Mladic and International Justice: 
		Age of Deception
        
		
        By Eric Walberg
		Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, June 6, 2011
		
Ratko Mladic, the most wanted fugitive of the International 
		Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY), was arrested last week after 
		16 years on the run. As former commander of the Republika Srpska Army 
		from 1992–96, he was indicted by the ICTY following the capture of 
		Srebrenica in July 1995, and charged by ICTY Judge Richard Goldstone 
		with genocide, crimes against humanity and violations of laws and 
		practices of warfare from 1992 to 1995 in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The 
		same indictment charged Radovan Karadzic, president of the Republika 
		Srpska and Mladic’s supreme commander. 
From May 1992, Bosnian 
		Serb forces under the command of Mladic took control of the 
		self-proclaimed Serbian Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina (since 
		renamed Republika Srpska). Thousands of Muslims fled to Bosnia and 
		Herzegovina government-controlled territory including Srebrenica and 
		Sarajevo, and by 1995, after attacks on these areas, 8,000 Bosniaks, 
		primarily Muslim, had been killed. 
The ICTY has tried other 
		Serbs, including Mladic’s deputy Radislav Krstic (sentenced in 2001 to 
		46 years later reduced to 35), Biljana Plavsic (sentenced in 2002 to 11 
		years), Serbia’s ex-president Slobodan Milosevic (died during his trial 
		in 2006), and Momcilo Krajisnik (sentenced in 2008 to 20 years). 
		Karadzic was finally arrested in Belgrade in 2008. His trial began in 
		2009, but he refuses to acknowledge the jurisdiction of the court or 
		enter a plea, claiming there is a conspiracy against him. 
Crimes 
		were committed in the break-up of Yugoslavia, as is always the case in a 
		civil war. But the Mladices were pawns in a geopolitical game in the 
		Balkans, with the main actors in European capitals and in Washington. 
		Milosevic’s self-defence is the stuff of legend, and Karadzic called the 
		tribunal a “court of NATO” disguised as a court of the international 
		community.
Even ignoring the criticism that these trials are in 
		effect show trials by the victors, if the ICTY is truly impartial, the 
		fact remains that charges similar to the ones against Mladic and 
		Karadzic can be levelled word-for-word at US president George W Bush for 
		“violations of laws and practices of warfare” in undertaking an illegal 
		war against Iraq. Egypt’s Mohamed ElBaradei has done precisely that, 
		both in his memoirs The Age of Deception: Nuclear Diplomacy in 
		Treacherous Times and on US television, where he bravely charged that 
		Bush administration officials should face international criminal 
		investigation for the “shame of a needless war” in Iraq. 
And 
		just as Mladic will be prosecuted for ethnic cleansing and killing “on 
		political, racial and religious grounds”, so should be the entire 
		political elite of Israel during the past six decades, for blatant 
		ethnic cleansing “on political, racial and religious grounds”. Many 
		Europeans and even a few Americans have tried to do just that by 
		launching civil suits against various Israeli and American politicians 
		and military officers in recent years. Bush, for one, has been notably 
		absent from Europe in drumming up sales for his own memoirs Decision 
		Points.
There is no International Tribunal for the United States 
		and/or Israel, and little likelihood of this happening. On whether 
		former British prime minister Tony Blair could be tried for war crimes, 
		Hans Blix, who headed the UN inspection team to investigate Iraq’s 
		supposed WMDs, said, “Well, yes, may be so. It’s not very likely to 
		happen.” He testified to the illegality of the war at the British Iraq 
		War Inquiry board last year but to no avail. Attempts to impeach Bush 
		were similarly brushed aside by Congress.
However, citizens’ 
		arrests and legal measures by Palestinians, Iraqis and Westerners in 
		European courts will continue — at least until Zionist forces in Europe 
		succeed in pushing through legislation protecting the criminals, as is 
		presently in the works in Britain.
Mladic’s forces “seized and 
		held over 200 UN staff members as hostages … to deter further air 
		strikes in those areas where the hostages were being held,” the 
		indictment states. But what about the dozens of UN peacekeepers that 
		Israel has targetted and killed since the first UN force rushed in to 
		put out the serial fires lit by Israel from 1948 on? As it invaded Egypt 
		in 1967, Israeli bombers killed 14 UN peacekeepers stranded there, 
		without any fallout. “Some of the hostages were assaulted and otherwise 
		maltreated during their captivity,” the indictment of Mladic states. I’m 
		sure the ghosts of those UN peacekeepers would much prefer to have been 
		merely maltreated. 
What would a comparable indictment of the US 
		and Israel sound like? ElBaradei estimated that hundreds of thousands of 
		Iraqis have needlessly died due to the invasion. Israel has ethnically 
		cleansed hundreds of thousands of Palestinians, killed tens of 
		thousands, jailed and tortured more tens of thousands as political 
		prisoners. Mladic’s crimes pale in comparison.
The ICTY was an ad 
		hoc tribunal set up by the UN Security Council in 1993, reminiscent of 
		the Nuremberg tribunal following WWII to try Nazi war criminals. It 
		functions in tandem with the ICC, the world court proposed in 1919 but 
		only ratified in 2002 following the end of the Cold War. Since then, the 
		ICC is the body that investigates crimes against humanity or illegal 
		wars where local courts are found wanting. 
Given the inability 
		of US and Israel to face up to their crimes, the ICC would therefore be 
		the appropriate body to prosecute Americans and Israelis, but they are 
		conveniently not members, unlike all of South America, half of Africa, 
		all of Europe, even the Palestinian National Authority. 
The US 
		has blackmailed and bullied any country it could to sign so-called 
		“Article 98 agreements”, supposedly providing immunity to US citizens in 
		those countries from any indicts by the world court. In 2003, the US 
		stopped military aid to 35 offending countries (among them nine European 
		countries). In 2005, Angola became the 100th country to cave in to US 
		pressure. Amnesty International and the European Commission Legal 
		Service argue that these agreements are not valid, though no one has yet 
		dared to test that claim. 
So far the International Cricket 
		Council (excuse me, the International Criminal Court) has undertaken six 
		investigations — all in Africa, the latest being in Libya, or what’s 
		left of it after more than two months of NATO bombing. While NATO 
		countries led by France and Britain pursue a clearly illegal war against 
		Libya, the ICC bizarrely charges not them but Libya leader Muammar 
		Gaddafi and his son Saif Al-Islam — the victims of the Europeans’ 
		criminal invasion — with crimes against humanity. This, despite the cozy 
		relationship enjoyed by Britain, France and the hapless Gaddafis until a 
		few months ago. The ICC is the empire’s watchdog rather than its 
		conscience, let alone the world’s conscience.  
Referring to 
		Iraq, though he could just as easily been referring to the destruction 
		of Yugoslavia or Palestine, El-Baradei asks, “Do we, as a community of 
		nations, have the wisdom and courage to take the corrective measures 
		needed, to ensure that such a tragedy will never happen again?” Sadly, 
		the answer is no. Again under UN auspices, Judge Goldstone attempted to 
		bring Israel to justice after its invasion of Gaza in 2009, but ended up 
		running for cover after yet another illegal US-Israeli war — this time 
		of words — against a supposedly “self-hating Jew”.
		
*** 
Eric Walberg can be reached at
		http://ericwalberg.com/. You can 
		order his book Postmodern Imperialism: Geopolitics and the Great Games 
		at 
		http://claritypress.com/Walberg.html