Kosovo and Its Impact on U.S. Foreign Policy

by Joseph E. Fallon

The struggle for Kosovo between Christian Serbs and Muslim Albanians dates back 
to 1389, when the Serbs were defeated by, and their lands annexed to, the 
Ottoman Empire. Muslim rule lasted over four centuries and resulted in several 
waves of forced migrations of Serbs from Kosovo. The current Albanian majority 
there was achieved more recently—the result of the policies of the Axis 
occupation (1941-45), which included the killing of an estimated 10,000 Serbs, 
the expulsion of another 100,000, and the introduction of Albanian settlers. 
The de-Serbianization of Kosovo continued under Tito’s rule (1945-80), during 
which the country acquired many attributes of a separate Albanian 
state—borders, a flag, a capital, a supreme court, an education system that 
promoted the Albanian language, a university with teachers and textbooks from 
Albania, as well as cultural and sporting exchanges with Albania. In 1981, 
after Tito’s death, Albanians in Kosovo demanded that the province be elevated 
to a republic with the right of secession. This provoked a Serbian reaction 
that facilitated the rise of Slobodan Milosevic, which, in turn, was cited by 
Albanians as a justification for the activities of the Albanian Kosovo 
Liberation Army (KLA). A downward spiral of ethnic suspicion and strife ensued, 
culminating in the Yugoslav wars.

>From 1996 to 1999, the war in Kosovo was an internal conflict between the 
>secessionist KLA—which, at one time, was designated a terrorist organization 
>by the U.S. State Department—and the armed forces of the rump Yugoslavia of 
>Serbia and Montenegro.

Citing an alleged massacre of Albanian civilians by Serbian forces in the 
village of Racak in January 1999, the U.S. government and NATO allies 
officially intervened. Meeting in Rambouillet, France, that February and March, 
they drafted a “peace accord,” which offered the KLA de facto independence for 
Kosovo immediately, and de jure independence in three years. During that 
interval, Kosovo would be administered as a NATO protectorate. The U.S. 
government introduced a military annex to the accord under which NATO personnel 
would be immune from all legal actions—civil, criminal, or administrative—and 
NATO forces would have unfettered access to any and all parts of Yugoslavia. 
And all the costs would be borne by Belgrade. Yugoslavia would have been a 
virtual colony of NATO.

When Belgrade refused to sign the accord, NATO attacked. The war lasted from 
March 24 to June 10, 1999. Kosovo became a U.N. protectorate (UNMIK), whose 
final status—some form of independence from Serbia—would be determined in the 
future. That future is now, and it is posing political and strategic problems 
for the Bush administration.

U.S. foreign policy toward Kosovo, which culminated in military intervention in 
1999, was a continuation of the policy Washington had pursued in Bosnia and 
Croatia in 1995. Each of the three wars contributed to a profound 
transformation in U.S. foreign policy. In Washington’s eyes, the end of the 
Cold War meant a transition from a bipolar world, which functioned within a set 
of political, military, and legal restraints, to a unipolar one. The U.S. 
government was now the world’s hyperpower, without rival or limitation. For 
Washington, the Yugoslav wars provided an opportunity to demonstrate this to 
the rest of the world, thereby accomplishing several key objectives.

First, Washington set out to demonize the Serbs in order to discredit and 
suppress not just Serbian ethnicity but any manifestation of ethnic 
nationalism, since such nationalism undermines the legitimacy of the dominant 
ideology of the virtues of multiethnic states and transnational corporations.

Second, U.S. policymakers sought to dismember an inconvenient state—in this 
case, one supported by Russia, thereby establishing a precedent. Later, that 
precedent would be applied to the union of Serbia and Montenegro, then Serbia, 
and, perhaps, even to Iran. In so doing, Washington hoped to weaken and isolate 
Russia, both internationally and in Europe.

It also established another precedent, in promoting ethnic cleansing by proxy. 
The Clinton administration covertly armed, trained, supported, and advised the 
government of Croatia for the August 1995 military offensive known as Operation 
Storm. Though it was aimed at the secessionist Republic of Serbian Krajina, it 
resulted in the expulsion of an estimated 300,000 Serbs from Croatia. According 
to the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), after ten years, the Serbs 
still have not been permitted to return to Croatia. The precedent was repeated 
in 1999 when the Red Cross reported that the KLA had expelled between 200,000 
and 250,000 Serbs from Kosovo. It was repeated yet again in 2001 in 
Afghanistan, in the wake of the U.S. invasion, when our “ally,” the Northern 
Alliance, consisting mostly of ethnic Tajiks, sought to expel a million ethnic 
Pash-tuns from northern Afghanistan. According to the UNHCR, nearly 100,000 
Pashtuns fled, becoming refugees either elsewhere in Afghanistan or in 
Pakistan. In Iraq, both Kurdish and Shiite militias, whose political parties 
are members of the national government—another ally of the Bush 
administration—currently engage in ethnic cleansing. In Kirkuk, Kurds are 
reversing the process of “Arabization,” while in Baghdad, Shiites are cleansing 
Sunni neighborhoods.

By supporting Muslim demands for a united Bosnia and an independent Kosovo, 
Washington hoped to persuade Muslims, especially in Egypt, Indonesia, Saudi 
Arabia, and Turkey—all key U.S. allies—that they are wrong to regard U.S. 
foreign policy toward Palestinians, Kashmiris, Moros, and Uighurs as evidence 
of any hostility toward Islam on our part.

Washington also sought to encourage Muslims in Albania, Bosnia, and Kosovo to 
promote a secularized, individualistic Islam, in which mosque and state are 
separate, which would undermine the appeal of traditional Islam, especially in 
the West.

With the Cold War ended, Washington sought to justify NATO’s continued 
existence by waging war on Bosnia and Kosovo. These wars required a radical 
redefinition of NATO’s mission and area of responsibility. These ad hoc 
military interventions became official policy after September 11. NATO’s 2002 
Prague Summit Declaration stated,

We, the Heads of State and Government of the member countries of the North 
Atlantic Alliance, met today to enlarge our Alliance and further strengthen 
NATO to meet the grave new threats and profound security challenges of the 21st 
century . . . so that NATO can better carry out the full range of its missions 
and respond collectively to those challenges, including the threat posed by 
terrorism and by the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and their 
means of delivery . . . NATO must be able to field forces that can move quickly 
to wherever they are needed . . . to sustain operations over distance and time 
. . . to achieve their objectives.

Thus, NATO is no longer a defensive alliance, and its sphere is no longer 
restricted to Europe. This enables the U.S. government to maintain, even 
increase, its Cold War level of influence in Europe and provides Washington 
with a reservoir of bases and troops from NATO countries to help implement its 
policy objectives as far away as Afghanistan and Iraq.

In attacking Yugoslavia, Washington also sought to test the ability of the U.S. 
government to impose political settlements that advance its interests. The more 
contradictory and arbitrary those settlements are—rejecting national 
self-determination in Bosnia but championing it in Kosovo—the more our power is 
projected.

The final status of Kosovo is to be decided by the U.N. Security Council. Its 
special envoy, Martti Ahtisaari, a former president of Finland, is reportedly 
recommending independence in all but name. (See 
www.unosek.org/unosek/index.html.) The Serbs have rejected this plan, and, 
while Moscow has stated that it will veto this recommendation unless both the 
Serbs and the Albanians agree to it, Washington favors it. Such a plan, if 
implemented, would fail to bring peace or justice to that region of the Balkans.

Any U.N. Security Council decision is expected to reflect “The Guiding 
Principles for a Settlement of Kosovo’s Status” set out in 2005 by the United 
States, England, France, Germany, Italy, and Russia—collectively known as the 
Contact Group. Principle Six declares that “There will be no changes in the 
current territory of Kosovo, i.e. no partition of Kosovo and no union of Kosovo 
with any country or part of any country.”

The current proposal for Kosovo independence violates international law while 
claiming to uphold it; it institutionalizes ethnic and religious discrimination 
and seeks to sanction both in law, denying the Christian Serbs of Kosovo the 
legal right to national self-determination, while granting and denying that 
right to the Muslim Albanians of Kosovo.

If national self-determination under international law forbids the partition of 
a territory, then U.N. member-states Bangladesh, Ireland, Israel, Moldova, 
Pakistan, and all the successor states of the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia are 
illegitimate. So, too, are the western borders of U.N. member-states Lithuania, 
Poland, and Russia, which were shaped by the post-World War II partition of 
Germany.

The plan both allows Albanians in Kosovo the right to secede from Serbia and 
denies them the right to unite with Albania. If the U.N. Security Council 
insists this restriction is in accordance with international law on the right 
to national self-determination, then it should also insist that the 
unifications of Germany, Vietnam, and Yemen were illegal, and future 
unifications of Ireland or Korea would have to be prohibited as well. 
Conversely, it would have to consider the Republic of Somaliland, which seceded 
from Somalia, and the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus, which seceded from 
Cyprus—states the United Nations refuses to recognize—to be, in fact, 
legitimate.

The plan advocates multiethnic statehood while dismembering a multiethnic 
state. The push for Kosovo independence is predicated upon it being a 
multiethnic state. As part of Serbia, however, it is already in one. By 
championing the concept of multiethnicity, the proposal undermines not only its 
own justification for Kosovo’s independence but the legitimacy of all the 
successor states to the former Yugoslavia: Bosnia, Croatia, Macedonia, 
Montenegro, and Slovenia—none of which are as multiethnic or as multireligious 
as was the former Yugoslavia.

Both Bosnia and Serbia constitute federal republics. Bosnia consists of two 
entities: the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, and the Republika Srpska. 
Serbia has two autonomous provinces: Kosovo-Metohija and Vojvodina. Both Bosnia 
and Kosovo are U.N. protectorates. Yet, Muslim Kosovo is to gain independence, 
while Christian Republika Srpska faces abolition and consolidation in a unitary 
Bosnian state. Such a policy is nothing short of institutionalized ethnic and 
religious discrimination.

The Security Council claims that Kosovo is an exception in international law. 
The legal principles announced for it are deemed to have no applicability to 
other disputes. This maneuver is an attempt to deny the protection of 
international law to parties in three specific conflicts—Transnistria in 
Moldova, and Abkhazia and South Ossetia in Georgia. Such an arbitrary claim of 
exceptionality undermines the moral authority of international law, making it 
nothing more than a law of the jungle defined and enforced for the benefit of 
the more powerful states.

A just and enduring political settlement for Kosovo requires that Bosnia be 
treated in an identical manner. If Kosovo has the right to secede from Serbia, 
then the Republika Srpska must have the right to secede from Bosnia.

An independent Kosovo must have the right to unite with Albania. Similarly, an 
independent Republika Srpska must have the right to unite with Serbia.

To resolve the Serbian refugee crisis, there should be a population exchange 
between Serbia and Montenegro, on the one hand, and Kosovo and Albania, on the 
other. Serbian refugees would agree not to return to Kosovo, while the Serbs 
still there would agree to relocate to Serbia. In exchange, Albanians in Serbia 
and Montenegro would relocate to Kosovo and Albania. There is a legal precedent 
for this in the “Convention Concerning the Exchange of Greek and Turkish 
Populations” (1923). With the approval of the international community, it 
successfully transferred over a million Greeks from Turkey to Greece and 
400,000 Turks from Greece to Turkey. Other examples of successful population 
transfers include those between Bulgaria and Turkey in 1913 and 1950-89; 
Bulgaria and Greece in 1919; Poland and the Soviet Union in 1945; and 
Czechoslovakia and Hungary in 1946.

The Bush administration favors the current proposal for Kosovo’s independence 
without appreciating the problems, political and strategic, it presents to U.S. 
foreign policy. Indeed, the White House is behaving as if the United States, as 
the world’s hyperpower, can overcome any problems that may arise—a notion that 
Afghanistan and Iraq should have dispelled.

The immediate problem is that Kosovo, perhaps more than Bosnia, has become a 
haven for Islamic militants and for organized crime. Both pose direct threats 
to Europe, and independence will only make it worse—for Europe and for the “War 
on Terror.”

If the Security Council proposal is implemented, the secessionist regimes of 
Transnistria in Moldova, and Abkhazia and South Ossetia in Georgia, will demand 
international recognition of their independence. Such official recognition 
would likely begin with Russia and then snowball. Since the Bush administration 
opposed independence for these regions, this would be viewed by many, including 
many Americans, as a political victory for Moscow and a political defeat for 
Washington.

Next would be Nagorno-Karabakh. The Armenians there will also insist on 
international recognition of their independence from Azerbaijan—something that 
both Turkey and Azerbaijan oppose. Armenian-Americans, however, support it, and 
they constitute an influential ethnic lobbying group. The Bush administration 
would be caught in the middle, and any decision would displease an important 
ally.

The strategic prize, however, is the Crimea, which has been part of Russia 
since 1783. With the Bolshevik Revolution, it became an autonomous republic, 
then an oblast of the Russian SFSR. In 1954, jurisdiction was transferred to 
the Ukrainian SSR as a symbolic gesture honoring the historic unity of the two 
Slavic peoples. When the Soviet Union fell, the Crimea reluctantly agreed to 
remain part of the Ukraine, but as an autonomous republic. Ethnically, 
linguistically, and culturally, the Crimea is Russian. It is home to the 
Russian Black Sea Fleet. If the U.N. Security Council votes on independence for 
Kosovo, the government of the Crimea would likely call for a vote on Crimean 
independence, which would easily pass, then demand international recognition. 
This would be followed by a vote on union with Russia. And Moscow would 
certainly accept the return of the Crimea to Russia.

This would be a major defeat for U.S. foreign policy. Since the Yugoslav wars 
of the 90’s, Washington has assumed that Russia, because of her size, natural 
resources, and nuclear weapons, has the potential to reemerge as a rival. To 
prevent this, the U.S. government has pursued a policy of containment. It 
supported the expansion of NATO eastward to include former Soviet republics, in 
violation of promises made to Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev. The 
anticipated impact of NATO enlargement, however, was trumped by Russia’s 
emergence as a principal supplier of oil and natural gas to Europe. Washington 
used the war in Afghanistan to displace Russia from the former Soviet Central 
Asian republics. After its initial success, which culminated in Kyrgyzstan’s 
“Tulip Revolution,” the U.S. government has seen its influence decline, while 
Russia’s has grown. In the Ukraine’s “Orange Revolution,” Washington supported 
the overthrow of a pro-Russian government and its replacement with a 
pro-American one. The new government soon announced its intention to join NATO 
and to expel Russia’s Black Sea Fleet from the Crimea—to humiliate Moscow and 
disrupt its naval operations. Then, a general election replaced that government 
with another pro-Russian one. If independence for Kosovo results in the return 
of the Crimea to Russia, U.S. foreign policy will have come full circle since 
the Yugoslav wars. The world would no longer be unipolar, and the U.S. 
government would no longer be the world’s hyperpower.

The July 2007 issue of ChroniclesJoseph E. Fallon writes from Rye, New York.

This article first appeared in the July 
<http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/?p=144>  2007 issue of Chronicles: A 
Magazine of American Culture. 

http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/?p=168

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