NATO's War Against Yugoslavia: The Ghost That Still Haunts Europe

by Rick Rozoff <https://original.antiwar.com/author/rick_rozoff/>  Posted on
May 20, 2021
<https://original.antiwar.com/rick_rozoff/2021/05/19/natos-war-against-yugos
lavia-the-ghost-that-still-haunts-europe/>  

Twenty-two years ago the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia was subjected to the
55th straight day of bombardment from the then 19-member North Atlantic
Treaty Organization, with 23 days more to go. Many families in Belgrade,
Novi Sad and Niš daily fled to bomb shelters during the aerial onslaught.
The permanent trauma inflicted on millions of civilians, especially
children, is perhaps impossible to calculate. And it has been denied or
ignored by Europe and the world. As forgotten as the cluster bomb fragments
and depleted uranium left behind by NATO's "humanitarian intervention."

The air war was justified by U.S. President Bill Clinton, British Prime
Minister Tony Blair and NATO Secretary General Javier Solana as a noble
crusade to stop, to employ an expression not uncommon at the time, the
"worst genocide since Hitler" in the Serbian province of Kosovo. The
operation, Operation Allied Force for NATO, Operation Noble Anvil for the
US, began with a barrage of Tomahawk cruise missiles fired from ships and
submarines in the Adriatic Sea. In all over 1,000 NATO military aircraft
flew 30,000 combat sorties over a nation of slightly more than 10 million
people, two million of those in Kosovo; a military bloc whose combined
population at the time was some 850 million and which included three of the
world's nuclear powers.

During the war, arguably the most lopsided since the US's invasion of
Grenada in 1983, American and other Western officials maintained a steady
drumbeat of increasingly hyperbolic, and unprecedentedly unconscionable,
claims of ethnic Albanians in Kosovo killed by Yugoslav forces. On May 16
Defense Secretary William Cohen appeared on
<https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/inatl/longterm/balkans/stories/cohen0
51699.htm> Face the Nation and said: "We've now seen about 100,000
military-aged men missing..They may have been murdered." Almost immediately
afterward another American official raised that number to 200,000.

The scare tactics worked as NATO's top military commander, General Wesley
Clark, was able to continue daily bombing missions over the small nation
months after all targets of military value had been hit, and hit repeatedly.
A passenger train, a religious procession, a refugee column, a vacuum
cleaner factory, marketplaces, apartment courtyards, the Swiss embassy in
Belgrade and the Chinese embassy as well, with three journalists killed and
27 other Chinese injured. Cluster bombs, graphite bombs and depleted uranium
ordnance were used widely. No one, not a single individual, has been held
accountable for those war crimes. Nor for what should be a war crime and one
of the most grave at that: intentionally creating and exaggerating atrocity
stories to agitate for and escalate a war. Few Western politicians and
journalists would have escaped that charge over their roles in 1999.

When the Yugoslav government of President Slobodan Milosevic was compelled
to accede to NATO diktat on June 10, over 200,000 ethnic Serbs, Roma and
other minorities left Kosovo with Yugoslav troops, and NATO and its
so-called Kosovo Liberation Army cutthroats - for whom and with whom it
waged the war - marched into Kosovo. After the latter arrived even more,
perhaps a hundred thousand or more, Serbs, Roma, Turks, Jews, Egyptians,
Ashkali and members of other ethnic minority communities, along with no few
Albanians, fled the province. Numerous Serbs, Roma and Albanian
"collaborators" were murdered. (During the air war Britain's Daily Telegraph
reported 100,000 ethnic Albanians fled Kosovo to other parts of Serbia.)

The permanent displacement of hundreds of thousands of non-ethnic Albanians
from Kosovo and the expulsion of over a quarter of a million Serbs from
Croatia in the early 1990s are the two largest cases of irreversible ethnic
cleansing in Europe since World War II. Decades later no one has been held
accountable for those crimes either.

Most all of the above has been forgotten if it was ever known. That's how it
was planned. While NATO was celebrating its fiftieth-anniversary jubilee in
Washington, D.C. and inducting the first new members since Spain in 1986,
and former members of the Warsaw Pact at that - the Czech Republic, Hungary
and Poland - a high-profile, low-risk war was just the thing to launch new
global NATO on the world.

The victim, Yugoslavia, had been mortally wounded; four years later it no
longer existed, even on the map. The corpse was expected to rest silently.

But its ghost refuses to disappear. On May 14 Serbian President Aleksandar
Vucic, responding to a comment by his Slovenian counterpart, Borut Pahor, to
the effect that there should be no redrawing of borders in Europe, said:
<http://www.tanjug.rs/full-view_en.aspx?izb=653823> 

"We have a differing view on Kosovo's independence. When I hear that, as
Pahor says, there are no border changes without conflict, I agree, and that
should be clear to all who have been generating conflicts and wanted to
change Serbia's borders." That is a reference to the West - the US, European
Union and NATO - successfully wrenching Kosovo from Serbia in 2008, in
violation of the 1999 Kumanovo Agreement. Vucic backed up his contention
that national borders should not be arbitrarily or unilaterally changed by
stating that only borders recognized by the United Nations are legitimate.
However, he said that a contrary practice had been at work since 1999, the
result of "the brutal hypocrisy of Western powers that have no principles,
or have principles as needed."

President Vucic was in Prague, the Czech Republic on May 18 and met there
with President Miloš Zeman. Zeman was prime minister of the Czech Republic
in 1999 when his country joined NATO and the war against Yugoslavia was
launched.

The Czech leader's spokesman, Jiri Ovcacec, confirmed that
<https://tass.com/world/1291087> "President Miloš Zeman presented public
apologies to President Aleksandar Vucic for the [NATO] bombardments of
Yugoslavia in 1999," and that he "personally asked the Serbian people for
forgiveness."

During the war Prague refused NATO's warplanes the right to land in Czech
territory. Today Zeman himself told the press after his meeting with
Serbia's president:

"We were hopelessly looking for at least one more [NATO] country that would
join us and come out against [the bombardments of Yugoslavia]. We remained
all alone." Displaying that rarest of virtues for a politician, penitence,
he also said his government should have exercised more resolve in demanding
the end of the bombing once it had commenced.

When the Czech Republic joined NATO in 1999 it was accompanied by Hungary
and Poland, fellow members of the Visegrad Four group in Central Europe. The
fourth member, Slovakia, was not invited because the party of three-time
prime minister Vladimír Meciar was not to the liking of the US, NATO and the
EU. The following year Meciar dropped out of politics, with his Movement for
a Democratic Slovakia party colleague Augustín Marián Húska disclosing:
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vladim%C3%ADr_Me%C4%8Diar> "The NATO war
against Yugoslavia in 1999 was also a signal to us, to not pursue any vision
of political independence anymore. We have seen what will happen to forces
that want to be independent."

On May 7 the governments of Serbia and China commemorated the NATO bombing
of China's embassy in Serbia in 1999. Serbian Minister of Labor, Employment,
Veteran and Social Affairs Dr. Darija Kisic Tepavcevic, head of the
Association of Journalists of Serbia Vladimir Radomirovic, Chinese
ambassador to Serbia Chen Bo and others laid wreaths in honor of three
Chinese journalists killed in the attack.

The Chinese ambassador thanked the Serbian people for keeping alive the
memory of the victims who, she said,
<https://antibellum679354512.wordpress.com/2021/05/08/serbia-commemorates-na
to-bombing-of-chinese-embassy-in-1999/> "paid the price of truth, justice,
and righteousness with their lives.

"We will never forget the crime conducted by the aggressor, who most
brutally violated the human rights, in the name of the so-called protection
of human rights." 

If most of the rest of the world has forgotten NATO's first war and its
bloody emergence on the world stage, China and Serbia have not.

On March 26, to mark the beginning of NATO's air war against Yugoslavia and
Serbia's Remembrance Day for the Victims of the NATO Aggression, Hua
Chunying, spokesperson for the Chinese Foreign Ministry, stated:
<https://antibellum679354512.wordpress.com/2021/03/26/us-led-nato-still-owes
-blood-debt-to-chinese-people-foreign-ministry/> 

"China would like to remind NATO that they still owe a debt of blood to the
Chinese people..The dead have passed away, but the living need more
vigilance and reflection."

It's worth quoting him further as a reminder that the crime of 1999 has
indeed haunted not only Europe but the world ever since it was perpetrated;
that what is seemingly past is really both prologue and precedent.

"Whether in Yugoslavia, Iraq, Libya or Syria, we should never forget the
lives of ordinary people lost to repeated bombardment, the crumbling walls
under the shells, the glorious historical sites consumed by the flames. 

"The US and some Western countries have kept their mouths open about human
rights and kept their mouths shut about their responsibilities..When they
blatantly launched a war against a sovereign country without the Security
Council's authorization, causing hundreds of thousands of deaths and the
dispersal of millions of people, did they ever care about the human rights
of the people in those countries? Is this what they mean by international
rules? Shouldn't they be held accountable for their war actions?"

Those questions, which had they been asked twenty-two years ago might have
spared millions of lives in the nations the Chinese diplomat enumerated and
others, need to be asked now and with a passion and insistence hitherto
absent.

Rick Rozoff is a contributing editor at Antiwar.com. He has been involved in
anti-war and anti-interventionist work in various capacities for forty
years. He lives in Chicago, Illinois. He is the manager of Stop NATO
<http://rickrozoff.wordpress.com/> . This originally appeared at Anti-Bellum
<https://antibellum679354512.wordpress.com/> .

 

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