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The
world cannot afford to let the tragedy of NATO’s war against
Yugoslavia be forgotten due to the silence of those who were
actors and accomplices of that brutal genocide.
President Clinton, National Security Advisor Sandy Berger,
Secretary of State Madeleine Albright and other close
collaborators of the President, including the person who was
ordered by Berger not to take notes when Cuba was discussed,
were at the meeting Clinton held with Aznar in the White
House on April 13, 1999, where the decision to intensify the
bombings was made, and Aznar suggested that Serbian
television, radio and other facilities be bombed, in actions
that would take the lives of innumerable defenseless
civilians.
Some of them, through press statements or in a book
or memoir, may have individually written about the
adventure, but none focused on the real danger and suicidal
wars that the United States is leading the world to. The
publication of the existing secret documents could be the
legacy of a President in 200 years from now, when, judging
by the pace we’re going at, there will no longer be any
publicity or readers.
Less than ten years have since gone by.
In Europe and elsewhere they have many accomplices
keeping silence.
After my third message was sent to Milosevic,
Italy’s Minister of Transportation visited Cuba. I met with
him on March 30, 1999 and directly discussed the issue of
the war against Yugoslavia.
What follows is a summary of what I said to him,
according to the notes taken during our conversation, in the
presence of my Office staff and officials from the Ministry
of Foreign Affairs:
“I began by asking why they had invaded Serbia and
how they were going to reach a settlement. I told him that,
in my opinion, it had been a great mistake and that, were
the Serbs to offer resistance, they would run into a
cul-de-sac. Why did Europe need to dismantle Yugoslavia,
which had implemented many reforms and which, strictly
speaking –the Cold War having ended– could not be labeled a
communist state and, much less, an enemy of Europe? I
explained that, in order to satisfy the German government’s
demand, Europe had encouraged and supported the separation
of Croatia, where, during World War II, Nazi Germany
organized the fearful chetniks, groups which
perpetrated countless crimes and massacres against the Serbs
and the liberation movement headed by Tito.
“Due to this complacency and lack of political
foresight, in the prevailing euphoria of the days when the
socialist block and the Soviet Union were in a crisis,
Europe dismantled Yugoslavia. This resulted in bloody
episodes and, specially, in the long and violent war in
Bosnia and, ultimately, in NATO’s current war against
Serbia. By then, Macedonia’s separation had also taken
place, which meant the mutilation of the greater part of the
Yugoslav Federation. Only Serbia, Montenegro and Kosovo
remained.
“As everyone knows, for decades Kosovo’s population
of Albanian descent grew uninterruptedly until it became the
broad majority. In Tito’s lifetime, long before his death,
many Serbian families left Kosovo seeking safety faced with
the numerous acts of violence that extremist groups from
Kosovo committed against them. At that time, in Kosovo, the
Serbs were subjected to what today is called ethnic
cleansing.
“Yugoslavia’s unnecessary and bloody disintegration
encouraged and unleashed the underlying conflicts between
the majority, of Albanian descent, and Kosovo’s Serbian
minority, conflicts which are at the root of the current
problem.
“The Serbian people are the essential core of what
remains of the former Yugoslavia. They are a combative and
courageous people who have been profoundly humiliated. I was
convinced that, offered ample autonomy, Serbia would have
accepted an honorable and peaceful settlement of the
conflicts in Kosovo.
“Kosovo’s moderate groups, acting in an intelligent
and constructive fashion, supported this settlement, as the
presence of a broad majority of Albanian descent would,
sooner or later, make the peaceful emergence of an
independent state possible. Europe knows perfectly well that
Kosovo’s extremist groups did not want this settlement; they
demanded immediate independence and, because of this, wanted
the intervention of NATO forces.
“It is unfair to lay all of the responsibility on
Serbia. Serbia has not invaded any sovereign country. What
it has done, in essence, is oppose the military presence of
foreign troops in its territory. For months, in recent weeks
particularly, it has known nothing but constant threats. Its
unconditional surrender was urged. No country can be treated
like that, let alone the people who, in the days of Europe’s
occupation, fought most heroically against the Nazis and
have ample experience in irregular warfare.
“If the Serbs resist –and I am convinced that they
will resist– NATO will have no other option but to commit
genocide, but such an action would fail, for two reasons:
“Firstly: they would be unable to defeat the
Serbian people if the latter applied all of its experience
and irregular warfare doctrine.
“Secondly: Public opinion in NATO member countries
themselves would not allow such an action.
“Armored divisions, stealth bombers, tomahawk,
cruise missiles or any other so-called intelligent weapon
would not suffice. A missile or bomb would have to be
launched for every person capable of carrying a rifle, a
bazooka or a portable anti-aircraft weapon. All of NATO’s
power would, in this case, be useless. There are star wars
and there are ground wars. All high-tech equipment
notwithstanding, individual combatants would be the most
important element in this type of war.
“Beyond Kosovo, a much more serious problem is
emerging, to the detriment of Europe’s and the world’s
interests. Russia has been humiliated terribly. NATO has
already advanced to the borders of what was once the Soviet
Union and it is promising to include other states of the
former socialist block, and even Baltic countries that were
part of the Soviet Union. Russians have every reason to
think they will not stop until they reach the walls of the
Kremlin.
“Like the Serbs, the Russians are a Slavic people
and this sense of identity is very strong among these
peoples. The attacks on Serbia are profoundly humiliating
for them and, more than any other action, they have produced
deep and justified feelings of insecurity, not only among
the Russians but in India and China as well, and these
countries will undoubtedly attempt to ally themselves to
Russia to guarantee their security. I doubt the Russians
would cease to do whatever is necessary to retain a response
capability which would be their sole guarantee in this
situation.
“Neither Europe nor the world, with their current
and overwhelming economic problems, would gain anything
through such a course of action.
“A few days ago, in the early morning of March 26,
while returning from Colombia to Russia before schedule, the
President of the Russian Federation’s State DUMA, Guennadi
Selezniov, made a stopover at Havana’s airport. I took up
these issues with him of my own initiative. I told him no
military solution was possible, that, without a doubt, any
effort to offer Serbia military aid would inevitably lead to
a general war, as the only means available to wage such a
war today are not conventional. I said also that the battle
was of a political, not military, nature.
“Selezniov publicly expressed this point of view I
shared with him.
“Both, Europe and the world are duty-bound to find
such a settlement, which, though difficult and complex, is
perfectly possible. If, rather than devote all their efforts
to threatening Serbia with terrible bombings, they had
brought pressures to bear on extremists in Kosovo, such a
settlement could have been reached. Only NATO can contain
extremists in Kosovo through frank and uncompromising
efforts. It is not a question of using weapons to achieve
this, but, rather, of warning the extremists in such a way
that they will be certain, beyond all doubt, that they do
not have NATO’s support. There is no question that the bombs
that have been dropped on Serbia for a week now will never
contribute to these dissuasive efforts.
“In addition to this, I believe it is a serious
political mistake that the United States and Europe should
try to keep Russia on the edge of the precipice in economic
terms by imposing it the International Monetary Fund’s
unviable formulas.
“The West makes no mention of the 300 billion
dollars that have been stolen from Russia and relocated to
Portugal, Spain, France, Italy, Austria and other countries.
This is fifteen times the miserable 20-billion-dollar loan
that the International Monetary Fund has been discussing for
months now. The West, which recommended or imposed these
models and policies on Russia, shares in the responsibility
for this ruthless plundering of Russia’s wealth.
“An internal explosion in Russia would be
catastrophic. This is coupled with NATO’s encroachment,
which I’ve already mentioned, the proposal to cancel the
Strategic Anti-Missile Defense Agreement and, now, the
incredible humiliation surrounding the attack launched by
NATO’s powerful forces against a small country like Serbia.
“I told him I was against all kinds of genocide or
slaughters, regardless of the perpetrator, and that all
ethnic groups and religions, without exception, are
deserving of the right to life, culture and peace.
“If I have taken the liberty of explaining this, it
is because I feel it is my duty to warn you of these dangers
and of the need to solve them. To lay these issues on the
table does no harm to anyone and can, on the contrary,
benefit everyone. I again expressed my conviction that the
Serbs would resist, and that a peaceful settlement was, in
my opinion, feasible, even though negotiating with a country
on which thousands of bombs had been dropped and whose
honor, dignity and economy had been dealt a harsh blow was
by no means easy.
“NATO has practically no more military targets to
strike, perhaps only concentrated or moving troops remain,
and the easiest thing for these troops would be to split up
to wage another type of war in which they cannot be
destroyed by air strikes.
“Europe knows that ground combat would be very
costly in terms of human lives and, what’s more, futile. I
added that, were the Serbs to deploy the strategy we would
use in our country in the event of an invasion by the United
States, an area in which they have already shown
extraordinary experience, NATO’s war would be futile and
repulsive, an act of genocide in the heart of Europe
destined to be condemned everywhere”.
Today is a glorious day for our country, the day in
which Carlos Manuel de Céspedes began Cuba’s war of
independence against the Spanish metropolis.
He was a source of inspiration for the generations
of Cubans who came after him. What he taught us was the duty
to reflect on and confront the dangers that menace the human
species today.
Fidel
Castro Ruz
October
10, 2007
7:55
p.m.
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