KGRKJGETMRETU895U-589TY5MIGM5JGB5SDFESFREWTGR54TY
Server : Apache/2.4.62
System : FreeBSD fbsdweb2.web.rcn.net 14.1-RELEASE FreeBSD 14.1-RELEASE releng/14.1-n267679-10e31f0946d8 GENERIC amd64
User : www ( 80)
PHP Version : 8.3.8
Disable Function : NONE
Directory :  /domains/roger.dnai/html 1996 Timelines/

Upload File :
current_dir [ Writeable ] document_root [ Writeable ]

 

Current File : /domains/roger.dnai/html 1996 Timelines/October_1996.htm
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//IETF//DTD HTML//EN">

<html>

<head>
<title>Events of October 1996</title>
<meta name="GENERATOR" content="Microsoft FrontPage 1.1">
</head>

<body bgcolor="#FFFFFF" BGPROPERTIES="FIXED">
<hr size=1>
<p align=center><font color="#000000"><font size=7>Events of October 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>
<table border=3 cellpadding=3 cellspacing=3 width=65%>
<tr><td width=100%><ul>
<li><!--VERMEER BOT=HTMLMarkup StartSpan --><A HREF="#CENTRAL EUROPE"><!--VERMEER BOT=HTMLMarkup EndSpan --><font size=4>CENTRAL EUROPE<!--VERMEER BOT=HTMLMarkup StartSpan --></ A><!--VERMEER BOT=HTMLMarkup EndSpan --></font></li>
<li><!--VERMEER BOT=HTMLMarkup StartSpan --><A HREF="#EASTERN EUROPE"><!--VERMEER BOT=HTMLMarkup EndSpan --><font size=4>EASTERN EUROPE<!--VERMEER BOT=HTMLMarkup StartSpan --></A><!--VERMEER BOT=HTMLMarkup EndSpan --> </font></li>
<li><!--VERMEER BOT=HTMLMarkup StartSpan --><A HREF="#THE FORMER YUGOSLAVIA"><!--VERMEER BOT=HTMLMarkup EndSpan --><font size=4>THE FORMER YUGOSLAVIA<!--VERMEER BOT=HTMLMarkup StartSpan --></A><!--VERMEER BOT=HTMLMarkup EndSpan --> </font></li>
<li><!--VERMEER BOT=HTMLMarkup StartSpan --><A HREF="#WESTERN EUROPE / EASTERN EUROPE"><!--VERMEER BOT=HTMLMarkup EndSpan --><font size=4>WESTERN EUROPE / EASTERN EUROPE <!--VERMEER BOT=HTMLMarkup StartSpan --></A><!--VERMEER BOT=HTMLMarkup EndSpan --> </font></li>
</ul>
</td></tr>
</table>
</center></div>
<div align=center><center>
<address><!--VERMEER BOT=HTMLMarkup StartSpan --><A NAME="CENTRAL EUROPE"><!--VERMEER BOT=HTMLMarkup EndSpan --><font color="#000000"><font size=5><b><i>CENTRAL EUROPE<!--VERMEER BOT=HTMLMarkup StartSpan --></ A><!--VERMEER BOT=HTMLMarkup EndSpan --></i></b></font></font></address>
</center></div>
<p align=center><font color="#000000"><font size=4><b><i>Albania </i></b></font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3><b>Oct. 20</b> Voting for local elections goes relatively smoothly despite parliamentary elections marred by fraud and violence 
last May for which President Sali Berisha&#151;a former Communist&#151;was heavily criticized. </font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3><b>Oct. 21</b> As the Council of Europe, which is in charge of monitoring the local elections, reports no serious incidents of 
fraud, the Democratic Party of President Sali Berisha claims a &#147;landslide victory.&#148; </font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3><b>NY Times, Oct. 25</b> Fatos Lubonja, a writer who spent 17 years in jail during the Communist era, criticizes President 
Berisha for keeping Albania in the past. For example, Albania is the only ex-Communist country where the government 
totally controls the radio and television. </font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3><b>NY Times, Oct. 27</b> More than half of the Albanian population is involved in collecting interest from pyramid schemes that 
use the cash from new investors to pay shareholders. But while the schemes survive as long as higher returns can lure new 
investors, they always collapse over time. </font></font></p>
<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>Oct. 2</b> In Sofia, former Prime Minister Andrei Lukanov is slain outside his house. One of Bulgaria's most influential 
political figures, Mr. Lukanov helped oust in 1989 Communist leader Todor Zhivkov (who ruled Bulgaria for 33 years) 
and was a strong critic of current Socialist Prime Minister Zhan Videnov. President Zhelyu Zhelev denounces the killing 
and parliament adopts a declaration condemning terrorism. </font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3><b>NY Times, Oct. 28</b> Successive Bulgarian governments have balked at market reform, refusing to privatize or dismantle 
inefficient state-owned industries and discouraging Western investment while allowing former Communist businessmen to 
strip state industries from their assets and send the money (between $3 billion and $5 billion) abroad. In early presidential 
election returns, voters register disapproval of the government, composed of former Communists, by giving a strong lead 
to Petar Stoyanov, the candidate of the anti-Communist Union of Democratic Forces. The function of president is mostly 
ceremonial, however, and carries little power. </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>Oct. 25</b> The Czech Defense Ministry announces that the estimated 150 Czech soldiers who served in the 1991 Persian 
Gulf war will receive medical examinations starting next month. The announcement follows recent reports that many Czech 
veterans suffer from ailments comparable to those reported by U.S. soldiers who also served in the Gulf war. These 
ailments have been attributed to exposure to Iraqi chemical weapons. </font></font></p>
<p align=center><font color="#000000"><font size=4><b><i>Poland </i></b></font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3><b>Oct. 23</b> Parliament votes not to try Gen. Wojciech Jaruzelski and other former Communist leaders for the deaths and 
imprisonment of opposition activists who campaigned for democracy during martial law 15 years ago. </font></font></p>
<p align=center><!--VERMEER BOT=HTMLMarkup StartSpan --><A NAME="EASTERN EUROPE"><!--VERMEER BOT=HTMLMarkup EndSpan --><font color="#000000"><font size=5><b><i>EASTERN EUROPE<!--VERMEER BOT=HTMLMarkup StartSpan --></A><!--VERMEER BOT=HTMLMarkup EndSpan --> </i></b></font></font></p>
<p align=center><font color="#000000"><font size=4><b><i>Belarus </i></b></font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3><b>Oct. 11</b> &#160;President Aleksandr Lukashenko, an openly anti-Western leader who seeks to reunite with Russia and stall 
market reform, has been trying to gain unlimited power by forcing through a new constitution to be decided by referendum 
on Nov. 7. </font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3><b>Oct. 19</b> Demonstrators march through the streets of Minsk to protest President Lukashenko's bid to &#147;gain near absolute 
power.&#148; Elected on an anti-corruption platform after Belarus&#151;a country of 10 million&#151;became independent in 1991, Mr. 
Lukashenko went along with economic reform initially, only to reverse course in 1995. Privatization has come to a halt and 
the country appears to be going back to the old Communist order. Mr. Lukashenko has offered to delay to Nov. 24&#151;but 
not drop&#151;the referendum planned for Nov. 7. </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>Oct. 1</b> With troops now owed three months of back wages, Defense Minister Gen. Igor Rodionov warns that the military 
may simply fail to respond to the Kremlin's orders, &#147;that is, people will just stop going to work.&#148; </font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3><b>Oct. 3</b> On television, President Boris Yeltsin says that he urged Gen. Aleksandr Lebed, his security adviser, to remain on 
the job although Mr. Lebed had threatened to resign because of his &#147;dwindling authority.&#148; Mr. Yeltsin also backs, and 
takes credit for, the accord Gen. Lebed concluded with Chechen rebels. </font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3><b>Oct. 14</b> Moscow has started to deport thousands of homeless people by train to distant villages where they grew up or 
were last registered as permanent residents. Although President Yeltsin and Moscow Mayor Yuri Luzhkov say the 
deportations are part of the war on crime, the deportees have not been charged with wrongdoing, a hint that the move is to 
clear Moscow's streets of poor Russians and immigrants from the former Soviet republics. </font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3><b>Oct. 16</b> Anatoly Chubais, President Yeltsin's chief of staff, has emerged in a few months as a powerful force in the Russian 
government. A pro-capitalist economist who led Russia's privatization campaign, Mr. Chubais has the support of many 
free-market reformers. Asserting that an efficient state is needed for achieving economic growth, Mr. Chubais is hoping to 
turn Russia's &#147;sometimes rudderless Government&#148; into a disciplined state. </font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3>Interior Minister Anatoly Kulikov accuses his rival, national security adviser Alekskandr Lebed, of preparing a &#147;mutiny&#148; 
but Mr. Lebed dismisses the accusation as &#147;nonsense.&#148; </font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3><b>Oct. 17</b> Saying that &#147;there has to be a united team,&#148; President Boris Yeltsin dismisses Aleksandr Lebed for trying to split 
the Kremlin governing team. Now free to campaign to replace President Yeltsin, whom he calls &#147;aged and sick,&#148; Mr. 
Lebed immediately announces his presidential ambitions. </font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3><b>Oct. 18</b> All Russian leaders&#151;Communists or free-market proponents&#151;back President Yeltsin's dismissal of their rival, 
Aleksandr Lebed. But in Chechnya, rebel leaders say that they cannot count on Russia without Gen. Lebed and announce 
plans to hold elections on Jan. 27 without consulting the Kremlin. </font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3><b>Oct. 19</b> President Yeltsin chooses Ivan Rybkin, a 50-year-old moderate politician loyal to the Yeltsin administration, to 
replace Mr. Lebed. Unlike Mr. Lebed, Mr. Rybkin is not named national security adviser, but he combines the functions 
of secretary of the National Security Council and presidential envoy to Chechnya. </font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3><b>Oct. 24</b> Chronic tax evasion is the most pressing problem facing President Yeltsin's administration, forcing the government 
to delay the payment of wages and pensions and causing public unrest among workers. There is no single reason for the 
tax evasion: some companies delay tax payments until they are paid by their creditors while others simply use political 
connections to reduce or ignore their tax obligations. </font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3><b>Oct. 27</b> New security chief Ivan Rybkin promises Chechen rebel leaders that Russia will hold to the peace agreement 
signed by his predecessor, Aleksandr Lebed. </font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3><b>Oct. 31</b> Vladimir Nechai, the head of Chelyabinsk-70&#151;a top nuclear research center which played an important role in 
the design and development of the Soviet nuclear arsenal&#151;commits suicide, heightening the plight of Russian scientists 
who are owed back wages and demanding sorely needed funds. </font></font></p>
<p align=center><font color="#000000"><font size=4><b><i>Ukraine </i></b></font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3><b>NY Times, Oct. 18</b> Since President Kuchma's election victory in 1994, a new elite of politicians from the city of 
Dnepropetrovsk (including the President; Prime Minister; the ministers of national security, agriculture, and industry; and a 
host of former Soviet-era politicians) has been ruling Ukraine. The powerful &#147;clan from Dnepropetrovsk&#148; is being accused 
of corruption and of systematically looting national assets. </font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3><b>NY Times, Oct. 24</b> After five years as an independent country, Ukraine finds itself caught between a &#147;beckoning West&#148; 
and a &#147;volatile Russia&#148; that supplies the natural gas Ukraine needs for its industrial and home energy consumption. Russia, 
however, has not agreed yet on the demarcation lines of the border between the two countries. Ukraine, which is seen by 
Washington as a &#147;critical buffer&#148; between Russia and Europe, has been trying to achieve both a special understanding with 
NATO and a solid relationship between Russia and NATO. </font></font></p>
<p align=center><font color="#000000"><font size=4><b><i>Ukraine/Russia </i></b></font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3><b>Oct. 24</b> President Kuchma of Ukraine and President Yeltsin meet to discuss a 1995 agreement Russia and Ukraine made 
in the Crimean resort of Sochi to split the former Soviet Black Sea fleet (Russia would &#147;purchase&#148; most of the Ukrainian 
share and end up with 82% of the fleet). Both agree that Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin will go to Kiev in 
November to sign agreements that could lead to a cooperation treaty. But they postpone deciding the status of 
Sevastopol, the fleet's home town that is located in Ukrainian Crimea and coveted by both sides. </font></font></p>
<p align=center><!--VERMEER BOT=HTMLMarkup StartSpan --><A NAME="THE FORMER YUGOSLAVIA"><!--VERMEER BOT=HTMLMarkup EndSpan --><font color="#000000"><font size=5><b><i>THE FORMER YUGOSLAVIA<!--VERMEER BOT=HTMLMarkup StartSpan --></A><!--VERMEER BOT=HTMLMarkup EndSpan --> </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>Oct. 1</b> The U.N. Security Council ends the sanctions it imposed in 1992 on Yugoslavia (Serbia and Montenegro). </font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3><b>Oct. 3</b> U.S. Defense Secretary William Perry tells a U.S. Senate panel that up to 7,500 American troops will remain in 
Bosnia until next March. Five thousand troops will leave soon for a six-month tour in Bosnia in order to assist with the 
withdrawal of the U.S. peacekeeping force of 15,000 men scheduled to pull out by Dec. 20. </font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3>In Paris, Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic and Alija Izetbegovic, the chairman of the new three-member Bosnian 
Presidency, sign an accord brokered by French President Jacques Chirac in which they agree to establish full diplomatic 
relations and to move &#147;from confrontation to cooperation.&#148; </font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3><b>Oct. 5</b> Objecting to the wording of the oath of office and the security arrangements for the ceremony to swear in the 
three-member presidency and legislators, Bosnian Serb leaders refuse to attend. </font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3><b>Oct. 6</b> Political chaos, combined with porous borders, widespread poverty, and violence, has caused a thriving criminal 
underworld to flourish in Bosnia. Well-organized gangs of ethnic Serbs, Croats, and Muslims (the &#147;only genuinely 
multi-ethnic organizations in Bosnia) have developed drug routes and prostitution rings with the complicity of local officials 
to whom they give bribes. </font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3><b>Oct. 10</b> As the official in charge of the civilian part of the Bosnian peace agreement, Carl Bildt asks that peacekeeping 
troops remain in Bosnia until 1998 in order to give Bosnia a chance to recover from the war. </font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3><b>NY Times, Oct. 17</b> The Arizona market, an improvised market located near the strategic town of Brcko in northern 
Bosnia, is one of the few places in Bosnia where ethnic Serbs, Croats, and Muslims can mix and work together. Cited by 
NATO commanders as a sign that the three groups can get along, the market is also criticized for perpetuating the 
lawlessness and black marketeering now common in Bosnia. </font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3><b>Oct. 18</b> Intelligence officials in Bosnia find the Bosnian Serbs in violation of the Balkans arms reduction agreement with 
many more heavy weapons (about 2,500 pieces) than they declared (about 1,350 pieces). The arms control agreement set 
limits on the number of heavy weapons the parties to the agreement can have and requires them to destroy excessive 
stocks. </font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3><b>Oct. 19</b> One month after the elections, the new presidency and parliament that were to unify Bosnia are being boycotted 
by Bosnian Serbs who are pushing ahead with plans to secede and merge with Serbia; and refugees trying to return to 
villages in enemy hands have been forced back. </font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3><b>Oct. 22</b> The OSCE, which is supervising elections in Bosnia, announces that municipal elections will be postponed for the 
second time (elections were first postponed from September to November due to irregularities in voter registration) 
because the Bosnian Serbs have decided to boycott the vote. But some diplomats fear that the new postponement will 
only solidify the lines of partition separating the three ethnic groups in Bosnia. </font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3><b>Oct. 24</b> Although the U.S. has shipped $100 million worth of military equipment intended for Bosnia to the Croatian port 
of Ploce, it refuses to turn it over until the Bosnian government agrees to meet certain conditions, including the dismissal of 
Deputy Defense Minister Hasan Cengic, who is accused of having ties to Iran. </font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3><b>Oct. 25</b> Officials in Washington and NATO have begun preparing for a new international peacekeeping force in Bosnia 
that would include at least 5,000 and perhaps as many as 10,000 U.S. troops. </font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3><b>NY Times, Oct. 27</b> With Bosnian leaders continuing to block the reunification of the Muslim-Croat Federation and the 
Bosnian Serb republic, Bosnia's industrial network&#151;which used to employ half of the country's workers&#151;is now 
unsalvageable. Production is down by 90% and what is left in the two parts of the country are two rudimentary economies 
that will be competing, instead of collaborating, for the same markets. </font></font></p>
<p align=center><font color="#000000"><font size=4><b><i>Croatia </i></b></font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3><b>Oct. 8</b> Antun Tus, a retired Croatian general, criticizes President Franjo Tudjman on Radio 101&#151;the last independent 
radio station in Croatia&#151;over Mr. Tudjman's drive to turn Croatia into a military power. &#160;Although Radio 101 resisted 
Communist and nationalist intolerance for 13 years, it is likely to be turned over to Tudjman supporters when its license 
expires in November. </font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3><b>Oct. 16</b> After a six-month delay over human rights concerns, the Council of Europe, which promotes democracy and 
human rights, admits Croatia as its 40th member. Croatia is the second former Yugoslav republic (Slovenia joined in 
1993) to be accepted as a member. </font></font></p>
<p align=left><font size=4>&#160;</font></p>
<p align=center><font color="#000000"><font size=4><b><i>Germany/Bosnian Refugees </i></b></font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3><b>Oct. 9</b> Some of the 320,000 Bosnian refugees who have found shelter in Germany are being threatened with expulsion as 
Bavaria announces that it will immediately enforce an August decree it signed, along with the other 15 German states, to 
return the refugees voluntarily or by force to Bosnia. German states have been financially burdened by the refugees and 
have pressed for their departure since the December peace agreement. </font></font></p>
<p align=center><!--VERMEER BOT=HTMLMarkup StartSpan --><A NAME="WESTERN EUROPE / EASTERN EUROPE"><!--VERMEER BOT=HTMLMarkup EndSpan --><font color="#000000"><font size=5><b><i>WESTERN EUROPE / EASTERN EUROPE<!--VERMEER BOT=HTMLMarkup StartSpan --></A><!--VERMEER BOT=HTMLMarkup EndSpan --> </i></b></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>Oct. 12</b> Blaming the U.S. for its refusal to let a European officer be in charge of the Alliance's southern command (which 
includes the U.S. Sixth Fleet)&#151;a post traditionally held by an American admiral&#151;France says that it will remain in NATO 
politically but not militarily (except in some cases such as Bosnia). France had considered rejoining NATO's military 
command structure but insisted in August on European control of the two main NATO ground commands, one of which is 
Allied Forces Southern Command. </font></font></p>
<p align=center><font color="#000000"><font size=4><b><i>Norway </i></b></font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3><b>Oct. 23</b> In a surprise announcement, Prime Minister Gro Harlem Brundtland announces her resignation, saying that she will 
run for reelection to parliament in September 1997 and brushing off speculation that she quit to seek the post of U.N. 
Secretary General. She is being succeeded by Thorbjoern Jagland, leader of the Labor Party, who is expected to follow 
the current government policies. &#160; </font></font></p>
<p align=center><font color="#000000"><font size=4><b><i>Norway/U.S.A./Russia </i></b></font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3><b>Oct. 5 (Reported in NY Times, Oct. 8)</b> Norway and the United States sign the Arctic Military Environmental 
Cooperation Accord with Russia to help Russia (technically and financially) dispose of nuclear submarine reactors and 
other radioactive waste that it dumped for 30 years in the Barents and Kara seas. </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>Oct. 6</b> At NATO Headquarters in Brussels, Russian security adviser Alexander Lebed announces his goal to pursue a 
&#147;complicated, but civilized dialogue&#148; concerning NATO's enlargement. </font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3><b>Oct. 7</b> Although Gen. Lebed concedes that NATO has the right to enlarge, he urges the Alliance to delay the decision to 
expand for a generation in order to &#147;allow the bitterness of the cold war to fade.&#148; </font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3><b>Oct. 9</b> Despite possible Russian reactions, the U.S. is pushing ahead with the NATO expansion schedule that will bring 
several former Soviet allies into NATO in 1999. In December, NATO is to set a date (before July 97) for a summit 
conference that will name the first countries eligible for NATO membership. </font></font></p>
<p align=center><font color="#000000"><font size=4><b><i>Switzerland </i></b></font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3><b>Oct. 30</b> Switzerland announces that it will join the NATO Partnership for Peace program. The move will allow Swiss 
officers to observe military maneuvers and play some part in peacekeeping exercises. </font></font></p>
<p align=center><font color="#000000"><font size=4><b><i>Turkey </i></b></font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3><b>Oct. 1</b> Necmettin Erbakan, the leader of the pro-Islamic Welfare Party who became Turkey's Prime Minister in June, has 
been campaigning for closer ties with Muslim countries. After visiting Iran in August, where he signed a multibillion-dollar 
oil transport agreement with the government, he is about to embark on a trip to Libya, declared a terrorist state by the 
U.S., and Nigeria, whose military leaders have jailed the man who won the country's last presidential election. The trip is 
causing concern in the West. </font></font></p>
<p align=left><font color="#000000"><font size=3><b>Oct. 7</b> Turkey and Libya sign a deal to triple trade between the two countries, prompting U.S. criticism. </font></font></p>
<p><a href="October_1996.htm"><font color="#000000"><font size=4>Go to top of Page</font></font></a><font color="#000000"><font size=4><br>
</font></font><a href="96_timeline.htm"><font color="#000000"><font size=4>Return to 1996 Timeline Contents</font></font></a><font color="#000000"><font size=4><br>
Return to NATO Workshop Homepage</font></font></p>
</body>

</html>

Anon7 - 2021