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WSWS : News & Analysis : Europe : The Balkans

The CARE-OSCE connection in Kosovo
New information on the case of two jailed Australian aid workers
By Mike Head
9 February 2000

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A current affairs program on the Australian government's Special Broadcasting
Services television network last week shed some further light on Yugoslavia's
detention of two CARE aid workers last year. Steve Pratt and Peter Wallace were
arrested with two carloads of computer files, a satellite telephone and other
communications equipment when they tried to cross into Croatia from Serbia last
March 31�just seven days after the US-NATO bombing of the country began.

The SBS Dateline program belatedly disclosed two pieces of new information. The
first was that CARE had a contract with the government of Canada, a NATO
member, to recruit a team of monitors in Kosovo before the bombing. Under the
arrangement, CARE Canada received $A32.2 million from CIDA, Canada's official
aid agency, to select and put in place 60 members of an Organisation for
Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) monitoring force. CARE paid the
observers and provided them with orientation briefings, medical services and
administrative backup.

Strictly speaking, the contract was with CARE Canada, but CARE Australia, as
CARE's lead agency in Yugoslavia, approved it. In fact, Pratt, who was CARE
International's country director in the former Yugoslavia, personally helped
set up the operation. He accompanied CARE Canada's chief John Watson on a week-
long tour when Watson arrived to establish the operation.

Dateline cited an unnamed OSCE source stating that the data collected by the
monitors was supplied to NATO, but not, as was supposed to happen, to
Yugoslavia. The program also interviewed CARE Canada's chief John Watson and
Stephen Wallace from CIDA who admitted that ex-military people and others "with
experience in combat zones" were recruited for the operation. In other words,
Pratt was directly linked to a network full of ex-military personnel sending
reports to NATO.

The second revelation came in an interview with CARE Australia chairman Malcolm
Fraser, a former prime minister. Fraser admitted that the material that the two
CARE workers tried to take across the border contained information on troop
movements, tank positions and minefields. Fraser confirmed that the documents
included "situation reports" written by Pratt in "military language".

When the CARE workers were detained, on suspicion of spying or passing on
information that aided the NATO bombing, the Australian government, opposition
politicians and the media denounced the arrests as an "outrage" and condemned
the Yugoslav regime of Slobodan Milosevic. For weeks on end, headlines and
editorials accused the Belgrade administration of using innocent humanitarian
workers as political pawns.

As CARE's chief spokesman, Fraser was at the centre of the campaign. He loudly
protested the complete innocence of the CARE staff, enlisting the support of
dignitaries from UN Secretary General Kofi Annan to South African President
Nelson Mandela. Fraser was appointed a Special Envoy of the Howard government
and eventually travelled to Belgrade to seek the prisoners' release.

The propaganda campaign only intensified when it was revealed that Pratt had
been a Major in the Australian army, as well as a one-time election candidate
for the conservative Liberal Party. It also emerged that he had previously
worked for CARE in such sensitive locations as Rwanda and had apparently been
forced to flee Kurdistan, in northern Iraq, as a suspected spy. The media
barrage continued unabated even when the Yugoslav court decided not to rely
upon Pratt's televised confession, broadcast on Yugoslav TV, that he had
"performed some intelligence tasks in this country, using the cover of CARE
Australia". The court ultimately dismissed the spying charges but convicted the
pair of lesser offences of passing information to a foreign organisation.

Now Fraser has admitted that he and other CARE officials knew all along of
highly incriminating evidence. Fraser claimed that he was not told about the
Canadian contract until after Pratt and Wallace were detained. Nevertheless, as
soon as he found out he insisted that the media suppress all mention of it.
Dateline itself acknowledged that it had known of the Canadian contract since
last June but did not report the information for seven months at Fraser's
request.

The significance of the Canadian contract can only be understood by examining
the true role of the OSCE monitoring operation. The Dateline program depicted
it as a "peace-monitoring" effort that had been agreed to by the Yugoslav
authorities. In fact, the Milosevic regime was forced to allow the OSCE to send
2,000 civilian monitors under the direct threat of NATO bombing, as well as
crippling economic sanctions. Under an agreement imposed by US diplomat Richard
Holbrooke on October 20, 1998, Milosevic pledged to withdraw Yugoslav security
forces from Kosovo, where they had been sent earlier in 1998 to combat units of
the Albanian separatist Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA).

The monitors had nothing to do with peace. They were to be deployed to police
Yugoslavia's compliance with the agreement, backed by NATO surveillance
flights. A NATO rapid reaction force was to be assembled to intervene in the
event of a breach by Serbia.

Given the circumstances, it is inconceivable that the monitors did not include
intelligence officers and agents. To the Serbian authorities this was obvious.
Interviewed by Dateline, Deputy Information Minister Miodrag Popovic stated:
"We knew all along about their intelligence activities. We knew all along about
the real purpose of the OSCE mission and that was to justify later NATO
aggression."

Appointed to head the OSCE force was William Walker, a US diplomat who was
previously implicated in the Nicaraguan Contra affair in the 1980s. As a deputy
to the Reagan administration's Assistant Secretary of State Elliott Abrams,
Walker was involved in illegally supplying weapons to the Contras who were
seeking to overthrow the Sandinista government.

The Milosevic-Holbrooke agreement provided the conditions for similar "dirty
tricks" activity in Kosovo. The KLA, which had been suffering heavy losses at
the hands of the Yugoslav army, was given the opportunity it needed to regroup,
obtain fresh military equipment and step up its campaign to drive all Serbs
from Kosovo.

As fighting flared between Serbian and KLA units, the OSCE monitors claimed to
have evidence of widespread Serbian atrocities. Walker was at the centre of the
main incident used to trigger the NATO bombing�the alleged killings of 45
Kosovar peasants by Serbian forces in the village of Racak on January 15, 1999.
When the bodies were discovered, Walker was the first observer on the scene and
immediately declared that there had been a Serbian massacre. On-the-spot
reports in the French press, however, suggested that the 45 could have been KLA
fighters killed in violent clashes with Serb units near the village the day
before.

Racak, and the subsequent withdrawal of OSCE observers, provided the pretext
for the Paris and Rambouillet conferences of February and March 1999 where the
"Contact Group" of six nations demanded that Milosevic sign an Accord granting
autonomy to Kosovo. Appendix B of the Accord required a full NATO occupation of
Yugoslavia, also in the name of ensuring compliance. Milosevic refused to sign,
objecting to the blanket infringement of Yugoslav's sovereignty, and the NATO
bombing commenced just six days later.

In his interview, Fraser defended the OSCE operation but said that "with
hindsight" it was a mistake for CARE to have participated in it, blurring
CARE's humanitarian mission. In another part of the interview, which has
received no comment in the media, he said the Rambouillet conference was used
to prepare for war. "It was the West's decision to go to war, not Yugoslavia's
and when I say the West's decision, there is a great deal of evidence to say
that Rambouillet was organised to provide an excuse to go to war and I say that
quite clearly and deliberately," he said.

Fraser's remarks provoked something of a storm within CARE. At one point,
CARE's publicity manager Antony Funnell interrupted Fraser's interview,
insisting that the CARE contract was with CIDA, not the Canadian government.
Fraser responded furiously with a string of rebukes. "Do not interrupt when I
am being interviewed and do not ever interrupt again," he thundered at one
point. "Do you understand?"

Canadian CARE's John Watson told Dateline that Fraser's objections flowed from
a "traditional" view of aid activity, whereas CARE Canada had "a more
progressive view of humanitarian work". When Fraser criticised CARE Australia's
national director Charles Tapp for not objecting to the Canadian contract, Tapp
responded by saying there were similar Australian government contracts with
many aid organisations in Bougainville, East Timor and Indonesia.

Aid agencies are used for such intelligence-gathering activities because they
can place personnel on the ground in volatile areas where other observers would
be under suspicion and scrutiny. As Pratt's record shows, their staffs often
feature seasoned military operatives. Direct state funding of aid agencies to
undertake such activities is a growing trend, as is overall dependence on
government coffers. The Australian Council for Overseas Aid estimates that in
1998 government sources provided one-third of the $218 million raised by its
affiliates.

As limited as the SBS material was, it pointed to a number of unanswered
questions about the CARE affair. Why was CARE asked to set up part of the OSCE
monitoring force? What data did the OSCE compile and how was it used in the
lead-up to the NATO bombing? What information did Pratt and his colleagues
collate and to whom was it sent? Did their reports continue during the first
week of the NATO onslaught?

This week, Four Corners, a flagship current affairs program on the other
government-funded TV network, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation,
attempted to divert public attention away from the SBS revelations. Instead of
a serious investigative examination of the new evidence, it devoted its weekly
timeslot to lengthy, uncritical and sympathetic interviews with Pratt and
Wallace. Every effort was made to pull on viewers' heartstrings. With a tender
and commiserating expression, interviewer Liz Jackson dwelt on their traumatic
experiences in detention, and their personal feelings. The SBS material was
barely mentioned, and only at the end of the 45-minute program.
Jackson did not ask either Pratt or Wallace any of the obvious questions.
Exactly what part did Pratt play in setting up and running the Canadian
contingent of the OSCE operation? Why did Pratt keep detailed records of
military movements? Why did he and Wallace stay in Yugoslavia after the bombing
commenced and then seek to leave Serbia with two carloads of extremely
sensitive material, including reports associated with the OSCE operation?

One new piece of information emerged showing that Pratt was no ordinary ex-army
officer. Among the documents found in his possession was his military record of
service between 1969 and 1992, revealing that before he left the army he had
been appointed second-in-command of the United Nations Military Observer Team,
on standby to deploy to the former Yugoslavia.

Rather than report and examine the documents carried by Pratt and Wallace,
which have never been released to the public, Four Corners quoted just three
snippets. In one, Pratt reported that "fighting continues in the strategically
important area of Podujevo". In a situation report, he wrote: "Significant
government forces, backed by about 12 VJ (army) heavy tanks and armoured cars,
launched operations against known KLA strong points recently established in
Podujevo." Both clearly relate to military operations, not aid work.

The third report, dated March 27, 1999, indicates that Pratt continued to send
information to NATO-linked sources throughout the first week of bombing.
"People are regularly moving into and out of air-raid shelters in the late
afternoons and nights" in Belgrade, he reported, describing the tension in the
city as "very high".

In his interview, Wallace claimed not to have known that Pratt had these
reports with him when they tried to leave the country. "What we should have
done before we'd gone out was sanitise the files, that is, to take out anything
that might be provocative," he suggested. The information, he admitted, "wasn't
strictly relevant to a humanitarian operation and our need to know where the
security risks were".

Asked why he thought the material was there, Wallace paused awkwardly before
saying: "Er, oh well, it's, um, just Steve's mistake". Suddenly the interview
switched back to Pratt, who blithely declared that he was "comfortable" with
the reports he had compiled.

Much remains hidden about the Pratt-Wallace affair, and not just in Australia.
Nothing has appeared in the Canadian press about the CARE-OSCE connection. In
both countries, and elsewhere around the world, aid agencies such as CARE
continue to attract donations and support, mounting considerable advertising
campaigns to portray themselves as purely humanitarian organisations.

Having had unwelcome attention drawn to the links between aid agencies and the
intelligence services, considerable official and media effort is being made to
prevent serious questions being asked. But what has emerged already is a high-
level coverup, led by Fraser and the Australian government, assisted by the
media, to suppress the facts about the use of CARE for intelligence gathering
in the Balkans.

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World Socialist Web Site
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