IN THIS MESSAGE:   Sanders v. progressives on NATO bombing; Crisis in
Yugoslavia & It's Relation to Global Fascism (long)

People interested in the response of Bernie Sanders political constituency
(at a Sanders Town Meeting) to his pro-war stance on the U.S./NATO bombing
of Yugoslavia might want to check out the Vermont Labor Party's web page -
complete with pictures at:
http://mishima.goddard.edu/~vlp/
The page is updated daily.

Fraternally,

Hal Leyshon
member of affiliated Teamsters Local#597
and VTLP executive committee member
see the Vermont Labor Party web page at: http://mishima.goddard.edu/~vlp/
===================================================

Bernie's "Town Meeting" on 
                       NATO/US War in Yugoslavia
                                           May 3, 1999

                                      Jozef Hand-Boniakowski


       Upwards of 500 people attended a forum at the Pavilion Auditorium in
Montpelier with Vermont
       Congressman Bernie Sanders and a panel consisting of four individuals
representing various
       perspectives on the war in Yugoslavia.  The event was not a town meeting
as advertised with panel
       members limited to 10 minutes and floor speakers to 2.  Speakers
included Dawn Calabia, U.N.
       High Commisioner on Refugees who spoke on Western Leaders ignoring the
pattern of "internal
       displacement" for a year.  Shirley Geden, a University of Vermont
economics professor spoke on
       the International Monetray Fund's (IMF) contribution to the economic
instability in Yugoslavia during
       the 1980's which contributed to the crisis.   The assistant Pastor from
the Unitarian Universalist
       Church of Burlington spoke on Women in Black and the  non-violent
possibility for resolving the
       conflict and going beyond militarism.   A professor from CUNY spoke
supporting the NATO bombing
       and urging the use of ground troops.  

       With very few exceptions the more than two dozen individuals who spoke
from the floor disagreed
       with Bernie's position on the daily massive bombing taking place in the
Balkans.  The general theme
       repeated throughout the evening was that violence in the name of
stopping violence is a mistake
       and that militarism by the world's remaining (sometimes called "rogue")
superpower under the
       guise of humanitarian concerns is a cover for further corporate global
expansion.  Some speakers
       suggested a greater master plan of the planet's largest purveyor of arms
for profit.  Others
       questioned the sanity of the patriarchical might-makes-right philosophy
of the United States.  A
       speaker questioned Bernie about the eventual return of the refugees to
their homeland in Kosovo, a
       place becoming uninhabitable through the use of radioactive depleted
uranium shelld.   Bernie's
       response was to avoid answering the question.  Others suggested that the
military-industrial-prison
       complex had much to gain from the war and from the continued use of
billions of dollars of
       soon-to-be-replaced sophisticated arms further pushing Wall Street
ticker tape results and profits
       upward.

       The forum clearly was a difficult night for Congressman Sanders with
many in attendance feeling let
       down by a politican whom they have become accustomed to trusting and
admiring, a "progressive "
       whom they believed like them is determined to change the
business-as-usual mentality of
       Congress.   Bernie's quick arrest of demonstrators at his office draws
ironic attention to an
       intolerance for dissent, something which less than a few decades ago he
was willing to participate
       in.  Two students recently arrested in Bernie's office sat in the front
row of the auditorium wearing
       handcuffs as a sign of that intolerance.

       Bernie is to be commeded for his efforts in participating in a
congressional delegation reaching an
       agreement with members of the Russian Duma trying to find a political
solution to the war.  That
       being said, some speakers questioned Bernie's late participation in the
delegation and only after the
       fallout in Vermont began quickly reaching his office.  Whether the forum
and its high energy on May
       4 made a difference only time can tell.  What is evident however, is how
Bernie's support for
       bombing in Sudan, Afhghanistan, Iraq and now Yugoslavia is eroding his
base of support in the
       progressive and social justice communities.


            Youth Arrestees Statement

                                      Pavilion Auditorioum Crowd

                                                                      Dawn
Calabia

               Shirley Geden

                          Text of Author's Statement Read at the Forum

       Good evening.  I would like to thank congressman Sanders for organizing
this forum.  This is my
       28th year teaching and my 14th at Burr and Burton Seminary in
Manchester, Vermont.  During that
       time I have seen many changes in education.  The major changes have
ocurred over the past two
       years with the violence and carnage now ocurring far too often.  While
the schools suspend and
       expel students for even minor acts of violence the adults in power
within our nation solve national
       disputes with violence.  While we teach students to keep their hands off
each other and encourage
       them to practice non-violent conflict resolution their government bombs
and bombs and bombs. 
       While we debate and divide over Act 60, the students see the tens and
hundreds of billions of
       dollars spent on even more sophisticated weapons of destruction now
being field tested in
       Yugoslavia making the corporate-militray-industrial-prison complex even
more profitable.  War is a
       crime against humanity.  Are not our children violently practicing what
we preach by example?

       The opinions expressed on this page are solely those of the author.  All
photos copyright 1999 by
       Jozef Hand-Boniakowski, Metaphoria 
=================================================

From: "Richard K. Moore" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
Subject: The Crisis in Yugoslavia and its Relationship to Global Fascism 


Friends & Colleagues,
Based on things you have written, and on distribution channels which you 
operate, I believe the following article may be of some use to you.
Please accept my apologies if the material is not of interest - relevancy 
is certainly in the eye of the beholder.
All the best and 
Keep up your good work, 
rkm 
Wexford, Ireland 
moderator: cyberjournal list.
PS> Use is free if non-commercial.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Crisis in Yugoslavia and its Relationship to Global Fascism
Copyright 1999 by Richard K. Moore, All Rights Reserved. 
http://cyberjournal.org 
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Among the lies and hypocrisies which characterize media reportage on NATO's 
aggression against Serbia is the absurd notion that NATO is somehow 
"fighting fascism". Ironically, the exact opposite turns out to be true.
Fascism wears many faces - not all of which involve stormtroopers and 
racial paranoia - and fascism wasn't always in such disfavor as it is 
today. Many in the US and Britain, especially among industrialists, openly 
welcomed the "order" brought by Hitler and Mussolini, and fascist 
governments have been supported by the US throughout the Third World in the 
postwar era. The history of fascism - and its role in preserving 
capitalist domination - provides an omionous perspective on NATO's actions 
in the Balkans.
Someone wrote to me that the important question about fascism is "How could 
anyone fall for it?". I suggest rather the question for our time is: "How 
can you recognize facism when it pretends to be something else?".
Fascism was, to begin at the beginning, an invention of capitalism, or 
shall we say, it was a collective invention of prominent Western 
industrialists and officials.
Hitler was originally recruited by German military intelligence to 
infiltrate a socialist labor party, which he eventually tranformed into the 
Nazi party. Hitler and Mussolini were financed, encouraged, and supported 
(mostly covertly) by Western industrialists, and Western governments, for 
the express purpose of suppressing grass-roots democratic forces (labor, 
socialist, communist, and anarchist movements) which were seeking to 
overcome capitalist domination.(1,2)
I looked up some Readers Digest articles from the thirties, just to sample 
the media party line of the day. I found an interview with two young 
Germans, one male one female, in which they explained all about the shiny 
new Germany, the virtues of eugenics, and about how Jews were like a cancer 
that had to be rooted out, even if unfortunate human suffering might be 
necessary. The article was a sympathetic one, not a crtique.
Hitler's Mein Kampf, written by Hitler while he kept a picture of Henry 
Ford on his desk, and whose main agenda is the subjugation of Russia, was 
on the public record. The extensive US investments and technology 
transfers to Nazi Germany contributed significantly to Germany's ability to 
eventually invade Russia, the avowed enemy of the capitalist system. 
General Motors and Ford (along with other US firms) operated manufacturing 
plants in Germany both before and throughout the war. The bombers which 
blitzed England were built in a General Motors plant.
After the war, Allen Dulles made it his mission to see that no US firm was 
punished for collaboration with the Nazis. In fact, far from denying their 
collaboration, General Motors and Ford demanded and received something like 
$30 million in compensation from the US government for damage to their 
plants from Allied bombing. More recently, when these facts reached public 
light, they were again not disputed - instead Ford and GM offered the 
excuse that their "subsidiaries were outside their control". This is all 
conclusively documented, and references are supplied at the end of this 
article.(1,2,3,4)
The US and Britain withheld their invasion of Europe until Russia began to 
turn the tide against the Nazis. Only then did Allied troops land in 
Italy and Normandy. This timing, along with other evidence, indicates a 
strategy aimed at limiting the western advance of Russian forces, more than 
a strategy of defeating Nazism as quickly as possible.(5,15) In fact 
Truman said outright:
If we see that Germany is winning we should help Russia and if Russia 
is winning we ought to help Germany and that way let them kill as many 
as possible . . . 
Harry S. Truman, 1941 
(I believe the original source was a 
local newspaper in Independence, Mo.)
---
The use of fascist governments by the West to suppress local democracy was 
not abandoned after WW II, despite propaganda rhetoric about "free-world" 
democratization. Throughout the Third World, by means primarily of covert 
and military US interventions, fascist military dictatorships were 
installed in order to suppress local populations and facilitate exploitive 
capitalist operations.(11,12,13,15)
Racism and nationalism were both characteristic of German Nazism, but 
neither is characteristic of fascism in general. Racism and nationalism 
sold well in thirties Germany; in Mussolini's Italy the packaging involved 
a romantic revival of the Roman Empire; the packaging was different again 
in Franco's Spain, the Shah's Iran, Pinochet's Chile, and Marcos' 
Phillipines.
What characterizes fascism in all cases is police-state suppression of the 
population, and the delegation of economic operations to capitalist 
interests.
Mussolini was explicit about the relationship between fascism and 
capitalism, and took pride in the fact that he "got the trains running on 
time". Pinochet's first action in office was to restore the operations of 
the transnationals in Chile. Hitler was less explicit about the 
association, given the pseudo-socialist component of Goebbel's propaganda 
line, but it was Herr Krupp who was made Oberfuhrer of Industry for all 
Third Reich territories, and the majority of concentration camps were run 
as corporate slave-labor operations rather than as death camps per se. 
Krupp had to argue this point with Hitler, finally convincing him that it 
made more sense to work Jews to death rather than "wasting" them by killing 
them outright.(3)
---
Fascism is thus not a phenomenon which can be usefully studied in terms of 
the isolated national context, and certainly not in terms of the psychology 
of individual leaders. Power-mad leaders, charismatic or merely ruthless, 
can always be recruited - you only need one per target country. And any 
nation, if subjected to sufficient externally-driven destablization, can 
fall prey to fascism. How and why fascism arises can only be understood 
from the larger perspective - in the context of capitalist strategies to 
maintain global dominance.
Fascism is only one of many such strategies. Liberal pseudo-democracy is 
the strategy employed in the West, and in some third world countries (eg, 
Phillipines) when the oppressiveness of the fascist strategy threatens to 
bring about an autonomous, locally initiated, change of regime.
Theocracies (eg Iran) are another of the strategies. The Shah had 
faithfully played the fascist role, and when a popular rebellion threatened 
to bring in an autonomous local regime - most likely labor-socialist and 
non-aligned - the Ayatolla was dusted off in his Paris sanctuary, 
transformed by the global corporate media into a manufactured "peoples' 
choice", and installed by the US, France, and Britain just-in-time to 
prevent local autonomy of an unapproved variety.
Western rhetoric pretended to be disappointed when the Ayatolla turned out 
to be a tyrant, but in fact he serves Western interests perfectly, both as 
"someone to hate" - justifying military expenditures and all sorts of 
anti-Bill Of Rights, "anti-terrorist" legislation - and as a general 
destabilizing force in the Arab world. Fear of Arab solidarity has been a 
central driving force in Western Mideast policy since at least the end of 
WW I.
Destabilization and regional devololution is another general strategy for 
global capitalist dominance. In this case, the goal is to break a region 
down into smaller, more manageable chunks, as in Russia and Eastern Europe.

US/NATO policy in Yugoslavia, or in Iraq, it seems to me, must be examined 
primarily in terms of the strategies revealed.
The "threat" posed by Iraq was to become a model of Arab modernization - a 
model based on the reinvestment of oil profits to build a modern national 
infrastructure. Such a modernization model is contrary to the Western 
model for managing the Mideast, which seeks to keep the oil-producing 
states in a permanent state of medievalism. This is why Kuwait was 
encouraged to engage in provocative oil dumping, and why the US tricked 
Saddam into invading Kuwait.
That sequence of orchestrated events provided the pretext for the US 
military to go in and destroy Iraq's "unapproved" national infrastructure. 
The fact that Saddam is a dictator was of no strategic significance, except 
for its propaganda value. All the oil-producing states are dictatorships, 
mostly installed by the West, and any pretense that Saddam's style of 
government was a reason for Desert Storm is transparent hypocrisy. 
Protection of the Kurds was revealed as equally transparent hypocricy when 
the US invited Turkey to bomb the same Kurds which Saddam had threatened - 
but who had in the meantime been magically transformed by the corporate 
media, ala Orwell, into "terrorists".
In Yugloslavia, the strategy obviously being deployed is that of 
destablization and devolution. Local fascism has little strategic 
relevance to the situation - and most certainly US/NATO policy has never 
been organized around any intent to promote human rights in the region. By 
encouraging the fragmentation of Yugoslavia, by secretly providing arms to 
militant factions, and by preventing any useful attempts at negotiation or 
mediation, Western policies have led inevitably and predictably to what is 
being called, at the level of individual episodes, "ethnic cleansing".
In fact ehnic cleansing, at the macro level, is the precise aim of Western 
policy: the creation of several mini-nations, each of which has its own 
ethnic identity, and each of which is in conflict with its neighbors. This 
is a textbook example of Samuel P. Huntington's "Clash of Civilizations" 
model for global capitalist domination.(16)
You may recall Dr. Huntington - he's the one who wrote the infamous "Crisis 
of Democracy" essay in 1973 which proclaimed that "something must be done" 
to reduce the "excess" democracy that had arisen in the sixties. His 
earlier words helped pave the way for Reagan-Thatcher reactionism, and his 
later words are now hearlding a shift in the global regime - to something 
the right-wingers like to call the "New World Order", and which, as will 
become clear below, could as well be called Global Fascism. More about 
that in a moment.
---
If one or the other local governments in the Balkans happens to be fascist, 
that has little relevance to Western policy. If any government there 
deserves to be painted with the fascist brush, Croatia would certainly be 
high on the list - and Croatia is being treated as a friendly ally by the 
West. It was Croatia which took the fascist side in WW II, and I recall 
reading a year or two back about a soccer match which was delayed so the 
Croatian fans could finish their enthusiastic round of Nazi songs. I'm not 
trying to shift any finger of blame from Serbia to Croatia - they are both 
ultimately victims in this scenario - I'm rather making the point that 
local fascism isn't strategically relevant to the situation. The more 
relevant strategic factors, I suggest, are -
(1) regional destabilization
(2) framentation along Huntington's "civilization boundaries"
(3) most of all - the establishment by de facto precedent of an 
end to territorial national sovereignty and its replacement by a 
pseudo-legitimized, capitalist-controlled, corporate-media 
celebrated, global military regime.
Thus, as we look deeper, fascism is indeed of primary relevance to what's 
going on in the Balkans - but at the global level, not the national.
At the national level, the hallmarks of fascism are police-suppression of 
populations and the delegation of economic affairs to capitalist interests.

At the global level, the US/NATO hi-tech military machine serves to 
suppress whole national populations at a time, in order that economic 
affairs can be more conveniently managed by global capitalism.
Far from promoting human rights and fighting fascism, the US/NATO actions 
amount to the consolidation of a global fascist regime - the military arm 
of globalization - the muscle that makes real the global sovereignty of 
those institutions which manage the global economy on behalf of their TNC 
constituency - the WTO, IMF, World Bank, OECD, WIPO, ad nauseum acronymium.

Human rights and human welfare, as we can see evidenced throughout the 
Third World, are of no concern to global capitalism. In the calculus of 
transnational "market forces", as interpreted by the almighty IMF, 
maximizing TNC profits is the only goal. Human welfare and human rights 
are not to interfere, even if that means mass starvation, which is 
precisely what it does mean.(17,18,19)
There's one more of capitalism's oft-used strategies which deserves mention 
in this regard, and that is genocide. In North America, Australia, and 
South Africa, to name three examples from the nineteenth century, wholesale 
genocide against indigenous peoples was the method used to clear the land 
for expansion of the capitalist system. It seems that some cultures don't 
domesticate well, from a capitalist perspective, and outright genocide is 
necessary to free up the land and resources being "wasted" by people who 
live "outside the cash economy". Local self-sufficiency is anathema to 
capitalism, as is economic sustainability. Both are fundamentally 
incompatible with what capitalism calls economic growth and development.
Sub-Sahara Africa is today's version of "Injun Territory" - a vast land 
occupied by semi-indigenous economies and peoples which aren't particularly 
productive from the perspective of global capitalism. Against the 
American "Injuns" the weapons were the US Cavalry, the destruction of the 
Bison herds, and media demonization of "savage heathens"; against the 
people of Sub-Sahara Africa the weapons are covertly-sponsored civil wars, 
the destruction of economies via IMF diktats, and media attribution of the 
genocidal civil wars to "primitive tribalism". The predictable 
consequence, now as in the US Old West, is publicly tolerated genocide on a 
continental scale.(17)
Of all the human rights - as enumerated by documents such as the US 
Delaration of Independence or the UN Delcaration of Human Rights - the one 
least respected of all by global capitalism is that of democratic self 
determination. Local autonomy, democratic or otherwise, is the ultimate 
deadly sin in the eyes of global capitalism. The mechanisms for preventing 
local autonomy, and for selling the prevention process to Western 
populations, have been steadily refined over at least the past three 
centuries, and are recently enjoing an unfortunate renaissance of demonic 
inventiveness - from free-trade treaties, to NATO blitzkrieg, to 
state-of-the-art wag-the-dog journalism.

Respectfully Yours, 
Richard K. Moore 
Wexford, Ireland
---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 
Recommended References 
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
(Please accept my apologies for not having at hand names of current 
publishers and other details for some of these references)
(1) George Seldes, "Facts and Fascism".
(2) James Pool, "Who Financed Hitler", 1978, Pocket Books, Simon & 
Schuster, New York.
(3) William Manchester, "The Arms of Krupp 1587-1968".
(4) Charles Higham, "Trading with the Enemy".
(5) Holly Sklar, ed, "Trilateralism", 1980, South End Press, Boston.
(6) Zinn, Howard, "A Peoples History of the United States", 1980, Harper & 
Row, New York.
(7) William Greider, "Who Will Tell the People, the Betrayal of American 
Democracy", 1992, Touchstone Press, Simon & Schuster, New York.
(8) Lederer, William J, "A Nation of Sheep", 1962, Fawcett 
World Library, Crest Books, New York.
(9) Michael Parenti, "Inventing Reality", 1993, St. Martin's Press, New York.
(10) Parenti, "Make-Believe Media - The Politics of Entertainment", 1992, 
St. Martin's Press, New York.
(11) Parenti, "The Sword and the Dollar - Imperialism, Revolution, and the 
Arms Race", 1989, St. Martin's Press, New York.
(12) William Blum, "Killing Hope, U.S. Military and CIA Interventions Since 
World War II", 1995, Common Courage Press, Monroe Maine.
(13) John Stockwell, "In Search of Enemies - A CIA Story".
(14) David Horowitz, editor, "Containment and Revolution", Beacon Press, 
Boston, 1967,
(15) John Bagguley, "The World War and the Cold War".
(16) Samuel P. Huntington, "The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of 
World Order", 1997, Simon and Schuster.
(17) Michel Chossudovsky, "The Globalization of Poverty", 1997, Third World 
Network, Penang, Malaysia.
(18) Jerry Mander and Edward Goldsmith, ed, "The Case Against the Global 
Economy, and For a Turn Toward the Local", 1996, Sierra Club Books, San 
Francisco.
(19) Frances More Lappé, "World Hunger, Twelve Myths", 1986, Grove Press, 
New York.
------------------------------ 
Additional suggestions by
Professor Joan Roelofs 
Department of Political Economy 
Keene State College
Shoup and Minter: Imperial Brain Trust 
Bertram Gross: Friendly Fascism
Covert Action Quarterly
Christopher Simpson: The Splendid Blond Beast (US postwar use of 
fascist assets in Europe)



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