Anti-NATO forces in Serbia mark 10th year since bombing of Yugoslavia
By
Heather Cottin
Belgrade, Serbia
Published Mar 29, 2009 8:53 PM
March 23—Hundreds of representatives are meeting in Belgrade on March
23-24 to commemorate the 10th anniversary of the U.S.-led 78-day bombing of
Yugoslavia and the heroic resistance of its people and military during
NATO’s aggressive and illegal war. Participants came from many European
countries, including Bulgaria, Belgium, Russia, Germany, Greece, Italy,
Ireland, Britain, Spain, Portugal and Serbia, as well as Palestine, Angola,
Brazil, Venezuela and the United States.
In 1999, thousands of courageous students rallied at huge rock concerts on
bridges the U.S. and its NATO allies were bombing in Belgrade. Wearing shirts
emblazoned with bull’s-eyes, they protested the criminal NATO violation
of Yugoslavia’s sovereignty, proclaiming themselves “NATO
targets.”
The Belgrade Forum met to “remember the defense of the county” that
coincided with NATO’s first step of Western military expansion into the
former socialist countries. The U.S.-led NATO assault killed over 2,000
civilians and bombed chemical and water treatment plants, resulting in
permanent destruction of the country’s ecology. The Pentagon used bombs
and shells with depleted uranium in Kosovo and the rest of Serbia 10 years ago.
Now cancer rates there have skyrocketed to over 300 percent above prior
rates.
Speakers at the two-day conference said the U.S.-NATO war—allegedly to
“liberate” Kosovo—was designed to build Camp Bondsteel, now
the largest U.S. military base in southeastern Europe. The U.S.-NATO plan was
to transform the Balkans into a launching pad for further military expansion
into Eastern Europe and Southwest Asia, which has happened.
Ivan Dimitrov from Bulgaria, one of the speakers at the Belgrade Forum,
apologized to Serbs for his nation’s role as the military base from which
the U.S. launched many of the aerial attacks during the 78-day war on
Yugoslavia. Belgrade, he said, is unique, a city that was bombed by both the
Nazis and by NATO. He continued, “The capitalist system is the focus of
all the evil in the world.”
In the Yugoslavia of 1989, some 20 million people of many nationalities lived
in six republics. Some 70 percent of the country’s productive capacity
was publicly owned.
Since Yugoslavia’s breakup, everything has been privatized. The factories
are closing. The fancy Benetton, Gap, Ann Taylor and computer stores have few
customers. Unemployment is in double digits. In Kosovo, a former province of
Serbia that NATO has turned into an abject colony, unemployment is 70
percent.
Protests of NATO ‘celebration’ planned
Most speakers at the Belgrade Forum condemned the world capitalist press for
suppressing the truth about what NATO began in Yugoslavia, but noted that this
spring marked a new beginning for a worldwide fightback against NATO militarism
and the putrefying capitalist system it protects.
The most pro-capitalist, rightist and subservient politicians in Georgia,
Ukraine, Azerbaijan, Poland, Bulgaria and other “new” NATO
member-states came into office after establishing their loyalty to the West and
to neoliberal policies supporting “globalization.” That is, they
backed U.S. and European Union imperialist investment and control, turning
their countries into Western colonies to defend their own narrow interests.
The workers in Eastern Europe, robbed of free health care, education, the
guarantee of jobs and culture, face double-digit unemployment.
Now the U.S. and NATO look to the working-class and farmer youth of Eastern
Europe’s “new” NATO members for cannon fodder for its
colonial adventures. These youths’ job is to kill and die for NATO in
Afghanistan, while NATO military expenditures strain the budgets of these
poorer member nations.
The 60th anniversary of NATO in early April has become the focus of protest all
over Europe and also in Canada, beginning now. In Montreal, Rome, Brussels and
Belgrade people are gathering to say no to NATO expansion, with major protests
planned for April 2-4 in and around Strasbourg, France.
Articles copyright 1995-2012 Workers World.
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