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Two decades since Kosovo "peace debacle" in Rambouillet - English - on
B92.net


7-8 minutes

  _____  

20 years ago today, a peace conference on Kosovo and Metohija began in
Rambouillet, near Paris. 

Source: B92, RTS Wednesday, February 6, 2019 | 11:10 

(EPA PHOTO REUTERS POOL/JACKY NAEGELEN/GW/MR/CG-fob)

The epilogue is known - after 17 days of negotiations that failed, on March
24, 1999, NATO started bombing
<https://www.b92.net/eng/news/politics.php?yyyy=2017&mm=03&dd=24&nav_id=1008
47>  the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (consisting of Serbia and
Montenegro). 

The talks were attended by representatives of Yugoslav authorities and of
Kosovo Albanians, with the mediators from the United States, Russia and the
EU - Christopher Hill, Boris Mayorski and Wolfgang Petritsch. 

The beginning of the conference was preceded by the months of US "shuttle
diplomacy," followed by the announcement of a peace treaty proposal, whose
content was met with serious objections both by Belgrade and by Kosovo
Albanians. 

According to the general assessment, the ambitiously imagined and pompously
announced peace conference in the French castle was scheduled too early and
without adequate preparation, and was destined to fail. 

"The Rambouillet text, which called on Serbia to admit NATO troops
throughout Yugoslavia was a provocation, an excuse to start bombing.
Rambouillet is not a document that an angelic Serb could have accepted. It
was a terrible diplomatic document that should never have been presented in
that form," former US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger wrote in London's
Daily Telegraph in June 1999. 

The Kosovo Albanian delegation consisted of: Azim Syla, Bajram Kosumi,
Blerim Shala, Bujar Bukoshi, Edita Tahiri, Fehmi Agani, Hashim Thaci,
Hidajet Hiseni, Ibrahim Rugova, Idriz Ajeti, Jakup Krasniqi, Mehmet Hajrizi,
Ram Buja, Rexhep Qosja, Veton Surroi, and Xhavit Haliti. 

The Serbian delegation was led by Ratko Markovic, and included Vladan
Kutlesic, Nikola Sainovic, Vladimir Stambuk, Vojislav Zivkovic, Guljbehar
Sabovic, Zejnelabedin Kurejshi, Faik Jashari, Sokol Quse, Refik Sinadinovic,
Ibro Vajt, Luan Koka, and Qerim Abazi. 

The Kosovo Albanian delegation - to everyone's surprise but with great US
support, led by then little-known "guerrilla chief" Hashim Thaci - accepted
in principle a proposal for a settlement agreement on the Kosovo crisis
proposed by the Contact Group. 

The main reason for the Albanian consent was the enormous pressure from the
United States, but also the fact that Serbia had previously rejected Hill's
plan for resolving the Kosovo crisis. 

The Serbian government's delegation also accepted the proposal in principle,
but with the condition that the passage through the country of NATO troops
should not be allowed, and that international forces in Kosovo should be
under the United Nations umbrella. 

The next round of negotiations on Kosovo began on March 15 in Paris, and
ended in failure after only four days. On March 18, the two delegations
signed two different agreements. 

The Kosovo Albanian delegation signed the agreement offered by international
negotiators, while the state delegation of Serbia signed its own proposal
for a political agreement - the Agreement on Self-Government in Kosovo and
Metohija. 

Even in the last attempt, on March 22, US Special Envoy Richard Holbrooke
failed to convince Slobodan Milosevic, president of the Federal Republic of
Yugoslavia, to accept the agreement on Kosovo and on the deployment of
foreign troops in the province. 

International mediators Mayorski, Petritsch, and Hill were also
unsuccessful. 

Two days later, on March 24, NATO launched its bombing campaign, which ended
after 78 days resulted in the withdrawal of Yugoslav forces from Kosovo and
the establishment of a provisional administration of the United Nations in
the province. 

During the entire course of the talks in France, the two delegations were
only once together at the same table, with then US Secretary of State
Madeleine Albright sat at its head.

 

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