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Balkan Crisis
Will ground troops be next?
US rains bombs on Yugoslav capital city
By the Editorial Board
3 April 1999
Also in
Serbo-Croatian
US cruise missiles and NATO warplanes hit downtown Belgrade
early Saturday morning (Friday evening, US time) in the first
direct attacks on the Yugoslav capital, a city of one million
people, since the air war against Yugoslavia began ten days ago.
Serbian television reported loud explosions at the headquarters
of the Interior Ministry and the Defense Ministry, two of the
largest buildings in the center of the city. Police cordoned off
the area, which was littered with rubble from the blasts. Eyewitnesses
said the explosions could be heard or seen throughout the city.
It is the first time since World War II that a European capital
has been subjected to aerial bombardment. Serbian vice-premier
Vuk Draskovic denounced the American assault on the city, pointing
out that the last time Belgrade had been bombed on Good Friday
it was by the Nazis in 1941, at the beginning of their invasion
and occupation of Yugoslavia--which suffered more at the hands
of Hitler than any country but the Soviet Union.
The initiative for this criminal attack on a densely populated
urban center came from the US government, which has been pressuring
its NATO allies to escalate the military onslaught on the regime
of Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic. Figures released by
NATO yesterday demonstrate that calling the air war a joint US-NATO
operation is a misnomer. US warplanes and cruise missiles account
for fully 90 percent of the explosive tonnage dropped on Yugoslavia
since the attacks began March 24.
The Pentagon is pouring military forces into the region, with
the deployment of the naval battle group headed by the aircraft
carrier Theodore Roosevelt, as well as new squadrons of
F-117A stealth bombers, B-1B bombers based in Britain, and specialized
radar-jamming and tank-fighting planes.
Growing discussion of ground troops
The evident failure of the Clinton administration's efforts
to bomb Serbia into submission has provoked a drumbeat of pronouncements
from media pundits and Washington insiders that the intervention
of US and NATO ground forces is the only "solution"
to the crisis in the Balkans.
The most influential daily newspapers are either openly campaigning
for a reversal of the White House pledge not to order a ground
assault on Serbia, or suggesting the time may soon come for such
a decision.
The Washington Post, the leading newspaper in the US
capital, has published a series of editorials demanding stronger
military action and criticizing Clinton for ruling out the use
of ground troops at the onset of the conflict with Yugoslav President
Milosevic.
The newspaper's op-ed page has run one column after another,
by Democrats and Republicans, liberals and conservatives, all
demanding the deployment of ground troops and a military offensive
to overthrow Milosevic.
On March 31, a column by Republican Senator Chuck Hagel of
Nebraska warned, "This is a war. To dance around this and
call it anything else misrepresents and demeans the reality and
the seriousness of the effort. The only acceptable exit strategy
is victory.... We must be prepared to do what is necessary to
achieve our objectives and ensure victory, including the option
of ground troops."
A column the same day by former Carter administration national
security adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski urged that the administration
prepare to dispatch NATO ground forces to Kosovo and begin making
the "political case for such intervention" with the
public.
The next day another Republican senator, Richard Lugar of Indiana,
wrote in the Post: "Immediate, conspicuous planning
for the use of NATO ground troops must commence in the numbers
required to blunt the Serbia offensive, stabilize Kosovo and,
if necessary, repel whatever elements of the Serbian armed forces
that remain."
Lugar, a long-time Republican Party spokesman on foreign affairs
and the second-ranking member of the Foreign Relations Committee,
declared, "President Clinton should have called President
Milosevic and told him that if he attacked Kosovo, we would terminate
his regime in Serbia."
Liberal spokesmen gave Clinton similar advice. A column Friday
co-authored by historian Robert Dallek and former Democratic Congressman
Stephen Solarz declared, "The task before us now is to let
go of the proposition that ground troops, as in Vietnam, are almost
always a bad idea. Sometimes important strategic and humanitarian
objectives require them."
Liberal columnist Richard Cohen wrote that Clinton should renounce
the position that NATO will not send in ground troops and begin
a buildup in Macedonia, while putting off any final decision on
invasion. "Nothing should be ruled out," he maintained.
The Wall Street Journal, always the most bloody-minded
of major US newspapers, also attacked Clinton for ruling out ground
troops, saying, "The lesson of war is that if you are compelled
to use force, use it overwhelmingly."
The newspaper, which hailed the Persian Gulf War as proof that
"force works," concluded that it would work in the Balkans
too, providing Clinton sets aggressive war aims for the United
States: "Having made this mess, the only thing that can redeem
it is the removal from power of Milosevic. The crucial step is
to declare removal as a goal."
The New York Times has been more cautious, but its editorial
Friday advised intensifying the bombing while considering such
options as "a limited invasion of 30,000 troops" to
establish safe havens in Kosovo, or the use of 200,000 troops
for a full-scale anti-Serb war.
The Los Angeles Times, in a front-page analysis the
same day, wrote: "It is also becoming clear that, however
distasteful and difficult it may be, President Clinton's options
for avoiding the unthinkable debacle of a NATO defeat may soon
be reduced to one: ground forces."
The newspaper noted that "in the corridors of the Pentagon,
the subject of ground forces has already become Topic A, while
in the halls of NATO headquarters in Brussels, officials have
begun to talk openly about the inevitability of a deployment of
ground forces to the region."
The shift in the official debate
It is worth pausing to consider the speed with which the terms
of the official Washington debate over Balkan policy have changed.
Only two weeks ago, the most sweeping military measure under consideration
was Clinton's plan to dispatch 4,000 American troops, with Serbia's
agreement, as part of a NATO force to patrol a cease-fire in Kosovo.
Even this proposal was considered too risky by many congressional
Republicans, and won approval by only a narrow 58-41 vote in the
Senate. Now there is open discussion of an American-led invasion
of Serbia, which could require a quarter million ground troops.
The servile US media attributes this shift in Washington to
an outraged reaction against atrocities committed by Serb forces
against the Kosovar Albanians. Aside from the questionable accuracy
of the reports from inside Kosovo, it remains to be explained
why similar or even greater atrocities--in Turkish Kurdistan,
Chechnya, Sierra Leone, Sri Lanka and a dozen other countries--have
not produced similar reactions in Congress, the White House and
the Pentagon.
A more persuasive explanation is that Washington is reacting
in outrage because its own plans for intervention in Kosovo have
produced a disaster. The Clinton administration evidently believed
that the combination of NATO air strikes and ground operations
by the US-backed Kosovo Liberation Army would create conditions
in Kosovo to force a Serb pullback. Instead, as the Post
reported Thursday on its front page, Pentagon and CIA officials
now believe that the Serb military offensive has shattered the
KLA.
One scheme to impose a US-dictated settlement having failed;
congressmen and media pundits now demand that the US and NATO
military do "whatever it takes" to defeat and overthrow
the Milosevic regime. What precisely does this mean: Invasion
of Kosovo? Occupation of Serbia? Use of nuclear weapons?
Two questions might be posed to these armchair generals: how
many hundreds of thousands of Serbs are they prepared to kill,
in an effort to a conquer a country that fought Hitler's Wehrmacht
to a standstill; and how many thousands of American lives are
they prepared to sacrifice in the process?
(Or alternatively, in the variant courageously suggested by
Texas Republican Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison, who proposed a
European-only ground force, how many German, French, British and
Italian lives should be sacrificed?)
Clinton administration spokesmen claimed initially that the
purpose of the air strikes was to stop the Milosevic regime from
intensifying its repression of the Kosovar Albanians and to prevent
a refugee crisis which would destabilize the region. The result
has been a massive onslaught against the Albanians and the worst
refugee crisis since the height of the Bosnian civil war.
One of three conclusions must be drawn from this gulf between
the initial presentation by the White House and the results after
10 days of warfare:
(1) The US government deliberately concealed its long-term
intentions in order to gain the public's acquiescence in the initiation
of a military attack. Clinton's claim that the attack would be
limited to bombing and his denial of any plans to introduce troops
would then be monstrous lies.
(2) The US government completely overestimated what could be
achieved by bombing and is proposing even more drastic measures
to cover up for previous failures. But why should anyone believe
those who so grossly miscalculated in the first place?
(3) The Yugoslav debacle is a combination of the two, lies
and miscalculations, with self-deception thrown in for good measure.
This is the most likely scenario. Already the performance of the
White House and Pentagon recalls the escalation strategy in Vietnam,
with the constant proclamations of "light at the end of the
tunnel" if only a few more troops and bombs were employed.
The logic of imperialist intervention
Whatever the conscious motives of Clinton or his generals,
the military intervention in the Balkans has a logic of its own,
and that logic has the most ominous implications. American imperialism
is headed towards a war of conquest against Yugoslavia, a war
which would bring forward the worst elements in American society.
Consider the column published in Friday's Wall Street Journal
by retired general William E. Odom, former director of the National
Security Agency, headlined "Take Belgrade." Odom calls
for an effort to "bring this war to a successful conclusion,
not just liberating Kosovo from Mr. Milosevic's tyranny but also
destroying Mr. Milosevic personally along with his regime."
Besides murdering the Yugoslav president and overthrowing a
sovereign state, Odom declares, "We should be prepared if
necessary to keep a NATO force in place for decades to squash
any temptation among local politicians to wait out the occupation."
In other words, the establishment of a permanent American protectorate
in the Balkans.
What would such a war mean for the American people? A ground
war in the Balkans could not be waged without a vast increase
in military spending and the mobilization of military forces on
the scale of Vietnam or the Persian Gulf. In the likely event
that the war was of long duration, or turned into a protracted
guerrilla conflict, it would be impossible to maintain the US
military commitment without the restoration of the draft.
It is significant that General Odom, in working through the
military tactics that a ground war against Yugoslavia would require,
reaches the following conclusion:
"A ground invasion must not be limited to Kosovo. In fact,
the approach from Hungary--now a NATO ally--into the Voivodina
region of Serbia and directly to Belgrade is open country that
invites a high-speed armored ground attack. The German military
swept down this corridor in World War II, taking the whole of
Yugoslavia in a couple of weeks. NATO forces today probably have
an even greater qualitative edge over the Serbs than the Wehrmacht
had then."
The strategists for American imperialism today, as they contemplate
their military options, are driven to embrace the example of Adolf
Hitler. That alone should give the thinking public pause, both
in America and Europe.
See Also:
US attitude toward "ethnic cleansing"
depends on who's doing it
[3 April 1999]
Behind and beyond the propaganda: Why
is the US bombing Serbia?
[2 April 1999]
"Executed" Kosovar leaders reemerge:
Easter miracle, or media fraud?
[2 April 1999]
Why did events in Kosovo take the Clinton
Administration by surprise?
[1 April 1999]
Clinton signals a shift to
a wider war against Serbia
[31 March 1999]
US, NATO prepare public opinion
for ground war against Serbia
[30 March 1999]
US-NATO bombs fall on Serbia:
the "New World Order" takes shape
[25 March 1999]
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