More recently: In October this year there was a Helsinki Citizens Assembly meeting in Tuzla (Bosnia). One afternoon U.S. envoy to Croatia, Peter Galbraith, gave an impromptu session. New York based HCA activist, Dorie Wilsnack, attended, and here is her recollection of the event: "He was just like US foreign policy: friendly and liberal on the surface, but underneath, evasive and arrogant and completely wrapped up in his own self-interest. Some of his statements were outright lies (The US played no role in helping the Croatians in Operation Storm) and some were so offensive that I had to write them all down. For example, one woman from Danish Parliament asked him who in the Dayton meeting would be representing the perspective of a multi-ethnic Bosnia: Milosevic? Tudjman? Izetbegovic? His answer: "The Americans will. Because we are the most multi-ethnic country in the world and we understand the importance of this." Another quote: "All Western democracies treat their citizens equally." That one got a ripple of laughter from the audience."

All this would not be possible without ZaMir Transnational Net and the network of anti-war activists on that net. Fifty years of "Yugoslav peace" was enforced on the people by the threat of imprisonment for even the faintest sign of nationalism. I had a friend who in 1986 was confined to three years in a maximum security prison for having hung a picture on his living room wall of what would in 1990 become the Croatian state flag. This kind of "peace" had to vanish once communism lost the stamina to enforce it. And there was little or no political will among the Party nomenclature to change the old ways.