Pyotr ISKENDEROV

UN Papers and the Gross Reality

(On the Tenth Anniversary of the UN Security Council Resolution on Kosovo)

June 10 is a sad date in the history of the UN, the institution originally 
meant to play the key role in ensuring peace, security, and the primacy of law 
in the world. The decade since the passing of the June 10, 1999 UN Security 
Council Resolution 1244 addressing the Kosovo problem – the document totally 
ignored throughout the period - has shown that the UN is no longer playing the 
role prescribed to it by the post-World War II system of the international law. 

The Resolution the tenth anniversary of which nobody seems willing to celebrate 
in the UN headquarters, Belgrade, or Pristina is usually attributed to an 
intricate compromise. Ten years ago the Russian leadership managed to 
incorporate into it several fundamental principles concerning the Kosovo 
settlement. Most importantly, it was stressed in the document's preamble that 
the Kosovo problem had to be solved on the basis “of the commitment of all 
Member States to the sovereignty and territorial integrity of the Federal 
Republic of Yugoslavia and the other States of the region”. Correspondingly, 
the Resolution called for “substantial autonomy and meaningful 
self-administration for Kosovo”. Besides, the UN Security Council reached 
consensus that international discussions of specific parameters of Kosovo’s 
future status would begin only after the implementation in the province of the 
democratic standards guaranteeing the political, economic, cultural, and 
national rights of the province's non-Albanian population. 

Nothing of the above materialized. From the outset, the West pushed for Kosovo 
independence, and only the requirements of Resolution 1244 which could be 
interpreted so as to broaden the rights and authority of Albanian separatists 
were actually met. As for Russia, its only accomplishments throughout the 
period since the passing of the resolution till the opening of the negotiations 
between Belgrade and Pristina on the status of Kosovo in February, 2006 were 
the snap offensive which led to the seizure of the Slatina airport by Russian 
peacekeepers and their quiet withdrawal in 2003 under the pretext that “it was 
impossible to change anything”. 

The subsequent talks under the auspices of the UN in which Russia took a 
somewhat bigger role ended with a predictable failure which made it possible 
for the Albanian separatists to declare the independence of Kosovo unilaterally 
in February, 2008. The independence was momentarily recognized by the 
Albanians' Western donors and ideological patrons. 

The available information makes it possible to claim that both the passing of 
UN Security Council Resolution 1244 and the diplomatic maneuvers around Kosovo 
that ensued – those in which the Russian Foreign and Defense Ministries took 
part in particular – were nothing but a show originally planned by the West. In 
the process Moscow's role to which the Russian leadership somehow agreed was 
that of a “good policeman”. 

Obviously, Resolution 1244 was stillborn. The key problems were not the poor 
compliance with its requirements and Russia's inability to make its partners 
view the UN document with proper respect but the fact that the West had made 
all the decisions on the status of Kosovo already in the late 1998. The 
subsequent negotiation between Serbs and Albanians in Rambouillet, NATO 
airstrikes, discussions in the UN Security Council, and the deployment of the 
UN mission and NATO peacekeepers in the province were just steps in the 
realization of the already existing plan. 

The build-up of the NATO presence in Kosovo also commenced in the late 1998. In 
the US the point of no return was reached when Michael Polt who coordinated the 
military policy in the Clinton Administration and later became the US 
Ambassador to Serbia convinced Secretary of State C. Powell to consent to the 
intervention in the region. Polt argued that by intervening in Kosovo NATO 
would send a clear message to all Eurasian countries, of course including 
Russia. 

Yugoslavian Vice President Momir Bulatovic said: “It already became clear in 
October, 1998 that the decision on our future had been made. They started 
talking about the “humanitarian disaster” in Kosovo and the so-called NATO 
credibility. The latter meant that if NATO was unable to put an end to the 
“humanitarian disaster”, then it simply had no right to exist. To avoid a 
military strike we were ready to make concessions to the extent of retaining 
only the minimal amount of state dignity and territorial integrity. They were 
interested in Kosovo's natural resources - we offered US and British companies 
to develop them at the token price of $1. They responded that the offer was 
attractive but unacceptable. Then NATO wanted a base in Kosovo. We offered them 
to have it for the same $1 token price. They were surprised but turned down the 
offer nevertheless. Trying to avoid conflict we eventually suggested that 
Yugoslavia should join NATO and thus automatically generate a solution to the 
Kosovo problem. Again the answer was No. Admitting us to NATO could resolve the 
dispute over Kosovo but could not solve any of the problems due to which NATO 
decided to attack our small country. NATO decided to move into Kosovo by 
forceavoiding any cooperation with us. The point is that if NATO does not 
reckon with us it would also be free of any obligations to other countries. 
They branded this the New World Order”. 

The US still had to secure Europe's consent to launching the offensive. 
Washington proposed “to give Serbs another chance” and to hold an international 
conference on Kosovo in Rambouillet in February, 1999. Belgrade faced totally 
unprecedented requirements deliberately formulated to make the aggression 
against Yugoslavia inevitable. Momir Bulatovic recalled: “In Rambouillet we 
were asked to agree to the deployment of NATO forces in Kosovo and to allow 
them access to all of the Yugoslavian territory. According to a document which 
looked like an ultimatum, all our expressways, railroads, air space, and 
installations were to be used by NATO free of charge and without any 
limitations. All NATO servicemen were to be exempt from our laws and or any 
criminal responsibilities. All the decision-making was to be left to the 
commander of the NATO contingent. The document was formulated so that no sane 
individual could ever sign it”. As expected, Yugoslavia' representatives did 
not agree to the de facto occupation of their country. 

Russia actively took part in the Rambouillet “negotiations” though the Russian 
leadership had to be aware that the West had already laid the finishing touches 
on the scenario for Kosovo. Russia's involvement only helped to make the 
enforced separation of Kosovo – the cradle of the Serbian national statehood – 
from Serbia appear more peaceful and take somewhat longer to complete... 

Viewing the situation now in 2009 one can only hope that Russia has learned the 
lessons. Russian diplomats admit in private conversations that Moscow should 
start cooperating more actively with the Balkan political forces which can be 
regarded as its potential allies in future conflicts over Eurasian political 
arrangements and energy security. Kosovo has been torn out of Serbia - this is 
the gross reality, not a passage from some UN papers. Bringing it back would 
take something other than voting in the UN Security Council, an institution 
which has become nothing else than a decoration used by the global forces 
acting behind the curtain.

 

http://en.fondsk.ru/article.php?id=2214

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