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The main CIA man in Serbia was Iceman who betrayed Milosevic


9-12 minutes

  _____  

"Los Angeles Times" described how the CIA recruited the head of the Serbian
State Security. 

Source: B92, Blic Friday, April 16, 2021 | 10:19 



EPA-EFE Michael Kooren / REUTERS POOL

Allegedly, the article writes about Jovica Stanisic who revealed the secrets
of the Milosevic regime and the location of mass graves in Bosnia to his
colleagues from the Central Intelligence Agency, but also spread gossips
about Milosevic and called him "terrible, insincere and corrupt", Blic
reported.

As a favor, the Central Intelligence Agency, as "Blic" further reports, took
him on a study trip to the CIA headquarters in 1996, where he received a
warmly welcome. American colleagues took him to a jazz session at the Blues
Alley Club in Georgetown and drove him to the east coast of Maryland to duck
hunting. 

John Deutsch, the head of the CIA in those days, even presented him a 1937
Parker shotgun, a highly valued collector's item. 

The Belgrade daily reminds that the cooperation between Stanisic and the CIA
was also confirmed by Wayne Jordash, who was a lawyer to Mr. Stanisic, who
stated in The Hague that Stanisic contacted the CIA in 1991 and that in 1993
he took the CIA operatives to the locations of mass graves in Bosnia. 

Once Stanisic appeared before The Hague tribunal on charges of taking part
in a joint criminal enterprise with Milosevic aimed at removing Bosnians and
Croats from parts of Bosnia and Croatia in order to establish an ethnic
Serbian state, the former Serbian Secret Service chief called on friends
from CIA. And they extended their hand to him, the text states. 

A secret document was submitted by the CIA to the Hague Tribunal, listing
all of the merits of Mr. Stanisic, as a kind of confirmation of his "good
role", with the condition that the document remains sealed. 

William Lofgren, a retired CIA agent in Belgrade who was in charge of
Stanisic explained that the CIA presented the file to show "that this
allegedly evil person actually did many good things." The CIA refused to
comment further on this document, and since the content of the document is
confidential, the Hague tribunal considered it in a closed session. 

Stanisic was described in the text published by "Los Angeles Times" as a key
CIA person in Serbia. 

"CIA agent William Lofgren required help. The CIA was blind after Yugoslavia
disintegrated in the civil war. At the time, the war began in Bosnia.
Milosevic was seen as a threat to European security, and the CIA was
desperate to get any viable information. And during a midnight walk, two
spies carved an unbreakable bond remaining a secret to this day: for eight
years, Stanisic was the main CIA man in Belgrade," the Los Angeles Times
wrote. 

While he was in custody in the Hague, while in custody, Stanisic stated in a
document compiled that he managed to "institutionalize cooperation with the
US intelligence community despite the well-known poor relations between our
two countries." 

The "Los Angeles Times" wrote that Stanisic commanded a heap of more than
two thousand people at the peak. He wore dark suits and sunglasses, like the
Balkan James Bond. His nickname was Iceman. He joined Tito's Secret service
in 1965, but never showed any inclination towards any ideology, not even
towards nationalism. He had a rare talent for espionage. 

"Stanisic was no ordinary intelligence officer. He was an intellectual, not
a hardcore policeman. He was well educated and skilled, and he knew how to
organize the secret service," Dobrica Cosic described him, a writer and
former dissident, president of Serbia in 1992 and 1993. 

Because of those skills Milosevic made Stanisic his first informant, despite
the mistrust between the two. 

A CIA agent serving in the region at the time told the Los Angeles Times
that they assumed Stanisic was not naive, but that they had never seen
evidence linking him to war crimes. Instead, they viewed him as a key ally
in a situation where things could rapidly go south. 

>From the very beginning, Stanisic was determined to reinforce his
relationship with the CIA. During one meeting with Lofgren, he handed him a
pile of papers, including plans for shelters and other facilities built by
Serbian companies in Iraq for Saddam Hussein. But Stanisic also drew the
line. "He never took money from the CIA, he never worked with the Agency on
specific tasks, and he never took any step that could be interpreted as a
flagrant betrayal of Milosevic," the Los Angeles Times reported. 

In their letter sent to The Hague, the CIA described efforts Stanisic made
to ease some of the most explosive situations during the Bosnian war. In the
spring of 1993, as the CIA claims, Stanisic pressured Ratko Mladic to stop
shelling Sarajevo for at least a while. 

Two years later, Stanisic helped in releasing 388 NATO soldiers. In his
notes, Stanisic claims that he negotiated this release with the support of
key people from the CIA. That same year, Stanisic intervened when captured
French pilots were shot down. 

Stanisic went with Milosevic to Dayton for peace talks, and then returned to
Serbia to implement the most important parts of the peace agreement. It was
up to Stanisic to convince the President of the Republic of Srpska, Radovan
Karadzic, to resign from his position. 

Stanisic helped the CIA to build a network of posts in Bosnia to monitor
ceasefire on the ground. Doug Smith, head of the CIA station in Bosnia,
recalls a meeting in Bosnia with Stanisic and a group of Serb officials from
Bosnia, held in Belgrade. 

Stanisic was deepening ties with the CIA and that became a source of
conflict with Milosevic, who was worried that his first informant was
plotting. In 1998, Stanisic was fired. 

Today, Stanisic and Franko Simatovic Frenki, a former JSO commander, have
been indicted before the Hague tribunal for participating in a joint
criminal enterprise led by then-Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic for
attempting to remove Bosnians and Croats from parts of Bosnia and Croatia to
establish an ethnic clean Serbian state. 

After the first instance trial, the Hague Tribunal acquitted Stanisic and
Simatovic in 2013, but the Appeals Chamber accepted the Prosecution's appeal
in 2015 and ordered a retrial on the same indictment due to irregularities
in the procedure. For the first time in the history of that court, the
Appeals Panel decided to completely rerun a trial. 

A new trial began in the summer of 2017, while the verdict, according to
earlier announcements, could be expected in May this year. 

Stanisic and Simatovic were arrested by Serbian authorities in 2003.
Stanisic has been temporarily released due to illness and resides in
Belgrade since July 2017. Neither of them attended the closing arguments at
the trial held in the Hague.

 

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