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Greece faces shame of role in Serb massacre
Guardian Unlimited ^ | 1/5/2003 | Helena Smith in Athens

Posted on 01/04/2003 9:38:15 PM PST by a_Turk

War crimes tribunal will hear secrets of support for Milosevic's ethnic cleansing.

It is what Hellenes have long feared: the shattering of a conspiracy of silence that has surrounded the role of Greek volunteers who proudly flew their flag at Srebrenica, after participating in Europe's worst massacre since the Second World War, when 7,000 men, women and children died.

Next week, as Greece settles into the presidency of the European Union, Milan Milutinovic, Serbia's recently retired president, will be brought before the war crimes tribunal at The Hague. Greek involvement in the atrocity, as well as other secrets Athens would prefer buried, could be revealed when the 60-year-old testifies.

No one, it is said, played such a pivotal role in the alliance between Athens and Belgrade during the Nineties Balkan conflicts. As Yugoslavia's ambassador to Greece, Milutinovic was Slobodan Milosevic's most trusted lieutenant. His links with Greece's political, religious and business elites were allegedly crucial to Serbia's secret economic infrastructure. They allowed the country to evade United Nations sanctions and, according to the International Criminal Tribunal, contributed considerably towards Milosevic's war machine.

When the diplomat was promoted to Foreign Minister in 1994, he retained his Athens post for several months when, EU diplomats say, he stashed away funds to buy villas and other prime properties in Athens and Crete at the behest of his boss.

With Greece's admiring public, pro-Serbian church, tolerant media and governments that supported Milosevic, Athens was seen as a bolt-hole by the now disgraced president. As Bosnian Serb ethnic cleansers torched villages, it was here Milosevic would escape to enjoy the hospitality of Greek politicians. Marko Milosevic, his lascivious smuggler son, declared Greece 'my first home'.

'This is our best-kept secret, the subject no politician of any persuasion has ever wanted to broach,' said Takis Michas, author of Unholy Alliance: Greece and Milosevic's Serbia. 'In an era where everyone is saying sorry, in Greece at least no one has shown remorse for the crimes in Bosnia when undoubtedly a significant proportion of the political establishment bear some responsibility.'

The US-published book, yet to be printed in Greek, records in shocking detail the relationship between the two Orthodox nations, including the leaking of Nato military intelligence under socialist leader Andreas Papandreou.

The Greeks know their past may be catching up with them. After last month's long statement of contrition before the Hague tribunal by the former Bosnian Serb leader, Biljana Plavsic, many believe it is only a matter of time before others open up too.

A Dutch documentary investigating Greek complicity in the Serb wars was aired on local television in which a director of the semi-official Athens News Agency, Nikolas Voulelis, admitted to widespread censorship. During the wars the Greek media was fanatically pro-Serb, portraying Yugoslav Muslims as 'infidel Turks' bent on destroying their Orthodox brethren. 'Editorial interference was a given,' he said.

But it was not only hospitality or money that the Greeks offered. Spiritual succour was provided by the Greek Orthodox church which sent priests to the front line (several clerics received bravery medals from Plavsic).

In a step repeated in no other country, Archbishop Serafeim invited the Bosnian Serb leader Radovan Karadzic to visit Athens in 1993. At a mass rally attended by prominent politicians, the indicted war criminal proclaimed: 'We have only God and the Greeks on our side.'

Last year, in a 7,000-page report that the Dutch authorities commissioned into the 1995 Srebrenica massacre, Greece was revealed to have sent shipments of light arms and ammunition to the Bosnian Serb army between 1994 and 1995. The report describes how Greek volunteers were implored, in intercepted army telephone conversations, to raise the Greek flag after the town fell. In one, General Ratko Mladic asked that they record the scene on video for propaganda purposes.

Around 100 soldiers are believed to have joined the Greek Volunteer Guard, formed at Mladic's request. The unit, which fought alongside Russians and Ukrainians, was led by Serb officers and had its own insignia - the double-headed eagle of Byzantium. At least four of its members were awarded the White Eagle medal of honour by Karadzic.

Although their 'heroic' exploits were widely reported in the Greek press, the volunteers have gone to ground since the creation of the war crimes tribunal. No government or party has ever sought an inquiry into their activities.


TOPICS: Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News
KEYWORDS: balkans; bosnia; campaignfinance; greece; napalminthemorning; serbia; wot
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To: ABrit; Michael2001
Communisim like Nazisim was a German invention (the latter with a tip of the hat to the Catholic Italians). Hey - didn't Karl Marx write most of his works in London?
61 posted on 01/06/2003 6:42:46 AM PST by Destro
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Comment #62 Removed by Moderator

To: a_Turk
The Greeks and Serbs both know what scum Albanians (spit!) are.

And my family in Smyrna knows about you too.

63 posted on 01/06/2003 6:46:26 AM PST by metesky
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To: TonyRo76
Even Byzantium's final sacrifice was a boon to mankind, in the Renaissance imparted by her refugee scholars that gave the drive to inspire Western Europeans to go to the East Indies via the West to bypass the Muslims. The rest is American history.
64 posted on 01/06/2003 6:49:14 AM PST by Destro
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To: Destro
The Greeks are very Byzantine in nature. For such a small nation they play a big role. Good thing too.

That might be because the Byzantine Empire was a Greek empire, eh?

The Greeks have been in Asia Minor since Jason and the Argonauts, which is essentially a stylized story of colonization and the search for new sources of firewood.

Click for an interactive map of Greek and Phoenician colonization.

My paternal grandfather was from Lesbos and my grandmother from Smyrna (Izmir). Decendants of the Achean Greeks, we're the ones to beware of when bearing gifts.

Acheans, Byzantines, Levantine Greeks, whatever one wishes to call them, have been there forever.

65 posted on 01/06/2003 7:19:15 AM PST by metesky
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To: A. Pole; a_Turk; Gael; MarMema; DTA; F-117A; weikel; getoffmylawn
I suspect this will be a disasterous next couple of weeks for the West as the hard-earned momentum in the Third World War is frittered away. Regardless, Turkey is the best friend the United States has now and for the forseeable future. Ankara must understand they are now dealing from the square table and be prepared to up their asking price for support in the coming American war versus Iraq.

The stalled American attack of January 2003 with many congruencies to the halting of the US Third Army in September 1944. Each time American momentum has been disipated by failure of logistical "experts" to do the job they are tasked with. Each time the Supreme American commander (Eisenhower, Bush) has failed to abandon established "truisms" of modern warfare in lieu of a classical understanding of Guderian-style blitzkrieg.

This delay will result in several thousand additional American casualties during the final attack on Baghdad. Just as two thirds of US WW II ETO casualties came after the September 1944 halt -- the vast majority of coming American and Brit KIA will directly result from the ongoing defensive buildup by Iraqi engineers around the capital.

Ankara understands this dynamic much better than Washington now and cleverly is most patient with DC. This superior comprehension should permit Turkey to increase its aid package to closer to 35 billion USD. There is a new Congress coming to DC Tuesday and the vast majority of these people have little understanding of foreign affairs.

Every commander wants to go into battle with overwhelming superiority and believe the opposition will roll over and collapse. US psy-war operations are at peak efficiency now and far too many Capitol Hill types are also taken in by the faux hype. Every day of delay in the attack increases the slim but real possibility of a US-Brit defeat.

Meanwhile rumblings in Bosnia and the Philippines indicate the Islamic entente fully prepared to launch counter-offensives versus Western soft targets. London still under the gun from coming WMD assault and the entire Western economic structure continues to hang from a thread. Where is spot oil today?

Where will it be in six weeks?

DC should immediately give Ankara a very generous economic compensation package and encourage grass roots business development between the US and Turkey. The Northern front is key to the entire Western attack -- without Turkey's support the US cannot launch, let alone win, a war versus Iraq.

And don't worry too much about Greece. Athens with a multitude of sins on their head -- they will be dealt with most accordingly once the smoke clears and the world is remade in blinding flashes from Moscow to London.

Amazingly, the West now holding the winning hand but wanting to discard and draw three...

The forces of freedom on the move. Europe trembles.

66 posted on 01/06/2003 7:43:41 AM PST by Fusion
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To: Michael2001; John H K
Hmmmm.....Still no appearances from the FR Serbian apologist brigade on this thread. Probably too late at night on a weekend

Until I show up and post my links and the Muslim sympathizers/Serb domonizers suddenly go silent.

67 posted on 01/06/2003 8:08:29 AM PST by Destro
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Comment #68 Removed by Moderator

To: Destro; Michael2001; John H K
LOL! You're so full of yourself it's hillarious.

>>Muslim sympathizers/Serb domonizers

Only idiots generalize. You and a lot of others here fit that category. I say all racists and biggots go eat sh!t.
69 posted on 01/06/2003 8:36:55 AM PST by a_Turk
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To: metesky
Acheans, Byzantines, Levantine Greeks, whatever one wishes to call them, have been there forever.

Well, at least for 3200 years, until Turks took care of them and of Armenians. Turkish invasion of Asia Minor (todays Turkey) after the battle of Manzikert in 1071 was the major disaster for the Eastern part of Christiandom.

70 posted on 01/06/2003 8:56:03 AM PST by A. Pole
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To: A. Pole
1071 when Alparslan kicked some serious Byzantine ass, but let the defeated emperor go after a short chat..


71 posted on 01/06/2003 9:19:15 AM PST by a_Turk
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To: MarMema
I was going to ask "where's fusion"? I guess someone opened up Guantanamo Bay and let all of the terrorist out on leave. Does this mean we should be preparing for a terrorist attack here in the US?
72 posted on 01/06/2003 9:43:55 AM PST by Andy from Beaverton
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To: a_Turk; Destro; vooch; anka
P r o c l a m a t i o n

Whereas, the Empire State is home to many ethnic communities whose members benefit from the freedom and democracy upon which our Nation was founded; as a global leader in many areas of basic human and social rights, New York State has a prominent role in acknowledging events in history -- many of them tragic and distressing -- that teach valuable lessons from which our greater society benefits; such events are the destruction of the city of Smyrna and the Genocide of the Greeks of Pontus and Asia Minor, tragedies that took the lives of hundreds of thousands of Greek civilians during World War I; and Whereas, these Greeks, whose ancestors had lived in communities along present-day northern Turkey near the Black Sea for three millennia, were singled out by the Turkish authorities for expulsion from their ancestral lands along with Armenians and Assyrians; from 1915-1923, Greeks of Asia Minor endured immeasurable cruelty during a Turkish Government-sanctioned systematic campaign to displace them; destroying Greek towns and villages and slaughtering additional hundreds of thousands of civilians in areas where Greeks composed a majority, as on the Black Sea coast, Pontus, and areas around Smyrna; those who survived were exiled from Turkey and today they and their descendants live throughout the Greek diaspora; and

Whereas, in 1922, Smyrna, the largest city in Asia Minor called "the jewel of the Mediterranean", a cosmopolitan hub populated by a highly educated Greek community and flourishing commercial and middle-classes, was sacked and burned and its inhabitants massacred by the Turkish forces; the pier of Smyrna became a scene of final desperation as the approaching flames forced many thousands to jump to their death, rather than be consumed by flame; George Horton, the Consul General of the United States in Smyrna at the time of the catastrophe, is quoted as saying, "...the destruction of Smyrna happened, however, in 1922, and no act ever perpetrated by the Turkish race in all its bloodstained history has been characterized by more brutal and lustful features, nor more productive of the worst of human sufferings inflicted on the defenseless and unarmed. It was a fittingly lurid and Satanic finale to the whole dreadful tragedy..."; and

Whereas, it is believed by many that acknowledgment and awareness of this shameful event will not only teach future generations, but also will help mankind prevent such crimes from being repeated; this concept is particularly important as our State works to instill in youth, a universal respect for other cultures, races, religions and viewpoints; and

Whereas, it is fitting that all freedom-loving people worldwide and New Yorkers alike, share in the solemn commemoration of the of Great Catastophe of Asia Minor of 1915-23, and join with the Greek-American community and its many religious, communal and philanthropic organizations as they honor the sacrifices and memory of their noble ancestors;

Now, Therefore, I, George E. Pataki, Governor of the State of New York, do hereby proclaim October 6th, 2002 as the 80th Anniversary of the Commemoration of the Burning of Smyrna and the Persecution of the Greeks of Asia Minor in the Empire State.

73 posted on 01/06/2003 10:11:01 AM PST by FormerLib
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To: metesky
Ping to #73
74 posted on 01/06/2003 10:13:21 AM PST by FormerLib
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To: FormerLib
Did he get reelected then?
75 posted on 01/06/2003 10:24:47 AM PST by a_Turk
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To: Fusion
You wish, a$$hole.
76 posted on 01/06/2003 10:34:10 AM PST by metesky
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To: FormerLib
Nice one. My family thanks you.
77 posted on 01/06/2003 10:45:09 AM PST by metesky
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To: a_Turk
Did he get reelected then?

Yes, he did! Amazing that speaking the truth only seemed to help him.

78 posted on 01/06/2003 11:02:06 AM PST by FormerLib
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To: ABrit
One thing they all have in common, a history of love for communist dictators, and a hatred of America. What else? Oh yes, they're all Orthodox. What is it they teach in Orthodox Churches? Kow tow to dictators, love slavery?

Well do they? Of course they don't, so what is your point other than the fact that you are anti-Christian Orthodox. And BTW I am not Christian Orthodox, I am Baptist.

I understand that you are Muslim. Since you so easily stereotyped Orthodox countries, why don't you tell us what all Muslim countries have in common.
79 posted on 01/06/2003 4:16:24 PM PST by Michael2001
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To: Michael2001
>>I am Baptist

I am not interested in your or anyone else's religion. I think judging others by their nationality, religion, race or creed is pathetic. It's a sign of a weak mind.

Weak minds are aplenty.

Let those of us who are capable work on loving one another. Maybe there still is time..
80 posted on 01/06/2003 5:22:01 PM PST by a_Turk
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