http://network.nationalpost.com/np/blogs/fullcomment/archive/2008/03/19/geor
ge-jonas-on-kosovo-independence-and-how-the-west-presided-over-ethnic-cleans
ing.aspx

 

George Jonas on Kosovo's independence and how the West presided over ethnic
cleansing

 

Posted: March 19, 2008, 1:40 PM by Marni Soupcoff 

 

George
<http://network.nationalpost.com/np/blogs/fullcomment/archive/tags/George+Jo
nas/default.aspx>  Jonas

Last month, the Serbian province of Kosovo declared its independence. This
week, Canada became the 31st country to recognize it
<http://www.canada.com/edmontonjournal/story.html?id=2e1961c3-f34e-410b-b4b4
-6a6a94bbe56c&k=18700> . Foreign affairs critic Bob Rae wondered what took
our government so long. Well - perhaps we hesitated recognizing what we went
to war for because we recognized that we should have hesitated going to war
for it.

Wait a minute, someone might say. Canada didn't go to war in 1999 as a
member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) to help Kosovo
secede from Serbia. That would have been like Germany dismantling
Czechoslovakia in 1938 to liberate the Sudetenland. We only participated to
prevent what we believed was an attempt at ethnic cleansing in Kosovo.

Yes, well, so much for the best-laid plans of mice and men. The forces of
Western liberalism that went into Kosovo to prevent ethnic cleansing ended
up presiding over it.

It was exactly four years ago, during the last week of March, that nearly
1,000 Serbs fled their homes after Albanian Muslims attacked Serb Christians
in their churches and villages. News agencies quoted Admiral Gregory
Johnson, U.S. Commander of NATO forces for Southern Europe at the time,
saying: "This kind of activity almost amounts to ethnic cleansing." Almost?
By the spring of 2004, an estimated 200,000 Serbs had been driven from the
province. 

To prevent the expulsion of Kosovar Albanians by Serbs, NATO engaged in a
war that ended up facilitating the expulsion of Serbs by Albanians. Had this
been an unforeseeable result, it might be excused - but it was predictable.
Had it been the West's aim to wrest Kosovo from Serbia, NATO's entry into
the conflict would have made sense. As it wasn't, it didn't.

Our bias for multicultural models of nationhood made us reluctant to support
Croatian, Slovenian and Bosnian ambitions for independence in 1990-91.
Though a prompt and unequivocal Western endorsement of self-determination
might have averted bloodshed altogether, we didn't want to see the
multicultural federation of Yugoslavia, a model we liked, break up into its
ethnic/religious components. Then, when war became inevitable, we needlessly
prolonged the conflict through a vapid UN arms embargo imposed on all
factions in September, 1991 - which naturally gave an edge to the
better-equipped Serbs. The savage war had an extended run, especially on the
Croatian front, due to our humanitarian-pacifist folly.

Slow to protest against the illegitimate ambition of multicultural
Yugoslavia to forcibly keep in its fold three nations that wanted to
separate, we came down like a ton of bricks on ethnic Serbia for its far
more legitimate ambition to preserve the country's territorial integrity
against the secessionist guerrillas of Kosovo. Washington, which resisted
recognizing genuine, if splinter, nations such as Croatia, Slovenia and
Bosnia until April, 1992, was quick to launch Stealth bombers to ensure the
autonomy of ethnic Albanians in a Serb province. As a multiculturalist thug,
the late Slobodan Milosevic was a protected species. As a nationalist thug,
NATO declared an open season on him.

Why did the West go to war in Kosovo? Probably for three reasons. One, to
make the world safe for multiculturalism; two, to appease the Muslim world;
and three, to avert another humanitarian tragedy in Europe. Though hardly
evil motives, in the circumstances all three amounted to a profound
misreading of the time and place to which they were being applied.

The Kosovo conflict was the flower children's war, waged by politicians who
emerged from a '60s generation of confused peaceniks, eco-freaks, and draft
resisters. After a life-long opposition to everything NATO stood for, Bill
Clinton, Tony Blair, Gerhard Schroeder, Javier Solana, and their friends
hijacked the alliance to act out their mushy liberal fantasies of fitting
every region into the Procrustean bed of a multicultural dream. They failed
to notice that Albanians had even less interest in multiculturalism than
Serbs; that the Muslim world wasn't being appeased; and that for every
Albanian saved from being ethnically cleansed in the region, a Serb was
being condemned to it.

The law assumes that people intend the natural consequences of their acts. I
wonder what we thought the natural consequences of putting NATO's air force
at the disposal of the KLA (Kosovo Liberation Army) would be - other than
eventual secession. Canadians are lucky Bill Clinton, Tony Blair, Gerhard
Schroeder and Javier Solana weren't in charge of the alliance in 1970 when
Pierre Elliott Trudeau brought in the War Measures Act. They might have put
NATO's air force at the disposal of the FLQ.

 

 

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