The Rational Destruction of Yugoslavia
by Michael Parenti
Internet
In 1999, the U.S. national security state
-- which has been involved throughout the world in subversion,
sabotage, terrorism, torture, drug trafficking, and death squads
-- launched round-the-clock aerial attacks against Yugoslavia
for 78 days, dropping 20,000 tons of bombs and killing thousands
of women, children, and men. All this was done out of humanitarian
concern for Albanians in Kosovo. Or so we were asked to believe.
In the span of a few months, President Clinton bombed four countries:
Sudan, Afghanistan, Iraq repeatedly, and Yugoslavia massively.
At the same time, the U.S. was involved in proxy wars in Angola,
Mexico (Chiapas), Colombia, East Timor, and various other places.
And U.S. forces are deployed on every continent and ocean, with
some 300 major overseas support bases -- all in the name of peace,
democracy, national security, and humanitarianism.
While showing themselves ready and willing
to bomb Yugoslavia on behalf of an ostensibly oppressed minority
in Kosovo, U.S. leaders have made no moves against the Czech Republic
for its mistreatment of the Romany people (gypsies), or Britain
for oppressing the Catholic minority in Northern Ireland, or the
Hutu for the mass murder of a half million Tutsi in Rwanda --
not to mention the French who were complicit in that massacre.
Nor have U.S. leaders considered launching "humanitarian
bombings" against the Turkish people for what their leaders
have done to the Kurds, or the Indonesian people because their
generals killed over 200,000 East Timorese and were continuing
such slaughter through the summer of 1999, or the Guatemalans
for the Guatemalan military's systematic extermination of tens
of thousands of Mayan villagers. In such cases, U.S. leaders not
only tolerated such atrocities but were actively complicit with
the perpetrators -- who usually happened to be faithful client-state
allies dedicated to helping Washington make the world safe for
the Fortune 500.
Why then did U.S. leaders wage an unrestrainedly
murderous assault upon Yugoslavia?
The Third Worldization of Yugoslavia
Yugoslavia was built on an idea, namely
that the Southern Slavs would not remain weak and divided peoples,
squabbling among themselves and easy prey to outside imperial
interests. Together they could form a substantial territory capable
of its own economic development. Indeed, after World War II, socialist
Yugoslavia became a viable nation and an economic success. Between
1960 and 1980 it had one of the most vigorous growth rates: a
decent standard of living, free medical care and education, a
guaranteed right to a job, one-month vacation with pay, a literacy
rate of over 90 percent, and a life expectancy of 72 years. Yugoslavia
also offered its multi-ethnic citizenry affordable public transportation,
housing, and utilities, with a not-for-profit economy that was
mostly publicly owned. This was not the kind of country global
capitalism would normally tolerate. Still, socialistic Yugoslavia
was allowed to exist for 45 years because it was seen as a nonaligned
buffer to the Warsaw Pact nations.
The dismemberment and mutilation of Yugoslavia
was part of a concerted policy initiated by the United States
and the other Western powers in 1989. Yugoslavia was the one country
in Eastern Europe that would not voluntarily overthrow what remained
of its socialist system and install a free-market economic order.
In fact, Yugoslavs were proud of their postwar economic development
and of their independence from both the Warsaw Pact and NATO.
The U.S. goal has been to transform the Yugoslav nation into a
Third-World region, a cluster of weak right-wing principalities
with the following characteristics:
incapable of charting an independent course
of self-development; a shattered economy and natural resources
completely accessible to multinational corporate exploitation,
including the enormous mineral wealth in Kosovo; an impoverished,
but literate and skilled population forced to work at subsistence
wages, constituting a cheap labor pool that will help depress
wages in western Europe and elsewhere; dismantled petroleum, engineering,
mining, fertilizer, and automobile industries, and various light
industries, that offer no further competition with existing Western
producers.
U.S. policymakers also want to abolish
Yugoslavia's public sector services and social programs -- for
the same reason they want to abolish our public sector services
and social programs. The ultimate goal is the privatization and
Third Worldization of Yugoslavia, as it is the Third Worldization
of the United States and every other nation. In some respects,
the fury of the West's destruction of Yugoslavia is a backhanded
tribute to that nation's success as an alternative form of development,
and to the pull it exerted on neighboring populations both East
and West.
In the late 1960s and 1970s, Belgrade's
leaders, not unlike the Communist leadership in Poland, sought
simultaneously to expand the country's industrial base and increase
consumer goods, a feat they intended to accomplish by borrowing
heavily from the West. But with an enormous IMF debt came the
inevitable demand for "restructuring," a harsh austerity
program that brought wage freezes, cutbacks in public spending,
increased unemployment, and the abolition of worker-managed enterprises.
Still, much of the economy remained in the not-for-profit public
sector, including the Trepca mining complex in Kosovo, described
in the New York Times as "war's glittering prize . . . the
most valuable piece of real estate in the Balkans . . . worth
at least $5 billion" in rich deposits of coal, lead, zinc,
cadmium, gold, and silver.1
That U.S. leaders have consciously sought
to dismember Yugoslavia is not a matter of speculation but of
public record. In November 1990, the Bush administration pressured
Congress into passing the 1991 Foreign Operations Appropriations
Act, which provided that any part of Yugoslavia failing to declare
independence within six months would lose U.S. financial support.
The law demanded separate elections in each of the six Yugoslav
republics, and mandated U.S. State Department approval of both
election procedures and results as a condition for any future
aid. Aid would go only to the separate republics, not to the Yugoslav
government, and only to those forces whom Washington defined as
"democratic," meaning right-wing, free-market, separatist
parties.
Another goal of U.S. policy has been media
monopoly and ideological control. In 1997, in what remained of
Serbian Bosnia, the last radio station critical of NATO policy
was forcibly shut down by NATO "peacekeepers." The story
in the New York Times took elaborate pains to explain why silencing
the only existing dissident Serbian station was necessary for
advancing democratic pluralism. The Times used the term "hardline"
eleven times to describe Bosnian Serb leaders who opposed the
shutdown and who failed to see it as "a step toward bringing
about responsible news coverage in Bosnia."2
Likewise, a portion of Yugoslav television
remained in the hands of people who refused to view the world
as do the U.S. State Department, the White House, and the corporate-owned
U.S. news media, and this was not to be tolerated. The NATO bombings
destroyed the two government TV channels and dozens of local radio
and television stations, so that by the summer of 1999 the only
TV one could see in Belgrade, when I visited that city, were the
private channels along with CNN, German television, and various
U.S. programs. Yugoslavia's sin was not that it had a media monopoly
but that the publicly owned portion of its media deviated from
the western media monopoly that blankets most of the world, including
Yugoslavia itself.
In 1992, another blow was delivered against
Belgrade: international sanctions. Led by the United States, a
freeze was imposed on all trade to and from Yugoslavia, with disastrous
results for the economy: hyperinflation, mass unemployment of
up to 70 percent, malnourishment, and the collapse of the health
care system.3
Divide and Conquer
One of the great deceptions, notes Joan
Phillips, is that "those who are mainly responsible for the
bloodshed in Yugoslavia -- not the Serbs, Croats or Muslims, but
the Western powers -- are depicted as saviors."4 While pretending
to work for harmony, U.S. leaders supported the most divisive,
reactionary forces from Croatia to Kosovo.
In Croatia, the West's man-of-the-hour
was Franjo Tudjman, who claimed in a book he authored in 1989,
that "the establishment of Hitler's new European order can
be justified by the need to be rid of the Jews," and that
only 900,000 Jews, not six million, were killed in the Holocaust.
Tudjman's government adopted the fascist Ustasha checkered flag
and anthem.5 Tudjman presided over the forced evacuation of over
half a million Serbs from Croatia between 1991 and 1995, replete
with rapes and summary executions.6 This included the 200,000
from Krajina in 1995, whose expulsion was facilitated by attacks
from NATO war planes and missiles. Needless to say, U.S. leaders
did nothing to stop and much to assist these atrocities, while
the U.S. media looked the other way. Tudjman and his cronies now
reside in obscene wealth while the people of Croatia are suffering
the afflictions of the free market paradise. Tight controls have
been imposed on Croatian media, and anyone who criticizes President
Tudjman's government risks incarceration. Yet the White House
hails Croatia as a new democracy.
In Bosnia, U.S. leaders supported the
Muslim fundamentalist, Alija Izetbegovic, an active Nazi in his
youth, who has called for strict religious control over the media
and now wants to establish an Islamic Bosnian republic. Izetbegovic
himself does not have the support of most Bosnian Muslims. He
was decisively outpolled in his bid for the presidency yet managed
to take over that office by cutting a mysterious deal with frontrunner
Fikret Abdic.7 Bosnia is now under IMF and NATO regency. It is
not permitted to develop its own internal resources, nor allowed
to extend credit or self-finance through an independent monetary
system. Its state-owned assets, including energy, water, telecommunications,
media and transportation, have been sold off to private firms
at garage sale prices.
In the former Yugoslavia, NATO powers
have put aside neoimperialism and have opted for out-and-out colonial
occupation. In early 1999, the democratically elected president
of Republika Srpska, the Serb ministate in Bosnia, who had defeated
NATO's chosen candidate, was removed by NATO troops because he
proved less than fully cooperative with NATO's "high representative"
in Bosnia. The latter retains authority to impose his own solutions
and remove elected officials who prove in any way obstructive.8
This too was represented in the western press as a necessary measure
to advance democracy.
In Kosovo, we see the same dreary pattern.
The U.S. gave aid and encouragement to violently right-wing separatist
forces such as the self-styled Kosovo Liberation Army, previously
considered a terrorist organization by Washington. The KLA has
been a longtime player in the enormous heroin trade that reaches
to Switzerland, Austria, Belgium, Germany, Hungary, the Czech
Republic, Norway, and Sweden.9 KLA leaders had no social program
other than the stated goal of cleansing Kosovo of all non-Albanians,
a campaign that had been going on for decades. Between 1945 and
1998, the non-Albanian Kosovar population of Serbs, Roma, Turks,
Gorani (Muslim Slavs), Montenegrins, and several other ethnic
groups shrank from some 60 percent to about 20 percent. Meanwhile,
the Albanian population grew from 40 to 80 percent (not the 90
percent repeatedly reported in the press), benefiting from a higher
birth rate, a heavy influx of immigrants from Albania, and the
systematic intimidation and expulsion of Serbs.
In 1987, in an early untutored moment
of truth, the New York Times reported: "Ethnic Albanians
in the Government have manipulated public funds and regulations
to take over land belonging to Serbs. . . . Slavic Orthodox churches
have been attacked, and flags have been torn down. Wells have
been poisoned and crops burned. Slavic boys have been knifed,
and some young ethnic Albanians have been told by their elders
to rape Serbian girls. . . . As the Slavs flee the protracted
violence, Kosovo is becoming what ethnic Albanian nationalists
have been demanding for years . . . an 'ethnically pure' Albanian
region. . . ."10 Ironically, while the Serbs were repeatedly
charged with ethnic cleansing, Serbia itself is now the only multi-ethnic
society left in the former Yugoslavia, with some twenty-six nationality
groups including thousands of Albanians who live in and around
Belgrade.
Demonizing the Serbs
The propaganda campaign to demonize the
Serbs fits the larger policy of the Western powers. The Serbs
were targeted for demonization because they were the largest nationality
and the one most opposed to the breakup of Yugoslavia. None other
than Charles Boyd, former deputy commander of the U.S. European
command, commented on it in 1994: "The popular image of this
war in Bosnia is one of unrelenting Serb expansionism. Much of
what the Croatians call 'the occupied territories' is land that
has been held by Serbs for more that three centuries. The same
is true of most Serb land in Bosnia. . . . In short the Serbs
were not trying to conquer new territory, but merely to hold onto
what was already theirs." While U.S. leaders claim they want
peace, Boyd concludes, they have encouraged a deepening of the
war.11
But what of the atrocities they committed?
All sides committed atrocities, but the reporting was consistently
one-sided. Grisly incidents of Croat and Muslim atrocities against
the Serbs rarely made it into the U.S. press, and when they did
they were accorded only passing mention.12 Meanwhile Serb atrocities
were played up and sometimes even fabricated, as we shall see.
Recently, three Croatian generals were indicted by the Hague War
Crimes Tribunal for the bombardment and deaths of Serbs in Krajina
and elsewhere. Where were U.S. leaders and U.S. television crews
when these war crimes were being committed? John Ranz, chair of
Survivors of the Buchenwald Concentration Camp, USA, asks: Where
were the TV cameras when hundreds of Serbs were slaughtered by
Muslims near Srebrenica?13 The official line, faithfully parroted
in the U.S. media, is that the Serbs committed all the atrocities
at Srebrenica.
Before uncritically ingesting the atrocity
stories dished out by U.S. leaders and the corporate-owned news
media, we might recall the five hundred premature babies whom
Iraqi soldiers laughingly ripped from incubators in Kuwait, a
story repeated and believed until exposed as a total fabrication
years later. During the Bosnian war in 1993, the Serbs were accused
of having an official policy of rape. "Go forth and rape"
a Bosnian Serb commander supposedly publicly instructed his troops.
The source of that story never could be traced. The commander's
name was never produced. As far as we know, no such utterance
was ever made. Even the New York Times belatedly ran a tiny retraction,
coyly allowing that "the existence of 'a systematic rape
policy' by the Serbs remains to be proved."14
Bosnian Serb forces supposedly raped anywhere
from 25,000 to 100,000 Muslim women. The Bosnian Serb army numbered
not more than 30,000 or so, many of whom were engaged in desperate
military engagements. A representative from Helsinki Watch noted
that stories of massive Serbian rapes originated with the Bosnian
Muslim and Croatian governments and had no credible supporting
evidence. Common sense would dictate that these stories be treated
with the utmost skepticism -- and not be used as an excuse for
an aggressive and punitive policy against Yugoslavia.
The mass rape propaganda theme was resuscitated
in 1999 to justify NATO's renewed attacks on Yugoslavia. A headline
in the San Francisco Examiner tells us: "SERB TACTIC IS ORGANIZED
RAPE, KOSOVO REFUGEES SAY." Only at the bottom of the story,
in the nineteenth paragraph, do we read that reports gathered
by the Kosovo mission of the Organization for Security and Cooperation
in Europe found no such organized rape policy. The actual number
of rapes were in the dozens "and not many dozens," according
to the OSCE spokesperson. This same story did note that the U.N.
War Crimes Tribunal sentenced a Bosnian Croat military commander
to ten years in prison for failing to stop his troops from raping
Muslim women in 1993 -- an atrocity we heard little about when
it was happening.15
The Serbs were blamed for the infamous
Sarajevo market massacre of 1992. But according to the report
leaked out on French TV, Western intelligence knew that it was
Muslim operatives who had bombed Bosnian civilians in the marketplace
in order to induce NATO involvement. Even international negotiator
David Owen, who worked with Cyrus Vance, admitted in his memoir
that the NATO powers knew all along that it was a Muslim bomb.16
However, the well-timed fabrication served its purpose of inducing
the United Nations to go along with the U.S.-sponsored sanctions.
On one occasion, notes Barry Lituchy,
the New York Times ran a photo purporting to be of Croats grieving
over Serbian atrocities when in fact the murders had been committed
by Bosnian Muslims. The Times printed an obscure retraction the
following week.17
We repeatedly have seen how "rogue
nations" are designated and demonized. The process is predictably
transparent. First, the leaders are targeted. Qaddafi of Libya
was a "Hitlerite megalomaniac" and a "madman."
Noriega of Panama was a "a swamp rat," one of the world's
worst "drug thieves and scums," and "a Hitler admirer."
Saddam Hussein of Iraq was "the Butcher of Baghdad,"
a "madman," and "worse than Hitler." Each
of these leaders then had their countries attacked by U.S. forces
and U.S.-led sanctions. What they really had in common was that
each was charting a somewhat independent course of self-development
or somehow was not complying with the dictates of the global free
market and the U.S. national security state.18
Yugoslav president Slobodan Milosevic
has been described by Bill Clinton as "a new Hitler."
Yet he was not always considered so. At first, the Western press,
viewing the ex-banker as a bourgeois Serbian nationalist who might
hasten the break-up of the federation, hailed him as a "charismatic
personality." Only later, when they saw him as an obstacle
rather than a tool, did they begin to depict him as the demon
who "started all four wars." This was too much even
for the managing editor of the U.S. establishment journal Foreign
Affairs, Fareed Zakaria. He noted in the New York Times that Milosevic
who rules "an impoverished country that has not attacked
its neighbors -- is no Adolf Hitler. He is not even Saddam Hussein."19
Some opposition radio stations and newspapers
were reportedly shut down during the NATO bombing. But, during
my trip to Belgrade in August 1999, I observed nongovernmental
media and opposition party newspapers going strong. There are
more opposition parties in the Yugoslav parliament than in any
other European parliament. Yet the government is repeatedly labeled
a dictatorship. Milosevic was elected as president of Yugoslavia
in a contest that foreign observers said had relatively few violations.
As of the end of 1999, he presided over a coalition government
that included four parties. Opposition groups openly criticized
and demonstrated against his government. Yet he was called a dictator.
The propaganda campaign against Belgrade
has been so relentless that prominent personages on the Left --
who oppose the NATO policy against Yugoslavia -- have felt compelled
to genuflect before this demonization orthodoxy.20 Thus do they
reveal themselves as having been influenced by the very media
propaganda machine they criticize on so many other issues. To
reject the demonized image of Milosevic and of the Serbian people
is not to idealize them or claim they are faultless or free of
crimes. It is merely to challenge the one-sided propaganda that
laid the grounds for NATO's destruction of Yugoslavia.
More Atrocity Stories
Atrocities (murders and rapes) occur in
every war, which is not to condone them. Indeed, murders and rapes
occur in many peacetime communities. What the media propaganda
campaign against Yugoslavia charged was that atrocities were conducted
on a mass genocidal scale. Such charges were used to justify the
murderous aerial assault by NATO forces.
Up until the bombings began in March 1999,
the conflict in Kosovo had taken 2000 lives altogether from both
sides, according to Kosovo Albanian sources. Yugoslavian sources
had put the figure at 800. In either case, such casualties reveal
a limited insurgency, not genocide. The forced expulsion policy
began after the NATO bombings, with thousands being uprooted by
Serb forces mostly in areas where the KLA was operating or was
suspected of operating. In addition, if the unconfirmed reports
by the ethnic Albanian refugees can be believed, there was much
plundering and instances of summary execution by Serbian paramilitary
forces -- who were unleashed after the NATO bombing started.
We should keep in mind that tens of thousands
fled Kosovo because of the bombings, or because the province was
the scene of sustained ground fighting between Yugoslav forces
and the KLA, or because they were just afraid and hungry. An Albanian
woman crossing into Macedonia was eagerly asked by a news crew
if she had been forced out by Serb police. She responded: "There
were no Serbs. We were frightened of the [NATO] bombs."21
During the bombings, an estimated 70,000 to 100,000 Serbian residents
of Kosovo took flight (mostly north but some to the south), as
did thousands of Roma and other non-Albanian ethnic groups.22
Were these people ethnically cleansing themselves? Or were they
not fleeing the bombing and the ground war?
The New York Times reported that "a
major purpose of the NATO effort is to end the Serb atrocities
that drove more than one million Albanians from their homes."23
So, we are told to believe, the refugee tide was caused not by
the ground war against the KLA and not by the massive NATO bombing
but by unspecified atrocities. The bombing, which was the major
cause of the refugee problem was now seen as the solution. The
refugee problem created in part by the massive aerial attacks
was now treated as justification for such attacks, a way of putting
pressure on Milosevic to allow "the safe return of ethnic
Albanian refugees."24
While Kosovo Albanians were leaving in
great numbers -- usually well-clothed and in good health, some
riding their tractors, trucks, or cars, many of them young men
of recruitment age -- they were described as being "slaughtered."
Serbian attacks on KLA strongholds and the forced expulsion of
Albanian villagers were described as "genocide." But
experts in surveillance photography and wartime propaganda charged
NATO with running a "propaganda campaign" on Kosovo
that lacked any supporting evidence. State Department reports
of mass graves and of 100,000 to 500,000 missing Albanian men
"are just ludicrous," according to these independent
critics.25
As with the Croatian and Bosnian conflicts,
the image of mass killings was hyped once again. The Washington
Post reported that 350 ethnic Albanians "might be buried
in mass graves" around a mountain village in western Kosovo.
Such speculations were based on sources that NATO officials refused
to identify. Getting down to specifics, the article mentions "four
decomposing bodies" discovered near a large ash heap, with
no details as to who they might be or how they died.26
An ABC "Nightline" program made
dramatic and repeated references to the "Serbian atrocities
in Kosovo" while offering no specifics. Ted Kopple asked
angry Albanian refugees what they had witnessed? They pointed
to an old man in their group who wore a wool hat. The Serbs had
thrown the man's hat to the ground and stepped on it, "because
the Serbs knew that his hat was the most important thing to him,"
they told Kopple, who was appropriately appalled by this one example
of a "war crime" offered in the hour-long program.
A widely circulated story in the New York
Times, headlined "U.S. REPORT OUTLINES SERB ATTACKS IN KOSOVO,"
tells us that the State Department issued "the most comprehensive
documentary record to date on atrocities." The report concludes
that there had been organized rapes and systematic executions.
But reading further into the article, one finds that stories of
such crimes "depend almost entirely on information from refugee
accounts. There was no suggestion that American intelligence agencies
had been able to verify, most, or even many, of the accounts .
. . and the word 'reportedly' and 'allegedly' appear throughout
the document."27
British journalist Audrey Gillan interviewed
Kosovo refugees about atrocities and found an impressive lack
of evidence. One woman caught him glancing at the watch on her
wrist, while her husband told him how all the women had been robbed
of their jewelry and other possessions. A spokesperson for the
U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees talked of mass rapes and what
sounded like hundreds of killings in three villages. When Gillan
pressed him for more precise information, he reduced it drastically
to five or six teenage rape victims. But he admitted that he had
not spoken to any witnesses and that "we have no way of verifying
these reports."28
Gillan noted that some refugees had seen
killings and other atrocities, but there was little to suggest
that they had seen it on the scale that was being reported. Officials
told him of refugees who talked of sixty or more being killed
in one village and fifty in another, but Gillan "could not
find one eye-witness who actually saw these things happening."
It was always in some other village that the mass atrocities seem
to have occurred. Yet every day western journalists reported "hundreds"
of rapes and murders. Sometimes they noted in passing that the
reports had yet to be substantiated, but then why were such stories
being so eagerly publicized?
In contrast to its public assertions,
the German Foreign Office privately denied there was any evidence
that genocide or ethnic cleansing was a component of Yugoslav
policy: "Even in Kosovo, an explicit political persecution
linked to Albanian ethnicity is not verifiable. . . . The actions
of the [Yugoslav] security forces [were] not directed against
the Kosovo-Albanians as an ethnically defined group, but against
the military opponent and its actual or alleged supporters."29
Still, Milosevic was indicted as a war
criminal, charged with the forced expulsion of Albanian Kosovars,
and with summary executions of a hundred or so individuals. Again,
alleged crimes that occurred after the NATO bombing had started
were used as justification for the bombing. The biggest war criminals
of all were the NATO political leaders who orchestrated the aerial
campaign of death and destruction.
As the White House saw it, since the stated
aim of the aerial attacks was not to kill civilians; there was
no liability, only regrettable mistakes. In other words, only
the professed intent of an action counted and not its ineluctable
effects. But a perpetrator can be judged guilty of willful murder
without explicitly intending the death of a particular victim
-- as with an unlawful act that the perpetrator knew would likely
cause death. As George Kenney, a former State Department official
under the Bush Administration, put it: "Dropping cluster
bombs on highly populated urban areas doesn't result in accidental
fatalities. It is purposeful terror bombing."30
In the first weeks of the NATO occupation
of Kosovo, tens of thousands of Serbs were driven from the province
and hundreds were killed by KLA gunmen in what was described in
the western press as acts of "revenge" and "retaliation,"
as if the victims were deserving of such a fate. Also numbering
among the victims of "retribution" were the Roma, Gorani,
Turks, Montenegrins, and Albanians who had "collaborated"
with the Serbs by speaking Serbian, opposing separatism, and otherwise
identifying themselves as Yugoslavs. Others continued to be killed
or maimed by the mines planted by the KLA and the Serb military,
and by the large number of NATO cluster bombs sprinkled over the
land.31
It was repeatedly announced in the first
days of the NATO occupation that 10,000 Albanians had been killed
by the Serbs (down from the 100,000 and even 500,000 Albanian
men supposedly executed during the war). No evidence was ever
offered to support the 10,000 figure, nor even to explain how
it was so swiftly determined -- even before NATO forces had moved
into most of Kosovo.
Repeatedly unsubstantiated references
to "mass graves," each purportedly filled with hundreds
or even thousands of Albanian victims also failed to materialize.
Through the summer of 1999, the media hype about mass graves devolved
into an occasional unspecified reference. The few sites actually
unearthed offered up as many as a dozen bodies or sometimes twice
that number, but with no certain evidence regarding causes of
death or even the nationality of victims. In some cases there
was reason to believe the victims were Serbs.32
Lacking evidence of mass graves, by late
August 1999 the Los Angeles Times focused on wells "as mass
graves in their own right. . . . Serbian forces apparently stuffed...many
bodies of ethnic Albanians into wells during their campaign of
terror."33 Apparently? The story itself dwelled on only one
village in which the body of a 39-year-old male was found in a
well, along with three dead cows and a dog. No cause was given
for his death and "no other human remains were discovered."
The well's owner was not identified. Again when getting down to
specifics, the atrocities seem not endemic but sporadic.
Ethnic Enmity and U.S. "Diplomacy"
Some people argue that nationalism, not
class, is the real motor force behind the Yugoslav conflict. This
presumes that class and ethnicity are mutually exclusive forces.
In fact, ethnic enmity can be enlisted to serve class interests,
as the CIA tried to do with indigenous peoples in Indochina and
Nicaragua -- and more recently in Bosnia.34
When different national groups are living
together with some measure of social and material security, they
tend to get along. There is intermingling and even intermarriage.
But when the economy goes into a tailspin, thanks to sanctions
and IMF destabilization, then it becomes easier to induce internecine
conflicts and social discombobulation. In order to hasten that
process in Yugoslavia, the Western powers provided the most retrograde
separatist elements with every advantage in money, organization,
propaganda, arms, hired thugs, and the full might of the U.S.
national security state at their backs. Once more the Balkans
are to be balkanized.
NATO's attacks on Yugoslavia have been
in violation of its own charter, which says it can take military
action only in response to aggression committed against one of
its members. Yugoslavia attacked no NATO member. U.S. leaders
discarded international law and diplomacy. Traditional diplomacy
is a process of negotiating disputes through give and take, proposal
and counterproposal, a way of pressing one's interests only so
far, arriving eventually at a solution that may leave one side
more dissatisfied than the other but not to the point of forcing
either party to war.
U.S. diplomacy is something else, as evidenced
in its dealings with Vietnam, Nicaragua, Panama, Iraq, and now
Yugoslavia. It consists of laying down a set of demands that are
treated as nonnegotiable, though called "accords" or
"agreements," as in the Dayton Accords or Rambouillet
Agreements. The other side's reluctance to surrender completely
to every condition is labeled "stonewalling," and is
publicly misrepresented as an unwillingness to negotiate in good
faith. U.S. leaders, we hear, run out of patience as their "offers"
are "snubbed." Ultimatums are issued, then aerial destruction
is delivered upon the recalcitrant nation so that it might learn
to see things the way Washington does.
Milosevic balked because the Rambouillet
plan, drawn up by the U.S. State Department, demanded that he
hand over a large, rich region of Serbia, that is, Kosovo, to
foreign occupation. The plan further stipulated that these foreign
troops shall have complete occupational power over all of Yugoslavia,
with immunity from arrest and with supremacy over Yugoslav police
and authorities. Even more revealing of the U.S. agenda, the Rambouillet
plan stated: "The economy of Kosovo shall function in accordance
with free market principles."
Rational Destruction
While professing to having been discomforted
by the aerial destruction of Yugoslavia, many liberals and progressives
were convinced that "this time" the U.S. national security
state was really fighting the good fight. "Yes, the bombings
don't work. The bombings are stupid!" they said at the time,
"but we have to do something." In fact, the bombings
were other than stupid: they were profoundly immoral. And in fact
they did work; they destroyed much of what was left of Yugoslavia,
turning it into a privatized, deindustrialized, recolonized, beggar-poor
country of cheap labor, defenseless against capital penetration,
so battered that it will never rise again, so shattered that it
will never reunite, not even as a viable bourgeois country.
When the productive social capital of
any part of the world is obliterated, the potential value of private
capital elsewhere is enhanced -- especially when the crisis faced
today by western capitalism is one of overcapacity. Every agricultural
base destroyed by western aerial attacks (as in Iraq) or by NAFTA
and GATT (as in Mexico and elsewhere), diminishes the potential
competition and increases the market opportunities for multinational
corporate agribusiness. To destroy publicly-run Yugoslav factories
that produced auto parts, appliances, or fertilizer -- or a publicly
financed Sudanese plant that produced pharmaceuticals at prices
substantially below their western competitors -- is to enhance
the investment value of western producers. And every television
or radio station closed down by NATO troops or blown up by NATO
bombs extends the monopolizing dominance of the western media
cartels. The aerial destruction of Yugoslavia's social capital
served that purpose.
We have yet to understand the full effect
of NATO's aggression. Serbia is one of the greatest sources of
underground waters in Europe, and the contamination from U.S.
depleted uranium and other explosives is being felt in the whole
surrounding area all the way to the Black Sea. In Pancevo alone,
huge amounts of ammonia were released into the air when NATO bombed
the fertilizer factory. In that same city, a petrochemical plant
was bombed seven times. After 20,000 tons of crude oil were burnt
up in only one bombardment of an oil refinery, a massive cloud
of smoke hung in the air for ten days. Some 1,400 tons of ethylene
dichloride spilled into the Danube, the source of drinking water
for ten million people. Meanwhile, concentrations of vinyl chloride
were released into the atmosphere at more than 10,000 times the
permitted level. In some areas, people have broken out in red
blotches and blisters, and health officials predict sharp increases
in cancer rates in the years ahead.35
National parks and reservations that make
Yugoslavia among thirteen of the world's richest bio-diversity
countries were bombed. The depleted uranium missiles that NATO
used through many parts of the country have a half-life of 4.5
billion years.36 It is the same depleted uranium that now delivers
cancer, birth defects, and premature death upon the people of
Iraq. In Novi Sad, I was told that crops were dying because of
the contamination. And power transformers could not be repaired
because U.N. sanctions prohibited the importation of replacement
parts. The people I spoke to were facing famine and cold in the
winter ahead.
With words that might make us question
his humanity, the NATO commander, U.S. General Wesley Clark boasted
that the aim of the air war was to "demolish, destroy, devastate,
degrade, and ultimately eliminate the essential infrastructure"
of Yugoslavia. Even if Serbian atrocities had been committed,
and I have no doubt that some were, where is the sense of proportionality?
Paramilitary killings in Kosovo (which occurred mostly after the
aerial war began) are no justification for bombing fifteen cities
in hundreds of around-the-clock raids for over two months, spewing
hundreds of thousands of tons of highly toxic and carcinogenic
chemicals into the water, air, and soil, killing thousands of
Serbs, Albanians, Roma, Turks, and others, and destroying bridges,
residential areas, and over two hundred hospitals, clinics, schools,
and churches, along with the productive capital of an entire nation.
A report released in London in August
1999 by the Economist Intelligence Unit concluded that the enormous
damage NATO's aerial war inflicted on Yugoslavia's infrastructure
will cause the economy to shrink dramatically in the next few
years.37 Gross domestic product will drop by 40 percent this year
and remain at levels far below those of a decade ago. Yugoslavia,
the report predicted, will become the poorest country in Europe.
Mission accomplished.
Postscript
In mid-September 1999, the investigative
journalist Diana Johnstone emailed associates in the U.S. that
former U.S. ambassador to Croatia, Peter Galbraith, who had backed
Tudjman's "operation storm" that drove 200,000 Serbians
(mostly farming families) out of the Krajina region of Croatia
four years ago, was recently in Montenegro, chiding Serbian opposition
politicians for their reluctance to plunge Yugoslavia into civil
war. Such a war would be brief, he assured them, and would "solve
all your problems." Another strategy under consideration
by U.S. leaders, heard recently in Yugoslavia, is to turn over
the northern Serbian province of Vojvodina to Hungary. Vojvodina
has some twenty-six nationalities including several hundred thousand
persons of Hungarian descent who, on the whole show no signs of
wanting to secede, and who certainly are better treated than the
larger Hungarian minorities in Rumania and Slovakia. Still, a
recent $100 million appropriation from the U.S. Congress fuels
separatist activity in what remains of Yugoslavia -- at least
until Serbia gets a government sufficiently pleasing to the free-market
globalists in the West. Johnstone concludes: "With their
electric power stations ruined and factories destroyed by NATO
bombing, isolated, sanctioned and treated as pariahs by the West,
Serbs have the choice between freezing honorably in a homeland
plunged into destitution, or following the 'friendly advice' of
the same people who have methodically destroyed their country.
As the choice is unlikely to be unanimous one way or the other,
civil war and further destruction of the country are probable."
Michael Parenti is the author of Against
Empire, Dirty Truths, America Besieged, and most recently, History
as Mystery, all published by City Lights Books.
NOTES:
1.New York Times, July 8, 1998. 2.New
York Times, October 10, 1997. 3.For more detailed background information
on the stratagems preceding the NATO bombing, see the collection
of reports by Ramsey Clark, Sean Gervasi, Sara Flounders, Nadja
Tesich, Michel Choussudovsky, and others in NATO in the Balkans:
Voices of Opposition (New York: International Action Center, 1998).
4.Joan Phillips, "Breaking the Selective Silence," Living
Marxism, April 1993, p. 10. 5.Financial Times (London), April
15, 1993. 6.See for instance, Yigal Chazan's report in The Guardian
(London/Manchester), August 17, 1992. 7.See Laura Silber and Allan
Little, Yugoslavia: Death of a Nation (London: Penguin, 1995),
p. 211; also Diana Johnstone, "Alija Izetbegovic: Islamic
Hero of the Western World," CovertAction Quarterly, Winter
1999, p. 58. 8.Michael Kelly, "The Clinton Doctrine is a
Fraud, and Kosovo Proves It," Boston Globe, July 1, 19 99.
9.San Francisco Chronicle, May 5, 1999 and Washington Times, May
3, 1999. 10.New York Times, November 1, 1987. 11.Foreign Affairs,
September/October 1994. 12.For instance, Raymond Bonner, "War
Crimes Panel Finds Croat Troops 'Cleansed' the Serbs," New
York Times, March 21, 1999, a revealing report that has been ignored
in the relentless propaganda campaign against the Serbs. 13.John
Ranz in his paid advertisement in the New York Times, April 29,
1993. 14."Correction: Report on Rape in Bosnia," New
York Times, October 23, 1993. 15.San Francisco Examiner, April
26, 1999. 16.David Owen, Balkan Odyssey, p. 262. 17.Barry Lituchy,
"Media Deception and the Yugoslav Civil War," in NATO
in the Balkans, p. 205; see also New York Times, August 7, 1993.
18.For further discussion of this point, see my Against Empire
(San Francisco: City Lights Books, 1995). 19.New York Times, March
28, 1999. 20.Both Noam Chomsky in his comments on Pacifica Radio,
April 7, 1999, and Alexander Cockburn in the Nation, May 10, 1999,
referred to Serbian "brutality" and described Milosevic
as "monstrous" without offering any specifics. 21.Brooke
Shelby Biggs, "Failure to Inform," San Francisco Bay
Guardian, May 5, 1999, p. 25. 22.Washington Post, June 6, 1999.
23.New York Times, June 15, 1999. 24.See for instance, Robert
Burns, Associated Press report, April 22, 1999. 25.Charles Radin
and Louise Palmer, "Experts Voice Doubts on Claims of Genocide:
Little Evidence for NATO Assertions," San Francisco Chronicle,
April 22, 1999. 26.Washington Post, July 10, 1999. 27.New York
Times, May 11, 1999. 28.Audrey Gillan "What's the Story?"
London Review of Books, May 27, 1999. 29.Intelligence reports
from the German Foreign Office, January 12, 1999 and October 29,
1998 to the German Administrative Courts, translated by Eric Canepa,
Brecht Forum, New York, April 20, 1999. 30.Teach-in, Leo Baeck
Temple, Los Angeles, May 23, 1999. 31.Los Angeles Times, August
22, 1999. 32.See for instance, Carlotta Gall, "Belgrade Sees
Grave Site as Proof NATO Fails to Protect Serbs," New York
Times, August 27, 1999. 33.Los Angeles Times, August 28, 1999.
34.It is a matter of public record that the CIA has been active
in Bosnia. Consider these headlines: The Guardian (Manchester/London),
November 17 1994: "CIA AGENTS TRAINING BOSNIAN ARMY";
The London Observer, November 20, 1994: "AMERICA'S SECRET
BOSNIA AGENDA"; The European, November 25, 1994: "HOW
THE CIA HELPS BOSNIA FIGHT BACK." 35.Report by Steve Crawshaw
in the London Independent, reprinted in the San Francisco Examiner,
July 26, 1999. 36.See the communication from Serbian environmentalist
Branka Jovanovic: http://beograd.rockbridge.net/greens_from_belgrade.htm;
March 31, 1999. 37.San Francisco Examiner, August 23, 1999.
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