About Biden's letter to the Financial Times yesterday.....
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/e0aa1a94-9a8a-11db-bbd2-0000779e2340.html

 

Begin forwarded message:

 

From: Milana Bizic <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Date: January 3, 2007 12:02:19 PM EST

To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Subject: Senator Biden's comments on Kosovo

 

It is hard to argue with someone of Senator Biden's stature as a member of
our most distinguished leaders in the U.S. Senate, and as the in-coming
Democratic Chairman of the U.S. Senate foreign relations committee. Also,
one can say Senator Biden has knowledge of the situation as he has been
"associated" with Kosovo issues for more than fifteen years.

 

However, I have no trouble in refuting his arguments and his slanderous
accusations of Kostunica, the Serbs and the Russians. Perhaps thinking
people would ponder and say, "Methinks he protests too much. Something is
rotten and its not the state of Denmark. What kind of MUSLIM DEMOCRACY is
there in Kosovo? He mentions the date of March, 2004, but fails to
acknowledge the Kristlknact against the Serbs that killed many and injured
hundreds more, destroying Serbian churches, monasteries, monuments and even
graveyards to remove historical evidence of who the original inhabitants of
this land were. Is this what he means by a "better future for south-east
Europe?" He's already preparing us mentally for the "mob violence" that will
shake Kosovo if the "inflamed frustrated" Albanians don't get their
sought-after independence.

 

Senator Biden knows that bombing the Serbs in Kosovo and then, incredibly
throughout Serbia was NOT a judicious use of American power. We violated
many laws and treaties. We made a grave error in providing a GREEN BELT
throughout Europe through which terrorists, drugs, illegal sex operations
and weapons pass readily. Biden is trying to cover up for all the many
mistakes we've made there already. We must not compound that thinking by
rewarding this violent behavior.

 

Senator Biden asserts that the "citizens of south-east Europe are mentally
prepared for an independent Kosovo." Well, that 15% of Serbian land isn't
theirs to give away!

 

If these Kosovar Albanians are already "the most pro-Americans in the
Islamic world"- God help America! No amount of renaming of streets formerly
named for Serbian rulers or saints with signs of Clinton Avenue suddenly
doesn't make one pro-American. Actions speak louder than words and the
constant bombings and terroristic threats to those Serbs and other
non-Albanians remaining aren't delivering messages of peace and goodwill.
And don't the Serbs as well as the Russians deserve equal opportunities for
world peace?

 

Kosovo was sacrificed to the idea of a "US-Muslim partnership" before for
several of the wrong reasons. Let's not make the same mistake again! God
bless us all!

 

Sincerely yours,

Milana Karlo Bizic

 

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Opponents of new Kosovo must be stopped 

By Joseph Biden

Published: January 2 2007 19:12 | Last updated: January 2 2007 19:12

Years of hand-wringing and chest-thumping over the future status of Kosovo
may finally be drawing to a close. In the next few months, adroit diplomacy
to secure Kosovo’s independence could yield a victory for Muslim democracy,
a better future for south-east Europe and validation for the judicious use
of American power.

But along with the potential for triumph in Kosovo, there is a growing risk
that Serbia and Russia will conspire to seize defeat from the jaws of
victory. Extremists in Belgrade and Moscow are – for very different reasons
– hoping to use Russia’s United Nations Security Council veto to quash
Kosovo’s bid for independence. If they succeed, the Balkans will emerge as
another source of bad news in a world already crowded with crises.

During the seven years since Nato ended Slobodan Milosevic’s reign of terror
in Kosovo, a UN-backed administration has largely succeeded in bringing
stability to the province. However, Kosovo’s people are justifiably tired of
a status quo marked by uncertainty and economic privation. These two
intertwined problems will continue so long as the debate over the province’s
future remains unresolved. Its ambiguous status is also leading to
stagnation in Serbia.

Nationalist politicians in Belgrade have embraced the fight against Kosovo’s
independence to divert public attention from their own failures and Serbia’s
stalled bid for European Union membership. The actions of Vojislav
Kostunica, Serbia’s prime minister, have been particularly disappointing. In
addition to refusing international requests to call for the arrest of war
crimes fugitives Ratko Mladic and Radovan Karadzic, Mr Kostunica has
rejected every attempt at compromise on Kosovo. Serbia’s moral authority on
the issue hit a new low in October when the 1.5m ethnic Albanian residents
of the province were denied the right to vote in a deeply flawed
constitutional referendum that declared Kosovo an integral part of Serbia.

To their great credit, the people of Serbia have proved more realistic about
Kosovo than their elected leaders. Opinion polls show that many Serbs
foresee that the province will gain independence. Ethnic Albanians in
Kosovo, meanwhile, overwhelmingly expect to sever ties with Serbia. With
citizens on both sides of the issue ready to finish the debate and move on
to more constructive challenges, leaders who block a solution will do so at
their peril.

Historically, trouble in the Balkans is almost always the result of false
expectations. On the whole, the citizens of south-east Europe are mentally
prepared for an independent Kosovo. 

If Belgrade postpones a settlement it will reopen the issue for many Serbs
previously resigned to Kosovo’s independence and further inflame
frustrations among the region’s ethnic Albanians. The result could be a
return of the mob violence that shook Kosovo in March 2004.

A Russian effort to delay a deal on Kosovo would be in keeping with the
Kremlin’s habit of fostering weak, subservient governments in formerly
communist states. Moscow has apparently reached the conclusion that
impoverished, unstable regimes are easier targets for manipulation than
prosperous, independent countries. It has made extensive, public use of oil
and gas diplomacy to undermine the budding democracies of eastern Europe.
Less attention has focused on the Kremlin’s quiet efforts to exacerbate
territorial conflicts in Georgia, Moldova and Azerbaijan. Serbia could
become the latest victim of this strategy.

Kosovo is not ready for full sovereignty. Even after independence, Nato and
the international community will need to provide security guarantees for
Kosovo’s minorities and strengthen its economy and institutions. But it is
time to grant the province independence. The longer the status debate
continues, the further Kosovo and Serbia will fall behind other rapidly
progressing former Yugoslav republics such as Croatia and Slovenia.

Success in Kosovo, if realised, will have implications far beyond the
Balkans. A responsible Russian approach to the issue could demonstrate the
Kremlin’s commitment to global order at a time when its credibility is in
tatters. The people of Kosovo – already the most pro-American in the Islamic
world – will provide a much-needed example of a successful US-Muslim
partnership. Stability in south-east Europe would be a welcome bit of good
news and offer hope in a season of tremendous foreign policy challenges.

The writer is the incoming Democratic chairman of the US Senate foreign
relations committee

Copyright <http://www.ft.com/servicestools/help/copyright>  The Financial
Times Limited 2007

 

http://www.ft.com/cms/s/e0aa1a94-9a8a-11db-bbd2-0000779e2340.html



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