[EMAIL PROTECTED] 

 

http://www.washingtontimes.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080125/COMMENTAR
Y/694120186

 

The Washington Times

 

Commentary 






>From Kosovo war to Cold War?


Austin Bay
January 25, 2008 

The Kosovo war isn't over. At the moment, Serbian ballots take precedence
over bullets; democratic electoral politics are a blessing in Serbia and
Kosovo, just like they are in Iraq.

But make no mistake: Sunday's first-round 2008 presidential vote in Serbia
was another battle in the Kosovo War, and it will not be the last.

Tomislav Nikolic, a radical Serbian nationalist and "Euro-sceptic," finished
ahead of current President Boris Tadic, a Serb nationalist who prefers
regional political moderation and (despite occasionally rabid campaign
rhetoric) favors European Union membership. The runoff is set for Feb. 3.

Mr. Nikolic is the protege of Serbian Radical Party founder Vojislav Seselj,
who is under indictment for war crimes committed during Yugoslavia's War of
Devolution. Mr. Nikolic supports stationing Russian troops in Serbia to
"bolster the Serbian position in seeking a solution to the Kosovo crisis and
remove the potential NATO threat." Yes — hot rhetoric intentionally laced
with Cold War ice.

Mr. Tadic says his Serbia won't "fight senseless wars." He contends that
sending Serb troops into Kosovo (an action Mr. Nikolic says he will
consider) means the end of Serbia's moral claim to Kosovo and will lead to
war with the European Union and NATO.

Kosovo's "final status" lies at the center of the Nikolic-Tadic contest.
"Resolving Kosovo's final status" has been an intentionally vague diplomatic
phrase for the process of determining if Kosovo will become a separate
nation, remain part of Serbia or linger as a U.N.-EU-NATO protectorate.

Serbs, other Balkan Slavs and a few Greeks fear a fourth possibility: an
independent Kosovo will encourage Albanian ethnic radicals who dream of
Greater Albania. After taking Kosovo, irredentist Albanian zealots will
demand slices of Montenegro, Macedonia, Greece's Epirus Province and
Serbia's Presevo Valley.

The murky diplomatic navigation of Kosovar Albanian demands, injured Serbian
pride and Russian fears of a establishing a "separatist precedent" for
spinning statelets from sovereign nations have divided NATO and the EU.

Romania and Greece oppose a "unilateral" Kosovo independence. Spain, with
its Basque separatists, isn't enthusiastic.

The process has brought Vladimir Putin's muscular Kremlin into open conflict
with Germany, Great Britain, France and the United States.

Though thankfully a distant prospect, Kosovo's dangerous conundrum could
provoke a Cold War-in-miniature. Is this an alarmist fret given Europe's
21st century political, economic and information connections? I hope so. I
think broad international and multilateral interests dampen and ultimately
absorb tough collisions that a decade or so ago might have re-energized and
sustained a new "Russia versus the West" confrontation.

But Kosovo lies in the heart of the Balkans. Whatever its final status,
violent Serb and Albanian diehards will not be satisfied. Recall
progressivist nabobs at the turn of the 20th century thought modern Europe
had politically evolved beyond war. Then the Balkans erupted, World War I
followed, then World War II, tagged by the long, thermonuclear precipice of
the Cold War.

A historian writing in the 24th century might see Europe's 20th century wars
as one long conflict that began with violent Balkan ethnic and nationalist
squabbles (Albanian revolt, Bosnian land grabs and the First Balkan War) and
ended with another deadly Balkan brawl (Yugoslavia's devolution). It's the
kind of storytelling form historians employ once time smooths jagged years
into slicker centuries.

But what do we do now?

The next critical decision lies with Serbia's electorate. Mr. Tadic,
however, is only a comparative moderate — he does not support an independent
Kosovo and he refuses to abandon Kosovo's Serb communities. In April 2007,
China said it opposes an "imposed" solution — indicating China might join
Russia in vetoing a U.N. move to declare Kosovo independent. Serbia has
floated a "one state, two systems" solution, echoing China's formula for
Hong Kong. Kosovar Albanians reject that model and reject partition.

Creating a pan-European economic community that would soften militant
nationalism by promoting economic and political interdependence is the great
idea behind the EU. It has worked in Western Europe. To the east, Poland
buys it. Russia doesn't — not yet. Nor do militant Serbs and Albanians in
the Balkan powderhouse.

Austin Bay is a nationally syndicated columnist.

Reply via email to