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WDN Exclusive Commentary

Bush betrays Christians in Kosovo
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Posted: June 9, 2007
1:00 a.m. Eastern

By Aleksandar Pavic

First it came loudly and clearly through the State Department when on 
May 15 in Moscow, after meeting Russian President Vladimir Putin, U.S. 
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said, "Kosovo will never again be a 
part of Serbia." Then, in late May, George Bush himself came out in 
favor of the so-called Ahtisaari Plan for the Serbian province of 
Kosovo, named after its creator, Martti Ahtisaari, the former president 
of Finland, by which that province is to gain independence under 
"international supervision," a view he has now restated at the G-8 
Summit of the world's leading industrial states in Germany.

Since the U.S.-led bombing of Yugoslavia in spring of 1999 and the 
subsequent deployment of 50,000 NATO troops in Kosovo, 151 Christian 
Orthodox churches and/or monasteries in the Kosovo province (its full 
name is "Kosovo and Metohia," with "Metohia" coming from the Greek word 
"metoh," meaning "church holding") have been burned down by Albanian 
terrorists or mobs, scores of Christian cemeteries have been desecrated, 
their monuments broken and even bodies dug up, and some 250,000 Serbs 
and other non-Albanians have been driven from their homes. Many of 
Kosovo's remaining Christians live in concentration camp-style ghettos, 
without any freedom of movement outside strictly confined areas. All 
attempts to initiate large-scale refugee return have been obstructed by 
both the U.N. civil administration as well as the NATO military 
presence, which has stood by as the anti-Christian terror in the 
province has continued almost unabated.


Until recently, many have thought President Bush was simply stuck with 
the Clinton legacy in the State Department and, forced to focus on more 
pressing international issues such as Iraq, Afghanistan, Iran, etc., was 
content to let Clinton-appointed cadres run Balkan policy by default. 
But this can no longer be an excuse once Bush has openly endorsed 
Kosovo's independence. And this is where the warning lights go off, not 
just for Serbia or the Balkans, but on a global scale.

For, this U.S. president's two terms have been marked by an 
ideologically based crusade, triggered by the events of Sept. 11, which 
has come to be called the Global War on Terror, or GWOT. GWOT is being 
promoted as "uncompromising," "limited neither by territorial nor time 
constraints," worth the war in Iraq, worth bombing Afghanistan and 
Somalia, worth antagonizing nuclear superpower Russia with the a new 
missile defense shield.

Yet, terror-laden Kosovo is getting wholly different treatment. This 
spot, variously described as "Europe's black hole," "the main European 
transit point for drugs, white slavery and illegal immigration" and 
"Afghanistan in Europe," is now being promoted to full statehood by the 
very U.S. administration whose "Global War on Terror" has quite 
literally turned that very same world upside-down over the past several 
years. Which is why it's no longer just an "American thing."

And which is why something appears to be terribly wrong.

As cries of "betrayal" rise in the U.S. over the proposed new 
immigration law, the new national ID, the creeping North American Union, 
the new dictatorial presidential "emergency" powers, the assault on 
Christianity in U.S. schools and other public institutions, a pattern is 
developing. And it is no better in the rest of the West. Biometric IDs 
are on the horizon in many Western democracies, along with rapid 
accumulation of citizens' personal, medical, financial, professional and 
any other available kind of data. Domestic spying is reaching epidemic 
proportions. Passenger searches have become routine. Street cameras are 
rampant – more than 4 million in Britain alone. State bureaucracies have 
been assuming ever-rising powers, the police agencies even more so. All 
this in the name of a "Global War on Terror."

Sacrifices might be demanded and accepted for the right cause. 
Compelling people worldwide, but especially in the West, to give up 
things as precious as civil liberties and privacy is a huge thing to 
ask. For many, it is unacceptable, for without these, life may not be 
worth living. The benefit of the doubt might be given to those that 
insist on such sacrifices if their actions are seen as overreactions 
done in good faith.

But the case of Kosovo and supporting the formation of a radical Islamic 
narco-terrorist state on soil soaked with the Christian spirit and the 
blood of Christian martyrs, with more than 1,300 churches over an area 
smaller than Rhode Island, proves an absence of good faith in the waging 
of the so-called terror war. And, as this is a global fight, lack of 
good faith in one place means a lack of good faith everywhere. For, not 
only does the identified outside threat (i.e. "terrorism") have to be 
credible, but the response to it also has to be consistent. Otherwise, 
the motives of those making the call to what seems to be endless war 
must be questioned. That's the way it is with crusades – the absolutes 
must be on both sides for the thing to function.

And the only global power standing in the way of independent Kosovo is 
Russia, which is blocking U.S.-led efforts to push Kosovo independence 
through the U.N. Security Council.

Miracles constantly happen. In less than 20 years, the beacon of 
promoting global freedom in the world seems to be turning into a beacon 
of slashing back global freedom, under apparently false pretenses. On 
the other hand, under its KGB-grown elite, the once "Evil Empire" has 
been undergoing an internal Christian revival and is willing to face 
down the U.S. on the issue of a small, beleaguered Christian enclave in 
the Balkans. One must pray for another miracle – that President Bush 
will reconsider his anti-Christian policy in the Balkans. For if he does 
not, it will mean that the war /on/ terror is – a war /of/ terror, in 
the name of an unidentified agenda. And that, like pagan Rome, America 
will have Christian blood on its hands.


/Aleksandar Pavic <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> covers the Balkans for 
WorldNetDaily.com./

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