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From: Rick Rozoff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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Sent: Wednesday, June 28, 2000 9:54 AM
Subject: [STOPNATO] The War Against Yugoslavia Is Not Over Yet


STOP NATO: NO PASARAN! - HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.COM

http://www.emperors-clothes.com/articles/chuss/warnot.htm

The War Against Yugoslavia Is Not Over 

by Michel Chossudovsky (6-28-00)

www.tenc.net [emperors-clothes]

Professor of Economics, University of Ottawa, author
of "The Globalization of Poverty, Third World Network,
Penang, Zed Books, London, 1997. 

While there is no evidence of direct US military
involvement in Montenegro, there is clear evidence of
indirect US involvement. The Croatian Armed Forces -
which are helping Montenegro's [highly partisan
police, the ] MUP - are receiving US military aid
under the 'train and equip' program. Financed by US
military aid, Military Professional Resources Inc
(MPRI), a mercenary outfit linked to the Pentagon, has
been responsible for officer training under the
so-called Croatian Armed Forces Readiness and Training
System (CARTS). 
Destabilizing Montenegro

The military invasion and occupation of Kosovo is but
a stage in the broader process of attempted economic
conquest and political destabilisation of Yugoslavia.
In Montenegro, the methods used in trying to achieve
this objective are similar to those used in Bosnia and
Kosovo: 

1. Creating internal social and ethnic divisions; 

2. Financing of pro-NATO political parties as well as
pro-NATO military, police and paramilitary groups; 


3. Applying instruments of economic warfare including
the destabilisation of Yugoslavia's national currency
and its use in Montenegro;

4. Engaging in supportive covert intelligence
operations to prepare the terrain for military
intervention.

Following the de facto separation of Kosovo from
Yugoslavia, NATO is intent upon promoting the
secession of Montenegro, Yugoslavia's only remaining
access to the Adriatic: 

"Under a 'joint operation in Yugoslavia with the code
name of 'Roots.'... Serbia was slated to lose access
to the Adriatic with the departure of Montenegro from
Yugoslavia. By severing Kosovo from it, an important
repository of raw materials would be lost as well. An
analogous fate was prepared for Vojvodina in the
north, region regarded as Serbias breadbasket. A
subsidiary goal was to cripple and even demolish the
Yugoslav (Serb) army's capacity to defend the borders
of Yugoslavia and even Serbia if a need for an
outright occupation arose... A Federal Yugoslavia
deconstructed into weak statelets composed of the
former Republics and 'autonomous regions' would be
ripe for outside economic domination through rammed-in
free markets." (Prof. R.K. Kent, Open Letter to the
Foreign Relations Committee for Europe of the US
Senate, 24 July 1999) 
Washington has backed the puppet government of
President Milo Djukanovic politically as well as
financially since 1997. At the height of the bombings,
Djukanovic travelled to Washington for meetings with
Secretary of State Madeleine Albright. 

Conditional upon the adoption of 'free market'
reforms, US assistance has included support to the
14,000-strong police force loyal to President
Djukanovic not to mention the financing of the
Montenegrin civilian militia. (See US State
Department, Press Conference, Washington, 9 June 1999,
see also the statements of Secretary M. Albright and
President M. Djukanovic, State Department Press
Conference, 22 April 1999). The MUP police force also
includes 1,600 Special Forces.

In the words of Secretary of State Madeleine Albright:

"We have helped in terms of money for privatisation,
for legal reform, balance of payment assistance, and
have given them landing rights. And, generally what we
have done is exempt them from the embargo that exists
against Serbia. I think that through that kind of
activity we have shown that those who follow
democratic practices and human rights, are respected
and helped by the United States and the rest of the
international community." (Press Conference, Cologne 9
June, 1999) 
Imposing the Deutschmark 

Advised by Western economists and consultants, the
preconditions for Montenegros 'economic separation'
from Yugoslavia has already been established.
Following NATO's bombing campaign against Yugoslavia,
the Deutschmark was adopted as the 'official' currency
(November 1999) leading to Montenegros de facto
withdrawal from the Yugoslav monetary system alongside
the paralysis of federal transfers to the Podgorica
government. A Currency Board was installed on the
model of Bosnia Herzegovina under the Dayton
Agreement. 

Meanwhile, Montenegros Central Bank had severed its
ties with the Yugoslav Central Bank in Belgrade with a
view to eventually establishing its own currency
pegged to the D-Mark. 

The new currency was established under the currency
board arrangement, with the support and financial
assistance of the IMF. Under this scheme (tantamount
to a colonial banking system), the Montenegrin
currency would require full foreign exchange backing
and the availability of extensive foreign exchange
reserves virtually signifying the control of monetary
policy by Western creditors. In turn, a separate tax
structure and system of customs duties was put in
place. Montenegro had also established the basis for
issuing its own passports. (William Drozdiak, Yugoslav
Republics Negotiate Future Ties, Washington Post,
October 27, 1999, p. A24). 

The economic secession of Montenegro from the rest of
Yugoslavia has become a fait accompli, with one
important exception: Serbia still retains a formal
access to the Adriatic Sea. Washingtons objective in
this regard is to mount an effective blockade of the
Montenegrin port of Bar which is the point of entry
for imported oil into Yugoslavia. In the words of
General Wesley Clark to a Senate Hearing: 

"And from the outset of the campaign, we pressed for
the full isolation of the theater, the closure of the
Adriatic and the Port of Bar, cutting off all fuel,
closing off the Danube, making sure there was no
commerce going in or culture going in, or other
communications". (Hearing Of the Senate Committee on
Armed Services, October 21, 1999) 
Meanwhile, the Pentagon has apparently already
outlined specific ''operations plans (OPLANs)"
pertaining to "the invasion and forcible expulsion of
Serb forces in Montenegro". (Truth in Media, Phoenix,
29 September 1999). The same source indicates "that
the unit designated as the spearhead for the invasion
of Montenegro, II Marine Expeditionary Force (II MEF),
stationed at Camp Lejeune, NC, has [set up] an
Operational Planning Team (OPT) in Macedonia
calculating how best to secure bridgeheads to
militarily support the Montenegrin government should
it decide to declare its independence from the Former
Socialist Republic of Yugoslavia (FRY)". (Ibid.) 

Moreover, the US Navy's "floating platforms" are
positioned off the Adriatic coast; the Marine Corps
Amphibious Ready Group is also on standby. 

The Yugoslav news agency Tanjug confirmed in June 2000
that Montenegro is "mobilizing and arming police
reservists". Supported by Washington, the Montenegrin
police (MUP) is firmly under the control of the
Interior Minister, Vukasin Maras, and the Chief of
Police, Vuk Boskovic. (Zoran Kusovac, 'The Balkans
braces for another showdown,' Jane Intelligence
Review, Vol 12, no. 4, April 1, 2000 ). According to
Yugoslav sources, Croatian army officers are providing
combat training "in preparation for incidents and
conflicts with the Yugoslav soldiers stationed
Montenegro." (UPI, 10 June 2000). 

"The 600-strong police units in Herceg Novi and Kotor
and another about 500 policemen in Tivat have been
drawn from members of Montenegro's Croat community who
have declared themselves in favor of an independent
Montenegro. A unit in the coastal town of Ulcinj,
close to the border with Albania, had been formed
mostly of ethnic Albanians, according to Tanjug.
Montenegrin security forces are constantly being
indoctrinated with the idea that the Yugoslav Army is
hostile and as such unwelcome in Montenegro and with
hatred against the Yugoslav Federation" (ibid.) 
US Military Aid

While there is no evidence of direct US military
involvement in Montenegro, there is clear evidence of
indirect US involvement.

The Croatian Armed Forces - which are helping
Montenegro's MUP - are receiving US military aid under
the 'train and equip' program. Financed by US military
aid, Military Professional Resources Inc (MPRI), a
mercenary outfit linked to the Pentagon has been
responsible for officer training under the so-called
Croatian Armed Forces Readiness and Training System
(CARTS). MPRI is also involved in the training of the
Kosovo Protection Corps (led by and mainly consisting
of the KLA) and the Federation Forces of the Croat
Muslim Federation of Bosnia-Herzegovina. MPRI is under
contract with the US Justice Department's
International Criminal Investigative Training
Assistance Program (ICITAP or "Icky-Tap") which
provides training and logistical support to "friendly
foreign law enforcement organizations in high profile
environments." (Wayne Madden, 'The U.S. connection to
the KLA,' The Progressive, August 1, 1999) 

NATO has intimated that it would not remain idle if
there were an incident between the Montenegrin Police
(MUP) and Yugoslav forces (VJ) stationed in
Montenegro. (ibid) 

Destabilising Vojvodina 

Vojvodina is a "bread basket" and source of raw
materials for Yugoslavia. NATO's ultimate objective is
the total collapse of Yugoslavia as a viable national
economy.

Vojvodina has within Serbia the same status as Kosovo.
It is an autonomous province with Novi Sad as its
capital. During the War, Novi Sad was considered as
'strategic.' NATO bombings of the bridges on the
Danube in the Novi Sad area were intended to isolate
Vojvodina from the rest of Serbia. 

"If NATO were to mount a full-scale invasion of
Yugoslavia, the plains of Vojvodina might be an easy
point of entry". ('Repeated Attacks By NATO Puzzle
City of Novi Sad; Government Building Is Latest
Casualty,' Washington Post, 19 April 1999). 
The Alliance was not only intent upon fomenting ethnic
conflict in Vojvodina but also on providing financial
support to the municipality of Novi Sad which was run
by opposition parties. NATOs hidden agenda was to
destabilise Vojvodina, calling for the establishment
of a 'special status' for Vojvodina. 

Meanwhile, the Budapest government (now a member of
NATO) had called for the return of the northern
territories ceded from the Austro-Hungarian empire as
a result of the Treaty of Versailles after World War
I. Barely a month after the end of the bombings,
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, met behind
closed doors with US Defence Secretary William Cohen.
On the agenda: autonomy to ethnic Hungarians in the
north of Vojvodina. Prime Minister Orban had insisted
that:

"NATO should 'guarantee' autonomy for the Hungarian
minority. Asked whether he meant by the use of force,
he responded: 'How else?'" (Ben Barber, 'Hungary puts
new pressure on Serbia; Autonomy sought for northern
region,' The Washington Times, 15 July 1999). 
C Copyright by Michel Chossudovsky, Ottawa, June 2000.
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