-Caveat Lector-

>From wsws.org

WSWS : News & Analysis : Europe : The Balkan Crisis

NATO attack on Serbia has repercussions for Europe as a whole

By Peter Schwarz
31 March 1999

Little more than a week of intensive air attacks against Serbia has
resulted in numerous military and civilian facilities and factories going
up in flames and the deaths of an untold number of human beings. Also
included amongst the first casualties of the war is what remained of the
world order that provided Europe with a certain degree of stability over
the past five decades.

The official justification for NATO's attack--to prevent a humanitarian
catastrophe and to limit the conflict in Kosovo--has rapidly proved to be a
fraud. Instead of solving the crisis in the Balkans, the war is Balkanising
world politics. A wildfire threatens to spread to the entire region,
affecting Europe as a whole.

It was not hard to foresee that the air attacks on targets in Serbia and
Kosovo would unleash one of the largest floods of refugees since the
beginning of the crisis in the former Yugoslavia. According to Albanian
government sources, almost 100,000 refugees have streamed over the
mountainous border with Kosovo since the offensive began. NATO itself has
spoken of some 500,000 Kosovan Albanians presently fleeing the hostilities.

These figures are just as hard to verify as the claims of the Albanian
government that several thousand Kosovars have been massacred by Serbian
forces. Since the withdrawal of all journalists and the Organisation for
Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) observers from Kosovo, it is
difficult to distinguish between the war propaganda of the various parties
and the truth. Nevertheless, there is no question that the NATO offensive
has further intensified the interplay of national hatred and violence in
Kosovo. This follows from the entire previous course of events.

Since the disintegration of Yugoslavia, the interventions of the Great
Powers have been directed towards splitting up the multiethnic state into
ever-smaller autonomous units. This was justified on some occasions by
referring to the right to self-determination, on others by invoking
humanitarian motives. The result has been to encourage bitterness and
nationalist sentiment, and has helped several right-wing nationalist
cliques, which are, in turn, supported by the Great Powers or played off
against each other, to gain power.

The crisis in Kosovo is the result of these policies; and could have been
predicted long ago. However, as long as the Serbian regime in Belgrade was
useful in pushing through the Dayton Accord regarding the fate of Bosnia,
it was tolerated. When that process was completed the Western powers began
to arm the underground Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) and to enhance its
diplomatic status. For its part, the strategy of the KLA was to launch
attacks on Serbian facilities so that the reprisals would provoke an
intervention by NATO.

In the meantime, accusations have continued to arise that Washington
expressly sought to prevent a peaceful resolution. Willy Wimmer,
vice-chairman of the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly, has accused the United
States of trying to "completely upstage" the OSCE and the Contact Group. In
an interview with a German radio station in mid-January, Wimmer said, "The
impression is often created that the reason why the Europeans must not
achieve anything is so that the United States can intervene here. Possibly,
quite different objectives are pursued in their Balkan policy."

The official justification for the attack on Serbia--that years of pent-up
national hatred must be dampened by bombs--is like suggesting that one put
out a fire with kerosene.

The war is now starting to unfold according to its own logic. While NATO
continues to insist its official aim is to force the Milosevic regime to
sign a peace accord providing for an autonomous Kosovo within the Serbian
state, the escalation of the war has long since removed any such
possibility.

Every day the bloodbath in Kosovo intensifies, the calls for the deployment
of NATO ground forces or a massive arming of the KLA grow louder. In both
cases, the inevitable consequence would be either the complete separation
of Kosovo, or its division into two hostile parts. The creation of an
Albanian mini-state in Kosovo would itself raise the question of a Greater
Albania and draw the neighbouring states into the conflict. Albania is
already threatening to enter the war and Macedonia could be next.

A quarter of the 2 million inhabitants of the Macedonian state founded in
1991 are of Albanian origin. Half of the Macedonian army is comprised of
Albanians. There are considerable Serbian, Bulgarian and Greek minorities
living in the country. The high emotions that have already been enflamed
could be seen last Thursday in the violent demonstrations of Serbian youth
outside the American, British and German embassies in the capital, Skopje.

It would be impossible for Greece to remain uninvolved in any conflict in
Macedonia. For years, Athens has refused to even recognise the name of this
state for fear that it might encourage territorial claims to the eponymous
region in northern Greece. Moreover, some 10,000 NATO troops are presently
stationed in Macedonia to oversee a future Kosovo accord. They could easily
be drawn into the war, regardless of the opposition to such a course inside
most of the NATO states.

Montenegro--which borders Albania, Kosovo, Serbia and Bosnia--is also being
put under enormous pressure by NATO to secede from federal Yugoslavia.

The fragile cease-fire in Bosnia would hardly survive under such
circumstances. How could the secession of Bosnian Republika Serbska then be
prevented when both Kosovo and Montenegro have parted company with Serbia
proper with the military support of NATO? The present war, therefore, has
the potential to spread like wildfire, with unforeseen consequences. There
is not the slightest indication that the governments that have unleashed
this war have any answers to such developments.

Another result of the war against Serbia is the dramatic worsening of
relations with Russia. Within Europe, a new Cold War threatens to develop
that could have far-reaching consequences for the planned expansion of the
European Union (EU) and NATO.

Within the framework of the Contact Group, Russia supported an accord
granting the autonomy of Kosovo, but has strictly opposed the enforcement
of this by military means. The demonstrative disregard for the Russian veto
and the attack on a country with traditional ties to Russia have unleashed
a wave of indignation that threatens to bring a nationalist regime to
power.

The government of Yevgeni Primakov at first reacted with symbolic
gestures--cancelling a state visit to Washington and breaking off
diplomatic ties with NATO. If relations continue to cool, this could have
serious implications for Europe's internal equilibrium.

French President Jacques Chirac, in consultation with the German
government, has won the agreement of the Russian premier to act as an
intermediary with Belgrade. In this way they hope to patch up the breach
with Moscow. Primakov is to propose to the Serbian government that there
could be a strong Russian contingent in the troops securing any Kosovo
peace. This might then act under the auspices of the UN, rather than NATO.

In the European NATO countries the first days of war united most of the
political parties behind their respective governments. In the press,
however, critical voices could be heard from the start. These expressed two
predominant themes.

One is the concern that the attack on Serbia without a UN mandate clearly
signifies the flouting of international law.

A typical commentary in the German press: "What is collapsing without
comment before our very eyes is something that was only achieved with
difficulty: the rule of international law. In the League of Nations, in the
Kellogg Pact, and finally in the charter of the United Nations, the peoples
[of the world] have promised to mutually respect their borders under all
circumstances and not to interfere in the internal affairs of sovereign
states."

The unspoken fear in all these editorials is that a precedence is now being
established that means that international relations will operate according
to the rule of the jungle, the right of the strongest. If today the veto
right of Russia and China in the UN Security Council is ignored, why not
tomorrow that of France and Britain, or Germany, which is also claiming a
permanent seat?

The second theme revolves around the question: what will happen if the war
escalates any further? It is clear that most of the European governments
are not prepared for such an eventuality and had hoped that the threat of
war alone would suffice to ensure Belgrade's co-operation.

Herbert Kremp asks in the conservative German paper Die Welt, "All the
questions that are currently posed come back to the same essential point:
Did the Western politicians make a correct estimate of their opponent
before they authorised the NATO attack?"

Josef Joffe, a supporter of the NATO attack, wrote in the S�ddeutsche
Zeitung, "The ethnic earthquake that broke out again in 1991 is immune to
cruise missiles. What should happen when the bombing stops? There is only
one good answer to this: under no circumstances should ground troops be
dispatched, that have to impose a peace through arms."

Nevertheless, the call for the deployment of ground troops grows louder.
The first high-ranking diplomat to openly call for their use was Wolfgang
Petritsch, the Austrian EU representative. The former commander of the UN
troops in Bosnia, French General Philippe Morillon, has also said the use
of ground troops is unavoidable.

The German government continues to avoid giving a categorical answer to
such questions. But that such a course is being considered can be seen from
the actions of the former Defence Minister Volker R�he, who has loudly
called for the withdrawal of the 3,000 German troops stationed in
Macedonia. He clearly fears that, regardless of the fact they were sent
there to police any agreed peace, they might easily become the vanguard of
a hostile intervention force.

The deployment of ground troops would further intensify the conflicts
inside NATO and inside Europe. In Germany, which since the defeat of 1945
has not participated in any war, such a course would unleash a great shock.
Already some 400 mothers of German soldiers stationed in Macedonia have
joined together to prevent their use in a war setting. To this end, they
have sought contact with the mothers of Serbian soldiers.

In Italy and France the coalition governments are already split. In France,
the Communist Party of Robert Hue and the Citizens Movement of Interior
Minister Jean-Pierre Chev�nment oppose the NATO action. The same stance is
taken by the Italian Communists of Armando Cossutta and the Greens in
Italy. Here, where even the Catholic bishops have spoken against the war, a
further escalation might bring down the government. Cossutta's party has
threatened to withdraw its ministers and parliament has demanded a halt to
the air attacks and the immediate resumption of negotiations.

Opposition to the war is even stronger in Greece, where the government as a
whole opposes it. This NATO member not only enjoys close traditional ties
to Serbia, but in the case of Macedonia is directly involved in the outcome
of the war.

Amongst the people of Europe, there is undoubtedly a broad opposition to
the war. However, in the "official" opposition, which finds its echo in the
press, only considerations of power politics find expression: growing
US-European antagonisms and Washington's interference in the older
continent are felt to signify a weakening of Europe.

See Also:
US, NATO prepare public opinion for ground war against Serbia
[30 March 1999]
War dominates the European Union summit in Berlin
[27 March 1999]
US-NATO bombs fall on Serbia: the "New World Order" takes shape
[25 March 1999]



WSWS : News & Analysis : Europe : The Balkan Crisis

Clinton signals a shift to a wider war against Serbia

By the Editorial Board
31 March 1999

Amid reports that the air bombardment of Serb forces has been far less
effective than originally claimed, President Clinton on Tuesday indicated
that the United States is preparing to vastly expand its military offensive
in Serbia.

Speaking at a State Department ceremony in Washington, Clinton for the
first time publicly suggested that his administration was preparing to drop
its official policy of Kosovan autonomy and embrace the demand of the
Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) for the secession of the province and its
recognition as an independent state.

Clinton dismissed out of hand the diplomatic efforts of Russian Prime
Minister Yevgenny Primakov to broker a cease-fire and warned the Serbs that
failure to accept US-NATO demands, including a 28,000-strong NATO
occupation force on Serb territory, meant "the prospect for international
support for Serbia's claim to Kosovo [was] increasingly jeopardized."

Clinton's choice of words was significant and, from the standpoint of
Serbia, highly provocative. Kosovo has been internationally recognized as a
constituent part of Serbia since 1912. Clinton implicitly, but
deliberately, placed a question mark over Serb sovereignty by relegating
its authority to a mere "claim."

A policy of severing Kosovo from Serbia dictates an immense intensification
of the war, including the introduction of ground troops, the military
occupation of Kosovo and its transformation into a de facto protectorate of
the United States. Such a strategy would require a broadening of the war
into a general attack on Serbia, with a massive toll in civilian
casualties. There are growing indications that, despite Clinton's claims to
the contrary, this is the direction of American policy.

Virtually every day since the onset of bombing last Wednesday has seen the
introduction of new weaponry. Over the past 48 hours the Pentagon has
ordered five B-1 bombers and additional air defense-jamming planes and
refueling tankers to Europe for expanded air strikes. A US A-10 "Warthog"
aircraft, designed to fly at low altitudes and destroy tanks, took off for
the first time on Monday.

Even more significantly, Pentagon spokesman Kenneth Bacon said on Monday
that the US was considering the introduction of Apache attack helicopters.
The Apache is a short-range tactical weapon that requires substantial
support from troops on the ground. One army officer, speaking on condition
of anonymity, told the press, "If you go Apache, you've walked across a
threshold."

Clinton and his NATO allies have adopted a posture of shock and dismay over
the Serb response to their bombing campaign, undertaken to force Belgrade
to accede to Western control over Kosovo. This pose is hardly credible. In
the first place, it cannot be squared with their depiction of Serb ruler
Slobodan Milosevic as a power-mad demon who revels in shedding the blood of
innocent civilians. Given such an enemy, what other outcome could Clinton
and company have expected?

Moreover, every eruption of national strife since the breakup of
Yugoslavia, which began eight years ago with the Western-backed secession
of Slovenia and Croatia, has seen bloody outbreaks of ethnic cleansing on
all sides--on the part of Croats, Bosnian Moslems and Serbs. Where it has
suited American policy, as in Croatia's mass expulsion of the Krajina Serbs
in 1995, such atrocities have been carried out with direct US support.

US and NATO statements of surprise and indignation serve two interrelated
purposes. They fuel the media campaign to manipulate the public and build
support for a wider war, and they promote the illusion that the US and NATO
are being forced to systematically expand their military offensive as a
"humanitarian" response to Serb aggression against the Albanian Kosovars.

The attempt of the US and NATO to deny any responsibility for the human
disaster that is unfolding in Kosovo is perhaps the most sickening
expression of the cynicism and hypocrisy that characterize their actions.
It is not a matter of offering the slightest support or apologetics for the
chauvinism and brutality of the Milosevic regime. Serb policy in Kosovo
has, since 1989, been characterized by a combination of repression and
provocation. And, partly in response to anti-Serb actions by the KLA and
increased pressure from the US, Belgrade has in recent weeks intensified
its attacks on the Kosovan Albanians.

But it is ludicrous to deny the plain fact that the flight of Albanians out
of Kosovo only took on massive proportions after NATO commenced its bomb
assault last Wednesday. US and NATO officials cannot make a credible case
that they initiated the bombing to prevent Serb atrocities against the
ethnic Albanians. Even as they in one breath make such claims, in the next
breath they acknowledge that bombing alone cannot halt the Serb
depredations that are alleged to be causing the flood of refugees.

The military assault inflamed the situation inside Kosovo, provoking an
intensification of Serb attacks on Albanian civilians. But other factors
are also at work, including the activities of the KLA--encouraged by the
United States--and the impact of the bombing itself. It is a tragic fact
that every war produces a refugee crisis, and the US-led war has turned
Kosovo into a battleground.

Some American pundits are now declaring that the US made a terrible
miscalculation and simply did not anticipate the human disaster that its
air war would produce. All the more reason, they argue, for the US and NATO
to quickly move ground troops into the province.

Even if one accepts such claims, the culpability of Washington and its NATO
allies is by no means lessened. In that case the world is confronted with a
colossal combination of recklessness and ignorance. To borrow the words of
Tallyrand, the US government is preparing to rectify a mistake by means of
a crime.

See Also:
NATO attack on Serbia has repercussions for Europe as a whole
[31 March 1999]
US, NATO prepare public opinion for ground war against Serbia
[30 March 1999]
War dominates the European Union summit in Berlin
[27 March 1999]
Whom will the United States bomb next?
[26 March 1999]
US-NATO bombs fall on Serbia: the "New World Order" takes shape
[25 March 1999]

Top of page

Readers: The WSWS invites your comments. Please send e-mail.
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Copyright 1998-99
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved


~~~~~~~~~~~~
A<>E<>R

The only real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking
new landscapes but in having new eyes. -Marcel Proust
+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
Every great advance in natural knowledge has involved
the absolute rejection of authority. -Thomas Huxley
+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
Forwarded as information only; no endorsement to be presumed
+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, this material
is distributed without charge or profit to those who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving this type of information
for non-profit research and educational purposes only.

DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion and informational exchange list. Proselyzting propagandic
screeds are not allowed. Substance�not soapboxing!  These are sordid matters
and 'conspiracy theory', with its many half-truths, misdirections and outright
frauds is used politically  by different groups with major and minor effects
spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRL
gives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers;
be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credeence to Holocaust denial and
nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://home.ease.lsoft.com/archives/CTRL.html

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to