Nato Bombing of Kosovo: Humanitarian Intervention or Crime against Humanity? |
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Authors: | Cohn Marjorie |
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Affiliation: | (1) Thomas Jefferson School of Law, 2121 San Diego Avenue, San Diego, CA 92110, USA |
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Abstract: | For 78 days in 1999, NATO forces led by theUnited States bombed Yugoslavia, killinghundreds of its civilians and devastating itsinfrastructure. NATO spokesmen justified thebombardment as ``humanitarian intervention'aimed at halting President Slobodan Milosevic's``ethnic cleansing' of non-Serbs in Yugoslavia. This essay deconstructs NATO's rationalizationsand analyzes other more sinister motives forthe bombing. By containing Yugoslavia, andmaintaining a permanent presence in Kosovo, theUnited States seeks to ensure its access toCaspian Sea oil, and to maintain economichegemony over Europe. U.S. activities inother countries, such as Turkey, corroboratethe non-``humanitarian' motives for the bombingof Yugoslavia. Finally, the essay analyzes whyNATO's so-called ``humanitarian' bombardment ofYugoslavia was rather a ``crime againsthumanity' undertaken in violation ofinternational law. |
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