http://inq.philly.com/content/inquirer/2001/08/30/opinion/TRIFKOVIC30.ht
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THE PHILADELPHIA INQUIRER               
Thursday, August 30, 2001 

Commentary: Options on Macedonia 
There are three hard ways to handle Albanian separatists. 

By Srdja Trifkovic 

On the eve of the War in Kosovo, I wrote in the Times of
London that NATO support of ethnic Albanian separatists in Kosovo would
unleash a chain reaction whose first victim would be Macedonia, because
"once KLA veterans acting as policemen start to patrol Kosovo, the
rising expectations of Macedonia's Albanians will be impossible to
contain."

"Nonsense," a U.S. State Department official snapped at a conference in
Washington a few days later. "The problem in Kosovo is Milosevic. In
Macedonia the Albanians don't need to make trouble because their rights
are respected." The issue was that of "human rights," he said, not
nationalism: the notion of Greater Albania was a Serb paranoid
invention.

Two and a half years, one bombing, and $100 billion later
we know the score. The same pattern of NATO blunders is continuing. To
correct it, we need to recognize that no institutional arrangements
short of ethnic partition will assuage Albanian separatism.

There is nothing remarkable, or inherently reprehensible,
about such behavior: Premodern nations and tribes have
been at it since time immemorial. The Albanians differ
only in that they have perfected the art of using foreigners
- sultans, kaisers, duces, f�hrers, and most recently the Clinton
administration - to get the job done for them. Indeed, the mess in the
Balkans is likely to be Clinton's most enduring legacy.

The Bush administration now faces three alternatives.
All of them are unpleasant, although not equally so.

Becoming a truly honest broker and acting robustly to
disarm the KLA (or whatever label it chooses to use in Macedonia today,
or Montenegro or Greece tomorrow) is a nonstarter. Truly disarming the
KLA, not merely collecting an arbitrarily determined and suspiciously
low number of easily replaceable weapons, would mean American
casualties, leading to a hasty withdrawal of the U.S. contingent - with
or without prior agreement with our European allies - and the loss of
credibility that this administration would never allow. It knows that
the only reason that ethnic Albanians still tolerate NATO's presence in
Kosovo, now that it is no longer needed to defeat the Serbs, is that it
has not seriously attempted to declaw the KLA. 

The present course - pretending to restrain the KLA while effectively
appeasing it - is the worst of all options. The deployment of 3,500 NATO
troops, supposedly for 30 days so the KLA may hand in its weapons to
them, is a stopgap measure divorced from any meaningful strategy. It
will also bring an all-around loss of American credibility (with the
Macedonians this has already happened) and no gain. Ethnic Albanians
will continue to use Kosovo as their safe haven for hit-and-run attacks
against Macedonians, with NATO either reduced to passive observers or
forced into an open-ended mission creep, and with American diplomacy
permanently stuck in a deadend not of this administration's making. 

The third option, least odious by far, is to disengage. During last
year's campaign, candidate Bush and his aides - notably Condoleezza
Rice, Dick Cheney and others - claimed that it was time to turn over the
task of policing the Balkans to the Europeans. Since the United States
has intervened needlessly and harmfully in the Balkans for the last
decade, the task of sorting out the mess should be left to our NATO
allies, if they are keen to stay. Bush should call Jacques Chirac and
Gerhard Schroeder and give them the glad tidings: The hour of Europe has
come. If your Eurocorps is to have any meaning, gentlemen, it is now -
in the hills around Tetovo, on the road from Skopje to Kumanovo, and
inside Kosovo - that its worth may be proven.

Perhaps the Europeans will have the sense to decline this gift.
Ultimately the Albanians may even have to face their long-abused
neighbors without foreign cover. That will present them with an
unexpected problem, but its resolution is unworthy of the bones of a
single Pomeranian grenadier or Texas Ranger.


Srdja Trifkovic ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) is director of
the Center for International Studies at the Rockford
Institute (www.rockfordinstitute.org) in Rockford, IL.





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