.....it is perhaps as
well that we should remember.....
"Humanitarian" Bombers in Court
27/1/04 by Noah Tucker

For the first time since the Nuremburg
trials of Nazis in 1946,the former leadership of a
western country was forced to attend court yesterday to
defend accusations that their country had committed war
crimes.
Wim Kok, who had been a trade union firebrand
before becoming prime minister of the Netherlands, and is
now a corporate board member of Shell and the Dutch
Telecoms company Telfort, avoided giving a view on
whether the NATO attack on the Belgrade RTS TV Studio was
justified, saying he had only found out after the bombing
that 150 civilians had been inside the building at that
time. Ex foreign minister van Aartsen on the other hand,
appeared enthusiastic about the attack. When the advocate
for the victims' families, Nico Steijnen, asked him about
the Amnesty International report which concluded that the
TV studio was a purely civilian site, the former cabinet
member claimed that the studio was in fact a 'dual use'
installation which also had a function for the
Yugoslavian armed forces. Van Aartsen
also stated that the Dutch govenment had in written
correspondence with Amnesty International on several
occasions before this bombing stating that communications
centres in general could be considered legitimate
targets; this, he suggested, could be considered
sufficient warning to the civilians inside the RTS TV
building in Belgrade. Even Judge P. A. Koppen, presiding
over the courtroom, appeared to have difficulty
concealing his amazement at this statement.
Sixteen people, all civilians, died in the
attack, which put the television station out of action
for three hours before transmission was resumed.
When asked about the NATO cluster bomb attack
on Nis, a Serbian town near a military airfield, Wim Kok
stated, "It's even more sad, seeing that a market
and a hospital were hit, that the actual target was
missed." Following the 15 deaths and 70 injured in
Nis, the Dutch government decided that its own F16
warplanes would cease dropping cluster bombs on
Yugoslavia; the other components of
the NATO forces did not change their policy of using
these terrifying weapons.
The packed courtroom heard an account of
the NATO strategy of gradually increasing the range of
sites which it was permissible for US and West European
forces to attack, moving from strictly military targets
in phase one of the war, to phase two, phase two-plus,
and phase three, in which communications, transport and
other infrastructure would be destroyed.
Steijnen (for the victims' families): 'What
was the difference between phase two-plus and phase
three'
Kok: 'In the NATO Council, the transition
between phases two and three was considered sensitive. So
we had phase two-plus, which included 'C-three centres' '
command, control and communications targets.'
Steijnen: 'Why was it sensitive, the move to
phase three'
Kok: 'That was my perception.'
Steijnen: 'A parliamentary document states
explicitly that civil targets were included. Was that the
cause of this 'sensitiveness''"
Kok: 'I can't say more. The decisions on
specific targets were not posed to the Netherlands and
did not have to be.'
One could conclude that only a country with
no real possiblity of hitting back at its opponents could
thus be coldly, systematically brought to its knees in
the 78 days of this bombardment, the first major war in
Europe since 1945. The tensions
within NATO had more to do with keeping public opinion on
board than any likelihood that Yugoslavia could score any
military successes.
The court appearance was part of a preliminary
hearing in an action for compensation from the Dutch
state on behalf of victims of the NATO attacks on Nis and
the RTS TV Studio. The former defence minister Frank de
Grave has yet to to give evidence, and ex-leader of
parliament Jeltje van Nieuwenhoven is refusing to attend
the court.
After today's proceedings, Meindert Stelling,
a leading member of the campaign for the bombing victims
and a founder member of Lawyers for Peace, was optimistic
about the outcome. "We have established that the
Dutch government was involved all the
way, in the decision-making process about what kind of
targets would be attacked in which phases of the war.
Also, our former foreign minister made it clear that NATO
forces needed to operate within the protocol of
international law, meaning that a target can only be
selected for attack if destroying it or putting it out of
action will create a definite military advantage for the
attacking party, according to plans and in the
circumstances of the time. The government will have to
prove that the RTS TV studio was actually in use by the
Yugoslavian military. They will also need to show that it
was reasonable to drop cluster bombs at Nis, so close to
a civilian inhabited area."
Stelling, himself a former Dutch Air Force
pilot, commented further on the day's evidence. "Our
former prime minister showed that he was not in control
in Holland's relationship with the NATO military
apparatus. He was not in control of
whether the war was conducted within international law.
This amounts to neglect."
Stelling concurs that it might have been
convenient for the Dutch leadership and some other
European NATO top politicians not to know which specific
sites were to be targetted, in case they were illegal.
My discussion with Stelling moves onto the
wider issues of the 1999 NATO war against Yugoslavia, and
it transpires that, by coincidence, we have both read the
recent book by General Wesley K. Clarke, who is currently
in the running to be the Democratic Party candidate for
election as President of the United States. Although the
politicians in the courtroom today had referred to the
bombardment of Yugoslavia as having the aim of 'bringing
Milosevic to the negotiating table', it is clear from the
account of the former Supreme Commander of NATO forces
and other insiders (for instance Michael Hirsh of
Newsweek) that before the bombing
started, the western countries made no attempt to
negotiate seriously, and instead drew up an ultimatum,
the 'Rambouillet Accord' which they knew the Yugoslavian
leaders could not accept because it included the
stationing of foreign troops on Serbian territory with no
jurisdiction over their activities by the Serbian and
Yugoslavian authorities.
This was a good war for NATO, one that kept
the western allies together, put Russia in its place and established
a precedent for rich western countries to use military
means to intervene in the 'humanitarian' affairs of
poorer nations. A war that caring
liberals, like Clinton, Blair and Wesley K. Clarke could
be proud of. A war with no casualties at all on the NATO
side.
Nearly five years later, Kosovo is no
nearer independence. It is still
formally part of Serbia, but is run as a NATO
protectorate. Ethnic Albanian
militias have ethnically cleansed the Jews, Gypsies and
Serbians from the province. Its
economy is managed by the World Bank. US company Brown
and Root Services, a subsidiary of Halliburton, is
reported to be making good profits
from the construction of a huge permanent US military
base, Camp Bondsteel, which is conveniently located near
vital oil and gas energy corridors including the
Trans-Balkan Oil Pipeline.

As we leave the courtroom, an hour after the
end of proceedings for that day, a group of middle-aged
women, Serbian civilians, have dismantled the little
shrine of crosses and photographs on the concrete steps
and are picking up the pieces.
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