The Scoop - http://www.bobharris.com/

To all readers: I'll be writing this column every two weeks instead of
weekly for a while.  Some personal stuff needs my time.  Don't worry.  No
big thing.  I'll probably return to a weekly format shortly.

To new subscribers: thanks for joining up.  Yes, the column really is
free, and you're encouraged to forward it to friends.  That's how our
readership grows.

Thanks!

bh




THE SCOOP for April 12, 1999
___________________________

Kosovo
We Have To Do Something... Don't We?
� 1999 Bob Harris
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

[] = italics



Longtime readers know I can't write a damn thing without digressing all
over the place.  So you won't be surprised when I begin a depressing
article about Kosovo with a sad story about my Dad.  Sorry, but it's the
most appropriate way to make my point I can think of.

________________

In the late spring of 1995, my father's lymphoma, which had been in
remission, returned.  Untreated, his life expectancy was maybe five years.

The first round of chemotherapy had weakened him.  It had not cured him.

But [we have do something], said the doctors.  And so they bombed him with
more chemicals, even harsher ones than before.

Six months later I held his hand and watched him die from the side
effects.  The doctors offered no apologies.

They had done everything they could.

________________

The urge to do [something] in the face of horror is strong.  You make
yourself feel more powerful over things you can't control.  But that
doesn't mean what you're doing will actually help the problem.

It may only make things worse.

________________

Here's a list of the countries the U.S. has bombed since the end of World
War II, compiled by historian William Blum and posted on the ZNet website
(http://www.lbbs.org/):

China 1945-46
Korea 1950-53
China 1950-53
Guatemala 1954
Indonesia 1958
Cuba 1959-60
Guatemala 1960
Congo 1964
Peru 1965
Laos 1964-73
Vietnam 1961-73
Cambodia 1969-70
Guatemala 1967-69
Grenada 1983
Libya 1986
El Salvador 1980s
Nicaragua 1980s
Panama 1989
Iraq 1991-99
Sudan 1998
Afghanistan 1998
Yugoslavia 1999

In how many of these instances did a democratic government, respectful of
human rights, occur as a direct result?

[Not once.]

________________

Depending on who you ask, territorial disputes between Serbs and Albanians
go back to sometime between the end of World War II and 1389.

The Serbs consider parts of Kosovo historic national ground, much like the
Alamo or Bunker Hill are to Americans.  In recent decades, Albanians,
often fleeing an oppressive government in their adjacent homeland, have
become a large local majority.

Thus what is universally termed by the U.S. media the Conflict In Kosovo.

(Which, you'll notice, is increasingly pronounced "Kosova" by TV combovers
and boob jobs.  That's because they're mimicking the White House and
Pentagon, who prefer the latter because that's how Albanians say it, thus
transforming a single schwa sound into a show of solidarity with a people
whose history, customs, and language they have no interest in whatsoever.
Lame.  But anyway.)

So it's hard to say exactly when this whole fracas started.

Exactly where bombing the holy crap out of Yugoslavia could have been
averted is a little easier to pin down.

For years, the Albanians of Kosovo were led by Ibrahim Rugova, a Gandhi
fan who practiced non-violent resistance.

Sounds like someone we'd want to hang out with, right?  But Rugova -- and
the Albanians he represented -- were completely ignored by the U.S.
framers of the 1995 Dayton accords, which treated Slobodan Milosevic, who
could have easily faced trial as a war criminal, as an essential partner
in any future peace and stability.  Milosevic's abrogation of Kosovar
autonomy had occurred five years earlier, and Serbian repression of the
Albanians in Kosovo was already underway and well-documented.  But Rugova,
the Albanians, and Kosovo were simply not a matter of U.S. concern.

After which, the KLA's armed solution made a lot more sense to a lot of
Albanians.  Which in turn gave the Serbs a rationale for increased
security measures.

Conflict escalates... and here we are.

________________

Is the U.S. (and its NATO figleaf) truly intervening for humanitarian
reasons?

History [very] strongly indicates otherwise.

As has been widely noted, the U.S. did nothing to stop a death toll
literally 100 times larger in Rwanda just five years ago.  And in recent
years, the U.S. has supported the people [committing] the atrocities in
Indonesia, Columbia, Pakistan, El Salvador, and numerous other countries.
Clinton himself admitted just weeks ago that the U.S. was on the side of
the murderers in Guatemala.

We're supposed to believe that this time it's different.  But at this very
moment, Turkey, a NATO ally, engages in well-documented repression against
its Kurdish population, with U.S. knowledge and support.

Reports of Serbian atrocities are heart-rending to any decent human being,
but remember that Serbian repression of Albanians in Kosovo was a fact for
years before it became a matter of U.S. concern.  Similar atrocities
committed by U.S. allies are ignored.  And it has already been reported
that the CIA was aware in advance that bombing Yugoslavia would lead to
increased atrocities against the Kosovars.

And still the bombings began.

Why?

________________

The primary goal of U.S. foreign policy after World War II, spelled out
explicitly in numerous declassified internal memoranda, is the maintenance
and expansion of labor and export markets to support the Western economic
system.

Put simply: if it's good for Wall Street, then it's good, period.  It's an
ingrained, unquestioned knee-jerk assumption.  The only debate among
decision-makers is over how best to proceed within that paradigm.

The conflicts in Bosnia and Kosovo were never a major concern until they
each led to large refugee populations that might move across national
borders, where they might join with local minorities to alter the balance
of local political power.  Which doesn't make anybody happy.  Greece
doesn't need Macedonia getting all screwed up with an influx of Albanians.
Turkey, Greece's historical enemy yet erstwhile NATO ally, doesn't need a
nationalist leader arising in Greece in response, which would therefore
threaten their security.  And so on.

Which is why the U.S. put a unilaterally-decided, quick-fix solution on
the table last February, warning Milosevic we'd bomb the crap out of him
if he didn't sign it.  But similar threats were made during the Bosnian
conflict in 1994, and nothing happened.  So Milosevic didn't sign.

Anybody who plays poker knows you don't bluff if somebody's called your
bluff successfully earlier in the game.

So now Madeleine Albright and Richard Holbrooke need to save face.

Kablooie.

________________

So far, the bombings have had the following effects:

As U.S. intelligence knew would happen, Serbian security forces have
unleashed a brutal wave of violence against Albanian Kosovars.  While a
Serbian offensive was always considered likely, the bombings in no way
have made any Kosovar safer.  Instead, they are now endangered two-fold:
both from the bombs and from enraged oppressors.

International observers -- an acknowledged key to maintaining a standard
of civilized conduct on the part of security forces -- have been forced to
leave the region, exacerbating the atrocities.  Relief workers who might
have been able to assist the victims have also been forced to leave the
country.

Meanwhile, Milosevic's power is far [greater] than before.  The Serbian
population, under attack from a foreign power, has rallied behind their
leader.  Civilians are being killed in the attacks, and more deaths will
surely follow, thanks to the country's weakened infrastructure.  The
survivors are angry.  Which means the bombings have weakened Belgrade's
political opposition -- including Serbia's Democratic Party -- into
virtual non-existence.  Any check on Milosevic's domestic police power no
longer exists, and so while the people of Belgrade are weakened badly by
the bombings, Milosevic will almost certainly survive the conflict vastly
more in control than before.

Have we learned nothing from Iraq?

Peaceful negotiations -- still possible only months ago -- are now
unlikely in the near future.  A lasting peace has become almost
unimaginable.

The likelihood is now greater that minorities will be encouraged by the
U.S. action on behalf of the Kosovars to seek their own
self-determination.  Macedonia and Bosnia are now less stable than before.
Russian intervention into the conflict, and the insanely dangerous
possibility of escalation, have been treated as an acceptable risk.
Washington has displayed its willingness to countenance a new cold war.
The world is a more dangerous place.

As the bombing campaign fails to accomplish a single stated objective, the
insertion of ground troops to become an occupying force with no end in
sight becomes ever more likely.  Which means protracted years of guerilla
warfare, more destruction of the country under occupation, more refugees,
and more deaths.

Have we learned nothing from Vietnam?

Back at home, the use of NATO as a figleaf renders the War Powers Act a
quaint relic of a time when American citizens could expect their elected
representatives in Congress to have some say in military affairs.  The
Constitution, already wobbly, is further weakened.

The Pentagon, which has pleaded for years for the capacity to fight
full-scale war on two fronts simultaneously, finally has a two-front war
(remember, we're still bombing Iraq) to call its own.  Expect military
expenditures to increase, even though the U.S. already spends more on
defense than its top ten potential enemies combined.

Abroad, U.S. credibility among NATO countries for future operations -- one
of which may actually be necessary someday -- is weakened.  Greece and
Turkey have never fully supported the bombings, and France and Germany are
more reluctant every day.

Meanwhile, the UN Charter, a treaty signed by the United States, prohibits
the use of force except in cases of self-defense or as authorized by the
UN Security Council.  Neither condition applies here.  So once again,
international law is revealed as completely meaningless to the United
States, which bombs any country it wishes to with complete impunity.  U.S.
credibility in Third World nations is badly shaken.

And a dangerous precedent has been set: if international law means nothing
to the sole remaining superpower, then international law means nothing.

So what now?

The bombing must stop.  It is not meeting and cannot meet the campaign's
stated objectives.  It has, in fact, made things vastly worse for all
concerned, including and especially the Albanian Kosovars.

Where we go from there should be determined not by Bill Clinton, the
Pentagon, or NATO -- none of whom have legal standing in the matter, as it
happens -- but by the UN General Assembly, which is where the issue of
humanitarian intervention -- if that was ever truly the issue -- belonged
in the first place.

The U.S. has already done everything it could.

___________________________

Bob Harris is a radio commentator, political writer, and humorist who
has spoken at almost 300 colleges nationwide.  His email address is
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

To receive a free email subscription to The Scoop, just send a blank email
to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
___________________________

Bob's Big Plug-O-Rama� (updated 4/12/99):

After writing the above, I just don't feel like self-promotion this week.


______________________________________________________________________
To unsubscribe, write to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Start Your Own FREE Email List at http://www.listbot.com/




Reply via email to