The following article shows the results of the policy of Croatian state towards WWII genocide survivors. Operation Storm was intended to kill or expell Serbs who survived WWII genocide in Croatia.
In July 1941, Mile Budak,Minister of Education of Croatia publicly proclaimed the policy of Croatian state: "The movement of the Ustashi is based on religion. For minorities-Serbs, Jews and Gypsies, we have three million bullets. We shall kill one part of the Serbs. We shall transport another, and the rest of them will be forced to embrace the Roman Catholic religion. Thus, our new Croatia will get rid of all Serbs in our midst in order to become one hundred percent Catholic within ten years." Today, Serbs comrprise approx. 4% of Croatian population. Genocide took slightly longer than planned, 60 years, not 10 due to the fact that Hitler was defeated in 1945. With the help of Clinton Administration and media, the goal of Nazi genocide policy in Croatia is successfuly accomplished. ---------------------------------------- CBC http://www.cbc.ca/stories/2003/07/21/croatia_030721 Croatian atrocities being forgotten: Cdn. officers Last Updated Mon, 21 Jul 2003 9:32:11 OTTAWA - Canadian officers say they are frustrated by inaction over a 1995 ethnic cleansing operation by Croatians against Serbs - one in which the Croats may have had western help. They documented numerous atrocities during Operation Storm, which was a four- day campaign by the Croats to recover land held in central and southern Croatia for four years by Serbian militias. However, not one person has been arrested and brought before the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia. More than 200,000 Serbs were expelled, and thousands were killed. "Just amazing. You can see the holes in the back of the head," said Capt. Gerry Carron, showing pictures he took to document the killings. "We found people in wells," he said. "There was an old lady we found head-first in a well. Why did they do that?" Some top military officers said the expertise required to plan and execute Operation Storm meant it couldn't have been done by the Croats alone. Croatia's American consultant Fingers have been pointed at Military Professional Resources Inc. (MPRI), a U. S. consulting company based in Alexandria, Virginia. The company's Web site points to an article in which the Croatian government praised the job MPRI has done for it - although MPRI has denied involvement in Operation Storm. "I don't think it was the Croats themselves that did that," said Maj.-Gen. Alain Fourand, who commanded UN forces in the area of Operation Storm, adding he suspected it was MPRI. Maj.-Gen. Andrew Leslie, who will be going to Afghanistan to command Canadian troops, also said he doubts the Croats themselves pulled off Operation Storm. "That was done by people who really knew what they were doing," he said, adding he didn't think the Croats had the expertise. Croatia was getting assistance in other ways. Argentina supplied artillery used in Operation Storm - despite a UN ban and even though their own soldiers were working there as peacekeepers. Looking back, Carron said peacekeepers may have made things worse by disarming the Serbs while the Croats re-armed. Canadian officers say the involvement of the West could explain the foot- dragging on prosecution, although the tribunal said the case is largely circumstantial. The Canadians also believe the Croatian commander of Operation Storm is being protected by supporters in Croatia's government, and that not enough diplomatic pressure is being exerted. Written by CBC News Online staff