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CANADA FREE PRESS

U.S War with Russia

McCain Supports Radical Muslims in Kosovo
By Cliff Kincaid

Thursday, March 27, 2008

If the media are on the lookout for gaffes by the presidential campaigns,
they missed a big one on Wednesday, when Cindy McCain met with Kosovo Prime
Minister Hashim Thaci in Kosovo's capital Pristina, while her husband was
giving a major foreign policy speech calling for "new foundations for a
stable and enduring peace."

Kosovo's declaration of independence, which McCain accepts and was
implicitly recognized by Cindy McCain's visit to Pristina, is a major threat
to global peace and security. It could spark a U.S. war with Russia.

It may be asking too much, however, for the media to cover a gaffe like
this. The Kosovo policy is a bipartisan blunder. For the liberal media,
Iraq, where McCain differs with Hillary and Obama about the length of stay
of the U.S. military, seems to be the only foreign policy issue worth
talking about. But the U.S. faces other major problems.

We need to recall that the war against the former Yugoslavia was depicted by
the liberal media as a worthwhile humanitarian intervention. But it was
waged on the basis of Clinton Administration lies of a "genocide" being
waged against Albanian Muslims in Kosovo, a province of Serbia. In fact, the
Clinton Administration's NATO war against Yugoslavia probably cost more
lives than were lost in the civil war in Kosovo. Serbian troops were forced
to withdraw in exchange for an international guarantee that Serbia would
retain sovereignty over Kosovo but the province would get substantial
autonomy. The U.S. agreed to that, but that agreement was violated when the
Bush Administration, with backing from McCain and Democratic presidential
candidates Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama, recently recognized Kosovo's
declaration of independence from Serbia.

Sending his wife to Kosovo confirms that McCain accepts Clinton's fraudulent
version of what happened there and that he agrees with Bush's "solution,"
which can only make the situation worse.

Conservatives should contemplate what is happening here. McCain, who says he
wants to wage a vigorous war against Islamic radicals worldwide, is prepared
to let Muslim extremists come to power in Kosovo and even have their own
sovereign state. This is itself a major gaffe. But McCain compounded it when
he gave a speech urging the building of "international structures for a
durable peace," including strengthening NATO. This sounds good, except that
McCain has to know that recognizing Kosovo's independence has split Western
nations and even NATO itself. It is a major foreign policy blunder that the
next administration, Democrat or Republican, may never recover from. It
represents a direct threat to the international order of nation-states. That
is why many nations have not recognized this new state of Kosovo. They
realize that Kosovo's independence could spark other groups to wage wars
against established regimes around the world.

This is not to say that some territories under the control of
internationally recognized regimes do not deserve their independence. Tibet,
under Chinese Communist occupation, deserves its freedom and sovereignty.
And Taiwan should become an independent state as well. China's communist
rulers, who opposed Kosovo's independence because they fear it could serve
as a precedent for Tibet and Taiwan, are the illegitimate ones. The regime
in Beijing should be undermined. But China, which supplies so many of our
products and invests so much in our economy, is too big an adversary to pick
a fight with. This shows the fallacy of claims of the U.S. being a
"superpower." We are at the mercy of China, and the presidential candidates
of both major political parties know it. Only a commentator like Lou Dobbs
of CNN dares to address the controversy on a regular basis.

Atrocities occurred on all sides as the former Yugoslavia went through
disintegration. But Serbia was involved in trying to hold the former
Yugoslavia together when outside powers, including various Arab and Muslim
states, were trying to carve the nation up. Kosovo's Muslims, who are a
majority, may not be as radical as those in other Arab states. But wait
until the radical Mosques that are being established around the territory,
with the financial assistance of Saudi Arabia, begin to exert their
influence on the next generation. They won't be waving American flags out of
gratitude for NATO waging war on Serbia. Meanwhile, many Christian churches
In Kosovo have been destroyed, and many Serbs, who are Christians, have fled
the province. No wonder Serbian demonstrators recently burned the U.S.
embassy there. And yet McCain says he wants to repair America's bad image in
the rest of the world. Start with reversing the disastrous Kosovo policy,
Senator McCain.

Conservatives should be concerned about the Kosovo policy for another
reason. In his Wednesday speech to the World Affairs Council, McCain talked
about the security of the state of Israel. He doesn't seem to realize that
recognition of Kosovo is a precedent for the creation of another Muslim
state, Palestine, in the heart of the Middle East, which could end up being
just as much of a threat to the Jewish state as a nuclear Iran. Israeli
analysts have recognized this threat. They know that Kosovo is to Serbia
what Jerusalem is to Israel. Bush, of course, is the first U.S. president to
campaign for the creation of an Arab/Muslim Palestinian state. He encouraged
the elections that brought the terrorist group Hamas to power in the
Palestinian territories. Does McCain favor this suicidal approach for the
state of Israel? Or does Israel's security lie in asserting its own
sovereignty and building a border fence? McCain, of course, seems to have an
aversion to border fences, at least when they are on the U.S. southern
border.

Hillary Clinton was accused of lying about her visit to Bosnia when she was
First Lady. The more important controversy is why the U.S. was militarily
involved in Bosnia in the first place. The record shows that her husband
approved the shipment of Iranian arms to the Bosnia Muslims so they could
fight the Christian Serbs. Clinton then expanded that policy to helping the
Muslims in Kosovo. So the Iranian influence that McCain warned about in his
World Affairs Council speech has already been brought into the Balkans by
the Clintons, in a policy that he supported all along.

If you have noticed the evidence that the Arab/Muslim bloc of nations
benefited from the Clinton policy in the former Yugoslavia, then you have
grasped an essential truth about what has led to the current precarious
state of affairs. It should be noted that Osama bin Laden, who was accused
of supporting the Muslim extremists in Bosnia and Kosovo, would go on to
order an attack on the U.S. on 9/11, killing nearly 3,000 of our fellow
citizens. So he is clearly not grateful for the U.S. helping his Muslim
brothers.

The lesson, which McCain says he recognizes in Iraq, is that the terrorists
cannot be appeased. But he wants to appease the Muslim extremists, backed by
bin Laden, in Kosovo.

The mystery is why President Bush, who authorized our soldiers to fight
Muslim extremists in Iraq, embarked on this policy to accommodate them in
Kosovo, and why McCain backs this wrong-headed approach. Some may see a
conspiracy in this, but I prefer the stupidity theory of history. I don't
think our foreign policy elites, and the politicians they control, are that
smart about what constitutes the national security interest of the U.S. Bush
may be under the manipulation of career bureaucrats in the State Department.
They seem to have an inordinate influence on McCain as well.

Since the Democrats won't quarrel with McCain or Bush on this unfolding
catastrophe, it is up to what used to be called an "adversary press" to
raise this uncomfortable foreign policy problem. It is an emergency because
another war could be on the horizon. This "adversary press" now includes,
more than ever, conservative commentators and bloggers. But some of those
blogs seem to be running more and more "McCain for President"
advertisements. This is a bad sign.

McCain, in his Wednesday speech, seemed to go out of his way to offend the
Russian government, making it clear that he doesn't regard the regime there
as a democracy. He even wants to exclude Russia from the G-8 group. Russia,
McCain said, does not qualify as a member of what he proposes as a global
"League of Democracies." But how can democracies survive if their countries
face dismemberment by groups of nations and alliances acting outside of
established and acceptable modes of conduct? How does it benefit the U.S. to
increase the membership of the Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC)
by adding states such as Bosnia and Kosovo?

Russia, which is promising to go to the aid of the Serbs remaining in
Kosovo, has recognized the danger to its own territorial integrity. It 
doesn't
want to see Chechnya, another potential member of the OIC, inspired to more
violence in order to attract recognition as an independent Muslim state like
Kosovo. A war with NATO forces in Kosovo cannot be ruled out.

Then the situation may get some serious media attention.

If foreign policy is McCain's strong suit, we are in serious trouble. His
policy is the same as that of Democrats Hillary and Obama. And yet McCain
says that Russia has a deficit of democracy.

Posted 03/27 at 05:53 AM

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