http://www.socialistworker.org/2008-1/664/664_11_Kosovo.shtml

ILLINOIS SOCIALIST WORKER (USA)

The meaning of Kosovo's independence
March 7, 2008 | Page 11

LEE SUSTAR looks at the history of the conflict over Kosovo and the role
played by Western imperialism.

KOSOVO'S DECLARATION of independence from Serbia marks the latest--but not
the last--imperialist power play in the Balkans.

The Kosvovar Albanians' legitimate struggle for self-determination has been
turned into a tool of great power politics--and that fits a pattern that has
led to much bloodshed in the region in the past.

Kosovo's independence comes nine years after a U.S.-led NATO war on Serbia,
then the dominant force in the former Yugoslavia, over Serbia's crackdown on
the ethnic Albanian majority in its southern province.

Since then, Kosovo has been administered by the United Nations and patrolled
by NATO troops, creating a quasi-state under Western tutelage. Only small
numbers of Serbs remain in Kosovo today, and they are under threat from the
Albanian majority.

Kosovo was the heartland of a Serb kingdom in the Middle Ages, but it has
been populated by an Albanian majority for at least 300 years. By the time
of the 1999 NATO war, some 90 percent of Kosovo's population of 2 million
was Albanian.

What else to read
The Fall of Yugoslavia by Misha Glenny tells the story of the
latest Balkans crisis and the decade of war that followed. For another
account that draws on eyewitness testimony from the wars, read Yugoslavia:
Death of a Nation, by Laura Silber and Allan Little.

The best source for a history of Kosovo itself is Between Serb
and Albanian: A History of Kosovo, by Miranda Vickers. Noel Malcolm's
Kosovo: A Short History also does a good job of telling the history.

The definitive book on the Balkans to the present day, read
Misha Glenny's The Balkans: Nationalism, War and the Great Powers.

Since the creation of Yugoslavia following the Second World War, Kosovar
Albanians experienced the worst poverty and underdevelopment in the country,
and faced discrimination in education, jobs and housing.

Yugoslavia's constitutional reforms in 1974 led to somewhat greater autonomy
for Kosovo. But these were rolled back after 1989, when former Yugoslavian
President Slobodan Milosevic, a Serb, used the issue of Kosovo to revive
Serbian nationalism. Milosevic chose to begin the campaign on the
anniversary of a historic battle between the medieval Serbs and the Turkish
Ottoman Empire, which eventually put much of present-day Serbia under
Ottoman rule.

Nationalist historians on both the Kosovar Albanian and Serb sides advance
opposing claims about which group originally was the majority population. In
reality, both lived side by side for centuries, and Albanians and Serbs
alike initially resisted the Ottomans.

Nevertheless, Kosovo became an all-important symbol for Serb nationalism in
the 19th century when Serbians stepped up their struggle against Ottoman
rule--and, later, domination by the Austro-Hungarian empire.

For Milosevic, Serbian nationalism and a call to "return" to Kosovo were a
convenient substitute for the discredited politics of Stalinism that ruled
Yugoslavia until the upheavals of 1989 across Eastern Europe.

The nationalist turn by Milosevic was matched by leaders of other ethnic
groups in Yugoslavia's federal structure of "republics"--Franjo Tudjman, who
became president of Croatia, and Milan Kucan, who became head of Slovenia.
Both declared independence from Yugoslavia and seceded after brief military
conflicts with the Serb-dominated remnant of Yugoslavia. Macedonia broke
away as well.

This nationalist dynamic led to a horrific three-cornered civil war in the
Yugoslav republic of Bosnia, which was divided between Serbs, Croats and
Muslims. From 1992 to 1995, tens of thousands were killed and at least 2
million displaced.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

THE BOSNIAN war and other Balkans violence were presented in the mainstream
media as the continuation of ancient "ethic hatreds." In fact, the
fingerprints of the big European countries and the U.S. were all over the
Balkans wars of the 1990s.
At first, the West reacted to the tensions in Yugoslavia by giving Milosevic
a green light to hold the country together under Serbian domination. But
when the country broke up anyway, the newly reunified Germany broke ranks to
recognize Croatia, which had been a puppet state under the Nazi occupation
in the Second World War.

This accelerated the crisis--leading to, among other things, a declaration
of independence by the Serbian minority in Croatia itself in the Krajina
region. "Ethnic cleansing"--the forced displacement of people because of
their nationality, language or religion--entered the world's vocabulary.

By 1994, the slaughter in Bosnia threatened to spin out of control. Two
regional NATO allies considered intervening--on opposite sides, as Greece
supported the Serbs and Turkey backed the Bosnian Muslims.

Eventually, Bill Clinton pressured France and Britain to abandon their own
pro-Serb tilt, and intervene to contain Milosevic and keep the conflict from
spreading. This took the form of brokering an alliance between Bosnian
Croats and Muslims against the Serbs, complete with arranging for guns and
money from Iran as well as Arab and Muslim countries.

It was Clinton's chief operative in the region, Peter Galbraith, who
organized the war according to Washington's objectives. As U.S. ambassador
to Croatia, Galbraith worked with "retired" U.S. military officers to build
up Croatia's armed forces to counter Serbia, even though Croatian President
Tudjman was every bit the authoritarian nationalist that Milosevic was.

On August 4, 1995, the Croatian army swept into the Serb territory of
Krajina in Operation Storm. "It was the first stage in what would become,
during the next few days, the biggest single forcible displacement of people
in Europe since the Second World War," wrote journalists Laura Silber and
Allan Little. Ultimately, some 200,000 Serbs were forced to flee from
Krajina, where they had lived for centuries.

The end to the war came after U.S. warplanes blasted Serbian targets in
Bosnia. By this point, Milosevic saw the forces arrayed against him and
pulled the plug on the Bosnian Serbs, agreeing to a peace deal at a U.S. air
force base outside Dayton, Ohio. Soon afterward, 60,000 NATO troops poured
into Bosnia as "peacekeepers"--that is, enforcers for a UN commissioner who
wielded the real political power in a Bosnia that remained ethnically
partitioned.

Milosevic was weakened, but held on as boss of Yugoslavia--by then reduced
to Serbia, Montenegro and Kosovo, an autonomous province of Serbia.

A nonviolent civil rights movement among Albanians had been met by brutal
crackdowns. Increasingly, young Kosovar Albanians turned to the Kosovo
Liberation Army (KLA), a group that originally embraced left-wing Maoist
politics, but had evolved into a nationalist force accused of trafficking in
drugs.

By 1998, the KLA had stepped up military attacks on Serb targets. Milosevic
retaliated with another wave of arrests and repression. Again, the Balkans
appeared on the brink of a wider war, with Turkey and Greece supporting
opposite sides.

Faced with a conflict that could get out of control, the Clinton
administration set about organizing a Kosovo war on its terms. It accused
Milosevic of plotting a genocide against Albanians, and Secretary of State
Madeleine Albright stepped in to broker a "compromise" at the French town of
Rambouillet.

It was an offer that Milosevic had to refuse--the deal would have allowed
NATO troops unrestricted movement across Yugoslavia. Milosevic had offered a
new autonomy deal for Kosovo; Albright had responded by demanding that
Yugoslavia accept a virtual invasion.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

WHEN MILOSEVIC refused, NATO began three months of bombing against
Yugoslavia, striking civilian targets and killing an estimated 2,000 Serbs.
But the war worsened the plight of the 850,000 Kosovar Albanians, who had
already fled their homes in response to Serb repression. Some 10,000
Albanians were killed by Serbian forces in that period.

NATO's air war was complemented on the ground by the KLA, which inflicted
blows against the Serb-dominated Yugoslav military. Milosevic
capitulated--again, in order to survive.

After finally being forced from office years later, Milosevic was eventually
captured by NATO forces and put in prison in the Hague for war crimes, but
he died before the trial was completed.

As in Bosnia, NATO troops and a UN commissioner have been the real political
power in Kosovo, where former KLA leader Hashim Thaci is now prime minister.
However, there is less independence than meets the eye following Kosovo's
declaration.

The European Union will still have a major role under what a UN negotiator
calls "supervised independence," and NATO troops will remain indefinitely.
Tellingly, a new nationalist Kosovar Albanian group, known as
Self-Determination, formed in protest of the UN's colonial-style
administration--and two of its members have been killed by UN police and its
leader imprisoned. Camp Bondsteel, which was the largest new U.S. military
base since the Vietnam War until the invasion of Iraq, will remain in
Kosovo.

Effectively, the U.S. and its allies are attempting to manipulate for their
own ends the struggle for self-determination by Kosovar Albanians--just as
the U.S. has done with the Kurds in Iraq.

The U.S. is facing some resistance, with Russia--Serbia's traditional
backer--opposing Kosovo's independence, along with other states challenged
by other nationalist movements, such as Spain and China.

But these imperial maneuvers don't mean that Kosovo's independence isn't a
legitimate political objective. As a group of Serbian socialists put it
recently, Serbian "nationalist claims to Kosovo play a crucial role in
'legitimizing' the Serbian ruling class. And the threat from Serbia lies at
the root of Kosovan Albanian support for the U.S., which has plans for a
Balkan oil pipeline...

"Nationalism and imperialism are dangerously entangled in Kosovo. This is
why Serbian revolutionary socialists have to be both anti-nationalist and
anti-imperialist...

"We believe that Serbian revolutionary socialists should respect Kosovo's
right to self-determination. By doing so, we draw a clear line between us
and our ruling class. We argue that by extending an internationalist hand of
friendship to the Kosovan Albanians, there is a way of solving our problems
without becoming the pawns of imperialism, East and West."

Reply via email to