republics into mini-states. [6]

Behind Kosovo lie Vojvodina, the Presevo Valley and Sandzak in Serbia, where 
ethnic separatism, cross-border armed attacks and outright terrorism have 
raised their heads, respectively.

Macedonia faces the same alarming prospect. Attacks by adjuncts of the 
so-called Kosovo Liberation Army - the National Liberation Army (NLA) of Ali 
Ahmeti - from inside Kosovo in 2001 placed the new nation on the precipice of 
all-out war and violent fragmentation. 

Last week Menduh Thaci, head of the Democratic Party of Albanians, called on 
his sponsors in the West to reduce Macedonia to an international protectorate. 
Speaking of a current political crisis largely of his making, Thaci said "I am 
convinced that the only way out is an urgent international protection, which 
will be a preventive measure for possible events." The next step is for the 
name of the nation to be changed or adjusted and for whatever it will then be 
called to be brought into NATO. Both the Greek government and pan-Albanian 
forces in Macedonia, Albania, Kosovo, South Serbia and Montenegro will be 
satisfied with the result and NATO will acquire its 29th (or 31st) member 
state. [7]

Montenegro, barely three years old, will soon deploy the first contingent of 
its armed forces to serve under NATO in Afghanistan. When it arrives it will 
join troops from Albania, Bosnia, Bulgaria, Croatia, Macedonia, Romania and 
Slovenia. The last seven nations also provided soldiers for the military 
occupation of Iraq after 2003. Montenegro didn't exist as an independent state 
at that time, so its initiation as a NATO candidate country will be in 
Afghanistan.

With Serbia as an observer nation of the Adriatic Charter and with it having 
joined NATO's Partnership for Peace transitional program in 2006, Washington 
and Brussels will also soon call on it to prove its right to Alliance candidacy 
by dispatching troops to the Afghan war front. As the U.S. and NATO are on the 
verge of a qualitative escalation of the war in South Asia, the Serbian foreign 
and defense ministries have announced the opening of a mission at NATO 
headquarters in Brussels. "[T]he point of the mission will be to improve 
cooperation and everyday communication with NATO, participate in the work of 
100 expert committees, and improve...cooperation with '50 member-states' of the 
'political' alliance." [8] Fifty states are almost exactly the number that have 
provided NATO troops for the war in Afghanistan. Serbia could be the 51st.

Even for the representative of a battered, splintered, demoralized nation, 
recent statements by current Serbian Defense Minister Dragan Sutanovac are 
offensive in their shameless fawning and obsequiousness.

He will soon be the first Serbian defense chief to visit the Pentagon in a 
quarter of a century, a fact he is proud of, and recently said that his trip 
will be "without a doubt, politically and militarily very important," as much 
of the money - $500 million - Washington has bribed Belgrade authorities with 
since the overthrow of President Slobodan Milosevic in 2000 "[was] used by the 
Serbian military."

Sutanovac, who graduated from the George C. Marshall European Center for 
Security Studies, jointly run by the U.S. Department of Defense and the German 
Defense Ministry, and who is described as "speaking perfect English," added 
these revealing details:

"The Serbian MoD [Ministry of Defense] has stable relations with the U.S. 
military and we can say that cooperation in defense is the backbone of 
relations between the United States and Serbia at the moment." 

"Considering the fact that the U.S. defense budget is as large as the defense 
budget of the rest of the world, it is crystal clear what the most important 
thing is to U.S. foreign policy and international relations." [9]

The former Kosovo Liberation Army, then Kosovo Protection Corps (and now Kosovo 
Security Force) offered troops to the U.S. for the war in Iraq shortly after 
the invasion of 2003 and the NATO-equipped and trained Kosovo Security Force, a 
nascent national army in all but name, will offer troops to NATO for the Afghan 
war as it drags on indefinitely. [10]

During recent municipal elections in Kosovo, the first since its nominal 
independence, one not recognized by 140 of 192 nations and by few outside the 
NATO world (the exceptions including Afghanistan, Liechtenstein, Monaco, the 
Marshall Islands, San Marino, Belize, Malta, Samoa, the Maldives, the Comoros, 
the Federated States of Micronesia, Nauru and Palau), supporters of former KLA 
chieftains Hashim Thaci - the Western-recognized prime minister - and war 
criminal Ramush Haradinaj were at daggers drawn and "people used rocks to 
attack a line of cars that transported Hashim Thaci....Thaci's party accused 
Haradinaj of directly inciting and organizing [the] attack...." [11]

A Russian report on the Western-endorsed and -celebrated elections placed the 
West's Kosovo strategy in a broader context:

"EU officials are the ones forcing the Serbian government to accept several 
very unpleasant decisions - recognition of the municipal elections in Kosovo, 
dissociation from Russia and the pullout of joint energy projects with Russia.

"As for democratic values in the EU policy with regard to Serbia, they are hard 
to believe in, given the EU officials' open sympathies with the Albanian 
militants of the Kosovo Liberation Army. Incidentally, the supporters of two 
KLA leaders, former 'prime minister' Ramush Haradinaj and his successor Hashim 
Thaci, caused a violent clash in one of the Albanian enclaves.

"It is worth reminding here that Haradinaj was allowed to leave the Hague 
occasionally 'to rule' Kosovo during his trial, while Thaci was eventually 
cleared by the Hague Tribunal of all charges of genocide against Serbs." [12]

Nevertheless the United States and its NATO allies, the self-proclaimed 
"international community" and champions of democracy, human rights and so forth 
wherever and whenever it suits their political purposes, continue to embrace 
the Kosovo entity as a brother-in-arms in the new global order.

Former U.S. president Bill Clinton was in the Kosovo capital of Pristina on 
November 1 for the unveiling of a particularly vulgar and meretricious 
gold-sprayed statue of himself [13], the ceremony presided over by the former 
head of the Kosovo Liberation Army, Hashim "The Snake" Thaci, the creation of 
whose pseudo-nation is a cause of great pride in Western capitals.

The Associated Press reported on the event in Europe's drug-smuggling criminal 
black hole:

"The statue portrays Clinton with his left arm raised and holding a portfolio 
bearing his name and the date when NATO started bombing Yugoslavia, on March 
24, 1999.

"Many waved American, Albanian and Kosovo flags and chanted 'USA!' as the 
former president climbed on top of a podium with his poster in the background 
reading 'Kosovo honors a hero.'" [14]

That Albanian flags were flaunted reveals what NATO mercilessly bombed the 
length and breadth of Yugoslavia for 78 days to achieve.

Three weeks afterward the mayor of a town in Albania - the distinction between 
that nation and Kosovo is now a strictly academic one - announced plans to 
follow suit and dedicate a statue to George W. Bush. Bush and Clinton have 
jointly sired the Kosovo/Greater Kosovo aberration. "The small Albanian town of 
Fushe-Kruje plans to erect a statue of former U.S. President George W. Bush to 
commemorate his June 2007 visit, when he was feted as a hero in an outpouring 
of love for America."

The town's mayor, Ismet Mavriqi, was quoted as saying, "If I had the final say, 
I would very much like a three-meter statue, probably in bronze, that captures 
his trademark way of walking with energy." [15]

The legacy that Washington and Brussels have left the people of Kosovo - those 
remaining that is, as hundreds of thousands of Serbs, Roma and others have  
fled for their lives since June of 1999 - was detailed in a recent Reuters 
report.

It said that although "Over the past decade it has received 3 billion euros in 
aid, according to the World Bank, and is expecting another billion by 2011," 
nevertheless "unemployment is 40 percent and average per capita income is 1,760 
euros. That compares with average joblessness of just under 10 percent in the 
European Union and an average salary of about 24,000 euros ($35,930)." [16]

Ten years of NATO-KLA collaboration have produced this human catastrophe.

This is the stability and prosperity that the West has brought to the Balkans.

That afflicted part of Europe has been the testing ground for NATO's expansion 
into Eastern Europe and since into Asia, Africa and the Middle East, starting 
with Bosnia in 1995 when NATO dropped its first bombs and deployed its first 
troops outside the territory of its member states.

As early as January of 1996 the now deceased American scholar Sean Gervasi 
warned that "There are deeper reasons for the dispatch of NATO forces to the 
Balkans, and especially for the extension of NATO to Poland, the Czech Republic 
and Hungary in the relatively near future. These have to do with an emerging 
strategy for securing the resources of the Caspian Sea region and for 
'stabilizing' the countries of Eastern Europe - ultimately for 'stabilizing' 
Russia and the countries of the Commonwealth of Independent States." [17]

NATO now has solidified military partnerships, conducts regular war games and 
has established permanent bases in several countries on and near the Caspian 
Sea - Azerbaijan, Georgia, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan, not to 
mention Afghanistan.

It has absorbed three former Soviet republics - Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania - 
and continues to insist that former Commonwealth of Independent States member 
Georgia and current one Ukraine will become full members of the Alliance.

Thirteen years ago Gervasi also warned that "The United States is now seeking 
to consolidate a new European-Middle Eastern bloc of nations....This grouping 
includes Turkey, which is of pivotal importance in the emerging new bloc. 
Turkey is not just a part of the southern Balkans and an Aegean power. It also 
borders on Iraq, Iran and Syria. It thus connects southern Europe to the Middle 
East, where the US considers that it has vital interests....With the war 
against Iraq [1991], the US established itself in the Middle East more securely 
than ever. The almost simultaneous disintegration of the Soviet Union opened 
the possibility of Western exploitation of the oil resources of the Caspian Sea 
region." [18]

Events in the interim have proceeded exactly as Gervasi indicated they would 
and for the motives he attributed to them.

Having undermined the United Nations, violated international law, humiliated 
Russia and moved NATO forces into the Balkans, the West was embarked in earnest 
on its drive for global domination in the post-Cold War world. As NATO's first 
war, the Operation Allied Force bombing campaign against Yugoslavia in 1999, 
was dragging on and assuming ever more ominous dimensions, even before the 
destruction of the Chinese embassy in Belgrade by NATO bombs, then Russian 
President Boris Yeltsin appeared on his nation's television and said: "I told 
Nato, the Americans, the Germans, don't push us towards military action. 

"Otherwise there will be a European war for sure - and possibly world war." [19]

That Yeltsin was the dependable friend of Washington that he was made the 
statement even more foreboding. Less than a month afterward the Chinese embassy 
was in ruins as the war raged on.

Europe and the world avoided a broader war ten years ago. But NATO, using the 
Balkans as its global springboard, may yet succeed in triggering a conflict 
that will not be contained and will not remain within the realm of conventional 
warfare. 


1) Macedonian Radio and Television, November 26, 2009
2) Thousand Deadly Threats: Third Millennium NATO, Western Businesses Collude 
   On New Global Doctrine
   Stop NATO, October 2, 2009
   
http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2009/10/02/thousand-deadly-threats-third-millennium-nato-western-businesses-collude-on-new-global-doctrine
3) Southeast European Times, November 20, 2009
4) Associated Press, November 18, 2009
5) Bulgaria, Romania: U.S., NATO Bases For War In The East
   Stop NATO, October 24, 2009
   
http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2009/10/25/bulgaria-romania-u-s-nato-bases-for-war-in-the-east
6) Adriatic Charter And The Balkans: Smaller Nations, Larger NATO  
   Stop NATO, May 13, 2009
   
http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2009/08/28/adriatic-charter-and-the-balkans-smaller-nations-larger-nato
 
7) Threat Of New Conflict In Europe: Western-Sponsored Greater Albania
   Stop NATO, October 8, 2009
   
http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2009/10/08/new-threat-of-conflict-in-europe-western-sponsored-greater-albania
8) Vecernje Novosti, November 4, 2009
9) Politika, November 27, 2009
10) Balkans: Staging Ground For NATO’s Post-Cold War Order
    Stop NATO, February 9, 2009
    
http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2009/08/26/balkans-staging-ground-for-natos-post-cold-war-order
 
11) Tanjug News Agency, November 12, 2009
12) Russian Information Agency Novosti, November 17, 2009
13) Kosovo: Marking Ten Years Of Worldwide Wars
    Stop NATO, October 31, 2009
    
http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/2009/10/31/kosovo-marking-ten-years-of-worldwide-wars
14) Associated Press, November 1, 2009
15) Reuters, November 21, 2009
16) Reuters, November 20, 2009
17) Sean Gervasi, Why Is NATO In Yugoslavia?
    http://www.globalresearch.ca/articles/GER108A.html 
18) Ibid
19) BBC News, April 9, 1999
===========================
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