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[Whatever one thinks of Belarus President Alexander
Lukashenko, for the record he is neither a communist
nor, having been elected in elections deemed free by
everyone and being well ahead in current polls for the
upcoming one, a dictator in any standard sense of the
word.
He has in fact pursued an independent course both in
foreign and domestic economic policies, and as such
incurred the displeasure - the homicidal rage
evidently - of the governing elite in Washington.
The following presents the starkest case study of how
the New World Order operates that one is likely to
read.]


THE TIMES (London)
MONDAY SEPTEMBER 03 2001 
 
US adopts 'Contras policy' in communist Belarus 
 
FROM ALICE LAGNADO IN MOSCOW 
 
THE US Embassy in Belarus has admitted that it is
pursuing a policy similar to that in 1980s Nicaragua,
in which anti-government Contra rebels were funded and
supported. 
President Lukashenko, a dictatorial Communist, is
heading for victory in presidential elections on
Sunday. 

In an unusual admission, Michael Kozak, the US
Ambassador to Belarus, said in a letter to a British
newspaper that America’s “objective and to some degree
methodology are the same” in Belarus as in Nicaragua,
where the US backed the Contras against the left-wing
Sandinista Government in a war that claimed at least
30,000 lives. Mr Kozak was not available for comment. 

Washington said recently that allegations of
state-sanctioned death squads operating in Belarus,
Europe’s last bastion of communism, were “credible”.
Two former state prosecutors, who have been granted
political asylum in America, have said that victims
were murdered with a special pistol and buried in a
cemetery in Minsk. 

The ambassador’s disclosure has coincided with moves
by the Bush Administration to gain increased political
influence in Eastern Europe and the Balkans and with
reports in several European newspapers, which said
that former US servicemen believed to be working for
the CIA were escorted with Albanian guerrillas from a
village in the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia
earlier this year. 

Earlier in his career, Mr Kozak served as Principal
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Inter-American Affairs
under Presidents Reagan and Bush, working in Panama,
Nicaragua and El Salvador, and was Ambassador to Cuba.
While Mr Kozak was serving in Nicaragua, Mr Reagan
famously compared the Contras to the French Resistance
fighters. 

President Lukashenko is popular and most Belarussians
fear that a new, pro-Western leader would bring the
poverty experienced by many Russians and Ukrainians
after the transition to a market economy. 

A spokesman for the US Embassy in Minsk told The Times
that the embassy helped to fund 300 non-governmental
organisations (NGOs), including non-state media, but
did not fund political parties, since that is banned
by law. He admitted that some of the NGOs were linked
to those who were “seeking political change”. 
 
 
 

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