|
Politics |
`Worse
than a scandal` The Truth about Depleted Uranium (by Robert Fisk)
JUST FOURTEEN months ago, on a bleak, frosty afternoon, I stopped my car beside an old Ottoman bridge in southern Kosovo. It was here, scarcely half a year earlier, that Nato jets had bombed a convoy of Albanian refugees, ripping scores of them to pieces in the surrounding fields. Their jets, I knew, had been firing depleted uranium rounds. And now, on the very spot east of Djakovica where a bomb had torn apart an entire refugee family in a tractor, five Italian Kfor soldiers had built a little checkpoint. Indeed, their armoured vehicle was actually standing on part of the crater in the road.>>> |
The IMF & World Bank – Two of Several Instruments of National Destruction
When an IMF mission goes into a country and requires the destruction of social and economic institutions as a condition for lending money - this is very similar to the physical destruction caused by NATO bombing. The IMF will order the closing down of hospitals, schools and factories. >>> |
History |
Codreanu
and the Iron Guard
"We shall create a spiritual atmosphere, a moral atmosphere, in which the heroic man may be born and on which he can thrive. This hero will lead our people on the road of its greatness." -Corneliu Codreanu >>> |
The
Dutch, the Germans and the Jews
Jan Herman Brinks examines the Dutch myth of resistance and finds collaboration with the Nazis went right to the top.>>> |
Brothers - Slavs |
The
Real Genocide in Yugoslavia
"The omission of Croatia from the conventional Holocaust studies is like a book whose first chapter is torn out." >>> |
new
BULGARIA AND RUSSIA
ARE ALWAYS TOGETHER
Interview with Bulgaria's Defense Minister Dimitr Pavlov. >>> |
The
Media and their Atrocities (Michael Parenti)
For the better part of a decade the U.S. public has been bombarded with a media campaign to demonize the Serbian people and their elected leaders. During that time, the U.S. government has pursued a goal of breaking up Yugoslavia into a cluster of small, weak, dependent, free-market principalities. Yugoslavia was the only country in Eastern Europe that would not dismantle its welfare state and public sector economy. It was the only one that did not beg for entry into NATO. It was--and what's left of it, still is--charting an independent course not in keeping with the New World Order. >>> |
Rodina, 2001