NEW REVELATIONS ARE FURTHER PROOF OF U.S. WAR
CRIMES

New revelations that NATO's high-altitude bombing of Yugoslavia
was far less successful than claimed at the time, are "further proof of
U.S. war crimes against Yugoslavia," said Sara Flounders, national
co-director of the International Action Center on May 10.

"This will provide additional evidence for the International War
Crimes Tribunal we will hold in New York June 9-10 to try U.S.
and NATO political and military leaders for war crimes, crimes
against humanity and crimes against peace," Flounders said.

Newsweek magazine had gotten hold of an internal U.S. Air Force
report showing that only 58 of NATO's so-called high-precision
strikes hit their targets. This compares with 744 NATO claimed at
the end of the bombing campaign.

"The claims of high accuracy with little harm to civilians," said
Flounders, "was just another in the long line of lies NATO
spokespeople used to justify massive attacks on civilian targets in
Yugoslavia."

A special investigation team from the U.S. and other NATO air
forces searched Kosovo on foot and by helicopter. U.S. top
officers boasted that NATO forces had disabled "around 120
tanks", "about 220 armored personnel carriers" and "up to 450
artillery and mortar pieces" in 78 days of bombing.

The investigators reported instead that NATO hit just 14 tanks, 18
APCs and 20 artillery and mortar pieces, less than one tenth of
NATO claims. These figures are quite close to the losses Yugoslav
forces reported at the end of the war. NATO dismissed the
Yugoslav report as "disinformation" at the time.

The investigators found out that U.S. and NATO high-altitude air
power was effective chiefly against civilian targets. It was the
bombing of cities and power stations that most damaged Serbia.

Flounders noted that the report, made last summer, had never been
made public. A second report, which reported hits closer to NATO
and the Pentagon's boasts, was then used.

"The Newsweek article avoided the implications that the U.S. and
NATO commanders violated the rules of war by striking civilian
targets," said Flounders. "Instead, it pointed to the efficacy of
striking the civilian infrastructure of a country, which in the case of
Yugoslavia includes hundreds of schools, dozens of hospitals and
almost every major industry. In effect it advocates new war crimes."

Former Attorney General Ramsey Clark had drawn up the original
charge sheet against NATO leaders, which added up to 19 charges.
Charge number 9, said Flounders, was "Attacking Objects
Indispensable to the Survival of the Population of Yugoslavia,"
including depriving the population of Yugoslavia of food, water,
electric power, food production, medicines, medical care and other
essentials to their survival, [by engaging] in the systematic
destruction and damage by missiles and aerial bombardment of food
production and storage facilities, drinking water and irrigation works
for agriculture, fertilizer, insecticide, pharmaceutical, hospitals and
health care facilities, among other objects essential to human survival.

"The NATO commanders, fearing the complete failure of their
campaign against the Yugoslav military, concentrated on hitting
civilian targets," said Flounders. "This is clearly a war crime, and we
will prove this before the world on June 10."

International Action Center
39 West 14th Street, Room 206
New York, NY 10011
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