WASHINGTON, April 15 (Hina) - A delegation of the National Federation of Croat Americans (NFCA) has voiced concern to U.S. officials about what they say is the Hague war crimes tribunal's attempt to rewrite the history of the
conflicts in the former Yugoslavia and to show Croatia as the culprit for the war and not the victim of Serbian aggression.
WASHINGTON, April 15 (Hina) - A delegation of the National Federation
of Croat Americans (NFCA) has voiced concern to U.S. officials about
what they say is the Hague war crimes tribunal's attempt to rewrite
the history of the conflicts in the former Yugoslavia and to show
Croatia as the culprit for the war and not the victim of Serbian
aggression.#L#
The delegation met the U.S. ambassador for war crimes, Pierre-Richard
Prosper, on Monday, complaining about indictments referring to 1995's
Operation Storm, which they said characterised a justified military
operation which liberated occupied territories as a criminal
enterprise.
The delegation, which included NFCA president John Kraljic, also said
the Hague tribunal had often relied on unreliable sources, including
former officials of the self-styled Republic of Serb Krajina, while
collecting evidence against Croatian generals.
The delegation went on to say that NFCA representatives had protested
against the U.S. policy of linking Croatia's admission to NATO to the
extradition of one man, General Ante Gotovina, notably when one
considered Croatia's extensive cooperation with the tribunal.
Citing examples of revising the history of the conflicts in the
region, the NFCA mentioned the recent indictments against Bosnian
Croats, which it said labelled the establishment of the Croat
community of Herzeg-Bosna as a criminal enterprise. Kraljic said
Herzeg-Bosna had been a logical step in the protection of Croats in
Bosnia-Herzegovina at a time when Bosnia was falling apart and the
international arms embargo favoured Bosnian Serbs.
At a meeting with Charles English, director of the State Department
Office for Central and Eastern Europe, the NFCA asked that Croatia's
admission to NATO be not linked to Albania and Macedonia since its
Croatia's political and economic stability made it a better candidate
for NATO entry.
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