The first:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/world/europe/387463.stm

BBC Online
July 6, 1999

'CIA ordered to topple Milosevic': US report

President Clinton has authorised an all-out campaign
to topple Slobodan Milosevic, according to sources
close to the US Government. 
  
Earlier this spring, Mr Clinton signed a secret
presidential "finding" giving the Central Intelligence
Agency (CIA) the green light to try to bring down the
Yugoslav president, said sources quoted in the US
news-magazine Time. 

The reported campaign has two tracks, overt and
covert. 

New secret initiatives 

The CIA is expected to try to "disrupt Mr Milosevic's
private financial transactions" and use computer
hackers to drain his overseas bank accounts
electronically, according to the Time report. 


Covert operations within Yugoslavia itself are also
reported to be planned, aimed at fomenting greater anti-Milosevic
feeling. 

But adminstration officials are well aware that the
Yugoslav president is still strong. 

Nato's Supreme Allied Commander (Europe), General
Wesley Clark, told the Senate Armed Services Committee
last week that Mr Milosevic "remains in firm control
of his military and is working hard at refurbishing
his image". 

Funding and support for opposition 

In terms of open diplomacy, the Clinton
administration's approach has been clear. 


The US Secretary of State, Madeleine Albright - who
has presided over the administration's Balkan strategy
- has been whipping up European political support for
Serbian opposition groups. 

Robert Gelbard, US Special Envoy to the Balkans,
brought 20 opposition figures together last month to
try to hammer out a more unified opposition. 

Now, six new radio transmitters outside Serbian
territory will beam a 24-hour diet of pro-Western
broadcasts to bolster dissident elements. 

Large reward 

Washington has also put a $5 million bounty on Mr
Milosevic's head. 


On 24 June, Mrs Albright announced the War Criminals
Rewards Programme for the former Yugoslavia. 

Under the scheme, information leading to the arrest or conviction of
anyone indicted by the International War Crimes Tribunal will receive a
handsome reward. 

Mr Milosevic has been indicted on several counts -
though the US announcement did not identify him by
name. 

But with street protests now taking place in growing
numbers - and with the Serbian Orthodox church
instructing its priests to blame Serbian forces for
the Kosovo war - the Americans clearly believe that
now could be the time to add to the pressure on Mr
Milosevic.




The second?
[And what coup attempt would be complete without the
active connivance of the IWPR?]


http://www.iwpr.net/index.pl?archive/bcr2/bcr2_20021024_1_eng.txt

Institute for War and Peace Reporting
October 25, 2002

Kostunica Blamed for Iraq Debacle 

The federal president's decision to retain
Milosevic-era military officials may have precipitated
recent Baghdad arms scandal.

By Aleksandar Radic in Belgrade (BCR No 376,
24-Oct-02)

The furore over Yugoslavia's involvement in arms deals
with Iraq is being blamed on federal president
Vojislav Kostunica's unwillingness to get rid of key
figures from the Milosevic regime.

The authorities have now started a clean-up operation
to rid themselves of Milosevic-era officials suspected
of masterminding an operation to supply military
services and equipment to Baghdad, following strong
pressure from the United States.

General director of the main state arms trade company Jugoimport, Jovan
Cekovic, and defence ministry arms trade assistant, General Ivan Djokic,
were both dismissed from their posts on October 22.

The move followed an official request from Washington,
in which the Belgrade authorities were told to crack
down on the sale of weapons and equipment to Iraq.

The Americans named Jugoimport and the Orao Institute
in the Bosnian Serb town of Bijeljina as the companies involved. The US
State Department said it has evidence that Iraqi combat planes were
being refurbished by the two firms.

The Yugoslav authorities have now launched an
investigation into the matter. "We will honour all international
obligations as part of the international against terrorism, and we want
to clear this affair up completely," said Serbian police minister Dusan
Mihajlovic. Jugoimport's Baghdad office has since been closed down. 

Washington welcomed the measures taken by the Yugoslav authorities to
put a stop to the illicit trade, which Belgrade analysts blame on
Kostunica.

The federal president hit out at Jugoimport's actions
on October 23, describing them as being guilty of
"gambling, and an entirely irresponsible business
move" that will be punished according to the law. He
added that this was an isolated incident that should
not be interpreted as Yugoslavia's own position.

But Kostunica's great political rival, Serbian prime
minister Zoran Djindjic, is not prepared to let the
matter drop, describing the scandal as "damaging", as
it implied that the federal authorities had lost
control of the army.

"President Kostunica is responsible for the army, and
he should deal with it. The fact that he has not shows
a fault in his professional approach to the post,"
Djindjic said, although the premier must take some responsibility for
the illict trade given that his minister of interior, Dusan Mihajlovic,
is chairman of Jugoimport and claims that he knew nothing about the
affair. 

Since the fall of Slobodan Milosevic on October 5,
2000, Kostunica has opposed any purge of personnel
from the former leader's military circle, claiming
that such key people should not be replaced at all
costs. 

Analysts believe Kostunica, who has authority over the
army but little else, was determined to win the
loyalty of top army officials to gain political
leverage in his ongoing battle with Djindjic.

These officials, however, are seen as being
"compromised" by their association with Milosevic, and
their involvement in the new political setup stopped
or significantly slowed down the reform of many
institutions, putting the brakes on Yugoslavia's
efforts to rejoin the international community.

This was the case with Jugoimport. There have been no
personnel changes at the firm - so the Milosevic-era cooperation with
Saddam Hussein seems to have carried on long after the ex-president's
fall.

A decree signed by Kostunica in spring 2001,
confirming Cekovic's retention as company director, is
the best proof of his support for the official. The
federal president would not comment on this
appointment in the wake of the scandal.

This decision went against the wishes of the US
authorities, which were opposed to Cekovic keeping his
post, as this raised fears that Yugoslavia could
retain contacts with Iraq or other blacklisted
regimes.

The pressure grew after the September 11 attacks on
America, as Cekovic showed no interest in stamping out
Islamic extremists and the regimes that supported
them.

The Jugoimport director soon became persona non grata
- yet Kostunica let him stay in his job.

The defensive wall surrounding Cekovic began to
crumble only after documents found at the Orao
Institute provided the US with hard evidence that
Jugoimport and its director were implicated in the
supply of weapons and services to Saddam Hussein's
forces.

But even after initial warnings were sent to four
leading Belgrade officials, nothing was done to launch
an investigation into the affair.

It took the publication of detailed media reports on
the Orao affair to nudge the federal government into
admitting that deals had taken place without its
knowledge or control. Even then, a specially formed investigative
commission only visited the Jugoimport offices a day after Cekovic was
dismissed.

Yugoslav army sources told IWPR that Cekovic, who had
held the post of Jugoimport director since 1996, had
conducted weapons deals "like a medieval feudalist". Information about
such transactions was kept from the public on the grounds that it was a
"state secret".

He established strong ties with China in the second
half of the Nineties, and Jugoimport conducted joint development
projects on rocket technology and sophisticated artillery ammunition. 

Although business with China had top priority, Cekovic
did not neglect his traditional buyers from Arab
states. There were excellent opportunities to make
money from Iraq, which was struggling under sanctions
and was willing to pay a high price for any military
help. 

It would appear that although the new Serbian
administration decided to renounce the practices of
the Milosevic regime and return to the international
community, dealings with Iraq were continuing behind
its back.

Borisa Vukovic, Milosevic's foreign trade minister who
fled to Iraq after losing his post after the fall of
his president, became one of the most important
middlemen and led the negotiations in Baghdad.

Sources from Yugoslav intelligence circles told IWPR
that Vukovic had wide access to the Iraqi ruling elite
thanks to his friendship with Uday Hussein, son of
Saddam.

Iraq was particularly interested in striking a deal to
ensure maintenance of its ageing air force jets, which
are in poor condition and are rarely flown due to a
lack of spare parts. Russian engines, with a much
shorter life cycle than those manufactured in the
West, were of most concern.

Yugoslav air force experts had already proved that
they were able to extend the lifecycle of the Russian
RD-33 engine - used by the MiG-29, the only modern
military plane owned by the Iraqi air force - by a
third to 450-500 working hours between services. 

The Orao Institute - which has experts and technology
capable of performing such overhauls - functions under
direct control of the Republika Srpska, RS, defence
ministry, but the Yugoslav air force remained one of
its most important clients. Within the federal army
general staff, the officer in charge of all dealings
with the Bosnian Serb company was General Ivan Djokic.

He later became assistant minister of defence for
military economic issues, and soon established close
relations with Cekovic. Formally, General Djokic had
to approve every contract with foreign customers -
including weapons and military equipment shipments.

Army sources told IWPR that Djokic is doubly
responsible for the Orao scandal - both for
authorising the illegal deal, and for organising
logistical support to allow the arrangements to be
carried out smoothly in Iraq.

Vesna Marjanovic, a spokesperson for Democratic
Centre, one of the members of Serbia's ruling
coalition, told IWPR that it "seems incredible" that
Jugoimport could still have been associating with
Iraq. "It is unbelievable that our intelligence
services learn from others what companies in this
country do," she said. 

This whole affair may prove very damaging for
Yugoslavia, which stands to lose the trust of the
international community after a long, hard slog to
improve relations.

Aleksandar Radic is a defence analyst at the Belgrade
news agency VIP. Gordana Katana in Banja Luka
contributed to this report.



                                   Serbian News Network - SNN

                                        [EMAIL PROTECTED]

                                    http://www.antic.org/

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