<http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/?p=750> Ahtisaari's Well Deserved Prize


by Srdja Trifkovic

http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/?p=750

The Nobel Peace Prize was awarded last Friday to former Finnish president
Martti Ahtisaari. The mainstream media claimed matter-of-factly that this
was the "global trouble-shooter's" reward for many years of "helping end
strife"  <http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5g5l2fRFVwVBwe7Ra-93Sz-pK9xSQ>
in troublespots ranging from Kosovo to Namibia and Indonesia. The Norwegian
Nobel Committee hailed Ahtisaari (71) "for his important efforts, on several
continents and over more than three decades, to resolve international
conflicts." The claim is ridiculous: Far from being a peacemaker, Ahtisaari
is an obedient apparatchik of the global elite class whose job it is to help
impose "solutions" decided upfront by his paymasters in Washington, New York
and Brussels. He is therefore eminently deserving of this particular honor.

There have been controversial Nobel peace prizes over the years – Yasser
Arafat comes to mind, not to mention Menachem Begin – but over the past two
decades the institution has degenerated into farce.

Last year it went to Al Gore for his "Inconvenient Truth." Enough said.

In 1992 the panel of five Norwegian worthies gave it to Guatemalan
"activist" (i.e. leftist self-dramatist and fraud) Rigoberta Menchu, whose
<http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/132786/did_rigoberta_menchu_deserv
e_the_nobel.html> deservedly forgotten autobiography was cut out of whole
cloth. (The brother she "watched die of malnutrition" was later found to be
alive and well fed.)

In 1999 the laureate was Bernard Kouchner, a shameless self-promoter and
currently Sarkozy's foreign minister. This quintessential '68-er has been
piggybacking of human misery for decades. Kouchner's outpouring of
pornograpic compassion, elicited by the plight of the "Boat People,"
prompted even his very own Doctors Without Borders to disown him. His
mending of fences with the French right – and current gainful employment –
came in the aftermath of his failed bids for the post of the director of the
World Health Organisation and the U.N. High Commissioner on Refugees.

Ahtisaari is in good company. His most high-profile mission to date – Kosovo
– is an unresolved problem made worse by him than it had been before him, or
that it would have been without him. His support of the Albanian cause and
insistence on independence as the only option is what the United States
wanted, and he performed on cue. That his "plan" is detrimental to peace and
stability in the region needs no restating.

It is ironic that the Nobel Committee announced its decision in the same
week when Serbia's resolution to have the International Court of Justice
consider the legality of Kosovo's self-declared independence was
<http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2008-10/09/content_10167623.htm> adopted
by the U.N. General Assembly. It's a bit like giving Neville Chamberlain the
1939 peace prize for Munich 1938…

Ahtisaari embarked on his bungled attempt to "deliver" the Serbs after
spending many years as "Chairman Emeritus" of the Soros-funded International
Crisis Group (ICG). There isn't a single evil cause or bad idea – especially
in the Balkans – that the ICG does not support and promote.

Ahtisaari's approach to "troubleshooting" in Kosovo in 2006-2007 may have
been based on six years' worth of flawed advice that he and others in the
"international community" had received from Western diplomats in Belgrade
and from a small but influential clique of "pro-Western" Serbian officials
and analysts who now hold the reins of power. All along his assumption had
been that Serbia would cave in yet again and agree to Kosovo's detachment,
albeit with some meaningless fig leaf ("conditional independence,"
"international guarantees for minority rights," etc, etc); that Russia and
China would endorse the deal at the Security Council; and that the problem
would be taken off the agenda by the end of 2007 with the raising of yet
another ex-Yugoslav flag at the U.N.

Ahtisaari cared not a hoot what the nature of the new entity would be – an
international protectorate, an EU-NATO condominium, a future province of
Greater Albania – but he was insistent that it would no longer be part of
Serbia. His plan has promised protection for the remaining Serbs, and
everyone – Ahtisaari included – knew that those "guarantees" were just new
lies on top of the old.

When all the Serbs are cleared out from their historic and spiritual
heartland, and their holy places destroyed – an even bet for the next decade
– there will be expressions of surprise and regret from the latest Nobel
laureate. Both sentiments will be false. Ahtisaari's true surprise and
regret will come when he dies.

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