FROM PHOENIX, ARIZONA

Thought you may be interested in the enclosed letter to the Wall Street
Journal.  The letter is also available at the Truth in Media Web site
(http://www.truthinmedia.org/Activism/wsj5-9-99.html), along with other
commments in the "TiM Activism" section.

Best,

Bob Dj.

-------------------------------------
May 9, 1999; 12:50 PM

Ned Crabb
Letters Editor
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
New York, NY
-------------------------------------

Subject: A letter to the editor re. the editorial, "A Good Deal for
Milosevic," May 7, 1999

Dear Ned,

Your editorial, "A Good Deal for Milosevic" (May 7, 1999), quotes Victor
Chernomyrdin, Russia's special envoy for the Balkans, as saying that the
peace proposal, agreed to by NATO leaders in Bonn, Germany on May 6, was "a
good deal for Milosevic," Yugoslavia's president.  To which your editors
added, "certainly it is a far better deal than the gallows he no doubt
reserves."

Well, well... he who lives in a glass house should not cast stones.  If
Milosevic deserves the gallows, what then shall be proper punishment for
the world class criminals, like Bill Clinton, Tony Blair, Jacques Chirac,
Wesley Kanne Clark, Madeleine Albright, Sam Berger, William Cohen, Javier
Solana, Jean Chretien... to name a few?  Or for the accomplices of these
mass murderers of innocent civilians and Chinese diplomats - the globalists
who bought them and put them in positions of power - the Bilderbergers, the
Trilateralists, or the CFR members?  Which includes, of course, many
members of the media, such as the Wall Street Journal's publisher, Peter
Kann, and the editor-in-chief, Bob Bartley.

If Milosevic deserves the gallows, the proper punishment for these war
criminals may be what the Ottoman Islamic rulers of the Balkans, whose
descendants are now NATO members and Washington's allies, used to mete out
to local Christians - impaling them on a stick.  For all gory details of
what that was like, your publisher and editor may wish to check out the
Nobel Prize-winning novel, "The Bridge on the Drina," by Ivo Andric (George
Allen & Unwin (Publishers) Ltd., 1959, ISSN 0-04-823017-0).

But personally, I'd prefer sending them to Serbia to face the parents of
the children they've killed; to beg the people they have crippled for life
for forgiveness.  And then, if they are granted mercy, as I suspect they
would be by the Serb Christians, be condemned to hard labor for life;
rebuilding with their own hands the country they have destroyed, but whose
spirit they could never vanquish.

Meanwhile, if the above-named world class thugs think that they are above
the law, they should read the formal complaint filed at the International
War Crimes Tribunal at the Hague this week against 60 of them by a group of
Canadian lawyers.  And a parallel legal action being taken by Glen
Rangwala, an international lawyer at the Cambridge University in Britain.
And then they should consider what Russia's foreign minister, Igor Ivanov,
said on May 8 - that those who launched the military strikes against
Yugoslavia "must be punished appropriately." He warned the NATO leaders
that those who "hope to escape punishment are seriously deluding
themselves."  As were the Nazi leaders at their pinnacle of power.

Best regards,

Bob Djurdjevic
Founder, Truth in Media
Phoenix, Arizona
--------------
NOTE: To cancel the e-mail editions of our reports, just reply with REMOVE
or UNSUBSCRIBE, followed by your e-mail address.

----
Bob Djurdjevic
TRUTH IN MEDIA
Phoenix, Arizona
e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Visit the Truth in Media Web site http://www.truthinmedia.org/ for more
articles on geopolitical affairs.




Reply via email to