-------------------------
Via Workers World News Service
Reprinted from the July 19, 2001
issue of Workers World newspaper
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NEW YORK: IAC MEETING OPPOSES U.S.-NATO TRIBUNAL

By Heather Cottin
New York

Outraged by the new Yugoslav regime's extradition of 
Slobodan Milosevic that violated both the Yugoslav 
constitution and its sovereignty, an overflow crowd packed 
the New York offices of the International Action Center on 
the evening of July 5.

Attendees of the IAC event, which included anti-imperialists 
from the Korean Truth Commission, Al-Awda Palestinian Right 
of Return Coalition, Vieques Support Campaign and members of 
the IAC Committee to Stop U.S. War in Colombia, joined 
meeting co-chair Pat Chin in shouting "Jivila Jugoslavia!--
Yugoslavia lives!" and demanding freedom for Milosevic.

They also joined the call for "U.S.-NATO out of the 
Balkans," as part of the growing mobilization to confront 
Pres. Bush September 29 in Washington during anti-
globalization protests.

Former U.S. Attorney General Ramsey Clark, founder of the 
International Action Center, urged the audience and the anti-
war movement to take up the cause of Yugoslav sovereignty 
once again.

Recently returned from Belgrade, where he spoke to tens of 
thousands of demonstrators protesting the predawn kidnapping 
of former President Milosevic to the so-called International 
War Crimes Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) in The 
Hague, Clark denounced U.S. aggression, which he held 
responsible for the break-up of Yugoslavia.

Dr. Milan Bulajic, international law expert and former legal 
counsel to the Yugoslav mission to the United States 
explained the absolute illegality of the extradition of 
Milosevic.

Both Clark and Bulajic pointed out that the UN Charter 
strictly prohibited the creation of such a tribunal, which 
effectively has the power to single out and punish an 
individual nation.

Admiral Elmar Schmaehling and Wolfgang Richter, two German 
founders of the European Peace Forum and participants in the 
recent Korean Truth Commission held here June 23 appeared. 
The two helped organize the European popular tribunal that 
on June 3, 2000 in Berlin found NATO guilty of war crimes 
against Yugoslavia.

Schmaehling pointed to the importance to the peace movement 
of fighting on the Milosevic case to prevent NATO from shif 
ting the blame for the war from itself to the Yugoslav 
leader. His group is planning an international symposium at 
The Hague for those who oppose NATO's war against Yugoslavia 
and both NATO and European Union military expansion.

IAC PLANS BOOK TO COUNTER BIG LIE

Co-director Sara Flounders said that the government and 
corporate media has "billions of dollars to spread their 
lies but Milosevic, the Yugoslavs and the people who know 
the truth only have the anti-war and anti-NATO fighters 
worldwide to counter these lies."

Flounders noted the importance of "NATO and the Balkans," an 
IAC book that has been very useful in explaining the 
significance of Yugoslavia and NATO expansion.

IAC activist John Catalinotto held up a computer disk 
containing chapters for a new IAC book to explain U.S.-NATO 
war crimes against Yugoslavia both during the 1999 war and 
afterward, plus the illegal intervention in that country's 
internal affairs.

Since the Bush Administration has called for the expansion 
of NATO as one of its two foreign policy priorities, a new 
book that examines the legal, economic, and military 
implications of U.S. strategy in Eastern Europe is necessary 
at this time, Flounders said.

Many responded to the IAC call for support for the 
publication of this book, and some volunteered to translate 
it into Russian, Bulgarian, and Greek.

It is clear that this attempt to put the former Yugoslav 
leader on trial in The Hague is the latest in the long 
campaign of U.S. and West European imperialism aimed at 
completing the anti-socialist counter-revolution in Eastern 
Europe that began in 1989.

Besides threatening a new war and continued sanctions, the 
U.S. and Western Europe poured over $100 million into 
Yugoslavia in the summer of 2000 to arrange for Milosevic's 
election loss and the subsequent Oct. 5, 2000, coup. Then 
they threatened to withhold $1.3 billion in loans from a 
June 29 "Donor's Conference" to the current Yugoslav leaders 
to force the extradition.

After the IAC meeting ended, the organizers showed a few 
rough cuts of a videotape of large protest rallies in 
Belgrade filmed and now being edited by West coast IAC 
organizer Gloria La Riva. Two years ago the videographer 
produced the widely used "NATO Targets," which she filmed 
while Yugoslavia was under NATO bombs.

- END -

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