On the ruins of Yugoslavia

en.fondsk.ru
Kosovo ` Serbia - Russia
17.04.2009


Elena GUSKOVA

At the end of the 20th century the fate of Yugoslavia was being
determined by numerous international organizations rather by
Yugoslavs. The nation did not want to obey and was punished. In
1992-1995 they were forced to accept ultimatums and support military
offensives. The aforesaid organizations launched information wars,
established coalitions and alliances and imposed peace deals in Dayton
and Ramboia. Nowadays there is hardly anyone on the post-Yugoslavia
territory who could oppose to such policies.
NATO's aggression against Yugoslavia in March-June of 1999 (the whole
operation mainly led by the U.S.) marked another step toward a managed
world pattern. NATO made an attempt to use force against 'disobedient'
states without UN sanctions and then watched the reactions of all
European institutions and countries. In the Balkans NATO acquired not
only big military experience and an opportunity to exhaust old and use
new weapons but also managed to enhance its activities, making its way
to a global organization.
Ten years have passed since the NATO aggression against a sovereign
European state. What did these years bring to those who threw bombs
and those who were attacked? What goals did NATO pursue and whether it
managed to cope with its tasks in the following years?
I would like to make it clear in the very beginning that NATO did not
achieve a military victory. They failed to destroy the army of
Yugoslavia and tame the soldiers` morale. However, they got the right
political atmosphere for destroying Serbia and, first of all, for
imposing their conditions on the Serbian government, including the
rules of cooperation with the EU, the International Criminal Tribunal
for the Former Yugoslavia and with NATO. After the 1999 Serbia lost
almost all opportunities to control its sovereignty and national
security.
After long years of injustice and punishment the Serbs lost the will
to fight, to resist as they were practicall
o repel the attack of the powerful Western military alliance. So,
after 1999 it became easier for NATO to continue destruction of
Yugoslavia and carry out power shifts.
In 2000 Slobodan Milosevic, who had been ruling the country for quite
many years, was ousted. At first sight, the move came as unexpected,
easy and legal, in other words-Yugoslavia's home affair. In fact, it
had been very thoroughly prepared by special divisions. The method
proved to be so successful that it was later used in Georgia and
Ukraine. The Georgian opposition were taught in Serbia, while their
Ukrainian 'colleagues' were drilled also in Serbia and in Georgia.
This is how they changed power in a country they had long failed to
destroy. But Yugoslavia remained as a symbol of independence and
disobedience. However, the new authorities obeyed and everything went
smoothly. Having arrived in Belgrade in February 2003, Javier Solana
suggested to a group of officials from Serbia and Montenegro to admit
that the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia ceased to exist, and adopt the
Constitution charter, written somewhere in Europe, its text
proclaiming the appearance of a new country. Solana did not face any
resistance.
The Republic was renamed to the State Union of Serbia and Montenegro,
and officially abolished the name ''Yugoslavia''. In 2006 Montenegro
and Serbia declared independence, thereby ending the Yugoslav
state. And it was Javier Solana who did it-he who remains a war
criminal for Serbs, who bombed their country in 1999.
After the 1999 it was easier to implement the plans which seemed
fantastic under Milosevic. Yugoslavia was undermined, its integration
slowed down, its strength exhausted. What they failed to achieve in
Ramboia in 1998 and through the 1999 bombings, they got on July 18th,
2005, when Serbia and Montenegro signed a deal with NATO `On Lines of
Communication'. This is a technical agreement which allows NATO
personnel and equipment to transit through the country. Under the
deal, the Alliance could enjoy such opportunities
until all peacekeeping operation in the Balkans are over'. Thus NATO
was given the green light to enlarge its presence in the region and
control the army of Serbia and Montenegro.
Today the Balkans are NATO's permanent base. In October 2008 Serbia's
Defense Minister and NATO officials signed a deal on information
security, which allows the Alliance control everyone who deals with
their documents or just cooperates with them. They insisted on secrecy
of the negotiations with Serbs.
The aftermath of the 1999 aggression for NATO was the most
favorable. Nobody condemned NATO and they felt even more confident. In
recent years the world has witnessed NATO making several attempts of
expansion. Currently the bloc is occupying its position on the
Balkans, using old and building new camps. It ignores all demands to
stop enhancing its security at the cost of others. The level of
regional security on the Balkans is lowering, and, of course, Moscow
is aware of this. NATO camp Bondsteel is being illegally operated in
Kosovo. In the center of Skopje the U.S. is said to build an embassy,
but its architecture is more likely to resemble a military base or a
CIA office.
Although NATO's role on the Balkans is officially described as a
peacekeeping mission, it is not a secret to anyone that the Alliance
deals with suppression of the Balkan Slavs. The process yet is not
over. We can see this happening in Kosovo and Metohija, Bosnia and
Herzegovina, Macedonia, Serbia (Vojvodina, Sandjak and southern
provinces).
In February 2008 Kosovo received Washington's permission to proclaim
its independence. It happened later than expected due to the positions
of Russia,China and some other states. At the Security Council Moscow
said 'no' to Kosovo`s independence. Russia respects interests of
Serbia and condemns all attempts to impose decisions on other members
of the international community. Russia understands that if extremism
is not stopped, Macedonia and then Montenegro will have to say goodbye
to a part of their territories. Europe will
ue of borders revision and how to recognize a new enlarged state of
Albania or the enlarged and independent Kosovo.
Russia seems to have found enough strength to stop being a mere
observer, as this role undermines its national security. Moscow gives
it to understand it is going to help the nations which confide their
future to Russia. Only Russia may bring stability to the Balkans. The
Serbian authorities should not miss the chance. They must remember
that Vojvodina is in jeopardy, that new rebellions are very likely in
southern Serbia.

http://groong.usc.edu/world/eu/msg05700.html

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