FROM PHOENIX, ARIZONA

The Special Truth in Media Global Watch Bulletins on NATO's war on Serbia,
such as the one enclosed below, can also be accessed at our Web site:
www.truthinmedia.org which is being updated throughout the day.HEADLINES 

Beijing              1. China's Leader Raises Stakes in Kosovo "Peace
Initiative"

Montenegro      2. No "Peace Plans" Anymore, Please; Just a Straight 
                             Aggression. Thank you. 

New York         3. Russians and Serbs: A Story of Love and Betrayal

Phoenix            4. A "Home-made" War Crimes Complaint Filed

Budapest          5. All of Budapest Marched for Peace

Belgrade           6. "Windows '99" Launched in Serb Capital

----------------------

1. China's Leader Raises Stakes in Kosovo "Peace Initiative"

BEIJING, May 10 - Chinese President, Jiang Zemin, has placed a major
obstacle in the path of the Kosovo "peace initiative" being pursued by
Russia's NWO quislings and the world's leading industrial countries. 

In his first public reaction to the NATO bombing of China's embassy in
Yugoslavia last Friday, Jiang said the UN Security Council could not
discuss any peace plans for Kosovo unless NATO first stopped its bombing
campaign, the BBC World News reported today. 

Jiang condemned the NATO action as "absolute gunboat policy." He added
that, "with the bombing continuing, it is impossible for the UN Security
Council to discuss any plan to solve the problem," he added. 

Jiang's remarks came in a telephone conversation on Monday (May 10) with
the Russian President , Boris Yeltsin, who was sending his Balkans
negotiator Viktor Chernomyrdin to Beijing for urgent talks. 
---
TiM Ed.: As usual, what the establishment western media report is only a
part of the story.  And here's the part you may not have heard about....

Following his missions to Washington and Bonn, where Chernomyrdin earned
the epithet of the Serb Backstabber-in-Chief (see Special TiM GW Bulletins
S99-69. Day 45, Update 1, Item 1, May 7), this friend of Al Gore's, and
traitor of Russia's own interests in Chechnya, was supposed to travel to
Belgrade to try to sell the Yugoslav president, Slobodan Milosevic, on the
bill of goods supposedly agreed to buy the Gee-Eight countries.  

Well, guess what... Right after the ceremonious (re)declaration of NATO
unity in Germany, Chernomyrdin instead flew straight to Moscow.  For
consultations on some urgent matters to do with his back-stabbing of
Serbia.  Such as that Germany and Italy apparently weren't going along (see
"Ain't Gonna Do There," S99-66, Day 43, Update 1, Item 1, May 5).

And now, Yeltsin is apparently sending his Backstabber-in-Chief to China,
in the hopes that Chernomyrdin can placate Beijing the way he was hoping to
do it to the Serbs in Belgrade.
--------------

2. No "Peace Plans" Anymore, Please; Just a Straight Aggression. Thank you.

MONTENEGRO, May 10 - Meanwhile, ordinary citizens of Yugoslavia are getting
tired of duplicitous "peace" proposals which only mean further propagations
of war.  Here's a tongue-in-cheek letter which TiM received today from a
reader in Montenegro, one of two constituent states of Yugoslavia:

"There is one accord that I believe is acceptable for Serbia to sign:
Surrender. No 'peace plans any more, please! Just surrender agreements.
For, then we would all know the truth: The NATO troops are the invaders and
conquerors who attacked our state and devastated it, not the not
'peacekeepers.'

And since we were weak to resist; and since we had no allies, and since so
many many potential allies actually betrayed us...

This can be the only way I can explain to my children why there are some
foreign soldiers traipsing around our country as if it belongs to them.

The only other option is to fight against NATO until they quit. Which may
last a very long time.  So be it. Just no 'peace plans' any more, please!
Make it a straight aggression.  Thank you.

Keep up the good work, and God be with us."
--------------

3. Serbia and Russia: A Story of Love and Betrayal (By Tatiana Popova)

NEW YORK, May 10 -The western establishment media keep propagating stories
about the alleged "traditional friendship" between the
"fellow-Orthodox-Christian" countries - Russia and Serbia.  Not only are
such claims ludicrous in light of Boris Yeltsin's betrayal of the Bosnian
Serbs during that country's civil war (see Special TiM GW Bulletins S99-69.
Day 45, Update 1, Item 1, May 7).  But they are even more preposterous when
considered in a wider historical context.

Which is why TiM brings you an expert foreign policy paper on the
Russo-Serbian relations during the last two centuries.  Since the person
who wrote this essay is an American working within the NWO establishment,
she has opted to have it published under the pseudonym - Tatiana Popova.
Voila...

"NATO’s bombing of Yugoslavia has once again raised the complex question of
Russia’s “loyalty” to the Serbs.  Both nations share an Eastern Orthodox
religion, similar Slavic languages, and cultural ties. However, relations
between Russia and Serbia have historically been tested as Russia has
struggled to balance its role as “great power” with that of protector of
its small, Slavic neighbors. 

Although the Russian PEOPLE have traditionally shown great support and
empathy for the plight of the Serbs during times of war, the Russian
GOVERNMENTS have consistently placed their own geopolitical interests over
those of the small Balkan nation.

 If the average Russian was asked today what he thought of the Serbs, he
would likely reply that they are Russia’s “little brothers,” fellow
Orthodox Christians who have traditionally been allied culturally and
politically with Russia. But Prof. David MacKenzie eloquently sums it up in
his book, "Serbia and Russia" (East European Monographs, Boulder. New York:
Columbia University Press, 1996):

“Historically, Russia has generally placed its own interest as a great
power ahead of Serbian ones.  Nonetheless, the Serbs for almost three
centuries have regarded Russia as their older brother and protector.  It
has been an unequal and sporadic partnership between a great power spanning
one-sixth of the earth’s surface and a small country caught in the Balkan
maelstrom.”

Today we see scenes from Russia of angry protests against the NATO
bombings, as young Russians volunteer to go to Yugoslavia to aid the Serbs.
  These scenes are reminiscent of the 19th century, when on more than one
occasion the Russian people had sent aid and soldiers volunteered to assist
the Serbs in their struggle to maintain independence in the face of
encroaching empires.  Yet public support for the Serbs among Russians today
is not necessarily enough to ensure Russian political and military support,
as Russian-Serbian relations in the 19th century illustrate.   

During the period between the First Serbian Insurrection in 1804 and the
Congress of Berlin in 1878, Serbia placed her fate on more than one
occasion in the hands of Russia, which often led to disappointment and
feelings of betrayal  as Russia repeatedly placed its own interests
vis-a-vis the great powers of Europe ahead of those of Serbia. 

In 1804, Serbs in Belgrade, led by Karadjordje, rose up against their
Ottoman overlords, who had ruled the Serb lands for over four centuries.
Initially, Russian Tsar Alexander I adopted a policy of non-intervention.
However, as the Serbs gained strength, it became difficult for Russia to
remain neutral.   

Russia was caught between public support for the Serbs, and the
government’s desire to maintain good relations with the Ottoman Empire.
Russia began slowly to provide military advice and financial aid to the
Serbs, in part as a response to Russian public opinion in support of the
Serbian cause, while trying to conceal the extent of Russia’s aid to the
Serbs from the Turks.   

Russia was eventually drawn directly into the fight, as it feared growing
French intervention in the Balkans.   The Russo-Turk war broke out in 1806,
but it was only after this formal Turk declaration of war that Russia
formally aligned militarily with the Serbs.   During this same year, the
Serbs had the opportunity to sign a peace treaty with the Turks, but
rejected it under Russian advice that a continued war would lead to a
Russian guarantee of Serbian independence.   

During the next several years, Russian involvement in the Turkish conflict
vacillated between direct support for the Serbs and withdrawal from the
fighting, as it served Russia’s interests with regard to the balance of
power in Europe.  In 1807 Russia signed a truce with the Turks, leaving the
Serbs feeling betrayed.   

Karadjordje, skeptical of Russia’s role, hesitated to grant Russia a
greater presence in Serbia if Russia could not be trusted to support the
Serbs in their time of need.  Nevertheless, when war resumed between Russia
and the Turks in 1809, the Russians and Serbs again joined forces against
the Turks until the summer of 1812.

Although many joint military victories were achieved during this period, a
growing portion of the Serbian leadership questioned Russia’s commitment to
the Serbs.  As they predicted, Russia soon felt compelled to pull out of
the war, due to growing French aggression in Europe.   

Later that year, Russia formally ended the war with Turkey, essentially
returning the Serb lands, under self-rule, to the Ottoman Empire.  In the
eyes of the Serbs, a truly independent Serbia could not exist without a
Russian protectorate status, which was not granted.  In 1813, the Turks
invaded Serbia, and Ottoman rule was reestablished.

This period in Serbian history is illustrative of the Serbs’ feelings of
betrayal by Russia as the Russian government choose to place its interests
as a European power ahead of its desire to be a protector and ally of
Orthodox Slavs.  

The Serbs made repeated appeals to Russia during this period, stressing the
religious, linguistic, and cultural ties the two peoples shared.
Nevertheless, the political aims of the Russian government took precedence
over any cultural affinity or sympathies that existed among the Russian
people toward the Serbs’ flight for independence.   The words of V.
Chichagov, the commandeer of the Danube Russian Army in 1812, which aided
the Serbs during this period, illustrate Russia’s predicament (see "Seventy
Years of Panslavisam in Russia: Karazin to Danilevsky, 1800-1876,
Washington, DC; Georgetown University Press):

“I have had great difficulty in calming the poor Serbians, they are truly
one of the best nations I know;  they are ready to die for their
independence…nevertheless I think I have managed to convince them of   the
need to dissimulate with the Turks for the moment, that we shall return as
soon as possible…that  everything depends on the salvation of Russia…I have
secretly wheedled them with arms and  munitions.  I still hope to preserve
their confidence in us.”

The 19th century is known for the Slavophile, and later the Panslavic
movements, which brought Russian intellectuals in closer contact with the
Serbs and other Slavs.   During the next decades, these intellectual
movements grew within Russia, stressing the importance of Slavic unity,
particularly among Orthodox peoples.   

Many of the intellectuals lobbied the Russian government in support of
closer ties between Russia and Serbia.   

Slavic Benevolent Societies were formed in Moscow and other large cities,
to promote cultural and educational exchanges between Russia and other
Slavic peoples.  These groups acted independently out of their own good
will, and did not receive Russian government aid or political pressure to
continue their activities.   

As many of the Panslavic intellectuals discussed Russia’s “duties toward
her brothers by blood and faith,” historian M.P. Pogodin was careful to
remind his colleagues that many of the Slavs had been embittered by
Russia’s prior “indifference” to their fate.   

The Panslavic movement grew stronger following Russia’s defeat in the
Crimean War in 1856, as a militarily weakened Russia sought to redefine
herself and her role in Europe. In 1860, a group of Russian Panslavists
signed an “Epistle from Moscow to the Serbs,” in which they advised the
Serbs to re-orient themselves toward Russia.  In 1867 a Serb delegation was
welcomed at the Moscow Slav Congress, where Panslavists F. I. Tyutchev
announced,

“Welcome, you are at home.  In Russia every Slav is at home, more often
than in his own country where he is often ruled by a foreigner.  But we
have never ceased to be one nation, sons of one mother.   But as you will
never desert Russia, Russia will never desert you…”

Such declarations of Russian loyalty were tested during the “Eastern
Crisis” of the 1875-1878.  The crisis began in 1875, as Serbian peasants in
the Ottoman provinces of Bosnia and Hercegovina revolted against their
Moslem landlords.  What began as a small uprising grew into a conflict that
inflamed the Balkans, and once again drew the great powers of Europe into
the region.   The events of these three years brought Russian official
policy into conflict with Russian public opinion, as the Russian government
tried to balance its interest in maintaining its relations with the
European powers with domestic public support for the Serbian cause.  

Despite Russia’s warnings that it would not support Serbia in the event of
a war with Turkey, war broke out between Serbia and Turkey in 1876.
During this period, Panslavic groups throughout Russia gathered aid for the
insurgents and organized informal military support.  

At this same time, the Russian government was in negotiations with Austria,
over the fate of the Balkans.  Russia was able to secure Austrian
neutrality in the event of a Russo-Turkish war, in exchange for granting
Austria the right to occupation and annexation of Bosnia and Hercegovina.   

After securing a deal with Austria, Russia went to war with Turkey.  Serbia
and Montenegro, hoping that a Russian victory would ensure independence for
Bosnia and Hercegovina, joined the Russians in their fight against the
Turks.  However, under the peace agreement signed at San Stefano in 1878,
following a Russian victory, the end result was the creation of an
independent Bulgaria. 

In 1878, the European powers gathered in Berlin to decide the fate of the
Balkans, noticeably without representation from any of the small Balkan
nations whose futures were to be determined. 

At the Congress, Austria was granted the right to occupy Bosnia and
Hercegovina.  The Serbs felt deeply betrayed by Russia, feeling that Russia
had placed its own interests in securing an independent Bulgaria ahead of
any notions of unity with the Serbia and concern for the plight of Bosnia
and Hercegovina.   The Serbs learned quickly that the agreement concluded
in Berlin was designed to serve the interests of the great powers,
including Russia, rather than those of the insurgents and small Slavic
states.  

During the Eastern Crisis, the Russian people were very sympathetic to the
plight of the insurgents.  Slavic Benevolent Committees raised donations
and gathered arms and munitions to supply the Serbian army.   Many Russians
volunteered to fight with the Serbs, out of genuine feelings of solidarity.
  Yet as during the Fist Serbian Insurrection, Russia put its own
geopolitical interests ahead of any notions of Panslavic unity.  

In summary, it is undeniable that the Russian public sympathized with and
went to great lengths to support the Serbs, for unselfish reasons.  But,
the Russian government betrayed this cause.  Following the war, one Serbian
poet, Jovan Jovanovic-Zmaj, reflected on Serbia’s disappointment in the
policies of the Russian government:

And it was finished in an unjust manner
And signed with a golden feather
And celebrated with a lordly feast
And the Serbian disaster was proclaimed as peace…

And he who was close to you
Shouts now since he predicted
That you do not care for the brother or sun
That you will not bring salvation…

Tatiana Popova, New York
---------------

4. A "Home-made" War Crimes Complaint Filed

PHOENIX, May 10 - So you think you're powerless?  So you think there is
nothing your can do to reverse the hijacking of the U.S. government by the
New World Order thugs?

Wrong!  Here's, for example, a step which this writer, your TiM editor,
took today.  He charged PERSONALLY the 68 NATO leaders with war crimes in a
filing with the UN War Crimes Tribunal at the Hague, Netherlands.

You can do the same thing.  You have the same right to charge the NATO
leaders with crimes against humanity as TiM has just done.  Feel free to
modify our complaint to suit your own purposes.  And then let the UN War
Crimes Tribunal know how you feel about the crimes which the people who had
created the Tribunal are committing:
---
FROM PHOENIX, ARIZONA

May 10, 1999

TO: Madame Louise Arbour
      INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL TRIBUNAL FOR FORMER YUGOSLAVIA
      P.O. Box 13888
      Churchillplain 1
      2501 EW The Hague
      Netherlands

      FAX: +31-70-416-5356
      TEL: +31-70-416-5000

Madam Prosecutor,

I hereby charge with war crimes, including mass murder of innocent
civilians and property destruction in Yugoslavia, all political leaders of
the NATO countries and the senior military commanders of the NATO alliance
individually and corporately, under Section 18(1) of the Statute which
governs the work of your Office (ICTY). 

I hereby ask you, under the terms of that Statute, both to prosecute and to
legally restrain them from further committing such murderous acts by
issuing an immediate injunction, prior to judgement being rendered on this
complaint.
 
A partial list of individuals charged with committing the heinous war
crimes against humanity is enclosed below.  

Since I have family in Yugoslavia who are suffering under NATO's
bombardment and whose lives are in danger because of it, and since I have
spent myself a period of time there under NATO's bombs, I have a legal
standing in filing this complaint.  Nevertheless, feel free to join this
complaint with that filed by Professor Michael Mandel, Professor W. Neil
Brooks, Professor Judith A. Fudge, Professor H. J. Glasbeek, Professor
Reuben A. Hasson and Sil Salvaterra, Barrister and Solicitor, - all of
Osgoode Hall Law School, York University, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M3J 1P3
- and other individuals named in their complaint.

I would appreciate receiving your acknowledgement and response.  Thank you.

Sincerely,

Bob Djurdjevic
Founder
Truth in Media
5110 N. 40th Street
Phoenix, Arizona 85018
USA
---------

A partial list of NATO leaders charged with war crimes:

William J. Clinton, Al Gore, Samuel Berger, Madeleine Albright, William S.
Cohen, George Tenet, Tony Blair, Robin Cook, George Robertson, Javier
Solana, Jamie Shea, Wesley K. Clark, Harold W. German, Konrad Freytag.
D.J.G. Wilby, Fabrizio Maltinti, Giuseppe Marani, Daniel P. Leaf, Jean
Chrétien, Lloyd Axworthy, Arthur Eggleton, Jean-Luc Dehaene, E. Derycke,
J.-P. Poncelet, Vaclav Havel, J. Kavan, V. Vetchy,  Poul Nyrup Rasmussen,
N.H. Petersen, H. Haekkerup, Jacques Chirac, Lionel Jospin, H. Védrine,
Alain Richard, Gerhard Schröder, J. Fischer, R. Scharping, Kostas Simitis,
G. Papandreou, A. Tsohatzopoulos, Viktor Orban, J. Martonyi, J. Szabo,
David Oddsson, H. Asgrimsson, G. Palsson, Massimo D'Alema, L. Dini, C.
Scognamiglio, Jean-Claude Juncker, J. Poos, Alex Bodry, Willem Kok, J. van
Aartsen, F.H.G. de Grave, Kjell Magne Bondevik, K. Vollebæk, D.J. Fjærvoll,
Jerzy Buzek, B. Geremek, J. Onyszkiewicz, Antonio Manuel de Oliveira
Guterres, J.J. Matos da Gama, V. Simão, Jose Maria Aznar, A. Matutes, E.
Serra Rexach, Bulent Ecevit, I. Cem and H. S. Turk.
---------------

5. All of Budapest Marched for Peace

BUDAPEST, May 9 - One of the three newest NATO countries, Hungary, has just
turned NATO's war on its ear.  Here's a report which TiM has just received
from a correspondent in Budapest.  

"We have just returned from the Peace March with my family (wife and two
children). I think the whole of Budapest was in the streets to ask for an
immediate stoppage of the war. 

We started from the Place of Heroes, just next to the Yugoslav Embassy, we
passed by the US Embassy. and the march ended on Kossuth Square, in front
of the Hungarian Parliament. 

No offensive signs were allowed. There were a few signs, like "Yankee go
home," but these were immediately removed by the organizers. 
---
TiM Ed.: The "thought police" of the NWO/NATO?"
---
The majority of signs were 'Stop Milo, stop NATO,' and 'Peace for the
Balkans.' There were participants from Greece, England and France (at least
these were the languages I heard). The Greeks even brought their national
flag. I am too tired now to write you more about it, but I can tell you it
was the largest rally in decades in Budapest. 

The next march will be on May 15, it will start from Szeged at noon, and it
will be called 'Peace, bread, water and salt march from Hungary into
Yugoslavia.' The march will cross into Yugoslavia.  All the best is wishing
you from Budapest."

János
--------------

6. "Windows '99" Launched in Serb Capital

BELGRADE, May 10 - The Windows ' 99 campaign has been first launched in
Belgrade, Serbia.  This, despite the six weeks of NATO bombings, and the
outrage expressed by the Microsoft's top officials, including Bill Gates,
about the Serbs' alleged infractions of the Microsoft intellectual rights. 

"They are all taping their windows with illegal 'X' (jack) signs," the
Microsoft chairman railed.  

Actually, all the Serbs citizens were trying to do was tape the windows of
their apartments from shattering when NATO comes calling with another of
its " humanitarian missions."  

And if their self-protection efforts represents a violation of Microsoft's
intellectual property claims, so be it!  After all, Windows '99 was first
invented in Belgrade.
--------------
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----
Bob Djurdjevic
TRUTH IN MEDIA
Phoenix, Arizona
e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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