http://groups.yahoo.com/group/stopnato/message/37221


Stop NATO
February 9, 2008


Balkans: Staging Ground For NATO's Post-Cold War Order
Rick Rozoff


The world hasn't begun to recover from the events of 1991, a true annus 
terribilis whose watershed nature was insufficiently appreciated at the time 
and has been practically ignored since.

The year initiated the first attempt in history to enforce worldwide military, 
political, economic and cultural unipolarity; the advent in earnest of 
neoliberalism with all the devastating economic and social consequences it has 
wrought since then; the genesis of US-led and Western-supported air, ground, 
counterinsurgency and proxy wars against defenseless targets from the Middle 
East to the Balkans, South Asia to Africa.

The major political events of the year were three:

The Operation Desert Storm war against Iraq and the inauguration of 
US-engineered gratuitous wars of convenience waged under the auspices of 
self-designated coalitions of the willing - major NATO powers and whichever 
client states could be bribed or bullied into providing false plumage for the 
alias adopted then and ever after, the "international community" - as often as 
not impersonating the United Nations or even more presumptuously humanity. 

The seemingly instantaneous breakup of the Soviet Union into its fifteen 
constituent federal republics.

The beginning of the fragmentation of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia with 
the largely German-instigated secession of, first, Croatia and Slovenia, and 
then Macedonia.

With the dissolution of the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia, Europe saw the end of 
the only two simultaneous multi-ethnic and multi-confessional federated nations 
in Europe, leaving only Serbia and Russia (meaningfully) now in that category.

With these two concomitant dismemberments, 1991 also issued in the demolition 
of the edifice of the entire post-World War I and -World War II system of 
international relations which had often been observed even in the breach, with 
the main institutional manifestation of the second, the United Nations, 
undermined and supplanted, and the confirmation and codification of the 
post-World War II definition of state-to-state principles in Europe, the 
Helsinki Final Act of 1975, torn to shreds. 

The Conference on Security and Co-operation in Europe (Helsinki) Final Act of 
August 1, 1975 states in its section on Inviolability of frontiers that:

"The participating States regard as inviolable all one another's frontiers as 
well as the frontiers of all States in Europe and therefore they will refrain 
now and in the future from assaulting these frontiers.
"Accordingly, they will also refrain from any demand for, or act of, seizure 
and usurpation of part or all of the territory of any participating State."

In its statement on Territorial integrity of States the Final Act adds:
"The participating States will respect the territorial integrity of each of the 
participating States.

"Accordingly, they will refrain from any action inconsistent with the purposes 
and principles of the Charter of the United Nations against the territorial 
integrity, political independence or the unity of any participating State, and 
in particular from any such action constituting a threat or use of force."

Strongly implicit in the above principles is the acknowledgment that national 
borders in Europe as decided upon at the 1945 Yalta and Potsdam conferences and 
confirmed in the United Nations at its founding in 1945, however imperfect in 
various respects, were inviolable and all the signatories to the Helsinki Final 
Act - including the US and all its NATO allies - committed themselves to the 
irrefragable territorial integrity of all European nations as constituted after 
the end of the world's most deadly and devastating war, one caused by the last 
attempt to redraw borders in Europe and Asia.

There are now nineteen nations in Europe (including the South Caucasus) that 
could not be found on a map at the time of the Helsinki Final Act: Armenia, 
Azerbaijan, Belarus, Bosnia, Croatia, the Czech Republic, Estonia, Georgia, 
Germany (united), Latvia, Lithuania, Macedonia, Moldova, Montenegro, Russia, 
Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia and Ukraine, and one aborted pseudo-state, Kosovo.

All but reunified Germany (itself only two years old at the time) didn't exist 
until 1991 and many are nations that never were independent countries until 
that year.

If Operation Desert Storm was the opening act in defining the Post-Cold War new 
American and NATO order, and the breakup of the Soviet Union allowed for its 
full implementation and the launching of a new Eurasian Great Game from the 
Baltic to the Black and from the Black to the Caspian seas, Yugoslavia and its 
former republics would be the main laboratory for the post-post-Yalta and 
post-Helsinki world.

In reference to the Balkans wars of the 1990s, the aftermath of which alone 
will be dealt with here, suffice it to say that a veritable mountain range of 
selective hyperbole, inverted logic, puerile bromides, the attribution of 
collective and exclusive guilt to one party (the Serbs), the 'clairvoyant' 
ascription of evil motives to only one of the belligerents (again the Serbs, at 
almost all times to almost all Serbs), ad nauseam, the popularized distillation 
of them has been summed up by most all Western commentators with two cliched 
chestnuts: Yugoslavia broke up because of a mythic Greater Serbia project and 
former and late Yugoslav president Slobodan Milosevic "started and lost four 
wars."
Parroting the last two inanities is all that's required to pass muster as a 
Balkans expert in most circles in the West and much of the rest of the world. 

Starting in the summer of 1991 this writer asserted that the entire compendium 
of such received prejudices could be refuted, could be demolished, with one 
word: Macedonia.

The events in Macedonia at that time are a subject fairly begging for 
book-length examination and analysis, but this synopsis will due for now:

Following the NATO takeover of the Serbian province of Kosovo in June of 1999, 
with their so-called Kosovo Liberation Army allies in tow, the latter almost 
immediately metastasized into similar armed formations in South Serbia 
(Liberation Army of Presevo, Bujanovac and Medvedja) and Macedonia (National 
Liberation Army) as well as suspected offshoots in Montenegro and northeasten 
Greece (Epirus).

The NLA of Ali Ahmeti, also a founder of the KLA, launched murderous attacks 
inside Macedonia from its bases in NATO-occupied Kosovo, at times marching 
right past American Kosovo Protection Corps (KFOR) troops, even dragging 
artillery with them as they did so. Macedonia was in the opening stages of a 
full-fledged civil war instigated from neighboring Kosovo.

While then NATO Secretary General Lord Robertson initially referred to the NLA 
invaders as "murderous thugs," NATO, the US and the EU threatened the 
Macedonian government into signing the Ohrid Framework Agreement on August 13, 
which legitimized the NLA, brought it into the national parliament as a 
political party (under a different name) and even installed Ahmeti as a cabinet 
minister in the federal government.

The above is detailed for two reasons: There is only a negligible Serbian 
minority in Macedonia and at the time former Yugoslav president Milosevic was 
languishing in a prison cell in the Hague, where he had been taken after being 
illegally whisked away from Belgrade in a NATO helicopter.

Remember the Western mantra: Serbian nationalism and Sloboban Milosevic were 
culpable for all unrest and violence in former Yugoslavia.

Having unleashed the prototype of the now infamous 'color revolutions' that 
have since afflicted Georgia, Ukraine, Kyrgyzstan and Lebanon and toppled the 
government of Slobodan Milosevic in the autumn of 2000, the US and NATO now had 
governments installed in all six former Yugoslav federal republics that would 
permit what the Rambouillet Appendix B ultimatum to Yugoslavia ten years ago 
had aimed at, the rejection of which by Belgrade had been used by NATO for its 
78-day bombing war against Yugoslavia the same year, particularly this 
provision:

"NATO personnel shall enjoy, together with their vehicles, vessels, aircraft, 
and equipment, free and unrestricted passage and unimpeded access throughout 
the FRY [Federal Republic of Yugoslavia] including associated airspace and 
territorial waters. This shall include, but not be limited to, the right of 
bivouac, maneuver, billet, and utilization of any areas or facilities as 
required for support, training, and operations."

What has occurred in the interim incontrovertibly reveals what was hidden 
behind the mask of NATO's 'humanitarian intervention,' replete with cluster 
bombs and depleted uranium munitions, graphite weapons and terror bombing, 
arming and training racist pogromists for ethnocide and murder, demolishing 
bridges, factories, broadcasting stations and the Chinese embassy in Belgrade: 
To turn the Balkans into a permanent military colony for the subjugation of the 
region and for the expansion of NATO to points east and south, along its new 
silk route to the Chinese border and throughout the so-called Broader Middle 
East and into Africa.

In the seminal and near-prophetic presentation "Why Is NATO In Yugoslavia?" of 
January of 1996, the late and irreplaceable American scholar Sean Gervasi 
remarked of NATO's first military deployment, in Bosnia of the preceding year, 
that its objectives included a far broader strategy:

"These have to do with an emerging strategy for securing the resources of the 
Caspian Sea region and for "stabilizing" the countries of Eastern Europe - 
ultimately for 'stabilizing' Russia and the countries of the Commonwealth of 
Independent States....Not a few commentators have made the point that Western 
actions in extending NATO even raise the risks of nuclear conflict...."

The paper is worth reading in its totality at:
http://www.globalresearch.ca/articles/GER108A.html 

A recent news item offers the latest verification of the claim regarding the 
current escalation of war in South Asia:

"Navy Captain Kevin Aandahl, spokesman for the US Transportation Command [said] 
one route could go from the Balkans to ...south through Central Asia to 
Afghanistan."
(Agence France-Presse, February 6, 2009)

NATO's longstanding plans to transform the Balkans into one large military 
colony for bases locally, troops for wars further afield and a staging ground 
for military actions to the east and the south will be explored nation by 
nation and after that in terms of the general strategy at the end of this 
article.

The consolidation of US and NATO military integration of the Balkans as a 
whole, the former Yugoslavia in particular, has proceeded unremittingly and 
inexorably over the past ten years and is most disturbingly exemplified by 
recent developments in the world's newest nation, Montenegro, and the West's 
new, less than a year old, "NATO pseudo-state," Kosovo. 

Montenegro declared its unilateral abrogation of the Union of Serbia and 
Montenegro, itself created from the former Federal Republic of Yugoslavia in 
2003, on May 21, 2006.

It is the 192nd and latest state to join the United Nations.
Within seven months, perhaps before it even completed putting its national seal 
on government stationary, it was absorbed into NATO's Partnership for Peace 
program. 

Montenegrins themselves were never consulted on the matter:
"Polls have suggested that 70% of Montenegrins would vote against joining NATO 
if given a chance to do so.

"One of the primary reasons for the citizenry's resistance to the desires of 
their political leaders is lingering resentment for the NATO's intervention in 
the Balkans in 1999."
(Montenegro Times, April 4, 2008)

Last June NATO's Norfolk, Virginia-based Allied Command Transformation 
conducted a Euro-Atlantic Partnership Work Programme (EAPWP) seminar in the 
Montenegrin capital of Podgorica, which was described as being "designed for 
regional Partnership for Peace (PfP) defence and military officials who are 
responsible for security and defence policy, strategic planning and execution.

"Partners were introduced to transformational principles for maintaining 
competitive military advantage over potential adversaries in the 21st
Century...."

(NATO International, Allied Command Transformation, June 12, 2008)

Less than two weeks later NATO launched an Intensified Dialogue with Montenegro 
after "Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Ms Dragana Radulovic and Deputy 
Minister for Defence Mr. Drasko Jovanovic met with NATO's Deputy Assistant 
Secretary General for Security Cooperation and Partnership [and for the 
Caucasus and Central Asia] Robert F. Simmons Jr...."
(NATO International, June 25, 2008)

Only five months later, such is the accelerated pace of integration, the US's 
and NATO's long-term man in Podgorica, President Milo Djukanovic, after 
announcing that he had been assured by NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop 
Scheffer that 'NATO is not tired of enlargement,' "handed over Montenegro's 
formal application for NATO's membership action plan [Individual Partnership 
Action Plan]...seen as the last step before full membership...." 
(Associated Press, November 5, 2008)

Less than a month afterward - - note the breathtaking telescoping of time and 
stages - Montenegro joined Bosnia in being pulled into the Adriatic Charter, 
which is "a cooperation mechanism initiated by the United States in 2003 [and] 
consists of Albania, Croatia and Macedonia [which] aims to co-ordinate NATO 
membership preparations."
(MakFax [Macedonia], December 4, 2008)

Albania and Croatia are slated to be granted full NATO membership at the 
Alliance's sixtieth anniversary summit on April 3-4, with Macedonia to follow 
once the 'name dispute' with Greece is settled.

The next, inevitable, step soon followed.

On December 17, 2008 Montenegro's ambassador to the US, Miodrag Vlahovic, 
signed a NATO Partnership for Peace Status of Forces Agreement, which 
establishes terms and conditions for the stationing of NATO nations', including 
the US's, military forces in a partner nation.

The very same day the Montenegrin parliament authorized the first, nominal but 
precedent setting, military deployment to Afghanistan to serve under NATO's 
command. 

This is in keeping with the simultaneous withdrawal of troops by fellow Balkans 
NATO partners - Albania, Bosnia, Bulgaria, Macedonia - from Iraq in December 
and the announcement that all four would increase their troop commitments in 
Afghanistan.

On January 27 of the current year a NATO delegation arrived in the capital of 
Montenegro "for the evaluation of the IPAP [Individual Partnership Action 
Plan}" just commenced last November, the demands of which are far-reaching 
enough to include "[C]riteria for NATO and EU membership [including] the 
significant role of the Directorate for Anticorruption Initiative in drafting 
anticorruption laws [and a] recently initiated process of drafting the Law on 
integrity, which is completely a new piece of legislation in Montenegro [and 
projects] planned in the field of local self-government, public administration 
and the private sector."
(Government of Montenegro, January 27, 2009)

To be NATOized is to be subordinated in every category, even being dictated to 
in matters of "local self-government."

Only days ago Frank Boland, head of NATO's Defense Policy Planning Directorate, 
told a Balkans daily "Montenegro could become a NATO member in 2012 given the 
overall progress the country has made thus far" but that "Montenegro first will 
have to get rid of its old weapons, which needs to be stored safely and later 
destroyed. The country also needs to adjust troop training in line with NATO 
standards."
(MakFax, February 2, 2009)
....
Kosovo, which seceded from Serbia on February 18, 2008, after the mediation of 
Britain, France, Germany and Italy - the very four nations that 'mediated' Nazi 
Germany's seizure of the Czech Sudetenland 60 years earlier at Munich - is, 
almost a full year later, only recognized by 54 of the world's 192 nations.

It is the site of Camps Bondsteel and Camp Monteith, built after Serbian forces 
were expelled from the province and the largest overseas US militay 
installations constructed since the Vietnam War.

The majority of the countries recognizing the illegal secession are NATO 
members, candidates and partners with an assortment of 'coalition of the 
willing' entities - so far has the stature and influence of the West waned in 
the past few years - as Belize, Liechtenstein, Marshall Islands, Micronesia, 
Nauru and Somoa.

Within five months of the US- and NATO-engineered breaking off of the 
historical heart of Serbia, Kosovo's prime minister and former KLA commander 
Hashim Thaci, who then US Secretary of State Madeleine Albright first started 
grooming as a future head of state in 2000 when she personally squired him 
around the State Department, United Nations and Democratic Party nominating 
convention in Los Angeles, delivered himself of the pledge that:

"We will present our goal and vision that Kosovo be part of the Euro-Atlantic 
family, part of NATO and the European Union as soon as possible." 
(Office of the Prime Minister of the Republic of Kosovo, July 9, 2008)

Eight days later Thaci was in Washington, his first visit as 'head of state,' 
meeting with Albright's successor once removed Condoleezza Rice, where he 
effused that "Kosovo and the people of Kosovo bow before the government and the 
people of America for their support."
[Office of the Prime Minister of Kosovo, July 18, 2008)

To be recalled the next time one reads in reference to Kosovo such elevated 
terms as independent, free, self-determined. Thaci's 'capital' as of last 
December now has a George Bush Street as well as a statue erected to Bill 
Clinton.

The following month Kosovo Defense Minister Fehmi Mujota (readers can add as 
many inverted commas here and afterward as they choose) affirmed that "Kosovo 
will build a continuous partnership with NATO, fulfilling its standards and 
necessary capacities in the defense field" and that the "Kosovo Security Force 
will be the nucleus of the future Kosovo army matching NATO standards."
(New Kosova Report [Sweden], August 19, 2008)

In a remarkable feat of historical and geographic legerdemain, Thaci last month 
asserted that Kosovo was "never Serbian" and that "We are part of the European 
family, we will be part of the EU and NATO....."
(Tanjug News Agency, January 24, 2009)

A demonstration of the diplomacy and statesmanship taught to him by his tutors 
Madeleine Albright, Condoleezza Rice and former United Nations Mission in 
Kosovo (UNMIK) chief Bernard Kouchner, now French foreign minister.

Local Serbs, whose ancestors lived in Kosovo for at least 800 years, of course 
have, to the West, the temerity to differ with Thaci's revisionist history and 
NATO's KFOR troops have dealt with them ruthlessly on behalf of Thaci and his 
fellow KLA veterans.

The commander of French NATO forces in Kosovo, General Michel Yakovleff, early 
last month threatened besieged Serbs with the warning to "Be aware of the 
strong determination of KFOR to respond, even brutally if necessary, to all 
forms of violence." 
(Deutsche Welle, January 9, 2009)

That is, to any attempts by ethnic Serbs and other minorities to defend 
themselves after thousands of Serbs, Roma, Ashkalis, Egyptians, Gorans and 
Turks have been murdered and 'disappeared' since June of 1999 and as many as 
4-500,000 have been terrorized into fleeing the province.

A week earlier a Kosovo separatist authority announced that the former KLA, 
current Kosovo Protection Corps would be transformed into a Kosovo Security 
Force - the embryo of a national armed forces - and that a "nine-week training 
course would be run by the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation and the Kosovo 
Force, or KFOR, an international peacekeeping mission led by NATO."
(Associated Press, February 2, 2009)

Within days NATO announced it was in fact forming a new Kosovo army.

In a dispatch titled "NATO says new Kosovo force to be launched on Jan 21," it 
was announced that "[The Kosovo Security Force] will replace the KPC [Kosovo 
Protection Corps], a 3,500-strong ...force backed up by some 2,000 reservists 
that was mostly composed of former Kosovo Liberation Army guerrillas who fought 
against Serbian rule" and that "Kosovo President Fatmir Sejdiu has named KPC 
[and before that KLA] commander Sylejman Selimi to head the new force."
(Reuters, January 14, 2009)

The Kosovo Security Force's uniforms will be supplied by the US Pentagon (B92 
[Serbia], January 17, 2009) and its troops "will be trained by British Army 
officers, with their uniforms provided by the U.S., and their vehicles by 
Germany." (Beta News Agency {Serbia], January 20, 2009)

And if any doubts could remain regarding the organic and inextricable links 
between NATO and the KLA (in whichever avatar), a former KLA commander has 
eliminated them.

"The Kosovo Security Force is striving to become part of NATO...said Kosovo 
Security Force commander Sylejman Selimi [who added] 'NATO has been showing 
interest in assisting the establishment of the Kosovo Security Force and I 
believe that the cooperation will go on. We are happy to acquire NATO's 
experience in training, equipment and infrastructure'" 
(Focus News Agency [Bulgaria], January 23, 2009)

NATO returned the favor the next day by formally announcing on its website that 
"KFOR representatives will present the concept of the recruitment campaign for 
the new Kosovo Security Force to the public at the University of Pristina."
(NATO International, January 24, 2009)

The above immediately drew the well-warranted ire of both Serbia and Russia, 
with, in addition to current Serbian government officials, former prime 
minister Vojislav Kostunica complaining that ""NATO is making and arming 
Kosovo's army" and that NATO (and its KFOR operation) are "no longer paying any 
attention to Serbia, and are implementing the Ahtisaari plan openly, building a 
Kosovo army."

Kostunica in the same statement urged a reevaluation of Serbia's Partnership 
for Peace status, which had been secured by NATO two years ago, in the 
(certain) event that the Alliance persists in building its proxy army.

The Russian ambassador to Serbia Aleksandr Konuzin was equally vehement in his 
denunciation, stating "Forming these forces is a remilitarization of Kosovo 
and, in itself, runs counter to Resolution 1244."
(FoNet/Danas [Serbia], January 27, 2009)

Lastly on this topic, Defense Minister Dragan Sutanovac claimed at the end of 
last month that the new Kosovo army is also being prepared, in addition to 
suppressing minority and other loyalist forces in Kosovo, for integration into 
NATO military operations aboard, presumably to join their Albanian, Bosnian, 
Bulgarian, Croatian, Macedonian, Montenegrin, Romanian and Slovenian Balkans 
counterparts in Afghanistan and future NATO war zones.

In 2004 arch-war criminal and then head of the Kosovo Protection Corps Agim 
Ceku offered members of the Corps, referred to by Western officials and 
journalists as a "civilian emergency services organisation," to the US for use 
in the war in Iraq. 
....
Serbia itself is not to get away unmolested and its sons and daughters spared 
the fate of their neighbors.

It was dragged into NATO's Partnership for peace along with Bosnia and 
Montenegro in 2006 and last October NATO Secretary Jaap de Hoop Scheffer and 
Serbian Defense Minister Dragan Sutanovac signed a security agreement that 
"will facilitate military-to military cooperation between Serbia and the 
alliance."
(New Europe, October 6, 2008)

In 2003 the Western press was full of accounts of 1,000 Serbian troops being 
sent to Afghanistan to fight under NATO command.

The deployment never materialized, but with Serbia the only former Yugoslav 
Partnership for Peace member without troops there, the prospect still remains.
....
Bosnia is the first former Yugoslav republic to have suffered the presence of 
NATO troops.

In the opening days of this year the Bosnian government, which had just 
recalled its last troops from Iraq, transparently in response to US and NATO 
demands, revealed that it had authorized the first deployment of troops to 
Afghanistan to serve with NATO's International Security Assistance Force (ISAF)
....
Croatia, which has been shepherded toward full NATO membership over the past 
five years through the US's Adriatic Charter along with Albania and Macedonia, 
will be inducted into the Allance at the April summit.

Preparatory to its final initiation, the US signed an 'Additional SOFA' (Status 
of Forces Agreement) with the nation last summer described at the time as "an 
international agreement between Croatia and the US determining issues regarding 
US forces' presence in Croatia within the framework of cooperation connected 
with the NATO and PfP."
(Republic of Croatia, Ministry of Foreign Affairs and European Integration, 
July 3, 2008)

In the spring Croatia hosted an international NATO exercise called MEDCEUR 08, 
which in addition to the US, its sponsor, included "12 members of NATO's 
Partnership for Peace Program - Albania, Armenia, Azerbaijan, 
Bosnia-Herzegovina, Kyrgyzstan, Macedonia, Moldova, Montenegro, Serbia, 
Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Ukraine," in an illustration of how NATO is 
jointly integrating Balkans and former Soviet states into its global army.
(Agence France-Presse, May 2, 2008)

Shortly thereafter Croatia was also the site for Adriatic Shield 08, an 
international "exercise...being held under the Proliferation Security 
Initiative (PSI) that was launched by the United States in 2003.
"The three-day exercise...is co-organized by Poland and the United States, with 
Bosnia-Hercegovina, Croatia, Italy, Montenegro and Slovenia also taking part."
(Agence France-Presse, May 12, 2008)
....
Albania, another Adriatic Charter graduate, for years hosted NATO forces in 
Durres.

Last November its Foreign Minister Lulzim Basha met with NATO chief Scheffer 
and pledged assistance in the creation of Kosovo's new army.
The nation has troops stationed in Afghanistan, Bosnia, Iraq and Chad.
In April it will be brought into NATO as a full member.
....
In November of 2008 Macedonia held the largest military exercise in its 
history, Macedonian Flash - 04, "an air-land exercise aimed at evaluating the 
preparedness of ARM [Army of the Republic of Macedonia] troops for deployment 
in NATO-led missions," for which a "NATO team [was] tasked to observe and 
evaluate the units' operational capabilities, their inter-operability and 
application of the NATO standards in conducting of the training exercises" 
(MakFax, November 2, 2008), indeed "watched by 70 NATO representatives from 26 
Alliance’s member states. (MakFax, November 3, 2008)

A month later a high-ranking delegation of the NATO Military Committee, led by 
the committee chairman Admiral Giampaolo Di Paola, arrived in Macedonia to 
discuss "the current and future participation of Macedonian troops in missions 
abroad."
(MakFax, December 8, 2008)

Early last month Macedonia deployed another contingent of troops to Afghanistan 
to serve with a NATO mechanized infantry unit.
A few days ago a delegation of the French armed forces visited the country to 
evaluate the "participation of its troops in missions abroad."
(Focus News Agency, February 4, 2009) 
....
Slovenia, one of the first two Yugoslav federal republics to secede from the 
nation, is the first and to date only one to be fully integrated into NATO, 
being absorbed after the Istanbul summit in 2004.

Before leaving office last month US President George Bush included Slovenia and 
the other six newest NATO members in the classified nuclear information 
agreement ATOMAL.

Last November its troops were among those participating in a joint NATO-Afghan 
army Joint Multinational Training Command exercise in Germany.

A month earlier a NATO flotilla of four warships and 800 sailors docked in the 
Slovenian port of Koper.

Days ago its government announced a modest increase in troops being deployed to 
Afghanistan in addition to sending security personnel to Gaza.

NATO has plans to open a center for training mountain troops in Slovenia, if it 
hasn't done so already. 
....
Bulgaria and Romania became full NATO members after the Istanbul summit also.

The next year the US commenced plans to take over three bases in Bulgaria and 
four in Romania as 'forward operating sites' and 'pre-positioning' staging 
grounds for operations to the east.

The Pentagon is to station several thousand troops at these full spectrum - 
infantry, air force, naval - locations.
....
In October of 2008 US Secretary of Defense Robert Gates at a meeting of the 
Southeast European Defense Ministerial (SEDM} in Maccedonia "urged Eastern 
European leaders to shift their military efforts from Iraq to Afghanistan, 
where their forces are more urgently needed."
(Associated Press, October 9, 2008)

At the time of the ten non-US members of the SEDM nine - Italy, Greece, Turkey, 
Albania, Bulgaria, Romania, Macedonia, Slovenia and Croatia - had a combined 
level of 5,100 troops in Afghanistan. The last, Bosnia, has now pledged troops 
also in responses to Gates' orders.

A concise summary of the SEDM is as follows:

"The SEDM currently includes Albania, Bulgaria, Greece, Macedonia, Italy, 
Romania, the United States, Slovenia, Turkey, Croatia, Ukraine and Bosnia and 
Herzegovina, and such observer countries as Moldova, Serbia and Montenegro.

The Southeastern Europe Defense Ministerial was set up in 1996....as a bridge 
with Euro-Atlantic organizations, particularly NATO."
(National Radio Company of Ukraine, October 9, 2008)

Before his appearance at the SEDM meeting Gates was in Kosovo meeting with 
leaders of the separatist regime there and "went from Kosovo to Macedonia, 
where he participated in a southeastern Europe defense ministers conference. 
While there, he met with his Ukraine counterpart and expressed America's 
support for NATO membership for Georgia and Ukraine. He also spoke to the 
defense ministers of Montenegro and Macedonia about recognizing Kosovo. Both 
nations did so Oct. 9."
(United States European Command, October 14, 2008)

That is, the US Pentagon chief went to Kosovo to meet with US troops stationed 
there and with Kosovo officials, surely Hashim Thaci among others, then left 
for Macedonia where he ordered the host government and that of Montenegro to 
recognize Kosovo's independence, which both do the following day.

Also in October US President Bush, while signing papers formalizing 
Washington's support for Albania's and Croatia's NATO admission, "reiterated 
U.S. support for prospective NATO members Ukraine, Georgia, Montenegro, and 
Bosnia-Herzegovina," and added, “'The door to NATO membership also remains 
open to the people of Serbia should they choose that path.'”
(Agence France-Presse, October 24, 2008)

A sentiment seconded by former Bulgarian foreign minister and current reputed 
candidate for NATO's top post Solomon Passy, who said at practically the same 
moment "I hope this won’t stop until the other countries from the West 
Balkans (Macedonia, Serbia, Bosnia and Herzegovina as well as Kosovo) become 
NATO member states" and said that "if this happens, one third of NATO member 
states will be from the Balkans...."
(Focus News Agency, October 23, 2008) 
....
At the beginning of 1991 Yugoslavia was a united country, a member and founder 
of the Non-Aligned Movement, with no foreign bases on its soil and no troops 
stationed abroad.

In the intervening eighteen years it has been torn to pieces and its fragments 
turned into little better than NATO military occupation zones and recruiting 
grounds for foreign wars.

The prototype for what awaits much of the world if the developments of 1991 
aren't soon halted and reversed.







__,_._,___


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