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Walt says situations where former government officials use credentials to argue the position of a foreign government without disclosing they are in its employ are always problematic. "Someone engaged in lobbying or political commentary ought to simply disclose where the outside income come from," he says. "At a minimum, people can discount anything that they might say." In widely read op-ed commentaries, William Montgomery, the former U.S. ambassador to many of Yugoslavia's former republics, proposes that Kosovo and Bosnia be allowed to split into its ethnic components
-- a stance fiercely opposed both by Washington and most European capitals. Montgomery is working for the Serbian Progressive Party -- Serbian nationalists that include supporters of former Serbian strongman Slobodan Milosevic and who demand that Serbs in Kosovo and Bosnia be allowed to secede. A document deposited with the U.S. Department of Justice last year shows him as registered as a foreign agent by party leader Tomislav Nikolic. But that is not apparent in his role as newspaper contributor. "I don't ever want to be in a position where I am explaining the party's policies ... that's not my role," Montgomery told The Associated Press when asked about his activities. The former special presidential adviser on Bosnia refused additional comment. In Austria, both Gorbach and Gusenbauer told The AP they dispute suggestions in national media that they have sold out in working for
-- and praising -- autocrats whose commitment to democracy and human rights records are abysmal. Lukashenko has been in power for more than 16 years, exercising overwhelming control over politics, industry and media in his nation of 10 million. But Gorbach, whose consulting company is seeking to expand in Belarus and other former Soviet republics, questions findings by international observers that Lukashenko's December re-election was rigged, declaring that what he saw at polling stations on election night showed the nation "progressing toward accepting the basic rules of democracy." And while condemning "violence in all of its forms," Gorbach -- who was the guest of the Belarus government as an election observer
-- said he spent post-election hours in his hotel room and saw and heard nothing of the brutal police crackdown on demonstrators protesting the vote. "What I observed was all above board," he declares. Gusenbauer, meanwhile, suggests he is doing Western society a service by promoting democracy and importing Western values through his paid consulting tasks for Nazarbayev, Kazakhstan's president for life. He said some people stand on the sidelines and wring their hands over lack of freedoms, while others jump in and try to change things for the better. "I definitely belong to the second group," he said.
[Associated
Press;
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