Ivo Skoric on Thu, 7 Feb 2002 16:09:01 +0100 (CET) |
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[Nettime-bold] Re: RT: The Milosevic Tapes |
Croatia's Globus is beating dead horses. The leaked transcripts of Clinton-Milosevic conversations are obviously a media sensation. But - Milosevic is in jail, Clinton's administration is out, and diplomatic conversations are always cordial. Why doesn't Globus rather investigate how did Enron manage to take over Croatia's power distribution and who in Croatia bears responsibility for that brilliant idea? ivo Date sent: Thu, 7 Feb 2002 09:08:00 -0500 From: "Tim Slater > TranSlater" <TRANSLATER@compuserve.com> Subject: RT: The Milosevic Tapes To: Blind.Copy.Receiver@compuserve.com ----Forwarded Message(s)---- Milosevic Tapes Show Cordial Clinton, Goofy Family RTos 06/02/2002 10:41 Copyright 2002 Reuters Ltd. All rights reserved. The following news report may not be republished or redistributed, in whole or in part, without the prior written consent of Reuters Ltd. By Douglas Hamilton BELGRADE (Reuters) - Slobodan Milosevic had cordial relations with Bill Clinton and was apoplectic when the daily meant to be his mouthpiece savaged the then U.S. president in a bungled editorial, according to transcripts of his phone calls. The leaked transcripts, published by the Croatian weekly Globus, are the current media sensation in the Balkans. Croatian defense ministry sources told Reuters in Zagreb on Wednesday they were authentic excerpts from wiretaps of hundreds of calls recorded by the Croatian military intelligence service, but there has been no comment from Serbia or Milosevic himself. In parts, the scripts read like an afternoon TV soap opera, with the dry wit, fatherly wisdom and weary political woes of the Serbian strongman in the leading role. Milosevic, far from being a bug-eyed, mad dictator, says he is "sick and tired" of seeing himself on television. He is also exasperated by the hill-billy antics of the Bosnian Serbs and fondly sarcastic with members of his dysfunctional family. Newspapers say "the Americans are furious" at the intelligence leak, especially the Clinton quotes. But since the two men had recently shaken hands at the signing of the peace deal for Bosnia, the civilized exchange hardly seems unusual. Milosevic, however, is due to go on trial next week before the U.N. tribunal at The Hague on charges of crimes against humanity and genocide. Speculation is mounting that Clinton and other major Western political figures will be called to testify. UP TO A POINT, SLOBODAN "It's nice to hear your voice," Clinton tells Milosevic in one taped call from Air Force One at the end of a New Year's visit to U.S. troops newly installed in Bosnia in January 1996. The Serbian leader has previously admitted to a top aide he is jealous of Clinton's planned stopover at Zagreb airport to meet Croatian President Franjo Tudjman but has been unable to persuade Clinton to also visit Belgrade. "We support normalization of relations and I know it cannot go ahead without you," the U.S. president stresses during their brief conversation about implementing the Dayton peace accords, which Milosevic helped clinch to end the war in Bosnia. "He spoke really nicely," a gratified Milosevic later tells his sidekick Milan Milutinovic, an indicted co-conspirator who is still at large and serving as president of Serbia. Milutinovic, also known disparagingly to U.S. negotiators as "Tunafish," quips that Clinton must have hid in the plane's toilet to make the call, so as not to be overheard by Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, whom he calls "a real bitch." The next day, Milosevic is stunned to see Politika, the leading pro-government daily in Belgrade, denouncing Clinton as a scandal-tainted draft dodger looking for photo opportunities. When he rings up to blow a fuse, the editor, Dragan Hadzi Antic, has not even read his own paper. In a scene reminiscent of Evelyn Waugh's media satire "Scoop," Milosevic lets rip in street language as Antic cowers. "For Christ's sake! You can't let them do as they please. Politika is considered the mouthpiece of the government and there you go and slag off Clinton!" Milosevic complains. Correcting course drastically, Politika prints an extremely positive editorial about the U.S. president on the following day, a volte face remarked on at the time by opposition media. The previous month, Milosevic saw his triumphant appearance in Paris for the Dayton signing ceremony put at risk by Bosnian Serbs who were defiantly holding two French pilots downed during NATO strikes in the autumn. He complains to army chief of staff Momcilo Perisic that the Bosnian Serbs had always put Belgrade in a terrible negotiating position with their actions. "What the (expletive) do they need these two pilots for? And now they are jerking us around with this. Let them find where the pilots are!" THE SOPRANOS OF SERBIA Records of his domestic phone calls are by turns tender and hilarious, as Milosevic, sounding like the harassed Mafia don played by James Gandolfini in the TV hit "The Sopranos," deals with the overdeveloped egos of his wife, son and daughter. Son Marko, a nightclub owner who has now fled to Central Asia, emerges as a Narcissus obsessed about his jug ears -- which he is going to have surgically corrected -- and his teeth -- which he is going to have replaced. He also plans to buy sets of colored contact lenses to match his clothes. "You're awfully skinny, every guy your age looks that way," Milosevic tells his son in an attempt to head off the ear surgery. "As soon as you fill out everything will fall into place. I looked even worse when I was thin." In January 1997, Marko has a new house with a swimming pool, which he keeps heated to 38 degrees Celsius. "You're a fool, man. That's not healthy," says Milosevic, quickly giving up the argument and passing the phone to "mummy." Daughter Marija, mostly complaining about business problems at her television station, has a new puppy so smart it can almost talk. But Milosevic has other concerns. "Please tell (Serbian TV) to get me off the news bulletin, for chrissakes. I am sick and tired of seeing myself...tell them it's enough...I think God and the people are sick and tired of me. I am too." ----End Forwarded Message(s)---- _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://amsterdam.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold