AAARGH
www.tenc.net
[Emperor's Clothes]
In Yugoslavia, the IMF has become the steadfast financial bureaucracy
of the Western military alliance, working hand in glove with NATO
and the US State Department.
The International Monetary Fund (IMF) is known to bully developing
countries, imposing strong doses of "deadly economic medicine"
while saddling governments with spiraling external debts. In complicity
with Washington, the IMF often meddles in cabinet appointments
in debtor countries. In Korea in the turmoil of the 1997 Asian
crisis, the Finance Minister --sacked for allegedly "hindering
negotiations" with the IMF-- was replaced by a former IMF
official.1 In Turkey, also in the wake of an IMF-style financial
meltdown (March 2001), the Minister of Economy was substituted
by a Vice-President of the World Bank. 2
But what has occurred in Yugoslavia sets a new record in the abusive
practices of the Washington-based international financial bureaucracy:
the arrest of a head of State of a debtor nation --demanded by
its main creditors-- has become "a pre-condition" for
the holding of loan negotiations.
While the 31st of March 2001 was Washington's deadline date for
the arrest of President Slobodan Milosevic by the DOS government,
another ultimatum was set for transferring the former head of
State to the jurisdiction of the NATO-sponsored Hague Tribunal
(ICTY). In the words of Secretary of State Colin Powell:
"the US administration's support for an international donors'
conference where Yugoslavia is hoping for up to $1 billion to
help rebuild would depend on continued progress in full cooperation
with the [Hague] tribunal."3
A State Department spokesman further clarified "that the
United States has the power to stop the conference from going
ahead in the early summer if Washington is not satisfied."4
Meanwhile, the Hague Tribunal has threatened to take the matter
before the UN Security Council, if President Milosevic is not
rapidly transferred to its jurisdiction. 5
WITHHOLDING FINANCIAL "AID"
Very timely... At the height of the Yugoslav presidential elections
(September 2000), "enabling legislation" was rushed
through the US House of Representatives. Washington had forewarned
Kostunica --pursuant to an Act of Congress (HR 1064)-- that unless
his government fully complied to US diktats, financial "aid"
would be withheld. The IMF and the World Bank had also been duly
notified by their largest shareholder, namely the US government,
that:
"the US Secretary of the Treasury [would] withhold from payment
of the United States share of any increase in the paid-in capital
of [the IMF and World Bank] an amount equal to the amount of the
loan or other assistance [to Yugoslavia].6
Meanwhile, Washington had demanded the setting up of an office
of the Hague Tribunal (ICTY) in Belgrade as well as modifications
to the legal statutes of Yugoslavia. The latter --to be rubber-stamped
by the Parliament-- would place the ICTY Tribunal above the jurisdiction
of Yugoslavia's national legal system. It would also allow the
ICTY to order on NATO's behest, the arrest of thousands of people
on trumped up charges.
RELEASING KLA TERRORISTS
US officials had also intimated that the prompt release of KLA
"freedom fighters" serving jail terms in Serbia was
to be regarded as an "additional pre-condition" for
the granting of financial assistance:
"State Department officials later told UPI that among other
steps the United States was looking for, were Yugoslav President
Vojislav Kostunica to begin returning Albanians captured during
the 1999 Kosovo conflict to Kosovo and for an acceptance of the
war crimes tribunal's jurisdiction inside Serbia where numerous
indicted suspects still enjoy immunity."7
An "Amnesty Law" was rushed through the Yugoslav parliament
barely a month before Washington's March 31st deadline.8 While
the victims of the war are persecuted and indicted as war criminals,
the Kostunica regime --on Washington's instructions-- has released
Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) criminals (linked to the drug mafias)
who committed atrocities in Kosovo.
Meanwhile, these criminals have rejoined the ranks of the KLA,
now involved in a new wave of terrorist assaults in southern Serbia
and in neighboring Macedonia. The evidence amply confirms that
these terrorist attacks are supported and financed by Washington.9
"ECONOMIC NORMALIZATION"
Without further scrutiny, the Western media touts the holding
of a donors' conference as "a necessary step" towards
"economic normalization" and the "reintegration"
of Yugoslavia into the "family of nations". Public opinion
is led to believe that the "donors" will "help"
Yugoslavia rebuild. The term "donor" is a misnomer.
In fact the donors' conference is a meeting of bankers and creditors
mainly from the countries which bombed Yugoslavia. Their intent
is to not only to collect money from Yugoslavia, but also to gain
full control and ownership of the Yugoslav economy.
Meanwhile, national laws have been revised to facilitate sweeping
privatization. Serbia's large industrial complexes and public
utilities are to be restructured and auctioned off to foreign
capital. In other words, rather than "helping Yugoslavia",
the donor conference --organized in close consultation with Washington
and NATO headquarters in Brussels-- would set the stage for the
transformation of Yugoslavia into a colony of the Western military
alliance.
Yugoslavia's external debt is in excess of $14 billion of which
$5 billion are owed to the Paris Club (i.e. largely to the governments
of NATO countries) and $3 billion to the London Club. The latter
is a syndicate of private banks, which in the case of Yugoslavia
includes some 400 creditor institutions. The largest part of Yugoslavia's
commercial debt, however, is held by some 16 (mainly) American
and European banks which are members of an "International
Coordinating Committee" (ICC) headed by America's Citigroup
and Germany's giant WestDeutsche Landesbank. Other big players
in the ICC include J. P. Morgan-Chase and Merrill Lynch.
The ICC --which operates discretely behind the scenes-- ultimately
call the shots regarding debt negotiations, privatization and
macro-economic therapy. In turn, the IMF bureaucracy acting on
behalf of both the commercial and official creditors has called
for "a restructuring of FRY's external debt on appropriate
terms" underscoring the fact that fresh money can only be
approved "following the regularization of arrears."
10 What this means is that Belgrade would be obliged to recognize
these debts in full as a condition for the negotiation of fresh
loans as well as settle pending succession issues regarding the
division of the external debt of the FRY with the "successor
republics."
FICTICIOUS MONEY
While token "reconstruction" loans are envisaged, vast
amounts of money and resources will be taken out of Yugoslavia.
In fact, most of the promised "reconstruction" money
is totally fictitious.
A $208 million 'bridge loan" granted by Switzerland and Norway
(January 2001 was used to reimburse the IMF. In turn, the IMF
had granted $151 million to Belgrade in the form of a so-called
"post-conflict assistance" loan. But this "aid"
was tagged to reimburse Switzerland and Norway, which had coughed
up the money to settle IMF arrears in the first place:
"The [IMF] Board approved a loan [of] ...US$151 million under
the IMF's policy on emergency post-conflict assistance in support
of a program to stabilize the FRY's economy and help rebuild administrative
capacities. Of this amount, the [Belgrade] authorities will draw...
US$130 million to repay the bridge loans they received [from Switzerland
and Norway] to eliminate arrears with the IMF."11
The illusion is conveyed that "money is coming in" and
that "the IMF is helping Yugoslavia." In fact, what
remains after the IMF "has reimbursed itself" is a meager
influx of 21 million dollars. And broadly the same fictitious
money arrangement has been put in place by the World Bank, which
has ordered that $1.7 billion in arrears "be cleared"
before the granting of fresh loans.
In this regard, Belgrade will be granted a so-called "loan
of consolidation" from the World Bank to reimburse the $1,7
billion debt it owes to the World Bank. Little or no money will
actually enter the country. In the words of Central Bank governor
Mladan Dinkic:
"[this] will pave the way for Yugoslavia's return to the
World Bank. `In the first three years, we will receive the so-called
AIDA status, which the World Bank gives to the poorest countries...
[this] is the most favorable arrangement possible, with a longer
grace-period and minimum interest, which will allow our economy
to pay off the [$1.7 billion] debt and create conditions for receiving
new loans".12
More generally, the "reconstruction" money will line
the pockets of international creditors and multinational corporations
(with trinkets for DOS cronies) while putting the entire Yugoslav
economy on the auction block. Assets will be sold at rock-bottom
prices under IMF-World Bank supervision. The meager proceeds of
forced privatization --in which only foreign "investors"
will be allowed to bid-- will then be used to pay back the creditors,
who happen to be the same people who are buying up Yugoslavia's
assets.
And who will appraise the "book value" of Yugoslavia's
industrial assets and supervise the auction of State property?
The large European and US merchant banks and accounting firms,
which also happen to be acting on behalf of their corporate clients
involved in bidding.
DEADLY ECONOMIC MEDICINE
Fictitious reconstruction money, however, is only granted on condition
Yugoslavia implements economic "shock therapy." The
donor-sponsored program is predicated on "destruction"
rather than "reconstruction". Under the disguise of
"economic normalization", the IMF, the World Bank and
the London-based European Bank for Reconstruction and Development
(EBRD) have been given the mandate to dismantle through bankruptcy
and forced privatization what has not yet been destroyed by the
bombers.
In this process, political terror and "economic terror"
go hand in hand. The evidence amply confirms that the IMF-World
Bank's lethal economic reforms imposed in more than 150 developing
countries have led to the impoverishment of millions of people.
In a cruel irony, bitter economic medicine and token financial
assistance are presented as "the rewards" for transferring
President Milosevic to the jurisdiction of the Hague Tribunal.
While the present IMF program is a "continuation" of
the deadly economic reforms first imposed on federal Yugoslavia
in the 1980s (and then on its "successor republics"),
it promises to be far more devastating.13
The Group of 17 economists (G-17) --which controls the Ministry
of Finance and Yugoslavia's Central Bank (NBJ)-- are in permanent
liaison with the IMF, the World Bank and the US Treasury. A "letter
of Intent" outlining in detail the economic therapy to be
imposed on Yugoslavia by the DOS government had in fact been drawn
up in secret negotiations with the creditors before the September
2000 presidential elections. Mladjan Dinkic --who now holds the
position of Governor of the National Bank of Yugoslavia (NBJ)
(Central Bank)-- had stated that one of the first things they
would do under a Kostunica presidency would be to implement economic
"shock therapy":
"Immediately after taking the office, the new government
shall abolish all types of subsidies... This measure must be implemented
without regrets or hesitation, since it will be difficult if not
impossible to apply later, in view of the fact that in the meantime
strong lobbies may appear and do their best to block such measures...
This initial step in economic liberalization must be undertaken
as a "shock therapy" as its radical nature does not
leave space for gradualism of any kind."14
The G-17 does not hide the fact that one of its main objectives
consists in breaking social resistance to the economic restructuring
program:
"Any future democratic regime is likely to face substantial
public resistance to privatization and the socio-economic reforms
that will accompany it. In the short term, the insolvency and
restructuring of Serbian enterprises is likely to generate unemployment
or wage cuts for many employees... The servicing of debts and
fiscal adjustments are likely to require cuts in public expenditure
and the introduction of potentially unpopular new taxes and levies.
The purchase of Serbian firms by wealthy domestic and foreign
investors may also generate resentment, especially as it will
represent a radical break with the former Yugoslav tradition of
workers' or "social" ownership. Nationalist and anti-reformist
groups are likely to mobilize popular resistance by exploiting
these problems. This form of political opposition would limit
the scope for introducing effective economic reform and privatization."15.
FREEZING WAGES
The IMF program --put into full swing in the wake of the September
2000 elections-- calls for the adoption of "prudent macroeconomic
policies and bold structural reforms", In IMF lingo, "bold"
invariably means the application of "shock treatment"
while "prudent" means carefully designed and uncompromising
austerity measures.16. Upon assuming office, the Kostunica government
--under IMF instructions-- has deregulated the prices of basic
consumer goods and frozen the wages of working people.17 A new
Labor Law setting the minimum wage at 35 percent of the average
wage was rubber-stamped by the Yugoslav parliament. In other words,
with rising prices coupled with the deindexation of wages ordered
by the IMF, the new legislation allows the real minimum wage to
slide to abysmally low levels.18
Credit has been frozen to local businesses and farmers. Interest
rates have already skyrocketed. With the end of the economic sanctions,
the IMF has also demanded that import barriers be removed to facilitate
the dumping of surplus commodities on the domestic market leading
to the bankruptcy of domestic producers. In turn, energy prices
are to be totally deregulated prior to the privatization of public
utilities, State oil refineries, coal mining and electricity.
In turn, drastic cuts in the social security and pension funds
of the Republic of Serbia are envisaged, which would virtually
lead to their collapse (See IMF Program, op cit). The restructuring
of social programs is a carbon copy of that imposed in neighboring
Bulgaria, where pensions paid out to senior citizens plummeted
in 1997 to $3 as month.19
ENGINEERING THE COLLAPSE OF THE DINAR
The most lethal component of the IMF program, however, is the
so-called "managed float" of the exchange rate which
--according to IMF Deputy Managing Director Stanley Fischer--
is implemented "to better reflect market conditions".
20
Yugoslavia's central bank foreign exchange reserves are of the
order of $500 million, the external debt is in excess of $14 billion.
Under agreement with the IMF, money (in the form of "precautionary
loan") would be granted to replenish the foreign exchange
reserves of the Central Bank with a view to supporting the dinar.
Moreover following the Brazilian pattern, the dinar would also
be artificially propped up by extensive government borrowing from
private banking institutions at exorbitant interest rates thereby
fuelling the internal public debt. 21
In the absence of exchange controls restricting capital flight,
central bank foreign exchange reserves would eventually be depleted.
In other words, when the "borrowed reserves" are no
longer there to prop up the currency, the dinar collapses. In
the logic of the "managed float", the dollars borrowed
under an IMF precautionary fund arrangement, would be reappropriated
by international creditors and speculators once the dinar slides,
leading to a further expansion of Yugoslavia's external debt.
In fact, this policy is largely instrumental in triggering hyperinflation.
The national currency would become totally worthless. In other
words, prices would go sky high following the collapse of the
national currency. In turn, wages would be frozen on IMF instructions
as part of an "anti-inflationary program" and the standard
of living would plummet to even lower levels. And Yugoslavs are
already impoverished with two thirds of the population (according
to UN sources acknowledged in the IMF report) with per capita
incomes below 2 dollars a day.
It's the same financial scam that the IMF applied in Korea, Indonesia,
Russia, Brazil and more recently Turkey.22 In this process, various
speculative instruments (including "short selling" of
currencies) were applied by international banks and financial
institutions to trigger the collapse of national currencies. In
Korea, debts spiraled in the wake of the currency crisis. As a
result, the entire economy was put on the auction block and several
of Korea's powerful conglomerates were taken over by American
capital at ridiculously low prices.
In Russia, the ruble became totally worthless following the implementation
of an IMF program. The float of the ruble applied in 1992 under
IMF advice was conducive in less than a year to a one hundred
fold (9900%) increase in consumer prices. Nominal earnings increased
ten fold (900%), the collapse in real wages in 1992 was of the
order of 86 percent. In subsequent years, real earnings continued
to plummet precipitating the descent of the Russian people into
extreme poverty.23
More generally, the IMF program creates a framework for collecting
as well as enlarging the debt through the manipulation of currency
markets. It is worth mentioning, in this regard, that barely a
few weeks before the arrest of President Milosevic, Turkey was
subjected --following the destabilization of its currency-- to
the most brutal economic reforms leading virtually over night
to the collapse of the standard of living. Under IMF ministrations,
interest rates in Turkey had shot up to a modest 550%.
WAR DAMAGES
The IMF has acknowledged in its report that the damage caused
by NATO bombings is of the order of 40 billion dollars.24 This
figure does not take into account the losses in Yugoslavia's GDP
resulting from years of economic sanctions, nor does it account
for the loss of human life and limb, the human suffering inflicted
on an entire population, the toxic radiation from depleted uranium
and the environmental devastation amply documented by Yugoslav
and international sources. 25 Ironically, this study on war damages
was coordinated by G-17 Mladjan Dinkic and Miroslav Labus who
now hold key positions in the DOS government. Since his appointment
to the position of central bank governor, Dinkic has not said
a word about "war damages" in his discussions with Western
creditors. 26
LUCRATIVE RECONSTRUCTION CONTRACTS
No "compensation" for war damages let alone debt relief
has been contemplated. In a cruel twist, a large part of the fresh
loans --which Yugoslavia will eventually have to reimburse-- will
be used to rebuild what was destroyed by the bombers. Moreover,
under the World Bank-EBRD system of international tender, these
loans are in fact tagged to finance lucrative contracts with construction
companies from NATO countries:
"the big winners [are the Western] telecommunications companies,
construction firms, banks and shipping concerns who can rebuild
the Danube River bridges, power plants and refineries destroyed
by NATO airstrikes. ... While European companies, already busy
with Balkan projects, have a home-court advantage, U.S. companies
such as infrastructure specialists Brown & Root [a subsidiary
of Vice President Dick Cheney's company Halliburton Oil], AES
and General Electric could get a piece of the action." 27
And what will these companies do? They will sub-contract will
local firms and/or hire Yugoslav engineers and workers at wages
below one hundred dollars a month. In other words, the borrowed
money promised to Belgrade for "reconstruction" will
go straight back into the pockets of Western banks and MNCs. In
turn, the so-called "prioritization of expenditures"
imposed by the IMF means that the State (i.e. Yugoslavia's own
money) would be footing the bill for clearing the Danube and rebuilding
the bridges, essentially "subsidizing" the interests
of foreign capital. Moreover, IMF "conditionalities"
--which require drastic cuts in social expenditures-- would prevent
the government from allocating its budget to rebuilding schools
and hospitals hit during the bombing campaign.
THE COSTS OF THE AIR CAMPAIGN
Accusing the Serbian people and the former head of State of the
crimes committed by the aggressor is intended to instill a sense
of fear and collective guilt on an entire Nation.
But there is something else which has so far not been mentioned:
Washington's design is to hold President Milosevic responsible
for the War not as an individual but as the country's head of
State, with a view to eventually collecting war reparations from
Yugoslavia.
In other words, if the former head of State were to be indicted
by the Hague tribunal, the country could be held "legally
responsible" not only for the costs of NATO's "humanitarian
bombs", but for all the military and "peacekeeping"
expenses incurred since 1992.
In fact, an army of accountants and economists has already evaluated
--on NATO's behest-- the costs of the air campaign and the various
"peacekeeping operations". In this regard, the U.S.
share of the costs of the bombing, "peacekeeping" and
"refugee assistance" solely in fiscal year 1999 was
estimated at $5.05 billion. The amounts allocated by the Clinton
Administration to pay for the war and the refugees in FY 1999
were of the order of $6.6 billion. So-called "emergency funding"
appropriated by Congress for operations in Kosovo and other defense
spending in FY 1999 totaled $12 billion. Moreover, the Department
of Defense estimates the costs of deployment of American occupation
forces and civilian personnel stationed in Bosnia and Kosovo since
1992 to be of the order of $21.2 billion.28
In other words, indicting President Milosevic on trumped up charges
raises a fundamental question of legitimacy. It sanctions the
bombings as a humanitarian operation. It not only absolves the
real war criminals, it also opens up the avenue for the indictment
of Yugoslavia as a nation.
The former head of State is indicted; the people are collectively
indicted. What this means is that NATO could at some future date
oblige Yugoslavia to pay for the bombs used to destroy the country
and kill its people.
There is nothing fundamentally new in this process. Under the
British Empire, it was common practice not only to install puppet
regimes but also to bill the costs of gunboat operations to countries,
which refused to sign a "free trade" agreement with
Her Majesty's government. In 1850, Britain threatened to send
in its "gun boats" ---equivalent to today's humanitarian
air raids-- following the refusal of the Kingdom of Siam (Thailand)
to sign a free trade treaty with Britain (equivalent to today's
"letter of intent" to the IMF). While the language and
institutions of colonial diplomacy have changed, the similarity
with contemporary practices is striking. In the words of British
envoy Sir James Brooke (equivalent to today's Richard Holbrooke):
"The Siamese Government is hostile-- its tone is arrogant--
its presumption unbounded... Should these just [British] demands
firmly urged be refused, a force should be present, immediately
to enforce them by a rapid destruction of the defenses of the
river... Siam may be taught the lesson which it has long been
tempted, ... a better disposed king placed on the throne, and
an influence acquired in the country which will make it of immense
commercial importance to England... [Note the similarity in relation
to Yugoslavia] Above all, it would be well to prepare for the
change and to place our own kind on the throne ... This prince
[Mongkut] we ought to place on the throne and through him, we
might, beyond doubt, gain all we desire.... And the expense incurred
[of the military operation] would readily be available from the
royal treasury of Siam."29
Replace the head of State, impose "free" trade, bill
the country for the military operation!
PRECEDENTS OF WAR REPARATIONS: VIETNAM AND NICARAGUA
In fact in the case of Vietnam --which won the war against US
aggression-- Hanoi was nonetheless obliged to pay war reparations
to the United States, as a condition for the lifting of economic
sanctions in 1994.
Although the historical circumstances were quite different to
those of Yugoslavia, the pattern of IMF intervention in Vietnam
was in many regards similar. The decision to lift the sanctions
on Vietnam was also taken in the context of a donors' conference.
"Some two billion dollars of loans and "aid" money
had been pledged in support of Vietnam's IMF sponsored reforms,
yet immediately after the Conference another separate meeting
was held, this time "behind closed doors" in which Hanoi
was obliged to fully reimburse ... the debts incurred by the US
installed Saigon military government."30 By fully recognising
the legitimacy of these debts, Hanoi had in effect accepted to
repay loans that had been utilised to support the US War effort.
Moreover, Hanoi's acceptance had also totally absolved Washington
from paying war reparations to Vietnam totalling $4.2 billion
as agreed at the Paris Peace Conference in 1973.31
NICARAGUA: "FREEDOM FIGHTERS" AND IMF ECONOMIC MEDICINE
Similarly the 12 billion dollars "reparations" that
the US had been ordered to pay to Nicaragua by the Hague International
Court of Justice (ICJ) were never paid. In 1990, following the
installation of a pro-US "democratic" government, these
reparations --ordered by the ICJ-- were erased in exchange for
"normalization" and the lifting of sanctions. In return,
Washington approved a token $60 million in "emergency aid"
which was of course conditional upon the payment of all debts
and the adoption of the most deadly IMF economic shock therapy:
"The United States ... provides severance pay to government
workers fired under the U.S.-mandated [IMF structural adjustment]
program to reduce the size of Nicaragua's government. Among the
results: Nicaragua's social security budget has been slashed from
$ 18 million to $ 4 million while unemployment has risen to about
45 percent. Health spending has dropped from $86 per person [per
annum] five years ago to $ 18 [in 1991 in the year following the
elections]. Pensions for disabled war veterans have been frozen
at $ 6.50 per month while food prices have risen [1991] to nearly
U.S. levels... In the words of a State Department official 'The
US is committed to rebuilding Nicaragua, but there's only a limited
amount you can do with development aid.'"32
Yet the US did not hesitate in spending billions of dollars to
finance nine years of economic embargo and war in which Washington
created and funded a paramilitary army (the Contras) to fight
the Sandinista government. Heralded by the Reagan administration
and touted by the media as "freedom fighters", the Contras
insurgency was financed by drug money and covert support from
the CIA. And in fact the same pattern of covert support using
drug money was applied to financing the Kosovo Liberation Army
(KLA) with a view to destabilizing Yugoslavia. William Walker,
head of the OSCE mission to Kosovo in the months preceding the
1999 war, was responsible together with Coronal Oliver North in
channeling covert support to the Contras which ultimately led
to the downfall of the Sandinista government and its defeat in
"democratic" elections in 1990.
THE ROLE OF THE UNITED NATIONS COMPENSATION COMMISSION (UNCC)
Another case is that of Iraq which --in the wake of the Gulf War--
was obliged to pay extensive war reparations. The United Nations
Compensation Commission (UNCC) was set up to process "claims"
against Iraq. Thirty percent of Iraqi oil revenues in the "oil
for food program" are impounded by the UNCC to pay war reparations
to governments, banks and corporations. The UNCC "has awarded
more than $32 billion [in claims], and more than $9.5 billion
has been paid out under the food-for-oil regime."33
These precedents are important in understanding the war in Yugoslavia.
Although no official statement has been made by NATO, the framework
and bureaucracy of the UNCC could at some future date be extended
to collecting war reparations from Yugoslavia. The UNCC's claim
procedures are based on a 1991 UN Security Council resolution
which establishes Iraq's liability for the Gulf war under international
law.
In the case of Yugoslavia, President Milosevic is accused by the
Hague tribunal for "crimes against humanity and violations
of the laws or customs of war", 34. Following the Iraqi precedent,
a decision of the Hague Tribunal concerning President Milosevic
could constitute the basis for the formulation of a similar UN
Security Council Resolution establishing the liability of the
government and people of Yugoslavia for the "direct loss,
damage... to foreign governments, nationals and corporations",
including "the costs of the air campaign." 35
REWRITING HISTORY
Recent events have shown how realties can be turned upside down
by the aggressor and its propaganda machine. NATO's intent is
to blatantly distort the course of events and manipulate the writing
of modern history. It is therefore essential that the Yugoslav
people remain united in their resolve. It should also be understood
that the "demonisation" of the Serbian people and of
President Slobodan Milosevic alongside the triggering of ethnic
conflicts is intended to impose the "free market" and
enforce the New World Order throughout the Balkans.
Internationally, the various movements against IMF-World Bank-WTO
reforms must understand that war and globalization are inter-connected
processes. Applied around the World, the only promise of the "free
market" is a World of landless farmers, shuttered factories,
jobless workers and gutted social programs with "bitter economic
medicine" under IMF-WB-WTO custody constituting the only
prescription. Moreover, militarization increasingly constitutes
the means for enforcing these deadly macro-economic reforms.
Yugoslavia's struggle to preserve its national sovereignty is
--at this particular juncture in its history-- a part of the broader
movement against the New World Order and the imposition throughout
the World of a uniform neo-liberal policy agenda under IMF-World
Bank-WTO supervision. Behind these organizations --which routinely
interface with NATO-- are the powers of the US and European financial
establishments and the Western military-industrial complex.
ENDNOTES
1. Agence France Presse , 19 November 1997.
2 Quest Economics Database. West LB Emerging Trends, 8 March 2001,
Agence France Press, 16 March 2001.
3. Statement of Secretary of State Colin Powell quoted in International
Herald Tribune, Paris, April 4, 2001
4. International Herald Tribune, op. cit.
5. B 92 News, Belgrade, 3 May 2001.
6. US House of Representatives, Bill HR 1064, section 302, September
2000, at http://www.house.gov/house/Legproc.html., click 106th
Congress and enter bill number.
7. UPI, 2 April 2001
8. New York Times, 27 February 2001.
9. See Michel Chossudovsky, Washington Finances Ethnic Warfare
in the Balkans", Emperors Clothes, April 2001.
10. See IMF, IMF Approves Membership of Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
and US$151 Million in Emergency Post-Conflict Assistance, http://www.imf.org/external/np/sec/pr/2000/pr0075.htm.
11. See IMF, IMF Approves Membership of Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
and US$151 Million in Emergency Post-Conflict Assistance, http://www.imf.org/external/np/sec/pr/2000/pr0075.htm.
12. Government of Serbia, Serbia Info, Belgrade 2 May 2001, http://www.serbia-info.com/news/2001-05/03/23335.html.
13 For further details see Michel Chossudovsky, Dismantling Former
Yugoslavia, Recolonising Bosnia, Covert Action Quarterly, Sprint
1996, available at http://www.ess.uwe.ac.uk/Kosovo/Kosovo-controversies4.html
or http://www.emperors-clothes.com/articles/chuss/dismantl.htm.
14. See Group of 17 "Program of Radical Economic Reforms",
Belgrade 1999 at http://www.g17.org.yu/english/programm/program.htm.
15. New Serbia Forum, "Privatization", Budapest, 13-15th
March 2000, http://www.newserbiaforum.org/Reports/privatisation.htm.
16. The full text of the IMF program is available at http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/cat/longres.cfm?sk&sk=3875.0
The Government's commitment under the IMF program is outlined
in Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, "Economic Reform Program
for 2001" Belgrade, December 9th, 2000, http://www.seerecon.org/FRYugoslavia/erp2001.htm,
see also "Synthetic View" of main economic policy measures
at http://www.seerecon.org/FRYugoslavia/epmeasures.pdf.
17. See Michel Chossudovsky, Kostunica Coalition Drives Up Prices
and Blames...Milosevic, October 2000, http://emperors-clothes.com/articles/chuss/triples.htm.
18. See B 92 News, 3 May 2001 at http://www.b92.net/archive/e/index.phtml.
19. IM Program, op cit. On Bulgaria see The Wind in the Balkans,
The Economist, London, February 8, 1997, p.12 and Jonathan C.
Randal, Reform Coalition Wins, Bulgarian Parliament, The Washington
Post, April 20 1997, p. A21.
20. See the Statement of IMF Deputy Managing Director Stanley
Fischer, December 2000 at http://www.imf.org/external/np/sec/pr/2000/pr0075.htm.
21. See Michel Chossudovsky, "Brazil's IMF Sponsored Financial
Disaster", Third World Network, 1998 at http://www.twnside.org.sg/title/latin-cn.htm.
22. For details see Michel Chossudovsky, Financial Warfare triggers
Global Financial Crisis, Third World Network at http://www.twnside.org.sg/title/trig-cn.htm.
23. See Michel Chossudovsky, The Globalization of Poverty, Zed
Books, London 1997, chapter 12.
24. The IMF quotes the G-17 study, "Economic Consequences
of NATO Bombardment", Belgrade 2000 at http://www.g17.org.yu/english/index.htm.
25. See Michel Chossudovsky, NATO Willfully Triggered an Environmental
Catastrophe in Yugoslavia, June 2000, at is http://emperors-clothes.com/articles/chuss/willful.htm.
26. See G-17, "Economic Consequences of NATO Bombardment",
Belgrade 2000 at http://www.g17.org.yu/english/index.htm.
27. USA Today, 10 October 2000.
28. GAO : Briefing report to the Chairman, Committee on Armed
Services, House of Representatives, RPTno: gao/nsiad-00-125br,
Washington, 24 April 2000.
29. Quoted in M. L. Manich Jumsai, King Mongkut and Sir John Bowring,
Chalermit, Bangkok, 1970, p. 21.
30. See Michel Chossudovsky, The Globalisation of Poverty, op
cit., Chapter 8.
31. A. J. Langguth, The Forgotten Debt to Vietnam, New York Times,
18 November 2000, see also Barbara Crossette, Hanoi said to vow
to give MIA Data, New York Times, 24 October, 1992.
32. The Houston Chronicle, 8 December 1991. To consult the International
Court of Justice 1986 Judgement on "Nicaragua v. United States
of America" see: "Military and Paramilitary Activities
in and against Nicaragua (Nicaragua v. United States of America)
(1984-1991)" at http://www.icj-cij.org/icjwww/Icases/iNus/inusframe.htm,
summary at http://www.icj-cij.org/icjwww/idecisions/isummaries/inussummary860627.htm.
33. UPI, 7 December 2000.
34. See the text of 1999 indictment of President Milosevic by
the Hague Tribunal at http://www.un.org/icty/indictment/english/mil-ii990524e.htm.
35. See the text of UNSC resolution 687 (1991) pertaining to Iraq
at http://www.unog.ch/uncc/introduc.htm.
© Copyright by Michel Chossudovsky, Ottawa, May 2001. All
rights reserved. Permission is granted to post this text on non-commercial
community internet sites, provided the essay remains intact and
the copyright note is displayed. To publish this text in printed
and/or other form, contact the author at [email protected],
fax: 1-514-4256224.
The URL for this article is
<http://emperors-clothes.com/articles/choss/eco2.htm>
L'adresse électronique de ce document est: http://aaargh-international.org/fran/actu/actu001/doc2001/ecoter.html
Ce texte a été affiché sur Internet à des fins purement éducatives, pour encourager la recherche, sur une base non-commerciale et pour une utilisation mesurée par le Secrétariat international de l'Association des Anciens Amateurs de Récits de Guerre et d'Holocaustes (AAARGH). L'adresse électronique du Secrétariat est <[email protected]>. L'adresse postale est: PO Box 81475, Chicago, IL 60681-0475, USA.
Afficher un texte sur le Web équivaut à mettre un document sur le rayonnage d'une bibliothèque publique. Cela nous coûte un peu d'argent et de travail. Nous pensons que c'est le lecteur volontaire qui en profite et nous le supposons capable de penser par lui-même. Un lecteur qui va chercher un document sur le Web le fait toujours à ses risques et périls. Quant à l'auteur, il n'y a pas lieu de supposer qu'il partage la responsabilité des autres textes consultables sur ce site. En raison des lois qui instituent une censure spécifique dans certains pays (Allemagne, France, Israël, Suisse, Canada, et d'autres), nous ne demandons pas l'agrément des auteurs qui y vivent car ils ne sont pas libres de consentir.
Nous nous plaçons sous
la protection de l'article 19 de la Déclaration des Droits
de l'homme, qui stipule:
ARTICLE 19
<Tout individu a droit à la liberté d'opinion
et d'expression, ce qui implique le droit de ne pas être
inquiété pour ses opinions et celui de chercher,
de recevoir et de répandre, sans considération de
frontière, les informations et les idées par quelque
moyen d'expression que ce soit>
Déclaration internationale des droits de l'homme,
adoptée par l'Assemblée générale de
l'ONU à Paris, le 10 décembre 1948.