==============

http://www.balkanstudies.org/blog/icj-ruling-blow-serbia-boon-tadi%C4%87-jeremi%C4%87

 

ICJ Ruling: Blow to Serbia, Boon to Tadic & Jeremic

By Srdja Trifkovic
Thursday, 22 Jul 2010

 

 

Ever since the U.S. intervened in Serbia’s domestic politics two years ago and 
helped the current coalition take power in Belgrade, Boris Tadic and his 
cohorts have been looking for a way to capitulate on Kosovo while pretending 
not to. The formula was simple: place all diplomatic eggs in one basket – that 
of the International Court of Justice – and refrain from using any other 
political or economic (let alone military) tools at Serbia’s disposal. On July 
22 the ICJ performed on cue, declaring that Kosovo’s UDI was not illegal.

It should be noted that the ICJ has only assessed Kosovo's declaration of 
independence; it has not considered more widely Kosovo's right to unilateral 
secession from Serbia. Furthermore, the ICJ has not assessed either the 
consequences of the adoption of the UDI, namely whether Kosovo is a state, or 
the legitimacy of its recognition by a number of countries.

The ICJ advisory opinion is deeply flawed and non-binding, but the government 
in Belgrade now has a perfect alibi for doing what it had intended to do all 
along.

Following the appointment of Vuk Jeremic as Serbia’s foreign minister in 2007, 
this outcome could be predicted with near-certainty. As President Boris Tadic’s 
chief foreign policy advisor, Jeremic came to Washington on 18 May 2005 to 
testify in Congress on why Kosovo should stay within Serbia. In his subsequent 
off-the-record conversations, however, he assured his hosts that the task was 
really to sugar-coat the bitter Kosovo pill that Serbia would have to swallow 
anyway.

Two years later another advisor to Tadic, Dr. Leon Kojen, resigned in a blaze 
of publicity after Austrian Chancellor Alfred Gusenbauer declared, on April 13, 
2007, “We are working with Boris Tadic and his people to find a way to 
implement the essence of the Ahtisaari plan.” Tout Belgrade knew that “Tadic’s 
people” meant—Vuk Jeremic. Gusenbauer’s indiscretion amounted to the revelation 
that Serbia’s head of state and his closest advisor were engaged in secret 
negotiations aimed at facilitating the detachment of Kosovo from Serbia—which, 
of course, was “the essence of the Ahtisaari plan.” Jeremic’s quest for 
sugar-coating the bitter pill was evidently in full swing even before he came 
to the helm of Serbia’s diplomacy.

In the intervening three years Tadic and Jeremic have continued to pursue a 
dual-track policy on Kosovo. The decisive fruit of that policy was their 
disastrous decision to accept the European Union’s Eulex Mission in Kosovo in 
December 2008. Acting under an entirely self-created mandate, the EU thus 
managed to insert its mission, based explicitly on the provisions of the 
Ahtissari Plan, into Kosovo with Belgrade's agreement.  

That was the moment of Belgrade’s true capitulation. Everything else -- the ICJ 
ruling included -- is just a choreographed farce…
The ICJ opinion crowns two decades of U.S. policy in the former Yugoslavia that 
has been mendacious and iniquitous in equal measure. By retroactively condoning 
the Albanian UDI, the Court has made a massive leap into the unknown. That leap 
is potentially on par with Austria’s July 1914 ultimatum to Serbia. The fruits 
will be equally bitter.

Aiding and abetting Muslim designs in the Balkans, in the hope that this will 
earn some credit for the United States in the Islamic world, has been a major 
motive of American policy in the region since at least 1992. It has never 
yielded any dividends, of course, but repeated failure only prompts the 
architects of the policy to redouble their efforts.

It is virtually certain that Washington will be equally supportive of an 
independent Sanjak that would connect Kosovo with Bosnia, or of any putative 
Islamistan, from western Macedonia to southern Bulgaria to northern Caucasus. 
The late Tom Lantos must be smiling approvingly wherever he is now, having 
called, three years ago, on “Jihadists of all color and hue” to take note of 
“yet another example that the United States leads the way for the creation of a 
predominantly Muslim country in the very heart of Europe.”

In the region, the ICJ verdict will encourage two distinct but interconnected 
trends: greater-Albanian aspirations against Macedonia, Montenegro, Greece, and 
rump-Serbia (Preševo), and pan-Islamic agitation for the completion of the 
Green Corridor – an Islamic belt anchored in Asia Minor and extending 
north-westward across the Balkans into the heart of Central Europe.

Beyond the Balkans, it will breed instability in each and every potential or 
actual separatist hotspot, from Galilee to Kashmir, from the Caucasus to 
Sinkiang.

Kosovo is now an expensive albatross costing American and European taxpayers a 
few billion a year. It will continue developing, not as a functional economy 
but as a black hole of criminality and terrorism. The ever-rising and 
constantly unfulfilled expectations of its unemployable multitudes will 
eventually turn – Frankenstein’s monster-like – against the entity’s creator. 
There will be many Ft. Dixes to come, over there and here at home.

God acts in mysterious ways. Kosovo had remained Serbian during those five long 
centuries of Ottoman darkness, to be liberated in 1912. It is no less Serbian 
now, the ugly farce in Priština and at The Hague notwithstanding. It will be 
tangibly Serbian again when the current experiment in global hegemonism 
collapses, and when the very names of its potentates and servants – Boris Tadic 
and Vuk Jeremic included – are consigned to the Recycle Bin of history.

 

 

 

 

_______________________________________________
News mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.antic.org/mailman/listinfo/news

Reply via email to