The risk of conflict in Balkans increasing  
  
By DAN KOBAYASHI 
First published: Sunday, September 4, 2005 
 
Six years after the conclusion of the Kosovo war and four years after the
Ohrid Framework Agreement ended ethnic violence in Macedonia, the Balkans
have settled into a real, if tenuous peace and vanished from Western
headlines. But as the troubled region moves toward a final discussion of
borders, minority rights and its place in Europe, the risk of renewed
conflict grows.
This became abundantly clear six weeks ago when three bombs exploded in the
center of Pristina where I was visiting. The blasts contained a message from
Albanian nationalists to the United Nations as it evaluates whether Kosovo
is ready to advance to final status talks -- the Balkans are at peace today,
but they need not be tomorrow, and anything short of independence for Kosovo
will lead to violence.

Another war in Kosovo could quickly spread to Macedonia and Montenegro, both
of which have large Albania minorities, and might even draw in Albania
itself. In other words, it could create the nightmare scenario that
originally led NATO to intervene in the Balkans in 1999. While the sentiment
in Kosovo is that independence is inevitable, the UN does not unilaterally
redraw the borders of sovereign states like Serbia, so securing independence
for Kosovo, and therefore peace, is completely dependent on the willingness
of the Serbs to voluntary relinquish what they perceive as their spiritual
and historical homeland.

There is only one solution: Europe. The belief that Europe is the answer to
problems of economic stagnation, corruption and ethnic tension is the only
idea that binds almost everyone in the Balkans, regardless of ethnicity,
nationality, party affiliation or profession. And eventual EU membership is
the most powerful incentive to good behavior and reform in history. The
wealth offered by the EU is so great that in most countries, political
parties are willing to work together to create the open political and
economic systems.

The trouble is that betting everything on Europe is a serious risk. The
promise of EU accession has helped win the peace in the Balkans, but the
removal of that hope, a prospect raised by the recent defeat of the proposed
EU constitution in referenda in France and the Netherlands, could quickly
inflame the region. Even if the EU remains open to expansion, Europe is
gambling that every Balkan country can reach the standards required for
accession and that by admitting them all at the same time (with the
exceptions of Slovenia, which is already a member, and Croatia and Bulgaria,
which are scheduled to join in 2007), they can solve every border dispute
and minority rights issue in one grand maneuver.

But if one border dispute cannot be resolved or one country cannot respect
its minorities, the whole plan could crumble under its own weight.

With the EU as "Plan A," there is no "Plan B." The only Plan B is more war,
more poverty and more ethnic cleansing.

It is essential that the Europeans, the United Nations and even the U.S.
listen to the message in the rumbling of the Pristina bombs -- the woes of
the Balkans have not been solved, only mitigated, and unless the West can
make the political, financial and intellectual investments required to
prepare all Balkan countries for EU membership and the Europeans can
maintain the will to embrace them, future explosions may carry more than a
message.

Daniel Kobayashi wrote this article for Global Beat Syndicate
 
http://www.timesunion.com/AspStories/story.asp?storyID=395345&category=OPINI
ON&newsdate=9/4/2005

                                   Serbian News Network - SNN

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