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Balkan Crisis
The Milosevic indictment: legal document or political diatribe?
By Barry Grey
1 June 1999
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Events of the past few days have made it clear that the indictment
of Slobodan Milosevic by the International Criminal Tribunal for
the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) was intended to buttress support
in the US and Europe for NATO's war, while whipping into line
those NATO countriessuch as Germany and Italythat
have resisted the push by Britain and the US for a ground invasion.
Clinton and Blair in particular have seized on the indictment
to scuttle Russia's diplomatic efforts and insist, as they have
from the outset, that there be no negotiations on NATO's demands
and that Belgrade be driven to total surrender.
As one senior British official told the New
York Times following the ICTY's announcement, Chernomyrdin
was trying to do a deal with a man incapable of delivering. This
pushes the equation forward on troops. British cabinet member
Clair Short said NATO troops would have to be on the ground in
Kosovo by September.
US Deputy Secretary of State Strobe Talbott declared, We're
not talking to Milosevic except in one language and that's bombing.
The US media has responded by stepping up demands for an invasion
of Yugoslavia. The indictment has been cited as proof that not
only government leaders, but the entire Serb population is complicit
in war crimes and must be punished. The Wall Street Journal
on May 28 published a column entitled Indictment Demands
Invasion which declared NATO could accept nothing short
of the occupation of Belgrade and a program of de-Nazification,
beginning with war crimes trials of the entire Serbian leadership.
New York Times columnist Anthony Lewis struck a similar
note the following day, declaring that the indictment vindicated
the bombing of civilian targets and the destruction of the country's
infrastructure, and justified a ground war. Saying the Serb people
had been infected by an evil leader, Lewis
called the bombing of water supplies, electrical grids, oil depots,
bridges, roads, factories, hospitals, schools and residences a
price that has to be paid when a nation falls in behind a criminal
leader.
The Hague tribunal's indictment is not a serious legal document
supported by probative evidence. Its entirely biased character
is indicated by the fact, acknowledged by the prosecutor, that
much of the evidence was supplied by two of the countriesthe
US and Britainthat are waging war against Serbia (and bombing
the private residences of Milosevic).
What is most astonishingand most discreditingis
the failure of the indictment to place the mass exodus of Kosovan
Albanians and the killings of civilians within its actual context,
i.e., a civil war between the separatist Kosovo Liberation Army
and the Yugoslav government, compounded by the NATO bombing campaign.
The indictment makes several fleeting references to the KLA,
which it describes as an armed independence movement, and notes
the escalation of fighting between the KLA and Serb forces beginning
in 1998. However it treats the alleged actions of Serb forces
in expelling Kosovan Albanians, shelling and burning villages
and killing civilians as having no relation to an ongoing military
struggle for control of the province.
For all the talk of genocide by NATO leaders and
the Western media, the indictment is able to verify only 340 civilian
deaths. At least some cases of ethnic cleansing which
it citesincluding the alleged Serb massacre of Kosovar civilians
at Racak last Januaryremain in dispute. (Some Western press
accounts at the time strongly questioned the account given by
US official William Walker, and supported Serb claims that those
killed were KLA guerrillas, shot down in a fire fight with Serb
troops).
The document makes no mention of KLA attacks on Serb civilians,
some of which have been reported even in the Western press. In
general, it presents an entirely one-sided and false picture,
sanitizing the role of the KLA.
Nor is there any reference to the role of external forcesthe
United States, the European powers, NATO, the International Monetary
Fundin crippling the economy of Yugoslavia with sanctions,
promoting the country's dissolution and stoking up communal conflict
between the various ethnic groups. This obvious omission contributes
to a completely distorted presentation of the facts.
The very week the ICTY issued its indictment, reports of more
direct and extensive US backing for the KLA emerged, including
a White House directive for the CIA to train KLA forces inside
Yugoslavia. American and European intelligence agencies began
supporting the KLA well before the onset of NATO bombing, and
since the war began, US, British and French special forces have
been reported operating with KLA units inside Serbia.
The indictment barely notes the NATO bombing campaign in Kosovo
and does not allow that the blasting of villages and towns could
have contributed to the flight of Kosovan Albanians. (Significantly,
the indictment makes no mention of the tens of thousands of non-Albanian
civilians who have fled their homes in Kosovo since NATO launched
its air war).
When considered within the context of the ongoing US-led assault
on Serbia, it becomes clear that the indictment was not really
issued in response to war crimes. Rather it is a response to Milosevic's
refusal to accept US ultimatums that would amount to a surrender
of sovereignty and loss of Kosovo.
Prior to the Rambouillet meetings last February and March there
was no talk from NATO leaders of removing Milosevic. Indeed, only
four years ago after the mass killings and deportations
in BosniaMilosevic was courted by the NATO leaders and prized
as the main guarantor of the Dayton accord, which established
a NATO protectorate over Bosnia.
The demands for the Serb leader's indictment and removal began
only after he rejected the terms laid down at Rambouillet and
then refused to buckle under to the NATO bombing campaign. Just
last week two leading representatives of the American political
establishmentHenry Kissinger and Jimmy Carteracknowledged
in separate articles that the United States did not negotiate
in good faith at Rambouillet. As Kissinger wrote: Rambouillet
was not a negotiationas is often claimedbut an ultimatum.
This is a damaging admission. It means that the United States
deliberately organized the Rambouillet meetings in order to confront
Milosevic with demands it knew he could not accept, and thereby
create a pretext for going to war.
Since many who support The Hague's indictment of the Serb leadership
make reference to the Nuremberg Trials, it is worth recalling
that the Nazi leaders were charged with three categories of crimesconventional
war crimes, crimes against humanity and crimes against peace.
The latter was defined as plotting to wage a war of aggression.
By any objective standard, the United States' actions before and
since March 24, 1999 should make Bill Clinton, Madeleine Albright,
William Cohen and Henry Shelton subject to indictment for war
crimes.
The indictment of Milosevic is not so much a legal document
as a political diatribe against the Serbian leadership. The Hague
tribunal has intervened into the war against Yugoslavia to shore
up the political position of the NATO powers and provide a legal
cover for escalating the bombing, invading the entire country
and transforming Serbia into a protectorate of the United States.
It is an insidious perversion of the concept of war crimes
in the interests of the imperialist powers, first and foremost
the United Statesa country that has refused to accept the
jurisdiction of the World Court over its own actions.
Milosevic indictment provides
pretext for invasion
[28 May 1999]
Why is NATO at war with Yugoslavia?
World power, oil and gold
[Statement of the WSWS Editorial Board, 24 May 1999]
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