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Pastimes : Kosovo -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Les H who wrote (13086)6/29/1999 1:48:00 PM
From: Andy Thomas  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 17770
 
Hi Les,
Yes Reno has no doubt obstructed justice.

Did anyone pick up on that TAS article several months back about how Freeh was going to start leaking the goods on Clinton?

Andy



To: Les H who wrote (13086)6/29/1999 2:43:00 PM
From: truedog  Respond to of 17770
 
to: Les Horowitz
from: truedog

Re: Reno

I think we know why, RIGHT ?!?!

truedog



To: Les H who wrote (13086)10/4/1999 9:36:00 AM
From: Les H  Respond to of 17770
 
EXPOSED: THE DEADLY LEGACY OF NATO STRIKES IN KOSOVO

AFTER INSISTING throughout its air
bombardment of Yugoslavia that its use of
depleted uranium munitions against Serb forces
posed no hazard to human health, Nato officers in
Kosovo now admit that particles from their shells
may have contaminated soil near targets in
Yugoslavia and could cause "inhalation"
problems, especially for children.

There has been a growing outcry against
munitions containing depleted uranium (DU) - a
waste product of the nuclear industry - since it
was used in armour-piercing projectiles in the
1991 Gulf war. In the eight years since, hundreds
of Iraqis living near the battlefields have died from
mysterious cancers and grossly deformed children
have been born to Iraqi soldiers who fought in the
war. British and American veterans suffering from
Gulf war syndrome suspect that the use of DU
weapons caused their own sickness and cancers.

In briefings to international aid workers in Pristina,
one K-For officer has warned his audience of
"contaminated dust" at the scene of DU munitions
explosions and urged aid officials to stay 150 feet
away from targets hit in Nato air strikes. But
non-governmental organisations have been
amazed to hear that Nato cannot - or will not -
say where it used DU ordnance against Serb
forces. "There is no releasable information about
where it was used and when," a K-For
spokesman told The Independent. He would give
no reason for Nato's refusal to provide these
details.

Officially, K-For warns aid workers to beware of
all Kosovo battle sites - especially the danger
posed by unexploded cluster bombs - but the
records of one major aid organisation in Pristina
show that on 13 and 20 August a K-For officer
was twice asked by United Nations officials
about the dangers of DU projectiles fired by
American A-10 Warthog ground-attack aircraft.
The officer - believed to have been British -
spoke of "the danger of the spread of
contaminated dust".

The Pentagon says that in the 1991 Gulf war,
more than 860,000 DU rounds were fired by
United States and - to a much lesser extent -
British forces. In following years, doctors in
southern Iraq were stunned to find an exponential
increase in child cancers and deformities among
families living near the old battlefields or close to
targets hit by US forces. One Iraqi doctor's
report in Basra last year recorded three babies
born without heads in August along with four with
abnormally large heads, six babies born with no
heads in September and two with short limbs. In
October 1998, another baby was born without a
head and four with oversize heads.

Nor were DU munitions used in Kosovo only
against armour, as Nato claimed. One aid worker
found exploded DU rounds at a defence
installation near Djakovica. "There were no
vehicles there, but I found the tops of the rounds,"
he told me.