On March 11, the former Serbian leader and president of
Yugoslavia, Slobodan Milosevic, died in his prison cell at The Hague, where
he had been on trial for four years and one month for war crimes and
genocide. The Serbian Socialist Party leader Zoran Andelkovic responded to
the news of Milosevic's death with the following statement:
"Slobodan Milosevic, the president of the Socialist Party of
Serbia and a former president of Serbia and Yugoslavia was murdered today at
the tribunal in Hague. The decision of the tribunal to disallow Milosevic's
medical treatment at the Bakunin Institute in Moscow represents a prescribed
death sentence against Milosevic. Truth and justice were on his side, and
this is why they have used a strategy of gradual killing of Slobodan
Milosevic. The responsibility for his death is clearly with the Hague
tribunal."
A partisan accusation or the truth? Milosevic was known to be
seriously ill. The Russian government promised to return Milosevic to the
tribunal after treatment. The tribunal refused. It is easy to conclude that
the case against Milosevic had collapsed and that an embarrassed U.S.
government, NATO authorities and Hague tribunal decided to let him die in
his cell rather than admit that his guilt could not be proven even after a
trial lasting four years and one month.
Milosevic was caught up in the post-Soviet-era break-up of
Yugoslavia. Nationalist forces broke up the Yugoslav federation. During
1991-92, Croatia, Slovenia, Macedonia and Bosnia-Herzegovina seceded from
Yugoslavia. Large Serbian minorities in Croatia and Bosnia objected and
claimed the identical right of self-determination to remain in the
federation as Croats and Muslims claimed to leave it. Croatian and Bosnian
Serbs organized, and a war against secession began.
Milosevic could hardly remain a Serbian leader and not support
the Serbs. Abraham Lincoln was canonized for invading the South to prevent
its secession, but Milosevic was damned for trying to protect Yugoslavia's
territorial integrity. In the end, Milosevic accepted secession. In 1995,
Milosevic negotiated the Dayton Agreement, which ended the war in Bosnia.
According to the encyclopedia Wikipedia, "Milosevic was credited in the West
with being one of the pillars of Balkan peace."
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In 1998, Milosevic was confronted with a more severe problem.
Armed actions by the separatist Kosovar Liberation Army, listed as a
terrorist organization by the U.S. Department of State, in the ancient
Serbian province of Kosovo broke out into warfare. Milosevic was now trying
to hold onto a province not of Yugoslavia but of Serbia itself, a province
that had been colonized by ethnic Albanians. The Serbian population in
Kosovo was outnumbered nine to one and suffered greatly at the hands of the
KLA.
Milosevic, already damaged by the wars of secession that
destroyed Yugoslavia, lost the media campaign waged by public relations
firms hired by contending factions that spun the news that Americans
received. Milosevic was demonized, and the Clinton administration had Serbia
bombed by NATO forces for 78 days in the spring of 1999.
Many Serbian civilians were killed by the air strikes, which hit
passenger trains and destroyed the Chinese embassy. In effect, the United
States interfered in Serbian affairs in behalf of the secession, with the
result that Kosovo has been essentially ethnically cleansed of Serbs. Kosovo
is apparently still considered to be a part of Serbia, but it is
administered by the United Nations. Somehow, this has been presented as a
great moral victory for humanity.
If the massive propaganda campaign against Milosevic had many
facts behind it, he long ago would have been convicted at The Hague. What
was the episode all about?
In my opinion, it was to establish the precedent, later to be
employed in the Middle East, that the U.S. government could demonize a head
of state geographically distant from any legitimate "sphere of influence"
and use military force to remove him. This is precisely the fate of Saddam
Hussein, and the Bush regime still hopes to repeat the strategy in Iran and
Syria.
The unanswered question is why the "international community"
goes along with it. The numerous civilians killed by U.S. interventions are
just as dead as the ones killed by heads of state attempting to hold onto
their countries. Why are the latter deaths war crimes, but not the former?
As a presidential candidate, George W. Bush criticized President
Clinton's intervention in Serbia and disavowed the international policeman
role for the United States. But as soon as Bush got in office, he plotted to
invade Iraq. Why?
Americans should be very concerned that Bush still has not come
clean about why he invaded Iraq. Americans should be disturbed that despite
the disastrous results in Iraq, Bush still intends "regime change" in Iran
and Syria.