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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: The
Balkan Crisis
Playwright Harold Pinter presents a powerful case in opposition
to NATO bombardment of Serbia
By Ann Talbot
7 May 1999
Playwright Harold Pinter, an outspoken opponent of NATO's war
against Serbia, presented a coherent and well-argued case opposing
the military action on BBC 2 television last Tuesday evening.
Using news footage and interviews specially recorded for the programme,
Pinter showed how the media are being manipulated, and that the
humanitarian justification for the war is false.
In a powerful condemnation of the war, Pinter described the
NATO onslaught against Serbia as "a bandit action, committed
with no serious consideration of the consequences, ill-judged,
ill-thought, miscalculated, an act of deplorable machismo".
Pinter was shown questioning British Defence Minister George
Robertson at a news conference. The playwright, citing the Geneva
Convention outlawing military attacks on civilian targets, demanded
to know how the bombing of a Serbian TV station could be described
as anything other than murder. "Mr. Pinter has obviously
got a new occupation now but I know his views," was the arrogant
reply from Robertson. He justified the bombing by claiming that
such targets were the "brains behind the brutality",
and "part and parcel of the apparatus that is driving ethnic
genocide".
Such claims--which have been used repeatedly to justify whatever
horrors NATO perpetrates--were challenged in the programme. Former
Labour Foreign Secretary Dennis Healey rejected the idea that
the expulsion of the Kosovar Albanians was the same as genocide.
He pointed out that NATO's actions were contrary to the United
Nations charter, which Britain had signed. NATO was bombing a
fellow UN member, without UN authority.
Jake Lynch of Sky News explained how the news media are being
manipulated to support the aggressive war drive. When NATO bombed
a refugee convoy there was a delay of several days before the
cockpit video, normally shown at the next daily press conference,
was released to the media. This was to enable NATO to cause the
maximum confusion, he explained. First NATO claimed there had
been two separate incidents. The next day this was amended to
one incident, and then later a US Brigadier General cited the
figure of two again.
Lynch said this was a graphic exercise in news management.
When the video was eventually shown, an audible murmur went round
the press conference--"that's a tractor". Lynch pointed
out that if it had been shown straight away, without the lavishly
composed graphics, the "PR impact would have been much more
negative for NATO". Reporters were sent to Brussels to report
the war, not to help NATO, yet there was a slippage in journalistic
technique. NATO "confirms" things have happened; Belgrade
only ever "claims" things.
Pinter gave a detailed account of the bombing of the Serbian
television station. He showed the letter in which NATO spokesman
Jamie Shea had assured the International Federation of Journalists
only days before the bombing that the television station would
not be attacked. Philip Knightley, author of The First Casualty--History
of Propaganda, explained why the TV station was targeted:
"NATO didn't want it revealed that it had bombed a civilian
convoy and left to itself would never have revealed it until the
war was over. But they were forced to admit to the bombing of
the civilian convoy because Serbian TV said that it had happened,
then took Western reporters in a bus to show them the results
of it."
NATO had rightly described the murder of an anti-Milosevic
journalist as a brutal act of repression, Pinter said, yet they
have never expressed any regret for the killing of those people
who were told they were safe at the TV station. "Both are
ugly murders of human beings who propagate words or images that
somebody else doesn't like."
Turning to the refugee crisis Pinter showed that there is a
direct correlation between the number of refugees and the amount
of popular support for NATO bombing. He derided the talk of moral
authority, demanding to know "who bestowed it on the NATO
countries?... Bombs and power--that's your moral authority."
The moral position of the US was highly ambiguous, he went on.
"When human rights groups discovered US jets used by the
Turkish airforce to bomb Kurdish villages within its own territory
the Clinton administration found ways to evade laws requiring
suspension of arms deliveries. 1.4 million Kurds fled Turkish
repression from 1990 to 1994. Yet Turkey is invited to the top
of the table at NATO's birthday party."
The US denied that genocide was taking place in Rwanda--with
800,000 dead--because it was not in the interests of the United
States to be part of a UN intervention force. But it calls the
Serbian ethnic cleansing "genocide" because it was politically
expedient to do so, he continued. He also made clear his disgust
for Prime Minister Tony Blair: "Under the rhetoric, Blair's
real character has become clear. There's nothing like a missile,
there's nothing like power, it was really worth waiting for!"
Pinter revealed the US record of complicity with ethnic cleansing
in the former Yugoslavia. The greatest single act of displacement
and ethnic cleansing in the entire Yugoslav war was that of 200,000
Serbs from Croatia in 1995. He showed an extract from an interview
with the then US Secretary of State, Warren Christopher, who said
of this episode, "It always had the prospect of simplifying
matters." Pinter explained that the "operation was carried
out by officers trained by NPRI, an organisation of US army veteran
commanders and was armed with a great deal of US weaponry, in
an attack of which the US had full knowledge." Its purpose
was "creating convenient ethnically-pure maps without committing
US ground forces."
In his memoirs, US Ambassador Holbrook admits to encouraging
Croatian assaults on the Serbs, telling the Croatians to hurry
up before the Serbs regroup, and then merely rebuking the Croatian
leader, Franjo Tudjman, during their cosy chats. Madeline Albright,
then US ambassador to the UN, timed the release of aerial photos
of mass graves of Muslims killed by Serbs at Srebrenica for the
same day as the Croats were expelling the Serbs, in order to divert
the world media's attention. These photos had been taken weeks
before by a US spy satellite but were held back in order to mask
one atrocity with another.
Pinter also showed the cynical way in which the US government
deals with the UN. In 1995 the bombing of the Bosnian Serbs needed
direct authority from the UN, but Secretary General Boutros Boutros
Gali was unwilling to grant it. So Madeline Albright by-passed
the secretary general, getting permission from his deputy Kofi
Annan, while Boutros Boutros Gali could not be contacted as he
was on a commercial flight. Kofi Annan effectively secured himself
the secretary general's job that day, Pinter declared. Now, the
US did not even bother to contact the UN.
The US had exacerbated the situation in Kosovo, Pinter argued.
He pointed out that over the course of 10 years, before the West
had begun negotiating with the hard line KLA and despite the fact
that war was often raging in other parts of former Yugoslavia,
Kosovo saw tension but little bloodshed. In fact, a comparable
number of people were killed there as in Northern Ireland. However,
once the KLA began their uprising 2,000 died in one year of violence.
Mark Almond of Oxford University, and a writer on Balkan history,
was interviewed about the Rambouillet talks. "In a little-noticed
annexe to the agreement, NATO insisted that its forces should
be allowed to have freedom of movement over the whole of Yugoslavia,
not just Kosovo. There was no real constraint over what sort of
forces there would be, and, to a great extent, what their activities
would be." Pinter explained what this meant: whether "you
are a dictator, the prime minister of a democratic country, or
even Mrs. Thatcher, and your sovereign territory is going to be
occupied, you might as well resist or your time in power is over."
Almond said there was a cynical aspect to the build-up of the
crisis, with "deliberate provocation of reprisals by the
KLA". He went on, "This aspect has been neglected in
the press. It wasn't simply unprovoked and meaningless racial
violence on the part of the Serbs--though we've seen quite a lot
of that too--but a complex struggle for power over Kosovo, in
which the loss of lives of ordinary Kosovo Albanians and others
were really treated as pawns."
Showing video footage of crowds on a bridge over the Danube
inside Serbia, Pinter commented, "Only two years ago hundreds
of thousands of young people were out on the streets against Milosevic.
Our blundering policy of bombing now finds them linking hands
on bridges waiting to be hit." He warned that if ground troops
were sent in, civilian casualties would mount and Kosovo would
be made a wasteland. "By the time NATO land forces will have
finished their work there will be nothing left to liberate".
This was the "crazed logic of escalation," he said.
Pinter brought together academics, politicians and relief workers
in condemning the war against Serbia. The programme showed that
opposition to it runs deep.
See Also:
Former SPD chairman's May Day speech
creates problems for German government
Oskar Lafontaine calls for an immediate stop to the bombing
of Yugoslavia
[7 May 1999]
Clinton, NATO generals discuss expansion
of Yugoslavia war
[6 May 1999]
Scenes of death and destruction
Victims of tornadoes or victims of bombing?
[6 May 1999]
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