Note the striking Jamie Shea quote: NATO will not be charged with war crimes, because 
it pays for the Tribunal.
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Institute for Public Accuracy 
915 National Press Building, Washington, D.C. 20045 
(202) 347-0020 * http://www.accuracy.org * [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
____________________________________________________ 

Thursday, May 27, 1999

WAR CRIMES?

WALTER ROCKLER, (202) 942-5789, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/opinion/perspective/ 
Rockler, a Washington lawyer and a former prosecutor at the Nuremberg War 
Crimes Trials, said: "For some to shout 'war criminal' at Milosevic only 
emphasizes that those who live in glass houses should be careful about 
throwing stones. The Nuremberg Court found that to initiate a war of 
aggression, as the U.S. has done against Yugoslavia, is not only an 
international crime, it is the supreme international crime."

GLEN RANGWALA, 011 44 1223 355956, [EMAIL PROTECTED], 
http://ban.joh.cam.ac.uk/~maicl/ 
Today, the Movement for the Advancement of International Criminal Law hands 
a 40-page dossier to the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former 
Yugoslavia in the Hague charging Prime Minister Tony Blair and other British 
officials with serious violations of international humanitarian law in 
Yugoslavia. Rangwala, an international lawyer at Trinity College, Cambridge 
University, is the main author of the dossier. Today, he said: "Unlike 
almost every previous conflict, the current war in Yugoslavia is marked by 
the presence of judicial institutions which can prosecute criminals on every 
side. There is now overwhelming evidence that NATO is consciously violating 
cardinal principles of humanitarian law."

ANN FAGAN GINGER, (510) 848-0599, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Professor of Peace Law and Human Rights at San Francisco State University, 
Ginger said: "Women and children are always the major victims in war. The 
U.S. has not ratified treaties protecting women and children. The bombing in 
Yugoslavia violates these treaties, the UN Charter and the most basic 
international law."

JOHN QUIGLEY, (614) 292-1764, (614) 326-3674, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Professor of Law, Ohio State University, and editor of the forthcoming 
"Genocide in Cambodia," Quigley said: "The targeting of broadcast stations, 
electrical facilities and various factories, all of which have a primarily 
civilian purpose, is not legitimate."

ROBERT HAYDEN, (412) 648-7404, (412) 421-1888, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Director of the Center for Russian and East European Studies at the 
University of Pittsburgh, Hayden said: "When questioned about NATO liability 
for war crimes, NATO spokesman Jamie Shea said that 'NATO is the friend of 
the Tribunal... NATO countries are those that have provided the finances to 
set up the Tribunal, we are among the majority financiers.' Mr. Shea 
clearly knows that he who pays the piper calls the tune."

JOHN BURROUGHS, (212) 818-1861, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Executive director of the Lawyers' Committee on Nuclear Policy, Burroughs 
said: "The law of armed conflict mandates that military action bear a 
proportionate relationship to the achievement of concrete military 
advantage. But the bombing of Yugoslavia is about punishing a society and a 
regime."

For more information, contact at the Institute for Public Accuracy: 
Sam Husseini, (202) 347-0020 or (202) 332-5055; David Zupan, (541) 484-9167





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Robert Naiman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Preamble Center
1737 21st NW
Washington, DC 20009
phone: 202-265-3263
fax:   202-265-3647
http://www.preamble.org/
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