http://www.antiwar.com/malic/?articleid=10232

The Year Everything Changed 
2006 in Review  
by Nebojsa Malic 

To say that the year behind us has been interesting would be an
understatement. On one hand, there were no wars in the Balkans; no
insurgencies, pogroms, or massacres. On the other hand, Imperial influence
in the region has decreased dramatically, most likely as a direct result of
the long defeat it is undergoing worldwide. Emissaries from Washington,
Brussels and The Hague are no longer greeted as demi-gods. Viceroys and
envoys are told to sod off. Years of abuse, pressure and coercion have
managed to produce the opposite effect from the one intended. 

As differences between reality and Empire-construed "facts" become
increasingly apparent, cognitive dissonance leads to either madness or
reexamination of one's beliefs. The edifice of lies cannot sustain itself
much longer.

The Hague: Inquisition's Fall 

The year began well for the Hague Inquisition. Belgrade was under enormous
pressure to find and arrest Bosnian Serb general Ratko Mladic, and Head
Prosecutor Carla del Ponte had veto power over EU's relations with Serbia.
The trial of Slobodan Milosevic wasn't going well, though. After four years
of prosecution and defense, Milosevic was getting seriously ill and the
case was going nowhere. Despite having spent millions of dollars, generated
hundreds of thousands of pages of paperwork, and bringing in almost three
hundred witnesses over the course of three years, the prosecutors had not
managed to prove any of their claims. Milosevic had successfully challenged
their malicious interpretations of history and political situation in
Yugoslavia, and his cross-examinations showed the witnesses as irrelevant
at best, perjured at worst. So it was a relief for the Hague Inquisition
when Milosevic was found dead in his cell on March 11. Although the
Inquisition never convicted him, the Empire's court of public opinion
passed a posthumous sentence on him – guilty as charged, of course. 

It turned out, however, that Milosevic's death marked the high point in the
Inquisition's reign of pseudo-judicial terror. The frankly ludicrous
conviction of Muslim warlord Naser Oric in July – sentenced to two years
and promptly released – and the farcical conviction of Bosnian Serb leader
Momcilo Krajisnik in September – sentenced to 27 years for supposedly
participating in an alleged Serb conspiracy – relegated the ICTY to
irrelevance. By then it had already lost its leverage over Belgrade; after
Del Ponte sabotaged EU's talks with Serbia in May 2006 because the
government of Vojislav Kostunica had not arrested Gen. Ratko Mladic,
Belgrade simply shrugged and stopped paying attention to the Hague
Harridan.

Serbia: Still Standing

At the beginning of this year, the Empire was proclaiming with certainty
that the "final solution" of the Balkans crisis was at hand and inevitable.
For a while, it seemed things were going its way. Serbia's talks with the
EU were suspended in May. The end of that month brought a surprise victory
for the Montenegrin separatists. After almost nine years of threatening to
secede from Serbia and extorting privileges and foreign donations on that
account, the venal regime of Milo Djukanovic rammed through a rigged
referendum and declared independence. And nothing happened.

While the position of the majority of Montenegrins who declared themselves
ethnic Serbs got worse, the position of Serbia improved dramatically.
Without the "Montenegrin question," the Empire lost another level with
which to control Belgrade.

By late June, the people of Serbia have begun to put the train of abuses
heading their way from the West in its proper context, telling the Imperial
officials precisely where they could stuff their threats and false
promises. This was met in Washington and Brussels with a growing sense of
panic, because their Serbian quislings were no longer taking orders. After
more than a decade of abuse – including blockade, a bombing war, partial
occupation and funding a coup – directed at Serbia, the Empire was
confounded as to why the Serbs might be angry and bitter. 

Given a false choice to surrender Kosovo for the theoretical promise of
possible membership in the EU and NATO, Serbia refused. Such
"intransigence" was deemed unforgivable by the Washington Post, which
railed against both the Prime Minister and President of Serbia in a
hysterical July editorial, declaring that Serbia needed to elect "better
leaders."

At the end of October, the ramshackle coalition government of Vojislav
Kostunica got approval for its draft constitution at a national referendum.
The new constitution – cumbersome and incoherent, but an improvement over
its predecessor – reasserted Serbia's claim to Kosovo as an integral part
of its territory. Its adoption started the counter for general elections,
and forced the Empire to delay its decision on the status of Kosovo till
after the January 2007 vote. With its last desperate attempt at bullying a
failure, the Empire is now betting on "better leaders" and conducting a
campaign of overt support to "democratic" parties, hoping that their
expected triumph might pave the way to Kosovo's separation.

Kosovo: The Frustrated Occupation

The death of Kosovo Albanian "president" Ibrahim Rugova in late January
delayed the start of "status talks" concerning that occupied Serbian
province. However, an outpouring of (undeserved) praise for Rugova in the
Western media created a climate of sympathy for the Albanians, and for the
first time independence was openly proclaimed as the preferred solution for
Kosovo. 

Soon thereafter, the Contact Group issued a statement that left
independence as the only acceptable option. British diplomat John Sawers,
speaking to Kosovo Albanians in February, stated almost explicitly that
independence was inevitable. The Empire stood squarely behind the
Albanians, going so far as to orchestrate the change of leadership in
Pristina. Provisional "prime minister" Bajram Kosumi was replaced in early
March by the wartime leader of the terrorist KLA, Agim Ceku.

But for the rest of the year, the project to separate Kosovo from Serbia
went nowhere. Empire's pompous proclamations met with Belgrade's determined
resistance, Russia's opposition, and the growing frustration of the
Albanians that has translated into violence against both Serbs and their
international "liberators." The battle for Kosovo is far from over.

Bosnia: The Gordian Knot

Constitutional amendments that would have made Bosnia a more centralized
country, drafted by the U.S. Embassy, were narrowly defeated in April.
Leading the opposition to the amendments was Haris Silajdzic, Muslim
nationalist and the self-proclaimed champion of centralization.

Silajdzic's antics won him the leadership of Bosnian Muslims and a seat on
the country's tripartite presidency, but also paved the way for an
unprecedented alignment of political forces on the Serb side, and the
emergence of Milorad Dodik as the key power broker in Bosnia. The project
of creeping centralization, ongoing since the first High Representative
took office in 1996, ground to a halt this year. Utter chaos in the
governing structures of the Muslim-Croat Federation, in comparison to which
the Serb Republic is a paragon of functionality and efficiency, has pulled
a rug out from under the centralizers.

With its pivotal question of ethnic relations fundamentally unresolved,
Bosnia remains a place where the promise of human decency constantly
battles the oppressive modern state.

Epilogue

Sixteen years since Yugoslavia started fragmenting, its shards are nowhere
close to a peaceful settlement. European and American interventions, both
political and military, over this period have not created peace, but simply
changed the context of conflicts and influenced their course. 

The "final solution" envisioned by policymakers in Washington, London and
Brussels is nowhere in reach; in fact, it is rapidly spinning out of their
grasp, with the Empire failing worldwide. The year ahead may well see the
complete unraveling of the Imperial design for the Balkans, as political,
social and economic realities continue to hammer at propaganda-created
delusions. What will replace the Imperial architecture is hard to predict,
but there is a possibility for a better Balkans now, more so than ever
since Yugoslavia imploded.
 

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