Closing the Books on Kosovo

by Doug Bandow 

Doug Bandow is a Senior Fellow at the Cato Institute and a former Special
Assistant to President Ronald Reagan. He is a member of the Coalition for a
Realistic Foreign Policy.

Ethnic Albanians in the Serbian province of Kosovo want independence, but
even the Europeans don't believe they've earned it. Javier Solana, the
European Union's foreign policy head, has returned from Kosovo's capital of
Pristina criticizing the Albanians' refusal to move forward on
democratization and minority rights.

Six years ago President Bill Clinton and NATO launched an unprovoked war
against Yugoslavia, which had attacked neither the U.S. nor any American
ally. The "liberated" Yugoslav (now Serbian) province of Kosovo remains in
limbo.

The status quo satisfies no one, especially the ethnic Albanians who
dominate Kosovo. Nicholas Burns, Undersecretary of State for Political
Affairs, recently told Congress: "The status quo of Kosovo's undefined
status is no longer sustainable, desirable, or acceptable."

So U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan has appointed a special envoy, Kai
Eide, Norway's ambassador to NATO, to assess the province's compliance with
democratic and human rights standards, with an eye to starting international
negotiations on Kosovo's final status in the fall. But the process is
dependent on Kosovo's good behavior, which Solana found lacking.

The fact that Kosovo remains an issue demonstrates the Clinton
administration's hubris and surreal view of the Balkan combatants in 1999.
The belief that it could impose a mutually acceptable arrangement, one that
enshrined minority rights within a multi-ethnic framework, always was a
fantasy.

The hatreds on the ground were too strong. America's intervention -- taking
the world's greatest military alliance into war against a destitute state
suffering through a series of civil wars -- irrevocably changed the
geopolitical environment.

Stopping the bitter guerrilla conflict was an obvious benefit, but little
good has occurred since the bloodletting ended. America's allies, the
Albanian majority, conducted ethnic cleansing on a grand scale, kicking out
most Serbs, Jews, Roma, and non-Albanian Muslims.

U.N. rule has done little to prevent endemic violence, crime, and
instability, including brutal anti-Serb riots last year. Rep. Chris Smith
(R-NJ) says simply: "the human rights situation in Kosovo is still not a
good one, particularly for minority communities who live in enclaves and for
the displaced."

At a congressional hearing in May, Charles English of the State Department
reported, "Discrimination remains a serious problem. Access to public
services is uneven. Incidents of harassment still occur. Freedom of movement
is limited. And too many minorities still feel unsafe in Kosovo."

At the same time, the local population is dissatisfied with its
indeterminate status: still formally part of Serbia, officially ruled by
Western occupiers, with effective local control but no final resolution in
sight.

Now, at least, the U.N., with prodding by the Bush administration, is
attempting to move forward. There is likely to be some assessment whether
Kosovo is meeting a number of democratic "standards" along with the creation
of some forum for discussing the province's ultimate status.

All that can be said is, the sooner the better. The current situation
benefits no one. Most obviously it is a source of discord and instability in
Kosovo.

The prospect of an international fight over Kosovo also provokes nationalist
antagonism in Serbia, where political parties hostile to the West have done
well of late. Other nations, too, worry: almost all of Serbia's neighbors
harbor ethnic Albanian populations and worry about the impact of border
changes. Unfortunately, it will be easier to start the process than to
deliver a good result.

The only hope for finding some solution is to abandon the illusions that
long have tainted American policy in the Balkans. First, consent of all of
the parties is impossible. There is no agreement that will satisfy everyone.
After seeing other parts of the former Yugoslavia secede, why would Albanian
Kosovars accept less than independence? But why would Serbia accept
dismemberment at the hands of numerous countries -- America, Britain, and
Turkey, to start -- that have historically suppressed their own secessionist
movements?

Why would an artificial neighboring state like Bosnia back the partition of
Kosovo between competing ethnic groups, creating a principle that could be
applied to it? Why would Greece, Macedonia, or Montenegro support an
Albanian minority of another nation in winning independence? Why should the
nation of Albania forswear the possibility of union with Kosovo and creation
of a greater Albania?

Western nations also should abandon the embarrassingly naive illusion that
they can forcibly engineer a federal state that protects minority rights.
The bitter serial break-up of Yugoslavia should have ended this fantasy.

If that wasn't a large enough dose of reality, then any belief in a
multi-ethnic Kosovo should have disappeared when ethnic Albanians kicked out
a quarter million of their neighbors after NATO intervened on their behalf.
Whatever final delusions might have remained should have disappeared in last
year's spurt of anti-Serb violence by ethnic Albanians.

Understandably, no Albanian Kosovar cares to trust his future to Serb
governance. But no Serb, Jew, Roma, or anyone else would want to trust his
future to ethnic Albanian governance, irrespective of the promises made by
whomever.

It also is important to abandon expectation of a "just" settlement. Since
the West cheerfully backed creation of a series of new states out of
Yugoslavia, there's no intrinsic reason to say no to Kosovo.

At the same time, the NATO countries denied Serbs the right to secede from
the new nations of Bosnia and Croatia. So what principle justifies giving
the Albanians more rights than were accorded the Serbs? On the other hand,
if Albanians have a right to secede from Serbia, there's no logical reason
to deny Serbs the right to secede from Kosovo.

In short, there are no generally applicable principles here. The U.S. and
its European allies support the sovereignty of nation states in the face of
ethnic pressures -- except when they support groups that wish to secede and
establish ethnically-based states.

In the case of the Balkans, the only principle that seemed to apply was that
everyone got to secede from Serb-dominated territories and Serbs were never
allowed to secede from territories dominated by other groups. This might be
consistent policy, but it should not be confused with a principled moral
stand.

None of the proposed solutions is pretty. Independence would be in keeping
with the wishes of Kosovo's ethnic Albanian majority, but would leave the
few remaining Serbs vulnerable, inflame nationalism in Serbia, unsettle
neighboring states, and create a statelet likely to become the regional font
of crime, instability, and perhaps even terrorism.

Leaving Kosovo with Serbia, whatever the form of autonomy, would satisfy
Serbia and other nations with sizable ethnic Albanian populations, but has
no support among Kosovo's Albanians. Serbian brutality during the guerrilla
conflict and six years of de facto autonomy after allied intervention have
eliminated this as a realistic option.

Moreover, this approach would place Serbia's democratic future in doubt,
creating a hostile voting bloc accounting for roughly 20 percent of the
population. (With a youthful population, ethnic Albanians could constitute
30 percent of army recruits.) Finally, this "solution" would be inherently
unstable, creating a sense of unfinished business, seeming ethnic Albanians
to be a mere way station on the way to independence.

Independence with partition -- really big partition minus little partition
-- would come closer to satisfying ethnic Albanians, by giving them a
country, and Serbs, by leaving most of them in Serbia. Such a system would
be difficult to negotiate with Albanians, leave some Albanians in Serb
territory, and would unnerve surrounding nations by encouraging further
partitions.

Nevertheless, it would come closest to reflecting the desires of residents
and applying just principles. Separation would be the means to discourage
future conflict. Certainly it should not be ruled out by the West, as the
Bush administration has attempted to do, effectively prejudging any
"negotiations."

Although Clinton administration officials who did so much to unnecessarily
entangle America in the Balkans have demanded continued U.S. "leadership,"
solving the region's problems always should have been Europe's rather than
America's problem. Unfortunately, the U.S. now bears significant
responsibility for the outcome due to its foolish intervention in 1999. But
Europe retains both a greater interest in Kosovo's final status and ability
to influence Balkan governments than does America. 

Thus, Washington should baptize the beginning of an international process
for resolving Kosovo's status and then step back, withdrawing its last 1800
troops from the region. Europe then could wield its various tools of
influence -- a willingness to maintain military garrisons, the prospect of
joining the European Union, and the offer of economic opportunities and aid.
If the Europeans choose a different strategy than preferred by Washington,
so be it. And if a continuing troop presence is necessary, as many analysts
argue, it should be provided by Europe.

The Kosovo war is over, but the peaceful resolution has barely begun. In the
West's search for a solution, no one should unduly worry about respecting
international juridical principles or seeking regional consensus. NATO
abandoned any pretense of principle when it launched its unprovoked war
against Serbia.

The allies should indicate that precedent is irrelevant. Every case, whether
Kosovo or Bosnia or Croatia or Macedonia, is unique. International solutions
will depend on particular circumstances and won't be determined by any other
settlement.

There are lessons to be learned. The U.S., with or without NATO, should say
never again. Never again will Washington substitute ideological fantasies
for practical realities when implementing its foreign policy. Never again
will Washington intervene in a distant civil war of no geopolitical concern
to America. Never again will America attack another nation that poses no
threat to the U.S. The world is filled with tragedy, and the Balkans -- let
alone Iraq -- demonstrates how difficult it is for outsiders to resolve
ancient and intractable conflicts.

Who can and should govern Kosovo, and can they do it fairly and effectively?
No one really knows. But it's time to give the local inhabitants a chance to
try... And to let them deal with the consequences if they fail.

This article originally appeared on American Spectator Online on July 29,
2005.


http://www.cato.org/pub_display.php?pub_id=4038









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