Date: Wed, 25 Mar 2009 12:25:42 -0400


http://www.antiwar.com/justin/?articleid=14455


March 25, 2009 


The Nation Formerly Known as Yugoslavia 
Ten years later 


by Justin Raimondo 


Tuesday marked the  
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1999_NATO_bombing_of_the_Federal_Republic_of_Yugoslavia>
 tenth anniversary of the bombing of the nation formerly known as Yugoslavia – 
an act of aggression that prefigured America's post-9/11 rampage and set the 
stage for our endless "war on terrorism" in many more ways than are at first 
apparent. To begin with, the Yugoslav war, like the Iraq invasion, was 
predicated on a lie: that as many as  
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/inatl/longterm/balkans/stories/cohen051699.htm>
 100,000 Kosovars and others were either killed or "ethnically cleansed" from 
Kosovo, and that this was the conscious plan of the Yugoslav military and 
political leadership. The 100,000 figure was casually thrown around in the 
run-up to the bombing, and "Stop genocide!" was the battle-cry of the War Party 
– a curious agglomeration of the usual neocons and the liberal-Left. This  
<http://www.newamericancentury.org/Kosovo%20Apr5%20-12%20,99.pdf> Bill Kristol- 
<http://www.nbi.dk/%7Epredrag/projects/SontagKosovo.html> Susan Sontag popular 
front was greatly aided by the personal intervention of  
<http://www.libertariansforpaul.com/2008/04/16/hillary-clinton-urged-president-to-bomb-serbia/>
 Hillary Clinton, who hectored her husband, then the president of the United 
States, into launching the U.S. attack. 
Yet what took place was not genocide but the random brutality of a typical 
civil war, and the 100,000 figure is very far from the truth. That number  
<http://www.labournet.net/balkans/9911/pilger.html> didn't hold up for  
<http://www.fff.org/freedom/0101e.asp> very long, at any rate, and was 
subsequently revised downward several times: 50,000, 25,000, 10,000. The final 
body count: less than 8,000, and these included both sides, military as well as 
civilians. This is not good, but it is hardly genocide. 
Yet people believe the myth of the Yugoslav "genocide"  
<http://www.slobodan-milosevic.org/news/rch012908.htm> to this day, just as a  
<http://www.harrisinteractive.com/harris_poll/index.asp?PID=544> great many 
Americans continue to believe Saddam Hussein was responsible for the 9/11 
terrorist attacks. A lie has only to be repeated often enough before it enters 
the popular consciousness as "truth" – that's the  
<http://thinkexist.com/quotation/-if_you_tell_a_lie_big_enough_and_keep_repeating/345877.html>
 first lesson in any good war propagandist's lesson book. Surely the War Party 
had a crack team of liars working overtime back then to put one over on the 
American people, beaming nonstop  
<http://www.albionmonitor.com/9906a/pp-klapr.html> misinformation 24/7, as U.S. 
warplanes bombed one of the oldest cities in Europe at 20,000 ft. – an act of 
cowardice that underscored the sheer venality of those who launched the 
conflict. We went to war  
<http://www.cnn.com/ALLPOLITICS/stories/1999/05/13/clinton.kosovo/> without UN 
sanction at the behest of a domestic lobby with a dubious agenda, one that ran 
directly counter to the national interests of the U.S. and yet was pursued, to 
the end, with disastrous consequences for all concerned. Does any of this sound 
familiar? 
Neocon grand strategist Bill Kristol declared, in the Weekly Standard, that we 
ought to "crush Serb skulls." He  
<http://www.antiwar.com/justin/pf/p-j060401.html> threatened to leave the 
"isolationist" Republican Party, which was voting against war funding in 
Congress. Meanwhile, the Democrats were questioning the patriotism of war 
critics and demanding that the nation stand united behind a "wartime 
president." The somewhat hapless Slobodan Milosevic was  
<http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&rls=GGGL,GGGL:2006-32,GGGL:en&q=milosevic%2Bhitler&btnG=Search>
 portrayed as the reincarnation of Hitler, just as Saddam Hussein was later 
made into this larger-than-life despot whose evil achieved Hitlerian 
dimensions. 
History repeats itself: the first time as tragedy, and, in this case, the 
second time as an  <http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2007/09/14/3839> even 
greater tragedy – with prospects of more to come. 
In the former province of Kosovo, the ethnic cleansing that supposedly occurred 
– in which Serbs turned out Albanian Kosovars – has been put in  
<http://www.converge.org.nz/pma/svict.htm> reverse gear, and the few remaining 
Serbian inhabitants cling tenaciously to their enclaves in the north, albeit in 
greatly reduced numbers. The Serbian population has been almost entirely driven 
into Serbia proper, after a  
<http://www.voanews.com/english/archive/2004-03/a-2004-03-19-26-Serbia.cfm?moddate=2004-03-19>
 reign of terror that included church burnings and outright murder. All of this 
occurred under the noses of the NATO/American forces, who stood by and tacitly 
encouraged the rape of what many Serbs regard as the birthplace of their 
nation. 
On this shameful anniversary, it seems somehow fitting that  
<http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/northamerica/usa/5039381/US-envoy-Richard-Holbrooke-did-offer-Radovan-Karadzic-immunity.html>
 news is breaking of Richard Holbrooke's promise to alleged Serbian war 
criminal Radovan Karadzic that he would be left alone if he withdrew from 
politics and abandoned all efforts to ensure the survival of the Republika 
Srpska, in what is now Bosnia. According to Charles W. Ingrao, co-editor of a  
<http://www.amazon.ca/Confronting-Yugoslav-Controversies-Scholars-Initiative/dp/1557535337/antiwarbookstore>
 new study of the Balkan intervention published by Purdue University, a trio of 
current and retired senior State Department officials have direct knowledge of 
Holbrooke's pledge. 
While Milosevic was ritually tried and condemned and the authors of the 
anti-Serbian ethnic cleansing campaign lorded it over Kosovo, Karadzic was on 
the run. For  <http://articles.latimes.com/2008/jul/23/world/fg-warcrime23> 
over a decade he disguised himself as a health expert and holistic healer, 
living under a pseudonym and a bushy growth of beard, putting up his shingle in 
Belgrade and Vienna as Dr. Dragan David Dabi. His arrest in Belgrade raises the 
issue of the Kosovo war once again.

The tenth anniversary of the bombing was hailed by Kosovo "president" and 
accused war criminal Hacim Thaci as commemorating " 
<http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/7960415.stm> a great historic day." 
Liberals of the Clintonian persuasion and neoconservatives agree. 
Holbrooke was recently appointed diplomatic czar and envoy extraordinaire for 
the " <http://www.pbs.org/newshour/video/module.html?mod=0&pkg=18022009&seg=4> 
Afpak" front, what the Obama team has always termed the "central front" in our 
eternal war on terrorism. The Purdue study and further revelations unearthed in 
a Times  <http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/22/world/europe/22hague.html?_r=1&hp> 
piece undermine his credibility at a crucial time. 
It was Holbrooke, you'll recall, who played the  
<http://www.antiwar.com/malic/?articleid=706> key role of the diplomatic 
arbiter during the Balkan aggression, insisting on the complete prostration of 
the Serb minorities in Bosnia and Kosovo and authoring the  
<http://www.state.gov/www/regions/eur/bosnia/bosagree.html> Dayton Accords, in 
effect the death warrant of the former Yugoslavia and the beginning of the 
re-balkanization of the region. Just the man for the job of sowing chaos in the 
tribal regions of Pakistan and environs. 
Holbrooke wisely refused to put his promise on paper, yet there is apparently 
plenty of evidence that such a deal was struck – and that the capture of 
Karadzic and his subsequent trial is taking place precisely because he didn't 
keep his part of the deal. The Times  
<http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/22/world/europe/22hague.html?pagewanted=2&_r=1&hp>
 reports the testimony of an American involved with the peacekeeping effort in 
the region, who spoke to Holbrooke on the eve of the 2000 Bosnian elections: 
"'Holbrooke was angry; he was ranting,' the American recalled. He quoted Mr. 
Holbrooke as saying: 'That son of a bitch Karadzic. I made a deal with him that 
if he'd pull out of politics, we wouldn't go after him. He's broken that deal 
and now we're going to get him.'" 
Well, they got him, but they can't admit the existence of the deal, just like 
they can't admit the deal made by George Herbert Walker Bush and Mikhail 
Gorbachev, as the Berlin Wall was falling. Gorbachev agreed to let East Germany 
go on the condition that NATO would not advance eastward – and Bush I  
<http://www.nytimes.com/1997/05/25/weekinreview/the-anatomy-of-a-misunderstanding.html?sec=&spon=&pagewanted=all>
 signed on. Today, NATO has advanced  
<http://www.russiablog.org/NATOExpansion.jpg> to the gates of Moscow and 
American-made "missile defense" in Poland and the Czech Republic has the 
Kremlin looking down a gun barrel. When it comes to dealing with the Slavs, no 
agreement is taken seriously by the Americans, and that includes the  
<http://www.fas.org/nuke/control/inf/text/index.html> INF treaty signed by 
Reagan and violated by his successors until, today, we have a new arms race in 
the offing, and the prospect of a new cold war as well. 
The Kosovo conflict was in many ways but a dress rehearsal for the massive U.S. 
military interventions of the post-9/11 era. The  
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kosovo_Liberation_Army> Kosovo Liberation Army 
(KLA) is merely the Balkan version of the  
<http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/story/8798997/the_man_who_sold_the_war/print>
 Iraqi National Congress (INC) – an American-financed-and-armed exile group 
that provides intelligence of dubious provenance and a political front to lend 
U.S. military action an aura of legitimacy. The chief difference is that, 
unlike the KLA, the INC was never a real fighting force and never amounted to 
anything politically, either. 
When it comes to the Kosovo war, the liberal interventionists who inhabit the 
foreign policy councils of the Obama administration, such as Holbrooke and 
Hillary, can  <http://www.hindu.com/thehindu/holnus/001200802180950.htm> crow 
that their version of imperialism is more pragmatic and effective – and even 
tout it as a "model" for what is being planned in Afghanistan and Pakistan. 
That's what this new emphasis on "multilateralism" is all about: not a 
softening of the U.S. approach, but a smarter and more "pragmatic" militarism, 
one that involves a long-term "nation-building" approach that deploys political 
and economic weapons as well as bombing campaigns and boots on the ground. The 
extension of NATO into the wilds of  
<http://www.nato.int/docu/update/2009/03-march/e0305b.html> Central Asia and  
<http://www.nato.int/issues/nato-georgia/index.html> the Caucasus will carry 
this essentially anti-Russian campaign to a new level. 
Kosovo, like Iraq, is riven with ethnic and religious warfare that threatens to 
break out at any moment into full-scale civil war, which could bring in Serbia 
and prompt action by NATO – and you can guess on which side they'll intervene. 
This could well be the arena where Obama takes on Putin and gets to pose as a 
tough guy even as he launches a  
<http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/americas/7954211.stm> diplomatic blitz in the 
Middle East aimed at Iran. 
On the Russian question, the Obama administration promises to be even more 
belligerent and aggressive than the Bush administration. During the 
presidential campaign, Obama came out for  
<http://www.politico.com/blogs/bensmith/0808/Obama_also_cites_NATO_membership_for_Georgia.html>
 admitting  
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/03/23/AR2009032302478_pf.html>
 Georgia and  <http://tinyurl.com/cuuhuv> Ukraine into NATO. John McCain's 
exhortation, during one presidential debate, that we " 
<http://www.antiwar.com/justin/?articleid=13584> watch Ukraine" is advice well 
worth taking. 
This is one civilizational war that all factions of the War Party can agree on, 
and certainly the groundwork has been laid with all the anti-Russian stunts and 
rhetoric of the past few years. From the  
<http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&rls=GGGL,GGGL:2006-32,GGGL:en&q=litvinenko%2Bjustin%2Bsite:www.antiwar.com&btnG=Search>
 Litvinenko affair to the Yushchenko " 
<http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&rls=GGGL,GGGL:2006-32,GGGL:en&q=yushchenko%2Bjustin%2Bsite:www.antiwar.com&btnG=Search>
 poisoning," the propaganda war against the Kremlin has taken on a novelistic 
air – pulp fiction, to be sure, and for that reason very effective. 
The Kosovo war was essentially the first shot fired in a new cold war against 
what is invariably described as "resurgent Russia," i.e., a Russia without the 
oligarchs and  <http://www.antiwar.com/justin/?articleid=10867> Yeltsin, who 
plundered and weakened the country to the point of complete collapse. Coupled 
with inevitable allusions to Stalin and overblown charges that the country is 
backsliding into totalitarianism, the Russophobes have been on the march for 
the last decade or so, urging in effect a war of civilizations – not against 
Islam, as in the neoconservative version, but a struggle pitting the West 
against the Slavic East, supporting wars of "liberation" from Georgia to 
Chechnya and beyond. Right now, the odds are better than even that we'll allow 
ourselves to get dragged into yet another such righteous and harebrained 
crusade. 

 

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