rt.com <https://www.rt.com/op-ed/536388-kosovo-nato-leave-damage/>  


It's time for NATO to leave Kosovo before it does any more damage


4-5 minutes

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By Boris Malagurski, a Serbian Canadian documentary film director, known for
"The Weight of Chains", enlisted in the catalog of the Library of Congress,
and whose work has been showcased on international festivals, including
Raindance in London. Follow Boris on Twitter @malagurski
<https://twitter.com/malagurski> 

Just as it all ended badly for the West's military interventions in Vietnam
and Afghanistan, so it will in Kosovo. NATO has overstepped its mandate,
overplayed its hand, and overstayed its welcome. 

As the last US military helicopters were leaving Kabul, Afghanistan, many,
including myself, emphasized the similarities with America's embarrassment
in Saigon, South Vietnam - but one parallel that few dared to draw was with
Kosovo.

When I merely asked "Is Kosovo next?" on Twitter, it sent Albanian media
outlets into a frenzy. Kosovo's Albanian majority celebrates NATO troops as
saviors - NATO bombed Serbia to take away control of its Southern province
of Kosovo in 1999. Since then, NATO has been sponsoring a nation-building
project that seemed to have culminated in 2008, when Kosovo's provisional
authorities declared independence from Serbia.

It wasn't an 'end of history' moment. Serbia and much of the world didn't
recognize Kosovo as an independent country, and Kosovo itself remained
heavily dependent on Western aid and military support. Most Albanian
politicians are aware of this and they are highly obedient with regards to
NATO, whose KFOR troops are 'keeping the peace' in Kosovo.

Also on rt.com Serbia inks deal with breakaway Kosovo region to end spat
that featured jet flyovers and tanks at border
<https://www.rt.com/news/536252-serbia-deal-kosovo-border-dispute/> 

However, NATO has overstepped its mandate. UN Security Council Resolution
1244, which put an end to NATO's war with Yugoslavia, guarantees Serbia's
sovereignty over Kosovo, while NATO has pushed for an independent Kosovo
from day one of their occupation. The resolution also called for the return
of an agreed number of Yugoslav and Serbian personnel to maintain a presence
at significant sites and key border crossings. NATO has never allowed this
to happen. The last Serbian prime minister who called for this agreement to
be honored was assassinated
<https://www.theguardian.com/world/2003/mar/12/balkans>  in 2003, a little
over a month after his request.

On the other hand, what are the results of NATO's nation building in Kosovo?
Close to a 30% unemployment rate. One of the poorest areas of Europe, with
as much as 45% of the population living below the official poverty line, and
17% being extremely poor. Former Kosovo Liberation Army terrorists, some
accused of trafficking weapons and human organs, replaced their military
uniforms with politicians' suits and are governing the entity. The previous
president of Kosovo, nicknamed 'The Snake', is currently being tried
<https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-54822789>  for war crimes and
crimes against humanity at The Hague. He's the one who unveiled the Bill
Clinton statue in Kosovo's capital. Bill then came to celebrate with 'The
Snake'.

Kosovo's recent license plate row
<https://www.euronews.com/2021/09/26/kosovo-government-offices-set-on-fire-o
ver-license-plates-row-with-serbia>  with Serbia was just the latest example
of a leadership in Kosovo incapable of dealing with real issues, but rather
going into conflict to cover its incompetence. Instead of negotiating with
Belgrade, Kosovo unilaterally used force to implement the removal of Serbian
license plates. And all that NATO was willing to contribute to deescalate
the tensions was to offer its KFOR troops
<https://apnews.com/article/europe-race-and-ethnicity-racial-injustice-serbi
a-kosovo-5762c8fdbb413ea3ddbf0278aefa4cde>  to replace Kosovo's special
unit, without even trying to resolve the essence of the dispute. What is
NATO still doing in Kosovo?

Probably the same thing it was doing in Afghanistan. Hoping a bad decision
to go in will eventually pay off somehow. But it won't. It didn't in
Vietnam, it didn't in Afghanistan, and it won't in Kosovo. So it's time for
NATO to start packing its bags.

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The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those
of the author and do not necessarily represent those of RT.

 

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