MENEM TENIA RAZON : ES UN ASUNTO DE ESTADO
En nuestros analisis sabíamos que Estados Unidos sabía de los enviío e hizo en el mejor de los casos la Vista Gorda.
Ahora por supuesto Oficialemte los desmienten. Pero esto Prueba que no es cierto, y que la inforacion esta en el congreso de Estados Unidos -El jez podría Pedir esas Pruebas o investigciones
Habría Una comisión del Senado de Estados Unidos que comenzó una investigación ( Parecida a la de las Cajas de Carrió y que tanto revuelo causó en Argentina) ,
From: "Humblues" <xxxxxx@tutopia.com> ( censurado por seprin)
To: <info@seprin.com>
Subject: El " Big Brother" lo sabía.
Date: Tue, 12 Jun 2001 09:00:02 -0300
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U.S. Admits Turning Blind Eye To Allied Arms Shipments To.
By John Pomfret
and David B. Ottaway
The Washington Post
WASHINGTON
Arms smuggling to Bosnia and Croatia was larger and more complex than the
shipments from Iran and Turkey recently acknowledged by the Clinton
administration, and involved such U.S. allies as Pakistan, Malaysia, Saudi
Arabia and Argentina, according to U.S. and Bosnian officials.
U.S. officials learned in 1992 than Iran had opened a smuggling route to
Bosnia with the assistance of Turkey, two years before a controversial
decision by President Clinton to give Croatia a diplomatic "green light" for
the shipments, national security adviser Anthony Lake said Friday. Bosnian
government officials said that by 1993, arms or money for arms purchases
also were being supplied through the Turkish pipeline by Saudi Arabia,
Malaysia, Brunei and Pakistan, and that other weapons shipments came from
Hungary and Argentina.
U.S. officials knew of most of the arms shipments but took no action,
despite Clinton's public support for a United Nations-sponsored arms embargo
against Bosnia, Croatia, and the other nations of the former Yugoslavia.
That policy marked a break with the Bush administration, which strongly
protested when an Iranian plane flew into Zagreb in September 1992 with
4,000 assault weapons, prompting Croatia to impound the cargo.
Administration officials have said that no covert action was taken to
support the weapons smuggling, and that U.S. actions amounted to turning a
blind eye to the shipments. But several congressional committees, including
a House select committee named Friday, are now investigating the arms
smuggling and Clinton's decision in April 1994 to have U.S. envoys tell
Croatian President Franjo Tudjman that the United States did not object to
the shipments. Republicans have charged that the administration allowed Iran
to gain a foothold in the Balkans by not opposing the shipments and plan to
investigate whether U.S. officials in the region may have taken direct
action to encourage or facilitate the smuggling.
Bosnian officials said the Balkan arms smuggling pipeline took shape during
1992, six months after war erupted in Bosnia between the Muslim-led
government and rebel Serbs, who were backed by forces and supplies from
neighboring Serbia. During a visit by Bosnian President Alija Izetbegovic to
Tehran last October, Bosnian sources said, an agreement was worked out to
open a weapons supply route to the Muslim-led government in Sarajevo through
neighboring Croatia.
This story was published on May 14, 1996.- se puede buscar en el registro de Diario-///Información verificada
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