HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK
---------------------------

What is worse is that the Rosenbergs were almost
certainly innocent. recently their brother in law has
confessed he set them up to save his own wife.


--- "Mrs. Jela Jovanovic" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> HTTP://WWW.STOPNATO.ORG.UK
> ---------------------------
> 
> 
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: TiM Publisher <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: TiM Readers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Sent: Wednesday, March 20, 2002 3:50 AM
> Subject: General Perisic: An American Spy? (UPDATE
> to TiM Bulletin 2002/3-3,
> Mar. 19, 2002)
> 
> 
> >
> > FROM PHOENIX, ARIZONA
> >
> > Here is an update to our latest Truth in Media
> Global Watch Bulletin which
> > is now available at our Web site.  Just click on
> the animated (green) THE
> > NEWS button to go to our latest report.
> >
> > Of course, you can also click on the TiM Bulletins
> Index button in the
> left
> > frame - to go to selections of our Bulletins
> archived by geographic
> regions
> > and subjects, and in chronological order.  Or
> click on any other button in
> > the left frame for other topics of interest.
> >
> > And now, here are the headlines of the latest TiM
> Bulletin.  Just keep in
> > mind that our stories are CONSTANTLY updated, and
> that the e-mail text
> > enclosed below is often merely the first edition
> of a story.  So we
> > recommend that you keep checking the TiM Web site
> daily, so that you would
> > not miss out on some important news or commentary
> updates.
> >
> > Here is an UPDATE to the latest TiM Bulletin:
> >
> >                                           
> HIGHLIGHTS
> >
> > Belgrade                            2. General
> Perisic: An American Spy?
> >
> > To read the latest update and all the LINKS to the
> above stories, just
> > click (or double-click, depending on your
> computer) on the following Web
> > address, and you'll be able to see it in full
> color, along with
> > accompanying images:
> >
> > http://www.truthinmedia.org/Bulletins2002/3-3.html
> >
> > -------------
> > NOTE: To cancel the e-mail editions of our
> reports, just reply REMOVE or
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> > -------------
> >
> >
> > Caught Red-handed in Espionage Case, Perisic
> Confesses But Pleads
> Innocent,
> > Citing Primacy of International over National Law
> >
> > 2. General Perisic: An American Spy?
> >
> > Belgrade Apologizes to Washington!  For What?  For
> Doing Too Good Job of
> > Counterespionage?
> >
> > BELGRADE, Mar. 19 - Imagine a former top American
> military official, now a
> > high-ranking government minister, being arrested
> with two of his former
> > military aides while meeting a foreign power's
> spook at a restaurant.  The
> > charge?  Espionage.  Some secret U.S. military
> materials, found in the
> > foreign spy's briefcase, serve as evidence.
> >
> > All hell would break loose in Washington, right? 
> The State Department and
> > the White House would send messages of outrage to
> that foreign power,
> > demanding explanations and apologies.  In fact, in
> the "good old days" of
> > the Cold War, such domestic traitors could be
> summarily court-marshaled
> and
> > probably executed, maybe along with the foreign
> spy.
> > After all, that's exactly what happened to Julius
> and Ethel Rosenberg, for
> > example.  The couple were tried, convicted and
> sentenced to death by Judge
> > Irving Kaufman. They were executed on June 19,
> 1953 for wartime espionage
> > (see "Cold War Spies and Espionage").  And
> Rosenbergs were "mere"
> civilians
> > who betrayed their country!
> >
> > Well, that was in the "good old days."  What
> happened on Thursday night
> > (Mar. 14) in Belgrade, Serbia, was just the
> reverse.  A foreign power
> > (America), which engaged in a failed spying
> endeavor, and which got caught
> > red-handed in its espionage activities, professed
> outrage and demanded
> > apology.  And amazingly - got it, from the vassal
> Serb authorities who
> > rushed to defend the accused traitors.
> >
> > Furthermore, the three domestic defendants were
> released by Serb
> > authorities on Saturday (Mar. 16), solely on the
> basis of the "enormous
> > pressure by the international community,
> specifically the U.S.
> government,"
> > according to a Mar. 18 report by the Serbian
> language daily "Glas
> Javnosti."
> >
> > So much for respect of the law and for sovereignty
> of Serbia and
> Montenegro
> > and its judicial system.  O tempora, o mores.
> >
> > Here's what happened.
> >
> > Agents of the Serb military security service,
> known as KOS, entered on
> > Thursday night the restaurant "Saric," south of
> Belgrade, and arrested
> > General Momcilo Perisic, former chief of the
> general staff of the Yugoslav
> > army, along with Colonel Miodrag Sekulic and
> Vladimir Vlajkovic.  Perisic
> > is currently serving as Serbia's deputy prime
> minister.
> >
> > An American diplomat, (General) John David
> Neighbor, the U.S. Embassy's
> > first secretary, with whom the three Serbs were
> meeting, was also detained
> > for questioning.  Neighbor reportedly heads up the
> CIA's Balkans desk,
> > according to Deutsche Presse-Agentur (Mar. 18) and
> Agence France Press
> > (Mar. 19) reports,
> >
> > Serb military sources told the Associated Press
> that Perisic was
> > apprehended while allegedly handing over secret
> army documents that "could
> > link (the former Serb president) Milosevic with
> war crimes."  Milosevic is
> > currently on trial by the U.N. war crimes tribunal
> at the Hague for his
> > alleged role in atrocities committed by troops
> loyal to him in Kosovo,
> > Bosnia and Croatia.
> >
> > The secret documents, which reportedly included
> tape recordings of some
> top
> > Serb military leaders' meetings, were reportedly
> found in the American's
> > briefcase.  Neighbor later claimed they were
> planted there by the Serb
> army.
> > But Belgrade's "Vecernje Novosti" ("Evening News")
> said that Perisic
> > admitted to the military investigative judge that
> he had turned over
> > confidential documents to the American diplomat
> (see www.beograd.com, Mar.
> > 18, 17:05-news in Serbian).  Perisic defended his
> action by saying he was
> > innocent of the charge of espionage, since he was
> obligated to do so by
> > international law (the Hague Tribunal), which (in
> his opinion) ranks
> higher
> > than the domestic law.
> >
> > Col. Sekulic, who allegedly secured the secret
> documents for his former
> > army boss, is in charge of Yugoslav Army's
> electronic surveillance,
> 
=== message truncated ===


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