ter·ror
ter·ror, noun
Violence
committed or threatened by a group to intimidate or coerce a
population, as for military or political purposes.
- ['American Heritage Dictionary,' 3rd
Edition, from Microsoft Bookshelf '98 CD]
The New York Times
quotes Gen. Michael Short, who directed NATO's three month bombing
of Yugoslavia in 1999:
"These days striking
directly at the Milosevic Government is very much on his mind. While
NATO says it is not fighting against the Serbian people, General Short
also hopes that the distress of the Yugoslav public will undermine
support for the authorities in Belgrade.
"'I think no power to your refrigerator, no gas to your stove, you can't
get to work because the bridge is down -- the bridge on which you held
your rock concerts -- and you all stood with targets on your heads. That
needs to disappear at 3 o'clock in the morning.'"
-- The New York Times,
13 May 1999. Gen. Short was not just talking. NATO intentionally
attacked civilian facilities
including consumer-goods factories, hospitals and homes, killing
thousands. The Times headlined this article, "Crisis in the
Balkans: The Overview; Allied Air Chief Stresses Hitting Belgrade
Sites," thus using the harmless-sounding phrase, "hitting Belgrade
sites," to whitewash Short's stated strategy of targeting civilians
to intimidate or coerce the Yugoslav population
into demanding surrender.
Agence
France Presse quotes Hassan Nasrallah, leader of Hezbollah. From
his televised speech 4 October 2000, at the start of the Palestinian
Arab campaign of suicide bombings of the past six years.
"'Let a
(Palestinian) reach a settler, let him stab him fiercely and let him die
afterwards. They (Israelis) love worldly matters, we love martyrdom. Hit
them in their weak points,' he shouted as thousands chanted: 'Allahu
Akbar,' or God is greatest.
"'The rule is: you
kill and then you die. You will see that the results will be different,'
he said in a fiery speech that immediately drew many live phone calls
from Gaza and Jordan to express 'gratitude' to Nasrallah's stand and
vows to 'follow his heroic path.'
[...]
"'The Falasha
[black African] Jew
will say: I prefer hunger in Ethiopia to knives in Palestine, and the
Russian Jew will say: I prefer to earn 50 dollars a month and then he
will pack his belongings and leave.'"
--
Agence France Presse, October 4 2000. AFP
headlined this dispatch,
"Hezbollah calls for Palestinian armed resistance against
Israel," thus using the heroic-sounding
term "resistance" to whitewash Nasrallah's expressed strategy of
targeting civilians to intimidate or coerce the
Jewish population into fleeing Israel. Nasrallah's group,
Hezbollah, aims to destroy the Jews worldwide. Case in point:
Argentina's General Prosecutor accuses Hezbollah of organizing the
murderous suicide bombing of the
Jewish community center in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Toronto Star reporter's account of an evening
spent in the home of Nasir Oric, commander of Bosnian Islamist
forces in the famous Bosnian town of Srebrenica.
"On a cold and snowy night, I sat in his living room
watching a shocking video version of what might have been called Nasir
Oric's Greatest Hits.
"There were burning houses, dead bodies, severed heads, and people
fleeing.
"Oric grinned throughout, admiring his handiwork.
"'We ambushed them,' he said when a number of dead Serbs appeared on the
screen.
"The next sequence of dead bodies had been done in by explosives: 'We
launched those guys to the moon,' he boasted.
"When footage of a bullet-marked ghost town appeared without any visible
bodies, Oric hastened to announce: 'We killed 114 Serbs there.'
"Later there were celebrations, with singers with wobbly voices chanting
his praises."
--
Toronto Star,'
16 February 1994. The full text is posted at
http://emperors-clothes.com/analysis/oric.htm
The goal of Oric's raids was to
eliminate the Serbian population. His Commander in Chief was
Bosnian Islamic leader Alija Izetbegovic,
hailed by the US
and Iranian governments as a nation-builder. After the war, mass
murderer Oric ran a discotheque
in Tuzla, Bosnia.
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