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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: The
Balkan Crisis
Scenes of death and destruction
Victims of tornadoes or victims of bombing?
By Jerry White
6 May 1999
The devastation wrought by the three tornadoes that hit in
Oklahoma and Kansas late Monday has been widely detailed by the
US news media. Survivors emerged from their basements to survey
scenes of death and destruction: flattened homes, schools and
buildings, neighborhoods strewn with twisted metal and trees.
The savage force of 260-mile-an-hour winds killed at least
43 people, injured another 663 and destroyed or heavily damaging
nearly 2,000 structures. As of Wednesday hundreds of victims were
still missing. Rescue workers, sifting through the rubble, expected
the death toll to rise.
Officials and news commentators described the impact of the
tornadoes with words usually reserved for a war zone. Oklahoma
Governor Frank Keating said: "We have whole communities that
simply aren't there anymore. It certainly looks like a huge battle
has taken place." A 73-year-old survivor, who hid in a closet,
compared the fear of the moment to her days in Germany during
World War II when bombs fell around her.
The tornadoes produced a human tragedy of considerable proportion.
The victims, many of whom suffered most because they could ill
afford well-built houses and lived in trailer homes, deserve sympathy
and public support. Undoubtedly, the government aid promised by
President Clinton and other officials will fall far short of the
needs of those affected, who will soon be forgotten once the media
spotlight is turned off.
Those who empathize with the tornado victims, however, should
pause for a moment and consider what if this destruction had been
the result of bombs and cruise missiles, instead of a natural
disaster?
Such horrific scenes are being produced every day in countless
Yugoslav cities and villages by US and NATO warplanes but go unreported.
The four-hour "reign of terror" described by tornado
survivors in Oklahoma City, Wichita and Kansas City is virtually
a nightly occurrence for the residents of Belgrade, Novi Sad and
Pristina who pile into bomb shelters, instead of tornado shelters.
Thousands of Serbs, including women and children, have already
been killed and injured in neighborhoods, schools and hospitals
destroyed by Operation Allied Force. Families are searching through
the rubble for loved ones and to pick up the pieces of their destroyed
lives, not unlike their American counterparts. But the tornadoes
moved on and dissipated after their destructive work. Tens of
thousands of ordinary Serbs still face the terror of escalating
bomb attacks and the possibility of invading and occupying troops.
The US news media has deliberately concealed the scale of the
human tragedy that has been caused by the US and NATO warplanes,
while repeating the Pentagon and White House lies about not targeting
Serbian civilians. Moreover, the US military has deliberately
destroyed Serbian television stations and broadcasting facilities
to prevent most images of the impact of bombing from reaching
the American public. The political establishment is well aware
that the such scenes would strengthen antiwar sentiment in the
US and evoke widespread sympathy for the Serbian people.
See Also:
Clinton, NATO generals discuss expansion
of Yugoslavia war
[6 May 1999]
The fraud of NATO humanitarianism
What are the reasons for the war in Yugoslavia?
[5 May 1999]
Wall Street celebrates stepped-up bombing
of Serbia
[5 May 1999]
Blair outlines his vision
of the new military world order
[29 April 1999]
War in
the Balkans
[WSWS Full Coverage]
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