-Caveat Lector-

from:
http://www.aci.net/kalliste/
<A HREF="http://www.aci.net/kalliste/">The Home Page of J. Orlin Grabbe</A>
-----
Der Fuhrer Invades Yugoslavia

Yugoslavia May Be Cut Off from the Internet

NATO must be planning to stage a new "Serbian atrocity"

Parts of Yugoslavia could lose Internet access because an American
satellite company might be ordered to stop transmitting into the country
under a U.S. trade embargo.
Loral Space and Communications Ltd. of New York said Thursday it could
be forced to cut transmissions into Yugoslavia from one of its
satellites, which serves at least two of the country's major Internet
providers.

Earlier this month, President Clinton issued an executive order banning
U.S. companies from selling or supplying to Yugoslavia "any goods,
software, technology or services."

"We're still not clear on this whole thing," Loral Space spokeswoman
Jeannette Colnan said, adding that the company was seeking advice from
the Treasury Department. "It depends on the interpretation of the
executive order."

The government that issued the order wasn't any clearer Thursday.

David Leavy, spokesman for the National Security Council, said that
"generally informational material is exempt" but that electronic
commerce would likely fall under the ban. "We'll need to inquire further
about the appropriate applications of the law," he said.

Word of the threat to shut down Internet access to parts of Yugoslavia
spread quickly across the worldwide computer network, where it was
mostly condemned in e-mail messages and online discussion groups.

"To put it bluntly, we somehow got used to air-raid sirens, bombings and
threats of invasion, but we don't know how we're going to survive
without the Internet," said Alex Krstanovic, co-founder of Beonet, one
of the affected Internet providers in Yugoslavia. "If NATO or the U.S.
wants to cut us out completely in order to be able to do whatever they
want here, this is probably the best way."

But some people argued that Internet access should be cut off.

"Continuing to provide these services would be kind of like giving aid
to the enemy," one person wrote.

U.S. civil liberties groups urged the Clinton administration to allow
citizens in Yugoslavia to continue using the Web.

"The Internet remains at this point one of the major sources inside
Yugoslavia for objective news reporting about the war," said Jim Dempsey
of the Washington-based Center for Democracy and Technology. "It also
remains one of the main sources for any remaining democratic voices
within Yugoslavia to communicate with the outside world."

Computer traffic in Yugoslavia uses both satellite and traditional
land-based telephone lines, but the loss of the Loral satellite could
dramatically reduce the Internet bandwidth available to citizens there,
causing slower connections or even blackouts.

It wasn't immediately clear whether the White House intended its May 1
executive order to include U.S. satellites, but U.S.-run telephone lines
were still operating in Yugoslavia.

Web sites in Yugoslavia continued to be accessible from the West late
Thursday evening, and there were no substantiated reports of anyone
unable to use the Internet to retrieve information from outside the
country.

A spokeswoman at the organization that registers Web addresses ending
with the country's "yu" suffix said she was familiar with the reports
but that there had been no problems yet.

Some U.S. experts on information warfare said it was improbable that the
Clinton administration intended that its executive order also would
apply to Internet communications.

"Information war is being waged today through public information — we're
over there broadcasting, jamming radios," said Alan Campen, a retired
Air Force colonel and author of several books on cyber-warfare. "But I
would be very surprised if they" shut down Internet satellite
transmissions.

Steve Aftergood of the Federation of American Scientists in Washington
agreed.

"I would be extremely surprised if the U.S. government or NATO forces
deliberately sought to cut that channel of information off," he said.
"It's a pretty lame form of information warfare because it cuts off the
flow of information, and I don't see whose interests that serves."

Fox News, May 14, 1999


Russian Follies

Communists Set to Impeach Yeltsin

Who, however, is still dead

MOSCOW - Still smarting over the latest political blow from President
Boris Yeltsin, the lower house of Russia's Parliament struck back
Thursday, opening a formal debate on impeaching Mr. Yeltsin for high
crimes in the turbulent years after the December 1991 collapse of the
Soviet system.
The session was not lively, but the mere fact that the impeachment issue
had arrived on the floor of the State Duma, which Mr. Yeltsin had long
sought to avert, added a sense of gravity and political portent to the
atmosphere.

It came one day after President Yeltsin dismissed Prime Minister Yevgeni
Primakov, who had broad support in the Duma.

The campaign to impeach Mr. Yeltsin has been driven for months by
hard-line Communists who are his most die-hard opponents.

What they began last summer as a long-shot has now become a genuine
irritant to Mr. Yeltsin and is expected to result in passage of one
count of impeachment, of the five being examined.

That count, charging that Mr. Yeltsin ''unleashed'' the war against the
breakaway autonomous republic of Chechnya in 1994, is expected to win
more than the 300 votes necessary in the 450-member chamber.

Grigori Yavlinsky, leader of the centrist Yabloko bloc, confirmed again
Thursday that his faction would vote for this count, saying it was
important to hold officials accountable for their actions.

The charge is also backed by the Communists and their allies, who
dominate the house. The vote is scheduled for Saturday.

The approval of an impeachment count is only the beginning, however, of
a longer process that wends through Russia's highest courts and the
Federation Council, the upper chamber of Parliament.

If the Duma votes for at least one count, it gains a political shield in
the fight with Mr. Yeltsin, under the constitution, the Parliament
cannot be dissolved from the time it votes impeachment until the final
decision by the Federation Council, in a maximum of three months' time.

Thus, giving priority to the impeachment vote, leaders of the lower
house set aside the question of how they would vote on the nomination of
Interior Minister Sergei Stepashin, the law-enforcement careerist whom
Mr. Yeltsin has proposed to succeed Mr. Primakov.

Gennadi Seleznov, the Duma speaker and Communist, said the chamber would
not take up Mr. Stepashin until next week, after the impeachment vote.

The Duma must consider Mr. Stepashin before next Wednesday.

If they reject Mr. Yeltsin's nominee three times, Mr. Yeltsin must
dissolve the chamber and move to early elections under the constitution.


But at the same time, the constitution says the Duma cannot be dissolved
while the impeachment charge is being considered by the courts and upper
house.

It is not certain what would happen if both provisions came into force
simultaneously.

The opening day of the impeachment debate was a series of long, dry
speeches laced with legal arguments. The five counts accuse Mr. Yeltsin
of illegally conspiring to destroy the Soviet Union in 1991,
overthrowing the constitutional order and violently dispersing the
elected Parliament in 1993, launching a two-year civil war in Chechnya
that cost tens of thousands of lives, undermining Russia's national
defense by ruining its armed forces, and committing genocide against the
Russian people by pushing market reforms that led to failing birthrates,
plunging life expectancy and widespread poverty.

The Chechnya war charge carries saliency among politicians because of
the enormous costs and humiliation of the failed battle to suppress the
separatists.

Vadim Filimonov, the lawmaker who headed the impeachment commission and
who presented the charges, claimed that Mr. Yeltsin's decrees in setting
the war in motion were beyond his authority and ''led to violence which
resulted in the death of tens of thousands of people, extensive damage
and the violation of the rights and freedoms of hundreds of thousands of
Russian citizens.'' Mr. Yeltsin's representative to Parliament,
Alexander Kotenkov, delivered a long rebuttal.

International Herald Tribune, May 14, 1999
-----
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
Omnia Bona Bonis,
All My Relations.
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End
Kris

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