Questions to Clinton in Kosovo



On http://www.transnational.org from November 22, 1999



TFF P r e s s I n f o   # 8 1


Q U E S T I O N S   T O   C L I N T O N   I N   K O S O V O    



November 22, 1999


"Given that democratic countries have free and independent media, President
Clinton's visit to Kosovo on November 23, would be a golden opportunity to
take stock of the US-lead Western policies to bring peace to the region.
Here is a selection of questions with some media advisory. In other words,
if I imagine I had been granted an interview as a journalist, this is what I
would focus on," says TFF director Jan Oberg.  


(1) Mr. President, US warplanes bombed Yugoslavia and the Kosovo province
with you as the  Chief Commander of US forces. Does it worry you that the
whole campaign was justified and conducted on the basis of what has turned
out to be grossly mistaken or falsified information about a genocide planned
by Belgrade?

[During the campaign, President Clinton, Secretary Cohen, and Secretary
Albright are on record with figures of between 10.000 and 100.000 missing
and probably killed in consequence of the alleged plan by Milosevic,
Operation Horseshoe. However, the Hague Tribunal has recently revealed that,
so far, 2.108 bodies have been identified - of more than one ethnicity and
dead from different causes; in short, not all Albanians massacred by Serbs.
From a human point, of course, this is a great relief. But it raises serious
issues as to of the information and intelligence basis on which decisions
with far-reaching consequences are made. And it begs the question: what is
world public opinion informed about and what not, and who produces
information for what purposes].

(2) What are your thoughts by the fact that NATO, with your country in the
lead, killed at least 2.000 innocent civilians in Serbia due to stray
missiles and bombs? You have apologised to the Chinese people for bombing
their embassy. Did you consider the possibility personally to apologise to
the relatives or, for instance, pay a compensation of some kind? And how do
you feel about the indictment of you, your Secretaries and all other NATO
leaders to the Hague War Crimes Tribunal?

[For the indictment of NATO leaders, see
http://www.transnational.org/features/Indictment_of_NATO.html. For the
indictment of Slobodan Milosevic for, among other things, being responsible
for the death of more than 300 people during the Kosovo war, see
http://www.transnational.org/features/indicted.html ]  

(3) Mr. President, the American Camp Bondsteel here at which you celebrate
Thanksgiving Day with your soldiers, is said to be the largest US military
facility the US has built from the ground-up since Vietnam. I have three
questions about it: a) what long term strategic aims does this huge
investment serve, and b) how is it possible to build such a facility on
territory which, according to concurrent legal judgment - and all UN
resolutions - belongs to the sovereign, recognised state of Yugoslavia whose
integrity you are also obliged to respect? And c) are you not sending a very
strong signal that Kosovo's future status is somehow already settled by fait
accompli? 

[Camp Bondsteel is described in a November 22 Christian Science Monitor
article - http://www.csmonitor.com/durable/1999/11/22/fp1s2-csm.shtml.
(Check archives, perhaps) It is gigantic: 775 acres, costs US $ 36.6
million, has every convenience and facility needed for its 6.300 US
soldiers, including two chapels and a mobile Burger King; the way it is
constructed is said to be indicative of a multi-year engagement and
wider-than-Kosovo aims].

(4) It is hardly wrong to say that the US was sympathetic to the plight of
the Albanians and cultivated the leaders of the Kosovo Liberation Army,
LDK/UCK, such as the present self-appointed prime minister of this province,
Mr. Hacim Thaci. Are you disappointed by the fact that these allies of yours
- I think we can call them that since KLA and NATO helped each other -  are
also responsible for an ethnic cleansing policy that has driven 234.000
legitimate non-Albanian citizens out of the province, according to UNHCR
figures? If so, what do you do now during your visit to put enough pressure
on Hacim Thaci and his military and civilian colleagues to ensure that you
can say what you said about the Albanian refugees in Macedonia and Kosovo:
we are going to bring them back to a safe environment. 

(5) I have a follow-up to that with a somewhat different angle: according to
the UN mandate that KFOR, UNMIK, OSCE operate on, Kosovo's citizens and
their multi-ethnic composition should be protected. However, the 234.000
have left under the very eyes of these missions being present on the ground.
I am sure that you, as the single most responsible leader, regret this
failure, given that this is the biggest and most heavily armed peacekeeping
mission ever - and the ultimate test of NATO in that role. In which ways
does America and its NATO and UN allies intend to change the structure and
function of the entire Kosovo operation before it decays beyond repair? 

(6) Mr. President, in every speech you have held also on this tour, you
emphasise human rights, general humanitarian concerns and freedom. Now,
there are almost 1 million refugees in Serbia - many more in fact than there
were Kosovo-Albanian refugees in Macedonia and Albania. They have fled from
Croatia, Bosnia and now Kosovo, driven away for exactly the same reasons you
stated repeatedly at the time about the Albanian victims: "not because of
anything they have done, but because of who they are." Yugoslavia and Serbia
is in deep crisis because of political blunders and economic mismanagement,
that is true, but also because of NATO's destruction and many years of
sanctions and exclusion from the international community. A humanitarian
catastrophe cannot be excluded this winter. How do you reconcile your
personal  commitment to humanism and moral leadership with actively
preventing that THESE human beings are helped? Do you see any historical
evidence that this is the way to overthrow authoritarian leaders?

(7) In your own speeches before the bombing campaign, you emphasised that a
major goal apart from stopping a genocide was to create stability in the
Balkan region. I think quite a few diplomats and security experts would
agree that neither Albania, Macedonia, Serbia, Montenegro, nor Bosnia and
Croatia for that matter, are more secure now than before March 24. Rather,
less so. I think many would be grateful for your guidance as to where and
when the Balkan situation has improved in any proportion to the political,
moral, military and economic investment we have made here? 

(8) Do you intend to compensate, one way or another, Macedonia and Albania
for America's/NATO's use of their territory and facilities? I mean in more
substantial terms than "keeping the door open" for later - much later -
membership of NATO?

(9) You have stated time and again, Mr. President, that you are proud that
America intervened both in Bosnia and here. And it did so, for sure,
forcefully and with determination - so much so, it seems, that EU countries
are now starting a 'turbo-militarization' with aims such as
military-industrial and -political integration, common policies, EU-WEU
fusion - in short, big steps towards a European army. The reason? They think
they looked timid compared with America! They want to be able to fix
problems in their own backyard. Now, I think I am not offending anyone by
saying that the United States of America has antagonised the Chinese and the
Russians a bit - NATO expansion, the Ballistic Missile Defence plans, the
Test Ban policy, bombing of Yugoslavia, the failed economic aid, the oil
pipeline agreement you just signed in Istanbul, Georgia's future NATO
membership, the 'noise' about Chechenya... - well, you know the list much
better, of course. Do you also sometimes feel that the US has taken the lead
to such an extent that it has antagonised its European friends and that this
could backfire, that they are now somehow turning away from the Atlantic
dimension. Even Tony Blair's UK seems to want Europe to become more and more
of a super power and less dependent on the US?

(10) Finally - and you have been extremely generous with your time - I would
like to ask you a question that has only indirect bearings on the Balkans.
Wherever you go you promote human rights, freedom and democracy. I am sure
that the right to privacy and freedom of speech is absolutely essential
central in your thinking. Therefore, I can't help asking you: how come the
US has developed technology that permits it to listen and automatically
register not only e-mail and fax traffic worldwide but also - now - the
human voice as we speak on phones with each other. It is done by your
National Security Agency, but - sorry if you think this is a naive question
- does the United States HAVE to feel so insecure? I relate it also to the
fact that US defence for the year 2000 will be more than three times greater
than the combined military spending of China, Russia, and the rogue states
Iran, Iraq, Syria, Libya, North Korea and Cuba?

[The tapping of communication was reported recently by the Independent -
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/Digital/Features/spies151199.shtml. The
military expenditure figures were reported by The Christian Science Monitor
(check archives, perhaps) at
http://www.csmonitor.com/durable/1999/11/04/fp1s1-csm.shtm ] 

"Well, only carefully chosen people get the opportunity to ask the President
of the United States questions. But we can ask ourselves questions and
ponder the answers - such as: why on earth are questions like these not
asked by those who do get the chance? And why are they not analysed and
debated MUCH MORE in your local and in our global media? 

Philip Knightly has stated that war's first victim is truth. Peace
researcher Johan Galtung maintains that complex understanding is its second
victim. It seems to me that war's third victim is self-criticism - and thus
we prevent ourselves from learning about the real motives behind wars as
well as the alternatives to war," ends TFF's director.  



(c) TFF 1999

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Dr. Jan Oberg
Director, head of the TFF Conflict-Mitigation team 
to the Balkans and Georgia

T F F

Transnational Foundation for Peace and Future Research
Vegagatan 25, S - 224 57 Lund, Sweden
Phone +46-46-145909 (0900-1100)
Fax +46-46-144512
Email
tff at transnational.org
http://www.transnational.org


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