UNMIK translators bomb Serbs 
                                     April 15, 2000 
 
                                     Kosovo Polje, April 14th - Ethnic- 
                                     Albanian bandits threw bombs on three Serbian houses in the night 
                                     between Wednesday and Thursday, in Kosovo Polje. 
 
                                     An explosive device was thrown into the house of Rajko Masulovic 
                                     in Branko Radicevic Street. During that incident he and his family were in 
                                     the neighbor's house. In the fire which then broke out a part of the house 
                                     was burned down, as well as the furniture and personal papers of 
                                     Masulovic. "Molotov cocktail" was also thrown into the house of Zlata 
                                     Colic and Ljubisa Bojanic. Bojanic`s home has been the target of similar 
                                     attacks several times so far. 
 
                                     It is suspected that Sefedin Hida organizes and also participates in the 
                                     nocturnal bomb and robbery attacks. His daughter and son-in -law work 
                                     as translators at UNMIK. 
 
                                     Bullies attacked, the same night, the house of Gavriolo Radulovic in Cara 
                                     Dusana Street, and broke all windows. This was the fourth attack on 
                                     Radulovic. He was also shot at two months ago. 
 
                                     All these assaults have the aim to frighten Serbs, and are conducted after 
                                     their refusal to sell their houses and estates to ethnic-Albanians.
THE NEW YORK TIMES 
                                     April 16, 2000 
 
                                     American Effort to Isolate Belgrade Falters 
 
                                     By STEVEN ERLANGER 
 
                                     BELGRADE, Serbia, April 15 -- Despite the indictment of 
                                     President Slobodan Milosevic on war crimes charges and the 
                                     efforts of Washington to isolate his regime, the Western diplomatic 
                                     quarantine of Yugoslavia has broken down, with every major European 
                                     country represented here by senior diplomats. 
 
                                     Only the United States has no diplomats here and has no plans to send 
                                     any as long as Mr. Milosevic remains in power, even though it continues 
                                     to retain a local staff of about 50 people. 
 
                                     Most NATO countries withdrew their diplomats during the war, but have 
                                     slowly seen the need for some representation in Belgrade, generally 
                                     regarding Yugoslavia as too important to ignore. But sending new 
                                     ambassadors is awkward because convention requires a meeting with the 
                                     head of state, who in this case has been indicted for war crimes. 
 
                                     On the French Embassy here, there is a sign that says, "Embassy of 
                                     Switzerland, French interest section." But the embassy functions with 
                                     some three diplomats, who issue visas, provide consular services but also 
                                     behave like diplomats. Similarly, the British, with a senior diplomat who 
                                     had already served four years here, are formally represented by Brazil, 
                                     the Germans by Japan. 
 
                                     And both France and Germany have issued limited visas, for European 
                                     parliamentary meetings, to Yugoslav officials like the former Socialist 
                                     Party spokesman, Ivica Dacic, who are on the European and American 
                                     lists of people banned from traveling to the West. 
 
                                     In general, the Europeans want to distinguish between the isolation of the 
                                     government and Serbian people, who still regard themselves as 
                                     Western-oriented. The tension between the Clinton administration and 
                                     the European Union over the efficiency of sanctions and how to bring 
                                     down Mr. Milosevic surfaces regularly, with many Europeans believing 
                                     that opening up trade, contacts and travel with Serbia will bring down 
                                     Mr. Milosevic much faster than isolation, which the regime manipulates in 
                                     its propaganda of a brave Serbia surrounded by enemies. 
 
                                     This winter, for example, the Europeans went ahead with oil and energy 
                                     aid for Serbian cities controlled by the opposition against strong initial 
                                     American objections, and the Europeans also forced through the lifting of 
                                     a ban on air travel to and from Belgrade -- one of the main requests of 
                                     the democratic opposition here. 
 
                                     Just last week, Australia rebuffed sharp American complaints and sent a 
                                     new ambassador to Belgrade who presented his credentials to Mr. 
                                     Milosevic on Thursday, together with the new Russian ambassador, in a 
                                     ceremony covered lavishly in the state news media here. 
 
                                     Washington and many European capitals are trying to avoid giving Mr. 
                                     Milosevic that kind of propaganda opportunity, which would let him 
                                     show that the world is coming to terms with his survival in power. 
 
                                     The Australian foreign minister, Alexander Downer, said that Canberra 
                                     had refused a direct American request, reportedly from Secretary of 
                                     State Madeleine K. Albright, to drop the appointment, or at least to skip 
                                     the meeting with Mr. Milosevic and fax the new ambassador's credentials 
                                     instead. 
 
                                     But the Yugoslav Foreign Ministry has insisted that countries abide by the 
                                     Vienna conventions governing diplomacy and present credentials to the 
                                     head of state. The Americans "asked us if we would fax the credentials," 
                                     Mr. Downer said. "The Yugoslav authorities made it clear they wouldn't 
                                     accept faxed credentials." 
 
                                     The Greeks and Italians, NATO members with traditionally close 
                                     historical and business ties to the Serbs, kept embassies open here during 
                                     the bombing war, as did Canada. The Italians also want to send a new 
                                     ambassador here, but are trying to negotiate a way to avoid a meeting 
                                     with the indicted Mr. Milosevic. 
 
                                     But they are expected to have no more success than the Australians did, 
                                     which will force them to either meet Mr. Milosevic or downgrade their 
                                     official representation here to a chargé d'affaires or deputy chief of 
                                     mission ad interim, appointments that do not require the presentation of 
                                     credentials to the head of state. 
 
                                     Diplomats here said they had hoped that the strange tale of the 
                                     Portuguese ambassador, Antonio Tanger de Correa, would create a 
                                     model. Portugal is the current president of the European Union, a 
                                     six-month term that ends with June, and Lisbon requested Belgrade to 
                                     approve the appointment before the war and Mr. Milosevic's indictment. 
 
                                     Unusually, given his European role, Belgrade agreed to accept his 
                                     credentials at the level of the first deputy foreign minister. But the 
                                     government does not invite Mr. Tanger de Correa to receptions or 
                                     official meetings because his credentials have not been presented to the 
                                     head of state, inviting the Portuguese deputy chief of mission instead. 
 
                                     "At first we thought there would be a 'Portuguese model,' " one diplomat 
                                     said. "But we were wrong. The Portuguese ambassador is really treated 
                                     like a nonentity here, not really like a diplomat at all." 
 
                                     A Yugoslav diplomat said: "We are a real country and not some African 
                                     colony," stressing that diplomatic conventions require ambassadorial 
                                     appointments to be accepted by heads of state. 
 
                                     Other governments have avoided the problem by not rotating 
                                     ambassadors or by bringing in lower-ranking diplomats, effectively 
                                     downgrading relations. This is what Washington had done even before 
                                     the NATO bombing war, with the embassy here headed by a senior 
                                     diplomat, Richard Miles, who had been an ambassador in other countries 
                                     but had a deputy rank here. Mr. Miles is an ambassador again, now in 
                                     Bulgaria. 
 
                                     The Czech Republic, which is applying to the European Union, has kept 
                                     its ambassador here, Ivan Busniak, for about four years. But Prague is 
                                     unsure if it will rotate him. If he leaves, Prague -- mindful of its Western 
                                     orientation -- has decided to replace him with a deputy chief of mission 
                                     ad interim "and wait for better times," the ambassador said. 
 
                                     The Clinton administration sharply denied a report in last week's Sunday 
                                     Times of London that it would send a low-level diplomat here by June. 
                                     The State Department spokesman, James P. Rubin, said: "There is no 
                                     consideration whatsoever about returning a diplomat to Belgrade." But he 
                                     said that discussions continued through third parties, including the Swiss, 
                                     about appointing "protecting powers" in each other's country to take care 
                                     of consular problems, property questions and other issues. 
 
                                     But even those discussions are frozen, officials of both countries say. The 
                                     Americans objected to Belgrade's request that China act for it in 
                                     Washington, so Belgrade objected to the American request for first 
                                     Sweden and then Switzerland. Washington wants Belgrade to pick a 
                                     country that is traditionally neutral; Belgrade says it can pick whatever 
                                     country it wants, and it has also asked for the keys to its Washington 
                                     embassy, which the Americans sealed during the war.
I guess one shouldn't mind finding a few interesting (?) articles 
in one place; though, I'm also certain that some can object to 
these copy-paste stuff... 
 
THE NEW YORK TIMES 
                                     April 16, 2000 
 
                                     WEEK IN REVIEW 
 
                                     WARBUCKS 
 
                                     How to Build Weapons When Money Is No Object 
 
                                     By TIM WEINER 
 
                                     WASHINGTON -- The crash last week of an Osprey aircraft, 
                                     which killed 19 marines, was a grim reminder that the military 
                                     builds weapons and aircraft that cost fortunes and still fail. 
 
                                     The Pentagon will spend $310 billion this year. That is more than the 
                                     world's 12 next-largest militaries combined, more than half the budget 
                                     of the United States, excluding benefits like Medicare and Social 
                                     Security. But that money buys weapons that "take far too long to 
                                     build, cost far too much and don't deliver as promised," said Louis J. 
                                     Rodrigues, the top expert on military procurement at the General 
                                     Accounting Office, the independent investigative arm of Congress. 
 
                                     The bill for six new systems -- three new tactical jet fighters, 
                                     along with the Osprey, the Comanche helicopter and the 
                                     beleaguered missile defense program -- will come to more 
                                     than half a trillion dollars. Most, if not all, will go into 
                                     full-scale production with open questions about their cost and 
                                     effectiveness. 
 
                                     The Pentagon's position is plain: there can be no price tag 
                                     on national security. These weapons represent America's global 
                                     superiority. If they are costly, so be it. 
 
                                     "We're going to have to pay for it," Defense Secretary William Cohen 
                                     told Congress last month when asked about the price of these weapons. 
                                     "It's going to cost more money, and we ought to face up to it and say 
                                     we're a rich country." He was seconded by Gen. Henry H. Shelton, 
                                     chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who testified that "there simply is no 
                                     alternative" to spending hundreds of billions on "state-of-the-art weapons 
                                     and technology to defend America." 
 
                                     But the issue of how wisely the Pentagon spends money persists. Not 
                                     that much has changed since 1969, when an Air Force financial analyst, 
                                     A. Ernest Fitzgerald, uncovered the very first billion-dollar cost overrun, 
                                     on the Air Force's C-5A plane. 
 
                                     "There are only two phases of a weapons program," Mr. Fitzgerald 
                                     famously said. " 'Too early to tell' and 'Too late to stop.' " 
 
                                     Billion-dollar overruns are now commonplace. Last week alone brought 
                                     three of them: more than $1 billion on a new version of the Patriot missile, 
                                     which failed in the 1991 gulf war; more than $1.4 billion on the Crusader 
                                     artillery system and more than $2 billion on a new Navy destroyer. And 
                                     though the Marines insisted last week that the Osprey is a well-tested 
                                     bargain at $40 million a plane, Pentagon records released on Wednesday 
                                     show that the true figure is $83 million, and that the plane still has crucial 
                                     tests to pass. 
 
                                     "Fundamental weapons system problems persist," said David M. Walker, 
                                     the comptroller general of the United States, who runs the General 
                                     Accounting Office. "We have a process that is very costly and does not 
                                     give you what you want." 
 
                                     That process begins with top-secret threat assessments. What if an ally 
                                     buys American fighter jets and turns into an enemy? The Pentagon has 
                                     responded to that possibility with three tactical fighter programs, at a total 
                                     projected cost of $350 billion. 
 
                                     Envisioning threats creates an urgency about finding technologies to 
                                     defeat them. Thus, the threat of nuclear annihilation led to the "peace 
                                     shield" -- the Star Wars system on which $60 billion has been spent 
                                     without a single working system to show for it. The Pentagon said last 
                                     week it would spend $30 billion more on a far smaller shield. 
 
                                     Repeatedly, Mr. Rodrigues said, "we bring in critical technology that is 
                                     unproven," instead of drawing on existing state-of-the-art systems that 
                                     have passed rigorous tests. This leads to building systems while still trying 
                                     to figure out how to make them work. For example, the Air Force has 
                                     begun building F-22's -- at $200 million per plane, history's most 
                                     expensive jet fighter -- even though the design keeps changing and the 
                                     on-board computers need testing. 
 
                                     Weapons that depend on unproven technology often fail to pass tests. 
                                     The tendency, then, is to fudge the tests, and in fact, most of the 
                                     Pentagon's biggest new weapons have been marked by "insufficient and 
                                     often unrealistic testing," along with overstated performance claims and 
                                     understated cost reports, the accounting office says. 
 
                                     Uncertain technology also leads to 
                                     development periods of 15 to 20 years, twice as long as a generation 
                                     ago. Over time, costs rise, old weapons wear out and the new ones may 
                                     not even meet the nation's evolving needs when they are delivered. 
 
                                     "Many of the systems that are being produced and are being 
                                     contemplated were designed during the cold war," Mr. Walker said. "But 
                                     do they make sense? What is the current and projected threat? We are 
                                     so far ahead of the rest of the world. How far ahead do you need to be? 
                                     Wants are unlimited -- but what do we really need?" 
 
                                     Ultimately, changes in weapons procurement may not come until costs 
                                     get so high that they dry up funds for recruiting, training and paying 
                                     servicemen and women. But it's clear what needs to be done. 
 
                                     First, the Pentagon must begin acting more like a business, using proven 
                                     technology when possible, rather than inventing technologies and hoping 
                                     they will work, Mr. Rodrigues said. 
 
                                     Second, the services must stop warring among themselves for money. 
                                     Retired Adm. Bill Owens, vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff in 
                                     1994 and 1995, says the services must be stripped of the power to 
                                     demand new weapons, which should reside with the secretary of defense 
                                     and the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. This would constitute a 
                                     revolution inside the Pentagon. 
 
                                     Now is the time to change, while America stands unchallenged in military 
                                     and political power, Admiral Owens said. But of the Pentagon, he 
                                     warned, "If we don't get some major reform done inside that building in 
                                     the way we buy weapons systems, we will pass some critical point where 
                                     we no longer can do what the nation needs us to do."
The European newspapers also said there had been a list of targets ruled off limits for air 
                                      strikes that included the Chinese Embassy -- at its actual address, not the mistaken one -- and 
                                      that the embassy at some point was removed from the list. 
 
                                      According to the officials interviewed by The Times, American commanders in Europe did 
                                      maintain such a list of buildings, like hospitals, churches and embassies. The Chinese 
                                      Embassy was on that list, officials said, but at its old address and was not removed. They said 
                                      the embassy was also listed at the wrong address on a similiar list in Britain. 
 
************************************** 
 
 
THE NEW YORK TIMES  
                                      April 17, 2000 
 
                                      FATEFUL CHOICE  
                                      A special report. 
 
                                      Chinese Embassy Bombing: A Wide Net of Blame  
 
                                      By STEVEN LEE MYERS  
 
                                      WASHINGTON, April 16 -- In the weeks before the bombing of the Chinese Embassy in Belgrade 
                                      last May, NATO was under tremendous pressure to escalate its war against Yugoslavia. The 
                                      alliance's supreme commander demanded 2,000 targets in Serbia -- a number some aides 
                                      considered arbitrary and too high for a country the size of Ohio. 
 
                                      Having begun the war for Kosovo with too few targets and the unrealistic hope of a quick 
                                      victory, NATO had to scramble for new targets. According to a NATO official, the pressure was 
                                      so intense that a cook and a motor pool worker with sufficiently high security clearances were 
                                      drafted into NATO's targeting office in Mons, Belgium, to help with paperwork on potential 
                                      missions. 
 
                                      In this atmosphere the Central Intelligence Agency submitted its first targeting proposal of the 
                                      war. It was selected by its Counter-Proliferation Division, which had no particular expertise in 
                                      either the Balkans or in picking bombing targets. The target was accepted, officials said, 
                                      without further vetting by the military. 
 
                                      In fact, it was the Chinese Embassy. It was described in a secret document given to President 
                                      Clinton for his approval as a warehouse that was headquarters of Yugoslav Army procurement. 
                                      The document, provided to The New York Times by a military officer, included a satellite 
                                      photograph, a casualty estimate and a description of the site. 
 
                                      The only thing that turned out to be accurate was the casualty estimate. The description of 
                                      the target's relevance to the war was misleading and, one senior intelligence official said, it 
                                      should have been apparent to any imagery expert that the building shown did not look 
                                      remotely like a warehouse or any Serbian government building. 
 
                                      Ever since the bombing, Chinese officials have angrily accused the United States of a 
                                      deliberate attack, while American officials have insisted that it was an error. 
 
                                      In an attempt to unravel what really happened, spurred in part by articles in two European 
                                      newspapers suggesting that the bombing had been deliberate, The New York Times 
                                      interviewed more than 30 officials in Washington and in Europe. 
 
                                      While the investigation produced no evidence that the bombing of the embassy had been a 
                                      deliberate act, it provided a detailed account of a broader set of missteps than the United 
                                      States or NATO have acknowledged, and a wider circle of blame than the government's 
                                      explanation of a simple error of judgment by a few people at the C.I.A. 
 
                                      None of the people interviewed at the Pentagon, C.I.A., the State Department and the military 
                                      mapping agency, or at NATO offices in Brussels, Mons, Vicenza, Italy and Paris said they had 
                                      ever seen any document discussing targeting of the embassy, nor any approval given to do so. 
                                      No one asserted that he or she knew that such an order had been given. 
 
                                      The bombing resulted from error piled upon incompetence piled upon bad judgment in a 
                                      variety of places -- from a frantic rush to approve targets to questionable reliance on inexpert 
                                      officers to an inexplicable failure to consult the people who might have averted disaster, 
                                      according to the officials. 
 
                                      In retrospect, they said, the bombing, if not intended, could have been avoided at several 
                                      points along the way. 
 
                                      Last week, 11 months after the fact, the director of central intelligence, George J. Tenet, 
                                      dismissed a midlevel officer who put the X on what turned out to be the embassy. He also 
                                      disciplined six other employees, saying that agency officers "at all levels of responsibility" 
                                      contributed to the bombing. 
 
                                      The Pentagon has not conducted its own review but administration officials say the matter is 
                                      now closed. China rejected Mr. Tenet's discipline as inadequate. 
 
                                      American officials have tried to explain how such a bizarre chain of missteps could have taken 
                                      place in intelligence and military organizations that pride themselves on technological 
                                      prowess. 
 
                                      "This was an error compounded by errors," said Under Secretary of State Thomas R. Pickering, 
                                      who had the job of explaining the attack to the Chinese last year. 
 
                                      Even some NATO and American officials acknowledge that they cannot explain how or why so 
                                      many mistakes occurred. 
 
                                      Chinese officials have been particularly suspicious since the attack actually hit the defense 
                                      attaché's office and the embassy's intelligence cell. But what neither they nor American 
                                      officials have disclosed is that the bombs, Pentagon officials said, were actually targeted 
                                      throughout the building. At least one and maybe two of the bombs did not explode, the officials 
                                      said. 
 
                                      Had the strike gone as planned, the embassy would have been demolished, the death and 
                                      destruction far worse. 
 
                                      Even some of those who accept the American assurances that the bombing was accidental 
                                      say they believe that blame has not yet been shared by all of those who contributed to the 
                                      mission. 
 
                                      "It was a systemic problem," said Representative Porter J. Goss, the Republican from Florida 
                                      who is chairman of the House's Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence. "It was not a 
                                      problem just at the C.I.A. The fact of the matter is that, at least at the Pentagon, somebody 
                                      should stand up and say it isn't just the agency's fault. To fire one person and let off all the 
                                      other agencies -- including the White House -- isn't doing justice to justice." 
 
                                      The Rush to Target: A Chaotic Scramble to Meet the Demand  
 
                                      NATO's initial plan was to bomb Yugoslavia for two nights, with daytime pauses to allow 
                                      President Slobodan Milosevic to agree to NATO's demands that he withdraw Serbian forces 
                                      from Kosovo. "You show them some lead -- boom! boom! -- and they'll fold," a NATO officer in 
                                      Belgium said. "That was definitely the prevailing opinion." 
 
                                      American officials said they had always been prepared for a longer war, but when the bombing 
                                      began on March 24, NATO had only 219 targets for all of Serbia, focused on air defenses and 
                                      military communications. 
 
                                      On the first night, 51 of those targets were struck; by the third night, NATO had exhausted 
                                      nearly half the original targets, even as Serbian forces began expelling Kosovo's Albanians en 
                                      masse. 
 
                                      "We woke up to the fact that Milosevic wasn't going to come out on the front lawn with a white 
                                      flag," the NATO officer said. 
 
                                      That realization touched off a scramble to find more targets. While diplomats wrestled over 
                                      whether to begin bombing more politically sensitive targets, including those in Belgrade, 
                                      NATO's military commanders, who for four decades had planned for war against the Soviet 
                                      Union, found themselves grossly unprepared for the task of choosing targets for this kind of air 
                                      campaign, the officials said. 
 
                                      The alliance had only two targeting centers, at the Joint Analysis Center in Britain and at the 
                                      Air Force's European headquarters in Germany, both run by Americans. 
 
                                      Only Britain also contributed fully developed targeting proposals, and there were only two 
                                      dozen of those, NATO officials said. 
 
                                      As the war continued, the American targeters were producing 10 to 12 new targets a day, 
                                      while allied pilots were striking at twice that rate. 
 
                                      By early April, Lt. Gen. Michael C. Short, the alliance's air commander, kept raising the problem 
                                      during NATO commanders' morning video conferences. "I'm running out of targets," he barked 
                                      one morning, according to an officer who was there. 
 
                                      Gen. Wesley K. Clark, NATO's supreme commander, asked why he did not have 4,000 targets 
                                      on his desk, a NATO officer said. By mid-April, General Clark halved his demand, and the Air 
                                      Force's intelligence director for Europe, Brig. Gen. Neal T. Robinson, agreed. 
 
                                      According to several officials, the goal became an obsession -- derided by targeting officials as 
                                      "T2K." Each morning, General Robinson briefed commanders on progress toward the goal. A 
                                      month into the campaign, they still had only 400 fixed targets, not counting tanks and other 
                                      weapons pilots were trying to hit in Kosovo. 
 
                                      General Clark declined to be interviewed for this article.  
 
                                      Picking targets is normally a painstaking process, involving reams of intelligence reports 
                                      checked and rechecked against satellite photographs. By mid-April, NATO reached out to any 
                                      military command with targeting expertise. 
 
                                      At that point, General Clark began to expand the scope of targets to include electrical grids 
                                      and commercial facilities like tobacco warehouses and the Yugo automobile car factory. 
                                      "You've destroyed virtually every military target of significance," an aide to General Clark said. 
                                      "Now what do you do? You start looking for other targets." 
 
                                      Even so, by the end of the war, NATO had produced only 1,021 fixed targets. Of those, they 
                                      bombed roughly 650. 
 
                                      Some senior officials played down the rush for targets, saying that as chaotic as the process 
                                      was, there were ultimately very few errors in targeting. But officials in Europe and Washington 
                                      maintained that as the pressure for targets intensified, proposals were not as thoroughly 
                                      reviewed as they could -- or should -- have been. 
 
                                      Among those was the one received by fax from the C.I.A.  
 
                                      The C.I.A. had provided information on scores of targets throughout the war, but it had not 
                                      previously been asked to propose its own, Mr. Pickering and other officials said. Its history of 
                                      picking targets has been checkered. During the Persian Gulf war, it sent bombers after a 
                                      supposed intelligence bunker that proved to be an air raid shelter filled with women and 
                                      children. 
 
                                      The agency has its own targeting cell, but it was the Counter-Proliferation Division, a small 
                                      office whose focus was the spread of missiles and nuclear, chemical and biological weapons, 
                                      that proposed this target. 
 
                                      Officers there saw the war as an opportunity to destroy the headquarters of the Federal 
                                      Directorate for Supply and Procurement, long a concern because of its suspected involvement 
                                      in smuggling missile parts to places like Libya and Iraq, intelligence officials said. 
 
                                      The directorate is an arm of Yugoimport, an ostensibly private corporation but one that like 
                                      most industry in Yugoslavia is closely linked to the ruling elite around Mr. Milosevic. Several 
                                      officials conceded that it had only a tangential relation to the war's objectives; the targeting 
                                      document showed that experts estimated only civilian casualties inside, not military 
                                      casualties. 
 
                                      "It had nothing to do with the war in the Balkans," an official said. "They were thinking, 'While 
                                      we're bombing anyway, here's a target that should have a great benefit to the nation and what 
                                      we're doing.' " 
 
                                      Other officials disputed that, citing intercepted radio transmissions and agents' reports that 
                                      the directorate was organizing truckloads of spare surface-to-air missile parts, as well as 
                                      artillery and mortar shells, for the Serbian forces. 
 
                                      Even so, when agency officials talked about the proposed target in at least three meetings, 
                                      they spent more time discussing whether they could legally justify the attack under the 
                                      international rules of war than they did about the location of the headquarters itself. 
 
                                      The division's officers had no specific expertise in targeting or the Balkans, the officials said. 
                                      None of those involved have been identified, but officials said the officer who has received the 
                                      most blame -- and was dismissed by Mr. Tenet -- was a retired Army officer who had been 
                                      contracted to work in the division. 
 
                                      He had been told to locate the directorate's headquarters and set to work, according to a 
                                      person familiar with his task. On April 9, he called the National Imagery and Mapping Agency in 
                                      suburban Washington requesting a map of Belgrade. Using it and two tourist maps, the officer 
                                      tried to pinpoint the headquarters, equipped only with its address. 
 
                                      A senior defense official said the address -- 2 Bulevar Umetnosti in New Belgrade -- came from 
                                      a letter intercepted by intelligence officials, though the address was easily available, including 
                                      from the directorate's internet site. 
 
                                      The NIMA map, produced in 1997, shows major buildings and geographic features. It does not 
                                      specify street addresses, but it identifies major landmarks. It was designed, a senior 
                                      intelligence official said, for ground operations, like the evacuation of personnel from the 
                                      American embassy. 
 
                                      One of the landmarks on the map is the headquarters of Mr. Milosevic's Socialist Party, which 
                                      is on a parallel street, Milentija Popovica, and which NATO bombed during the war. Knowing 
                                      that address and the address of other buildings on that same street, the officer used a 
                                      technique called "resection and intersection" to locate what he thought was the 
                                      headquarters. 
 
                                      The method involves finding addresses on parallel streets and drawing lines to the targeted 
                                      street on the presumption that numbering schemes are uniform. It is used for generally 
                                      locating landmarks in a city for such things as search and rescue missions. "To target based 
                                      on that is incomprehensible," one official said. 
 
                                      Having chosen what he thought was the directorate, the officer called NIMA on April 12 or 13 
                                      and asked for satellite images of the site, which he received on the 14th, officials said. At that 
                                      point a NIMA analyst assigned the building a number -- 0251WA0017 -- from the military's 
                                      "bombing encyclopedia," a worldwide compendium of potential targets and other landmarks. 
 
                                      According to the officials interviewed, the satellite images did not raise concerns. When Mr. 
                                      Pickering, the under secretary of state, briefed the Chinese about the bombing last summer, 
                                      he said there were no seals or flags that would identify it as a diplomatic compound. An 
                                      incredulous Chinese official asked why America's satellites did not see it was an embassy. 
                                      "Didn't you see the green tiles on the roof?" the official asked, according to an American who 
                                      was there. 
 
                                      In fact, a senior intelligence official said, satellite images contained clues that should at least 
                                      have prompted questions -- not necessarily that it was the embassy, but rather about whether 
                                      it was the headquarters of a Yugoslav arms agency. 
 
                                      "It doesn't look like an office building," the official said. "It looks like a hotel. It's too nice a 
                                      place. Given all the space around it, I didn't see external fencing that I would expect from a 
                                      government facility." 
 
                                      The Review: An Immense Error, Perfectly Packaged  
 
                                      Compounding the mistake, according to the officials, was the initiative taken by the officer 
                                      who located the target. He produced what one official called a "superficially perfect" proposal 
                                      by downloading from the military's secure intranet a targeting form and filling it out -- complete 
                                      with the "bombing encyclopedia" number, as well as eight-digit longitudinal and latitudinal 
                                      figures. 
 
                                      Impressively packaged, the proposal prompted no questions. The C.I.A.'s assistant director of 
                                      intelligence for military support, Brig. Gen. Roderick J. Isler, ultimately approved it, and it 
                                      arrived at the European Command and the Joint Chiefs of Staff appearing to be a more 
                                      advanced proposal than it was, the officials said. 
 
                                      "This target came with an aura of authority because it came from the C.I.A.," said John J. 
                                      Hamre, who recently stepped down as deputy secretary of defense. 
 
                                      Mr. Hamre said the Joint Chiefs never conducted a thorough review of the target. The reasons 
                                      are not clear. Instead the chiefs received two proposals for the same target, one from the 
                                      C.I.A. and another from European Command, which did not note that it originally came from the 
                                      agency, and approved it. "They got false confirmation," an intelligence official said. 
 
                                      Agency officials said their officers had never intended the target to be viewed by the Pentagon 
                                      as a complete proposal, but simply as a nomination. Instead, as one NATO officer put it, "it 
                                      went through like a cog on an assembly line." 
 
                                      By April 28, 10 days before the bombing, planners in Europe had assigned the target, like every 
                                      one in the war, a sequential number. It was No. 493, and the essential information about the 
                                      target was boiled down to a single document to be presented to President Clinton and other 
                                      NATO leaders. 
 
                                      This document identified the target as "Belgrade Warehouse 1," but under a heading called 
                                      "linkage" called it the "HQ for the Federal Directorate Supply and Procurement." The objective 
                                      was to "destroy warehouse and contents," which it went on to say would undercut the ability 
                                      of Serbian forces to receive new supplies. 
 
                                      It also classified the possibility for collateral damage as "tier 3 high," which an official said 
                                      referred to the likelihood of the impact of the bombs sending shards of glass flying 
                                      considerable distances. That indicated analysts were able to distinguish the embassy's 
                                      marble and glass structure. The directorate's headquarters was made of white stone. 
 
                                      Three red triangles on the image depict the points at which the bombs were to strike. The 
                                      document also estimated that casualties would range from three to seven civilians, 
                                      presumably those working inside, while the estimate for unintended civilian casualties, which 
                                      also included those who might happen by at the time, ranged from 25 to 50. 
 
                                      The bombing, in fact, killed three and wounded at least 20.  
 
                                      Mr. Tenet has said that the C.I.A. proposed only one target during the war. Actually, the agency 
                                      proposed two or three more, but after the embassy bombing, Pentagon officials refused to 
                                      strike them. 
 
                                      In the end, despite its supposed value, NATO never did attack the intended target. 
 
                                      Allied Concerns: An American Goal: Keeping Secrets  
 
                                      As with most of attacks during the war, especially the strikes in Belgrade, planning and 
                                      execution were done by Americans. In raids involving the stealthy B-2's and F-117 fighters, 
                                      many details about the attacks were classified as "U.S. only," mainly for fear of revealing 
                                      secrets about those aircraft. 
 
                                      After the war, some allies questioned the practice. The French Ministry of Defense's report on 
                                      the war last November complained of military operations "conducted by the United States 
                                      outside the strict NATO framework and procedures." 
 
                                      A senior NATO diplomat said the United States attacked 75 to 80 targets in this way. The 
                                      Chinese Embassy was one of them. 
 
                                      The control of information limited the number of allied officers who might have been able to 
                                      notice the targeting error. 
 
                                      Gen. Jean-Pierre Kelche, who as chief of the defense staff is France's top military officer, said 
                                      that in spite of the restrictions on the military operations, all of the specific targets were 
                                      reviewed by the political and military leaders of the major allies, including Prime Minister 
                                      Jacques Chirac of France and Prime Minister Tony Blair of Britain. 
 
                                      "It was supposed to be an arms storage facility," General Kelche said in an interview in Paris. 
                                      "It's clear the nature of that target did not create any problems for me." 
 
                                      He said the unilateral American operations were a political problem, but not an operational 
                                      one. He added, however, that the militaries of each country were responsible for reviewing 
                                      those targets its forces were scheduled to strike. 
 
                                      When Mr. Tenet dismissed the officer blamed for targeting and disciplined six others, he 
                                      singled out another for praise. That officer, also not identified, raised questions about the
When Mr. Tenet dismissed the officer blamed for targeting and disciplined six others, he 
                                      singled out another for praise. That officer, also not identified, raised questions about the 
                                      target, Mr. Tenet said. In the days before the bombing, he called analysts at NIMA and at the 
                                      NATO headquarters in Naples to express doubts, Mr. Tenet said. 
 
                                      Memories of his objections vary, and other intelligence officials raised questions about them. 
                                      The officer, who once worked in the same proliferation office involved in targeting the 
                                      embassy, now works in the Technical Management Office, an operation involved in highly 
                                      classified operations, officials said. 
 
                                      He had no authority to review targets, or even know what they were, but heard informally that 
                                      the directorate was being targeted, officials said, adding that he then called the imagery 
                                      analyst at NIMA. On that day, April 29, nine days before the bombing, he told the analyst that 
                                      he had recently spoken to a source who confirmed the directorate's actual location, about 
                                      1,000 yards south of the embassy. 
 
                                      At that point, a senior intelligence official said, the NIMA analyst could have withdrawn the 
                                      target's "bombing encyclopedia" number or alerted more senior officials. Instead, he promised 
                                      to call the officer who had identified the target in the first place. 
 
                                      The NIMA analyst tried unsuccessfully to arrange a meeting between the two agency officers, 
                                      who did not know each other, officials said. On May 3, the analyst produced six more images 
                                      of the building and its surroundings, which confirmed to the skeptical officer that the target 
                                      was not the directorate, the officials said. 
 
                                      At that point, he raised his concerns with military officers in Naples, but he did not make his 
                                      questions official or sound grave enough to remove the target from the list, the officials said. 
                                      Then, he left work for three days to attend a training session. 
 
                                      When he returned, on May 7, he learned -- again informally -- that the target was on that night's 
                                      list. He called Naples a second time, through back channels, but spoke to a different officer, 
                                      who informed him that the B-2 was already on its way from its base in Missouri, according to 
                                      officials. 
 
                                      "It didn't really raise the panic you think it would have," a defense official said. 
 
                                      While Mr. Tenet commended the officer's efforts, another senior agency official was critical of 
                                      the fact that the officer -- perhaps out of fear that he was acting beyond his responsibilities -- 
                                      had never voiced doubts to the assistant director of intelligence for military support, who was 
                                      in a position to have put a hold instantly on the target. 
 
                                      The Questions: No Indications of a Sinister Plot  
 
                                      Last year, The Observer of London, in conjunction with Politiken, a Danish newspaper, 
                                      published articles suggesting that the bombing was deliberate. Their stories said that the 
                                      strike had been intended to silence transmitters at the embassy being used for rebroadcasting 
                                      communications for the Yugoslav armed forces or, later, by the Serbian paramilitary leader 
                                      known as Arkan. 
 
                                      All of the officials interviewed by the Times said they knew of no evidence to support the 
                                      assertion, and none has been produced. They said there was also no evidence that the 
                                      Chinese had in any way aided the Serbian war effort, though one NATO diplomat said it was 
                                      impossible to rule out the possibility that the Chinese shared information with the Serbs. 
 
                                      Officials rejected the idea that the Chinese Embassy was being used for rebroadcasting and 
                                      said they did not suspect during the war that it was doing that. General Kelche said 
                                      photographs taken after the strike showed ordinary antenna on its roof, not microwave dishes 
                                      that would have been used in military communications. 
 
                                      The officials said that after the bombing they did learn a great deal about the embassy's 
                                      intelligence operations, including the background of the three Chinese journalists who were 
                                      killed and who American officials say were in fact intelligence agents. 
 
                                      "It is -- or was -- considered the major collection platform for Europe," a senior defense official 
                                      said. "One could say it was a silver lining to the bombing, but it was not deliberate." 
 
                                      The European newspapers also said there had been a list of targets ruled off limits for air 
                                      strikes that included the Chinese Embassy -- at its actual address, not the mistaken one -- and 
                                      that the embassy at some point was removed from the list. 
 
                                      According to the officials interviewed by The Times, American commanders in Europe did 
                                      maintain such a list of buildings, like hospitals, churches and embassies. The Chinese 
                                      Embassy was on that list, officials said, but at its old address and was not removed. They said 
                                      the embassy was also listed at the wrong address on a similiar list in Britain. 
 
                                      Roy W. Krieger, a lawyer who represents one of the supervisors who was reprimanded by Mr. 
                                      Tenet, said neither his client nor any of the others intended to bomb the embassy. "No sinister 
                                      conspiracy exists, only a systemic failure masquerading as a conspiracy," he said. 
 
                                      He criticized the punishment of the C.I.A. officials alone, even though the NIMA map contained 
                                      a critical error and none of the Pentagon's data bases included information on the embassy's 
                                      actual location. 
 
                                      "The C.I.A.'s action is even more troubling in the face of the refusal of the Department of 
                                      Defense to even acknowledge its failures contributing to this tragic event," he said. 
 
                                      After the bombing, Mr. Hamre and the vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff at the time, 
                                      Gen. Joseph W. Ralston, conducted the Pentagon's review of the targeting, but it was never 
                                      made public. Officials from the Joint Chiefs of Staff refused repeated requests to be 
                                      interviewed, as did Air Force commanders, on orders from their Chief of Staff, Gen. Michael E. 
                                      Ryan, according to a spokesman. 
 
                                      Mr. Goss, the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, said members of Congress had 
                                      intensely questioned officials. In the end, he said he was confident in their assurances it had 
                                      not been a deliberate strike. 
 
 
have a look at this old article: 
 
Lies, Damn Lies...& 
 Maps 
 
at 
 
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