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<P ALIGN="center"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="7">Events of December
1996 </FONT></FONT></P>
<HR SIZE="1">
<P ALIGN="center"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="5">Anne D. Baylon
</FONT></FONT></P>
<DIV ALIGN="center">
<CENTER>
<ADDRESS>
<FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="4"><B><I>CENTRAL EUROPE
</I></B></FONT></FONT></ADDRESS> </CENTER></DIV>
<P ALIGN="center"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="4"><B><I>Bulgaria
</I></B></FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 21
(Reported in NY Times, Dec. 23)</B> Prime Minister Zhan Videnov resigns.
For the past three years, the former Communists--renamed the Bulgarian
Socialist Party--have ruled Bulgaria, but they have refused to carry out
market reforms and have been accused of corruption for allowing “politically
connected banks to drain the country’s hard currency reserves.”
Under Mr. Videnov’s government, the economy has come close to
collapsing, with inflation close to 300% and an uncontrolled currency
depreciation. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="center"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="4"><B><I>Czech
Republic </I></B></FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 2</B>
President Václav Havel undergoes surgery for lung cancer. According
to his surgeon, Dr. Pavel Pafko, the prognosis for the President’s
recovery is “good.” </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="center"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="4"><B><I>Romania
</I></B></FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 1</B>
President Emil Constantinescu ends decades of official atheism under
Communism with an Orthodox ceremony that supplements his civil
inauguration on Nov. 29. Talking about the future, the President says that
it “depends on leaders who have to sacrifice and citizens who don’t
have to be sacrificed anymore.”<B> </B></FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="center"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="4"><B><I>Slovakia
</I></B></FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>NY Times, Dec.
17</B> Elected twice as Prime Minister, Vladimir Meciar has tightened his
powers by controlling the secret service, the privatization process, the
media, and the universities. Unlike the rest of Central Europe, which is
geared toward democracy, Mr. Meciar is turning away from democracy. He has
curbed the rights of ethnic Hungarians (10% of the Slovak population),
enriched his loyal political allies through the privatization of industry,
and even been accused of arranging the kidnapping of the son of his chief
political rival, President Michal Kovac. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="center">
<FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="4"><B><I>EASTERN EUROPE
</I></B></FONT></FONT>
</P>
<P ALIGN="center"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="4"><B><I>Chechnya
</I></B></FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 17</B> In a
sign of “the lawlessness and violence that rule Chechnya,” six
Red Cross workers are killed by masked gunmen in their guarded compound at
the hospital of Novye Atagy, causing the Red Cross and the few relief
organizations still operating there to withdraw from Chechnya. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 22</B> A
remote-controlled mine kills five boys near Grozny. The killing is one in
a series of terrorist acts intended to derail the peace process in
Chechnya, where the separatists have taken charge and presidential and
parliamentary elections have been scheduled for Jan. 27. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 30</B>
Russian officials say that they will end their troop withdrawal from
Chechnya before the Jan. 27 elections. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="center"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="4"><B><I>Russia
</I></B></FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 3</B> Over
400,000 Russian coal miners, teachers, and power plant workers go on
strike, all demanding back pay. Many miners and workers have not been paid
for months. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 6</B>
Employees of a St. Petersburg nuclear power plant take over the control
room and threaten to shut down the plant—which supplies most of the
city’s power—unless they receive months of back pay. The crisis
is resolved when the  government pays a billion rubles ($200 per
worker) and promises to deliver the rest within a week. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 11</B>
Russian coal miners end their strike after the government agrees to pay
back wages before the new year. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 23</B>
Looking fit, President Yeltsin returns to work in the Kremlin. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>NY Times, Dec.
25</B> Tens of millions of workers have not received their salaries for
months. The delay in wage payments (estimated at $9.3 billion) has forced
people to borrow from their parents’ pensions. The government has
promised to pay all wage arrears in December, but 80% of the debt is owed
by failing companies and not by the state. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 27</B>
Former national security adviser Gen. Aleksandr Lebed announces that he
has formed a new political party—the Russian Popular Republican Party—to
seek the presidency. The party will offer voters a third choice in
addition to the Communists and the party of Mr. Yeltsin. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 28</B> In
an unusual show of cooperation, the Communist-dominated parliament agrees
with Mr. Yeltsin’s government to adopt the 1997 budget (about $98
billion). </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="center"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="4"><B><I>Tajikistan
</I></B></FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 20</B>
Civil war flares up as rebels loyal to Rizvon Sadirov, a mercenary
opposition leader, seize 23 hostages, including 8 U.N. military observers,
about 90 miles east of the capital of Dushanbe. Civil war started after
the Soviet Union’s collapse as a fight among regions for control of
the country. While President Imomali Rakhmanov’s Government won four
years ago, the opposition kept fighting from Afghanistan and has now
captured more than half the country. The rebels are demanding safe passage
for Mr. Sadirov’s Afghan-based fighters into Tajikistan. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 21</B> The
Tajik rebels free 21 hostages and 7 U.N. observers. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 23</B>
President Imomali Rakhmonov signs a cease-fire with the leading opposition
leader, Sayed Abdullah Nuri, under the mediation of Russian Prime Minister
Viktor Chernomyrdin. (Russia, which maintains 25,000 troops in Tajikistan,
has repeatedly encouraged the Tajik government to make peace.) The
agreement requires both sides to restore peace by July 1997. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 25</B>
Despite the cease-fire, Russian troops stationed on Tajikistan’s
southern border are fired upon from the Afghanistan side of the border.
</FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="center">
<FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="4"><B><I>THE FORMER YUGOSLAVIA
</I></B></FONT></FONT>
</P>
<P ALIGN="center"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="4"><B><I>Bosnia
</I></B></FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 3</B>
According to Jane’s Intelligence Review reports, the Bosnian military
produced chemical arms during the war, namely chlorine gas. Chemical
weapons will be banned in 65 countries by next April, when the Chemical
Weapons Convention comes into effect. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 17</B> NATO
Defense Ministers give the “final go-ahead” for a scaled-down
U.S.-led force that will keep the peace in Bosnia for the next 18 months.
The force, composed of 31,000 men from the U.S., Russia, and 23 NATO or
NATO-allied countries, will replace the existing 60,000-troop force.
</FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 20</B> NATO
terminates its 60,000-men mission in Bosnia and replaces it with the new
mission. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 23</B>
Bosnian Serb leaders announce that they will not participate in the new
national government of Bosnia. Without a national government, however,
Bosnia remains divided, with a Serbia state  controlling half of
Bosnia and a Muslim-Croat Federation controlling the other half.</FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="center"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="4"><B><I>Serbia
</I></B></FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 1</B>
Opposition leaders who have led two weeks of street protests in major
Serbia cities against the government’s nullification of local
elections won by the opposition say that in order to drive Mr. Milosevic
out of power, they need the support of the mining communities in the
south. But the miners have been threatened with immediate dismissal if
they strike. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 2</B> While
rallies calling for Mr. Milosevic to step down continue, the government is
jamming “B-92,” the only independent radio station left in
Serbia. The station, which was founded in 1989 and has always reported on
the opposition, has constantly been threatened with closure. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 3</B> The
government shuts down the “B-92” radio station, blocks busloads
of protesters, and arrests 32 students for “brutal attacks on people’s
property.” In response, the opposition leaders call for nationwide
strikes. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 4</B>
Protests enter their 17</FONT><SUP><FONT SIZE="3">th</FONT></SUP><FONT SIZE="3">
day. The U.S. State Department reports a promise by Foreign Minister Milan
Milutinovic “that the Serbia Government will not use force to disrupt
those demonstrations.” The government shuts down a second radio
station critical of Mr. Milosevic. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 5</B>
President Milosevic makes several concessions, allowing radio “B-92”
to resume broadcasting, promising to pay overdue pensions and student
loans, and announcing the resignation of some unpopular party leaders.</FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 6</B> <EM>Politicka</EM>—the
largest state-run newspaper in Yugoslavia—is angering its Serbian
readers by not covering the daily street protests. The chief editor is a
friend of the President. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 7</B> When
radio station “B-92” was shut down by the government on Dec. 3,
its Web site took over the reporting of street protests. The station now
has a deal with an Amsterdam-based access service to broadcast over the
Internet 24 hours a day and thus bypass government transmitters. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 8</B>
Blocking a possible compromise with the opposition, the Serbian supreme
court upholds the government’s annulment of local elections (that had
given control of Belgrade to the opposition), in effect granting the
governing Socialist Party control over the city’s government. At the
same time, plainclothes police arrest young anti-Government leaders and
beat them up. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 9</B>
Anti-government student protests are increasingly colored with a virulent
Serbian nationalism. Although the students say that their movement is
apolitical, they attack President Milosevic, not for starting the war in
Croatia and Bosnia but for failing to create a Greater Serbia. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 10</B>
Boycotting the opening of the federal Yugoslav parliament, 15 parliament
members and 22 others representing parties of the opposition coalition
join the street protests. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 11</B>
Claiming to represent the student majority, representatives of Belgrade
University student unions (which are under Mr. Milosevic’s grip)
demand to return to class and ask the protesters to join them. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 12</B> So
far, Serbia’s factory workers have ignored pleas for walkouts by the
opposition leaders. As one labor leader puts it, “If you strike in
Serbia, you have just signed up for unemployment.” </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 14</B>
While the government has promised to pay long overdue pensions, salaries,
student grants, and social welfare, it has begun to print money without
having the corresponding reserves in order to fulfill its promise. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 15</B>
Eager to quell anger over the local elections’ annulment, Mr.
Milosevic turns over to his opponents the control of Nis, Serbia’s
second largest city. But opposition leaders say that they “don’t
want to bargain away their election victories.” Mr. Milosevic also
invites the OSCE to examine the election results. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 22</B>
Opposition leaders join forces by forming a coalition of the 30 towns and
villages they already govern, while about 100,000 protesters demonstrate
in Belgrade’s streets. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 24</B> For
the first time since demonstrations started in November, opposition
protesters clash with government supporters after President Slobodan
Milosevic buses hundreds of riot policemen and thousands of his supporters
to Belgrade. The clashes leave 58 people wounded. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 25</B>
President Milosevic’s supporters call for “tough action”
against opposition demonstrators. Prime Minister Milo Djukanovic of
Montenegro (Serbia’s junior partner in the Yugoslav Federation) warns
that Montenegro is prepared to have its own foreign policy if Serbia
cannot “work harder to rejoin the international community.”
</FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 27</B>
Former Spanish Prime Minister Felipe Gonzales, head of the OSCE
international mission in charge of examining the election results,
delivers a report that recommends reinstating rightful winners of the
elections and encourages Mr. Milosevic to “use the crisis as an
opportunity to move toward democracy.” </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 28</B>
Thousands attend the burial of Predrag Starcevic, the first protester to
be killed in the anti-government demonstrations. Mr. Starcevic was beaten
to death during the Dec. 24 clashes. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="center"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="4"><B><I>Yugoslavia
(Serbia and Montenegro) </I></B></FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 18</B>
While Yugoslavia has fulfilled its promise to destroy 80 tanks by year’s
end as part of an arms control treaty signed in June, Washington, which
promised Yugoslavia $2 million to help with the demolition program, is
delaying its payment. Washington’s stalling is due to its unhappiness
with Mr. Milosevic’s handling of the elections in Serbia. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="center">
<FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="4"><B><I>WESTERN EUROPE / EASTERN
EUROPE
</I></B></FONT></FONT>
</P>
<P ALIGN="center"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="4"><B><I>Boeing/McDonnell
Douglas </I></B></FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>NY Times, Dec.
16</B> The Boeing Company announces its plans to acquire the McDonnell
Douglas Corporation, the biggest merger in the aerospace industry. The
deal would make Boeing the world’s largest aerospace company and the
only manufacturer of commercial jets in the U.S. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="center"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="4"><B><I>France/U.S.A./NATO
</I></B></FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 2</B> The
disagreement between France and the U.S. over whether a European or an
American commander should lead the major NATO command in Naples
(traditionally lead by an American) is causing a delay in the plans for
the military reorganization of NATO. The restructuring, which must be
finished before the NATO summit meeting in early July, is intended to
provide better security and stability in Europe in the new post-Cold War
environment. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="center"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="4"><B><I>France/U.S.A./U.N.
</I></B></FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 10</B>
France and the U.S. are split over the election of a new U.N. Secretary
General. Two candidates have emerged: Kofi Annan of Ghana, an insider who
is Under Secretary General for Peacekeeping, and Amara Essy, who is the
Ivory Coast’s Foreign Minister. France opposes Mr. Annan as too
American (Mr. Annan was educated in the U.S.). </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 13</B>
France joins the consensus and the Security Council chooses Kofi Annan to
head the U.N. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 17</B> Kofi
Annan becomes the new Secretary General. Mr. Annan will officially take
over on Jan. 1. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="center"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="4"><B><I>Germany/Czech
Republic </I></B></FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 10</B>
German Foreign Minister Klaus Kinkel and his Czech counterpart Josef
Zieleniec will meet in Prague on December 20 to initial a joint
declaration that will end a 50-year dispute between the two countries.
Germany will apologize for the invasion of the former Czechoslovakia
during World War II and the Czech Republic will express regrets for the
postwar expulsion of millions of Sudeten Germans from the former
Czechoslovakia. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 20</B> In
Prague, Minister Kinkel and Minister Zieleniec initial the reconciliation
declaration between their two countries. The document will require
parliamentary approval on both sides. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="center"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="4"><B><I>Germany/NATO
</I></B></FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 13</B> The
German parliament approves the deployment of 2,000 peacekeeping soldiers
in Bosnia, reflecting growing self-confidence that German soldiers can
contribute fully to Allied operations outside the NATO region (no German
ground troops have been deployed outside NATO borders since World War II).
</FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="center"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="4"><B><I>IMF/Russia
</I></B></FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 15</B> The
International Monetary Fund resumes payment of a three-year $10.1 billion
loan to Russia it had suspended because of the Russian government’s
failure to raise taxes and collect revenues. Russia’s recent push to
step up tax collection has prompted the IMF to revive the loan. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="center"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="4"><B><I>NATO/Eastern
Europe </I></B></FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 10</B> In
Brussels, NATO foreign ministers formally approve expanding the Alliance
to include former Eastern European Communist countries and say that they
will announce the new members at a July 8/9 meeting in Madrid. The most
likely candidates are Poland, Hungary, the Czech Republic, Romania, and
Slovenia. NATO also offers to negotiate a special charter with Russia and
pledges that the Alliance will not move nuclear weapons on the territory
of new members. Finally, NATO proposes to develop a “distinctive
relationship” with Ukraine. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="center"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="4"><B><I>Russia/NATO
</I></B></FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 11</B>
Russian Foreign Minister Yevgeny Primakov accepts NATO’s offer to
negotiate a separate charter with Russia although Russia still opposes
expansion. Cooperation would cover general areas such as military
training, peacekeeping, equipment, and tactical weapons. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="center"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="4"><B><I>Seven
European States/U.N. </I></B></FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 15</B> The
Defense Ministers of Austria, Canada, Denmark, the Netherlands, Norway,
Poland, and Sweden sign an agreement to set up the U.N. Standby High
Readiness Brigade, a permanent 4,000-member force that can be called upon
by the U.N. Security Council for peacekeeping or preventive operations
with two to four week’s notice and be deployed for up to six months.
</FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="center"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="4"><B><I>Turkey/European
Union </I></B></FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 10</B>
Complaining that the European Union does not recognize Turkey’s
strategic importance, Turkish Prime Minister Necmettin Erbakan refuses to
attend a dinner at the EU summit meeting in Ireland. Turkey, which turned
down a chance at EU membership in 1977, has since reapplied, but it is
facing resistance due to its economic underdevelopment and its human
rights record. </FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="center"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="4"><B><I>U.S.A.
</I></B></FONT></FONT></P>
<P ALIGN="left"><FONT COLOR="#000000"><FONT SIZE="3"><B>Dec. 5</B>
President Clinton chooses Czech-born Madeleine Albright, currently the
U.S. Ambassador to the U.N., as his Secretary of State and retiring
Republican Senator William Cohen as Secretary of Defense. </FONT></FONT></P>
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