What "mistake"?

 

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 <http://www.nypost.com/> clip_image001Updated: Sun., Feb. 13, 2011, 5:16 AM
clip_image002

Truth about "mistake" bombing of Chinese embassy

By MICHAEL SHERIDAN

Last Updated: 5:16 AM, February 13, 2011

Posted: 10:45 PM, February 12, 2011

The former Chinese president Jiang Zemin has admitted in an unpublished
memoir that Serbian military intelligence units were hiding inside the
Chinese embassy in Belgrade when Nato bombed it in 1999. 

The memoir is reported to say that Jiang acceded to a personal plea from
Slobodan Milosevic, the Serbian leader, to shelter key military intelligence
personnel, and that 14 Serbs and three Chinese citizens died there when US
bombers struck.

Although the United States apologized for the raid - which led to
anti-western demonstrations in China - blaming faulty target mapping by the
CIA, the Chinese government never accepted this explanation.

Now a Chinese-language magazine in Hong Kong has published an account of the
bombing from a series of essays written in retirement by Jiang, 85, who
stepped down from his last post in 2004.

It said Jiang regretted allowing the Serbs sanctuary inside China's
diplomatic mission and believed it was a serious political mistake. The
memoir is said to tell how a furious Chinese government was forced to mute
its protests after the Americans privately presented evidence of Serbian
electronic communications from within the embassy.

The diplomatic bargain appeared to be that the Americans saved China's face
by apologising for a "mistake" and the Chinese allowed the street rage to
cool off without serious violence.

Jiang believes the Belgrade bombing destroyed his relationship with Bill
Clinton, then the US president, according to the magazine Qiansao (Outpost),
which quoted Jiang's aides and family members. He appears to have gambled
and lost because he saw a chance to outflank Russia, which had refused to
help Milosevic protect his intelligence assets.

The magazine claimed the Chinese were already sending secret supplies of
surface-to-air missiles to the former Yugoslavia through Libya. "When the
air campaign began, Yugoslavia's defence ministry, information department
and police headquarters were all destroyed by NATO bombs," it said, quoting
the memoir.

"Slobodan Milosevic once again asked Jiang to allow core departments of
military intelligence to take refuge in the Chinese embassy basement so as
to keep operating." The Chinese leader agreed.

As the NATO bombing intensified, the Chinese foreign ministry asked Jiang if
it could withdraw its staff from Belgrade, but he ordered them to stay put
as a sign of solidarity with Milosevic, the memoir admits.

NATO was bombing Serbia to force it to withdraw from Kosovo, a province
seeking independence. To China, fighting its own separatists in Tibet and
Xinjiang, it was a matter of principle to support the government in
Belgrade.

Although the memoir seems not to say so, there was another reason for
Chinese involvement on Serbia's side. The magazine says Milosevic's agents
handed over to China some navigation gear, thermal insulation and part of a
jet exhaust from an American F-117 Stealth fighter shot down over the
Balkans. China surprised the Americans by unveiling its own stealth fighter
in a test flight last month.

The Belgrade bombing is one of "two regrets" in Jiang's memoir, said
Qiansao. The other is his decision to stage a crackdown on the Falun Gong
meditation group.

Chinese journalists believe the magazine's account of the memoirs is
authentic, pointing to previous instances when high-level documents or
memoirs have first appeared as leaks in Hong Kong.

Asked about the magazine's claims, a NATO spokesman referred to a statement
made by Jamie Shea, then its spokesman, in May 1999, in which he regretted
the loss of life and damage to the embassy.

Shea added: "I would like to remind the people of Yugoslavia that we
carefully select targets that are directly related to President Milosevic's
political and leadership apparatus."

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nypost.com , nypostonline.com , and newyorkpost.com are trademarks of NYP
Holdings, Inc. 



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