The Africanization of the Balkans

The lessons of Zimbabwe are lost in darkest Kosovo.

By Denis Boyles


The  
<http://www.lefigaro.fr/international/2007/11/29/01003-20071129ARTFIG00345-le-kosovo-vers-la-secession-apres-lechec-des-negociations.php>
 report in Le Figaro that a trio of today’s big powers — including Russia, the 
U.S., and the European Union — was at loggerheads in the Balkans, has a certain 
cold air of familiarity about it, right down to the annoying Serb nationalists 
at the center of it all.

The sudden chill between Russia and what we can now again call “the West” is 
the result of the collapse of talks between the Serbs and the Kosovars a couple 
of days ago. Their negotiations were supposed to be the “last chance” at 
working out a “settlement” — ostensibly of what relationship the Serbian 
province of Kosovo should have with Belgrade. In reality, the two sides were 
negotiating the terms of Serbian surrender demanded by the Kosovar terrorists 
they had once fought. The Serbs were willing to continue to come up with 
something, as the IHT  
<http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2007/11/29/europe/EU-GEN-Turkey-Serbia-Kosovo.php>
 reports today, but most think it would be an empty exercise: On December 11, 
the international community will impose a “solution” and grant Kosovo the 
independence its leaders demand. The Serbs will be scarred and Russia might not 
like it, but they both had their chance to do something about it eight years 
ago, and they missed it. Serbia was being run by a dangerous buffoon and the 
Russians were broke.

                        

Now the Russians are rich as czars and everybody’s worried about what they 
might do — including, I guess, the Russians: Le Figaro’s reporter says the 
Russian foreign minister is “very alarmed” at the consequences of forcing 
Serbia to accept Kosovo’s independence. That Russian alarm was matched by 
American concern. Our negotiator, Frank Wisner,  
<http://www.lemonde.fr/web/article/0,[EMAIL PROTECTED],36-983277,0.html> told 
Le Monde that “tensions are obvious.” Sorting out the Balkans should be a snap. 
The countries there are little and cute. But the “Balkan powder keg” is a local 
trademark, and for good cause. 

The place is a mess; for starters, the air war against Serbia left affairs in a 
state of perilous improvisation. The feebleness of Russia a decade ago is what 
permitted the bulldozer diplomacy of heavy-handed men like Richard Holbrooke, 
whose famous Dayton agreement criminalized not only Serbia’s actual criminals, 
including especially Slobdan Milosevic, but also the entire Serbian nation. As 
the architect of America’s diplomacy in the Balkans, Holbrooke left a legacy of 
lean-tos and shanties. The Dayton Accords ended the conflict in Bosnia by 
enshrining fractured politics in a state dominated by Muslims, and where today, 
consequently, “hundreds of mujahadeen fighters…are successfully spreading their 
fundamentalist Islamist views” at the expense of Bosnian Serbs,  
<http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/0,1518,516214,00.html> according to 
Der Spiegel. 

As in Kosovo, the international community will eventually force a settlement on 
the Bosnian Serbs. In fact, tensions will rise this weekend, as the Islamic 
presidency seeks to impose reforms that will eliminate the semi-autonomy Dayton 
had granted the Serbs, Muslims, and Catholics, in favor of the Muslim majority. 
The resulting Islamic state may well drift further toward the Wahhabism now 
firmly taking root there.

Kosovo may travel a similar path path. During the last eight years of often 
ineffective NATO occupation, Kosovar Serbs have been effectively cleansed from 
all but the very northernmost districts. This constitutes an ironic end to a 
conflict that only came to America’s attention when Milosevic’s army tried to 
solve a backyard terrorism problem by driving Albanian Kosovars, including 
members of the Marxist-inspired Islamic Kosovo Liberation Army, back to Albania 
(a country that desperately didn’t want them). The goal of the KLA, of course, 
was to cleanse Kosovo of Serbs, as newspapers and magazines —  
<http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1282/is_14_50/ai_55103654> including 
NRO and The New York Times, in dispatches like  
<http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=980DE1DA1230F93BA15750C0A96F958260&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=all>
 this one and others from the 1990s — occasionally noted. The Republican in the 
White House may think the KLA is heroic now, but in 1999, the party felt 
differently, as  <http://www.senate.gov/%7Erpc/releases/1999/fr033199.htm> this 
Senate Republican Policy Committee report makes clear.

The current Kosovo government is populated by the former terrorist leaders 
mentioned in that report, including Hashim Thaci, whose radical party defeated 
a more moderate one, and carried the elections that were held in the province 
on November 17.  <http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/699175.stm> According 
to the BBC, Thaci, who’s married to an Albanian mafia princess (Pristina’s a 
long way from Queens), has long been associated with racketeering in Kosovo. He 
was also widely known as a ruthless opponent of the late Ibrahim Rugova, 
Kosovo’s popular moderate leader who died in 2006. Wary of the ex-KLA leaders’ 
ambitions, and maybe knowing a few things we don’t, most Albanians avoided the 
election (turnout was around 45-percent, and Kosovar Serbs boycotted the vote 
entirely.)

But an independent Kosovo under the leadership of former KLA commanders is 
apparently a done deal, no matter what the Russians want. The statements from 
the Kosovar leadership imply the threat of violence if they are not appeased. 
Violence against whom? The few remaining Kosovar Serbs? The Independent’s 
ill-formed “ <http://news.independent.co.uk/europe/article3198900.ece> big 
question” is “Would the Balkans flare up again if Kosovo declared 
independence?” That’s the wrong question, of course. The question is will 
violence flare up again if they don’t declare independence? The Kosovars may 
not want to make the mistake the Serbs made. The “war” in Kosovo was widely 
supported in the U.S., largely on the basis of genuine outrage at what 
Milosevic was doing, and if the press made mistakes in reporting, as some claim 
they may have in Radac, for example, there’s no escaping the fact that in 
Kosovo, the Serbs deserved to lose. 

And lose the Serbs did. It was a neat, Clintonian kind of war, led by a general 
only Clinton could really love, Wesley Clark (Peter J. Boyer’s entertaining New 
Yorker profile from 2003 is  
<http://www.newyorker.com/archive/2003/11/17/031117fa_fact> here), in which 
civilians may have been bombed in Belgrade but our casualty list was fairly 
short. Some wondered why we were cluster-bombing people in a country that had 
been our ally in two wars (at no small cost, either) instead of boycotting them 
into compliance with civilized norms, and exactly how much punishment Serbia 
deserves. But the larger question is why we were there at all. Kosovo became 
America’s problem only because the Europeans were no better at solving Balkan 
crises than they are at negotiating with Iranians. As Ed Morrissey recently  
<http://www.captainsquartersblog.com/mt/archives/016097.php> observed in his 
Captain’s Quarters blog, “[Kosovo] is, and should always have been, a strictly 
European affair.”

Maybe, but when there’s a spliff of moral outrage to be passed around, nobody 
wants to miss the buzz. So enthusiasm in the U.S. for an independent Kosovo 
comes from right and left. William Finnegan’s lively  
<http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2007/10/15/071015fa_fact_finnegan?currentPage=1>
 piece in the current New Yorker captures the mood about Kosovo in blue-state 
America perhaps better than it does the mood in Kosovo itself, judging from 
those election turnouts. But The Wall Street Journal also has demanded quick 
independence for Kosovo and lately has taken to giving Kosovo’s current prime 
minister, Agim Ceku, op-ed space not just  
<http://online.wsj.com/article/SB118842283302212661.html?mod=Letters> once, but 
 <http://www.opinionjournal.com/extra/?id=110010866> twice in three months (but 
each time inviting James Jatras of the lonely  <http://www.savekosovo.org/> 
American Council for Kosovo to write a letter to the editor, the most recent of 
which is  <http://online.wsj.com/article/SB119561138717200039.html> here). 
Richard Holbrooke, one of the most authoritative American advocates of 
independence for Kosovo, endorsed Thaci,  
<http://www.sueddeutsche.de/ausland/artikel/73/143750/> telling the 
Sueddeutsche Zeitung that he had known the chap “for about ten years” and had 
found that he had a “remarkable” way about him. No doubt. 

Holbrooke and others are irritated by suspicions that an Islamic Kosovo might 
pose a security risk. They shrug off concerns by claiming, rightly, that most 
Kosovars are secular Muslims and that the place will never be an al-Qaeda base 
or a haven for extremists. But they say that about Bosnia, too. Besides, what 
was Assistant U.S. Attorney Brian Frazier telling that jury in the Jose Padilla 
trial? Something, Reuters  
<http://www.reuters.com/article/latestCrisis/idUSN14313557> reported, about “al 
Qaeda-affiliated groups” fighting in Kosovo in the ‘90s? I guess they were our 
allies, back in the day. Any friend of Thaci’s…

If 55-percent of the Kosovo citizens couldn’t bring themselves to vote at all, 
how rushed are they for independence? Maybe they realize that independence 
isn’t as simple as a slogan, and that they’ll have to live with whatever 
happens next. And maybe they too think there may be other ways to go, as  
<http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/0507/p09s01-coop.html> this Christian Science 
Monitor article proposes. Kosovo’s neighbors, including Macedonia, Montenegro, 
and Albania itself, are deeply concerned about the implications of an 
independent Kosovo, and the whole idea of a “greater Albania.” It’s Europe’s 
Kurdistan in some ways.

The Balkan crisis recalls more than just Sarajevo, 1914. It also smacks of 
Salisbury, 1980, and a dozen other African capitals upon achieving an 
expeditious, politically convenient independence, in which something bad was 
replaced by something arguably worse. The common complaint about colonialism 
wasn’t how it began but how it ended: When it was time to go, the retreating 
colonial power gave the keys to the guy with the most guns and ran for it, 
rather than trying to take the time to fight for a more careful solution that 
required careful thought, and saved lots of lives. Thus, the history of 
post-colonial Africa is littered with murderous tyrants, the most notorious of 
which is Zimbabwe’s Robert Mugabe (a recent NRO piece describing his early 
support from an unthinking international community is  
<http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=NDRkZDU3NzdhOGQzNGE4MzA1MmZmYzVlNGQyYTdlOGI=>
 here). Kosovo’s not a colony and southeastern Europe isn’t Africa. But in 
Zimbabwe, we enthroned a known criminal. The result was much, much more 
criminality. Do we really want to do the same in the Balkans? 

— Denis Boyles, author of  
<http://www.nationalreview.com/redirect/amazon.p?j=1594030529> Vile France and 
the upcoming  <http://www.nationalreview.com/redirect/amazon.p?j=0385516746> 
Superior, Nebraska.

http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=OGIzYTMzM2JkODg0ZjczNjkzOWU2NDg0OTc1NzY2NDk=

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