November 14, 2009 

Bill Clinton in Kosovo


By  <http://www.americanthinker.com/georgy_gounev/> Georgy Gounev

 

Inevitably, some extraordinary security measures were taken in Kosovo's capital 
in connection with William Jefferson Clinton's recent visit. The former 
president of the United States undertook a long journey to the middle of the 
Balkans in order to take a look at his own figure standing twelve feet above 
the rest of humanity.

 

There could be little doubt that those extraordinary measures added additional 
tension in the life of the current and former residents of the area. Let's 
clear up a possible confusion: many of the current Albanian residents of 
Pristina live in the houses of the former Serbian owners who were forced to 
leave, very often at gunpoint. My thoughts went back two weeks before the 
former president's visit to Kosovo, when I had to spend some rather 
uncomfortable hours in the company of a small group of former residents of 
Pristina.  

 

On a cold morning that had the Serbian city of Prokuplje in its wet and foggy 
embrace, a friend of mine and I joined a small group of Serbian teachers, 
nurses, and doctors, all of them Pristina natives. Every morning, this group 
traveled to their jobs at a tiny Serbian enclave in the vicinity of the city 
where they were born and raised. The preparation for their seemingly endless 
working day starts at four in the morning. 

 

We joined them an hour later as we boarded the overcrowded van. The three-hour 
journey had to be undertaken so early because of the long wait at the border. 
Those doctors, nurses, and teachers, most of them women, have been taking this 
killing journey back and forth at the beginning and the end of each working day 
for several years. If they are lucky, they will be back home somewhere after 
nine, when their children are already sleeping. The nightmare will repeat 
itself again the next morning at 4 a.m. 

 

Obviously, some of the smiling and applauding Albanian observers of the 
unveiling of the monument were living in the houses of the Serbian doctors and 
teachers currently making the demanding journey across the border that 
separates their city from their country. Did this fact disturb the former 
president of the United States? No, not a bit. Should it have disturbed him? 
Yes, and not only him, but the American people as well.

 

In justifying the war the United States waged against Serbia back in 1999, the 
Clinton administration pointed out the moral obligation of the most powerful 
democracy on earth to defend the victims of persecution and ethnic cleansing. 
The actions of this administration, however, defied such a noble obligation. To 
put it bluntly, in the course of the Serbian-Albanian conflict over Kosovo, the 
United States was successful in defending the rights of the Albanian residents 
of Kosovo when those rights were violated by the dictatorial regime of Slobodan 
Milosevic.  

 

However, the United States failed miserably in the other important goal of its 
voluntarily accepted responsibility: the protection of the Serbian residents of 
the area who became the victims of persecution and ethnic cleansing of the same 
magnitude that had provoked the American involvement in the Kosovo conflict in 
the first place. Tens of thousands of Serbians were forced to leave the area, 
and more than one hundred Christian churches and monasteries were desecrated 
and destroyed. 

 

Regardless of the fact that the United States is in possession of "Camp 
Bondsteel" -- a large military base in Southeast Kosovo -- its human and 
technological resources have never been used to protect the Serbian victims of 
the Albanian ethnic cleansing. As a result, the Serbian presence in Kosovo has 
been almost eradicated. 

 

Bishop Artemije, the spiritual leader of the Serbian community in Kosovo, who 
moved to a small monastery in Pristina after his residence was set on fire 
several years ago, told me shortly after the end of my tortuous journey to 
Grachaniza Monastery, "We are conducting our conversation on a tiny archipelago 
consisting of Serbian and Christian islands surrounded by an Albanian and 
Muslim Sea..."

 

This situation outlines not only the moral deficiency of the United States' 
Balkan strategy, but a strategic deficiency as well. The American regional 
strategy gave birth to a growing anti-Americanism in Southeastern Europe. 

 

What at least should be done is an American attempt to improve U.S. relations 
with Serbia. An important component of such an attempt could be the initiation 
of a dialogue between the mutually hostile communities of Kosovo at a local 
level. It is possible as well to create some arrangement with regard to the 
American protection of the Serbian enclaves -- particularly those in the South, 
where the residents are completely isolated from Serbia. A third dimension of 
such an activity could be the work on an agreement that would address the 
humanitarian problems involving the plight of the Serbian refugees. What the 
Albanians could get in return could be financing of joint projects benefiting 
equally their communities and the Serbian enclaves.

 

With the theoretical opportunity to take part in this kind of activity, 
President Clinton, undoubtedly a skillful negotiator, will have the opportunity 
to undo at least part of the mistakes committed during his presidency with 
regard to the Kosovo conflict. If the situation remains the same, the present 
shape of the Pristina monument would require two important additions. A group 
of statues portraying smiling and deeply grateful Albanian residents should be 
situated on the left side of the monument, while on the right side should be 
displayed a replica of an overcrowded van  filled with dead-tired Serbian 
teachers and doctors dozing while waiting their turn to cross the border.

 

Dr. Gounev earned his Ph.D. at the Moscow Institute of Foreign Relations in 
history and political science. He currently teaches comparative history and 
international studies at two Southern California Colleges and has authored 
several books. His website is foraff.org <http://foraff.org/> .

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"Bill Clinton in Kosovo"

 

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