spectator.org 
<https://spectator.org/back-to-the-future-u-s-negotiates-with-war-advocates-and-criminals-of-old/>
  


Back to the Future: U.S. Negotiates With War Advocates and Criminals of Old


But at least the Trump Administration is not treating Serbia in the ugly way 
its predecessors (and NATO) went out of their way to do.


Doug Bandow

21-26 minutes

  _____  

The last couple of weeks brought momentous news from the Balkans. The Serb 
politician who began his career as chief propagandist to Yugoslavia’s 
authoritarian leader throughout the Balkan wars enjoyed a big election victory. 
The Kosovo politician who served as one of the top insurgent commanders who 
helped win that nation’s independence was indicted for war crimes. The Trump 
administration’s effort to bring them together to resolve their nations’ 
differences collapsed.

At the president’s behest, his jack-of-all-trades aide Richard Grenell had 
hoped to clinch a stunning peace deal by inviting Serbian President Aleksandar 
Vucic and Kosovar President Hashim Thaci to meet at the White House last 
Saturday. But Grenell was embarrassed and frustrated. In contrast, the 
Europeans could barely suppress their glee after Grenell left them on the 
sidelines.

Indeed, for years successive Serbian governments found a dramatic way to ensure 
that memories of the West’s perfidy when Serbia was attacked by NATO would not 
disappear.

Kosovo is one of many international issues dominated by ethnically-based 
interest groups. In 1998 and 1999 Albanian-Americans organized to push 
Washington to support the burgeoning insurgency in Kosovo, an autonomous 
territory within Serbia. The U.S. had no reason to get involved, since the 
bloody consequences were limited though tragic and had no meaningful security 
consequences for America.

Even the moral equities were complex. Kosovo’s history recorded abuse by both 
ethnic groups, since Albanians predominated locally and Serbs nationally. In 
the late 1990s the Yugoslav military was playing rough, but insurgencies rarely 
are pleasant affairs. The Kosovo Liberation Army killed ethnic Serbs and 
Albanians with equal enthusiasm, especially the latter when accused of 
collaboration. U.S. envoy Robert Gelbard observed that the KLA was “without any 
questions, a terrorist group.”

However, the lack of security relevance made the Balkans of interest to the 
Clinton administration, going back to the initial violent breakup of Yugoslavia 
<https://original.antiwar.com/doug-bandow/2020/06/25/remember-americas-great-kosovo-ally-never-mind-the-war-crimes/>
 , which was far more complicated than the morality play often assumed, with 
brutality, murder, and mayhem all around. It seemed the less strategically 
important, the greater the administration’s desire to act. Led by Secretary of 
State Madeleine Albright, who had expressed her belief that there was no reason 
for America to possess such a “superb military” unless it was used, and used 
promiscuously, Washington’s determined social engineers decamped for the French 
town of Rambouillet. There they tried to force the fast-diminishing country of 
Yugoslavia, which already had lost Bosnia, Croatia, and Slovenia, to accept 
NATO administration of Kosovo and effective occupation of the rest of the 
country, with freedom of movement and from prosecution guaranteed for allied 
personnel. When Belgrade refused, off to war went the Clintonistas.

The first consequence was to trigger a Serb plan to drive hundreds of thousands 
of ethnic Albanians from their homes. It was a terrible crime, yet it was 
actually a response to NATO’s unprovoked attack on Yugoslavia. Belgrade badly 
miscalculated: other atrocity stories generated by the KLA and circulated by 
NATO were quickly disproved. But the mass ethnic cleansing retrospectively 
seemed to justify the very intervention that sparked the crime.

Even then the Clinton administration was unwilling to risk public displeasure 
by introducing ground troops, so it just bombed and bombed and bombed — for 78 
days — until Belgrade finally agreed to the occupation of Kosovo, though not 
the rest of the country. American commander Wesley Clarke was barely prevented 
from starting World War III by his British deputy, who refused to block Russian 
forces racing to Kosovo to secure a place in the occupation.

Events only went downhill from there 
<https://spectator.org/42092_kosovo-year-later/> . Ethnic Albanians kicked out 
a quarter of a million ethnic Serbs, Roma, and other ethnic and religious 
minorities. The Kosovo government gained a reputation for corruption, 
criminality, and violence. The U.S. and Europe promoted faux negotiations, with 
the outcome preset as Kosovo’s independence. Pristina eventually dropped all 
pretense and claimed nationhood, but Serbia, Russia, several members of the 
European Union, and others refused to recognize the new state, which remains 
barred from both the United Nations and EU.

Kosovo’s politics has been dominated by former leaders of the KLA. Hashim 
Thaci, whose KLA nom de guerre was “the Snake,” became the first prime minister 
of the new nation in 2008. As coalitions changed he later held positions as 
foreign minister and deputy premier. In 2016 he was elected Kosovo’s president. 
Many KLA fighters, including Thaci, were accused of criminal behavior during 
the war. Nevertheless, the U.S. and Europe, though not Serbia, largely ignored 
the charges, working with those who dominated Pristina’s politics.

Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic, who oversaw the campaign against the KLA, 
was subsequently defeated for reelection and then extradited to the Hague for 
trial for crimes against humanity (he died of a heart attack during the 
proceedings). Serbian politics remained on the nationalist side, as successive 
governments rejected Kosovo’s independence and remained close to Russia. 
Nevertheless, hope for economic gain and eventual entry into the European Union 
led to intermittent negotiations and occasional agreements as well as 
unsurprising spats with Kosovo.

The dominant political figure in Serbia today is the surprising Vucic. He 
served as Minister of Information under Milosevic, went into opposition as a 
hardline nationalist after the latter’s ouster, but in 2008 shifted parties and 
ideologies, becoming a moderate, populist conservative, pro-EU and economic 
reform. He entered government in 2012 as minister of defense and deputy prime 
minister. Two years later he was premier. In 2017 he was elected president.

He has come under sharp criticism for trending close to the authoritarian line, 
especially with press restrictions. He has remained close to Moscow and 
recently embraced China for its coronavirus aid. Yet he proclaimed his 
commitment to the EU and is widely viewed as an opportunist willing to make any 
deal that he believes to be politically advantageous.

While Thaci and Vucic came to dominate their respective countries, the EU 
devoted much time and effort to browbeating Serbia to accept the loss of what 
was viewed as the cradle of Serbian history. However, EU bureaucrats who 
thought everything could be compromised for money underestimated the power of 
nationalist passion and cultural identification. Although no Serb could 
seriously imagine a return of Kosovo to Serbian rule, resistance to abandoning 
the claim, as well as the thousands of ethnic Serbs who remained in Kosovo but 
desired to stay with Serbia, remained strong. Vucic insisted that “In reply to 
a possible offer to recognize Kosovo and that Kosovo enters the UN, and we 
receive nothing in return, except EU membership, our answer would be ‘no’.”

Enter Richard Grenell, the just retired ambassador to Germany. Although an 
atypical and controversial diplomat, President Donald Trump made him special 
envoy to the Balkans last fall. Grenell cheerfully jumped into Pristina’s 
unique political snakepit, in April orchestrating the downfall of the prime 
minister, who refused to end Kosovar trade sanctions against Belgrade. The 
deposed Albin Kurti called the maneuver “a parliamentary coup d’état” and 
claimed that “It is the first time now that we have an American envoy, he has 
the same identical stance with Serbia.”

The Europeans naturally were livid at Grenell’s involvement, even though they 
had had no meaningful success in resolving the impasse. The typical Brussels 
Eurocrat is happy to negotiate everything and compromise anything, but not when 
Serbia was concerned. EU diplomats hosted meetings and encouraged talks, but 
proved powerless to get Serbs to abandon an emotional if hopeless claim to 
historic territory.

Yet all was not lost. Thaci and Vucic began talking about possible territorial 
swaps. Residents of the largely Serb enclave of Mitrovica in Kosovo’s north 
desired to remain in Serbia. Those living in the largely Albanian Presevo 
Valley in Serbia’s south would prefer to be in Kosovo. A trade, euphemistically 
called “border correction,” could satisfy both sides. The State Department 
shifted position to endorse the idea in 2018.

However, the idea horrified the European establishment, which decried opening 
up border changes. Eurocrats who run the EU are the ultimate social engineers 
and complained since they favor federal, multi-ethnic states, irrespective of 
residents’ wishes. Paddy Ashdown, who played dictatorial colonial governor in 
Bosnia after the 1995 Dayton Accord forced the warring parties to stay 
together, asserted: “Sustainable peace can only come when we learn to live in 
multi-ethnic communities, rather than re-drawing borders to create mono-ethnic 
ones.” That’s beautiful in theory but long experience demonstrates that it is 
foolish — and sometimes deadly — to allow the perfect to be the enemy of the 
good.

Also frantic were leaders of nations facing their own separatist movements, 
such as Spain (think Basques and Catalans). Nevertheless, the American and 
European governments had opened up the boundary issue when they dismembered 
Serbia, which required multiple and monumental territorial shifts. Allowing 
everyone but Serbian ethnic minorities to change their governments reflected 
obvious bias.

Kurti accused Grenell of favoring the move. The latter claimed not to have 
talked about the issue, which seemed unlikely if he was serious about forging a 
compromise. To advance an agreement he had scheduled a meeting at the White 
House between Thaci and Vucic for Saturday June 27. Grenell said only economic 
issues would be on the agenda, to build trust. Of course, side discussions 
could easily occur even if the topic was not formally on the agenda. Moreover, 
he said broader peace talks were planned for later in the year. To be 
successful any negotiations would have to reach the fundamental issues of 
identity and nationhood.

Buoyed by his big election victory a couple weeks ago, Vucic could withstand 
any popular antagonism toward trading away the Serbian claim to Kosovo. 
Especially if he gained the return of Mitrovica, which would be an obvious 
nationalist achievement.

Thaci also looked like someone who could deliver. He was one of the people 
without whom Kosovo would not be independent. He enjoyed popular support and 
combat credibility which could deflect complaints for compromising with Serbia. 
Having gotten his hands dirty in the past he probably could help muscle any 
agreement through parliament.

But a funny thing happened on the way to the White House show. Last week Thaci 
and nine other Kosovars were indicted by a special prosecutor in the Hague for 
war crimes and crimes against humanity. He was charged with involvement in 
upwards of 100 murders. (So was a former parliamentary speaker.) Despite 
Thaci’s vociferous denials, his responsibility would surprise no one. After the 
announcement he headed back to Kosovo. The new prime minister, Avdullah Hoti, 
was expected to act as substitute, but he would have been at sea in the 
negotiations and without the political clout necessary to defend the result. He 
also decided against attending.

So Grenell canceled the gathering. He hasn’t given up. And he has a potentially 
powerful selling point: if Trump loses, the Biden administration is likely to 
start afresh. Moreover, the usual foreign service officers who would reemerge 
in a Biden administration would be more likely to defer to the EU, as in the 
past. In which case chances of a deal would diminish.

However, the way forward is unclear. Kosovar politics could become chaotic. 
Thaci is likely to be preoccupied and reluctant to take a potentially 
controversial position when he needs solid support at home. If he is 
extradited, Kosovars might focus their ire on outside actors, including Serbia 
and the EU, and be less willing to consider compromise.

The path for Vucic would seem to be clearer, with the recent renewal of his 
popular mandate. However, the magnitude of his victory — his party won 
three-quarters of the seats in parliament — reflects an opposition boycott to 
protest his anti-democratic practices. Moreover, it might not be as easy for 
him to sell a deal with an accused war criminal. The charges are not new but 
have been officially validated.

Further roiling the waters, Vucic recently added to his sometime tilt toward 
Moscow a kowtow to Beijing. He might prefer to keep his options open and 
maintain his leverage, since he has few fans in the EU other than Hungary’s 
Viktor Orbán. Making a deal and fully committing to the EU might not be his 
best move at the moment.

In fact, Brussels and Washington will be very interested to see in what 
direction he decides to move. Vucic is no dictator, but as a strongman in a 
recent democracy with weak civil institutions he has undermined the liberal 
political order. Which left the group Freedom House to make an almost 
schizophrenic assessment:

 The Republic of Serbia is a parliamentary democracy with competitive 
multiparty elections, but in recent years the ruling Serbian Progressive Party 
(SNS) has steadily eroded political rights and civil liberties, putting 
pressure on independent media, the political opposition, and civil society 
organizations. Despite these trends, the country has continued to move toward 
membership in the European Union.

Concern over possible abuse of his authority for political advantage, though 
legitimate, isn’t likely to have great effect. Although it is theoretically 
easier for the EU to punish a non-member, simply cutting aid and blocking 
entry, the organization has less reason to prioritize a state which cannot 
directly influence the organization. And with other Balkan states entering the 
EU, leaving out Serbia might create even more regional trouble.

Moreover, the Trump administration, at least, cares naught about human rights 
when friendly states are involved. The EU treats such concerns more seriously 
but has achieved little in the more important cases of Hungary and Poland. 
Vucic’s machinations appear modest in comparison: He is no poster boy for 
tyranny. An organization made up of sovereign governments cannot easily 
discipline sovereign governments, especially when the perceived abuses are 
moderate and indirect.

Also at issue is Russian and Chinese influence in Belgrade. Indeed, the 
International and Security Affairs Centre figured that Serbia’s agreement with 
EU foreign policy positions has dropped sharply since 2012. Yet several 
nations, including Greece and Italy, differ sharply with Brussels over 
important questions such as policy toward Moscow. Even Germany dissents from 
the U.S. line, which Congress attempted to enforce by sanctioning the 
Nordstream 2 natural gas pipeline with Russia, raising Berlin’s ire.

Attempting to redirect Belgrade’s perspective won’t be easy — and probably 
isn’t worth the effort. Moscow’s role is historic: It was the Russian Empire 
which backed Serbia when Austro-Hungary issued its famous ultimatum in July 
1914. Moscow backed Serbia in the early 1990s when the U.S. and Europe largely 
ignored attacks 
<https://www.forbes.com/sites/dougbandow/2017/01/24/bungled-intervention-in-kosovo-risks-unraveling-a-new-deal-needed-for-peace/#6d336d5d1b16>
  on ethnic Serbs during Yugoslavia’s breakup. The allies continued their bias 
after occupying Kosovo, doing little to stop the ethnic cleansing of the Serb 
minority <https://www.cato.org/publications/commentary/delivering-serbs-wolves> 
.

Since then Russia has defended Serbia and blocked Kosovo from international 
forums. More recently the Putin government sent COVID-19 aid, including 
biological war specialists to help disinfect hospitals. To emphasize the 
continuing bilateral relationship Vucic traveled to Moscow in June to attend 
the pandemic-delayed World War II victory parade. After meeting with Russian 
Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov Vucic said that any deal would require Russia’s 
consent.

Indeed, for years successive Serbian governments found a dramatic way to ensure 
that memories of the West’s perfidy when Serbia was attacked by NATO would not 
disappear. The Serbian government placed the bombed-out Ministry of Defense 
building, which I jogged by years ago when visiting Belgrade, on its list of 
protected cultural monuments. The reconstruction process began only in 2015, 
sixteen years after it was wrecked, and proposals to either repair or replace 
the damaged structure remained controversial. The Association of Serbian 
Architects advocated the ruined building’s preservation as a “monument of 
suffering and brutality of NATO force.” Even today, after the country’s shift 
Westward, not all Serbs believe President George W. Bush’s claim, made as 
Kosovo prepared to declare independence, that “the Serbian people can know they 
have a friend in America.” (At the time demonstrators responded negatively by 
attacking the U.S. embassy and setting it afire.)

Nevertheless, Belgrade still has far greater economic dealings with the rest of 
Europe and military relations with NATO than either with Russia. Moreover, 
Jelena Milic of the Center for Euro-Atlantic Studies contended 
<https://thediplomat.com/2020/04/china-is-not-replacing-the-west-in-serbia/>  
that even the growing relationship with the PRC “is less about China and more 
about counterbalancing Russia, which is force-feeding Serbia weapons sales and 
various other forms of military cooperation.”

The attraction to Beijing is more recent but more intense, given the toll taken 
by COVID-19. The People’s Republic of China backed Yugoslavia during the war 
and shared in Serbians’ suffering when the U.S. inadvertently bombed the 
Chinese embassy. The PRC, highly sensitive to separatism and “splittism” of any 
sort, also opposed Kosovo’s independence. Indeed, argued Milic earlier this 
year:

The cooperative relationship between Serbia and China in recent years is at 
least partially an outgrowth of the Kosovo dispute. Belgrade appreciates and 
seeks to expand relations with virtually all countries that have not recognized 
Kosovo’s unilateral declaration of independence.

Unsurprisingly, China is Serbia’s most important economic partner from Asia; 
imports from China lag behind only those from Germany and Italy. The Pupin 
Bridge over the Danube, financed and built by Beijing, and that nation’s first 
large infrastructure project in Europe, is informally known as the “Chinese 
bridge.” Prime Minister Li Keqiang attended the opening ceremony. In 2016 China 
purchased a failing steel plant, preserving jobs otherwise destined to 
disappear. The same year the two countries announced a strategic partnership 
and in 2017 made travel visa free.

This year the PRC provided assistance — a medical team and test kits — to fight 
the coronavirus. With Europe originally less helpful, Vucic dismissed “European 
solidarity” as a “nonexistent … fairy tale on paper” while lauding the Chinese 
as “the only ones who can help us in this difficult situation.” On the Chinese 
personnel’s arrival in Belgrade, Vucic kissed a Chinese flag and exclaimed: 
“Thank you very much to my brother, President Xi Jinping, the Communist Party 
of China and the Chinese people.” Assistance did ultimately come from the EU 
and other European nations but received far less attention. A military exercise 
is planned with Chinese forces later this year.

Yet Belgrade is not alone in playing with others. Italy welcomed Chinese 
investment and workers, which is one reason COVID-19 hit its industrial north 
so hard, and Chinese medical assistance. Early sentiment trended sharply 
against the EU, though that may ebb as the health crisis continues to ease and 
the EU approves relief spending. Moreover, continental hostility toward the PRC 
has risen, especially after the delivery of defective medical equipment and 
pressure to toe Beijing’s line.

Nevertheless, Serbia’s economic ties with the continent remain far stronger and 
EU membership would link Belgrade more tightly to its neighbors and the rest of 
Europe. Vucic said he does not plan on choosing among competing powers, 
explaining that: “As far as we are concerned, we are on the European path. We 
are not giving up on that.” Indeed, last week while expressing his appreciation 
for “the efforts of Richard Grenell to find economic solutions between us and 
Pristina,” Vucic emphasized that “we are completely committed to the EU-led 
political dialogue.”

The best way to enhance Western influence would be to resolve the Kosovo 
standoff with a meaningful concession to Serbia. Vucic noted that we 
“unequivocally get that support for the integrity of Serbia from China and 
Russia and, on the other hand, we have very good economic cooperation and 
cooperation in all other areas.” Remove Kosovo and much of the East’s appeal 
would fade. Argued Milic:

The solution to Kosovo lies in Europe and the United States. Belgrade 
understands this well. Serbia is not seeking to replace the West as its 
principal partner and, despite the current rhetoric and public expressions of 
gratitude, no amount of Chinese aid to fight coronavirus is going to change 
that.

The Balkans long has spread instability throughout Europe. The Clinton 
administration should have stayed out of the geopolitical mess created by 
Yugoslavia’s implosion, insisting that European nations again act like the 
serious actors they once were and address the problem. The Bush administration 
should not have pushed to dismantle Serbia while pretending to be Belgrade’s 
friend. The Obama administration should not have joined with the EU to demand 
that Serbia surrender what it always defended, its territorial integrity. Yet 
Brussels and Washington treated Belgrade’s, but not Pristina’s, refusal to 
surrender as “intransigence.”

However, the past will not be undone. The Trump administration deserves credit 
for making a serious attempt to stabilize at least one small part of the 
region, given the EU’s continuing failure. Although the latest effort just went 
bust, the administration shouldn’t give up. It still might succeed where the 
Obama administration failed dismally.

Doug Bandow is a Senior Fellow at the Cato Institute. A former Special 
Assistant to President Ronald Reagan, he is author of Foreign Follies: 
America’s New Global Empire.

 

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