The Convenient Death of Slobodan Milosevic

To: Mary Mostert <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: The Convenient Death of Slobodan Milosevic


The Convenient Death of Slobodan Milosevic


By Mary Mostert, Analyst, Banner of Liberty (www.bannerofliberty.com)

March 13, 2006

Slobodan Milosevic, the last communist head of state for the former
Yugoslavia, after four years of a trial conducted by the ICTY (International
Criminal Tribunal for Yugoslavia), died in his cell at the Hague, unattended
and after much debate with his captors over his health problems. His trial
for his alleged crimes has been going on for four years and was supposed to
be coming to an end in a matter of weeks.

His death is being viewed as rather convenient by those who might have been
embarrassed had he won the case. A Dutch news agency, citing an unidentified
"adviser" to the Tribunal, reported that traces of a drug used to treat
leprosy and tuberculosis, which would block medications prescribed for
Milosevic's heart disease and high blood pressure, were found in his blood.
His attorney, Zdenko Tomanovic told reporters that his Milosevic feared he
was being poisoned and requested that an autopsy take place in Moscow. The
Tribunal refused that request as it did a recent request to allow Milosevic
treatment in Russia for health problems.

During the past 10 years I've done a lot of research on the issues involving
the break up of Yugoslavia. The disintegration of Yugoslavia was caused by a
civil war that reminded me a great deal of America's own Civil War of
1861-1865. The outbreak of America's civil war was not caused by any one
person, but arose largely because of a fundamental disagreement between the
North and the South over what the U.S. Constitution says and over the
slavery issue.

The South believed the Constitution limited federal sovereignty, and that
the States retained their sovereign rights. The North believed Constitution
made the federal government the keeper of the nation's sovereignty.

The second fundamental disagreement arose as the Northern States, all of
which allowed slavery at the time of the Declaration of Independence,
gradually eliminated slavery either because of moral concerns or simply
because, in the economy of the North, it was impractical and expensive to
maintain.

In American history, the President of the country who believed that the
preservation of the Union was more important than states rights was Abraham
Lincoln Although the Civil War was the bloodiest war in American history and
left anger and resentments that have haunted America every since, today
Lincoln is considered one of America's greatest presidents because he
managed to preserve the Union.

On the other hand, Slobodan Milosevic's efforts to preserve the unity of
Yugoslavia after the death of communist dictator Tito did not succeed -
although it might have if US and British Air Forces had not bombed the Serbs
for 79 days 1999.

Abraham Lincoln did not, all by himself, create the situation which led the
Southern States to secede from the Union and Slobodan Milosevic did not, all
by himself, create the situation which led first Slovenia and Croatia to
secede from Yugoslavia on June 25, 1991 or Bosnia and Herzegovina to secede
from Yugoslavia on October 15, 1991. As a matter of factTito preserved
Yugoslav unity by harshly putting down a Croatian separatist movement in
1972 without any outside assistance.

In 1990 in the first multi-party election to be held in Serbia after World
War II Slobodon Milosevic was elected President of Serbia. On July 23, 1997
he was elected President of all of Yugoslavia. He lost the election of
October 5, 2000, after NATO had bombed the country for 79 days and on April
1, 2001 he was arrested on a charge of corruption and was imprisoned without
specific charges.

On June 28, 2001 without any trial on charges in the arrest warrant, the
newly elected Serbian leadership handed the previously elected president
over to the ICTY to be imprisoned at the Hague.

This would be somewhat comparable to European powers arresting President
Abraham Lincoln and hauling him off to Europe for trial. And, had it not
been for the diplomacy of Lincoln's Secretary of State, William H. Seward,
that might have happened over the Trent affair. The Confederacy had
appointed two former US Senators as ambassadors to France and Britain during
the Civil War. They went to Havana, caught the British mail steamer Trent
for Europe. A Union frigate San Jacinto commanded by Captain Charles Wilkes
halted and boarded the Trent, removed the two new Confederate ambassadors
and took them to Boston, where they were tossed in prison.

This was considered an act of war by Britain, which promptly demanded
reparation and an apology. Seward recommended just that to keep the British
from declaring war on the United States. Had that happened, the Union
probably could not have won the Civil War and Abraham Lincoln would probably
not be honored as a great American president.

>From time to time over the past 4 years I've read some of the ICTY 
>trial
transcripts which
<http://www.bannerofliberty.com/BosniaKosovo/OSKosovo-MasterTOC.html>  are
posted on my website along with other information on issues involving the
former Yugoslavia. Frankly, it was becoming obvious to me that the
prosecutors in the case had very poor arguments that were being regularly
refuted by Milosevic and his defense lawyers. Although CNN reported and
President Clinton believed that Milosevic had killed "over 100,000
Albanians," scores of forensic experts never found the bodies that the
Albanians claimed were buried in "mass graves" in Kosovo.

With Milosevic now dead, the ICTY is "unable" to pronounce a verdict.
Technically, there can BE no "guilty" verdict. Under American law, he would
have to be considered innocent, since no court of his peers ever declared
him guilty. Milosevic is the third Serb to die while imprisoned at the
Hague. If he had been a terrorist and the Hague was an American prison, the
world media would be up in arms demanding an investigation.

Of course, that won't happen. Anyway, the Serbian Unity Congress (SUC) says
the death of Slobodan Milosevic, "together with the passing of two other
leaders responsible for the Yugoslav carnage, Croatian president Franjo
Tudjman and Bosnian president Alija Izetbegovic, will lead to the final
closing of an unfortunate chapter in Serbian, Yugoslav and world history."
All three men were signers of the Dayton Peace Accord in 1995 that was
supposed to solve the Balkan problem..

SUC also observed Kosovo Albanian leaders of the most recent Balkan
bloodbath are still at large. Former Prime Minister Ramush Hardinaj resigned
when indicted for war crimes, and Agim Cheku, who was recently nominated to
be Kosovo's prime minister, awaits his indictment for war crimes.

As long as key leaders of the Balkan bloodbath expect to be rewarded for
their crimes by being given possession and made leaders of Kosovo, I rather
doubt the chapter is closed on this story.




                                   Serbian News Network - SNN

                                        [email protected]

                                    http://www.antic.org/

Reply via email to