The War on Yugoslavia: The Real Face of American “Diplomacy”

By Andrew Korybko <http://www.globalresearch.ca/author/andrew-korybko> 

Global Research, March 26, 2015

Sputnik <http://sputniknews.com/columnists/20150324/1019950056.html>  24 March 
2015

Region: Russia and FSU <http://www.globalresearch.ca/region/russia-and-fsu> , 
USA <http://www.globalresearch.ca/region/usa> 

Theme: Culture, Society  
<http://www.globalresearch.ca/theme/culture-society-history> & History, US NATO 
War Agenda <http://www.globalresearch.ca/theme/us-nato-war-agenda> 

 174 

 23  3 

 

 274 

 

The 16th anniversary of NATO’s War on Yugoslavia gives cause to reflect on what 
American ‘diplomacy’ is really all about.

The US has long trumpeted itself as the only paragon of virtue and ‘defender of 
freedom’ in the world, going into overdrive with this message in the years 
following the Cold War. Millions of people were duped during this time, but 
their illusions were quickly dispelled after the 1999 War on Yugoslavia.

This tragedy exposed the true face of American ‘diplomacy’ as a duplicitous 
front for pursuing predetermined geopolitical ends. The war wasn’t so much 
about a ‘humanitarian intervention’ (the reality surrounding which was grossly 
exaggerated by the Western media) as it was the establishment of a pro-Western 
proxy state in the heart of the Southern Balkans.

The War on Yugoslavia also marked a turning point where the US began ramping up 
its aggression all across Eurasia and perfecting the first actual version of 
Hybrid Warfare.

Uncle Sam’s Sins

The US did a lot of horrible things during its War on Yugoslavia, but here’s 
three of the most audacious:

Supporting Terrorism:

The so-called ‘Kosovo Liberation Army’ (KLA), the armed wing of Albanian 
nationalists fighting in the Serbian province of Kosovo, was deemed a terrorist 
organization by the Yugoslav authorities.UNSC Resolution 1160, which was 
supported by the US, even condemned the group for its terrorist activity and 
urged it to immediately halt such actions. Be that as it may, the KLA served an 
decisive role in destabilizing Serbia, and was thus not only supported by the 
US throughout the conflict, but its leader Hashim Thaci was even recognized by 
Washington as the province’s ‘Prime Minister’ afterwards.

Lying to the World:

The US tried to convince the world that the Albanians in Kosovo were 
experiencing genocide at the hands of the Serbs, but this was nowhere near the 
reality on the ground. Although some Albanians were certainly killed during 
their violent uprising against the federal government, Serbs were too, and 
neither demographic experienced the ‘tens of thousands’ of deaths that the 
State Department evoked as the US’ excuse for bombing Yugoslavia.

Tens of thousands of more people have died during Mexico’s drug war in recent 
years, for example, but America’s southern neighbor has yet to experience a 
‘humanitarian intervention’.

Bombing Civilian Infrastructure:

The US-led NATO bombing campaign killed hundreds of civilians and destroyed 
apartment buildings, farms, schools, hospitals, churches, and bridges. The 
Pentagon’s explanation for such horrors (when it chose to address them) was 
that its ‘precision-targeted munitions’ malfunctioned, but the surviving 
victims refused to believe this.

BONUS: Bombing China And Getting Away With It:

The US hit the Chinese Embassy in Belgrade (officially recognized as the 
sovereign territory of the country, as is any state’s embassy abroad) on 7 May, 
1999, killing 3 people and injuring about 20 others. One need only imagine the 
militant response from the Pentagon if the shoe was on the other foot.

The Foreign Policy Toolkit

The War on Yugoslavia represented the first testing ground for the application 
of the US’ integrated regime change strategy, however sloppily applied. It 
combined the following characteristics that would later be developed and 
perfected in forthcoming conflicts:

Unconventional War:

In order to stir up chaos and create a pretext for an ultimatum and eventual 
military intervention, the US supported the KLA during its terrorist war in the 
Serbian Province of Kosovo.

Ultimatum:

The US gave President Milosevic the ultimatum to pull all Yugoslavian police 
and army forces out of Kosovo Province or face the pulverizing consequences.

Conventional Intervention:

The destabilization came to a dramatic climax when NATO launched its 
‘humanitarian intervention’ against Yugoslavia, which ultimately led to its 
fragmentation and destruction.

Color Revolution:

American intelligence services and Gene Sharp’s teachings organized and 
directed the Bulldozer Revolution of October 2000, which has since been 
acknowledged as the first Color Revolution.

Nowadays, the methods above have been perfected and patterned in the following 
order:

1. Ultimatum:

The US gives an explicit/public or implicit/behind-the-scenes ultimatum to a 
targeted country or leader. If they refuse and a ‘palace coup’ can’t be pulled 
off, then the next step is initiated.

2. Color Revolution:

This ‘street coup’ attempt seeks to oust the targeted country’s leadership 
through the carefully constructed façade of ‘people’s power’, whereby the 
international media is fed the misleading impression that the majority of a 
country’s citizens are revolting against their government. Other than the 
ultimatum or conventional coup, it’s the most cost-effective tool for regime 
change.

3. Unconventional War:

The third step can be evoked in the midst of the second one before turning into 
its own full-fledged destabilization when the Color Revolution fails. It 
capitalizes off of some of the social infrastructure built during the street 
coup attempt, and then arms the participants and encourages them to commit to 
terrorism and insurgency in overthrowing their government. Foreign mercenaries 
can also be involved.

4. Conventional Intervention:

While the previous two steps typically involve a deep level of covert 
commitment, the final step purposely brings the external destabilizer’s actions 
into the open by initiating an open war. This is the most expensive form of 
regime change, but is always clothed in grand ‘humanitarian’ or ‘democratic’ 
rhetoric to hide its true intent.

Where Are They Now?

Let’s take a look at the most notable example of each stage of the US’ regime 
change template and see how these countries have since coped with the Hybrid 
War waged against them:

Steps 1-2: Ukraine

The implicit ultimatum against President Yanukovych was that he had to sign the 
EU Association Agreement, and when he delayed doing so at the last minute, a 
Color Revolution was unleashed against him. In some ways, the urban terrorism 
of EuroMaidan even fulfills the requirements for Step 3.

Nowadays, the country lies in ruin and bankruptcy, and the oligarchs 
(Poroshenko and Kolomoiskyi) are poised to fight a fratricidal war amongst 
themselves at the expense of more Ukrainian lives.

Steps 1-3: Syria

President Assad refused to allow a gas pipeline from pro-American Qatar to 
transit Syrian territory en route to the Mediterranean, preferring instead to 
opt for the Friendship Pipeline with Iraq and Iran. As a punishment, Syria was 
thus dragged into the theater-wide ‘Arab Spring’ Color Revolutions spearheaded 
by the US, but when the people resolutely stood by their democratically elected 
leadership and secular authorities and refused to allow the street coup to 
succeed, an Unconventional War was unleashed on the country.

As it stands, the most notorious terrorists from every corner of the world have 
infested the country, slaughtering tens of thousands of innocent people and 
turning entire cities to rubble in their four-year-long rampage.

Steps 1-4: Libya

Muammar Gaddafi refused to fully integrate his country into the EU-led ‘Union 
For the Mediterranean’, instead choosing to remain an observer member. Despite 
having surrendered Libya’s weapons of mass destruction during an earlier 
ultimatum in 2007, Gaddafi’s reluctance to move forward with Euro-Mediterranean 
integration made him a marked man.

The US-organized ‘Arab Spring’ Color Revolutions subsequently targeted him in 
2011, and events in the country quickly spiraled into Unconventional Warfare as 
terrorists surged into the main cities and started killing civilians and 
government representatives.

NATO decided to commence a bombing campaign against the country shortly 
thereafter under a false ‘humanitarian intervention’ pretext, which 
consequently destroyed the state’s social and physical infrastructure and 
turned it into the fearsome terrorist battleground that it is today.

Remember, these above-cited tragedies would not have been possible had it not 
been for the US’ War on Yugoslavia and the ‘perfection’ of the regime change 
techniques that were first applied there. It is for this reason that the memory 
of 24 March should serve as a somber reminder each year of the lethality of 
American ‘diplomacy’ and the uncountable costs that can be incurred from 
resisting Washington’s will.

http://www.globalresearch.ca/the-war-on-yugoslavia-the-real-face-of-american-diplomacy/5438961

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"SERBIAN NEWS NETWORK" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/senet.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to