Still Slandering Serbia

 

Manufacture of news, faithful service on behalf of powerful interests

 

by George Szamuely

 

Global Research <http://www.globalresearch.ca> , June 1, 2007

 

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New York Times’ firing of Judith Miller, allegedly for bad reporting, served 
the same purpose as the paper’s daily "Corrections" column: It suggested that 
everything else in the newspaper of record is pretty bloody good. It isn’t of 
course. Manufacture of news, faithful service on behalf of powerful interests, 
editorializing masquerading as reporting, mischievous misinterpretations and 
double standards pepper the pages much as they did when Judith Miller was on 
board. A classic case of the Times molding the news to make it fit to print was 
its recent coverage of the International Court of Justice’s ruling on 
Bosnia-Herzegovina’s suit against Serbia, charging genocide and demanding 
billions in reparations. 

This was a suit in which the Times had a huge stake. The Balkan wars were 
halcyon days of U.S. journalism. Times reporters like John F. Burns and David 
Rohde collected Pulitzers reporting horrors, op-ed columnists like Anthony 
Lewis and Leslie Gelb weekly worked themselves up into a lather calling for 
bombs, all parroting the familiar line: The Serbs were to blame for the breakup 
of Yugoslavia; the Serbs were responsible for the wars in the former 
Yugoslavia; the Serbs alone committed genocide, as a matter of state policy and 
because they are a uniquely wicked people; and were it not for U.S. 
determination to bomb, the Serbs would have wiped out every ethnic group and 
realized their ancient dream of Greater Serbia. Not coincidentally, tales of 
Serb horrors, replete with photos of women wailing and girls lighting candles, 
serve the purpose of reassuring readers that, contrary to what they may see or 
hear, it is U.S. adversaries, and not the United States, that commit atrocities.

Thus the ICJ ruling that came down on Feb. 26 could not but have been a severe 
disappointment to the Times. The court ruled, first, that the atrocities in 
Bosnia did not amount to genocide. And, second, that the government of 
Yugoslavia not only did not commit genocide, but that it was not responsible 
for the killings in Bosnia because it didn’t exercise effective control over 
the armed forces of the Bosnian Serbs. To be sure, the court, following the 
International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY), did rule that 
genocide took place on one occasion—in July 1995 in Srebrenica. However, even 
in this case the government of Yugoslavia bore no responsibility. There was no 
evidence, the court said, that the attack on Srebrenica was ordered by, or was 
undertaken in collusion with, Belgrade. Though the ties between the Yugoslav 
army and the Bosnian Serb army "had been strong and close in previous 
years…they were, at least at the relevant time, not such that the Bosnian 
Serbs’ political and military organizations should be equated with organs of 
the FRY." Thus, the court said, the massacres at Srebrenica were not "committed 
by persons or entities ranking as organs of [Yugoslavia]. It finds also that it 
has not been established that those massacres were committed on the 
instructions, or under the direction of organs of [Yugoslavia], nor…that 
instructions were issued by the federal authorities in Belgrade, or by any 
other organ of the FRY, to commit the massacres, still less that any such 
instructions were given with the specific intent…characterizing the crime of 
genocide." Therefore, the court ruled, Serbia did not owe Bosnia-Herzegovina 
any reparation payments.

The Times’ strategy was to mischaracterize the ICJ’s ruling and at the same 
time to attack it for its ruling. The triumphant headline on next day’s story, 
written by Marlise Simons, made it seem as if the ruling was a vindication of 
the Times line: "Court Declares Bosnia Killings Were Genocide." Now of course 
this was not what the court declared. Nor, incidentally, was this one of the 
issues on which the court had been asked to issue a ruling. The issue was 
Serbia’s responsibility for the alleged genocide. Simons admitted that the 
court had determined that Serbia was not guilty of genocide. But, she 
immediately added, the court "faulted Serbia, saying it ‘could and should’ have 
prevented the genocide." The court said no such thing. The words Simons quotes 
are not to be found anywhere in the ruling. They come from statement made to 
the press by the ICJ’s president, Judge Rosalyn Higgins of Great Britain. She 
said: "The Court has found that [Yugoslavia] could, and should, have acted to 
prevent the genocide, but did not.  [Yugoslavia] did nothing to prevent the 
Srebrenica massacres despite the political, military and financial links 
between its authorities and the Republika Srpska and the VRS." However, 
Higgins, for whatever reason, was mischaracterizing the ruling. The court said, 
"In view of their undeniable influence and of the information, voicing serious 
concern, in their possession, the Yugoslav federal authorities should, in the 
view of the Court, have made the best efforts within their power to try and 
prevent the tragic events then taking shape, whose scale, though it could not 
have been foreseen with certainty, might at least have been surmised." 

There is a world of difference between saying that a person didn’t do 
everything in his power to prevent a crime and saying that that person could 
and should have prevented the crime. In fact, it was precisely because the 
court was unable to say Belgrade could have prevented the killings at 
Srebrenica that it ruled that no reparations were owed to Bosnia. "Reparations 
to Bosnia would be appropriate if the Court were able to conclude…that the 
genocide at Srebrenica would in fact have been averted if [Yugoslavia] had 
acted in compliance with its legal obligations. However, the Court clearly 
cannot do so….Since the Court cannot therefore regard as proven a causal nexus 
between [Yugoslavia’s] violation of its obligation of prevention and the damage 
resulting from the genocide at Srebrenica, financial compensation is not the 
appropriate form of reparation for the breach of the obligation to prevent 
genocide."

Despite her show of bravado, Simons knew the ruling was a major disappointment. 
So she began mumbling darkly about political pressures that may have been 
exerted on the court. The ruling, she said, "even if strictly based on the law, 
hews close to the political wishes of Western countries that want to pull 
Serbia into a wider Western European community, rather than see it isolated as 
a pariah state, possibly accused of genocide, with its extreme nationalists 
growing in strength." So Simons who reports uncritically, not to say awe, on 
the doings of the ICTY—a court established, financed and staffed by NATO, and 
whose rules of procedure and evidence are carefully crafted to ensure 
preordained outcomes—now has the gall to suggest that the ICJ judges, who 
really are international, are obeying diktats from certain unnamed "Western 
countries."

Simons concluded her report by asserting that "the last word on the role of the 
Serbian leadership in the Bosnian war has not been said." Based on the word 
anonymous ICTY prosecutors, she said, "The tribunal has part of the war-time 
records of the Supreme Defense Council, which included the former Yugoslavia’s 
military and political leaders….Tribunal officials have said part of the 
minutes of the meetings were blacked out and some whole sections were missing. 
But the minutes still provided much information on how the Serb leaders ‘ran 
their proxy army’ in Bosnia, one tribunal official said." According to Simons, 
Serbia made a deal with the tribunal that only its judges and lawyers could see 
the records, but not those of the ICJ. In their ruling, she noted, "the judges 
made the point that they had been prevented from seeing them." True, they did 
do that, but they ascribed no great significance to this, given the vast array 
of material that Bosnia did present. 

So there we have it. According to Simons, the court ruled that genocide took 
place in Bosnia and that Serbia violated the Genocide Convention. But its 
failure to rule that genocide in Bosnia was orchestrated from Belgrade, which 
Simons knows to be the case, can only be explained by some kind pressure 
applied to the court by unnamed Western countries and because some documents 
had been blacked out. 

To be sure, the ICJ ruling was problematic, to say the least. The court said no 
genocide took place in Bosnia, other than in Srebrenica. But this makes no 
sense. Genocide, if it means anything, is an attempt to destroy an entire 
nation or an entire ethnic group. If you kill many members of an ethnic group 
in one village, but leave them alone in the next village, and, indeed, in every 
other village, you may, if they are unarmed, be committing a war crime, but you 
are not committing genocide. Raphael Lemkin, drafter of the 1948 Genocide 
Convention, defined genocide as "a coordinated plan of different actions aiming 
at the destruction of essential foundations of the life of national groups, 
with the aim of annihilating the groups themselves." Thus, in ruling that the 
killings in Bosnia didn’t amount to genocide, but that the killings in one 
small town—Srebrenica—did amount to genocide, the court was hardly in accord 
with the convention.

Moreover, the court, again following the ICTY, held that the Bosnian Serb 
forces had no intention even to capture Srebrenica, merely to reduce it in 
size. According to the court, "at some point…the military objective in 
Srebrenica changed, from ‘reducing the enclave to the urban area’…to taking 
over Srebrenica town and the enclave as a whole." Thus, the supposed "plan" to 
kill all of the military-age men in Srebrenica wasn’t even conceived until 
after the capture of the town. "The necessary intent was not established," the 
ICJ said, "until after the change in the military objective and after the 
takeover of Srebrenica, on about 12 or 13 July." In addition, the court 
accepted that this "intent" didn’t encompass the entire Muslim population of 
Srebrenica. The court, like the ICTY, didn’t dispute that the Bosnian Serb 
forces transported Srebrenica’s women, children and old men to safety. 

Since, according to the ICJ, the takeover of Srebrenica was an improvised plan, 
since there was no intention on the part of the Bosnian Serbs to carry out 
executions until after the change in the military objectives, since Belgrade 
had no effective control over the Bosnian Serbs, since Belgrade didn’t know 
ahead of time about the intention to capture Srebrenica, since Belgrade had no 
armed forces of its own in Bosnia, it is hard to see what it "should have" done 
to prevent the alleged massacres. The United Nations, which actually had forces 
stationed in Bosnia, was in a far better position to do something to prevent 
them.

In addition to Simons’ front-pager, the Times ran another story the same day in 
the inside pages, written by Nicholas Wood, bitterly complaining about the ICJ, 
under the headline "Bosnian Muslims View Ruling as Another Defeat." The ruling, 
Wood wrote, "greatly disappointed relatives of the mainly Muslim victims of the 
conflict." The verdict "marked the second setback in a year." What was the 
first setback? The death of Slobodan Milosevic. "His death forestalled a 
decision on whether Mr. Milosevic was guilty of committing war crimes and 
possibly genocide. The Milosevic trial pointed to the substantial involvement 
of the Serbian state in helping to finance, equip and plan the war in Bosnia." 
By "decision," Wood of course meant a decision that Milosevic and Serbia were 
guilty as charged. He wasn’t expressing fury that Milosevic’s death cheated the 
Serbs of an acquittal. 

Like Simons, Wood took the tack of both attacking the ICJ and mischaracterizing 
its ruling. He blithely declared that the court "found a clear link between 
Serbia and the Bosnian Serb military. According to the court, Serbia had been 
in a position to stop the genocide of close to 8,000 Muslim men and boys at 
Srebrenica." The first statement is misleading, since the crucial finding was 
not the existence of a "link," which no one ever doubted, but that the Bosnian 
Serb armed forces were not de jure or de facto "organs of the FRY." Wood’s 
second statement is an outright lie. The court didn’t say that Serbia was "in a 
position to stop the genocide." It said that Serbia had failed to show "that it 
took any initiative to prevent what happened, or any action on its part to 
avert the atrocities which were committed." In other words, it could and should 
have done more.

Six days later the Times weighed in with an editorial, declaring smugly that 
the ICJ had "established the official complicity of the former Serbian 
government" in the Srebrenica genocide. This again is a flat-out lie, and a 
particularly stupid one. The court had explicitly ruled "that Serbia has not 
been complicit in genocide, in violation of its obligations under the 
Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide." Next 
day, on March 6, Simons returned to the matter of the ICJ ruling. She again 
repeated the lie that the court found that but found that Serbia " ‘could and 
should’ have prevented the [Srebrenica] killings as the Genocide Convention 
requires." The court’s findings, she wrote "variously described by 
international law experts as timid, ambiguous or a tactful compromise, have 
caused anger in Bosnia and relief in Serbia, which was absolved of having to 
pay the war reparations that Bosnia had demanded. Bosnian Muslims, who were a 
majority of the victims of the 1992-1995 war driven by Serbia, called the 
ruling a disgrace." This is classic New York Times: intimidate readers by 
reference to unnamed "experts." One international law expert Simons didn’t 
consult was Ian Brownlie, one of the world’s most distinguished international 
law experts, Chichele Professor of Public International Law at Oxford and 
author of the standard text on international law. Brownlie was one of the 
attorneys who represented Serbia before the ICJ.

This time around Simons sounded more satisfied: "Serbs in Bosnia expressed 
anguish at seeing their forces explicitly accused of genocide. At the same 
time, the court strengthened the hand of Ms. Del Ponte, the chief prosecutor of 
the Yugoslavia war crimes tribunal, who has unceasingly called for the arrest 
of Mr. Mladic, Mr. Karadzic and three other Bosnian Serb leaders." On top of 
that, she happily reported, "the ruling associates Serbia’s present government 
with the scourge of genocide, even if it happened under the past government of 
Slobodan Milosevic."

One month later, on April 9, Simons could not hold her fury back any longer. In 
an 1800-word article, under the title "Genocide Court Ruled for Serbia Without 
Seeing Full War Archive," she asserted the existence of a massive conspiracy 
involving both the ICJ and the ICTY to whitewash Serbia’s crimes. In 2003, she 
wrote breathlessly, Serbia handed over to the ICTY hundreds of documents that 
"contained minutes of wartime meetings of Yugoslavia’s political and military 
leaders, and promised the best inside view of Serbia’s role in the Bosnian war 
of 1992-1995." However, the Serbs outwitted the ICTY, "Citing national 
security, [Serbia’s] lawyers blacked out many sensitive—those who have seen 
them say incriminating—pages. Judges and lawyers at the war crimes tribunal 
could see the censored material, but it was barred from the tribunal’s public 
records." 2003! Four years ago, and we’re only finding about this now?

Now, Simons continued, Belgrade has "made its true objective clear: to keep the 
full military archives from the International Court of Justice, where Bosnia 
was suing Serbia for genocide." Belgrade attained its objective when the ICJ 
"absolved it from paying potentially enormous damages." As Simons tells it, 
these minutes of Supreme Defense Council meetings, or rather just the 
blacked-out sections, constitute the "smoking gun"—the final, undeniable proof 
of Serbia’s guilt. "Lawyers who have seen the archives," Simons said, "and 
further secret personnel files say they address Serbia’s control and direction 
even more directly, revealing in new and vivid detail how Belgrade financed and 
supplied the war in Bosnia, and how the Bosnian Serb army, though officially 
separate after 1992, remained virtually an extension of the Yugoslav Army. They 
said the archives showed in verbatim records and summaries of meetings that 
Serbian forces, including secret police, played a role in the takeover of 
Srebrenica and in the preparation of the massacre there." Wow! Amazing stuff! 
All of that can be found in archives that the ICTY has had in its possession 
since 2003, but which for some reason it kept to itself! 

When these minutes handed over, "the lawyers said, a team from Belgrade made it 
clear in letters to the tribunal and in meetings with prosecutors and judges 
that it wanted the documents expurgated to keep them from harming Serbia’s case 
at the International Court of Justice. The Serbs made no secret of that even as 
they argued their case for ‘national security,’ said one of the lawyers, 
adding, ‘The senior people here knew about this.’…When Belgrade’s lawyers met 
with tribunal judges to request secrecy for their archives, they produced a 
letter of support from Carla Del Ponte. " Simons then quotes del Ponte as 
saying " ‘It was a long fight to get the documents, and in the end because of 
time constraints we agreed,’ she said. ‘They were extremely valuable for the 
conviction of Slobodan Milosevic.’ " Conviction? That’s odd. Didn’t Milosevic 
die before his trial ended? But then at the ICTY, "trial" is synonymous with 
"conviction" unless, of course, the defendant is an agent of the United States.

 

Simons’ claims are baffling. If the ICTY has had these documents since 2003, 
why didn’t it make use of them? The Milosevic trial was notable for the 
prosecutors’ total failure to present any serious evidence that the war in 
Bosnia was instigated and orchestrated from Belgrade. The claim that they had 
to be kept out of the tribunal’s public records is utter nonsense. The ICTY has 
innumerable mechanisms at its disposal, which it puts to frequent use, to keep 
testimony, evidence and the identity of witnesses secret. Trial transcripts are 
replete with the redacted testimony of anonymous witnesses. In none of the smug 
analyses during the past year and beyond, often proffered in the Times, about 
the inevitable guilty verdict that awaited Milosevic had there been any mention 
of crucial evidence being missing. 

Let’s see then. After more than 15 years of blaming everything in the Balkans 
on Serbia in general, and Milosevic in particular; and after more than 10 years 
of trials at the ICTY, bluster from prosecutors Louise Arbour and Carla del 
Ponte, not to mention tens of millions of dollars of U.S. taxpayer money and 
billions of dollars of free publicity, courtesy of Marlise Simons, New York 
Times, CNN and the BBC, everything continues to hang on some documents in some 
"archives" in some Belgrade ministry that only a few people have seen, but 
which definitively prove whatever needs to be proven—that the Bosnian Serb 
army, under Belgrade’s direct command, carried out genocide in Bosnia in 
accordance with orders from Belgrade. And now the conspiracy to absolve Serbia 
of guilt has succeeded in recruiting del Ponte. 

The ICTY prosecutors who had clearly spoon-fed this story to Simons have every 
incentive to shift the blame from themselves for their meager success. Within 
days of Simons’ story appearing, her key source, Geoffrey Nice, the chief 
prosecutor in the Milosevic trial, publicly lashed out del Ponte. In a letter 
to a Croatian daily, Jutarnji List, he accused del Ponte of making a deal with 
Belgrade to "place part of the archive under protective measures" without 
consulting him. The deal, Nice declared, "had no legal grounds and served only 
to conceal evidence of Yugoslavia’s involvement in the wars in Croatia and 
Bosnia-Herzegovina." Why Nice chose to write this letter to an obscure Croatian 
newspaper rather than the New York Times or the London Times is a mystery, the 
answer to which we will no doubt learn at some point. Del Ponte immediately 
fired back and issued a statement declaring "The Office of the Prosecutor of 
the ICTY rejects in the strongest terms allegations that the OTP is in any way 
involved in ‘concealing documents’ from the International Court of Justice or 
in any ‘deal’ whatsoever with the Belgrade authorities." 

What all this shows is how ready the New York Times is to entertain bizarre 
conspiracy theories and to impute malign motives to others in its loyal service 
to the U.S. war machine.


  
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