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Outside View: Kosovo issue best left alone


 

Published: Feb. 5, 2008 at 11:36 AM

 

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By JAMES GEORGE JATRAS
UPI Outside View Commentator
WASHINGTON, Feb. 5 (UPI) -- 

 

During its final year in office, the Bush administration has a full plate on
the foreign front: intractable war in Iraq, Taliban resurgence in
Afghanistan, concerns about Iran's nuclear program, nuclear uncertainty in
North Korea, increasingly unstable nuclear-armed Pakistan, and hopes for an
ever-elusive settlement between Israel and the Palestinians.

With all that to juggle, one might think Washington would hesitate to
trigger a blowup on a seemingly unimportant matter that could transform into
a full-blown global crisis. Yet that is exactly what the administration
intends to do with respect to the Serbian province of Kosovo.

Since the 1999 NATO war against what was then Slobodan Milosevic's
Yugoslavia, Kosovo has been under U.N. administration. The province remains
legally part of Serbia as Albanian Muslims escalate their demands to create
an independent country. Despite pious assurances of protection, the
remaining Christian Serbs know that Kosovo's independence would mean
curtains for them. With a quarter of a million Serbs (and other
non-Albanians: Roma (Gypsies), Croats, Gorani, all the Jews) terrorized from
the province during the past nine years of "peacetime" when the rest of the
world had turned it eyes elsewhere, the Serbs' fears are well-founded. Since
1999, some 150 Christian shrines have been destroyed or desecrated. At the
same time, hundreds of mosques have been built, mainly with Saudi money and
propagating the intolerant Wahhabi brand of Islam. 

The effective authority in the Albanian Muslim community is an organized
crime network trafficking in drugs, women and weapons. The legitimate
economy is virtually nonexistent. Independent or not, it's hard to see how
Kosovo ceases to be an economic basket case and black hole of terror, crime
and corruption, despite billions of aid dollars and euros dumped into the
place.

In short, Kosovo is a mess, and it's not obvious how or when that can be
changed. Left alone, it might remain one of the worlds simmering sore spots,
like Kashmir or Cyprus, until the parties manage to come to some agreement
-- or don't.

However, for reasons that are hard to understand, the Bush administration --
joined, oddly enough, by Hillary Clinton -- demands that immediate
independence for Kosovo's Albanians is the only possible solution. The fact
that democratic Serbia refuses to concede amputation of 15 percent of its
territory, and has offered the Albanians the fullest autonomy enjoyed by any
minority group anywhere in the world, is ignored. Likewise dismissed is the
fact that the relevant U.N. Security Council Resolution affirms Serbia's
sovereignty, which Russia insists must be respected.

If, as now planned, Kosovo's Albanians declare independence after a green
light from Washington, a bad situation would get much worse. Violence would
flare as Muslim Albanians step up their attacks on Christian Serbs. Belgrade
would be forced to consider how to respond as its citizens are targeted
under the eyes of an illegal occupying force. Moscow, livid at the prospect
of an end-run of the Security Council, has said it stands ready to aid
Serbia if asked. Countries around the world would be forced to take sides on
whether to recognize Kosovo's independence. Most probably would not, as
separatist groups in dozens of countries cite Kosovo as reason to demand
carving out their own states. Washington might find itself isolated, along
with a few countries that had followed our lead.

Setting all this in motion might be justified if there were some obvious
U.S. benefit. But the opposite is the case. Why should we provoke a needless
fight with a newly muscular Russia? Especially after Sept. 11, why should
America want to be midwife to the birth of a new Islamic country in Europe?
Already having experienced "blowback" in the form of the jihad terror plot
against Fort Dix, N.J., where four of the six indictees are Albanian Muslims
from the Kosovo region, why give the Albanian mafia a consolidated base from
which to extend its operations?

The United States has no interest in creating an independent Kosovo, even if
it were easy to achieve. The fact that trying to separate Kosovo from Serbia
would be anything but easy would just add one more headache to our list. If
the Bush administration has any sense, it will leave Kosovo to the next
president, whoever that might be.

--

(James George Jatras is director of the American Council for Kosovo
(www.savekosovo.org) and principal, Squire Sanders Public Advocacy in
Washington. He previously served as senior foreign policy adviser to the
Republican leadership of the U.S. Senate.) --

(United Press International's "Outside View" commentaries are written by
outside contributors who specialize in a variety of important issues. The
views expressed do not necessarily reflect those of United Press
International. In the interests of creating an open forum, original
submissions are invited.)

© 2008 United Press International. All Rights Reserved.
This material may not be reproduced, redistributed, or manipulated in any
form.

 

 

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