counterpunch.org
<https://www.counterpunch.org/2019/04/10/the-tragedy-and-fallacy-of-natos-ba
lkan-experiment-20-years-on/>  


The Tragedy and Fallacy of NATO's Balkan Experiment: 20 Years On


by

11-14 minutes

  _____  

Photograph Source Darko Dozet - CC BY-SA 3.0

March 24,1999 was an ordinary school day in Belgrademid-week (Wednesday).
Suddenly, half of my high-school class quietly left for home early, citing
relatives calling in from overseas saying that the NATO bombing campaign has
startedin the South, including an authorisation to hit Belgrade
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/inatl/longterm/balkans/stories/kosovo0
33199.htm> . My friends and I (for whom the satellite TV was an unimaginable
luxury!) reluctantly left our interrupted class, each one of usburied deeply
in our thoughts as to what the conflictmight actually mean. We
rememberedwellthe convoys of refugees
<https://balkaninsight.com/2015/08/04/operation-storm-childhood-memories-of-
a-refugee-exodus-08-02-2015/>  pouring across Serbia's westernborder during
the Croatian and Bosnian wars, with many refugee children attending our
school too and eventually blending in withthe locals. The state broadcaster
RTS television was playing its usual program, heavily controlled by
Milosevic's cronies, with no sign of impaling events. Around 8.12pm, which
was the time for widely popular Latin telenovelas, there was a loud bang in
the neighbourhood and all of our apartment block's windows shook. Is it
firecrackers? A little while afterwards the air raid sirens began;thenow
famous commentator fromtheindependent Studio B television channel Avram
Izrael
<http://www.rts.rs/page/stories/sr/78%D0%B4%D0%B0%D0%BD%D0%B0/story/2855/sve
docanstva/3464454/avram-izrael-dobar-glas-u-zlo-vreme.html>  was about to
start with his daily commentary about air raids. This was the first bomb
that was dropped on Belgrade, a European capital during an offensive
military operation, hitting very close to home. In our proximity there were
several military facilities underneath Strazevica and Avala mountains, which
became a daily target for NATO's yet another failed Balkan experiment. The
symbol of Belgrade and former Yugoslavia, the Avala Tower and a television
transmitter, was destroyed
<https://archives.cjr.org/the_kicker/and_thats_the_way_it_was_april_17.php>
during one of those raids, only six days after RTS headquarters were bombed
killing a dozen journalists and which the Amnesty International declared a
<https://www.cleveland.com/world/2009/04/amnesty_international_calls_na.html
> 'war crime'.

We had no atomic bomb shelter in our building(throughout the old Yugoslavia,
some of these can still be found), and one family built a home in our
basement whose doors they generously opened to the children at night,
including myself and my best friend who was often visiting us. Newer
buildings had proper shelters from the days of the old Yugoslavia, but we
could not go there as they were already full. Our neighbours were stocking
petrol in the basement cages;if a bomb was to fall on our building, we would
have become a giant firecracker ourselves.I remember stuffing all our major
possessions (family jewellery and some money in the foreign currency) in a
brown bear (a souvenir from Australia) with a large zip across its belly and
holding our passports close by. Mine was different - it had a clear stamp
from the Australian embassy and a 3 month tourist visa on it, unused. The
embassies were shutting down along with the borders. Only the Hungarian one
remained open, but NATO by then already targeted an Albanian refugee convoy
citing collateral damage
<https://www.theguardian.com/world/1999/jul/18/balkans9> . One question was
doing the rounds: Werewe going to end up facing one ofthose 'mistaken
missiles', adding to a rising civilian toll
<https://www.hrw.org/reports/2000/nato/Natbm200-01.htm>  of this conflict?
Bridges in Novi Sad were already destroyed
<https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/serbia-settles-scores-with-danubes
-bombed-bridges-1129441.html>  as people were crossing them. The Chinese
Embassy in Belgrade had been hit
<https://www.hrw.org/sites/default/files/reports/natbm002.pdf> , killing
three and wounding twenty embassy staff members. The bus had to go around
and around to get to the northern border, while there were soldiers hiding
in the bushes near the highway as I could see through a foggy window, with
my mother accompanying me to our farewell in Budapestand short-stay there
organised by a relative.There is a sizeable Serbian community in Hungary
(once a large ethnic group within the Austro-Hungarian empire) and a
Romaniorchestra played a famous song for us at the dinner table
withominouswords "Adio for now, and who knows when and where we will meet
again".

This was a fortnight after the raids began. My memory of that era is still
vivid, stark and unspoiled. The feeling of weird, dangerousexcitement when
listening to the anti-aircraft fire and observing the capital city covered
in spring darkness as the electricity was cut. People were unsure whether
the light would attract any attention from theinvisiblekilling machines
which we could ominously hear above our heads; as a resulteverybody was
reluctant to even put candles on. There was the lingeringsound of dogs
howling on the streets. There were numerous scenes of people in the city
centre protesting with music and song against the bombing while defiantly
stationed on the main bridges in Belgrade, defending them from NATO bombs.
Thousands of people each daygathered. It was an inspiration to live each day
as it came. People were greeting bombs with humour and song.

For public servants it was compulsory to attend work, putting citizens in
harm's way. My mother's company, the famous Sava Centar Convention Centre
(it was originally built to host by Yugoslavia the first Non-Alignment
Movement conferencetherein 1961)was on the NATO'starget hit list as it
hosted one of three major television channels. It was a stroke of luck that
it was not hitduring the NATO bombing spree in the heart of Southeast
Europe.

Surreal times for surreal people, with neighbours greeting each other with
real smiles for the first time in years, or even decades. Some sending their
children to the countryside, only for some areas there also to be hit with
even more collateral damage. What was reallyhappening in Kosovo went
underreportedlocally, just like what was happening in the rest of Serbia and
Montenegro internationally. For me then came a one-way ticket to Australia
and a wonderful Australian family with whom I lived while attending a
prestigious Anglican college in Perth. I didn't look back but part of my
heart was forever left behind. Custody was transferred to my father from
Australia so that my status could be made permanent. Less than a decade
later I worked, ironically, as aparliamentary servant in Canberra advising
the Australian parliamentarians on NATO!

It all came back to me with a jolting reminderlast month; the
20thanniversary since the brutal, unprovoked and extraordinary attack by 19
NATO Alliance members against a sovereign nation in Europe, the Federal
Republic of Yugoslavia, composed of Serbia and Montenegro. As a living
teenage witness of that pan-European tragedy, the 24thMarch will be
remembered as a black day for many peoples living in the heart of the
Balkans and their children who now reside in the West as a result of that
conflict. For 78 days they had to re-live some of the experiences of their
ancestors who were carpet bombed during the Second World War first, in a
case of bitter historical irony, the Nazis in Operation Retribution in 1941,
then by the Allied forces which was, by many accounts, even worse and in
which some of my family members lost their young lives.  The Kosovo War was
a dramatic turning point for international politics
<https://foreignpolicy.com/2019/01/02/the-small-war-that-wasnt/> ,
suggesting the limits, and hypocrisy, of humanitarian intervention.  Even
long-standing defenders of such rights, including Vaclav Havel, felt it
necessary
<https://www.nybooks.com/articles/1999/06/10/kosovo-and-the-end-of-the-natio
n-state/>  to attack the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia without
explicitUNSCapproval, despite having a mere 35 percent of the population
supportingit.With unjustified optimism, he argued that this had been the
first war not waged "in the name of 'national interests'."

The NATO bombing attack on Serbian and Montenegrin territory, initiated
withevangelical zeal by President Bill Clinton of the United States (who was
on the mend from his Monica Lewinsky scandal) and UK Prime Minister Tony
Blair, brought the world close to another dangerous crisis with Western and
Russian forces. A deeper conflict was probablyavertedthanks to the swift
thinking by a British Lieutenant-General Sir Mike Jackson,who resisted
themilitary confrontation with Moscow that was ardently advocated by his
boss, NATO chief Wesley Clark
<https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/1562161/Gen-Sir-Mike-Jackson-My-
clash-with-Nato-chief.html>  with now famous words
<https://www.nytimes.com/1999/09/10/world/us-general-was-overruled-in-kosovo
.html> : "No, I'm not going to do that. It's not worth starting World War
III". NATO, however, bombed hospitals, schools, children's playgrounds,
petrol stations, trains, factories, all in the name of 'peace' and 'conflict
prevention'. Hundreds of thousands were reallocated because of this
conflict.

Carving out the Kosovo territory from a sovereign nation in Europe ran
against all international law principles the world has known, causing a
turning point in the West's relations with Russia and ushering a new,
politicised principle of the so-called 'humanitarian intervention'. NATO's
military operation was, ironically, named 'Merciful Angel', giving precedent
to regime-change scenarios from Iraq in 2003 to Libya
<https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/politics/natos-bombing-of-serbia-p
resents-lessons-for-the-assault-on-gaddafi-2250165.html> in 2011. It also
caused another mass migration in the Balkans, with hundreds of thousands of
people being firstly internally displaced across the region, then over the
next couple of years emigrating from the Balkans into Western Europe and
further across the seas all the way to Australia and New Zealand. The
intervention perpetrated the very thing it was meant to halt: mass
displacement and disruption.

The Balkans is now living with the legacy of that humanitarian impulse
initiated by NATO countries, oneheavily contaminated with depleted uranium
from the NATO bombs, with dire consequences for human
<https://balkaneu.com/serbs-fighting-cancer-to-sue-nato-this-fall-over-use-o
f-depleted-uranium-during-the-1999-bombings/> , animal and environmental
health still being heavily debated
<https://www.rferl.org/a/serbian-accusation-lingers-of-link-between-nato-bom
bing-health-woes/29841402.html> . There is currently a move by Serbs to
initiate a lawsuit against NATO
<https://www.sbs.com.au/yourlanguage/serbian/en/audiotrack/nato-member-state
s-be-sued-1999-attack-serbia>  for the contamination and damage done. The
bombings destroyed much of Serbian industry as the targets were not only
military: schools, hospitals, factories, petrol stations, TV stations and
other civilian infrastructure suffered terribly from the NATO bombing.
Serbia and its break-away Kosovo province turned semi-independent state
(with international assistance) are now among the poorest areas of Europe,
with massive brain-drain
<https://balkaninsight.com/2018/07/23/repat-serbia-many-leave-a-few-are-lure
d-back-07-19-2018/> , youth unemployment and widening social inequality as
well as reliance on foreign remittances. Yet it remains highly popular as
the sought-after travel destination
<https://travellemming.com/reader-travel-awards-2019/?fbclid=IwAR3nSR2pnsSSL
T73zCCF_yqdE4tbp4urMl_jOcK3HkO256cr3IC7EM2q_vk> , famous for its nightlife
<https://www.theguardian.com/travel/2015/mar/13/nightlife-reports-clubbing-i
n-belgrade>  and defiance
<https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/inatl/longterm/balkans/stories/belgra
de040999.htm>  through music and humour which at display daily during NATO
bombing and media campaign against Serbs and rump Yugoslavia in 1999.

I went on to do extraordinary things in Australia, finishing four degrees
and working as both public and parliamentary servant. All of my studies also
dealt with the issue of Kosovo war in different ways, all invariably finding
it debilitating to the European landscape: myHonours thesis saw the Kosovo
war as the catalyst for change in German and Italian foreign policies after
the Cold War; in my Master's thesisconsidered itan obstacle to
democratisation in the Balkans, and in my PhD found it to bea lingering
legacy which has delayed Serbia's EU accession prospects to this day. I
provided tailored and independent advice to the Federal Parliament's
Presiding Officers, who often took me along to their meetings with
international dignitaries. I took a parliamentary delegation overseas and
facilitated the visits of many international visitors to the Parliament,
including from NATO and a prominent lobbyist for the Kosovo war whom I found
quite pleasant on a personal level. As I raisea young family in Sydney, the
conflict still exists in my dreams and the feeling of displacement that they
occasionally bring, along with the feeling that crimes were committed during
those 78 daysby 19 members of NATO Alliance which went on to build the
largest military base in Kosovo for Southeast Europe.

Dr Nina Markovic Khaze is a sessional lecturer at the Department of Security
Studies and Criminology, Macquarie University, Visiting Fellow at the ANU
Centre for European Studies, andpolitical commentator for SBS Radio and has
been writing for different news outlets over the years. 

 

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