-Caveat Lector-

Radio Wars

<http://www.brillscontent.com/2001mar/features/radiowars.shtml>

Serbia's Slobodan Milosevic understood the power of propaganda and did his
best to control the media. But his failure to silence the U.S.-supported
radio station B-92 was emblematic of the war he lost to control the country.

By Peter Maass
March 2001

In Belgrade, you don't need to be paranoid, but it helps. It's late
October, and I'm sipping an espresso at the Window Café, along Knez
Mihailova, the city's main shopping street, with Sasha Mirkovic, the
general manager of B-92, an independent radio station that had the annoying
habit of exposing the lies of Slobodan Milosevic's government. Outside the
café, the city is laced with remnants of the euphoria that greeted the
downfall of Milosevic's regime just a few weeks earlier. The government was
washed away by a wave of protesters, many of whom found their way to the
city center on October 5 by following a bulldozer as it cleared a path
through police roadblocks.
A few yards from where Mirkovic and I sit, street vendors are selling
postcards of the famous bulldozer now a political icon with treads, and
they are selling copies of a CD of popular protest songs with a torn
campaign poster of Milosevic on the cover, under the title "He's Finished."
Mirkovic is telling me about B-92, checking his watch, running his hand
through his dark hair (which is not far from a crew cut), and asking the
waiter to turn down the music. He suddenly stops and points to his cell
phone, which he has placed on the table between us. Whenever Mirkovic had
face-to-face conversations with sources or friends during the Milosevic
era, he tells me, he not only turned off his cell phone but removed its
battery. "It's not paranoia," says the stocky 33-year-old in the weary,
know-it-all tone of a mechanic describing what's wrong with a car. "If you
don't take out the battery, even though the phone is turned off, your
conversation can be listened to." Detaching the battery to illustrate, he
adds: "People are still doing this, even though Milosevic is gone."
I thought this was strange, another example of the suspicion that fills the
Balkans with enough conspiracy theories to keep Oliver Stone busy for
years, but other Serb journalists were telling me the same thing, assuring
me, usually at the outset of our conversations, that they are not being
paranoid. But none of them could explain how a switched-off cell phone
could transmit their conversations to government snoops.
When I return to New York, I call Jeff Schlanger, chief operating officer
of the security-services group at Kroll Associates, the global
investigative company. Schlanger begins the conversation by reminding me of
a simple fact: "A cell phone is a listening device." He explains that
technicians can reconfigure a phone to transmit a conversation even though
its owner has turned it off. The trick, he explains, is to make the phone
appear as though it's been turned off when it is actually on. When I ask
Schlanger what could be done to thwart this mischief, he suggests detaching
the cell phone's battery.
For quite some time, being an independent journalist in Serbia required a
range of skills that edged into the realms of spycraft and diplomacy.
That's because the struggle for power in Serbia centered on information,
not politics, and Mirkovic's station was at the center of this war. B-92 --
which stands for Belgrade 92, its original frequency, began operating in
1989 as a low-wattage radio station for young people, but it quickly
evolved, under Mirkovic's boss, editor in chief Veran Matic, into the
Serbian capital's most influential source of honest and live news about the
wars that were tearing apart the former Yugoslavia and about the government
lies that were fueling the nationalist madness.
Milosevic made sure that the state-owned media, especially Radio Television
Serbia (RTS), broadcast his nationalist propaganda at all times; the
station was staffed by loyalists who heaped praise upon the politicians,
including Milosevic, who was later indicted for war crimes by the United
Nations tribunal in The Hague. While leaders of the police and army were
making deals with the opposition in the weeks before Milosevic was ousted,
the ever loyal men and women of RTS pumped out increasingly strident
propaganda, and they didn't stop until a mob stormed their headquarters on
October 5 and set it on fire.
Milosevic understood that if you can brainwash your people, you don't need
to arrest them. He understood a corollary lesson, too a regime that draws
its power from propaganda rather than terror faces its greatest threat from
independent journalists who have the desire and the means to expose its
lies. Milosevic never banned any opposition party and rarely arrested
politicians who opposed him; he did, however, force the closure of radio
and television stations he didn't like, and he didn't hesitate to throw
journalists into jail. They were the enemy, and 18 months before he was
removed from power, Milosevic showed how much he feared B-92, the pillar of
Serbia's independent media, by trying to shut it down.
His failure to fully silence B-92 was emblematic of the war he fought --
and, ultimately, lost, to control the hearts and minds of ordinary Serbs.
B-92 outmaneuvered and outlasted Milosevic because it had truth on its side
and a clever, dedicated staff, but it also had another asset, financial
assistance from the United States government, which realized that in
today's world, an undesirable dictator can be undermined with accurate
information as well as smart bombs.
It was April 2, 1999, and Sasha Mirkovic knew it was going to be a bad day
at the office when he saw the police cars parked outside the Dom Omladine
building.
Dom Omladine is Belgrade's center for young people, who like to drink
coffee in the ground-floor cafe, surf the Internet on the first floor, or
shoot pool in the basement. The building is also the headquarters for B-92,
and when Mirkovic, one of its founders, walked past the news kiosk outside
the building on
that day, he prepared himself for the worst. The NATO alliance had recently
launched the first wave of air strikes in its 78-day bombing of Yugoslavia,
and Milosevic was cracking down on dissent. Mirkovic had already taken the
precaution of deleting sensitive e-mail messages from his computer and
slipping out of B-92's office with documents that detailed the financial
assistance the station received from foreign donors. Although B-92
acknowledged having accepted assistance from nonprofit groups outside the
country, it never disclosed the dollar amounts, which appear to have been
in the millions, or the donors themselves. And in the hands of Milosevic's
propaganda machine, those details could easily be used to tie B-92 to the
NATO governments that were preparing to turn the country into rubble.
Mirkovic took the elevator to his sixth-floor office; it was 8:30 in the
morning, and he had arrived early to conduct a phone interview with a
foreign television network. Before the interview could begin, a security
guard told him there were visitors outside. He stepped into the corridor
and faced two plainclothes law-enforcement officials who flashed their IDs
and said they were taking over the station. Behind them were four uniformed
policemen, and behind them were half a dozen men in black leather jackets
who looked as though they had seen too many Terminator movies.
The only B-92 staff on the sixth floor apart from Mirkovic were a security
guard and a cleaning woman. It was not much of a match, especially since
Mirkovic's backpack was stuffed with some of the financial documents the
police probably wanted. Stalling for time, Mirkovic asked the security
guard to summon the cleaning lady, because, he said, he had her bag. When
she appeared a minute later, squeezing through the leather jackets,
Mirkovic casually handed her his backpack, and without missing a beat, she
carried it to safety.
"When I went back into my office, a guy was already sitting in my chair,"
Mirkovic tells me, smiling. "The guy was asking, 'Where are the documents?
Where are the folders?'"
Mirkovic refused to tell him and was tossed out of the office. He went
downstairs and met with B-92 staffers who had gathered at the cafe on the
ground floor. They decided that if they couldn't have the station, they
wouldn't let the government have it, either.
The station's engineers logged on to the computer terminals in the lobby of
Dom Omladine and hacked their way into the  B-92 computer system. They
deleted whatever they could find not just financial information but even
audio files that contained the jingles that identified the station to its
listeners. When the government reopened B-92, the following Monday, most of
the staff showed up ostensibly to interview for their old jobs and pledge
their loyalty to a new management. But they were in fact there to cause as
much havoc as possible. Disc jockeys filched as many CDs as they could lay
their hands on. Technicians, asked to show their skills or just show how
the systems worked, logged on to the computers and deleted files. The
station's music director managed covertly to stick a screwdriver into an
electrical outlet, shorting the station's wiring and causing everything to
crash.
Regardless, the state-run B-92 went back on the air several days later,
with a new staff that hadn't a clue about the alternative music the station
used to play. They thought Radiohead was a tape cleaner of some sort. More
important, their news broadcasts were the usual Milosevic drivel. The
station was a fake, and listeners knew it; few tuned in. That was a victory
of sorts for the station's former staff, but they still confronted a basic
question: What do we do now to get the truth onto the airwaves?
Sasha Mirkovic has the crisp, let's-not-waste-a-second demeanor of a young
dotcom executive, which is unusual in Belgrade. His mind even operates in a
digital way, clicking from one subject to another so quickly that I find it
necessary, on occasion, to ask him to slow down and explain something
before clicking to another subject. He got his start in broadcasting as a
disc jockey, which seems to have trained him to dread silence. Our
encounter at the Window Café is a classic illustration of Mirkovic's manic
lifestyle, as he talks on his cell phone (he quickly reattached the battery
after his demonstration) and jots reminders in his leatherbound datebook,
which tracks his multiple appointments with diplomats, politicians, and
journalists. A natural-born organizer, Mirkovic even keeps a list of every
movie he has seen (he's a film buff; there are several thousand titles on
the list). I suggest that his life seems a bit frenetic. "It would be worse
if I had a normal life and didn't do anything against this regime," he
replies. "One of the main reasons I was doing this job at B-92 was because
I could not live in this country without acting against this regime. That
was the meaning of my life. But I was also thinking, of the people who left
the country, One of us is making a mistake, them or me."
In the early 1990s, B-92 occupied the same cultural ground in Serbia as
Rolling Stone did in America in the 1960s; one of B-92's slogans was "Trust
no one, not even us." Under the guidance of Veran Matic, its editor in
chief, B-92 soon evolved beyond the alternative realm and organized
get-out-the-vote campaigns while disseminating news not only about the wars
that were taking place in Croatia and Bosnia but also about Serbia's
economic free fall. As Milosevic's grip on Serbia's media tightened through
the 1990s, B-92 became the most influential antidote to government propaganda.
In late 1996, Milosevic's Socialist Party stumbled in municipal elections
but refused to cede control of the city halls it lost; nightly
demonstrations ensued, and one of the first things the government did,
hoping to short-circuit the protests, was ban B-92's broadcasts, which had
spread the word about the growing agitation. But the station's journalists
began broadcasting on the Internet, and their reports were bounced back
into Serbia on shortwave broadcasts of the BBC and Radio Free Europe.
Milosevic, who still cared about his international reputation, relented,
letting the station resume its broadcasts and eventually letting the
opposition take control of the city halls it had won.
This was the beginning of the end for Milosevic because it led to a
blossoming of independent media outside Belgrade, where city councils ran
their own radio and television stations and controlled licensing for new
ones. These city-run stations parroted the government's line while
Milosevic's Socialist Party was in charge, but that changed once the
opposition took over. Mirkovic and Matic used this opening to establish a
network of independent stations outside Belgrade that broadcast reports by
the team at B-92. It was called the Association of Independent Electronic
Media (ANEM is the acronym for the Serbian name for the group).
The members of ANEM, eventually 33 radio stations and 17 television
stations, were shoestring operations; many used homemade transmitters. But
even shoestring outfits need money, and this posed a problem for ANEM.
Businesses were reluctant to advertise on antigovernment stations, and the
country's economy was in ruins, so there was no way that even a
pro-Milosevic station could survive on advertising revenue alone.
This is where the U.S. government stepped in. Since the early 1990s, the
independent media in Serbia had received modest support from a handful of
private donors, including the Open Society Institute, funded by financier
George Soros to promote democracy in places such as Serbia. After the 1996
municipal elections, the U.S. and its European allies became aware of two
facts, that Milosevic was not an unstoppable force of nature and that his
control over voters could be weakened by the work of the independent media.
So the White House and its allies in Europe decided to funnel financial
support not only to prodemocracy forces in Serbia, including opposition
parties and student groups, but also to the media. This was a new approach:
In the days of the cold war, programs that were designed to bring down
foreign governments tended to involve covert support for coup makers or
rebel factions. Serbia, however, had opposition parties and independent
media, and they could topple the regime democratically if given the means.
"Support for the independent media and the democratic forces was crucial,"
notes Jim Hooper, a former U.S. State Department expert on Yugoslavia and,
until recently, executive director of the Balkan Action Council, a think
tank that often criticized U.S. policy. "It was one of the elements without
which Milosevic wouldn't have been overthrown." Some of the other key
factors, Hooper believes, were the bombing of Yugoslavia, which weakened
popular support for Milosevic, and international sanctions, which isolated
the country.
By 2000, the U.S. was budgeting more than $25 million for
democracy-building programs in Serbia, and nearly half of that was devoted
to civil-society development, which included media-related projects, says
Don Pressley, an assistant administrator at the U.S.  Agency for
International Development. Pressley tells me that a "substantial portion"
of the media funding went to ANEM, though the exact amount is not
forthcoming from Washington or Belgrade.  U.S. officials say the problem is
that their "partners" in Serbia do not wish to have the amounts publicized
even now, because this could provide fodder for Serb nationalists who want
to portray the anti-Milosevic uprising as having been made in the United
States.  "For a country in which 50 deutsche marks [about $25] is a lot of
money, people would not understand these figures," Mirkovic tells me.
Whatever the amount, the money was not wasted on expensive consultants or
salaries for American expatriates, which often happens with
U.S.-government-run foreign programs. This time, the funding went directly
to local journalists, providing them with the resources to continue
broadcasting.
"This can be done everywhere, and should be," says John Fox, director of
the Washington office of the Open Society Institute.  "This can be done in
all places, in Africa, in Asia, wherever there are independent journalists
who are already taking risks, who are already showing the enterprise, and
who already have credibility."
In Serbia, it was the information age's equivalent of a guerrilla
war.  Journalists who exchanged e-mail with foreign donors (and one
another) used PGP, an encryption program, and instructed their foreign
contacts not to fax sensitive documents because faxes are easy to
intercept. Even nonsensitive faxes could cause trouble. The head of the
Belgrade office of Norwegian People's Aid, a nonprofit organization that
quietly provided independent journalists with money and equipment,
everything from transmitters and laptops to air conditioners, tells me of
his horror at receiving a faxed invitation from the State Department to
speak at a seminar it was organizing. The next day, the fax was leaked to
the Serbian minister of information, who used it to portray the Norwegian
group as an instrument of U.S. policy.
One of the point men in Belgrade for distributing U.S. aid is Dusan Masic,
a former news editor at B-92 who has worked, since April, for the
International Research & Exchanges Board (IREX), a Washington-based
nonprofit that is one of the principal channels for U.S. funding to
independent media. When I meet with Masic in Belgrade, he is still
operating in a quasi-fugitive manner, with no office or business cards. We
get together at a cafe in downtown Belgrade, and he begins by asking wary
questions about my background and this magazine.
His caution eases somewhat, but when I bring up the issue of
U.S.  financial aid, he smiles and says, "I can't talk about that." Still,
I ask him which media outlets receive funding from IREX. He won't say. How
did he transfer the money into the country? He won't say.
He agrees, however, to disclose a trick of his unusual trade:
Whenever he has a confidential, face-to-face talk with someone, he detaches
the battery from his cell phone.
By the time B-92 was taken over by the Milosevic regime, in April 1999, the
flow of foreign assistance was well under way, so resources were available
to bring the station to life on the Internet and to allow its journalists
to produce radio and television programs that could be shown on ANEM
stations elsewhere in the country.  B-92 was renamed B2-92 to differentiate
it from the government-hijacked station on the FM dial, and it broadcast on
a new website, freeb92.net.
It was not by chance that an English name was used for the site and that
its content was translated into English. The site's domestic impact was
limited because few Serbs have the high-speed modems needed for real-time
broadcasts, but with texts and programs in both English and Serbian, the
site was a useful resource for journalists and diplomats outside Serbia, as
well as an important PR tool for the station's editorial team, which wanted
to demonstrate to the outside world that they were still at work.
Security was a critical issue as the station went into its guerrilla mode;
the NATO bombing in the spring of 1999 prompted Milosevic to declare
martial law, giving his regime sweeping powers. Just a few days after the
takeover, Slavko Curuvija, an independent publisher who was critical of
Milosevic, was gunned down on a Belgrade street. The assassination was
widely blamed on thugs working for the government, and independent
journalists like Mirkovic took the warning to heart. Mirkovic attended
Curuvija's funeral and recalls, "Everybody was saying, 'Take care; take
care.'" Mirkovic went semiunderground, often staying with friends, and on
the 50th day of the bombing, his boss Matic fled to Montenegro because of
rumors he would be murdered. Mirkovic stayed behind, in sole control of the
B2-92 team.
Once the bombing ended, in June 1999, the political atmosphere relaxed and
the B2-92 team was able, from August, to broadcast on a Belgrade frequency
controlled by a sympathetic opposition party.
But in May 2000, when Milosevic initiated another media crackdown, B2-92
was yanked off the air again and returned to the Internet. It was not heard
on the FM dial until Milosevic was deposed in
October.
During the crackdowns in April 1999 and May 2000, B-92's role as the
principal outlet for honest and current news was assumed by a scrappy
station, Radio Index, which was founded by Nenad Cekic, who had broken away
from B-92 in a murky dispute in the early 1990s. Depending on whom you
believe, Cekic was either fired or asked to resign for stealing equipment
or cutting a deal with the government or opposing alleged corruption at the
station, or for other reasons that neither he nor his detractors wish to
mention. In any event, Index played second fiddle to B-92 throughout most
of the 1990s until B-92 was forced off the air. Cekic kept his station on
the air by, among other things, hiding one of its transmitters in an
unfinished home on a hilltop above Belgrade. It seems that some of the
independent media's most bitter feuds are conducted between people who
should be allies, and the Index and B-92 teams are no exception: They
despise each other more than they appear to despise Milosevic.
"B-92 became popular in the West because of their self-promotion," Cekic
tells me in his smoke-filled office on the 17th floor of Belgrade's tallest
building. While we talk, he waves a pair of scissors in the air, saying, "I
have a strong impression that your government wasted your money."
Cekic notes that when Milosevic lost the first round of the presidential
election on September 24, Index spread the word about the results and about
Milosevic's attempt to tilt the ballot-counting in his favor. In the
subsequent ten days, which decided the future of Serbia, everyone relied on
Index for up-to-date information.  Cekic is acid in his assessment of B-92:
"They were not around when the revolution happened. Oops."
The two stations represent different cultural styles. B-92 was always cool
and trendy, though perhaps a bit too highbrow for the working class. Index
was downmarket, the New York Post of the Serbian radio world, playing
top-40 hits and featuring, on its advertising posters, a woman's scantily
clad torso. Foreign donors were well aware of the differences, both
cultural and political, between the two stations and brokered a truce after
the local elections in 1996, persuading the B-92 team to bring Index into
the ANEM network. But Cekic, arguing among other things that his station
was a major player in the media world, demanded greater say within ANEM
than Matic and Mirkovic wanted to give.
"We were not so happy because we knew Cekic," Mirkovic tells me one day.
"He really started to be destructive. He is telling these stories that we
didn't want to show him the books. But he is not the person who I am going
to show books to. I show ANEM's books to donors, and he can ask donors if
he has questions. So we expelled him."
Cekic's bitterness is extreme, though it's certainly true that his station
was more influential than B-92 in the final months, perhaps even the final
year or two, of Milosevic's regime, thanks to Index's ability to continue
broadcasting. Despite this, ANEM received the bulk of foreign aid for the
independent media, and little of it reached the coffers of Index, much to
the dismay and rage of Cekic, who now faces the possible demise of his
station due to lack of funds.
"They are not a news organization," Cekic says of his nemesis.  "They are a
private group for collecting money. That must be recognized in the West.
They are interested in money, not journalism."
When I ask Mirkovic about these accusations, he initially says he doesn't
want to exchange insultsthen proceeds, as we walk through town toward his
office, to do precisely that. He accuses Cekic of collaborating with a
fascist party that was part of Milosevic's coalition government. "They were
in a kind of deal with the Radical Party, especially with the minister of
information, who protected them," Mirkovic says. (Cekic denies it.)
We soon arrive at Mirkovic's new office in a dull building above a pharmacy
and grocery store in the center of town. There are a couple of desks and
chairs, a poster for a Moby CD, several new computers, and, of course, a
haze of cigarette smoke. "Do I look like a person who has a lot of money?"
Mirkovic asks. "This is stupid, you know."
It is a Monday evening three weeks after Milosevic was overthrown, and
Sasha Mirkovic is heading from his office to a reception at the Turkish
Embassy. This is a big part of his life now: schmoozing with diplomats and
politicians and businessmen. The corridors of power are wide-open, and they
are crowded with friends, not enemies. Mirkovic walks up Kneza Milosha, a
boulevard that is a visual reminder of Serbia's recent history.
At its lower stretch lie the ruins of the Defense Ministry and Army
Headquarters, bombed by NATO in 1999. Farther along the boulevard is a
looted office of the political party controlled by Milosevic's
much-despised wife; the office was attacked and destroyed in the uprising
in October, and the graffiti on its walls reads, in English, "Freedom!
Revolution!"
As Mirkovic walks by, he passes the head of the U.N. office in Belgrade;
they exchange warm greetings. The city remains in a celebratory mood.
Inside the embassy, several waiters recognize Mirkovic, who, amid the
suited diplomats and politicians, is wearing a T-shirt under a frayed
sweater, and they congratulate him on regaining control of B-92 after the
long blackout that began in April 1999...a lifetime ago, it seems. Mirkovic
scans the room and notices two ministers of the new government; they are
friends of his from the University of Belgrade.
An acquaintance approaches him and mentions that a businessman is coming to
Belgrade to find a publishing partner for Serbian editions of Playboy and
Cosmopolitan. Would B-92, which published several political books in recent
years, be interested?
The long-range plan is to turn B-92 and ANEM into self-supporting media
companies producing provocative programs that the state-controlled media,
now slavishly loyal to the new president, Vojislav Kostunica, will shy away
from and that most commercial stations will shun in favor of sitcoms and
soap operas. In November, B-92 broadcast a 30-minute NPR documentary about
war crimes committed by Serb soldiers in Kosovo, precisely the sort of
program that other media outlets even now wouldn't touch. Mirkovic hopes
that B-92's hallmark radio program, Catharsis, which delved into issues of
war and guilt, will be expanded into a television program, and he's hard at
work putting together a new television studio for a nightly news broadcast.
Matic and Mirkovic do not expect foreign donors to remain generous for much
longer now that Milosevic is a private citizen living in a villa surrounded
by high walls in a posh suburb of Belgrade. Although their foreign donors
may not realize that the removal of Milosevic does not mean the full advent
of democracy and openness, Serbia is no longer as crisis-ridden as it used
to be, and the kindness of strangers is unlikely to linger.
ANEM and B-92 need to stand on their own commercial feet, and already ANEM,
with Mirkovic as vice-president, has acquired the rights to broadcast NBA
games. ANEM is also negotiating with MTV to broadcast its music programs.
Mirkovic does not bother to detach the battery from his cell phone before
replying to his acquaintance's query.
"Playboy? Cosmopolitan?" he says. "Sure, I'll meet with the guy."

<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance�not soap-boxing�please!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'�with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds�is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html
 <A HREF="http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html">Archives of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
 <A HREF="http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/">ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to