December 12, 2007

Dreaming of Diplomacy, Waiting for War


The Next Kosovo War


By DIANA JOHNSTONE

The United States and its European allies have announced that diplomacy has
failed to solve the Kosovo problem. When diplomacy fails, that means war.
Especially in so serious a matter as unilaterally declaring the independence
of a part of another country's territory.

But the next Kosovo war is supposed to be such a small, muted, insignificant
war that nobody will notice. NATO is occupying the potential battlefield
with over 16,000 men, backed by air power, and is poised, it says, to "avoid
violence". The overwhelming military advantage of NATO may indeed prevent
any eventual violence from reaching the status of a "war". The confidence
that comes of wielding decisive military force has allowed the United States
and its NATO allies to pursue a policy that normally would be a sure-fire
formula for war.

War results when the opposing parties have totally conflicting views of
reality. The Albanians and Serbs have totally opposing views of the very
history of the disputed province of Kosovo. The role of diplomacy is to take
such conflicting views of reality into account. It means avoiding pushing
one party to a dispute into a humiliating corner. It involves seeking to
promote mutual respect and understanding, at least enough to accept
compromise. 

Instead, the United States, followed by its irresponsible European allies,
has from the start endorsed the extreme Albanian nationalist view, treating
Serbia as a "rogue state" that does not deserve the normal protection of
international law. Washington has orchestrated two rounds of totally sham
"negotiations", whose conclusions it dictated from the start, on behalf of
its Albanian clients. The first round took place at Rambouillet, leading to
the 1999 NATO bombing of Serbia and occupation of Kosovo. The second round
took place this year, leading to what could be another, more muted but
longer, unpredictable conflict.

Long and short sham negotiations

At the end of the 1990s, the Clinton administration was not really concerned
with solving the Kosovo problem. It wanted to solve its own NATO problem.
Its NATO problem was this: What is the use of this military alliance, now
that the Communist bloc, which it was created to deter, no longer exists? To
preserve NATO, a new raison d'être had to be found. This was "humanitarian
intervention". From now on, NATO would exist in order to rescue oppressed
minorities in foreign countries--especially those with some geostrategic or
economic value, of course. The deep-rooted Kosovo conflict between the
Serbian State and an Albanian secessionist movement, marked by spasmodic
violence on both sides, provided the experimental terrain for this new
policy. The Kosovo problem was proclaimed to be a crisis, requiring
international intervention, only weeks before NATO's 50th anniversary
meeting, when this U.S.-designed policy was officially adopted. 

To provide a casus belli, the Clinton administration orchestrated sham
negotiations at the French château in Rambouillet. The U.S. abruptly
promoted Hashim Thaqi, the head of the armed "Kosovo Liberation Army", to
head the Kosovo Albanian delegation, shoving aside more reputable Albanian
leaders such as Ibrahim Rugova. No direct encounters between the Serbian and
Albanian delegations were even allowed. Both were ordered to accept a
comprehensive plan drafted by the United States, allowing for NATO
occupation of Kosovo. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright bullied Thaqi
into reluctantly accepting the ultimatum, with back-stage assurances that he
would eventually get his own "independent Kosova". The Serbs had agreed to
the principle of autonomy of Kosovo, and their parliament had drafted a
proposal--totally ignored at Rambouillet. But the Serbian delegation
rejected the ultimatum, which included an annex that would have allowed NATO
occupation of the whole of Serbia. This rejection was the result Ms Albright
sought. On the pretext that Serbia had "refused to negotiate", NATO could
wage its victorious little "humanitarian" war.

This year, the world has been provided with the spectacle of much more
prolonged sham negotiations. For weeks and months, the West's semi-official
media have put out "news" reports that the negotiations to settle the Kosovo
problem were not getting anywhere. This was not news because the
negotiations were framed in such a way that they could not possibly succeed.

"The Serbian and Albanian sides can't agree", the pseudo-diplomats say of
their pseudo-diplomacy. They mean, the Serbian side has not agreed to the
Albanian demand for an independent Kosovo. This was the only proposal with
U.S. support. It amounted to yet another ultimatum to the Serbs. The
Albanians knew they had the support of the United States and NATO, who are
occupying Kosovo militarily. They had no incentive to bargain. They could
just wait for the negotiations to fail, sure they would be given what they
want by occupying Great Powers.

Russia supports diplomacy and international law

The West is putting the blame for this failure on Vladimir Putin. The
servile press is puffing up Putin's status as the latest world class bad
guy, motivated by "power" and a perverse desire to annoy the virtuous
Americans. Since the Americans back the Albanian demand for independence,
the Russians, out of contrariness, back the Serbian position.

This is not exactly accurate. The Serbian position is to offer very
comprehensive autonomy to Kosovo, a self-government just short of formal
independence. The Russian position is to be ready to support any agreement
reached between the two sides. 

Western reporters and commentators refuse to grasp what this means. It means
that the Russians are insisting on genuine negotiations, between the two
parties, the Serbian government and Kosovo Albanian separatists. They are
not saying what the outcome of such genuine negotiations would be. They
might reach some sort of compromise providing for some sort of independence.
The point is that such an agreement, reached by both parties, would be legal
under international law. Independence proclaimed unilaterally by Kosovo
Albanians, without negotiated agreement with Serbia, would constitute a
clear violation of international law. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov
has repeatedly warned that a unilateral proclamation of independence could
provoke further interethnic violence in the region and set a dangerous
precedent for many other countries with ethnic minorities.

In the level of principles, the contrast is not between the U.S. backing
Albanian Kosovo independence and Russia backing Serbia. It is between Russia
backing diplomacy and the United States backing force.

A "NATO State"

But how much "independence" will Kosovo really enjoy? In private, European
governments know that Kosovo is not a viable independent state. This has
been demonstrated during eight years of international protectorate. Kosovo's
economy is almost entirely dependent on remittances from emigrés to their
families, international aid (including Saudia Arabian mosque building
projects) and flourishing crime (drug and sex trafficking in particular).

Since official international endorsement of unilateral Serbian guilt has
made reconciliation between Serb and Albanian inhabitants impossible, NATO
forces, under the guise of the European Union, are expected to stay on "to
protect the human rights of minorities". In terms of security, the
"independent" Kosovo will be a NATO satellite. Formal independence from
Serbia, following eight years of de facto independence from Serbia, will do
nothing to improve the miserable state of the economy. The huge number of
unemployed young Albanians like to hope independence will bring jobs and
prosperity. But it is hard to see how closed borders with a hostile Serbia
will do more for Kosovo's economy than decades of preferential Yugoslav
development funds. Some sources of income may even diminish, notably foreign
aid, as "humanitarian" NGOs move elsewhere. Even foreign remittances may be
cut back if certain European governments decide to send their Albanian guest
workers back to their "liberated" homeland. Only organized crime seems
certain to prosper.

Last August, as the long round of sham negotiations got underway, Slobodan
Samardzic, the Serbian minister for Kosovo, said that a Kosovo state created
with the U.S. support "would only serve the interests of America and the
local mafia clans." Samardzic belongs to the younger, pro-Western generation
that tended to attribute the West's hostility to Serbia to Slobodan
Milosevic. But Milosevic has been gone for years, and Western policy remains
unchanged.

Samardzic said that NATO plans to make Kosovo virtually its own territory,
"a satellite, an army barracks state on foreign territory". The main source
of power in Kosovo would be the huge U.S. military base, Camp Bondsteel,
built immediately after NATO occupied the territory in June 1999, without
asking permission from anyone.

As the latest round of sham negotiations ended, Serbian prime minister
Vojislav Kostunica said events prove that the real reason NATO bombed Serbia
in 1999 was in order to conquer Kosovo as a "NATO puppet state".

And what has Serbia been offered in return for loss of its historic
territory? Merely a vague suggestion that, if it behaves, it may eventually
obtain EU membership. In short, in return for losing sovereignty over
Kosovo, it may be allowed to give up more of its sovereignty to the European
Union. But even this is a hazy prospect.

It is quite possible that Serbia could manage better economically without
Kosovo, which was always the poorest and least developed part of Yugoslavia,
despite massive development funds from the rest of the country. But Serbia's
reasons for wanting to retain Kosovo are not economic, but moral. The West
has refused to take these into account, brushing them all aside with the
single argument that Serbia "lost its right" to the territory because of
Milosevic's repression of Albanian separatists. More realistically, NATO
"won its right" to dispose of Kosovo by bombing Serbia. The Western argument
comes down to might makes right, or rather, superior might makes right.

Serbia's case

The Serbian reasons to reject Kosovo's secession are legal and moral:

1. International law. Even after NATO bombed Serbia into allowing Kosovo to
be occupied, its sovereignty over the province was officially confirmed
under international law. As the one-sided war ended, the United Nations
Security Council adopted Resolution 1244 which reaffirmed "the commitment of
all Member States to the sovereignty and territorial integrity" of
Yugoslavia, of which Serbia is the successor State. Resolution 1244, which
remains the existing basis for the legal status of Kosovo, also speaks of
"substantial autonomy and meaningful self-administration"--which is what
Serbia has agreed to and proposed. It does not speak of independence.

What has Serbia done since the fall of Milosevic to merit worse treatment
than was prescribed in 1999?

2. The impossibility of abandoning the Serbian minority to almost certain
persecution and expulsion. Nor can Serbia abandon its historic monuments,
the precious medieval monasteries of Decani, Gracanica, Pec and many others.

3. The deep, truly painful sense of injustice and humiliation at the manner
in which the Great Powers are orchestrating the amputation of this most
cherished part of Serbia's historic territory. Serbs are blamed for
something they never did, something even Milosevic never did: the attempted
"genocide" or at least "expulsion" of Albanians from Kosovo. This is no more
than wartime propaganda, which by now is probably believed by most
Albanians, since the Great Powers endorse it. The official line,
criminalizing Serbia, echoed daily by more or less ignorant, but
well-coached, editorialists and commentators, heaps unbearable insult on
injury. Sometimes insult is harder to take than injury.

This last reason, which may be the strongest of all, is virtually invisible
to Americans and Europeans who have swallowed whole the official line of
wicked Serbs persecuting innocent Albanians, in willful ignorance of the
complexities of history and culture of the region. 

If these perfectly legitimate Serb concerns were taken into consideration,
patient diplomacy could in all probability achieve a compromise settlement
that would differ from the initial negotiating positions of both sides, but
which, with international guarantees and incentives, could satisfy at least
part of the demands of both sides.

Dreaming of what might have been

Even after the disaster of NATO bombing and occupation of Kosovo made the
situation far worse, by exacerbating hostility between the Albanian and
Serbian communities to the boiling point, diplomacy might have been able to
play a constructive role. That would simply require a bit of good will and
constructive imagination--qualities to which current U.S. leaders do not
even aspire, preferring to rely on the iron fist.

Let us imagine that the United States had not managed to subvert the
peace-making functions of international organizations such as the OSCE and
the United Nations. Let us imagine the existence of a real "international
community", which could give serious backing to diplomatic efforts to find a
compromise solution for Kosovo. Instead of uniting a "Troika" made up of the
United States, the European Union and Russia, let us suppose that India,
China and Brazil could appoint a group of diplomats, for instance, former
ambassadors to Yugoslavia (including, perhaps, both the former East and West
German ambassadors to pre-disintegration Yugoslavia, former Canadian
ambassador James Bissett and former British ambassador Ivor Roberts, as well
as former ambassadors from non-European countries) to facilitate open-ended
negotiations between Serbs and Albanians. There would be no preconditions
except one: the negotiations would last until the two parties agreed to a
compromise solution.

My own personal belief is that genuine, patient negotiations could arrive at
some sort of overall agreement involving border changes and partition, as
well as some sort of union between the secessionist Albanian part of Kosovo
and Albania itself. The arguments for such a solution are overwhelming, and
have been stated most convincingly by Dobrica Cosic, Serbia's most
distinguished novelist and a former President of Yugoslavia, well before the
Kosovo problem exploded into armed conflict in 1998-99. 

It is true that both the Albanian and Serbian sides reject partition, more
or less vehemently. But that is natural at the start of negotiations. The
Albanians adamantly demand all of Kosovo within its present borders. This
demand is supported by the United States, which also insists that there be
no union between Kosovo and Albania. This is the point on which some
compromise could be worked out.

Serbia's position has been to offer a degree of autonomy that would in fact
be tantamount to total internal independence. This is understandable as a
bargaining position, but it is hard to see how it would be favorable to
Serbia itself. Serbia would risk bearing a financial burden for a territory
over which it exercises no control.

On the other hand, the Albanians' expectations for independence, and most of
all, the hatred they foster for Serbia, makes a return to Serbian rule
impossible in practical terms. Moreover, Serbia has one of Europe's lowest
birth rates, while Kosovo Albanians have the highest. After being
outnumbered by Albanians in Kosovo, Serbs might eventually be outnumbered by
Albanians in Serbia.

The welfare of both Serbs and Albanians could be ensured best by an overall
agreement to end the hostilities between the two populations, something that
clearly has not been accomplished in eight years of U.N.-NATO protectorate.
This should involve some territorial rearrangements, as well as economic and
cultural agreements between the parties concerned. Neighboring countries
should also be brought into the negotiations. Agreements should be made on
the basis of practical realities, not on presumptions of "guilt" and
"innocence".

Finally, identity needs to be detached from particular territories and
particular events. Future generations of Serbs and Albanians must be able to
live their lives freed from the burdens of past resentments and ancestral
vendettas. 

Diana Johnstone is the author of
<http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/158367084X/counterpunchmaga> Fools'
Crusade: Yugoslavia, NATO and Western Delusions, Monthly Review Press. She
can be reached at [EMAIL PROTECTED]

http://www.counterpunch.org/johnstone12122007.html

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