By Nicolas J. S. Davies
July 08, 2020 "Information
Clearing House"
- When President Clinton dropped 23,000
bombs on what was left
of Yugoslavia in 1999 and NATO invaded and occupied the
Yugoslav province of Kosovo, U.S. officials presented
the war to the American public as a "humanitarian
intervention" to protect Kosovo’s majority ethnic
Albanian population from genocide at the hands of
Yugoslav president Slobodan Milosevic. That narrative
has been unraveling piece by piece ever since.
In 2008 an international
prosecutor, Carla Del Ponte, accused U.S.-backed Prime
Minister Hashim Thaci of Kosovo of using the US bombing
campaign as cover to murder hundreds of people to sell
their internal
organs on the
international transplant market. Del Ponte’s charges
seemed almost too ghoulish to be true. But on June 24th,
Thaci, now President of Kosovo, and nine other former
leaders of the CIA-backed Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA,)
were finally indicted for these 20-year-old crimes by a
special war crimes court at The Hague.
From 1996 on, the CIA and other Western intelligence
agencies covertly worked with the Kosovo Liberation Army
(KLA) to instigate and fuel violence and chaos in
Kosovo. The CIA spurned mainstream Kosovar nationalist
leaders in favor of gangsters and heroin smugglers like
Thaci and his cronies, recruiting them as terrorists and
death squads to assassinate Yugoslav police and anyone
who opposed them, ethnic Serbs and Albanians alike.
As it has done in
country after country since the 1950s, the CIA unleashed
a dirty civil war that Western politicians and media
dutifully blamed on Yugoslav authorities. But by early
1998, even US envoy Robert Gelbard called the KLA a
“terrorist group” and the UN Security Council condemned
“acts of terrorism” by the KLA and “all external support
for terrorist activity in Kosovo, including finance,
arms and training.” Once the war was over and Kosovo was
successfully occupied by US and NATO forces, CIA sources
openly touted the
agency’s role in
manufacturing the civil war to set the stage for NATO
intervention.
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By September 1998, the UN
reported that 230,000 civilians had fled the civil war,
mostly across the border to Albania, and the UN Security
Council passed resolution
1199, calling for a
ceasefire, an international monitoring mission, the
return of refugees and a political resolution. A new US
envoy, Richard Holbrooke, convinced Yugoslav President
Milosevic to agree to a unilateral ceasefire and the
introduction of a 2,000 member "verification" mission
from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
Europe (OSCE). But the US and NATO immediately started
drawing up plans for a bombing campaign to "enforce" the
UN resolution and Yugoslavia’s unilateral ceasefire.
Holbrooke persuaded the
chair of the OSCE, Polish foreign minister Bronislaw
Geremek, to appoint William
Walker, the former US
Ambassador to El Salvador during its civil war, to lead
the Kosovo Verification Mission (KVM). The US quickly
hired 150
Dyncorp mercenaries to
form the nucleus of Walker’s team, whose 1,380 members
used GPS equipment to map Yugoslav military and civilian
infrastructure for the planned NATO bombing campaign.
Walker’s deputy, Gabriel Keller, France’s former
Ambassador to Yugoslavia, accused Walker of sabotaging
the KVM, and CIA
sources later admitted
that the KVM was a "CIA front" to coordinate with the
KLA and spy on Yugoslavia.
The climactic incident of CIA-provoked violence that set
the political stage for the NATO bombing and invasion
was a firefight at a village called Racak, which the KLA
had fortified as a base from which to ambush police
patrols and dispatch death squads to kill local
"collaborators." In January 1999, Yugoslav police
attacked the KLA base in Racak, leaving 43 men, a woman
and a teenage boy dead.
After the firefight, Yugoslav police withdrew from the
village, and the KLA reoccupied it and staged the scene
to make the firefight look like a massacre of civilians.
When William Walker and a KVM team visited Racak the
next day, they accepted the KLA’s massacre story and
broadcast it to the world, and it became a standard part
of the narrative to justify the bombing of Yugoslavia
and military occupation of Kosovo.
Autopsies by an
international team of medical
examiners found traces
of gunpowder on the hands of nearly all the bodies,
showing that they had fired weapons. They were nearly
all killed by multiple gunshots as in a firefight, not
by precise shots as in a summary execution, and only one
victim was shot at close range. But the full autopsy
results were only
published much later, and the Finnish chief medical
examiner accused Walker of pressuring
her to alter them.
Two experienced French
journalists and an AP camera crew at the scene
challenged the KLA and Walker’s version of what happened
in Racak. Christophe Chatelet’s article
in Le
Monde was
headlined, "Were the dead in Racak really massacred in
cold blood?" and veteran Yugoslavia correspondent Renaud
Girard concluded his
story in Le
Figaro with another critical question, "Did the KLA
seek to transform a military defeat into a political
victory?"
NATO immediately threatened to bomb Yugoslavia, and
France agreed to host high-level talks. But instead of
inviting Kosovo’s mainstream nationalist leaders to the
talks in Rambouillet, Secretary Albright flew in a
delegation led by KLA commander Hashim Thaci, until then
known to Yugoslav authorities only as a gangster and a
terrorist.
Albright presented both
sides with a draft agreement in two parts, civilian and
military. The civilian part granted Kosovo unprecedented
autonomy from Yugoslavia, and the Yugoslav delegation
accepted that. But the military agreement would have
forced Yugoslavia to accept a NATO military occupation,
not just of Kosovo but with no geographical limits, in
effect placing all of Yugoslavia under NATO
occupation.
When Milosevich refused
Albright’s terms for unconditional surrender, the US and
NATO claimed he had rejected peace, and war was the only
answer, the "last
resort." They did not
return to the UN Security Council to try to legitimize
their plan, knowing full well that Russia, China and
other countries would reject it. When UK Foreign
Secretary Robin Cook told Albright the British
government was "having trouble with our lawyers" over
NATO’s plan for an illegal war of aggression against
Yugoslavia, she told him to "get
new lawyers."
In March 1999, the KVM
teams were withdrawn and the bombing began. Pascal
Neuffer, a Swiss KVM
observer reported, "The situation on the ground on the
eve of the bombing did not justify a military
intervention. We could certainly have continued our
work. And the explanations given in the press, saying
the mission was compromised by Serb threats, did not
correspond to what I saw. Let’s say rather that we were
evacuated because NATO had decided to bomb."
NATO killed thousands of
civilians in Kosovo and the rest of Yugoslavia, as it
bombed 19 hospitals, 20
health centers, 69 schools, 25,000 homes, power
stations, a national TV
station, the Chinese
Embassy in Belgrade and
other diplomatic
missions. After it
invaded Kosovo, the US military set up the 955-acre Camp
Bondsteel, one of its largest bases in Europe, on its
newest occupied territory. Europe’s Human Rights
Commissioner, Alvaro Gil-Robles, visited Camp Bondsteel
in 2002 and called it "a smaller version of Guantanamo,"
exposing it as a secret CIA
black site for illegal,
unaccountable detention and torture.
But for the people of Kosovo, the ordeal was not over
when the bombing stopped. Far more people had fled the
bombing than the so-called "ethnic cleansing" the CIA
had provoked to set the stage for it. A reported 900,000
refugees, nearly half the population, returned to a
shattered, occupied province, now ruled by gangsters and
foreign overlords.
Serbs and other minorities
became second-class citizens, clinging precariously to
homes and communities where many of their families had
lived for centuries. More than 200,000 Serbs, Roma and
other minorities fled, as the NATO occupation and KLA
rule replaced the CIA’s manufactured illusion of ethnic
cleansing with the real thing. Camp Bondsteel was the
province’s largest employer, and US military contractors
also sent Kosovars to work in occupied Afghanistan and
Iraq. In 2019, Kosovo’s per capita GDP was only
$4,458, less than any
country in Europe except
Moldova and war-torn, post-coup Ukraine.
In 2007, a German military
intelligence report described Kosovo as a "Mafia
society," based on the
"capture of the state" by criminals. The report named
Hashim Thaci, then the leader of the Democratic Party,
as an example of "the closest ties between leading
political decision makers and the dominant criminal
class." In 2000, 80%
of the heroin trade in
Europe was controlled by Kosovar gangs, and the presence
of thousands of US and NATO troops fueled an explosion
of prostitution and sex
trafficking, also
controlled by Kosovo’s new criminal ruling class.
In 2008, Thaci was elected
Prime Minister, and Kosovo unilaterally declared
independence from Serbia. (The final dissolution of
Yugoslavia in 2006 had left Serbia and Montenegro as
separate countries.) The US and 14 allies immediately
recognized Kosovo’s independence, and ninety-seven countries,
about half the countries in the world, have now done so.
But neither Serbia nor the UN have recognized it,
leaving Kosovo in long-term diplomatic limbo.
When the court in the Hague
unveiled the charges against Thaci on June 24th, he was
on his way to Washington for a White House meeting with
Trump and President Vucic of Serbia to try to resolve
Kosovo’s diplomatic impasse. But when the charges were
announced, Thaci’s plane made a
U-turn over the
Atlantic, he returned to Kosovo and the meeting was
canceled.
The accusation of murder
and organ trafficking against Thaci was first made in
2008 by Carla
Del Ponte, the Chief
Prosecutor of the International Criminal Tribunal for
the Former Yugoslavia (ICTFY), in a book she wrote after
stepping down from that position. Del Ponte later
explained that the ICTFY was prevented from charging
Thaci and his co-defendants by the non-cooperation of
NATO and the UN Mission in Kosovo. In an interview for
the 2014 documentary, The
Weight of Chains 2, she explained, "NATO and the
KLA, as allies in the war, couldn’t act against each
other."
Human Rights Watch and the
BBC followed up on Del
Ponte’s allegations, and found evidence that Thaci and
his cronies murdered up to 400 mostly Serbian prisoners
during the NATO bombing in 1999. Survivors described
prison camps in Albania where prisoners were tortured
and killed, a yellow house where people’s organs were
removed and an unmarked mass grave nearby.
Council of Europe
investigator Dick Marty interviewed witnesses, gathered
evidence and published a report, which the Council of
Europe endorsed in
January 2011, but the Kosovo parliament did not approve
the plan for a special court in the Hague until 2015.
The Kosovo Specialist
Chambers and
independent prosecutor’s office finally began work in
2017. Now the judges have six months to review the
prosecutor’s charges and decide whether the trial should
proceed.
A central part of the Western narrative on Yugoslavia
was the demonization of President Milosevich of
Yugoslavia, who resisted his country’s Western-backed
dismemberment throughout the 1990s. Western leaders
smeared Milosevich as a "New Hitler" and the "Butcher of
the Balkans," but he was still arguing his innocence
when he died in a cell at The Hague in 2006.
Ten years later, at the
trial of the Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic, the
judges accepted the prosecution’s evidence that
Milosevich strongly opposed Karadzic’s plan to carve out
a Serb Republic in Bosnia. They convicted Karadzic of
being fully responsible for the resulting civil war, in
effect posthumously exonerating Milosevich
of responsibility for the actions of the Bosnian Serbs,
the most serious of the charges against him.
But the U.S.’s endless
campaign to paint all its enemies as "violent
dictators" and "New
Hitlers" rolls on like a demonization machine on
autopilot, against Putin, Xi, Maduro, Khamenei, the late
Fidel Castro and any foreign leader who stands up to the
imperial dictates of the US government. These smear
campaigns serve as pretexts for brutal sanctions and
catastrophic wars against our international neighbors,
but also as political weapons to attack and diminish any
US politician who
stands up for peace, diplomacy and disarmament.
As the web of lies spun by Clinton and Albright has
unraveled, and the truth behind their lies has spilled
out piece by bloody piece, the war on Yugoslavia has
emerged as a case study in how US leaders mislead us
into war. In many ways, Kosovo established the template
that US leaders have used to plunge our country and the
world into endless war ever since. What US leaders took
away from their "success" in Kosovo was that legality,
humanity and truth are no match for CIA-manufactured
chaos and lies, and they doubled down on that strategy
to plunge the US and the world into endless war.
As it did in Kosovo, the
CIA is still running wild, fabricating pretexts for new
wars and unlimited military spending, based on sourceless
accusations, covert
operations and flawed,
politicized intelligence.
We have allowed American politicians to pat themselves
on the back for being tough on "dictators” and “thugs,”
letting them settle for the cheap shot instead of
tackling the much harder job of reining in the real
instigators of war and chaos: the US
military and the CIA.
But if the people of Kosovo can hold the CIA-backed
gangsters who murdered their people, sold their body
parts and hijacked their country accountable for their
crimes, is it too much to hope that Americans can do the
same and hold our leaders accountable for their far more
widespread and systematic war crimes?
Iran recently indicted Donald
Trump for the assassination of General Qassem Soleimani,
and asked Interpol to issue an international arrest
warrant for him. Trump is probably not losing sleep over
that, but the indictment of such a key US ally as Thaci
is a sign that the US“accountabilty-free
zone” of impunity for
war crimes is finally starting to shrink, at least in
the protection it provides to US allies. Should
Netanyahu, Bin Salman and Tony Blair be starting to look
over their shoulders?
Nicolas J.S. Davies is
the author of Blood
On Our Hands:
the American Invasion and Destruction of Iraq.
He also wrote the chapters on "Obama at War" in Grading
the 44th President: a Report Card on Barack Obama’s
First Term as a Progressive Leader.
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