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Wesley Clark voleva attaccare i russi in Kosovo

1) James Blunt: «In Kosovo sventai la terza guerra mondiale». Il cantautore non obbedì all'ordine di attaccare i soldati russi

2) Ex-UK Officer: Wesley Clark Ordered Attack On Russians In Kosovo

3) Wesley Clark: The Guy Who Almost Started World War III 
(by Stella Jatras - August 23, 2003)


Sui crimini di guerra di cui si è reso responsabile Wesley Clark in Kosovo nel 1999 da generale della NATO - prima di candidarsi (e fallire) con i Democratici alla vicepresidenza USA - abbiamo dato conto innumerevoli volte nel nostro notiziario. In proposito si veda ad esempio:

Wesley Clark fera-t-il demain le contraire de ce qu'il faisait hier?

Wesley Clark War Crimes amply documented

NATO's War of Aggression against Yugoslavia (by Michel Chossudovsky)

Wesley Clark farà domani il contrario di ciò che ha fatto ieri?

DOSSIER: Wesley Clark, criminale di guerra


=== 1 ===


James Blunt: «In Kosovo sventai la terza guerra mondiale»


Il cantautore non obbedì all'ordine di attaccare i soldati russi

LONDRA - Avrebbe sventato la Terza guerra mondiale. Chi sarà mai? Un politico, Un generale? Un agente dei servizi segreti? No, nessuno tra questi. A salvare il mondo fu James Blunt, il cantautore britannico di You 're Beautiful che prima di intraprendere la carriera musicale era un ufficiale della cavalleria, quando, nel 1999 in Kosovo, si rifiutò di obbedire al generale americano Wesley Clark che gli ordinò di attaccare un battaglione di 200 soldati russi. Lo ha raccontato lo stesso Blunt ai microfoni di Bbc Radio 5, aggiungendo che «era una situazione folle»: «Ero l'ufficiale responsabile di una truppa di uomini dietro di me».
LA VICENDA - Blunt, il cui racconto è stato confermato dal generale britannico Mike Jackson, che in quell'occasione si oppose alla decisione di Clark, ha proseguito raccontando come il generale Clark aveva detto loro di raggiungere una pista di atterraggio e di assumerne il controllo, ma i soldati russi erano arrivati prima di loro e «ci puntavano le armi addosso in maniera aggressiva». «Il comando diretto giuntoci dal generale Wesley Clark fu di sopraffarli - racconta il cantautore -. Vennero usate diverse parole che si sembravano strane. Parole come "distruggere" vennero pronunciate alla radio».
CONSEGUENZA DISASTROSE - «Le conseguenze pratiche di questa decisione politica sarebbero state un atto di aggressione nei confronti dei russi» sottolinea il musicista. Blunt non si sentiva di affrontarli, ma il reggimento dei paracadutisti che si trovava insieme a lui era «pronto a dare battaglia». «Ci sono cose che si fanno sapendo che sono giuste e cose che ti senti invece che sono assolutamente sbagliate. Questo senso di giudizio morale viene inculcato nella testa a noi soldati dell'esercito britannico» ha ricordato Blunt, sottolineando che avrebbe disobbedito all'ordine anche se a rischio di finire di fronte ad una corte marziale. Per fortuna, prima che la situazione degenerasse, il generale Jackson intervenne. «Le sue parole esatte furono: "Non voglio che i miei soldati siano responsabili di aver dato inizio alla Terza guerra mondiale" e ci disse: "Perché invece non proseguiamo sulla strada e circondiamo la pista?"», ha raccontato Blunt, dicendosi «assolutamente» sicuro che se le cose fossero andate diversamente le conseguenze sarebbero potute essere disastrose. (fonte: Ansa)

15 novembre 2010(ultima modifica: 16 novembre 2010)


=== 1 ===

http://www.smh.com.au/lifestyle/people/i-stopped-world-war-iii-says-james-blunt-20101115-17tab.html

Sydney Morning Herald
November 15, 2010


I stopped World War III, says James Blunt 


James Blunt says he stopped World War III from happening by disobeying a general's order.

The singer, who served in the British army for six years, told the BBC yesterday he refused an order to seize an airfield during NATO's 1999 intervention in Kosovo after the Russians got to it first.

"It was a mad situation anyway," he told BBC Radio 5Live.

"We had 200 Russians lined up pointing their weapons at us aggressively and we've been told to reach the airfield and take a hold of it."

Blunt was a 25-year-old cavalry officer at that time and the head of his unit, which was leading a column of 30,000 NATO troops.

The Kosovo Force (KFOR) soldiers had entered Kosovo under a UN mandate after Yugoslavia withdrew from the region following a 11-week bombing campaign by NATO.

The Yugoslav troops were trying to suppress Kosovo's ethic Albanians' campaign to split from the country.

"I was given the direct command to overpower the 200 or so Russians who were there.

"I was the lead officer with my troop of men behind us....The soldiers directly behind me were from the Parachute Regiment, so they're obviously game for the fight.

"The direct command [that] came in from General and [NATO Supreme Commander Europe] Wesley Clark was to overpower them. Various words were used that seemed unusual to us. Words such as 'destroy' came down the radio."

But Blunt, who said he was "party to the conversation" about the possible attack, said "we were querying our instruction" as it would have meant fighting the Russians.

"Fortunately, up on the radio came [British] General Mike Jackson, whose exact words at the time were, 'I'm not going to have my soldiers be responsible for starting World War III'.

"And after a couple of days the Russians there said 'hang on we have no food and no water. Can we share the airfield with you?'."

Blunt said he would have defied General Clark's orders even without the support of General Jackson, risking a court martial.

"There are things that you do along the way that you know are right, and those that you absolutely feel are wrong, that I think it's morally important to stand up against, and that sense of moral judgement is drilled into us as soldiers in the British army."

General Clark, who has since retired from the US Army, told the BBC in 2000 that he had cleared the possible attack with then NATO Secretary General Javier Solana.

"He talked about what the risks were and what might happen if the Russians got there first, and he said: 'Of course you have to get to the airport'.

"I said: 'Do you consider I have the authority to do so?' He said: 'Of course you do, you have transfer of authority'."

A senior Russian officer also told the BBC in 2000 that the Russians planned to fly in thousands of soldiers after they occupied the airport.

"Let's just say that we had several airbases ready. We had battalions of paratroopers ready to leave within two hours."

Blunt quit the military to become a singer in 2002. His debut album sold 11 million copies, led by the success of his hit song You're Beautiful.


=== 3 ===

http://www.antiwar.com/orig/jatras12.html

Wesley Clark: The Guy Who Almost Started World War III

by Stella Jatras
August 23, 2003



General Wesley Clark, former Supreme Allied Commander Europe (SACEUR) and Friend of Bill's (FOB) is considering a run for President of these United States. In an AP report of 29 June, former-President William Jefferson Clinton stated that Wesley Clark would make a fine president, if he ran. After all, what are friends for? There is also a grassroots campaign effort to "draft Wesley Clark" for president which states, "We believe America needs a new president. One who can be a voice for common sense and moderation in these dangerous, uncertain times. One with the unquestionable leadership and foreign policy credentials necessary to win in 2004. We believe that General Wesley Clark might just be – the one. That is why we are trying to convince him to seek the Democratic nomination for president."

Let us look at what kind of a president Wesley Clark would make according to CounterPunch of November 12, 1999, "The poster child for everything that is wrong with the GO (general officer) corps," exclaims one colonel, who has had occasion to observe Clark in action, citing, among other examples, his command of the 1st Cavalry Division at Fort Hood from 1992 to 1994.

"At the beginning of the Kosovo conflict, CounterPunch delved into the military career of General Wesley Clark and discovered that his meteoric rise through the ranks derived from the successful manipulation of appearances: faking the results of combat exercises, greasing to superiors and other practices common to the general officer corps. We correctly predicted that the unspinnable realities of a real war would cause him to become unhinged. Given that Clark attempted to bomb the CNN bureau in Belgrade and ordered the British General Michael Jackson to engage Russian troops in combat at the end of the war, we feel events amply vindicated our forecast. 

"With the end of hostilities it has become clear even to Clark that most people, apart from some fanatical members of the war party in the White House and State Department, consider the general, as one Pentagon official puts it, 'a horse's ass.' Defense Secretary William Cohen is known to loathe him, and has seen to it that the Hammer of the Serbs will be relieved of the Nato command two months early."

This is the guy who received the Kosovo Campaign Medal after having been granted a waiver, although according to an article in Stars and Stripes(European addition), no one seems to know who granted the waiver in time for the general to get the first medal awarded. Even though he led the international alliance in its 78-day blitz against Yugoslavia, the waiver was necessary because General Clark's service did not meet the criteria for the award which required service in the actual theater of operation. It appears that Clark made no effort to secure similar waivers for the thousands of service personnel who supported the effort from bases outside the combat zone.

On 17 July 2001, General Wesley Clark was confronted in an often heated exchange by his critics at Border's book store where the general was promoting his book, Waging Modern War.Although one of the axioms of Clark's book is that, "A Political Problem Cannot be Solved by Military Force," what he practiced and advocated in Kosovo was just the opposite. When confronted with questions about the misuse of air power and grossly exaggerating the results as exposed in aNewsweek article titled Kosovo Cover-Up of 15 May 2000, targeting civilian targets as stated by Sen. Joe Lieberman, and consorting with KLA terrorists such as Hashim Thaci and Agim Ceku, General Clark's replies were always the same: the questioner was wrong, Sen. Lieberman was wrong, and Newsweek was wrong. "I went to the presentation very much opposed to everything Clark stood for, but it wasn't until I heard him speak and answer questions that I realized how dangerous a man like this is," writes Col. George Jatras, USAF (Ret).

'THE GUY WHO ALMOST STARTED WORLD WAR III'

IWaging Modern WarGeneral Clark wrote about his fury upon learning that Russian peacekeepers had entered the airport at Pristina, Kosovo, before British or American forces. In the article "The guy who almost started World War III," (Aug. 3, 1999), The Guardian (U.K.) wrote, "No sooner are we told by Britain's top generals that the Russians played a crucial role in ending the West's war against Yugoslavia than we learn that if NATO's supreme commander, the American General Wesley Clark, had had his way, British paratroopers would have stormed Pristina airport, threatening to unleash the most frightening crisis with Moscow since the end of the Cold War."

"I'm not going to start the third world war for you," General Sir Mike Jackson, commander of the international KFOR peacekeeping force, is reported to have told Gen. Clark when he refused to accept an order to send assault troops to prevent Russian troops from taking over the airfield of Kosovo's provincial capital. The Times of London reported on 23 May 2001 in an article titled, "Kosovo clash of allied generals," that "General Sir Michael Jackson [was] told that he would have to resign if he refused to obey an order by the American commander of Nato's forces during the Kosovo war to stop the Russians from seizing control of Pristina airport in June 1999." 

If General Clark had had his way, we might have gone to war with Russia, or at least resurrected vestiges of the Cold War and we certainly would have had hundreds if not thousands of casualties in an ill-conceived ground war

In his article titled, "A Long, Tough Job," which appeared in the Washington Post on 14 September, Clark writes, "And the American public will have to grasp and appreciate a new approach to warfare. Our objective should be neither revenge nor retaliation, though we will achieve both. Rather, we must systematically target and destroy the complex, interlocking network of international terrorism. The aim should be to attack not buildings and facilities but the people who have masterminded, coordinated, supported and executed these and other terrorist attacks.

"Our methods should rely first on domestic and international law, and the support and active participation of our friends and allies around the globe. Evidence must be collected, networks uncovered and a faceless threat given shape and identity."

"Rely on international law"? Clinton and his gangsters broke every international law on the books regarding Yugoslavia. "Evidence must be collected?" Evidence of what? The Serbs certainly did not have weapons of mass destruction; nor did they attack us first; nor were they ever a threat to us. His words ring hollow. 

You can read "Wes" Clark's letter to the National Albanian American Council of 1 November 2002, in which he says, "Let's stay in touch." For an American general who was supposed to be impartial in a civil war, it is no secret that Clark is the Albanian lobby's fair-haired boy. And why not? He delivered Kosovo to them. 

General Clark brags about the fact that not one solder was killed under his command. Even though the Serbs had every opportunity to kill American soldiers, I contend that the Serbs did not want Americans to die at their hands. This was illustrated when Sgt. Christopher Stone of Smiths Creek, Michigan, upon his release, left a note to his prison guards thanking them for treating him with "dignity and respect." The Pentagon declined to release a copy of Stone's note, but a copy was made available to The Associated Press (5 May 1999). The note ended with "Thank you, you are very kind" and "God help you." 

Col. David Hackworth, in his 1999 commentaryDefending America, wrote of Clark: Known by those who've served with him as the Ultimate Perfumed Prince, he's far more comfortable in a drawing room discussing political theories than hunkering down in the trenches where bullets fly and soldiers die. 

Col. Jatras writes that "General Clark is the kind of general we saw too often during the Vietnam War and hoped never to see again in a position of responsibility for the lives of our GIs and the security of our nation. That it happened once again we can thank that other Rhodes scholar from Arkansas."

In this writer's judgement, what this guy is positioning himself for is the VP slot with Hillary running for President. It would be a marriage made in Hell...a Hell for all of us. 

Knowing all the above, why would anyone want as president or VP a guy who was willing to start World War III for the sake of his own ego and self-importance?