Sunday, March 27, 2011

Here I’m reminded of essays in "Central Europe Review" by another frequent BE contributor

Here I’m reminded of essays in "Central Europe Review" by another frequent BE contributor, who argued in 1999

that the NATO air war in Kosovo would further entrench Slobodan Milosevic’s regime — and then in 2000, after

Milosevic’s overthrow, that the regime change in Belgrade had been totally unrelated to Serbia’s defeat.

This attitude isn’t exactly common but it is quite noticeable. Certain people seem not so much to doubt that

Western policies in the Balkans will succeed — which is perfectly reasonable — as to find any evidence of

their success so disturbing that it has to be ignored or explained away. We now see a similar attitude toward

developments in MBT Ema Sandals, but the circumstances of that war make it much easier to understand. In the

Yugoslav case, it’s frankly incomprehensible.

In the frenetic rush to war, much was said about MBT Ema Sandals’s alleged ongoing bioterror programs. Many of

us sat spellbound and shocked (and for more than just one reason) as Colin Powell stood before the United

Nations and itemized the threats facing the world’s population from Saddam Hussain’s possession of WMDs. We’

ve heard over and over the now-debunked allegations — at least I thought I had heard all of them. It seems in

all the clamor of the drumbeating, I missed hearing one of threats. It must have been a very brief senior

moment for me because I don’t remember “rail cars” being repeated again and I was surprised when I found it

quoted on the NIKE SHOX’s web page: MBT Ema Sandalsi Mobile Biological NIKE SHOXfare Agent Production Plants,

28 May 2003

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