Chronicles
26, Vol. II
Forging of Anti-Yugoslav Conspiracy
Biserko, Sonja
The almost 1,000-page Volume I dissects the role of
the Serbian mainstream elite in the evolvement of the Greater Serbia
program from 1966 to this very day. "The war was prepared for long and
preparations for it involved different levels: the media, institutions,
informal socializing over drinks, schools and the University, the Church
and the Army. From the planning stage to the project's effectuation,
various figures have been given different roles. The role of the war's
mouthpiece was given to Vojislav Seselj, one of the most dedicated
operatives, acting all the time as Slobodan Milosevic's alter ego. He
was always ready to manifest the degree of violence the President would
opt for at a specific point. At the same time, he was always unlikable
enough to make Slobodan Milosevic look decent and acceptable," says the
book's editor in the lengthy introductory study.
Apart from providing a detailed chronology for the
period 1966-2006, the Vol. I carries Sonja Biserko's article headlined
"The Outcome of a Defeated Project" additionally supported by the
transcript of the beginning of the trial of Slobodan Milosevic before
the tribunal in The Hague, including the testimony given by Vojislav
Seselj in his capacity as a witness for the defense.
The 600-page Volume II presents testimonies of major
witnesses for the defense in the trial of Slobodan Milosevic, as well as
transcripts of intercepted telephone conversations between Dobrica
Cosic, main architect of the Greater Serbia project, and Radovan
Karadzic, one of the two most infamous fugitives from The Hague justice.
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