Why did Milosevic Surrender?By *Sam Vaknin, Ph.D.*

Why did Milosevic surrender? I originally asked that question on June 21,
1999. So why did he? Not because of NATO. Ground damage assessment based on
the number of withdrawing troops and their hardware and on a detailed
inventory of charred remains in most of Kosovo - prove that this air
campaign was no different to its predecessors. Only 10% of Serb artillery,
tanks, APCs and so on were effected. The Yugoslav (read: Serb) army -
ostensibly the side which lost the war - is vibrant and defiant. It does not
look like it has been subjected to the equivalent of 12 Hiroshima size
nuclear bombs in 11 weeks. It looks like it knows something that the rest of
us don't.

And it does.

Milosevic did not surrender. He entrapped the West in his usual, wily style.
He lured the west into a fatal hornets' nest, an unmanageable capsule of
centuries-old conflicts, a terrorists' lair, replete with drug deals, gun
smuggling and organized crime. Kosovo constitutes a major drugs route from
the Golden Triangle, via Turkey, Afghanistan and Iran to Europe. It is an
integral part of the path leading - via the polluted Vardar river - from
Greece to Montenegro. It is swarming with weapons traders, drug dealers,
"freedom fighters", Muslim fanatics, spies, con artists, smugglers and
common criminals. Every self respecting mob is heavily represented there -
from the ruthless Bulgarian mafia to the murderous Russian one. The civilian
population has long been intimidated into co-operation in all these
loathsome (though lucrative) activities. Many are only too happy to
collaborate.

Milosevic withdrew his forces - this is an undeniable fact. He did so after
he lost the backing of Russia. Russia sold him to the West and disposed of
the Old Guard which supported him in the Kremlin. It was handsomely rewarded
by that long arm of the USA - the IMF. But Russia's betrayal is not
sufficient to account for the Serbian volte face. The turnaround in
Milosevic's position was too sudden and Russia's support has always been
more moral than military. Something else was at play.

Notice the following hitherto unimaginable developments:

Milosevic surrenders Kosovo to NATO occupation, including all its holy sites
and lucrative mines. There is a conspicuous absence of domestic reaction by
the likes of Seselji, the Serb ultra-nationalist. He quits the government -
a response eerily civilized judging by his previous record.

The stunning rapprochement between the Macedonian Prime Minister, an
erstwhile nationalist and Albanian-buster, Ljubco Georgievski and the
self-proclaimed KLA Kosovar "Prime Minister" Hashim Thaci. The two agree to
open liaison offices in each others' capital cities and to collaborate with
Albania in the forthcoming reconstruction of the Balkan region. All this is
happening as the Macedonian Minister of the Interior is accusing both the
Serbs and the KLA of conducting subversive activities on Macedonian soil
with the aim of splitting Macedonia apart. All this happens as NATO begins
to clash militarily with an ever more defiant and cocksure KLA.

The Russians flex their 200-men muscles in an enclave in the Pristina
airport. Yugoslavia looks upon the developing East-West choreography with a
profound lack of interest. The Serb forces are withdrawing together with
tens of thousands of Serb civilians, the new refugees in this never-ending
saga. This, despite the FACT that Milosevic could have dragged the war on
indefinitely without incurring too much damage either to his military or to
his regime. Had he done so, NATO would have been the first to blink.

Why did Milosevic surrender? Why so suddenly and so surprisingly? Why did he
surrender when the West and NATO were on the verge of breaking apart (recall
the acrimonious public exchanges between Blair, Clinton and Schroeder just
prior to the auspicious Serb capitulation)? This is very reminiscent of the
German surrender in 1918. The forces in the field felt victorious. The
politicians wavered. The result was a sense of betrayal and backstabbing
exploited by the corporal-Fuhrer Hitler.

Sherlock Holmes used to say: "When you eliminate the impossible, what
remains, however improbable, must be the truth." And what remains is a
secret deal. A hidden agenda. A missing protocol. It is a wild
reconstruction of bizarre events. It is improbable. But Milosevic's
surrender was impossible - so it must be the truth or a close approximation
thereof.

I think that the only reasonable explanation to this week's events is the
following:

Milosevic agreed to withdraw from Kosovo and to turn it over to NATO for a
limited period of time.
NATO (not too eager to remain in the province and police it forever) agreed
to disarm the KLA and transform it into a docile police force cum political
party. It agreed, in other words, to do Milosevic's bidding and dirty work.
The KLA agreed not to pursue its anti-Serb, pro-independence strategy.
Coming from Rugova, such a policy would have been judged treasonable. The
KLA was the only force which could have delivered the climbdown.
Serbia agreed to recognize the KLA as THE legitimate force in Kosovo once
demilitarized and converted. It actually agreed to support the KLA against
the now discarded Rugova. The KLA needed Serbia, a natural ally in the
absence of others.
The KLA and NATO agreed to let Serbia back into a KLA-dominated Kosovo
later. The exact form of the final political-military arrangement has not
been made clear. But it always was evident that it must - and will - include
Serb sovereignty and military presence in the province. Kosovo's political
future remained undetermined: a province? An autonomy? In a federation? A
confederation with Serbia and a more independent Montenegro? No one knows,
not even the main players. But the Serbs and the KLA and NATO are in
cahoots. There is more to the "capitulation" than meets the eye.


Macedonia - informed about these backstage accords - hurried to establish
good neighbourly relations with the real winners of the war: with the KLA.
In this it served as both Serbia's AND NATO's long arm. A perfect venue and
communication channel, Macedonia established itself as the arena of future
reconstruction and future political negotiations. Incidentally, it also
secured its own territorial integrity. An happy KLA in a self-governed
Kosovo will have little incentive to re-engage in subversive activities in
Albanian-populated Western Macedonia.

All the participants in this tragicomedy are now going through the motions.
The Serbs are withdrawing. The KLA is taking over. NATO half-heartedly tries
to disarm the more flagrant KLA units. Serbia is biding its time. In a few
months, it will be asked to re-enter Kosovo by both NATO and the KLA. A
political phase will then begin which will result in final status
negotiations. Macedonia will host, convey messages between the parties,
apply pressure together with Albania and its own Albanian politicians, make
promises, hold secretive meetings, diplomatically gesticulate. If all goes
well - everyone will emerge victorious. If not - all the parties are
steeling themselves for a second Kosovo war, much more inevitable than the
first one.

* The article's original version was written on June 21, 1999.

*Sam Vaknin ( http://samvak.tripod.com ) is the author of Malignant Self
Love - Narcissism Revisited and After the Rain - How the West Lost the East.
He served as a columnist for Global Politician, Central Europe Review,
PopMatters, Bellaonline, and eBookWeb, a United Press International (UPI)
Senior Business Correspondent, and the editor of mental health and Central
East Europe categories in The Open Directory and Suite101.

Visit Sam's Web site at http://samvak.tripod.com You can download 22 of his
free ebooks in our bookstore <http://globalpolitician.com/freebooks.asp>*

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