FROM PHOENIX, ARIZONA

The Special Truth in Media Global Watch Bulletins on NATO's war on Serbia,
such as the one enclosed below, can also be accessed at our Web site:
www.truthinmedia.org which is being updated throughout the day.

Issue S99-86, Day 60
---------------------------
May 22, 1999; 9:00PM EDT

HEADLINES

Djakovica                    1. NATO Hits KLA Compound, Killing Five and
                                        Wounding 25 Albanian Rebels

Brussels                       2. NATO Considers Halt to Bombing

London                        3. Blair Talks Tough, Is Less "Invincible" Now

London                        4. Mountains Ground U.S. Apaches

Hong Kong                  5. China Bars U.S. Ships from Hong Kong

--------------------

1. NATO Hits KLA Compound, Killing Five and Wounding 25 Albanian Rebels

DJAKOVICA, May 21 - With the kind of "support" the Kosovo Liberation Army
rebels received at 7:30AM local time on Friday May 21 from their friends
and allies at NATO, the Albanian terrorists may prefer low-tech combat
against the Yugoslav police.  By the time smoke had cleared after three
NATO bombs hit a KLA compound in Kosovo, a mile from the Albanian south
west of Djakovica, five KLA rebels lay dead and 25 were wounded.

The KLA compound was actually a former Yugoslav Army barracks taken over by
the rebels last month, the Washington Post reported today (May 22).  The
attack is an embarrassment for both NATO and the Albanian guerrillas, who
had felt confident enough of their control of the area to invite western
journalists to visit, the Post said.
---
TiM Ed.: This mishap is another example of "friendly fire" bungling by the
NATO "supermen" and their "precision" high-tech killing machines. On
several earlier occasions they couldn't even hit the right country, let
alone the intended military formation, as several NATO missiles exploded in
Macedonia or Bulgaria.  So far, at least five missiles had hit Bulgaria,
the last one falling in the early morning hours on May 10 near the village
Liulin, which was heard by the residents of the Sofia suburb Nadezda.

And NATO might as well draft a form letter for diplomatic apologies it is
having to send out, as its May 21 bombing in Belgrade reportedly also
slightly damaged the Indian, Israeli, Pakistani and Hungarian embassies, in
addition to the earlier damages to the Swedish and Swiss ambassadors'
residences (see S99-84, Item 1, May 20 and S99-85, Item 2, May 21).

With such "precision bombing," should the American and other NATO troops
ever move in close to the Yugoslav border, the may discover a whole new
meaning of "air support" and that oxymoron term, "friendly fire."  Just as
the KLA rebels did on May 21.
--------------

2. NATO Considers Halt to Bombing

BRUSSELS, May 21 - The all pomp and bluster NATO supreme commander, Gen.
Wesley Clark, said at the outset of the war that he was going to have the
Serbs on their knees after the first three days of bombing (see S99-58, Day
36, Item 1, Apr. 28). For, after 60 days of incessant and accelerating
bombing, the only knee pads being worn out are those used by NATO leaders
while praying for a miracle - to save them from the dead end road they have
picked out for themselves.

And small miracles are being granted, it seems. To those who still have a
dose of humility left.  NATO leaders are considering a fundamental switch
of tactics whereby the bombing of Serbia could be halted before Slobodan
Milosevic has met the alliance's five conditions for a cease fire, the
London Telegraph reported on May 21.

The move, if agreed, would represent a significant climbdown from NATO's
position that its demands must be met in full before the air campaign could
end, the Telegraph said. As diplomatic efforts to find a solution
intensified, NATO made it clear that it was seriously considering plans
advanced by Massimo D'Alema, the Italian prime minister, which involve a
cessation of bombing as soon as a United Nations Security Council
resolution on a settlement had been merely drafted. Which could happen any
time now.

Under the Italian plan, bombing would stop before Milosevic had withdrawn
any of his 40,000 troops and perhaps even before he had formally agreed to
do so, and to allow in a Nato-led peacekeeping force. The bombing would
halt before the UN resolution had been officially approved to get round the
possibility of a Chinese veto. After meeting D'Alema at the NATO
headquarters in Brussels, Javier Solana, the alliance's secretary general,
said the Italian proposal is being taken "very seriously".

Last night (May 20), Solana flew to London to meet Tony Blair and for
dinner with George Robertson, the defence secretary. The Italian plan was
understood to be one of the main items for discussion.

And at the May 20 NATO briefing in Brussels, Jamie Shea, the alliance
spokesman, hinted clearly that the D'Alema plan, or something like it, was
under active consideration. Previously, NATO had rejected any such claims
out of hand.
---------------

3. Blair Talks Tough, Is Less "Invincible" Now

LONDON, May 22 - While Tony Blair, is trying to outdo in tough military
talk even his good friend, the Draftdodger-in-Chief, Bill Clinton, the
British prime minister is looking less "Invincible" every moment.

In a terse statement issued in London on May 20, the Ministry of Defense
said that the British aircraft carrier, HMS "Invincible," is being
withdrawn from the NATO operation against Yugoslavia, and sent home, the
BBC World Service reported. The Ministry said the vessel would not be replaced.
---
TiM Ed.: Which goes to show you that the liberals' bark is worse than their
bite.  Except when it comes to killing innocent civilians, a "military"
challenge at which they excel.

By the way, the British Defense Ministry did not elaborate as to the
reasons the "Invincible" was being withdrawn from the Adriatic theater of
war.  But speculations range from having to go home for an oil change, to a
more credible scenario - that the "Invincible" needed to have its entire
crew replaced.  With brainless morons who don't care if they hit hospitals
or barracks.  Nor who is in them.

As we had reported earlier, this British aircraft carrier's crew were near
mutiny last month after realizing that they were being commanded by leaders
missing some screws, not just needing an oil change (Day 27, Update 1, Item
7, Apr. 19).
---------------

4. Mountains Ground U.S. Apaches

LONDON, May 22 - "Mountains Ground US Apaches," read a headline from
today's report by the London Telegraph's defense correspondent, TiM Butcher:

"The Apache attack helicopter, promoted as the most potent weapon in
America's airborne arsenal, will never fly on combat missions in Kosovo
because it cannot cope with the region's mountains, defense sources said
yesterday.

The aircraft, deployed to Albania by the Pentagon with great fanfare as the
'silver bullet' to end to the Kosovo crisis, is militarily redundant
because of the 10,000ft mountains. Only by fitting additional fuel pods
could it negotiate such obstacles, and that would reduce its weapons
payload and its capability to defend itself."
---
TiM Ed.: What an irony!  Not only because the Pentagon's "pride and joy"
helicopter fleet has turned out to be a paper tiger (which we've already
told you - see "Flying Coffins," S99-81, Day 55, Item 1, May 17).  But also
because anyone who has seen where the real Apaches live (in northeastern
Arizona) knows that they are mountain people.

It is all reminiscent of a famous line uttered in opposition to the U.S.
involvement in Bosnia by Gen. Colin Powell, when he was running the U.S.
military: "We don't do mountains."   Well, if anyone knows how to "do
mountains," the real Apaches do.  Which means that the Pentagon's paper
tigers, besides being militarily impotent in the mountains, were also badly
misnamed.
---------------

5. China Bars U.S. Ships from Hong Kong

HONG KONG, May 21 - The Chinese dragon is putting some teeth in Boris
Yeltsin's version of the Russian bear.  While the Russian president and his
"special envoy" to the Balkans, Viktor Chernomyrdin, were busy trying to
sell out the Serbs' interests to Kremlin's western masters (while talking
tough, of course), China has put the New World Order leaders know that it
will not be bought, like the Moscow lapdogs.

China said Friday that it had barred U.S. warships from visiting Hong Kong
because of ''the current situation,'' the International Herald Tribune
reported today (May 22). Although officials in the Chinese Foreign Ministry
office did not offer a clear explanation, the ban was apparently a fallout
from the accidental NATO bombing of the Chinese Embassy in the Yugoslav
capital of Belgrade on May 7.

The U.S. Consulate in Hong Kong said earlier Friday that China had canceled
visits by five warships that had been scheduled for May and June.  ''The
Chinese have denied all pending U.S. port visits,'' a consulate official said.

Barbara Zigli, a U.S. consulate spokeswoman, said it was the first time
that Beijing had banned a U.S. warship from docking in Hong Kong since the
territory's handover to Chinese rule.

''We regret these mutually beneficial port calls, which bring economic
benefits to Hong Kong, as well as shore leave benefits to U.S. Navy
personnel, are unable to take place at this time,'' she said.
---
TiM Ed.: We suspect that this must come as a shock to people like the U.S.
consulate's spokesperson - but you can't buy everybody.  And especially not
after you first bomb them.

By the way, Hong Kong has been one of the favorite ports of call for the
U.S. Pacific Fleet, we are told.
---------------
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----
Bob Djurdjevic
TRUTH IN MEDIA
Phoenix, Arizona
e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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