Friends

 

"All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing."
Edmund Burke 1727 - 1797.

 

Please see the following. It would be important to have letters of support
for Burton sent to the WT:  <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
[EMAIL PROTECTED]   Since they just published one from my son, Jim
and have printed quite a few of mine, it would be good to have others,
particularly from non-Serbs names.  If you need help with drafting, let me
know.  It's good we finally have something we can write in support of for a
change, instead of in opposition. 

 

Also, note that Congressman Burton is in a tough reelection fight and needs
help. He is cochair of the Serbian Caucus and would like Serbian-American
help, but I understand that so far he hasn't gotten much to date.  Let's
pitch in!  Here's his campaign address, with a "Contribute" link on the left
side of the page:

http://www.indianadan.com 

 

Stella

 

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 

 

[EMAIL PROTECTED] 

 

 <http://www.washingtontimes.com/article/20070820/COMMENTARY/108200019/1012>
http://www.washingtontimes.com/article/20070820/COMMENTARY/108200019/1012

Article published Aug 20, 2007
Negotiating for peace in Kosovo

 

The Washington Times 


August 20, 2007

Dan Burton - In coming weeks, an international confrontation is likely to
occur among the United States, the European Union, and Russia over an issue
most Americans have long since forgotten: Kosovo, where a few hundred
Americans remain deployed as part of a NATO force protecting a shaky interim
peace that ended the 1999 U.S.-led intervention.

For most Americans this obscure Serbian province, with its mainly Albanian
Muslim population and its hundreds of Serbian Christian churches and
monasteries, may be a little-remembered footnote to the breakup of
Yugoslavia. However, now is the time for clear thinking about next steps if
Kosovo is to avoid revisiting its history as a hotbed of regional
instability and violence.

The international mission in Kosovo for the last eight years has not met its
original goals regarding establishment of an open, multiethnic and
multireligious society. True, there has been no return to large-scale
fighting. But remaining Christian Serbs are confined to NATO-protected
enclaves for fear of endemic Muslim Albanian violence. A quarter of a
million expellees — some two-thirds of the Serbs, Roma, Croats, and all the
Jews — still cannot return safely to their homes. More than 150 Christian
holy sites have been burned, blown up or desecrated. Organized crime is
rampant, with allegations of corruption reaching into the upper levels of
the U.N.-supervised local administration and unemployment outside these
criminal elements remains more than 50 percent.

Even Albanian officials have expressed concern at the growth of radical
Wahhabist influence, and the reality of a dangerously segregated society, as
hundreds of Saudi-financed mosques have sprung up to replace the destroyed
churches.

Although the situation on the ground in Kosovo has been a case study in U.N.
mismanagement, there is no question of Kosovo's legal status as part of
Serbia. U.N. Security Council Resolution 1244, which ended the 1999 war,
reaffirmed Serbia's territorial integrity and sovereignty while calling for
substantial autonomy and self-government for Kosovo within Serbia.

But against this clear standard for Kosovo's future, the U.S. State
Department has insisted the only possible solution for Kosovo is not
autonomy, but independence — even though Serbia refuses to give up 15
percent of its territory. Even worse, during his recent trip to Albania,
President Bush suggested that if a Russian veto blocks any new Security
Council Resolution to separate Kosovo from Serbia, the U.S. might take the
lead in recognizing a unilateral declaration of Kosovo independence with no
legitimate claim of authority at all. Within Europe itself there are growing
misgivings and decisions about this course.

This is a terrible idea. To start with, our policy is in contravention of
international laws and will create a dangerous precedent. Also, there is no
reason to suppose an independent Kosovo would be a viable state, either
economically or politically. Terrorist and organized crime influences,
already rampant in Kosovo, would be granted a consolidated haven for their
operations. Independence would likely be followed by renewed anti-Serb
attacks, at least against the smaller enclaves, if not against Northern
Mitrovica, where most of the remaining Serbs enjoy relative security. Unrest
in neighboring Albanian-dominated areas of southern Serbia, Montenegro and
Macedonia, even Greece, could be reignited.

Perhaps most damaging, an imposed separation of Kosovo from Serbia would
send a message to other trouble-spots, not just in the Balkans, that state
borders are up for grabs.

The American relationship with Serbia would suffer badly if we insist on
inflicting on a democratic country of 10 million people an offense they
cannot accept and never will forget. An imposed separation of Kosovo, the
cradle of Serbia's national and spiritual life, would alienate Serbs of all
political stripes and could very well result in the implosion of Serbian
democracy, with incalculable negative consequences. In short, an imposed
independence of Kosovo could set the region back another decade.

As an original cosponsor of a House resolution calling for the U.S. to
support a mutually agreed solution for the future status of Kosovo and
reject an imposed solution, I believe we can no longer proceed on a policy
that is trapped in assumptions formed years ago. Instead of an imposed
preconceived outcome, any viable solution for Kosovo must result from
give-and-take negotiations between Serbia and the Kosovo Albanians,
balancing Serbia's legitimate concern for its sovereignty and the Albanians'
legitimate right of self-governance.

It must be consistent with accepted international principles, including
guarantees of both the territorial integrity of states as well as of human
rights and self-determination. The U.S., the U.N., the European Union,
Russia, or any other interested actor must not impose a solution on either
of the parties, or bow to threats of violence if one of the parties' demands
is not met.

As with any genuine negotiation, the eventual outcome cannot be foreseen
with certainty. However, it is certain that unless we hit the reset button
and reevaluate the situation, Kosovo may once again become a trouble-spot
requiring American and NATO attention at a time we can least afford it. As
Kosovo re-emerges from years of obscurity, we neednow to take another
serious look at America's options and long-term interests. As I stated
before, the solution must come from negotiations between Serbia and Kosovo
Albanians.

Dan Burton, Indiana Republican, is ranking member of the U.S. House of
Representatives Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on the Western Hemisphere and
serves on the House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Asia and the Pacific.

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