http://original.antiwar.com/malic/2009/06/09/treaties-and-dreams/
 

Treaties and Dreams

by Nebojsa Malic, June 10, 2009 

Kosovo Armistice, a Decade Later

 

On June 10, 1999, the  <http://www.nato.int/kosovo/docu/a990609a.htm> 
military-technical agreement (MTA) between NATO and the Yugoslav Army went into 
effect, along with UN Security Council  
<http://www.nato.int/Kosovo/docu/u990610a.htm> Resolution 1244. Between them, 
they provided a somewhat graceful ending to NATO’s  
<http://www.antiwar.com/malic/?articleid=5312> first war. Conceived as a 
three-day demonstration of force, predicated on a  
<http://emperors-clothes.com/gilwhite/rambouillet.htm> disgraceful ultimatum, 
justified by an onslaught of vicious propaganda, the assault on then-Yugoslavia 
nearly tore the alliance apart on its 50th birthday. Just four years later, the 
invasion of Iraq saw it tossed aside in favor of a " 
<http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Coalition_of_the_willing> coalition 
of the willing."

 

NATO never honored its obligations from the MTA or UNSCR 1244. Kosovo was 
turned over to the KLA, whose campaign of murder, pillage, and arson drove out 
hundreds of thousands of non-Albanians from the province. Over the next 10 
years, Serb religious and cultural heritage has been  
<http://www.antiwar.com/malic/?articleid=2164> systematically destroyed, and 
most of the surviving Serbs have been driven out or killed. Meanwhile, the UN 
and NATO authorities gradually created institutions of statehood and eventually 
sponsored a  <http://www.spiked-online.com/index.php?/site/article/4278/> 
declaration of "independence" by the KLA regime.

Armistice, Not Surrender

In the face of such overwhelming evidence, one would be tempted to conclude 
that the treaty signed by NATO and Yugoslav officers in a tent near Kumanovo on 
June 9 was an unconditional surrender. Or, as Alliance spokesman Jamie Shea put 
it at a  <http://www.freeserbia.net/Documents/Kosovo/NATO0607.html> June 7 
press conference, a "complete acceptance of our non-negotiable conditions." Yet 
it was nothing of the kind. 

The MTA was an armistice, painstakingly negotiated over five days. The 
government in Belgrade accepted the proposal put forth by NATO emissary Martti 
Ahtisaari (accompanied by Russian envoy Viktor Chernomyrdin) on June 3. Yet 
Yugoslav and NATO officers negotiated till June 9 before settling on a text. 
During that week, NATO continued to bomb – as evidenced by the briefing given 
by Luftwaffe Maj. Gen. Walter Jertz at the aforementioned press conference. 

On the anniversary of the armistice, the Belgrade daily Politika  
<http://www.politika.rs/rubrike/Tema-nedelje/Kumanovski-sporazum-deset-godina-kasnije/Pet-dana-rovovskih-pregovora.sr.html>
 published an interview with one of the participants in the talks, Maj. Gen. 
Obrad Stevanovic of the Serbian police. Stevanovic said that the final text of 
the agreement only mentioned NATO in the context of its obligation to halt the 
bombing, and that KFOR was supposed to be a UN force. Likewise, there was no 
mention of the Rambouillet ultimatum.

In the end, none of that mattered much. Once NATO and the KLA came into 
possession of Kosovo, the MTA and 1244 were dead letters. Stevanovic maintains 
that none of the officers involved could have known NATO would not honor the 
deal, or that KFOR would fail to protect the civilians from the KLA. Yet that 
is precisely what happened.

A Strange Coincidence

With the benefit of hindsight, NATO turning over Kosovo to the KLA may seem 
like an obvious and foregone conclusion. After all, did the Alliance not just 
launch an illegal war of aggression on behalf of this  
<http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/121818.stm> terrorist organization hastily 
re-branded as "freedom fighters"? At the time, however, things seemed less 
clear-cut.

The war had not gone well for the Alliance. There were too many "mistakes," too 
much "collateral damage," and too little proof for tall tales of massacred 
Albanian civilians. That didn’t stop the media from repeating them ad nauseam, 
but every day that Belgrade held out, the Alliance got weaker. On the other 
hand, the Yeltsin regime sold Belgrade down the river in early June, most 
likely at Washington’s insistence. The proposal offered to Milosevic on June 3 
was sufficiently watered down that he could accept it and claim a diplomatic 
victory. 

Granted, that meant nothing once NATO got actual possession of the territory 
and the KLA could do as it pleased. Neither Milosevic nor the Russians were in 
any position to challenge that, however. Milosevic was  
<http://www.antiwar.com/malic/?articleid=7522> ousted in a black-op "popular 
revolution" in 2000 and replaced with a client regime. Yeltsin was pressured to 
resign at the end of 1999, with his betrayal of Belgrade probably playing at  
<http://grayfalcon.blogspot.com/2008/08/turning-point.html> least a partial 
role.

In the tragedy of Kosovo that ensued, few noticed that the war officially ended 
on a very symbolic date. Perhaps it was a coincidence, but there aren’t many of 
those when it comes to the Balkans. Namely, June 10 was the date on which the 
first  <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/League_of_Prizren> Albanian national 
movement was established in distant 1878, a crucial year in Balkans history.

1878 and the Congress of Berlin

By the mid-15th century, all of the Balkans had been conquered by the Ottoman 
Turks. The tide of Ottoman conquest, once seemingly unstoppable, began to 
recede after the failed siege of Vienna in 1683. The 18th century was marked by 
fierce wars with Austria and Russia, pushing the Turks back. Starting in 1804, 
uprisings by the Serbs and the Greeks further weakened the Ottoman hold over 
the Balkans. 

As part of an administrative  
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subdivisions_of_the_Ottoman_Empire#Administrative_reform.2C_1864>
 reform in 1864, the Ottoman Empire broke up its old provinces into smaller 
units called vilayets. In one of those provinces, Herzegovina, the excesses of 
Ottoman taxation provoked a rebellion in 1875. Using the distraction, 
Bulgarians rose up in the spring of 1876 but were cruelly suppressed. At this 
point, Serbia and Montenegro declared war on the Ottoman Empire. Despite 
Russian military aid, they were soon forced on the defensive. In April 1877, 
Russia entered the war; by March 1878, the Ottomans were defeated, and Russian 
forces were within reach of Istanbul. 

With Austria-Hungary and Britain alarmed at the extent of Russian gains in the 
proposed Treaty of San Stefano, Germany’s chancellor Bismarck called the  
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Congress_of_Berlin> Congress of Berlin. Intended 
to be a reprise of the 1815 Congress of Vienna, which had created four decades 
of peace in post-Napoleonic Europe, the Berlin affair merely sowed the seeds of 
future Balkans conflicts and  <http://www.antiwar.com/malic/?articleid=13853> 
ultimately the Great War.

For example, the  <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_of_San_Stefano> San 
Stefano treaty outlined a sizable, independent Bulgarian state. At the Congress 
of Berlin, only a third of the outlined territory was recognized as Bulgaria; 
another third was set apart as "East Rumelia," and the rest (Macedonia) was 
restored to Ottoman rule. Though East Rumelia was peacefully integrated into 
Bulgaria in 1885, the issue of Macedonia proved a major bone of contention 
between Bulgaria, Serbia, and Greece, marring the victory over the Ottomans  
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First_Balkan_War> in 1912 and resulting in 
Bulgaria joining the Central Powers in 1915 (and the Axis in World War II).

The Congress of Berlin is also where Austria-Hungary received a mandate to 
occupy Bosnia and Herzegovina, which put Vienna on a collision course with 
Belgrade and resulted in the Sarajevo assassination of 1914.

The League of Prizren

On June 10, 1878, Albanian religious and tribal leaders founded the League of 
Prizren, demanding greater recognition of Albanians within the Ottoman Empire 
and the consolidation of four vilayets – Shkoder,  
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kosovo_Province,_Ottoman_Empire> Kosovo, 
Ioannina, and Monastir (see a  
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Balkans_at_1905.jpg> rough map here) – into 
an Albanian province. Though ultimately unsuccessful and disbanded after just 
three years, the League marked the beginning of an Albanian national movement. 
Just as Bulgarians saw the borders set out in Berlin as a grave injustice and 
considered the San Stefano borders their birthright, the Albanians claimed the 
four provinces as "ethnic Albanian lands" and have fought to acquire them  
<http://grayfalcon.blogspot.com/2007/12/albanian-truth.html> ever since. 

The independent Albania that was established in 1912 included the province of 
Shkoder and a part of Ioannina. Kosovo became a part of Serbia, and the vilayet 
of Monastir – i.e., Macedonia – was divided between Serbia, Bulgaria, and 
Greece. The part that went to Serbia is today the former Yugoslav Republic of 
Macedonia.

Following the Nazi-led invasion of Yugoslavia in 1941, parts of Kosovo and 
today’s Macedonia were given to  
<http://www.geocities.com/ga57/albania/kosova41.html> Italian-occupied Albania. 
Upon Italy’s surrender in 1943, Albanian leaders formed the " 
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second_League_of_Prizren> Second League of 
Prizren" and sought Nazi patronage in establishing an "ethnic Albania." 

Living the Dream

It is unclear whether Imperial leaders and generals knew the symbolism of June 
10 when they chose that date for the Kumanovo agreement to go into force. It 
is, however, clear that NATO’s occupation resulted in the establishment of the 
"independent state of Kosovo" in February 2008, as well as the 2001 
insurrections in  <http://www.antiwar.com/malic/m080901.html> Macedonia and 
southern Serbia. Thus the "Albanian lands" claimed by the League of Prizren 
have been put under de facto Albanian control – thanks to the American Empire. 

The latest example came just two weeks ago, on May 31, when the prime ministers 
of Albania and Kosovo ceremoniously opened a tunnel on the Pristina-Durres 
highway (built with Turkish funding). The Albanian prime minister, Sali 
Berisha, was  
<http://www.b92.net/eng/news/politics-article.php?yyyy=2009&mm=05&dd=31&nav_id=59510>
 quoted as saying:

"Today, one of the Albanians’ most beautiful dreams has become reality. This is 
a tunnel of the unification of the nation. Today we decided that there are no 
obstacles, that there is nothing that can divide us, not only spiritually, but 
also physically." (Emphasis added.) 

However, the one constant in this "beautiful dream" since 1878 has been that it 
could only be realized with the help of outside powers, and by force. From the 
Ottoman Empire to the Axis, all the sponsors of Albanian aspirations ultimately 
failed, and their victory proved ephemeral. 

In 1999, the American Empire was the “ 
<http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/quotes/m/madeleinea144932.html> 
indispensable nation,” and it looked as if its power would last forever. That 
is by no means a certainty any longer. The question now is whether history 
repeats itself or merely rhymes.

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