October 30, 2010

Obama hope was all hype

Obama hope was all hype

The US president has caved into vested interests and preserved extraordinary rendition. Not so different to his predecessor, then

As the midterms approach, 15 million Americans are out of work and Obama's ratings hover at about 40% to 45%. There is no doubt Democrat majorities in house and Senate may disappear. Democrats in marginal seats keep the president at arm's length, aware that the mood of the electorate reflects the desperate straits in which the country finds itself.

Obama's electoral triumph of 2008 coincided with the most colossal economic crisis since the Great Depression (and far more global in scope); to add to his troubles, two wars were under way on difficult terrain in far away Islamic lands. The first few months of 2009 became the most abbreviated honeymoon period granted a new president in recent memory.

In times of crisis, the incumbent suffers. And the bigger the crisis the greater the punishment inflicted on those in power, unless they do something that makes a change. Obama has not done so. Instead, both at home and abroad, the continuities between Obama's administration and that of Bush-Cheney far outweigh any differences.

Whenever vested interests resisted, Obama caved. On the economy, despite the advice of Robert Reich and Joseph Stiglitz, the president defended the very orthodoxy that led to the Wall Street crash. And this at a time when inequality in the US was much higher than it had been 40 years ago.

The healthcare "reforms" also saw a total capitulation to the corporations: the insurance companies, the pharmaceuticals, the for-profit hospitals and the top of the range specialists will benefit. Even the loyal Los Angeles Times felt compelled to complain: "As a candidate for president, Barack Obama lambasted drug companies and the influence they wielded in Washington. He even ran a television ad targeting the industry's chief lobbyist, former Louisiana congressman, Billy Tauzin … [for] preventing Medicare from negotiating for lower drug prices … Tauzin has morphed into the president's partner. He has been invited to the White House half a dozen times in recent months."

Vested interests resisted. Obama caved. The healthcare "reform" was actually crafted by Liz Fowler, former executive for a private health insurer and an employee of Senator Max Baucus, who presides over the Senate finance committee and is, according to John R MacArthur, the publisher of Harper's Magazine, "a beneficiary of millions of dollars in contributions from insurance and health care companies".

To dissociate politicians from capitalists is slightly disingenuous, to put it mildly. US lawmakers are competitive and auction themselves to the highest bidder via the lobby system. As a result, the story of the healthcare reforms is replicated in numerous other spheres. The "new" education policies based on privatisation and charter schools that have been a disaster in parts of the country are to be continued as managers replace educationalists. Guantánamo remains open. Obama's legal guru now embedded in the state department, Harold Koh, publicly insists the drone attacks in Pakistan that kill more civilians than "terrorists" are perfectly legal. Elena Kagan, Obama's offering to the supreme court, told Congress that she agreed with John Yoo, a Bushman who served as an assistant attorney general, that a "terrorist" captured anywhere was subject to "battlefield law". Like his Republican predecessor, the new attorney general, Eric Holder, happily invoked "state secrets" to stop a trial, while Obama's CIA boss (a former Clinton employee), Leon Panetta, was in feisty mood after he got the job, boasting that he fully intended to preserve "extraordinary rendition", that is, sending prisoners to be tortured in Afghanistan, Egypt, Jordan or Pakistan.

The hope of 2008 soon morphed into hype. Admirers in the liberal media who had linked Obama vicariously to the civil rights movement sounded increasingly ridiculous; claiming the mantle of Martin Luther King for their man was an extravagance that had to be rapidly discarded. In one of his last big speeches, a year before he was assassinated, King had argued "that if our nation can spend $35bn a year to fight an unjust, evil war in Vietnam, and $20bn to put a man on the moon, it can spend billions of dollars to put God's children on their own two feet right here on earth". What had any of this to do with a seasoned machine politician from Chicago?

As a candidate, Obama projected himself as a new Reagan, above narrow party politics. He wanted to please all, but has ended up annoying many. And if the Republicans can find a halfway decent candidate (perhaps a uniformed one) I doubt the incumbent will get a second term. Will the Clintons even let him be the candidate?

http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2010/oct/28/obama-hope-all-hype

October 28, 2010

Boris Johnson: “Kosovo-style social cleansing”

Most disappointing that Boris Johnson should suggest that there is any relevant connection with Kosovo and capping housing benefit at £400 ($600) per week.

Johnson actually was reasonably open-minded in 1999 and went to Beograd during or shortly after the bombing. It would be interesting to know what prompted him to use Kosovo - he is one of the few people in office who might have been expected to see that this shibboleth of Tony Bliar and New Labour is very vulnerable to criticism and hence a way to dismantle the overblown claims and immoral foreign policy they have built on this supposed success...  Tim Fenton

David Cameron scolds Mayor of London Boris Johnson over 'Kosovo' comment

David Cameron has delivered an unprecedented slap-down to Boris Johnson for comparing Government plans to stop housing benefit being claimed on expensive homes to "Kosovo-style social cleansing".

 

By Rosa Prince, Political Correspondent
Published: 6:11PM BST 28 Oct 2010

The Prime Minister was said to be "bristling" with anger after the Mayor of London suggested that capping housing benefit at just under £21,000 a year would lead to the poor being "pushed out" of their homes.

The plans are designed to stop low-income taxpayers subsidising expensive properties for benefits claimants. Ministers estimate that 21,000 people are living in homes for which the state pays more than £400 a week, including 17,000 in the capital.

 In a rare public rebuke, a spokesman for the Prime Minister said Mr Cameron disagreed with the mayor's choice of words and view of the housing benefit policy. Mr Johnson had appeared to suggest that he was seeking to prevent the housing cap being implemented in London.

"The last thing we want to have in our city is a situation such as Paris, where the less well-off are pushed out to the suburbs," he said.

"I'll emphatically resist any attempt to recreate a London where the rich and poor cannot live together.

"What we will not see and not accept is any kind of Kosovo-style social cleansing of

The Prime Minister was said to be "bristling" with anger after the Mayor of London suggested that capping housing benefit at just under £21,000 a year would lead to the poor being "pushed out" of their homes.

The plans are designed to stop low-income taxpayers subsidising expensive properties for benefits claimants. Ministers estimate that 21,000 people are living in homes for which the state pays more than £400 a week, including 17,000 in the capital.

In a rare public rebuke, a spokesman for the Prime Minister said Mr Cameron disagreed with the mayor's choice of words and view of the housing benefit policy. Mr Johnson had appeared to suggest that he was seeking to prevent the housing cap being implemented in London.

"The last thing we want to have in our city is a situation such as Paris, where the less well-off are pushed out to the suburbs," he said.

"I'll emphatically resist any attempt to recreate a London where the rich and poor cannot live together.

"What we will not see and not accept is any kind of Kosovo-style social cleansing of London. On my watch, you are not going to see thousands of families evicted from the place where they have been living and have put down roots."

Within two hours of the comments being broadcast, Mr Cameron's spokesman issued a public rebuke, saying: "The Prime Minister doesn't agree with what Boris Johnson has said or indeed the way he said it.

"He thinks the policy is the right one and he doesn't agree with the way [Mr Johnson] chose his words."

It is the first time that Mr Cameron's growing irritation with the Mayor has been made explicit, and confirms Mr Johnson's position as his only serious rival within the Conservative Party.

The mayor's words were unfortunate given that a day earlier, Nick Clegg, the Deputy Prime Minister, had described as "deeply offensive" a Labour claim that the poor would be "sociologically cleansed" out of London if housing benefit was cut.

Senior Coalition figures rounded on Mr Johnson. Mr Clegg said: "I disagree with what Boris Johnson said on the policy and very strongly disagree with the way he expressed his views."

As No 10's displeasure was made clear, Mr Johnson issued a statement saying that his words, broadcast on BBC Radio London, had been "taken out of context".

Mr Johnson has had a somewhat fractious relationship with Mr Cameron for some time.

Sources suggested that Mr Johnson's wish to take over more control of London's housing budget would almost certainly now be rejected.

A source said: "The official line is that Boris is Boris, but he has gone too far this time.

"To accuse the Prime Minister of social cleansing is well over the top. It is fair to say that the PM was bristling with anger when he heard." 

Is the fate of the world being decided today in the Indian Ocean


michelcollon.info - Investig'Action

 Is the fate of the world being decided today in the Indian Ocean ?

INTERVIEW OF MOHAMED HASSAN BY GREGOIRE LALIEU & MICHEL COLLON

Straddled by the Islamic arch (which stretches from Somalia to Indonesia, passing through the countries of the Gulf and Central Asia), the region has certainly become the world's new strategic centre of gravity. This new chapter in our series 'Understanding the Muslim world', takes us there on a tour. Mohamed Hassan explains to us how China's economic development is overturning the world balance of power and is freeing the countries of the South from their dependence on the West.

He also lays bare the strategies employed by the US in its efforts to maintain its leadership. And why it is that the US empire is nevertheless destined to die. Finally, he predicts the end of globalisation.
It remains to be seen if their planetary domination will end without a struggle, or whether the gangsters will be shooting hostages. read the interview

Serbia makes another u-turn on Europe

Serbia makes another u-turn on Europe

ZELJKO PANTELIC

Today @ 10:49 CET

Serbs are said to have a long memory which might help the Serbian leadership sell its latest sharp turn over European policy to its citizens.

After the Council of ministers finally forwarded Serbia's application for EU membership to the European Commission, the official position in Belgrade has swung back to euphoric pro-European rhetoric, new unrealistic promises and an understatement of conditions set by the EU for further progress on the road to membership.

Even foreign minister Vuk Jeremic has stopped talking about Kosovo (Photo: United Nations)

Description: http://ads.euobserver.com/www/delivery/lg.php?bannerid=374&campaignid=240&zoneid=35&loc=http%3A%2F%2Fwaz.euobserver.com%2F887%2F31146&cb=9f9bd432a0Just one year ago, Serbian officialdom celebrated the 55th anniversary of the communist takeover with plenty of pomp. Back then, Belgrade was visited by Russian president Dmitry Medvedev, the biggest ally in defending Serbia's sovereignty over Kosovo. It also dropped its previous political motto, 'There is no alternative to the EU', and launched the 'Four pillars policy' calling for close ties with Russia, China, the US and the EU.

Vuk Jeremic and Bozidar Djelic, the Serbian ministers for foreign affairs and for European integration, repeatedly stated that if Belgrade were forced to choose between the EU and Kosovo it would pick the latter.

This year, in less than two months, from July to September, Serbia's foreign policy has completely changed once again.

There are several reasons for this. The first is the opinion of the International Court of Justice which found no violation of international law in Kosovo's declaration of independence. The second is the global financial crisis which showed that the Serbian economy would collapse without good relations with the EU.

Thirdly, the 'Kosovo is more important than Europe' policy failed to lift the popularity of president Boris Tadic's party. On the contrary, the former radical Tomislav Nikolic has taken a lead in the polls with his new Progress party.

Even Mr Jeremic has stopped speaking about Kosovo, after more then 150 lobby trips around the world in one year, to lobby for Serbia's position on its former province. Two of the four pillars (China and Russia) have collapsed and, again, Serbia has found there is no alternative to the EU.

In 2008, after the coalition led by president Tadic won the elections, the Serbian government produced an action plan for EU integration of Serbia. It predicted that the country would be an official EU candidate before the end of 2008, would start negotiations for membership in 2009 and would enter the EU in 2012.

The plan was dropped after a few weeks but Serbian top officials continued to say that the country would be technically ready for EU membership in 2012.

Until a few months ago, official optimism liked to recall the old idea, dusted off by Greece, that in 2014, one century after the start of the First World War, the EU could complete its enlargement by admitting all of the western Balkan countries among its ranks.

Now, Serbian media keep referring to the forwarding of the EU application to the commission in such enthusiastic terms that the uninitiated would be forgiven in assuming that the country had already achieved candidate status. Nobody reported that Serbia had been waiting a record ten months to see its bid take at least the first step; Iceland waited less than one week and it took just four months for Montenegro.

The new proclaimed target date for entry in EU is 2016, which implies that Serbia would be ready in 2014.

Croatia got candidate status in 2004, started to negotiate with the EU in 2005, and is still negotiating today. Just few days ago Jose Manuel Barroso, president of the European Commission, refused to name a date for Croatian accession.

The Serbian government has, however, managed to overcome Dutch resistance on the issue of war crimes. "Full cooperation" with the war crimes tribunal in The Hague is a key condition for European integration, but the Netherlands had strongly insisted for the arrest of Ratko Mladic, the former Bosnian Serb military commander suspected of war crimes and genocide, to be a precondition of any further steps on Serbia's EU track.

http://waz.euobserver.com/887/31146

http://waz.euobserver.com/887/31146

October 25, 2010

Eastern Europe Versus the Open Society

http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/2010/10/25/eastern-europe-versus-the-open-society

Eastern Europe Versus the Open Society

by Srdja Trifkovic

Excerpts from a speech to the H.L. Mencken Club, Baltimore, October 23, 2010

Two weeks ago the first "gay pride parade" was staged in Belgrade. Serbia's "pro-European" government had been promoting the event as yet another proof that Serbia is fit to join the European Union, that is has overcome the legacy of its dark, intolerant past. Thousands of policemen in full riot gear had to divide their time between protecting a few hundred "LBGT" activists (about half of them imported from Western Europe for the occasion) and battling ten times as many young protesters in the side streets.

The parade, it should be noted, was prominently attended by the U.S. Ambassador in Belgrade Mary Warlick, by the head of the European Commission Office, Vincent Degert of France, and by the head of the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) Mission in Serbia, Dimitris Kipreos. Needless to say, none of them had attended the enthronment of the new Serbian Patriarch a week earlier. Two days later, Hillary Clinton came to Belgrade and praised the Tadic regime for staging the parade.

Mrs. Clinton et al are enjoying the fruits of one man's two decades of hard work in Eastern Europe. George Soros can claim, more than any other individual, that his endeavors have helped turn the lands of "Real Socialism" in central and eastern Europe away from their ancestors, their cultural and spiritual roots. The process is far from over, but his Open Society Institute and its extensive network of subsidiaries east of the Trieste-Stettin line have successfully legitimized the notions that only two decades ago would have seemed bizarre, laughable or demonic to the denizens of the eastern half of Europe.

The package was first tested here in America. Through his Open Society Institute and its vast network of affiliates Soros has provided extensive financial and lobbying support here for

  • Legalization of hard drugs: We should accept that "substance abuse is endemic in most societies," he says. Thanks to his intervention the terms "medicalization" and "non-violent drug offender" have entered public discourse, and pro-drug legalization laws were passed in California and Arizona in the 90s.
  • Euthanasia: In 1994 Soros—a self-professed atheist—launched his Project Death in America (PDIA) and provided $15 million in its initial funding. (It is noteworthy that his mother, a member of the pro-suicide Hemlock Society, killed herself, and that Soros mentions unsympathetically his dying father's clinging on to life for too long.) PDIA supports physician-assisted suicide and works "to begin forming a network of doctors that will eventually reach into one-fourth of America's hospitals" and, in a turn of phrase chillingly worthy of Orwell, lead to "the creation of innovative models of care and the development of new curricula on dying."
  • Population replacement: Soros is an enthusiastic promoter of open immigration and amnesty & special rights for immigrants. He has supported the National Council of La Raza, National Immigration Law Center, National Immigration Forum, and dozens of others. He also promotes expansion of public welfare, and in late 1996 he created the Emma Lazarus Fund that has given millions in grants to nonprofit legal services groups that undermine provisions of the welfare legislation ending immigrant entitlements.

Soros supports programs and organizations that further abortion rights and increased access to birth control devices; advocate ever more stringent gun control; and demand abolition of the death penalty. He supports radical feminists and "gay" activists, same-sex "marriage" naturally included. OSI states innocently enough that its objectives include "the strengthening of civil society; economic reform; education at all levels; human rights; legal reform and public administration; public health; and arts and culture," but the way it goes about these tasks is not "philanthropy" but political activism in pursuit of all the familiar causes of the radical left—and some additional, distinctly creepy ones such as "Death in America."

Soros's "philanthropic" activities in America have been applied on a far grander scale abroad. His many foundations say that they are "dedicated to building and maintaining the infrastructure and institutions of an open society." What this means in practice? Regarding "Women's Health" programs in Central and South-Eastern Europe, one will look in vain for breast cancer detection programs, or for prenatal or post-natal care. No, Soros's main goal is "to improve the quality of abortion services." Accordingly his Public Health Program has focused on the introduction of easily available abortion all over the region, and the introduction of manual vacuum aspiration (MVA) abortion in Macedonia, Moldova, and Russia. Why is Soros so keen to promote more abortions? Overpopulation cannot be the reason: the region is experiencing a huge demographic collapse and has some of the lowest fertility rates in the world. Unavailability of abortions cannot be the answer either: only five European countries had more abortions than live births in 2000: the Russian Federation, Bulgaria, Belarus, Romania and Ukraine. The only answer is that Soros wants as few little European Orthodox Christians born into this world as possible.

Soros's Public Health Programs additionally "support initiatives focusing on the specific health needs of several marginalized communities," such as "gays" and AIDS sufferers, and promote "harm reduction" focusing on needle/syringe exchange and supply of methadone to adicts. His outfits lobby governments to scrap "repressive drug policies." Over the past decade and a half the Soros network has given a kick-start to previously non-existent "gay" activism in almost all of its areas of operation. The campaign for "LGBT Rights" is directed from Budapest, publishing lesbian and gay books in Bulgaria, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Slovenia and Slovakia, opening Gay and Lesbian Centers in Ukraine and Rumania. Its activists routinely attack the Orthodox Church as a key culprit for alleged discrimination of "LGBTs."

Education is a key pillar of Soros's activities. His Leitmotif is the dictum that "no-one has a monopoly on the truth" and that "civic education" should replace the old "authoritarian" model. Even under communism Eastern Europe has preserved very high educational standards, but the Soros Foundation seeks to replace the old system with the concept of schools as "exercise grounds" for the "unhindered expression of students' personalities in the process of equal-footed interaction with the teaching staff, thus overcoming the obsolete concept of authority and discipline rooted in the oppressive legacy of patriarchal past." The purpose of education is not "acquisition of knowledge": the teacher is to become the class "designer" and his relationship with students based on "partnership." Soros's reformers also insist on an active role of schools in countering the allegedly unhealthy influence of the family on students, which "still carries an imprint of nationalist, sexist, racist, and homophobic prejudices rampant in the society at large."

"Racism" is Soros's regular obsession, but he had a problem finding it in racially non-diverse East European countries. This has been resolved by identifying a designated victim group—gypsies ("Roma"). His protégés now come up with policy demands to "protect" this group that could have been written by Rev. Jesse Jackson:

  • anti-bias training of teachers and administrators;
  • integration of Romani history and culture in the textbooks at all levels;
  • legally mandated arffirmative action programs for Roma;
  • tax incentives for employers who employ them;
  • access to low-interest credit for Roma small family businesses;
  • setting aside a percentage of public tenders for Roma firms;
  • legislation to fight "racism and discrimination" in housing;
  • adoption of "comprehensive anti-discrimination legislation";
  • creation of mechanisms "to monitor implementation of anti-discrimination legislation and assist victims of racial discrimination in seeking remedies";
  • recognition by governments of "the Roma slavery and the Holocaust through public apology along with urgent adoption of a package of reparatory measures."

A budding race relations industry is already in place, with the self-serving agenda of finding "discrimination" in order to keep itself in place for ever.

To make his agenda appear "normal" to the targeted population, millions of East Europeans are force-fed the daily fare of OSI agitprop by "the Soros media"—the term is by now well established in over a dozen languages—such as the B-92 media conglomerate in Serbia.

The social dynamics Soros uses to penetrate the target countries is interesting. To thousands of young East Europeans to become a "Soroshite" represents today what joining the Party represented to their parents: an alluring opportunity to have a reasonably paid job, to belong to a privileged elite, for many to travel abroad. The few chosen for the future new Nomenklatura go to Soros's own Central European University in Budapest. In all post-communist countries Soros relies overwhelmingly on the sons and daughters of the old Communist establishment who are less likely to be tainted by any atavistic vestiges of their native soil, culture and tradition. The comparison with the janissary corps of the Ottoman Army is more apt than that with the Communist Party. The new janissaries, just like the old, have to prove their credentials by being more zealous than the Master himself.

The key ideological foundation for Soros's beliefs is the same: that all countries are basically social arrangements, artificial, temporary and potentially dangerous. A plethora of quotes from his writings will make it clear that he thinks that owing allegiance to any of them is inherently irrational, and attaching one's personal loyalty to it is absurd. Like Marx's proletarian, Soros knows of no loyalty to a concrete country. He could serve any—or indeed all—of them, if they can be turned into the tools of his Wille zur Macht. In 1792, it could have been France, in 1917 Russia. Today, the United States is his host organism of choice because it is so powerful, and its media scene is open to penetration by his rabidly anti-traditionalist and deeply anti-American worldview and political agenda.

Textbooks and educational curricular reforms pushed by Soros in Eastern Europe indicate that he is trying to perform crude dumbing down of the young. Within months of coming to power in October 2000 the "reformists" within Serbia and their foreign sponsors insisted that schools—all schools, from kindergarden to universities—must be reformed and turned from "authoritarian" institutions into poligons for the "unhindered expression of students' personalities in the process of equal-footed interaction with the teaching staff, thus overcoming the obsolete concept of authority and discipline rooted in the opressive legacy of patriarchal past." They started with primary schools, with a pilot program of "educational workshops" for 7-12 year olds. The accompanying manual, sponsored by UNICEF and financed by the Open Society, denigrades the view that the purpose of education is acquisition of knowledge and insists that the teacher has to become the class "designer" and his relationship with students based on "partnership."

The reformers devote particular attention to the more active role of schools in countering the allegedly unhealthy influence of the family on students, which "still carries an imprint of nationalist, sexist, [anti-Roma] racist, and homophobic prejudices rampant in the society at large." The time-honored Balkan tradition of slapping childrens' bottoms when they exceed limits is now presented in the elementary classroom as a form of criminal abuse that should be reported and acted upon. Traditional gender roles are relativized by "special projects" that entail cross-dressing and temporary adoption of opposite gender names.

Soros's vision is hostile even to the most benign understanding of national or ethnic coherence. His core belief—that traditional morality, faith, and community based on shared memories are all verboten—is at odds even with the classical "open society" liberalism of Popper and Hayek, by whom he swears. His hatred of religion is the key. He promotes an education system that will neutralize any lingering spiritual yearnings of the young, and promote the loss of a sense of place and history already experienced by millions of Westerners, whether they are aware of that loss or not. Estranged from their parents, ignorant of their culture, ashamed of their history, millions of Westerners are already on the path of alienation that demands every imaginable form of self-indulgence, or else leads to drugs, or suicide, or conversion to Islam or some other cult.

To understand Soros it is necessary to understand globalization as a revolutionary, radical project. In the triumph of liberal capitalism, the enemies of civilization such as Soros have found the seeds of future victory for their paradigm that seeks to eradicate all traditional structures capable of resistance. The revolutionary character of the Open Society project is revealed in its relentless adherence to the mantra of Race, Gender and Sexuality. His goal is a new global imperium based that will be truly totalitarian. But he is making a colossal miscalculation. He does not realize that the unassimilated and unassimilable multitudes do not want to be the tools of his will to power. Illegal aliens in America, Algerians in France, Turks in Germany and Pakistanis in Britain have their own, instinctive scenario, and it does not entail leaving Soros and his ilk in positions of power, or alive.



October 19, 2010

Krsljanin: ‘Serbia is an occupied country’

Interview with Krsljanin: 'Serbia is an occupied country'

Published Oct 17, 2010 10:26 PM

On Oct. 5, 2000, a coup engineered by U.S. imperialist agencies and supported by Western European imperialist governments overthrew the Socialist Party government in Yugoslavia led by Slobodan Milosevic. At the time — only 16 months after a vicious 79-day U.S.-led NATO air war against the people of Yugoslavia — there was much confusion even among progressive and anti-war forces in the imperialist countries due to the overwhelming anti-Milosevic propaganda in the corporate media. The following interview by Cathrin Schütz with former Milosevic aide Vladimir Krsljanin throws light on those events and the developments in Serbia in the last 10 years.

Ten years ago, on Oct. 5, Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic was overthrown. What is hidden behind this "democratic revolution for freedom" celebrated by the Western media and politicians?

For 10 years Serbia had successfully resisted the war against Yugoslavia, which began in the early 1990s. After NATO's war of aggression against our country ended in 1999 without a clear victory, London and Washington carried out a vast special operation to overthrow Milosevic; it was the mother of all subsequent "color revolutions."

Through a presidential decree, Bill Clinton gave the CIA carte blanche to carry out a coup in Yugoslavia. Enormous sums were invested in political parties, NGOs [non-governmental organizations] and media. The fragmented opposition [to Milosevic and the Socialist Party of Serbia] was unified under foreign guidance. A coalition of 18 parties under the umbrella called the "Democratic opposition," or DOS, formed with one goal: overthrow Milosevic.

William Montgomery, the person later named as U.S. ambassador to Belgrade, set up a specially equipped office in Budapest [in neighboring Hungary]. Opposition activists attended courses that were run by CIA agents. The so-called student group known as "Otpor" (Resistance) used the slogan "Gotov je" (He is finished) to conduct the election — this was all a project of Western intelligence agencies.

How did the overthrow take place?

In the Yugoslav presidential election on Sept. 24 the incumbent Milosevic obtained 15 percent fewer votes than Western-backed candidate Vojislav Kostunica. However, since neither of these two leading candidates won an absolute majority, it should have come to a run-off ballot. The DOS parties claimed that Milosevic had falsified the elections and Kostunica was victorious in the first round of voting. Otpor led violent street protests.

DOS wanted to prevent the runoff, although they would have won for sure. Milosevic refused to accept a resignation without a second round of voting.

At the height of the dispute, the Supreme Court issued a strange decision: Because of rumors of irregularities in the first ballot, all votes from the southern Serbian province of Kosovo were simply canceled. Of course, the vote in those districts would have to be repeated.

With Kosovo's votes cancelled, Kostunica's vote share increased to more than 50 percent. Milosevic acknowledged the decision and on Oct. 5 congratulated Kostunica's victory. This step, which had barely been reported, was buried in what was a media-constructed "popular uprising." As Otpor set the Parliament on fire, the Kostunica forces immediately and completely seized the government apparatus. With this coup they avoided a controlled handover of power.

It was thus not simply an electoral victory for the opposition?

The years-long image of Milosevic as a "dictator" in the Western media would have appeared absurd if he were simply removed by a Democratic vote. The West didn't want to risk this loss of credibility. Mainly though, the "revolution" needed to be carried out violently to shorten the time until the new regime could allow far-reaching Western interventions in the state and economy, thus making the transformation irreversible.

After Oct. 5, government offices and businesses were occupied by so-called crisis units, and those previously in charge were dismissed. After a few months 40,000 officials had been illegally removed from office. Today's economy minister, Mladjan Dinkic, began his illustrious career by using machine guns to take over the National Bank.

Dinkic's party, G17 Plus, was originally set up as an NGO by the West. Despite its marginal election results, for the last 10 years it has controlled public finances under successive governments. Dinkic's first act as a national bank director was to dissolve the four largest Serbian banks at the behest of the International Monetary Fund — with the result that the Serbian banking system is now in foreign hands, and every year 6 billion euros flow out of the country. I remember Milosevic's words before the election: "They are not targeting Serbia to grab Milosevic, but Milosevic to grab Serbia."

But beyond the Western propaganda, there was in reality a great discontent among the population [in 2000]. ... Under the guidance of and in close collaboration with their foreign sponsors, the opposition understood how to blame on Milosevic the suffering caused by Western sanctions and NATO's war and how to make big promises should they win the elections.

The bombs had destroyed the economy and infrastructure, which aggravated the social discontent. When the government used up the remaining government funds for repairing the main road and rail links, the voters felt even more pain and were susceptible to opposition propaganda that claimed voting out Milosevic would stop the foreign pressure and increase the standard of living. It is in this sense that one should understand White House spokesperson Ari Fleischer's comments that the war was part of the "regime change" strategy of NATO and the United States, because it weakened Milosevic and led to his fall.

Why did the leading Western countries carry out such an aggressive intervention policy in Yugoslavia and Serbia?

Since the early 1990s there have been not many different wars in Yugoslavia — in Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia, Kosovo — it was all one war: that of the West against Yugoslavia. In this statement I fully agree with Milosevic. Former U.S. President George Bush Sr., while speaking during the celebration of German reunification, discussed the elimination of the consequences of the Versailles Treaty in Europe. A key point regarding Versailles at the beginning of the 20th century was to weaken Germany in favor of the Eastern European countries, which Germany had considered as satellites within the "Central Europe" doctrine.

Thus, those in Versailles for the first time recognized Yugoslavia as a state. Until Yugoslavia's breakup, Catholic and Muslim groups in Yugoslavia were used by Western powers to counteract Russian influence, which was based on historical closeness with Serbs. In the 1990s, however, a resurgent Germany's role was to serve as a NATO member to weaken Russia and Eastern Europe, which was to be transformed into a "Euro-Atlantic region" — but of course only as a colony. In line with the long-cherished desire of the British, Serbia especially should be weakened as a potential ally of Russia.

With Milosevic it could never happen. Kosovo is now home to Camp Bondsteel, the largest U.S. military base in Europe, in the area of the proposed major oil and gas pipelines from the Caspian Sea.

Did Milosevic's fall pay off for Serbia's population?

Immediately after Oct. 5, 2000, the Milosevic-SPS dominated Serbian Parliament was rendered powerless through the formation of a transitional government. Early parliamentary elections were held. DOS won a two-thirds majority and named Zoran Djindjic, the number one favorite of the West, as prime minister, the most powerful office of Yugoslav politics. Thus, the coup was completed.

Serbia is now an occupied country. Foreign "advisers" are sitting in government, army, police and secret service. The economy is flattened; the banking system in foreign hands. Privatization and sale of large companies bring poverty and hunger to Serbia. The army consists of only four brigades; the media have been silenced, the politicians corrupted. Montenegro has separated and Kosovo has declared its independence.

And while before Oct. 5, 2000, the Belgrade District Court tried in absentia and convicted the NATO leaders of war crimes, sentencing them to 20 years in prison, the sentence was repealed shortly after the coup. The head of the government TV station was found responsible for the death of his staff — those who died from NATO bombs. Afterwards Milosevic and several high-ranking state officials and generals were delivered to the NATO Inquisition in The Hague, in violation of the Constitution.

Thus nothing has improved. On the contrary, our remote-controlled president and the choir of the bought politicians and "experts" talk about great victories on the road to joining the European Union. But it seems obvious that this way is not the right way.

Published Oct. 6 in the German daily newspaper Junge Welt. Translated by Workers World managing editor John Catalinotto.


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http://www.workers.org/2010/world/serbia_1021/

October 15, 2010

Washington wants its Trojan horse in Europe

Washington wants its Trojan horse in Europe

14.10.2010

 

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton continues to tour Europe. She has already visited Bosnia and Herzegovina and Serbia. Today, she is expected to have a meeting with the Albanian authorities of Kosovo. Afterwards, Clinton will travel to Brussels, where the head of US diplomacy is expected to conduct negotiations with the administrations of the European Union and NATO.

In Sarajevo, Bosnia's capital, Clinton made a strange statement. "Hatreds have eased, but nationalism persists. Meanwhile, the promise of greater stability and opportunity, represented by integration into Europe, remains out of reach," she said.

"Your neighbours have taken strides in that direction. They know there is no better way to achieve sustained economic growth and long-term political stability than by integrating with Europe . . . Now is the time for the citizens of this country to make your voices heard," she added.

Clinton was talking about Slovenia, which became a EU member six years ago, and Croatia, which will join the EU in a year or two. Serbia and Montenegro have already submitted their bids for EU membership. Mrs. Clinton apparently believes that now it is Bosnia's turn to become a part of united Europe.

Russia Today: US refuses to acknowledge its failure and mistakes in the Balkans

That was a very curious statement for a top US official to make. The US Secretary of State said that it would be so good if the countries of the former Yugoslavia joined the EU - the organization, in which the US is not a member and never will be. It just so happens that the US official was instructing EU's governing agencies on its new members. Clinton pointed out "the best path" for the Balkan states to the organization, which the United States has no relation to.

The above-mentioned remarks in Sarajevo could be regarded as a singular event, but USA's top diplomat for Europe Philip Gordon released a similar statement later on. Speaking about Clinton's plans in Serbia, Gordon stated that the goal of the US administration was to make the Serbs start a dialogue with Kosovo Albanians for their joint European integration.

"We've been quite clear that we believe that further reforms are necessary," said Philip Gordon, the top US diplomat for Europe.

"The Bosnians need to follow up," he said. "The rest of the region is moving towards Europe, and Bosnia is going to have to overcome these ethnic divisions ... if they want to go down this path."

Therefore, the Americans openly interfere in the affairs between independent entities of international law - the European Union and the Balkan states. Why does the US administration want the Balkan countries to join the European Union? The conclusion is forced upon you: the Americans want to weaken the influence of the organization. They particularly want to weaken the influence of Germany and France by introducing Washington's Trojan horse within the walls of the European Union. It is an open secret that the prospects of conflicting situations between the EU and the USA pose economic and political concerns for the US leadership.

"The integration into the EU and NATO is like an American bait for the Balkan states. The USA wants to "buy" them this way to be able to skillfully manipulate those countries afterwards. The USA has special interests in each of those states," Elena Guskova, a witness to The Hague Tribunal, the chairwoman of the center for the modern Balkan crisis told Pravda.Ru.

"Let's take Bosnia and Herzegovina, for example. The Americans propagate the idea of changing the constitution in this country, which is supposed to considerably strengthen the Muslim-Croat Federation supported by the West on the whole and by the USA in particular.

"The Constitution of Bosnia and Herzegovina, formed in 1995 on the base of the Dayton Agreement, anchors the existence of two state formations of its territory: the Republic of Srpska and the Muslim-Croat Federation. However, the constitution, which was virtually written by Europe and the USA, implies the existence of Bosnia and Herzegovina as a single state.

"As for Kosovo, the situation there is different. First and foremost, one should bear in mind the fact that US army bases are deployed there. No one, except for Americans themselves, controls those bases. One can do anything there: arrange human organ transplantation hospitals or build secret jails which would be absolutely unreachable for human rights activists and journalists. Now they want to strengthen their influence in Kosovo by pushing it towards the EU.

"All this is aimed against the Serbs. The West and the USA contributed a lot to the destruction of Yugoslavia. After Slovenia and Croatia obtained independence, the West continued cutting the region to pieces. The Americans want to finish what they started. They want to cut the present-day Serbia to minimize its role in the Balkans. One of the main reasons of this politics is the fact that Belgrade is an ally of Moscow. If Serbia joins the EU, the situation will change drastically. It will no longer be able to run independent politics," the specialist said.

Sergey Balmasov
Vadim Trukhachev
Pravda.Ru

http://english.pravda.ru/world/europe/14-10-2010/115369-0/

October 12, 2010

Israel: 'Fix Kosovo first before telling us what to do'

Israel: 'Fix Kosovo first before telling us what to do'

LEIGH PHILLIPS

11.10.2010 @ 09:18 CET

Israel's foreign minister, Avigdor Lieberman of the hard-right nationalist Yisrael Beiteinu party, has bluntly told the foreign ministers of Spain and France to fix problems in Europe before telling Israel what to do, according to reports in the local press.

"Solve your own problems in Europe before you come to us with complaints. Maybe then I will be open to accepting your suggestions," he told France's Bernard Kouchner and Spain's Miguel Angel Moratinos at a dinner on Sunday evening (10 October) in Jerusalem.

Mr Lieberman suggested that Europe is sacrificing Israel the way it abandoned Czechoslovakia in 1939 (Photo: the half-blood prince)

Description: http://ads.euobserver.com/www/delivery/lg.php?bannerid=296&campaignid=211&zoneid=4&loc=http%3A%2F%2Feuobserver.com%2F9%2F31011&referer=http%3A%2F%2Feuobserver.com%2F&cb=5c98dccf0eMr Lieberman said that after Europe had solved conflicts in the Caucasus as well as the ongoing disputes over Cyprus and Kosovo, then the Jewish state "will listen to your advice," reports the conservative Jerusalem Post.

He also suggested that Europe is sacrificing Israel the way it abandoned Czechoslovakia in 1939.

"In 1938 Europe placated Hitler, sacrificing Czechoslovakia instead of supporting it, and gained nothing from it," he said, according to Haaretz, the left-leaning Israeli daily.

"We will not be the Czechoslovakia of 2010, we will stand up for Israel's vital interests."

Mr Lieberman suggested that the international community was trying to compensate for its failures elsewhere in the world by pushing for a peace deal between Israel and the Palestinians.

"What about the struggle in Somalia, North Korea, Zimbabwe, Afghanistan and Sudan?" he continued.

"Instead of talking now with the Arab League about the future of a referendum in Sudan, or discussing the explosive situation in Iraq in 2012, the international community is applying great pressure on Israel."

The strong words came as Mr Kouchner reportedly signalled that the creation of a Palestinian state may have to come via the United Nations Security Council if peace negotiations falter.

In an interview with Palestinian paper Al-Ayyam, the French minister said that Paris would prefer a two-state solution to be agreed by both sides, but that the former option could not be ruled out.

"We want to be able to soon welcome the state of Palestine to the United Nations. This is the hope and the desire of the international community, and the sooner that can happen the better," he said.

"The international community cannot be satisfied with a prolonged deadlock. I therefore believe that one cannot rule out in principle the Security Council option," he said.

"But the establishment of the Palestinian state must come as a result of the peace process and be the fruit of bilateral negotiations."

The two ministers also met with President Shimon Peres, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, defence minister Ehud Barak and Tzipi Livni, a former foreign minister and leader of the opposition centrist Kadima party.

The other government leaders told the two Europeans that the international community must be flexible over the issue of a freeze on the construction of settlements in the occupied Palestinian territories.

The Israeli government has refused to extend a 10-month partial freeze that ended in September on new settlement building, illegal under international law.

Over the weekend, Palestinian President Mahmud Abbas said to Arab foreign ministers that his side would consider a request before the UN Security Council if the peace talks collapse as a result of the settlement issue.

The Israeli defence minister, Ehud Barak, of the centre-left Labour Party, was reportedly more cordial with the two European ministers.

"They both take a lot of time working towards a real European contribution to peace between Israel and the Palestinians," he said.

"I know that they are both friends of Israel, and they are respected by the Palestinians and throughout the Arab world. Therefore, they can really help."

 

http://euobserver.com/9/31011

http://euobserver.com/9/31011

October 06, 2010

A Decade of Serbia's Humiliation

www.balkanstudies.org

 

A Decade of Serbia's Humiliation

Srdja Trifkovic

 

On October 5, 2000, in a coup by the security forces staged against the backdrop of massive street protests, Slobodan Milosevic was removed from power in Serbia. A decade later, the author says in ChroniclesOnline, many of those who cheered his downfall at that time have nothing to celebrate.

 

In the run-up to Peti oktobar we believed that a change of regime—any change—was essential to Serbia's recovery from six decades of war, bloodshed, communist and neo-communist nightmare.

 

We were wrong. It is futile to debate whether Milosevic's dead-end regime was "better" or "worse" than what Serbia has today with its "pro-Western" rulers. It is like discussing whether pancreatic cancer is preferable to congestive heart failure. Let me be specific.

 

On October 10 the first "gay pride parade" will be staged in Belgrade. The government has been promoting the event as yet another proof that Serbia is fit to join the European Union, that is has overcome the legacy of its dark, intolerant past. It has threatened the opponents of the spectacle with violence and judicial consequences. It has earned praise from all the right quarters in Brussels, Washington and the NGO sector for its "public commitment to … thwart any attempt to stop the march from proceeding to its conclusion." There will be five thousand policemen in full riot gear marching with a few hundred "LBGT" activists on the day.

 

This is pure anarchotyranny in action. The current government in Belgrade is quite powerless to protect its citizens from harassment in the NATO-occupied province of Kosovo. It is powerless to prevent young jihadists from pelting with stones tourist buses from non-Muslim areas in the majority-Muslim region of Novi Pazar—not in Kosovo, mind you, but in "Serbia Proper." It is powerless to stop rampant corruption by its own functionaries and politically associated cronies. It is powerless to halt open war-mongering by Islamic extremists such as Mufti Zukorlic in the Sandzak region in the south, or advocacy of ethnic separatism by Hungarian activists in the north. It is powerless to evict the Gypsy criminal underclass from usurping prime real estate in the nation's capital. It is unable and unwilling to arrest and prosecute mafia bosses, privatization tycoons and foreign agents in its own ranks.

 

At the same time, the regime of Serbia's Euro-Integrators led by President Boris Tadic is brutally efficient in clamping down on those "extremists" who dare protest the promotion of sodomy and who dislike the imposition of psychopathological "norms" imposed by the regime's foreign mentors. It is good at normalizing criminality and criminalizing normality. Serbia will never enter the EU, of course, and it will never be absolved of its alleged sins harking back to the Milosevic era, but in terms of anarchotyrannical shackles it is eminently "Western" already.

 

In foreign affairs Serbia's position is even worse. It is incomparably worse than a decade ago. On September 10, at the UN General Assembly, Serbia abruptly surrendered its claim to Kosovo. As Diana Johnstone explained in Counterpunch, the government in Belgrade tried to pretend that this surrender was a "compromise"; but for Serbia, it was all give and no take:

 

In its dealings with the Western powers, recent Serbian diplomacy has displayed all the perspicacity of a rabbit cornered by a rattlesnake.  After some helpless spasms of movement, the poor creature lets itself be eaten. The surrender has been implicit all along in President Boris Tadic's two proclaimed foreign policy goals: deny Kosovo's independence and join the European Union. These two were always mutually incompatible. Recognition of Kosovo's independence is clearly one of the many conditions—and the most crucial—set by the Euroclub for Serbia to be considered for membership.

 

But "denying Kosovo's independence" had never been a genuine goal. For some years now Tadic and his cohorts have been looking for a way to capitulate on Kosovo while pretending not to. The formula that led to the surrender at the UN last month was simple: place all diplomatic eggs in one basket—that of the International Court of Justice—and refrain from using any other tools at Serbia's disposal. Last July 22 the ICJ performed on cue, declaring that Kosovo's UDI was not illegal.

 

That is exactly what Tadic's regime and its foreign handlers had expected, and wanted. It should be noted that the government of Serbia asked the ICJ only to assess the legality of Kosovo's declaration of independence, not to consider more widely Kosovo's right to unilateral secession from Serbia or to assess the consequences of the adoption of the UDI, namely whether Kosovo is a state, or the legitimacy of its recognition by other countries. As a former British diplomat who knows the Balkans well has noted, international law takes no notice of declarations of independence, unilateral or otherwise, as such; they are irrelevant.

 

The ICJ advisory opinion was deeply flawed and non-binding, but the government in Belgrade was given a perfect alibi for doing what it had intended to do all along. It could not be otherwise. Ever since the appointment of Vuk Jeremić as Serbia's foreign minister in 2007, this outcome could be predicted with near-certainty.

 

As President Boris Tadić's chief foreign policy advisor, Jeremić came to Washington on 18 May 2005 to testify in Congress on why Kosovo should stay within Serbia. In his subsequent off-the-record conversations, however, he assured his hosts that the task was really to sugar-coat the bitter Kosovo pill that Serbia would have to swallow anyway.

 

Two years later another advisor to Tadić, Dr. Leon Kojen, resigned in a blaze of publicity after Austrian Chancellor Alfred Gusenbauer declared, on April 13, 2007, "We are working with Boris Tadić and his people to find a way to implement the essence of the Ahtisaari plan." Tout Belgrade knew that "Tadić's people" meant—Vuk Jeremić. Gusenbauer's indiscretion amounted to the revelation that Serbia's head of state and his closest advisor were engaged in secret negotiations aimed at facilitating the detachment of Kosovo from Serbia—which, of course, was "the essence of the Ahtisaari plan." Jeremić's quest for sugar-coating of the bitter pill was evidently in full swing even before he came to the helm of Serbia's diplomacy.

 

In the intervening three years Tadić and Jeremić had continued to pursue a dual-track policy on Kosovo. The decisive fruit of that policy was their disastrous decision to accept the European Union's Eulex Mission in Kosovo in December 2008. Acting under an entirely self-created mandate, the EU thus managed to insert its mission, based explicitly on the provisions of the Ahtissari Plan, into Kosovo with Belgrade's agreement.

 

That was the moment of Belgrade's true capitulation. Everything else – the ICJ ruling and the General Assembly spectacle included—is just a choreographed farce …

 

That farce will continue with the forthcoming visit by Hillary Clinton to Belgrade. Aiding and abetting Muslim designs in the Balkans, in the hope that this will earn some credit for the United States in the Islamic world, has been a major motive of her husband's and her own policy in the region for almost two decades now. It has never yielded any dividends, of course, but repeated failure only prompts the architects of the policy to redouble their efforts. Washington will be equally supportive of an independent Sanjak that would connect Kosovo with Bosnia, or of any other putative Islamistan, from western Macedonia to southern Bulgaria ("Eastern Rumelia") to the Caucasus. The late Tom Lantos must be smiling approvingly wherever he is now, having called, three years ago, on "Jihadists of all color and hue" to take note of "yet another example that the United States leads the way for the creation of a predominantly Muslim country in the very heart of Europe."

 

* * * *

 

A DECADE after his downfall Milosevic appears almost decent in comparison to his current successors. He was guilty of many sins and errors, but they were a matter between him and his people. The Hague was the wrong court designed to find him guilty of the wrong crimes.

 

First of all, Milosevic was not a "Serbian nationalist." Until 1987 he was an unremarkable apparatchik. His solid Communist Party credentials—he joined the League of Communists as a high school senior in 1959—were essential to his professional advance. His name remained relatively unknown outside the ranks of the nomenklatura. Then came the turning point. As president of the League of Communists of Serbia, in April 1987 Milosevic traveled to the town of Kosovo Polje, in the restive southern Serbian province of Kosovo, to quell the protests by local Serbs unhappy with the lack of support they were getting from Belgrade in the face of ethnic Albanian pressure. When the police started dispersing the crowd using batons, Milosevic stopped them and uttered the words that were to change his life and that of a nation. "No one is allowed to beat you people; no one will ever hit you again," he told the cheering crowd.

 

Used to two generations of Serbian Communist leaders subservient to Tito and reluctant to advance their republic's interests lest they be accused of "greater Serbian nationalism," ordinary Serbs responded with enthusiasm. The word of a new kind of leader spread like wildfire. Milosevic's populism worked wonders at first, enabling him to eliminate all political opponents within the Party leadership of Serbia in 1987. A huge rally in Belgrade's Confluence Park (1988) and in Kosovo to mark the 600th anniversary of the historic battle (1989), reflected a degree of genuine popularity that he enjoyed in Serbia, Montenegro, and Serbian-inhabited part of Bosnia and Croatia in the late 1980s. But far from proclaiming an agenda for expansion, as later alleged by his enemies, his Kosovo speech was full of old ideological clichés and "Yugoslav" platitudes.

 

The precise nature of his long term agenda was never stated, however, because it had never been defined. He was able to gain followers from widely different camps, including hard-line Party loyalists as well as anti-Communist nationalists, because they all tended to project their hopes, aspirations and fears onto Milosevic—even though those hopes and aspirations were often mutually incompatible.

 

The key issue was the constitutional framework within which the Serbs should seek their future. They were unhappy by Tito's arrangements that kept them divided into five units in the old Yugoslav federation. Milosevic wanted to redefine the nature of that federation, rather than abolish it. Then and throughout his life he was a "Yugoslav" rather than a "Greater Serb." In addition he was so deeply steeped in the Communist legacy of his formative years (and so utterly unable to resist the pressure from his doctrinaire wife) that even after the fall of the Berlin Wall he kept the old insignia with the red star, together with the leadership structure and mindset of the old, Titoist order.

 

The tensions of this period could have been resolved by a clear strategy once the war broke out, first in Croatia (summer 1991) and then in Bosnia (spring 1992). This did not happen. In the key phase of Milosevic's career, from mid-1990 until October 5, 2000, a cynically manipulative Mr. Hyde had finally prevailed over the putative national leader Dr. Jekyll. As the fighting raged around Vukovar and Dubrovnik, he made countless contradictory statements about its nature, always stressing that "Serbia is not at war" and thereby implicitly recognizing the validity of Tito's internal boundaries. Very much against the prevailing trend of Western commentary, I opined at that time that "Milosevic is cynically exploiting the nationalist awakening to perpetuate Communist rule and his own power in the eastern half of Yugoslavia." (U.S. News & World Report, 18 June 1990), that for Serb patriots "trusting Milosevic is like giving a blood bank to Count Dracula" (The Times of London, 23 November 1995).

 

Milosevic's diplomatic ineptitude and his chronic inability to grasp the importance of lobbying and public relations in Washington and other Western capitals had enabled the secessionists to have a free run of the media scene with the simplistic notion that "the butcher of the Balkans" was overwhelmingly, even exclusively guilty of all the horrors that had befallen the former Yugoslavia. At the same time, far from seeking the completion of a "Greater Serbian" project while he had the military wherewithal to do so (1991-1995), Milosevic attempted to fortify his domestic position in Belgrade by trading in the Western Serbs (Krajina, Bosnia) for Western benevolence. It worked for a while. "The Serbian leader continues to be a necessary diplomatic partner," The New York Times opined in November 1996, a year after the Dayton Agreement ended the war in Bosnia thanks to Milosevic's pressure on the Bosnian-Serb leadership. His status as a permanent fixture in the Balkan landscape seemed secure.

 

It all changed with the escalation of the crisis in Kosovo, however. His belated refusal to sign on yet another dotted line at Rambouillet paved the way for NATO's illegal bombing of Serbia in the spring of 1999. For one last time the Serbs rallied under the leader many of them no longer trusted, aware that the alternative was to accept the country's open-ended carve-up. Yet Milosevic saved Clinton's skin by capitulating in June of that year, and letting NATO occupy Kosovo just as the bombing campaign was running out of steam and the Alliance was riddled by discord over what to do next.

 

The ensuing mass exodus of Kosovo's quarter-million Serbs and the torching of their homes and churches by the KLA terrorists did not prevent Milosevic from pretending that his superior statesmanship, embodied in the unenforceable UN Security Council Resolution 1244, had saved the country's integrity. The ensuing reconstruction effort in Serbia was used as a propaganda ploy to improve the rating of his own socialist party of Serbia and his wife Mirjana Markovic's minuscule "Yugoslav United Left" (JUL).

 

For many Serbs this was the final straw. Refusing to recognize the change of mood, in mid-2000 Milosevic followed his wife's advice and called a snap election, hoping to secure his position for another four years. Unexpectedly he was unable to beat his chief challenger Vojislav Kostunica in the first round, and succumbed to a wave of popular protest when he tried to deny Kostunica's victory in the closely contested runoff.

 

His downfall on October 5, 2000, would not have been possible if the military and the security services had not abandoned him. There had been just too many defeats and too many wasted opportunities over the previous decade and a half for the security chiefs to continue trusting Milosevic implicitly. Their refusal to fire on the crowds—as his half-demented wife allegedly demanded on that day—sealed Milosevic's fate. After five months' isolation in his villa he was arrested and taken to Belgrade's central prison. On June 28, 2001, Prime Minister Zoran Djindjic arranged for his transfer to The Hague Yugoslav War Crimes Tribunal, in violation of Serbia's laws and constitution. It was the first major self-inflicted humiliation by Serbia under its new, "democratic" management. The process is going on, unabated, nine years later.

 

Ten years after Milosevic's downfall, "the record of history" is yet to be articulated on the tragedy of ex-Yugoslavia in the 1990s. It will come, probably too late to alter the unjust and untenable temporary outcome of the wars of Yugoslav succession. Sadly, those who had collectively invented a fictional character bearing the name "Slobodan Milosevic" in the 1990s are using the tenth anniversary of his downfall as a welcome opportunity to put the finishing touches on the caricature, and to demand from his successors further surrenders and new humiliations as evidence that Serbia has overcome his legacy. Vae victis!

October 05, 2010

Diana Johnstone, Nice Guys Finish Last

Nice Guys Finish Last

 

Diana Johnstone   

понедељак, 04. октобар 2010.

Description: http://www.nspm.rs/images/stories/hronika%20nova/peti-oktobar-x.jpgOn October 5, 2000, the regular presidential election process in Yugoslavia was boisterously interrupted by what Western media described as a "democratic revolution" against the "dictator", president Slobodan Milosevic. In reality, the "dictator" was about to enter the run-off round of the Yugoslav presidential election which he appeared likely to lose to the main opposition candidate, Vojislav Kostunica. Rather than support the democratic electoral process, the United States trained and incited activists to take to the streets and replace it by a televised spectacle of popular uprising. Probably, the scenarists modeled this show on the equally stage-managed overthrow of the Ceaucescu couple in Rumania at Christmas 1989, which ended in their murder following one of the shortest kangaroo court trials in history. For the generally ignorant world at large, being overthrown in an uprising was meant to prove that Milosevic was really a "dictator" like Ceaucescu. Being defeated in an election would have tended to prove the opposite.

In contrast to Ceaucescu, the murder of Milosevic was accomplished slowly, indirectly, over many years. But October 5 marked the day on which effective political power in Yugoslavia was seized by foreign Great Powers, mainly by the United States. Proclaimed president in confused circumstances, Kostunica was weakened from the start. The Western favorite, Zoran Djindjic, was installed as Serbian prime minister and a few months later violated the Serbian constitution by turning Milosevic over to the International Criminal Tribunal for Former Yugoslavia (ICTY) in The Hague – for one of the longest kangaroo court trials in history.

The self-styled "Democratic" politicians in Belgrade labored under the illusion that throwing Milosevic to the ICTY wolves would be enough to ensure the good graces of the "International Community". But that was not enough, and the demands for more have continued to this day. Sending Milosevic, Generals Nebojsa Pavkovic, Sreten Lukic, Vladimir Lazarevic and Dragoljub Ojdanic, Admiral Miodrag Jokic, Radovan Karadzic and Vojislav Seselj, among others, has done nothing to remove the stigma from Serbia. On the contrary, cooperation with The Hague tribunal has above all served to confirm Serbia's collective guilt. After all, if even Serbs consider their own leader responsible for all the wars in Yugoslavia, who else will object? The trumped up theory of a "joint criminal enterprise" to create "Greater Serbia" was used to blame every aspect of the breakup of Yugoslavia on an imaginary Serbian conspiracy. The scapegoat turned out to be not just Milosevic, but Serbia itself. Serbia's guilt for everything that went wrong in the Balkans was the essential propaganda line used to justify the 1999 NATO aggression, and by implicitly endorsing this guilt, the "democratic" leaders effectively undermined Serbia's moral claim to Kosovo.

In June 1999, as bombs were destroying bridges and factories, Milosevic gave in and allowed NATO to occupy Kosovo under threat of carpet bombing that would destroy Serbia entirely. But he set conditions – which the United States proceeded to ignore.

His successors surrendered unconditionally, and fled from a less perilous battle – the battle to inform world public opinion of the complex truth of the Balkans. 

Not only the "Democratic" leaders, but many Serbs who could not understand why NATO bombed their country preferred to echo the NATO line, in order to escape from isolation. They would say, what happened in Yugoslavia was all the fault of one man, Slobodan Milosevic. But we are not like him, we are nice. Get rid of him, and all will be well.

That did not work because the diagnosis of the problem was wrong.

By a complex convergence of events, Yugoslavia served as an experimental field for the American project to remake the world. Yugoslavia was an experimental field for hard power, in the bombing of Yugoslavia, but also and even more so for soft power: propaganda and manipulation. Techniques tried out in Yugoslavia were later used in one country after another – notably the "color revolutions" which began in Belgrade on that October 5.

Serbia has been and continued to be the victim of an historic injustice and the object of ongoing slander. It is understandable, probably inevitable that Serbs try to escape from this intolerable present by projecting themselves into a mythical heroic past or a mythical idyllic future within the European Union. To some extent this may reflect a generational split, with an older generation recalling the mythical past and the younger generation anticipating the mythical future. 

Meanwhile, I have the impression that Serbia's pro-Western leaders are very confused about the present. It strikes me that these leaders, who identify so closely with the West, totally fail to understand it. Sometimes I have the impression that the Serbian bourgeoisie identifies with a kinder, gentler America that may have existed in the past, but does not exist today. They appear to believe, quite sincerely, that being nice to the West, the West will be nice to them. They don't know with whom they are dealing. They don't seem to have heard of a familiar American saying, "Nice guys finish last". In this ruthless world, being nice simply means that you are a loser, and that it costs nothing to keep cheating and beating you.

The United States and its NATO satellites are engaged in a world conquest of a new kind. It is active everywhere and yet almost invisible. The grotesquely enormous U.S. military machine continues to seek "full-spectrum" military superiority to control everything that goes on from underground to outer space, with close to one thousand overseas military bases around the globe, and vigorous programs to transform the erstwhile defense forces of other countries into specialized "tool boxes" for use in whatever war the U.S. may see fit to start anywhere in the world. Every day the United States engages in joint military exercises with client States at some point or another on the globe. Being an ally of the United States entails being unable to defend oneself, but being able to help the United States attack some other country.

And nice guys finish last.

Serbia's stigmatization continues. Western newspapers ignore Serbia unless there is something negative to say. In France, the weather maps that show temperatures in world capitals skip over Serbia – a non-country. The only ones who manage to break through this barrier are tennis stars – apparently the sports world has its own autonomy. But not everyone in Serbia can be a tennis star. Outside the tennis courts, Serbia continues to bear the stigma of "extreme nationalism", "ethnic cleansing", "the worst massacre in Europe since World War II", even "genocide".

The persistence of this stigmatization calls for explanation. It was only a few years after the end of World War II that the Federal Republic of Germany was accepted into NATO and recognized as an ally of the West. The rapidity of Germany's rehabilitation had two reasons which do not apply to Serbia. First of all, Germany was an industrial power-house, an economic power whose recovery was essential to the economy of the victorious United States itself. Second, there was the common enemy: the Soviet Union.

Some Serbs have obviously hoped that the "common enemy" factor could help rehabilitate Serbia. The common enemy being, in this case, Islam. Some admirable friends of Serbia entertain this hope, quite sincerely, but with all due respect I wish to voice objections to this approach.

One must keep in mind the role assigned to Serbs in the war game: that of racist enemies of Muslims. This stereotype is only reinforced when Serbs say anything against Muslims. The U.S. game has been to use support for Muslims in Bosnia and Kosovo to please leaders in the Muslim world. In 2007, the late congressman Tom Lantos, who at the time was chairman of the House foreign affairs committee, referred to independence for Kosovo as "just a reminder to the predominantly Muslim-led governments in this world that … the United States leads the way for creation of a predominantly Muslim country in the very heart of Europe." 

The myth of Serb "genocide" against Muslims serves to make US and Israeli wars against Muslims look almost humanitarian in comparison. To see things in terms of a conflict between the Christian West and the Muslim world plays into the hands of those who used Yugoslavia as their experimental laboratory for conquest. It fails to grasp the big picture. It points to the wrong enemy. It was not the Muslim world which destroyed Yugoslavia, it was NATO. It was not the Muslim world that detached Kosovo from Serbia, or could have done so – it was NATO. 

As a personal note, I must tell you that when I have visited Algeria and Libya, I have encountered intellectuals whose sympathy is with the old Yugoslavia and with Serbia. This is true also of Turkey, which may be more surprising.

In the context of the NATO project of world conquest, the choices made by Serbia have broader significance than may be perceived. When Serbia turns its back on the rest of the world in its single-minded desire to win approval from the NATO powers that stole Kosovo, it is proving that aggression pays. 

Serbia will not be treated as an equal until it fights back on the propaganda front. So long as the nation is stigmatized as "genocidal", it cannot make any claim to Kosovo, or to anything else. A pariah nation can only beg on its knees.

Shakespeare wrote these lines,

"Who steals my purse steals trash… but he that filches from me my good name robs me of that which not enriches him, and makes me poor indeed."   Let me say that the loss of Kosovo, however brutal and unjust, is minor compared to the loss of Serbia's good name. Serbian leaders have set the wrong priorities, putting futile gestures to recover Kosovo ahead of serious efforts to restore Serbia's reputation. 

Serbia does not have the military force to recapture Kosovo from NATO. It cannot fight successfully on the hard power battlefield. But it could at least try to fight on the battleground of words, images, ideas.

The totally biased trials in The Hague were designed to justify NATO aggression by establishing Serbia's guilt. And yet, the long trial of Milosevic, and the current endless trial of Vojislav Seselj, have failed to do so. However, this is hidden from world public opinion. The real faults of those defeated politicians are insignificant compared to the implications of their demonization. Serb patriots should make use of the testimony in those trials to establish the truth and restore Serbia's honor. They should do research, write book, make films, talk to the world. Not only the world, but even more the younger generations of Serbs, should be made to understand the tragedy – not to weep, nor to seek revenge, but to know the truth and live in freedom, independence and dignity. Only the truth can make you free.

 

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