Slobodan Markovic on Tue, 18 May 1999 18:58:23 +0200 |
[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]
Syndicate: Craig Goodrich on the War (fwd) |
[this is a forwarded article. address for comments is included below. --sloba] ================================================================================ Sincere Regrets by Craig Goodrich As I write this, in the wee hours of May 8, our US ambassador to the UN, Peter Burleigh, is addressing an emergency session of the Security Council, responding to Chinese outrage that we blew up their embassy in Belgrade, killing four and injuring a dozen others. Burleigh said earlier that there was "no confirmation" that the missiles which flattened the Chinese embassy were fired by NATO; he obviously believed that they might have come from some _other_ country firing missiles in Yugoslavia -- perhaps India or Uruguay. But he's now admitted they were fired by NATO -- that is, by the US, since our country is providing more than 90% of the operational support for this war. He places the blame for this incident, though, squarely on the shoulders of Milosevic, insisting "the real blame lies with Yugoslavia's president for causing the Kosovo crisis." But he graciously offers the Chinese our "sincere regrets" anyway. Well, let's think about that for a moment. Milosevic had already agreed to an international military presence in Kosovo -- indeed, two hundred observers from the OSCE (Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe) had to be evacuated from Kosovo before the bombing began. What the Clinton Administration insisted on, though, was free access to all of Yugoslavia (not just Kosovo) by armed NATO troops, aircraft, and tanks. This was the _only_ point that Milosevic rejected. Could _any_ sovereign country acquiesce to such foreign occupation? So the US, your country and mine, after a full year of rejecting one peace plan after another -- one from the Patriarch of the Serbian Orthodox Church and another from Kosovar Albanian politician Ibrahim Rugova, to name just two -- decided to start bombing Yugoslavia to force Milosevic to accept terms that no head of state anywhere in the world could possibly agree to. The bombing violated the US Constitution, the NATO Charter, the UN Charter, the Geneva Accords, and indeed every known precept of international law. Then Milosevic, now free of foreign observers, faced with a civil war in Kosovo fomented by the KLA -- a drug-running guerilla group financed principally by the Albanian mafia -- and believing that he had nothing further to lose, turned loose his thugs to drive hundreds of thousands of Albanians out of Kosovo, while he could simultaneously silence his growing democratic opposition by accusing them of treason. This is _exactly_ what had been predicted for more than a year by observers ranging from the CIA to the Cato Institute -- yet the Administration (which has repeatedly utilized the "Wag the Dog" phenomenon to build its own support) appeared shocked and surprised. The bombing has continued for more than six weeks. Kosovo is essentially uninhabited now; its cleansing is complete. NATO -- that is, the US with Britain playing the part of the small but noisy faithful dog -- is running out of targets. One oil refinery has been bombed into oblivion no fewer than five separate times. Yugoslavia was a poor country to start with; the bombing has set back more than twenty years of painful progress in improving its standard of living. The Danube -- a principal highway of commerce for all of southern Europe -- is blocked. Feverishly searching for targets, we have recently bombed Montenegro, which was run by a moderate, pro-Western, anti- Milosevic government -- now, like all of Yugoslavia, being pushed into the Milosevic camp by NATO insanity. We have bombed to rubble a splended example of industrial art-deco architecture in Nis on the grounds that it was a military target: it produced cigarettes for the Serbian army. We have repeatedly set off enormous quantities of high explosive within fifty yards of monasteries not only housing Orthodox monks working as best they can to relieve the suffering of _all_ Kosovars, but also containing irreplaceable treasures of Byzantine religious art, which have survived wars with the Bulgars, the Turks, the Austrians, and the Nazis. These precious mosaics and frescos, and the 800-year-old monasteries themselves, are being destroyed by the continuous pounding. We have flattened the old city of Pec, whose markets and workshops dated back to the 13th century. We have damaged the 16th-century Hadum Mosque in Djakovica, and the 1600-year-old Byzantine basilica in Nis. St Procopius's 9th-century church in Prokuplje has been hit. The old Belgrade Fort has been hit and part of its 15th-century rampart collapsed -- a historic site of immense patriotic importance to Hungarians as well as Serbs, since it was there that the Magyar General Janos Hunyadi defeated the Turks in July of 1456. And speaking of Hungarians, on April 18th we blew up the Banovina Palace in Novy Sad, the finest work of Art-Deco architecture in the Balkans, because the Vojvodina Assembly met there. The Vojvodina province of Serbia contains a majority of Magyar descent, who before the bombing began had not been particularly friendly with Milosevic. Now, of course, they are. While we were in Novy Sad, we also damaged the old Austrian Petrovaradin Fortress, since it had a military-sounding name. The fact that it has had no military importance whatever for more than 150 years, housing currently only shops and museums, and was built nearly a century before the US Declaration of Independence was signed -- all this seems somehow to have been overlooked. We have bombed a convoy of the very refugees we claim to be helping. We have bombed a bus of civilians off a bridge. We have bombed a train full of passengers. We have bombed bridges more than 500 years old, historical treasures of no conceivable military value. We are killing more than a dozen innocent Serbs every day. The makeup girl in the Belgrade TV studio. The residents of apartments two blocks from a civilian factory. We were horrified by the senseless loss of innocent life at Columbine High School; NATO has been providing a Columbine every day, a Waco every week, for a month and a half now, and charging you upwards of two million dollars an hour to do so. It is tempting to refer to this operation as The War To Make Us Forget The Impeachment, or The War To Keep Up CNN's Ratings. But NATO spokesmen have scrupulously avoided the term "war", and the US Congress has refused to declare war. Rightly so: this is not a war; it's not a "police action"; it's not even a "conflict." It has long since become simply an exercise in compulsive, psychotic vandalism: not simply a crime against international law but a crime against civilization itself -- a barbaric video game on real people, heedless self-absorbed nihilism worthy of the Trenchcoat Mafia, notwithstanding the hypocritical condemnation of violence from a President who has bombed more countries during his administration than any since the Second World War. NATO diplomats from Greece, Italy, and Turkey could not convince the Administration to stop the bombing. Nor could the President's friend Jesse Jackson. But since the Red Chinese bought and paid for Clinton's reelection, they may not be willing to settle for a breezy "you better put some ice on that." =========================== Computer guru Craig Goodrich lives in a house in the woods in Elkmont, with his wife, two children, and four cats. He is a former Congressional candidate of the Libertarian Party of Alabama, a smoker, and a gun owner. Comments are welcome; they may be emailed to craig@airnet.net. Thanks to Simon Jenkins' Times of London column May 7 (at http://www.the-times.co.uk/news/pages/tim/99/05/07/timopnope01003.html?1124027) for targeting data. ------Syndicate mailinglist-------------------- Syndicate network for media culture and media art information and archive: http://www.v2.nl/syndicate/ to unsubscribe, write to <syndicate-request@aec.at> in the body of the msg: unsubscribe your@email.adress