NATO's Reign of Terror in Kosovo
by Michel Chossudovsky
Global Research, February 25,
2008
The following text was written in the
immediate wake of the 1999 NATO bombings of Yugoslavia and the
invasion of Kosovo by NATO troops. __It is now well established
that the war was waged on a fabricated humanitarian pretext and
that extensive war crimes were committed by NATO and the US.
In a bitter irony, the so-called International
Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) in The Hague
is controlled by those who have committed extensive war crimes.
It was not President Milosevic, who was poisoned in his prison
cell, but NATO who started the war in Yugoslavia. __According
to Nuremberg jurisprudence, the ultimate war crime consists in
starting a war. According to William Rockler, former prosecutor
of the Nuremberg War Crimes Tribunal:
"The [1999] bombing war violates
and shreds the basic provisions of the United Nations Charter
and other conventions and treaties; the attack on Yugoslavia constitutes
the most brazen international aggression since the Nazis attacked
Poland to prevent "Polish atrocities" against Germans.
The United States has discarded pretensions to international legality
and decency, and embarked on a course of raw imperialism run amok."
According to Nuremberg jurisprudence,
NATO heads of State and heads of government are responsible for
the supreme crime: "the crime against peace."__Reagan's
NSDD 133 (1984) "Secret and Sensitive"__There is evidence
that the US administration in liason with its allies took the
decision in the early 1980s to destabilise and dismantle Yugoslavia.
The decsion to destroy Yugoslavia as a
country and carve it up into a number of small proxy states was
taken by the Reagan adminstration in the early 1980s. __A "Secret
Sensitive" National Security Decision Directive (NSDD 133)
entitled "US Policy towards Yugoslavia." (Declassified)
set the foreign policy framework for the destabilization of Yugoslavia's
model of market socialism and the establishment of a US sphere
of influence in Southeastern Europe. __Yugoslavia was in many
regards "an economic success story". In the two decades
before 1980, annual gross domestic product (GDP) growth averaged
6.1 percent, medical care was free, the rate of literacy was 91
percent, and life expectancy was 72 years. __While NSDD 133 was
in itself a somewhat innocous document, it provided legitimacy
to the free market reforms. A series of covert intelligence operations
were implemented, which consisted in creating and supporting secessionist
paramilitary armies, first in Bosnia then in Kosovo. __These covert
operations were combined with the destabilization of the Yugoslav
economy. The application of strong economic medicine under the
helm of the IMF and the World Bank ultimately led to the destruction
of Yugoslavia's industrial base, the demise of the workers' cooperative
and the dramatic impoverishment of its population. __Kosovo "Independence"
__The record of US-NATO war crimes is important in assessing recent
developments in Kosovo. __From the outset of their respective
mandates in June 1999, both NATO and the UN Mission to Kosovo
(UNMIK) have actively supported the KLA, which has committed
numerous atrocities. __It is important to understand that these
atrocities were ordered by the current and former prime ministers
of the Kosovo "government". __Since 1999, State terrorism
in Kosovo has become an integral part of NATO's design. The present
government of prime minister Hashim Thaci (a former KLA Commander),
is an outgrowth of this reign of terror. It is not a government
in the common sense of the word. It remains a terrorist organization
linked to organised crime. It is instrument of the foreign occupation.
__Michel Chossudovsky, February 23, 2008.
***
NATO HAS INSTALLED A REIGN OF TERROR IN
KOSOVO
by Michel Chossudovsky, August 10, 1999
__
This text was presented to the Independent
Commission of Inquiry to Investigate U.S./NATO War Crimes Against
The People of Yugoslavia, International Action Center, New York,
July 31, 1999.
PART I: MASSACRES OF CIVILIANS IN KOSOVO
While the World focusses on troop movements
and war crimes, the massacres of civilians in the wake of the
bombings have been casually dismissed as "justifiable acts
of revenge". In occupied Kosovo, "double standards"
prevail in assessing alleged war crimes. The massacres directed
against Serbs, ethnic Albanians, Roma and other ethnic groups
have been conducted on the instructions of the military command
of the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA).
NATO ostensibly denies KLA involvement.
These so-called "unmotivated acts of violence and retaliation"
are not categorised as "war crimes" and are therefore
not included in the mandate of the numerous FBI and Interpol police
investigators dispatched to Kosovo under the auspices of the Hague
War Crime's Tribunal (ICTY). Moreover, whereas NATO has tacitly
endorsed the self-proclaimed KLA provisional government, KFOR
the international security force in Kosovo has provided protection
to the KLA military commanders responsible for the atrocities.
In so doing both NATO and the UN Mission have acquiesced to the
massacres of civilians. In turn, public opinion has been blatantly
misled. In portraying the massacres, the Western media has casually
overlooked the role of the KLA, not to mention its pervasive links
to organised crime. In the words of National Security Advisor
Samuel Berger, "these people [ethnic Albanians] come back
... with broken hearts and with some of those hearts filled with
anger."1 While the massacres are seldom presented as the
result of "deliberate decisions" by the KLA military
command, the evidence (and history of the KLA) amply confirm that
these atrocities are part of a policy of "ethnic cleansing"
directed mainly against the Serb population but also against the
Roma, Montenegrins, Goranis and Turks.
Serbian houses and business have been
confiscated, looted, or burned, and Serbs have been beaten, raped,
and killed. In one of the more dramatic of incidents, KLA troops
ransacked a monastery, terrorized the priest and a group of nuns
with gunfire, and raped at least one of the nuns. NATO's inability
to control the situation and provide equal protection for all
ethnic groups, and its apparent inability or unwillingness to
fully disarm the KLA, has created a serious situation for NATO
troops...2
The United Nations High Commissioner for
Refugees (UNHCR), confirms in this regard that:
"more than 164,000 Serbs have left
Kosovo during the seven weeks since... the NATO-led Kosovo Force
(KFOR) entered the province... A wave of arson and looting of
Serb and Roma homes throughout Kosovo has ensued. Serbs and Roma
remaining in Kosovo have been subject to repeated incidents of
harassment and intimidation, including severe beatings. Most seriously,
there has been a spate of murders and abductions of Serbs since
mid-June, including the late July massacre of Serb farmers."3
POLITICAL ASSASSINATIONS
The self-proclaimed Provisional Government
of Kosovo (PGK) has also ordered assassinations directed against
political opponents including "loyalist" ethnic Albanians
and supporters of the Kosovo Democratic League (KDL). These acts
are being carried out in a totally permissive environment. The
leaders of the KLA rather than being arrested for war crimes,
have been granted KFOR protection.
According to a report of the Foreign Policy
Institute (published during the bombings):
"...the KLA have [no] qualms about
murdering Rugova's collaborators, whom it accused of the `crime'
of moderation... [T]he KLA declared Rugova a `traitor' yet another
step toward eliminating any competitors for political power within
Kosovo."4
Already in May [1999], Fehmi Agani, one
of Rugova's closest collaborators in the Kosovo Democratic League
(KDL) was killed. The Serbs were blamed by NATO spokesperson Jamie
Shea for having assassinated Agani. According to Skopje's paper
Makedonija Danas, Agani had been executed on the orders of the
KLA's self-appointed Prime Minister Hashim Thaci.5 "If Thaci
actually considered Rugova a threat, he would not hesitate to
have Rugova removed from the Kosovo political landscape."6
In turn, the KLA has abducted and killed
numerous professionals and intellectuals:
"Private and State properties are
threatened, home and apartment owners are evicted en masse by
force and threats, houses and entire villages are burned, cultural
and religious monuments are destroyed... A particularly heavy
blow... has been the violence against the hospital centre in Pristina,
the maltreatment and expulsion of its professional management,
doctors and medical staff."7
Both NATO and the UN prefer to turn a
blind eye. UN Interim Administrator Bernard Kouchner (a former
French Minister of Health) and KFOR Commander Sir Mike Jackson
have established a routine working relationship with Prime Minister
Hashim Thaci and KLA Chief of Staff Brigadier General Agim Ceku.
ATROCITIES COMMITTED AGAINST THE ROMA
Ethnic cleansing has also been directed
against the Roma (which represented prior to the conflict a population
group of 150,000 people). (According to figures provided by the
Roma Community in New York). A large part of the Roma population
has already escaped to Montenegro and Serbia. In turn, there are
reports that Roma refugees who had fled by boat to Southern Italy
have been expelled by the Italian authorities.8 The KLA has also
ordered the systematic looting and torching of Romani homes and
settlements:
"All houses and settlements of Romani,
like 2,500 homes in the residential area called `Mahala' in the
town of Kosovska Mitrovica, have been looted and burnt down".9
With regard to KLA atrocities committed
against the Roma, the same media distortions prevail. According
to the BBC: "Gypsies are accused by [Kosovar] Albanians of
collaborating in Serb brutalities, which is why they've also become
victims of revenge attacks. And the truth is, some probably did."10
INSTALLING A PARAMILITARY GOVERNMENT
As Western leaders trumpet their support
for democracy, State terrorism in Kosovo has become an integral
part of NATO's postwar design. The KLA's political role for the
post-conflict period had been mapped out well in advance. Prior
to Rambouillet Conference, the KLA had been promised a central
role in the formation of a post-conflict government. The "hidden
agenda" consisted in converting the KLA paramilitary into
a legitimate and accomplished civilian administration. According
to US State Department spokesman James Foley (February 1999):
"We want to develop a good relationship
with them [the KLA] as they transform themselves into a politically-oriented
organization, ...[W]e believe that we have a lot of advice and
a lot of help that we can provide to them if they become precisely
the kind of political actor we would like to see them become.'"11
In other words, the US State Department
had already slated the KLA "provisional government"
(PGK) to run civilian State institutions. Under NATO's "Indirect
Rule", the KLA has taken over municipal governments and public
services including schools and hospitals. Rame Buja, the KLA "Minister
for Local Administration" has appointed local prefects in
23 out of 25 municipalities.12
Under NATO's regency, the KLA has replaced
the duly elected (by ethnic Albanians) provisional Kosovar government
of President Ibrahim Rugova. The self-proclaimed KLA administration
has branded Rugova as a traitor declaring the (parallel) Kosovar
parliamentary elections held in March 1998 to be invalid. This
position has largely been upheld by the Organisation for Security
and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) entrusted by UNMIK with the postwar
task of "democracy building" and "good governance".
In turn, OSCE officials have already established a working rapport
with KLA appointees.13
The KLA provisional government (PGK) is
made up of the KLA's political wing together with the Democratic
Union Movement (LBD), a coalition of five opposition parties opposed
to Rugova's Democratic League (LDK). In addition to the position
of prime minister, the KLA controls the ministries of finance,
public order and defence. The KLA also has a controlling voice
on the UN sponsored Kosovo Transitional Council set up by Mr.
Bernard Kouchner. The PGK has also established links with a number
of Western governments.
Whereas the KLA has been spearheaded into
running civilian institutions (under the guidance of the OSCE),
members of the duly elected Kosovar (provisional) government of
the Democratic League (DKL) have been blatantly excluded from
acquiring a meaningful political voice.
ESTABLISHING A KLA POLICE FORCE TO `PROTECT
CIVILIANS'
Under NATO occupation, the rule of law
has visibly been turned up side down. Criminals and terrorists
are to become law enforcement officers. KLA troops which have
already taken over police stations will eventually form a 4,000
strong "civilian" police force (to be trained by foreign
police officers under the authority of the United Nations) with
a mandate to "protect civilians". Canadian Prime Minister
Jean Chretien has already pledged Canadian support to the formation
of a civilian police force.14 The latter which has been entrusted
to the OSCE will eventually operate under the jurisdiction of
the KLA controlled "Ministry of Public Order".
US MILITARY AID
Despite NATO's commitment to disarming
the KLA, the Kosovar paramilitary organisation is slated to be
transformed into a modern military force. So-called "security
assistance" has already been granted to the KLA by the US
Congress under the "Kosovar Independence and Justice Act
of 1999". Start-up funds of 20 million dollars will largely
be "used for training and support for their [KLA] established
self-defence forces."15 In the words of KLA Chief of Staff
Agrim Ceku:
"The KLA wants to be transformed
into something like the US National Guard, ... we accept the assistance
of KFOR and the international community to rebuild an army according
to NATO standards. ... These professionally trained soldiers of
the next generation of the KLA would seek only to defend Kosova.
At this decisive moment, we [the KLA] do not hide our ambitions;
we want the participation of international military structures
to assist in the pacific and humanitarian efforts we are attempting
here." 16
While the KLA maintains its links to the
Balkans narcotics trade which served to finance many of its terrorist
activities, the paramilitary organisation has now been granted
an official seal of approval as well as "legitimate"
sources of funding. The pattern is similar to that followed in
Croatia and in the Bosnian Muslim-Croatian Federation where so-called
"equip and train" programmes were put together by the
Pentagon. In turn, Washington's military aid package to the KLA
has been entrusted to Military Professional Resources Inc. (MPRI)
of Alexandria, Virginia, a private mercenary outfit run by high
ranking former US military officers.
MPRI's training concepts which had already
been tested in Croatia and Bosnia are based on imparting "offensive
tactics... as the best form of defence".17 In the Kosovar
context, this so- called "defensive doctrine" transforms
the KLA paramilitary into a modern army without however eliminating
its terrorist makeup.18 The objective is to ultimately transform
an insurgent army into a modern military and police force which
serves the Alliance's future strategic objectives in the Balkans.
MPRI has currently "ninety-one highly experienced, former
military professionals working in Bosnia & Herzegovina".19
The number of military officers working on contract with the KLA
has not been disclosed.
_PART II. FROM KRAJINA TO KOSOVO: THE
SHAPE OF THINGS TO COME
_A FORMER CROATIAN GENERAL APPOINTED KLA
CHIEF OF STAFF
The massacres of civilians in Kosovo are
not disconnected acts of revenge by civilians or by so-called
"rogue elements" within the KLA as claimed by NATO and
the United Nations. They are part of a consistent and coherent
pattern. The intent (and result) of the KLA sponsored atrocities
have been to trigger the "ethnic cleansing" of Serbs,
Roma and other minorities in Kosovo.
KLA Commander Agim Ceku referring to the
killings of 14 villagers at Gracko on July 24, claimed that: "We
[the KLA] do not know who did it, but I sincerely believe these
people have nothing to do with the KLA."20 In turn, KFOR
Lieutenant General Sir Mike Jackson has commended his KLA counterpart,
Commander Agim Ceku for "efforts undertaken" to disarm
the KLA. In fact, very few KLA weapons have been handed in. Moreover,
the deadline for turning in KLA weaponry has been extended. "I
do not regard this as noncompliance" said Commander Jackson
in a press conference, "but rather as an indication of the
seriousness with which General Ceku is taking this important issue."21
Yet what Sir Mike Jackson failed to mention
is that KLA Chief of Staff Commander Agim Ceku (although never
indicted as a war criminal) was (according to Jane Defence Weekly
June 10, 1999) "one of the key planners of the successful
`Operation Storm'" led by the Croatian Armed Forces against
Krajina Serbs in 1995.
General Jackson who had served in former
Yugoslavia under the United Nations Protection Force (UNPROFOR)
was fully cognizant of the activities of the Croatian High Command
during that period including the responsibilities imparted to
Brigadier General Agim Ceku. In February 1999, barely a month
prior to the NATO bombings, Ceku left his position as Brigadier
General with the Croatian Armed Forces to join the KLA as Commander
in Chief.
FROM KRAJINA TO KOSOVO: THE SHAPE OF THINGS
TO COME
According to the Croatian Helsinki Committee
for Human Rights, Operation Storm resulted in the massacre of
at least 410 civilians in the course of a three day operation
(4 to 7 August 1995).22 An internal report of The Hague War Crimes
Tribunal (leaked to the New York Times), confirmed that the Croatian
Army had been responsible for carrying out:
"summary executions, indiscriminate
shelling of civilian populations and "ethnic cleansing"
in the Krajina region of Croatia...."23
In a section of the report entitled "The
Indictment. Operation Storm, A Prima Facie Case.", the ICTY
report confirms that:
"During the course of the military
offensive, the Croatian armed forces and special police committed
numerous violations of international humanitarian law, including
but not limited to, shelling of Knin and other cities... During,
and in the 100 days following the military offensive, at least
150 Serb civilians were summarily executed, and many hundreds
disappeared. ...In a widespread and systematic manner, Croatian
troops committed murder and other inhumane acts upon and against
Croatian Serbs." 24
US `GENERALS FOR HIRE'
The internal 150 page report concluded
that it has "sufficient material to establish that the three
[Croatian] generals who commanded the military operation"
could be held accountable under international law.25 The individuals
named had been directly involved in the military operation "in
theatre". Those involved in "the planning of Operation
Storm" were not mentioned:
"The identity of the "American
general" referred to by Fenrick [a Tribunal staff member]
is not known. The tribunal would not allow Williamson or Fenrick
to be interviewed. But Ms. Arbour, the tribunal's chief prosecutor,
suggested in a telephone interview last week that Fenrick's comment
had been `a joking observation'. Ms. Arbour had not been present
during the meeting, and that is not how it was viewed by some
who were there. Several people who were at the meeting assumed
that Fenrick was referring to one of the retired U.S. generals
who worked for Military Professional Resources Inc. ... Questions
remain about the full extent of U.S. involvement. In the course
of the three yearinvestigation into the assault, the United States
has failed to provide critical evidence requested by the tribunal,
according to tribunal documents and officials, adding to suspicion
among some there that Washington is uneasy about the investigation...
The Pentagon, however, has argued through U.S. lawyers at the
tribunal that the shelling was a legitimate military activity,
according to tribunal documents and officials".26
The Tribunal was attempting to hide what
had already been revealed in several press reports published in
the wake of Operation Storm. According to a US State Department
spokesman, MPRI had been helping the Croatians "avoid excesses
or atrocities in military operations."27 Fifteen senior US
military advisers headed by retired two star General Richard Griffitts
had been dispatched to Croatia barely seven months before Operation
Storm. 28 According to one report, MPRI executive director General
Carl E. Vuono: "held a secret top-level meeting at Brioni
Island, off the coast of Croatia, with Gen. Varimar Cervenko,
the architect of the Krajina campaign. In the five days preceding
the attack, at least ten meetings were held between General Vuono
and officers involved in the campaign..."29
According to Ed Soyster, a senior MPRI
executive and former head of the Defence Intelligence Agency (DIA):
"MPRI's role in Croatia is limited
to classroom instruction on military-civil relations and doesn't
involve training in tactics or weapons. Other U.S. military men
say whatever MPRI did for the Croats and many suspect more than
classroom instruction was involved it was worth every penny."
Carl Vuono and Butch [Crosbie] Saint are hired guns and in it
for the money," says Charles Boyd, a recently retired four
star Air Force general who was the Pentagon's No. 2 man in Europe
until July [1995]. "They did a very good job for the Croats,
and I have no doubt they'll do a good job in Bosnia."30
THE HAGUE TRIBUNAL'S COVER UP
The untimely leaking of the ICTY's internal
report on the Krajina massacres barely a few days before the onslaught
of NATO's air raids on Yugoslavia was the source of some embarrassment
to the Tribunal's Chief Prosecutor Louise Arbour. The Tribunal
(ICTY) attempted to cover up the matter and trivialise the report's
findings (including the alleged role of the US military officers
on contract with the Croatian Armed Forces). Several Tribunal
officials including American Lawyer Clint Williamson sought to
discredit the Canadian Peacekeeping officers' testimony who witnessed
the Krajina massacres in 1995.31
Williamson, who described the shelling
of Knin as a "minor incident," said that the Pentagon
had told him that Knin was a legitimate military target... The
[Tribunal's] review concluded by voting not to include the shelling
of Knin in any indictment, a conclusion that stunned and angered
many at the tribunal"...32
The findings of the Tribunal contained
in the leaked ICTY documents were downplayed, their relevance
was casually dismissed as "expressions of opinion, arguments
and hypotheses from various staff members of the OTP during the
investigative process".33 According to the Tribunal's spokesperson
"the documents do not represent in any way the concluded
decisions of the Prosecutor." 34
The internal 150 page report has not been
released. The staff member who had leaked the documents is (according
to a Croatian TV report) no longer working for the Tribunal. During
the press Conference, the Tribunal's spokesman was asked: "about
the consequences for the person who leaked the information",
Blewitt [the ICTY spokesman] replied that he did not want to go
into that. He said that the OTP would strengthen the existing
procedures to prevent this from happening again, however he added
that you could not stop people from talking".35
THE USE OF CHEMICAL WEAPONS IN CROATIA
The massacres conducted under Operation
Storm "set the stage" for the "ethnic cleansing"
of at least 180,000 Krajina Serbs (according to estimates of the
Croatian Helsinki Committee and Amnesty International). According
to other sources, the number of victims of ethnic cleansing in
Krajina was much larger.
Moreover, there is evidence that chemical
weapons had been used in the Yugoslav civil war (1991-95).36 Although
there is no firm evidence of the use of chemical weapons against
Croatian Serbs, an ongoing enquiry by the Canadian Minister of
Defence (launched in July 1999) points to the possibility of toxic
poisoning of Canadian Peacekeepers while on service in Croatia
between 1993 and 1995:
"There was a smell of blood in the
air during the past week as the media sensed they had a major
scandal unfolding within the Department of National Defense over
the medical files of those Canadians who served in Croatia in
1993. Allegations of destroyed documents, a coverup, and a defensive
minister and senior officers..."37
The official release of the Department
of National Defence (DND) refers to possibility of toxic "soil
contamination" in Medak Pocket in 1993 (see below). Was it
"soil contamination" or something far more serious?
The criminal investigation by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police
(RCMP) refers to the shredding of medical files of former Canadian
peacekeepers by the DND. In other words did the DND have something
to hide? The issue remains as to what types of shells and ammunitions
were used by the Croatian Armed Forces ie. were chemical weapons
used against Serb civilians?
OPERATION STORM: THE ACCOUNT OF THE ROYAL
CANADIAN REGIMENT
Prior to the onslaught, Croatian radio
had previously broadcasted a message by president Franjo Tudjman,
calling upon "Croatian citizens of Serbian ethnicity... to
remain in their homes and not to fear the Croatian authorities,
which will respect their minority rights."38 Canadian peacekeepers
of the Second Battalion of the Royal 22nd Regiment witnessed the
atrocities committed by Croatian troops in the Krajina offensive
in September 1995:
"Any Serb who had failed to evacuate
their property were systematically "cleansed" by roving
death squads. Every abandoned animal was slaughtered and any Serb
household was ransacked and torched".39
Also confirmed by Canadian peacekeepers
was the participation of German mercenaries in Operation Storm:
"Immediately behind the frontline
Croatian combat troops and German mercenaries, a large number
of hardline extremists had pushed into the Krajina. ...Many of
these atrocities were carried out within the Canadian Sector,
but as the peacekeepers were soon informed by the Croat authorities,
the UN no longer had any formal authority in the region."40
How the Germans mercenaries were recruited
was never officially revealed. An investigation by the United
Nations Human Rights Commission (UNHRC) confirmed the that foreign
mercenaries in Croatia had in some cases "been paid [and
presumably recruited] outside Croatia and by third parties."41
THE 1993 MEDAK POCKET MASSACRE
According to Jane Defence Weekly (10 June
1999), Brigadier General Agim Ceku (now in charge of the KLA)
also "masterminded the successful HV [Croatian Army] offensive
at Medak" in September 1993. In Medak, the combat operation
was entitled "Scorched Earth" resulting in the total
destruction of the Serbian villages of Divoselo, Pocitelj and
Citluk, and the massacre of over 100 civilians.42
These massacres were also witnessed by
Canadian peacekeepers under UN mandate:
"As the sun rose over the horizon,
it revealed a Medak Valley engulfed in smoke and flames. As the
frustrated soldiers of 2PPCLI waited for the order to move forward
into the pocket, shots and screams still rang out as the ethnic
cleansing continued. ...About 20 members of the international
press had tagged along, anxious to see the Medak battleground.
Calvin [a Canadian officer] called an informal press conference
at the head of the column and loudly accused the Croats of trying
to hide war crimes against the Serb inhabitants. The Croats started
withdrawing back to their old lines, taking with them whatever
loot they hadn't destroyed. All livestock had been killed and
houses torched. French reconnaissance troops and the Canadian
command element pushed up the valley and soon began to find bodies
of Serb civilians, some already decomposing, others freshly slaughtered.
...Finally, on the drizzly morning of Sept. 17, teams of UN civilian
police arrived to probe the smouldering ruins for murder victims.
Rotting corpses lying out in the open were catalogued, then turned
over to the peacekeepers for burial."43
The massacres were reported to the Canadian
Minister of Defence and to the United Nations:
"Senior defence bureaucrats back
in Ottawa had no way of predicting the outcome of the engagement
in terms of political fallout. To them, there was no point in
calling media attention to a situation that might easily backfire.
...So Medak was relegated to the memory hole no publicity, no
recriminations, no official record. Except for those soldiers
involved, Canada's most lively military action since the Korean
War simply never happened."44
PART III. NATO'S `POST CONFLICT' AGENDA
IN KOSOVO.
Both the Medak Pocket massacre and Operation
Storm bear a direct relationship to the ongoing security situation
in Kosovo and the massacres and ethnic cleansing committed by
KLA troops. While the circumstances are markedly different, several
of today's actors in Kosovo were involved (under the auspices
of the Croatian Armed Forces) in the planning of both these operations.
Moreover, the US mercenary outfit MPRI which collaborated with
the Croatian Armed Forces in 1995 is currently on contract with
the KLA. NATO's casual response to the appointment of Brigadier
General Agim Ceku as KLA Chief of Staff was communicated by Mr.
Jamie Shea in a Press Briefing in May:
"I have always made it clear, and
you have heard me say this, that NATO has no direct contacts with
the KLA. Who they appoint as their leaders, that is entirely their
own affair. I don't have any comment on that whatever."45
While NATO says it "has no direct
contacts with the KLA", the evidence confirms the opposite.
Amply documented, KLA terrorism has been installed with NATO's
tacit approval. The KLA had (according to several reports) been
receiving "covert support" and training from the CIA
and Germany's Bundes Nachrichten Dienst (BND) since the mid-nineties.
Moreover, MPRI collaboration with the KLA predates the onslaught
of the bombing campaign.46 Moreover, the building up of KLA forces
was part of NATO planning. Already by mid-1998, "covert support"
had been replaced by official ("overt") support by the
military Alliance in violation of UN Security Council Resolution
UNSCR 1160 of 31 March 1998 which condemned: "...all acts
of terrorism by the Kosovo Liberation Army or any other group
or individual and all external support for terrorist activity
in Kosovo, including finance, arms and training."
NATO officials, Western heads of State
and heads of government, the United Nations Secretary General
Kofi Annan not to mention ICTY chief Prosecutor Louise Arbour,
were fully cognizant of General Brigadier Agim Ceku's involvement
in the planning of Operation Storm and Operation Scorched Earth.
Surely, some questions should have been asked...
Yet visibly what is shaping up in the
wake of the bombings in Kosovo is the continuity of NATO's operation
in the Balkans. Military personnel and UN bureaucrats previously
stationed in Croatia and Bosnia have been routinely reassigned
to Kosovo. KFOR Commander Mike Jackson had previously been responsible
as IFOR Commander for organising the return of Serbs "to
lands taken by Croatian HVO forces in the Krajina offensive".47
And in this capacity General Mike Jackson had "urged that
the resettlement [of Krajina Serbs] not [be] rushed to avoid tension
[with the Croatians]... while also warning returning Serbs "of
the extent of the [land] mine threat."48 In retrospect, recalling
the events of early 1996, very few Krajina Serbs were allowed
to return to their homes under the protection of the United Nations.
And a similar process is unfolding in
Kosovo, ie. the conduct of senior military officers conforms to
a consistent pattern, the same key individuals are now involved
in Kosovo. While token efforts are displayed to protect Serb and
Roma civilians, those who have fled Kosovo are not encouraged
to return under UN protection... In postwar Kosovo, "ethnic
cleansing" implemented by the KLA has been accepted by the
"international community" as a "fait accompli"...
While calling for democracy and "good
governance" in the Balkans, the US and its allies have installed
in Kosovo a paramilitary government with links to organised crime.
The foreseeable outcome is the outright
"criminalisation" of civilian State institutions and
the establishment of what is best described as a "Mafia State".
The complicity of NATO and the Alliance governments (namely their
relentless support to the KLA) points to the de facto "criminalisation"
of KFOR and of the UN peacekeeping apparatus in Kosovo. The donor
agencies and governments (eg. the funds approved by the US Congress
in violation of several UN Security Council resolutions) providing
financial support to the KLA are, in this regard, also "accessories"
to the de facto criminalisation of State institutions. Through
the intermediation of a paramilitary group (created and financed
by Washington and Bonn), NATO ultimately bears the burden of responsibility
for the massacres and ethnic cleansing of civilians in Kosovo.
STATE TERROR AND THE `FREE MARKET'
State terror and the "free market"
seem to go hand in hand. The concurrent "criminalisation"
of State institutions in Kosovo is not incompatible with the West's
economic and strategic objectives in the Balkans. Notwithstanding
the massacres of civilians, the self-proclaimed KLA administration
has committed itself to establishing a "secure and stable
environment" for foreign investors and international financial
institutions. The Minister of Finance Adem Grobozci and other
representatives of the provisional government invited to the various
donor conferences are all KLA appointees. In contrast, members
of the KDL of Ibrahim Rugova (duly elected in parliamentary elections)
were not even invited to attend the Stabilisation Summit in Sarajevo
in late July.
"Free market reforms" are envisaged
for Kosovo under the supervision of the Bretton Woods institutions
largely replicating the structures of the Rambouillet agreement.
Article I (Chapter 4a) of the Rambouillet Agreement stipulated
that: "The economy of Kosovo shall function in accordance
with free market principles". The KLA government will largely
be responsible for implementing these reforms and ensuring that
loan conditionalities are met.
In close liaison with NATO, the Bretton
Woods institutions had already analysed the consequences of an
eventual military intervention leading to the military occupation
of Kosovo: almost a year prior to the beginning of the War, the
World Bank conducted "simulations" which "anticipated
the possibility of an emergency scenario arising out of the tensions
in Kosovo."49
The eventual "reconstruction"
of Kosovo financed by international debt largely purports to transfer
Kosovo's extensive wealth in mineral resources and coal to multinational
capital. In this regard, the KLA has already occupied (pending
their privatisation) the largest coal mine at Belacevac in Dobro
Selo northwest of Pristina. In turn, foreign capital has its eyes
rivetted on the massive Trepca mining complex which constitutes
"the most valuable piece of real estate in the Balkans, worth
at least $5 billion."50 The Trebca complex not only includes
copper and large reserves of zinc but also cadmium, gold, and
silver. It has several smelting plants, 17 metal treatment sites,
a power plant and Yugoslavia's largest battery plant. Northern
Kosovo also has estimated reserves of 17 billion tons of coal
and lignite.
In the wake of the bombings, the management
of many of the State owned enterprises and public utilities were
taken over by KLA appointees. In turn, the leaders of the Provisional
Government of Kosovo (PGK) have become "the brokers"
of multinational capital committed to handing over the Kosovar
economy at bargain prices to foreign investors. The IMF's lethal
"economic therapy" will be imposed, the provincial economy
will be dismantled, agriculture will be deregulated, local industrial
enterprises which have not been totally destroyed will be driven
into bankruptcy. The most profitable State assets will eventually
be transferred into the hands of foreign capital under the World
Bank sponsored privatisation programme. "Strong economic
medicine" imposed by external creditors will contribute to
further boosting a criminal economy (already firmly implanted
in Albania) which feeds on poverty and economic dislocation. __"The
Allies will work with the rest of the international community
to help rebuild Kosovo once the crisis is over: The International
Monetary Fund and Group of Seven industrialized countries are
among those who stand ready to offer financial help to the countries
of the region. We want to ensure proper coordination of aid and
help countries to respond to the effects of the crisis. This should
go hand in hand with the necessary structural reforms in the countries
affected helped by budget support from the international community."51
Morever, the so-called "reconstruction"
of the Balkans by foreign capital will signify multibillion contracts
to foreign firms to rebuild Kosovo's infrastructure. More generally,
the proposed "Marshall Plan" for the Balkans financed
by the World Bank and the European Development Bank (EBRD) as
well as private creditors will largely benefit Western mining,
petroleum and construction companies while fuelling the region's
external debt well into the third millennium.
And Kosovo is slated to reimburse this
debt through the laundering of dirty money. Yugoslav banks in
Kosovo will be closed down, the banking system will be deregulated
under the supervision of Western financial institutions. Narcodollars
from the multibillion dollar Balkans drug trade will be recycled
towards servicing the external debt as well as "financing"
the costs of "reconstruction." The lucrative flow of
narcodollars thus ensures that foreign investors involved in the
"reconstruction" programme will be able reap substantial
returns. In turn, the existence of a Kosovar "narco State"
ensures the orderly reimbursement of international donors and
creditors. The latter are prepared to turn blind eye. They have
a tacit vested interest in installing a government which facilitates
the laundering of drug money.
The pattern in Kosovo is, in this regard,
similar to that observed in neighbouring Albania. Since the early
1990s (culminating with the collapse of the financial pyramids
in 1996-97), the IMF's reforms have impoverished the Albanian
population while spearheading the national economy into bankruptcy.
The IMF's deadly economic therapy transforms countries into open
territories. In Albania and to a lesser extent Macedonia, it has
also contributed to fostering the growth of illicit trade and
the criminalisation of State institutions.
ENDNOTES
1. Jim Lehrer News Maker Interview, PBS,
26 July 1999._2. Stratfor Commentary, "Growing Threat of
Serbian Paramilitary Action in Kosovo", 29 July 1999._3.
Human Rights Watch, 3 August 1999._4. See Michael Radu, "Don't
Arm the KLA", CNS Commentary from the Foreign Policy Research
Institute, 7 April, 1999)._5. Tanjug Press Dispatch, 14 May 1999._6.
Stratfor Comment, "Rugova Faced with a Choice of Two Losses",
Stratfor, 29 July 1999._7. Federal Ministry for Foreign Affairs,
Yugoslav Daily Survey, Belgrade, 29 June 1999._8. Hina Press Dispatch,
Zagreb, 26 July 1999._9. Ibid._10. BBC Report, London, 5 July
1999._11. New York Times, 2 February 1999._12. Financial Times,
London, 4 August 1999._13. See Organization for Security and Cooperation
in Europe, Mission in Kosovo, Decision 305, Permanent Council,
237th Plenary Meeting, PC Journal No. 237, Agenda item 2, Vienna,
1 July 1999._14. Statement at the Sarajevo Summit, 31 July 1999._15.
106th Congress, April 15, HR 1425._16. Interview with KLA Chief
of Staff Commander Agim Ceku, Kosovapress, 31 July 1999._17. See
Tammy Arbucki, "Building a Bosnian Army", Jane International
Defence Review, August 1997._18. Ibid._19. Military Professional
Resources, Inc, "Personnel Needs", http://www.mpri.com/current/personnel.htm_20.
Associated Press Report._21. Ibid._22. The actual number of civilians
killed or missing was much larger._23. Quoted in Raymond Bonner,
War Crimes Panel Finds Croat Troops Cleansed the Serbs, New York
Times, 21 March 1999)._24. Ibid._25. Ibid._26. Raymond Bonner,
op cit._27. Ken Silverstein, "Privatizing War", The
Nation, New York, 27 July 1997._28. See Mark Thompson et al, "Generals
for Hire", Time Magazine, 15 January 1996, p. 34._29. Quoted
in Silverstein, op cit._30. Mark Thompson et al, op cit._31. Raymond
Bonner, op cit._32. Ibid._33. ICTY Weekly Press Briefing, 24 March
1999)._34. Ibid._35. Ibid._36. See inter alia Reuters dispatch,
21 October 1993 on the use of chemical grenades, a New York Times
report on 31 October 1992 on the use of poisoned gas)._37. Lewis
MacKenzie, "Giving our soldiers the benefit of the doubt",
National Post, 2 August 1999._38. Slobodna Dalmacija, Split, Croatia,
August 5 1996._39. Scott Taylor and Brian Nolan, The Sunday Sun,
Toronto, 2 November 1998._40. Ibid._41. United Nations Commission
on Human Rights, Fifty-first session, Item 9 of the provisional
agenda, Geneva, 21 December 1994)._42. (See Memorandum on the
Violation of the Human and Civil Rights of the Serbian People
in the Republic of Croatia, _http://serbianlinks.freehosting.net/memorandum.htm_43.
Excerpts from the book of Scott Taylor and Brian Nolan published
in the Toronto Sun, 1 November 1998._44. Ibid._45. NATO Press
Briefing, 14 May 1999._46. For further details see Michel Chossudovsky,
Kosovo `Freedom Fighters' Financed by Organized Crime, CAQ, Spring-Summer
1999._47. Jane's Defence Weekly, Vol 25, No. 7, 14 February 1996.
_48. Ibid._49. World Bank Development News, Washington, 27 April
1999._50. New York Times, July 8, 1998, report by Chris Hedges._51.
Statement by Javier Solano, Secretary General of NATO, published
in The National Post, Toronto May 1999.
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