Bill Clinton’s Statue Is in Kosovo

 

January 15, 2010 | From theTrumpet.com

 

But who’s really responsible for the breakaway republic? 

 

Stephen Flurry  <http://www.thetrumpet.com/index.php?columnist=5> 

In November, former U.S. President Bill Clinton attended the unveiling 
<http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/8336789.stm>  of an 11-foot bronze statue of 
himself before a large crowd of cheering Albanians in downtown Pristina, the 
capital of Kosovo. 

“I am profoundly grateful that I had a chance to be a part of ending the 
horrible things that were happening to you 10 years ago,” Clinton said in front 
of the adoring crowd, referring to nato’s 1999 bombing campaign against Serbia. 
The U.S.-led campaign forced Slobodan Milosevic’s army to evacuate its 
sovereign territory in the province of Kosovo, effectively paving the way for 
Kosovo’s secession. 

NATO, we should note, was established in 1949 as a defensive alliance among 10 
European nations, the United States and Canada. Under terms of the alliance, 
nato members agreed to defend any member state invaded by an enemy nation. 

In October 1998, however, nato “expanded” its mandate to include missions that 
would extend “freedom” and “human rights” throughout Europe—even if it meant 
going beyond the boundaries of nato member states. 

Like Kosovo, for example. 

With its newly revised mandate, nato immediately set its sights on Serbia, 
which had been cracking down on separatist forces in Kosovo throughout 1998. 
This culminated in the 78-day aerial campaign that President Clinton authorized 
in early 1999. 

It is, however, Germany that is responsible for both starting and ending the 
war in Kosovo. From the beginning of Yugoslavia’s dissolution, the German 
government covertly supplied separatist forces in Kosovo, known as the Kosovo 
Liberation Army (kla), with military intelligence, training and weapons. The 
KLA had also been linked to the Albanian mafia and various Islamic terrorist 
groups, including Osama bin Laden’s al Qaeda. 

“Without any questions,” the kla is a “terrorist group,” said President 
Clinton’s special envoy to the Balkans, Robert Gelbard, on Feb. 23, 1998. “The 
future of Kosovo is within Yugoslavia,” Gelbard added, after meeting with 
Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic for several hours. The Clinton 
administration set up the Belgrade meeting with Milosevic to inform him that 
the United States was ready to reward Yugoslavia for its “good will” in 
implementing the peace accords the U.S. had brokered in 1995. Milosevic took 
that as his cue to stamp out the separatist rebellion in Kosovo. 

Then, practically overnight, America—after being pressured by Germany—hung 
Milosevic out to dry. 

Just three weeks after the Belgrade meeting, the State Department accused 
Milosevic of ethnically cleansing Albanians from Kosovo. President Clinton 
threatened the use of force against Serbia if violence in Kosovo didn’t simmer 
down. 

When asked by Congress if he still considered the kla a terrorist group, 
Gelbard told lawmakers that while the kla had “committed terrorist acts,” it 
had “not been classified legally by the U.S. government as a terrorist 
organization” (emphasis mine throughout). 

They committed acts of terrorism, but were no longer terrorists! 

“Unfortunately and tragically, terrorist acts have occurred,” said Gelbard, 
“and they have provided an excuse for Milosevic here. But, as I said, there is 
no question at all that the overwhelming, brutal, repressive, despicable 
violence—the criminal actions, I believe, committed by the Federal Republic of 
Yugoslavia here—are responsible for the tragedy we have at hand right now.” 

Three weeks earlier, there had been no question that the kla was responsible 
for the violent unrest in Kosovo. Now, no question, it was Milosevic. 

Germany, the kla’s primary state sponsor, had spoken. And the United States 
abruptly switched sides in the Balkan conflict. 

A few days before Gelbard’s flip-flop at the congressional hearing, the 
so-called “contact group” of Germany, Britain, France, Italy, Russia and the 
United States met for an emergency meeting in London to discuss Kosovo. During 
the meeting, the group of six decided to punish the Milosevic government with 
sanctions intended to pressure Yugoslavia into granting broad autonomy to the 
Albanians in Kosovo. 

This, just two weeks after an American envoy assured Milosevic that the future 
of Kosovo is within Yugoslavia! 

“This time, we must respond before it is too late,” said U.S. Secretary of 
State Madeleine Albright. “When the war in the former Yugoslavia began in 1991, 
the international community did not react with sufficient vigor,” she 
remembered. 

Of course, as our regular readers know, it wasn’t the international community’s 
failure to act in the Balkans that caused war to break out in the former 
Yugoslav republics. It was our failure to stand up to Germany (and the Vatican) 
after it insisted on moving forward to recognize Slovenia and Croatia, despite 
strenuous protests (initially) from the United States, the European Union and 
the United Nations. 

As much as the U.S. might want to forget about this history, the new, 
German-backed breakaway states haven’t forgotten. In 1993, for example, Croatia 
erected a bronze statue in honor of German Foreign Minister Hans-Dietrich 
Genscher, the first diplomat to recognize Croatian independence. 

According to the Associated Press, the onetime foreign minister “championed 
Croatia’s independence in 1991 and pushed a hesitant Europe to recognize its 
secession from federal Yugoslavia” (June 3, 1997). 

Kosovo’s 2008 declaration of secession was merely the final chapter of 
Germany’s Balkan conquest. Besides disempowering its traditional enemy Serbia, 
“Berlin was able to successfully reassert its claim as hegemonic power in 
Southeast Europe,” wrote 
<http://www.german-foreign-policy.com/en/fulltext/56134>  
German-Foreign-Policy.com. 

There may be a bronze statue of President Clinton in Kosovo commemorating the 
American firepower that ousted Milosevic from his former Yugoslav republic. But 
Germany is the one responsible for the breakaway. 

This is why, when they declared their independence in 2008, Kosovars waved 
German flags alongside their American counterparts. 

And this is why, on one of the banners celebrating Kosovo’s proclamation, it 
read <http://www.german-foreign-policy.com/en/fulltext/56134> , “Thank you 
Germany!” • 

 

Stephen Flurry’s column appears every Friday.
To e-mail Stephen Flurry, click 
<mailto:[email protected]?subject=response%20to%20%27bill%20clinton%26rsquo%3bs%20statue%20is%20in%20kosovo%27%20%5b6892%5d>
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