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Kosovo: First "NATO State"

Global Research, April 8, 2008
Voice of Russia

Kosovo's Fate Can Be Clarified on May 11. Russia Has its Final Chance

The decision of U.S president George Bush to start deliveries of arms to
Kosovo (for reasons of "bolstering" U.S. security) and the belated sincerity
of Carla del Ponte, Prosecutor General of the International Criminal
Tribunal for Yugoslavia, who spoke about the anti-Serb atrocities of the
current Albanian leaders in that province, became the final elements of the
brilliant western scenario. Indeed, the scenario was brilliantly
orchestrated and orderly implemented.

The forced seizure of the cradle of Serbia's statehood and Orthodoxy, and
the creation of the world's first "NATO state" was the work of all the
present-day international institutes, including UN, the European Union, the
North Atlantic Alliance, OSCE and the Hague Tribunal. Some organisations and
individual countries presented the order others implemented, still others
acted as the "cover" group. The objective was achieved in less than a decade
starting from 1998 when an OSCE mission was opened in Kosovo headed by
William Walker, an active participant in blatant CIA operations in Central
America in the 1980s. It was him who made public details of the alleged
massacre by Serbian security forces of the residents of the village of
Rachak in Kosovo in January 1999 that came as a shock to western public. And
even though independent observers soon announced that in reality the dead
were Albanian militants killed in battle whose uniforms were replaced by
civilian clothes. But the required pretext for the anti-Serbian campaign was
there.

The time then came for the United Nations, EU and the Contact group. Talks
in Rambouille and Paris in 1999 were organised with an eye to making
Belgrade give up Kosovo under the threat or actual use of force. The demand
of NATO's unimpeded access to Kosovo was ghastly reminiscent of the 1914
Austrian-Hungarian ultimatum to Serbia (true, then it was all about the
unlimited authority for Austrian courts to investigate independently the
circumstance of the murder of Archduke Franz Ferdinand in Kingdom of
Serbia).

In 1914 Serbia rejected the ultimatum, and Russia sided with Serbia with all
its military might. In 1999 the Yugoslav negotiators acted in much the same
way, but all that Moscow offered in support, boiled down to Boris Yeltsin's
rambling TV address "Stop Clinton!" and the dashing U-turn of Evgeni
Primakov's aeroplane over the Atlantic. NATO made its coup de grace against
the background of lively debates by then Russian elite on the issue whether
it was worthwhile for Moscow to quarrel with the West over "some 
Yugoslavia".
Their answer was "No", and to appease Washington and Brussels the more, they
despatched Viktor Chernomyrdin to beat the consent to capitulate out of
Slobodan Milosevic.

In the summer of 1999 NATO's the Yugoslav army and Serbian police in Kosovo
was substituted for by KFOR. Russia made a show of its formal part in the
peacekeeping operation, but failed to even get its own zone of
responsibility determined. Russian troops then had to report to NATO
commanders, immeasurably pleasing their recent "cold war" opponents, and a
little later Russian troops quietly left Kosovo for good, betraying both
authorities in Belgrade and ordinary Kosovo Serbs.

It took no magic to predict further developments. The UN mission in Kosovo
was closing its eyes on the crimes of Albanian extremists, and the Hague
tribunal drew carbon copies of accusations of the Serbian and Yugoslav
leaders. NATO began to set up bases to train Albanian military units, while
the chieftains of the terrorist "Kosovo Liberation Army" continued to seize
power in the province. Organising elections and the follow-up
self-proclaiming of Kosovo's "independence" February 17, 2008 under the
circumstances proved - elementary.

The latest revelations of Ms. Del Ponte about the unprecedented trade in
human bodily organs extirpated from hundreds of kidnapped and murdered
Kosovo Serbs along with the Interpol and Europol reports on Kosovo turning
into Europe's biggest drug trafficking terminal give one a clue as to what
the sources of Kosovo's "independence" are.

It is not hard to foresee that there will be more new shocking revelations
coming from western politicians and dignitaries, confident that Kosovo's
independence process is irreversible so they can now repent their sins,
shedding crocodile tears - provided no harm is done to their shared cause.

But both Serbia and Russia still have their last chance to grab before, as
it were, the train is out of reach, finding the way into the engineer's
cabin and making the train run on a different line. The most important thing
is to be able to take advantage of the current situation. For Serbs that is
May 11 early parliamentary elections that are to mark the beginning of the
revival of Serbian national spirit and the cleansing of the bodies of power
of traitors, yes-men and the "fifth column." The follow-up developments can
include (provided the only democratic force, the Serbian Radical party
coming to power), Serbian leaders could officially make a call on Russia to
become the defender of Kosovo Serbs. It is quite possible given the UN
Security Council Resolution 1244 of June 1999, which even the West still
honours it as legal. The document confirms Belgrade's right to despatch to
Kosovo a limited consignment of troops to protect Serbs in Kosovo and their
historical and cultural monuments, something not yet demanded by either by
Serbia or Russia. The arrival of Russian troops to Kosovo's northern parts
could become the first step on the path of installing genuine order in
Serbia.

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