Following the usual pattern, once the notably-short US public attention 
span has elapsed, after popular support for the air-war is no longer 
needed, history gets rewritten:

Questions Surface Over NATO's Revised Take on the War in Kosovo

Balkans: Official accounts have been rewritten or contradicted by insiders 
in the past year.

By PAUL RICHTER, Times Staff Writer

L.A. TIMES (June 10, 2000)

WASHINGTON--To hear some of the generals talk today, the Kosovo Liberation 
Army and NATO could scarcely have worked more closely during the alliance's 
78-day air war in Kosovo.

KLA guerrillas constantly were on the phone to NATO "to tell us there were 
15 bad guys down the road," U.S. Air Force Lt. Gen. Michael C. Short, North 
Atlantic Treaty Organization air operations boss, told a conference in 
Virginia last month. And NATO itself "instigated" the KLA's biggest 
offensive of the war in May 1999, German Gen. Klaus Naumann, former head of 
the NATO military committee, told an interviewer.

This collaboration might not be noteworthy--except that NATO leaders so 
emphatically denied it during the war. And the revisionist accounts are but 
one example of the way the official accounts have been rewritten or 
contradicted by insiders since the war.

While the air war is history, the issue is not just academic: The alliance 
can't afford widespread doubts about its conduct of the war as it struggles 
to continue a peacekeeping effort that is likely to drag on for years in 
the province.

During the conflict, officials of NATO countries said that as many as 
700,000 of Kosovo's 1.9 million people had been internally displaced. Now, 
NATO officially puts the figure at 500,000, and sources within the alliance 
acknowledge that it could be much smaller--perhaps fewer than 100,000.

Likewise, during the war, U.S. officials said "tens of thousands" of 
Albanian men might have been slaughtered by the Serbs. Now, the official 
estimate is a maximum of 10,000 killed. A number of analysts believe the 
figure is 6,000 or fewer.

There also has been a reduction in official estimates of how much Serb 
military equipment was destroyed.

On May 23, 1999, even before NATO had begun the final crescendo of bombing 
that did most of the damage, President Clinton claimed alliance warplanes 
had damaged or destroyed one-third of the 1,100 Serb armored vehicles 
believed to be in Kosovo. When the war ended two weeks later, Defense 
Secretary William S. Cohen declared that NATO warplanes had "severely 
crippled" the Serbs' Third Army, which was deployed to the
province.

But official estimates of the damage began falling soon thereafter.

Three months after the air campaign ended, officials said the number of 
destroyed tanks was 93, rather than the 120 that had been previously 
estimated. Last month, the Air Force acknowledged that, in a postwar site 
visit, they had been able to find physical evidence of damage to only 26.

Air Force officials insisted that evidence from other sources--such as 
witness accounts and satellite pictures--indicated that 93 were struck. But 
one military officer who had reviewed the evidence said that assertion was 
"a real stretch."

Gen. Michael Jackson, the British commander in Kosovo, acknowledged to a 
parliamentary committee last month: "It's a matter of record that the 
actual damage in Kosovo was rather less than the estimated damage."

The former commanders have let slip other details that contradict the 
presentation of information during the war.

Short, who retires this month, said that after the embarrassing bombing of 
the Chinese Embassy in Belgrade, NATO ruled out strikes in the center of 
the Yugoslav and Serbian capital.

Short said that although "there were political and military targets I'd 
have gone after," NATO leaders "had a circle drawn around downtown 
Belgrade, within which we couldn't hit anymore." This prohibition 
effectively gave the Serbian leadership an area within which it could 
safely operate, he told PBS' "Frontline" program.

Short declined a request for an interview for this report.

With all of these examples, allied officials have insisted that they never 
intended to deceive, and revised their estimates as soon as they learned of 
inaccuracies.

Jamie Shea, NATO's chief spokesman during the war, asserted last month that 
NATO set "a new standard for transparency" during the war. Its briefings 
provided "more complete and accurate information" than were made available 
in any previous conflict.

NATO contends that, while its damage estimate was cut back, the downward 
adjustment was far smaller than in previous wars.

For more, see: http://www.latimes.com/news/nation/20000610/t000055119.html

Jim Devine [EMAIL PROTECTED] & http://bellarmine.lmu.edu/~JDevine/AS
"Is it peace or is it Prozac?" -- Cheryl Wheeler. 

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