Sunday, March 19, 2006

WE'VE MOVED

GOZKINO GOES PRO!!!!

www.gozkino.com

With this last post I say farewell to all the crap Blogger has been giving me forever. Long live GOZKINO! Don't forget to donate to cover hosting costs :)

Ein sozialisticher Grüße,

Erich

Thursday, March 16, 2006

How the media lied about Milosevic's 1989 speech in Kosovo

Being in Spain, I am unfortunately subject to the almost complete demonisation of the Serbs as a people and as a nation everywhere in the press. It feels like taking a walk in Albanian Kosovo what with all the anti-Serb 'news reports' and the ethinc slurs.

Western media, with absolutely every other crisis pertaining to a nation, do not label the nation as a whole. They have never labelled Americans as belicists as a whole. They have never labelled Italians Berlusconites. They have never labelled Palestinians or Albanians as terrorists. And this is positive. However, Western media finds a great amount of boldness when talking about Serbs in general, especially in light of Milosevic's recent death.

If you follow this closely, you are bound to find quick biographies of Milosevic in the newspapers. Doubtless there will be reference to a 'ultra-nationalistic' speech made by Milosevic in 1989 in Kosovo to 'incite hatred against muslims'.

With all the different 'quotes' going around, it will soon turn out Milosevic's speech was about two days long.

I invite you, the reader, to take a look at the original BBC News translation of the speech, made ad hoc on the field in Kosovo.


Milosevic's speech on a field in Kosovo, 1989


As much resentment as I may have for Milosevic for being a filthy communist thief who destroyed his country's economy by embezzling public funds, this speech is one of the most brilliant speeches one could ever give in a 'multi-ethnic' society such as 1989 Yugoslavia.

Milosevic called for forgetting the details of the battle, and for examining the factors that caused the Serbs to lose. Factors such as a lack of unity among the leadership. Milosevic called for equal rights of every citizen, irrespective of "national affinity" or religion. It is admirable for a leader of a federal nation to make this kind of speech without resorting to cheap nationalistic ploys to gain personal power, which is something Western media claimed Milosevic did.

One of the best commentaries of the situation can be found at hirhome.com, here. The contrast between Western and Albanian media 'quotes' and the real speech are so striking one wonders whether we are not in a Soviet police state. It is understandable that the Albanian media would be so critical of the speech. As a speech calling for unity of Yugoslav ethincities and for the unity of the federal state with equality among all, Albanian imperialism (as ridiculous as it may sound) in Kosovo and Macedonia was threatened.

Finally, I cannot leave without quoting a reference to the brilliant and critically acclaimed book 'To Kill a Nation: The Attack on Yugoslavia' by Michael Parenti. He is one of the few but admirable journalists and historians in the West who go to any bother of taking news as it came with a pinch of salt. Michael deserves a Nobel Peace Prize for his brilliant work on uncovering the real goals behind having a 'genocidical' Serbia.

To finalise this meeek post, I would like to propose a toast to:

Michael Parenti *clink*
Francisco Gil-White *clink
The Emperor's New Clothes team for providing an objective and critical source of media *clink*
The Serb people. There are few peoples who have endured as much as the Serbs during the entire course of their history. As much as the Serbs are mortally hated by many for purely racist reasons, they hold steadfast in the face of bullshit. Admirable. I hope one day the ridicule over the Balkan Wars will be acknowledged and Serbia be recognised as a victim of sever crap from NATO. *clink*

Ein sozialisticher grüße,

Erich

Sunday, March 12, 2006

New Style, Same Rules

I fiddled with the CSS template. Hopefully I'll be able to raise some funds to get my own domain and hosting service eventually to have a bit more power over my blog.

So remember to Paypal GOZKINO's subversive media activities.

It has come to my attention that some people enjoy GOZKINO from work and therefore they don't have RSS readers installed. I suggest you take a look at the various services I offer on the sidebar for RSS aggregation from websites. Bloglines and Google are quite good for newbies. Otherwise, simply post your email in the comments - I mean riots - and I'll fix it so you get an email telling you everytime GOZKINO updates.

In any case, continue to enjoy GOZKINO, and if you have any comments on the 'new' look, post a riot and I'll see to it that you get sent to Siberia.

Ein sozialisticher grüße,

Erich

Saturday, March 11, 2006

Who's that? Is it - Yep, that's Holsbruck, everyone take cover

Everyone remember Holsbruck? Worked under the Clinton Administration? Accused the Serbs of outright genocide (that no-one has ever proved)? As anti-Serb as anyone can get (except for Hitler, of course, who hated Slavs in general a lot).

Well, I think I see his sillouhette (Please send typos via snail mail to: GOZKINO Customer Service, The Kremlin, 113096, Moscow FL, USA) over the horizon. Wanna know why? Please, keep reading (and don't forget to donate through PayPal to sponsor GOZKINO's activities).

From BBC.

Four Albanians have been kidnapped in Afghanistan by Taliban guerilla. Talk about Random!

Knowing Holsbruck, or even the despicable Carla del Ponte, I would wager a hefty pint of an alchoholic beverage based on barley that they're going to charge straight up and call the Talibans 'Serbs'.

As a retaliation I'm going to charge right up with them and pull the third finger.

As for the Albanians? I hate falling into stereotypes, but Albania is Europe's biggest heroin importer. By a large margin. Albanian Mafias in the rest of Europe basically do that, import Afghan heroin and smash cars into jeweleries (presumably to steal away the contents of said jeweleries). I insist, I hate stereotypes, but here we have four random Albanians (BBC fails to mention whether they are reporters, presumably indicating they are not) in Kandahar. I would wager another hefty pint of beverage that there are cheaper and more inviting touristical destinations for Albanians closer to Albania. Am I trying to say that the four Albanians were buying poppy-based drugs? Maybe. In the absence of information, I will assume the logical.

So a voodoo doll to Holsbruck and to del Ponte. And a voodoo crop (?) to Afghan poppy which finds its way to Europe. Couldn't the troops there do something useful and burn all of that crap as long as it takes?

Ein sozialisticher grüße,

Erich

Finally The US can Escape - Carla Ponte Has No Job

Milosevic was found dead in his cell earlier today. Now him and Babic are both dead, which presents the US with a perfect opportunity.

From BBC

Naturally, there is always the possbility that they were executed. How outrageous is this, after all? I mean, the Tribunal is masterminded by a country which is capable of organising a coup d'etat in a South American country to put a fascist in power.

What does this imply? Well, for four years of trial there has not been a single piece of evidence against Babic or Milosevic. It has been impossible to find them guilty of anything other than being middle aged men, even with their microphones turned off every time they tried to say something in defense.

So, with these two out of the way, the US is now free to continue pursuing their ridiculous allegations that they were genocides forever after, and maybe eventually place a couple of US Air Bases in Serbia, which was the Clinton's Administration's goal all along (so far there are none, especially after Milosevic declined the US demand in 1991).

With no more people left to try, what can the US do? Maybe it could start by trying Bosnian Mujaydeens and Albanian terrorists. But this would be too much of an admission that they were wrong in their accusations that the Serbs were mass murderers and the rest of the area were victims. So they go free to do as they will, sponsor al Qaeda all they want, pull into Europe as much Afghan heroin as they can get their hands on, and give bin Laden all the Bosnian passports he needs (remember that during 11S bin Laden travelled with a legitimately issued Bosnian passport).

So in inauguration of a new voodoo section of Gozkino, I dedicate the first voodoo doll to Carla del Ponte. Now she no longer has a job. She no longer has to convince a rigged trial that Milosevic is Hitler's son (which she failed to do in four years of trial). She can burn in hell and convince all the little demons down there all she wants. Dow there she'll find Milosevic filed under 'Extorsion' and 'Embezzlement', but not under 'Murderer' or under 'Assasin'. Fuck her.

The second voodoo doll goes to Clinton, who can burn in hell for eternity for completely fucking to pieces a country which was doing so well like Yugoslavia in 1990.

And to all the Bosnian Muhajdeens and the Albanian terrorists, who continue their gradual ethnic cleansing of their newly found territories, they can go and get sodomised by Satan himself, I wouldn't give a fleeting shit. Voodoo doll to all of them.

I might as well say hi to Babic, Krajina War leader, for holding strong in face of aggression, and for keeping his people as safe as he could. You're not a murderer, there are no victims under your name.

And finally, a voodoo doll to Milosevic, for being such a corrupt motherfucker. But not a genocide. I'll be damned if the truth ever surfaces.

Ein sozialisticher grüße,

Erich

200 of us are missing

200 of us are not with us today. 200 of us will not awake today and go about their lives. 200 of us will not awake any more to see the skies above Madrid today.

For those who claim there is no clash of civilisations coming our way: 200 of us will not stand up in protest. For those who wish to back down in face of terror: 200 of us will not stand to fight. For those who use 200 deaths as political footballs: 200 of us will not stand to stop you.

Today is the second anniversary of the 11-M Madrid train bombings. 200 innocent commuters left us bewildered, aghast, but we stand resolute in our bravery and in our decisiveness. We will not buckle. We will not allow the guardians of our State blindfold us. We will not allow barbarians to soften our spirits.

Two years ago, an entire nation wept for the loss of 200 people. Today, the rest of us refuse to forget. We refuse to stand back and let our lives be changed by pigs. Today, we are all madrileños

A toast to Madrid, and to 200 people who are not here to see the world today. *clink*

Ein sozialisticher grüße,

Erich

Wednesday, March 08, 2006

A Bunch Of Turks Are Stuck In Time

From The Times

"An extraordinary family who walk on all fours are being hailed as the breakthrough discovery which could shed light on the moment Man first stood upright.
Scientists believe that the five brothers and sisters found in Turkey could hold unique insights into human evolution.
The Kurdish siblings, aged between 18 and 34 and from the rural south, 'bear crawl' on their feet and palms."


The mind boggles on this issue.

Timewarpfamilybbc070306 450X298
These people are apparently genetically incapable of standing upright. In other words, these people are not suffering from a disease or a genetic mysfunction - their DNA is effectively stuck 100,000 years ago. This will apparently provide interesting insight into the genetic evolution of man being able to stand upright.

Meanwhile, this family's intelligence has evolved enough to provide for religion (as pictured), but not yet enough for 'hand-shoes' to protect the palms (soles?) of their hands.

I do not want to know how they perform their toilet duties.

Eon sozialisticher grüße,

Erich

Sunday, March 05, 2006

Wow, Commie-nism at its best

Statement from the, beleive it or not, Iraqi Communist Party.

From the doubtful news source People's Weekly World

Statement of the Iraqi Communist Party

In yet another evil and criminal attempt by the enemies of Iraq, the enemies of national unity, a gang of criminals carried out a bomb attack on the shrines of Imams Ali Al-Hadi and Hassan Al-Askari, in Samaraa. The aim is to ignite the flames of sectarian sedition among the Iraqi people and destroy their national unity that we all strive to preserve. The loss of this unity would mean the loss of Iraq, as a land, a people and a civilization.

While expressing strongest condemnation of this criminal act, we call upon all our people, of all religious sects and nationalities, to remain resilient and show a high sense of responsibility, and shun vengeful tendencies. The criminals must not be allowed to achieve their aim of destroying Iraq and shedding more blood. Every effort must be made to preserve our national unity, so that we can eliminate terrorism and terrorists, and continue our march to build a democratic and prosperous Iraq.

We also call upon the government to shoulder its full responsibility by pursuing the criminals, apprehending and putting them to trial to receive just punishment, as well as ensuring security.

Let us all unite and stand firmly together against the terrorists and murderers, and those behind them, and all those who strive to destroy our national unity. Let us work with full determination and perseverance to foil this hellish scheme, that has failed up to now, and must continue to fail. We must double our efforts to preserve and consolidate Iraqi national unity, build a tolerant peaceful Iraq that enjoys peace, harmony and democracy.

-----------

National unity?????? Are these communists we're talking to or what? Naturally, the American Communist Party (if it still exists other than a couple of disgruntled car factory workers) stands behind this statement. If the Comintern released a statement criticising the Iraqi Commie Party, you can sure as hell be sure that the CPUSA would retract its backing of IraqiCP.

Beh, not much more to point out, other than a galloping hypocrisy coming from, no surprises here, commies.

Ein sozialisticher grüße,

Erich

Hotlink image

Use the following image to link to GOZKINO:



Ein sozialishticher grüße,

Erich

Saturday, March 04, 2006

Ahmadenijad=Lenin=Hitler

Good stuff I scooped off the interweb.




All three are exactly the same, only (luckily) Ahmadenijad stlil hasn't managed to get to killing all the Jews he'd like to.

Ein sozialisticher grüße,

Erich

Cox and Forkum are clear minded thinkers

Couple of jewels from their editorial cartoons:


Coxandforkum.com









So give their site a visit. Coxandforkum.com.

To them *clink*

Ein sozialisticher grüße,

Erich

Friday, March 03, 2006

Bush pulls a clever move

I repeat: I do not give a rat's behind about what Bush is or is not doing. From my privilieged position as an exiled statesman, all I see is someone who went to great pains to get rid of a dirty dictator and is being threatened often to death by Michael Moorists for one reason or another.

He is a stupid man, as I have said before, but whoever runs his foreign policy hit it on the head of the nail fair and square this time.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/4770946.stm

From BBC News:

"Our agreement will strengthen the security and the economy of both our nations," the US president said."

Now, this agreement involves India freezing its nuclear plan while Pakistan goes forward unhindered. Can you seriously trust a man who forced his way into power, head of a violent Muslim republic, with a couple dozen nuclear warheads? I wouldn't, especially if this man's name is something as untrustworthy and ridiculously funny like 'Pervez'.

"India is better off because America has a close relationship with Pakistan," said Bush"

OK children, analogy time. Gather around and listen. This is like saying "Greece is better off because Germany has ties with Turkey." Maybe better: "Kevin Bacon is better off because Sharon Stone has a close relationship with her producer".

Fuck it, I'm trying to say it's irrelevant.

The truth is, India is a noble nation which has been subject to many injustices. From where I stand, not only is Kashmir undisputably a part of India, but so is Pakistan. Which is now led by a man called Pervez and has a small moustache.

Finishing off, a toast to India *clink* and a toast to Pervez's moustache *splash*. May it grow long and curly and fall off next time Pakistan 'arrests' an Al-Qaeda agent.

I leave you be to arrive at your won conclusions.

Ein sozialisticher grüße,

Erich

Wednesday, March 01, 2006

Sign it people, just sign it

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/4763520.stm

From BBC.

"Salman Rushdie is among a dozen writers to have put their names to a statement in a French weekly paper warning against Islamic "totalitarianism".
The writers say the violence sparked by the publication of cartoons satirising the Prophet Muhammad shows the need to fight for secular values and freedom"

Thank you.

I would also like to raise my glass to the following people, who are all signatories of the statement:

  • Salman Rushdie - Indian-born British writer with fatwa issued ordering his execution for The Satanic Verses

  • Ayaan Hirsi Ali - Somali-born Dutch MP

  • Taslima Nasreen - exiled Bangladeshi writer, with fatwa issued ordering her execution

  • Bernard-Henri Levy - French philosopher

  • Chahla Chafiq - Iranian writer exiled in France

  • Caroline Fourest - French writer

  • Irshad Manji - Ugandan refugee and writer living in Canada

  • Mehdi Mozaffari - Iranian academic exiled in Denmark

  • Maryam Namazie - Iranian writer living in Britain

  • Antoine Sfeir - director of French review examining Middle East

  • Ibn Warraq - US academic of Indian/Pakistani origin

  • Philippe Val - director of Charlie Hebdo



That list has almost certainly become a hit list for Mecca Authorities, but I wish them the best of luck. Through their zeal and enlightment, I hope they pave the path for the world while apologists and Chamberlainists continue their 'Alliance of Civilisations'.

"After having overcome fascism, Nazism, and Stalinism, the world now faces a new global threat: Islamism," the manifesto says."

How much different is Islamism to Stalinism? Not at all. In fact, when you tear away all the adornments like insignias and decorations, all of the aforementioned systems are exactly the same.

If there is one religion which is truly, as Marx has said, an opiate of the masses, it is the current political party which calls itself Islam, in it's tremendously succesful means of brainwashing the native population and turning them against the West (and here comes the brilliance of the plan), and freezing integration - what's more, promoting the adaptation of host countries to the immigrant's way of life, leading to situations such as were witnessed in France (aka car burnings).

I would also like to mention the protesters in a certain American university, who wanted to deny a college student group of the right to discuss the cartoon issue. From CNN:



*it gets better*:

"The Muslim Student Union's Osman Umarji accused the evening program of inciting Islamophobia."

This is like Stalin in 1946 accusing Churchill of promoting 'Stalinophobia' with his 'Iron Curtain' speech.

To the Muslim Student's Union:

Presumably you have come to study in the US to arrive in a land of freedom, tolerance and opportunities, the likes of which you cannot witness in Muslim nations such as Iran, Saudi Arabia, etc. etc. So get used to the freedom of speech or go home.

Ein sozialisticher grüße, and a toast to the signatories of the Statement *clink*,

Erich

We expandify

www.blogcharm.com/gozkino

GOZKINO Media is a natural extension of GOZKINO which takes the political review of mass media in the market to a new level. Check it out, go nuts, read our reviews.

Ein sozialisticher grüße,

Erich

Tuesday, February 28, 2006

The Bosnia Calculation: How many have died? Not as many as you might think.

"
George Kenney

The NY Times Magazine, April 23, 1995

- George Kenney, a Washington writer, resigned from the State Department int 1992 to protest United States policy Yugoslavia. -

ALL TOLD, HOW MANY PEOPLE HAVE DIED IN BOSNIA? For news organizations and policy specialists, the easy answer is 200,000. As someone who have followed the conflict closely from the begining in a proffesional capacity, I'm not convinced. Bosnia isn't the Holocaust or Rwanda; it's Lebanon.

A relatively large number of white people have been killed in gruesome fashion in the first European blowup since World War II. In response, the United Nations has set up the first international war crimes trial since Nuremberg. But that doesn't mean the Bosnian Serbs' often brutal treatment of Bosnian Muslims is a unique genocide, as the United Nations and the Bosnian Muslims have charged.

There can be no minimizing of what the Serbs have done in Bosnia. Their punishment of the Muslims far outweighs any Muslim transgression. For there to be peace in the long run there must jusitice. Yet the more serious the charge, the more effort we must make to get the facts right. We should think twice before revising historical fact into a fearful epic that plants the seeds for a future war.

By my count, the number of fatalities in Bosnia's war isn't 200,000 but 25,000 to 60,000 -- total from all sides. What surprises me is not that the popular figure is so inflated -- informed people can and will argue about it for some time to come -- but that it has been so widely and uncritically accepted.

The notion of hundreds of thousands of deaths emerged late in 1992, when "ethnic cleansing" was in full swing and journalists suspected the State Department of concealing its knowledge of a Bosnian killing field. It didn't. Its real failure was knowing nothing and not wanting to know.

In August 1992, shortly before I resigned as acting head of the State Department's Yugoslav desk, I wrote a memo suggesting that we send teams to investigate, and was rebuffed. At that time my most dire concern was a C.I.A. report predicting up to 150,000 deaths through the winnter if the West did nothing. Leaked in September, the report seemed tame next to a prediction of 400,000 deaths, made by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Special Envoy, Jose-Maria Mendiluce, a man, one senior United Nations official says, "gifted with theatrical flair." As it turned out, the winter was exceptionally mild. Few died.

"By my count, the number of fatalities in Bosnia's war isn't 200,000 but 25,000 to 60,000 -- total from all sides. What surprises me is not that the popular figure is so inflated -- informed people can and will argue about it for some time to come -- but that it has been so widely and uncritically accepted."


Nevertheless, revelations of ethnic cleansing, combined with the C.I.A. and United Nations predictions, created expectations. Images of a killing field lingered, personified in grim photographs of skeletal Muslim men in Serbian concentration camps. That backdrop made it easy for Haris Silajdzic, then Bosnia's Foreign Minister, to give the first big boost in the number of deaths. In December 1992, he told journalists that there were 128,444 dead on the Bosnian side (induding Croats and Serbs loyal to the Bosnian Government). He evidently got the figure by adding together the 17,466 confirmed dead and the 111,000 that the Bosnian Institute of Public Health had estimated to be missing. An able politician, Silajdzic understood the benefit of apparent slaughter. In the West, it meant political support; in the Islamic world, much-needed donations to lubricate the Bosnian war machine.

At first, such high numbers didn't take. But on June 28, 1993 -- as near as I can pin it down -- the Bosnian Deputy Minister of Information, Senada Kreso, told journalists that 200,000 had died. Knowing her from her service as my translator and guide around Sarajevo, I believe that this was an outburst of naive zeal. Nevertheless, the major newspapers and wire services quickly began using these numbers, unsourced and unsupported (Mea culpa: I used the figure of 200,000 dead in articles and speeches for a while in 1993.) An inert press simply never bothered to learn the origins of the numbers it reported.

"An able politician, Silajdzic understood the benefit of apparent slaughter. In the West, it meant political support; in the Islamic world, much-needed donations to lubricate the Bosnian war machine."


Today, Silajdzic, now the Prime Minister, routinely talks about genocide and the "Bosnian holocaust" with nary an eyebrow raised in his audience. But there was no holocaust. For Bosnia, an area slightly larger than Tennessee, to have suffered more than 200,000 deaths would have meant roughly 200 deaths per day, every day, for the three-plus years of war. But the fighting rarely, if ever, reached that level. After the Serbs carved out the areas they wanted in 1992, fighting declined steadily, reaching a virtual stalemate by autumn 1993. Now on the front lines, combatants often shoot past each other, tacitly understanding that in a low-intensity war nobody wants to get hurt.

Outright warfare, therefore, has probably resulted in deaths measured in the tens of thousands, induding civilians. If there were huge numbers of other dead, they would be accounted for only by systematic killing in concentration camps or the complete, as- yet-undiscovered extermination of entire villages.

Neither the International Committee of the Red Cross nor Western governments have found evidence of systematic killing. Nobody, moreover, has found former detainees of concentration camps who witnessed systematic killing. Random killing took place in the camps, but not enough to account for tens of thousand of dead. And, apart from the few well-known massacres nobody sees signs of missing villages, either.

An inert press simply never bothered to learn the origins of the numbers it reported.


The Red Cross has confirmed well under 20,000 fatalities on all sides. Extrapolating from that and from the observations of experienced investigators in Bosnia, its analysts estimate total fatalities at 20,000 to 30,000, with a small chance that they may exceed 35,000.

Analysts at the C.I A. and the State Department's Bureau of Intelligence and Research put fatalities in the tens of thousands but hesitate to give a more precise range until the war is over. European military intelligence officers with extensive experience in Bosnia estimate fatalities in the mid tens of thousands. From these and other estimates by generally reliable relief workers, and given the arguments about the physical impossibility of high numbers, I arrived at the range of 25,000 to 60,000 fatalities.

The question of how many fatalities there have been in Bosnia is far from academic. Many wars, maybe all -- but this war especially -- are fought for prestige and honor, not rational reasons. Many atrocities in the former Yugoslavia have been justified as revenge for killings during World War II. Yet the number of fatalities in Yugoslavia during World War II was also never documented. In fact, interpreting those numbers today defines your brand of ethnic nationalism. Thus, people in the Balkans think the number of fatalities makes a difference -- and since they do, so should we. The difference could be between getting a settlement in our lifetime and waiting generations. Not to break the cycle is a grattuitous, even immoral error.

" The Red Cross has confirmed well under 20,000 fatalities on all sides. Extrapolating from that and from the observations of experienced investigators in Bosnia, its analysts estimate total fatalities at 20,000 to 30,000, with a small chance that they may exceed 35,000."


Red Cross officials, normally secretive, surprised me by warmly embracing a public airing of the question. Their worry is that obsessive attention to Bosnia will come at the expense of the world's ability to allocate humanitarian resources among similar or more serious wars. Of perhaps greater long-term concern to them is that wild inflation of Bosnian fatalities will discredit reports of subsequent atrocities.

There is always a tension between moral outrage at particular horrors and the effort to put them into perspective. Michael Berenbaum, director of the Holocaust Research Institute at the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, deftly explains: "The Holocaust has raised our tolerance for ordinary evil. This forces people to make their own plight more Holocaust-like." Bosnia was an ideal candidate for such an image make-over, since in the early confusion of ethnic cleansing and concentrauon camps American uncertainty about what was happening made our worst fears seem quite real.

Those who sounded the early alarm profoundly believe that "Never again" means "Never again." Preventive concern, however, evolved perversely into a distorted picture. My sense is that the chorus warning of genocide gradually got taken over by those who sought to stampede the United Sutes into unilaterally lifting the arms embargo against the Muslims. The activists half-succeeded. Though there has been no unilateral lifting, recent polls suggest that a large majority of Americans believe that the Serbs committed genocide. It may already be too late to change that perception.

Magnitude matters. As Berenbaum notes genocide with a small "g" (in which we might lump Bosnia with East Timor, Liberia, Guatemala, Sudan and Chechnya, among a score of others) is quite different from Genocide with a big "G" (the Holocaust -- and, perhaps, Cambodia or Rwanda). To their discredit, some advocates of lifting the embargo played down the difference. The emotional resonance of Genocide obscured the dismal possibility that arming the Muslims could inflame the war, killing far more than had already been killed: after a supposed 200,000 deaths, it didn't matter if additional tens of thousands died so long as we did what was "right." Like the cruel Balkan leaders themselves, advocates of arming the Muslims became strikingly callous.

In 1995, lacking the bodies, the charge of Genocide has worn thin. It seems to have almost become sensationalism for its own sake. Apart from any question of the number of fatalities, journalists have begun a hot little debate about how "objective" coverage of Bosnia has been, about whether it has tended to favor the Muslims. Several journalists with whom I spoke expressed the uneasy feeling that something was obviously wrong. In the words of the writer David Rieff, "Bosnia became our Spain," though not for political reasons, which is what he meant, but rather because too many journalists dreamed self-aggrandizing dreams of becoming Hemingway.

Who could do a reliable count? Probably not the State Department. Unfortunately, Secretary of Stae Warren Christopher folded under pressure from the interventionists and began-however furtively -- charging the Serbs with Genocide. Having thus taken sides, the State Department can hardly be expected to investigate reliably.

"My sense is that the chorus warning of genocide gradually got taken over by those who sought to stampede the United Sutes into unilaterally lifting the arms embargo against the Muslims. The activists half-succeeded. Though there has been no unilateral lifting, recent polls suggest that a large majority of Americans believe that the Serbs committed genocide."


The United Nations is well placed, but its officials have every incentive to duck controversy. Western govermnents have repeatedly shrugged off any responsibility for an authoritative count. The news media can report figures only from others; it does not have the access needed to compile its own numbers. And the Balkan people can't be trusted.

The only other possible sources are nongovernmental organizations like the Red Cross, and their counting criteria vary greatly. But a neutral source is important. As long as the world tosses around words like "genocide" so loosely, the present tragedy will revolve endlessly. Counts count. "