----- Original Message -----
From: Rick Rozoff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, October 13, 2000 9:39 AM
Subject: [STOPNATO.ORG.UK] KFOR=NATO: Occupation Zone Plagued By Apartheid, Euro
Infighting, DU


STOP NATO: �NO PASARAN! - HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK

http://www.albaniannews.com
Albanian Daily News
October 13, 2000
(from The Irish Times)

"'If we don't create a European defense system we'll
always be the Americans' lackeys' - but - "European
defense?' a Danish officer said. 'As far as I'm
concerned, this is a NATO operation. Full stop.'"




KFOR Peacekeepers Also Wear the NATO Symbol


MITROVICA - A French colonel, Francois Xavier Yves,
stood on the roof of his mechanised infantry
battalion's barracks to explain his colour-coded
ethnic charts to us. Red for Serbs, blue for
Albanians, green for Bosnians, orange for Turks.
Across the Ibar river, northern Mitrovica was a crazy
quilt, predominantly red but intermingled with other
colours.

In three ethnically mixed highrise towers to the left
of the bridge, 560 residents must present a badge to
French soldiers every time they enter their building.
The chart shows the ethnic group of every apartment on
every floor. It's a long way from liberty, equality
and fraternity, Col Yves admits, "but it's the way
they want it. If you say `hello' in the wrong
language, they won't answer."

Col Yves believes that he is helping to build what the
French call "L'Europe de la d�fense" by preventing the
hateful neighbours of Mitrovica from killing one
another. "If we don't create a European defence system
we'll always be the Americans' lackeys," he says with
a frankness you don't find at KFOR headquarters in
Prishtina. "The Americans see and hear everything;
we're always dragging behind them."

The colonel argues that "Kosovo is a European affair -
it's only two hours from Paris." Perhaps, but 75 per
cent of the munitions used in the 1999 NATO
bombardment were American. So were most of the
communications. And the US maintains the largest
contingent.

The agreement which ended the bombardment foresaw an
"international force" in Kosovo. Former president
Milosevic claimed it would be a UN, not a NATO force.
But the blue and white badges worn by KFOR personnel
say NATO. The NATO symbol is everywhere, and the flags
of 19 NATO countries line the main hall at
headquarters in Prishtina.

"There's not even a Partnership for Peace flag," an
Irish officer says wistfully. Despite the formal UN
mandate for the force Europe's four neutral countries
are second-class citizens in Kfor, with a lower
security clearance than non-EU Poland, Hungary and the
Czech Republic, who joined NATO last year.

During its EU presidency, France is actively promoting
the establishment of a European rapid reaction force -
agreed in Helsinki last December - and European
defence in general. Officers from the five-nation
(France, Germany, Belgium, Spain and Luxembourg) Euro
corps in Strasbourg are about to complete a six-month
tour at Kfor command, where they filled 350 of 900
positions. The US initially resisted Eurocorp's offer.

The French general, Jean-Philippe Wirth, called the
experience the Eurocorps' "baptism of fire" - perhaps
an overstatement for a grouping created seven years
ago. Aside from the French, most of KFOR's contingents
seemed unaware that the Europeans had played any
particular role for the past six months. "European
defence?" a Danish officer said. "As far as I'm
concerned, this is a NATO operation. Full stop."

After France, Germany is the most enthusiastic forger
of a "European defence identity", not because Berlin
believes US "hyper power" is dangerous, but because a
common defence policy is deemed necessary for
successful political and economic integration.

On the ground in Kosovo, obstacles range from Italian
drivers who cannot understand requests made by French
officers in English, to mutual back-biting by the
French and British.

We were given an introduction to Kfor by a young
British major who turned to a US colonel at the back
of the room each time a journalist asked a difficult
question.

NATO's Secretary General, Lord Robertson, admitted
last March that the US air force fired 31,000 rounds
of depleted uranium (DU) - a waste product of the
nuclear industry used for its armour-piercing
abilities - during the 1999 bombardment. Some
scientists believe DU may be the primary cause of a
sharp rise in cancer cases in Iraq and the "Gulf War
syndrome" which afflicts soldiers who fought there.

Several high-ranking KFOR officers dismissed questions
about DU in Kosovo, claiming it was not dangerous,
that they did not know where DU rounds were fired and
that no precautions have been taken. The US colonel at
the back of the room insisted a recent course on
radiation in the Ukraine for members of the Kosovo
Protection Corps - the recycled Kosovo Liberation Army
- had nothing to do with DU. Yet Dr Bernard Kouchner,
the head of UNMIK, acknowledged that Kfor received the
results of a DU study within the past week. Use of the
munitions represented "not a short term but a
long-term risk", he said. (Irish Times)



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