"Endgame in the Balkans: Regime Change, European Style"


~~~~~~~~~~~~~

To my Serbian readers:
Whereever you are in the world, now is the time to tell your side of
the story!  I think these interviews - with Father Benedict and now
with an Albanian in Britain who has told me twice he is an "Islamic
Fascist" - need to be distributed all over the world.  There are a lot
of people out there who only know what they have been told about
Serbs.  It never ceases to amaze me that so much totally false
information is believed in this world if someone repeats it often
enough.  Serbs have proof that somehow you never tell the world about.
I am often accused, as I am in this exchange below, of being paid by
the "Serb Lobby" for writing my articles.  Had there BEEN a Serb lobby
10 years ago when I first started writing about the break-up of
Yugoslavia, it would not have taken me so long to figure out what the
real arguments are all about in the Balkans!.
So, keep sending these articles to everyone you know and the media and
members of government.
Mary Mostert

```~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Wishful Thinking
by Nebojsa Malic


Empire, Kosovo, and "Natural Albania"

Between the relative calm of the summer vacation season and the
turbulent events in Lebanon over the past month, the Balkans have been
on the periphery of news lately. Just because something isn't seen on
CNN, however, doesn't mean it's not happening.

After over seven years of UN/NATO occupation, the Serbian province of
Kosovo is up for a status review. The UN and the self-appointed
"Contact Group" (U.S., UK, Italy, Germany, France, and Russia) face
the mutually exclusive positions of Belgrade – which insists Kosovo is
an integral part of Serbian territory, and can have unprecedented
autonomy but never independence – and the Albanian provisional
government in the province, which calls anything short of independence
unacceptable.

Aug. 15 saw the appointment of Joachim Ruecker, one of the current
bureaucrats in the UNMIK occupation authority, as the successor to
viceroy Soeren Jessen-Petersen. The outgoing viceroy was appreciated
by the separatist Kosovo Albanians as a champion of their cause.

Meanwhile, Albanians rioted as the Empire's top negotiator, Martti
Ahtisaari, visited Pristina this week to meet with Ruecker and
Albanian officials. The rioters belong to Vetevendosje, a militant
"youth group" seeking unconditional independence from Serbia.

Not Whether, but When?

According to an Aug. 18 editorial in the New York Times, "the main
question facing the international community is not whether Kosovo will
become independent, but when and how."

The Times, much as the Washington Post, is an echo chamber of
"liberal" imperialist policymakers, who shaped U.S. Balkan policy
under Clinton but are not currently in power. So it's not at all
surprising that the proposed "solution" is a distilled version of the
International Crisis Group's formula for "conditional independence":

"The most promising way to encourage further progress is by moving
ahead to a carefully conditioned form of limited autonomy.

"The most critical issue, now as ever, is guaranteeing the rights of
the ethnic Serb minority. Any independence arrangement will have to
assure minorities a substantial role in government.…

"An international authority will have to monitor the government's
fulfillment of internationally agreed conditions, paying special
attention to issues like the rule of law and minority rights. A few
thousand NATO-led troops should remain in Kosovo with the power to
intervene when necessary to compel compliance."

One thing that simply leaps off the page here is the Times' callous
disregard of Serbs and Albanians. Why would the Serbs of Kosovo accept
being relegated to minority status in the land seized from them by
force, and see a handful of charity government jobs as adequate
compensation? Why would the Albanians agree to special treatment of
Serbs, after they've repeatedly demonstrated their hatred and
intolerance over the past seven years? And why would they accept a
continuing foreign presence, if they are truly independent? If
anything, this arrangement would further fan the flames of hatred in
Kosovo, as Albanians would blame the remaining Serbs for the presence
of an Imperial garrison.

The only clear winner emerging here is the Empire: it gets to keep the
bases Halliburton built in the occupied province, and boast of its
"intervention done right."

Wrench in the Works

Not four days after the Times editorial, a challenge came to
Washington's pet project in the Balkans. Not from Belgrade, as one
would have assumed, but from Albania itself.

Epoka e Re, an Albanian paper published in Kosovo, printed an
interview on Aug. 22 with Koco Danaj, political adviser to Albania's
Prime Minister Sali Berisha, in which Danaj called for the creation of
a "natural Albania" by 2013.

Already assuming the independence of Kosovo, Danaj invoked
Montenegro's separation from Serbia as an argument that Albanians in
Montenegro and Macedonia should have the right to secede as well.
"Instead of having Albanians participate in those countries'
governments, it would be more natural that they had one government in
the Albanian capital, Tirana, Danaj said." (AKI)

The Italian news service that reported Danaj's comments didn't note
the significance of the date, but 2013 would be the 100th anniversary
of the creation of Albania. It was in 1913 that the European "Great
Powers" created the first Albanian state by the Treaty of London,
which officially ended the Balkan Wars. For the rest of the 20th
century, Albanian nationalists have attempted to adjust the borders
laid out by that treaty to ones more closely approximating those
claimed by the 1878 League of Prizren as "ethnic Albania." This is the
"natural Albania" Danaj was referring to, no mistake.

Danaj's comments drew a sharp reaction from Serbia's de facto Foreign
Minister Vuk Draskovic, who condemned them as expansionist and sent a
message to the Contact Group that amounted to "Did we not tell you
so?"

Belgrade's warnings that the campaign for Kosovo's independence, the
Macedonian rebellion, and the Albanian participation in Montenegrin
secession were all parts of a wider strategy for the creation of a
Greater Albania have been played down by Imperial officials and mocked
by Albanian partisans such as the ICG. But as days go by, it's become
obvious that such a pattern does indeed exist.

Something in the Water

Meanwhile, in occupied Kosovo, the Albanian provisional government has
inadvertently demonstrated its complete inability to provide even
basic services to its population. According to medical staff at
Pristina's University Hospital, contaminated tap water and public
pools have aided the spread of viral meningitis, with over 400 people
infected so far.

Sanitation in Kosovo is not UNMIK's responsibility, but squarely that
of the authorities led by the "former" KLA thugs. Over the past eight
years, they have demonstrated an unquestionable talent for atrocities,
terrorism, propaganda, and lobbying, but a complete lack of ability to
protect the lives or property of their fellow Albanians, let alone the
Turks, Roma, Ashkali, or Serbs who lived in Kosovo.

Mind you, the competence – or lack thereof – of the Albanian
authorities should not be a factor in deciding whether their
separatist cause should be allowed to violate international law,
precedent, and principle. But it would at least help the Albanian
claims some if they actually appeared even marginally capable of
running their own affairs.

Foregone Conclusions

Policymakers and lobbyists in Washington whose political capital is
heavily invested in the "Bank of Collective Serbian Guilt" (Deliso)
are pushing for the separation of Kosovo before the end of this year.
One of their favorite phrases is that independence is a "foregone
conclusion." It's an effort designed to further punish and weaken
Serbia and bolster Albania as Washington's preferred client-state in
the region. This approach does not take into account either Serb or
Albanian agendas, treating these people instead as mere pawns on
Empire's grand chessboard. As evidenced by the idea of "natural
Albania," the pawns have ideas of their own.

Empire's failure is therefore the real foregone conclusion here, and
it isn't a matter of whether, but when.

Wishful Thinking
http://www.antiwar.com/malic/?articleid=9596

                                  Serbian News Network - SNN

                                       [email protected]

                                   http://www.antic.org/

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