Kosovo: “Thinking Outside Of The Box” Author: Wes Johnson, author of Balkan 
Inferno: Betrayal, War 15 September 2007 - Issue : 747 

A front page photo in the International Herald Tribune a few weeks ago of the 
blackened and twisted remains of an automobile blown up by the Basque terrorist 
ETA outside a police barracks in Spain was yet another reminder of the danger 
to peace and stability posed by various liberation movements that use violence 
to advance their cause.

By Wes Johnson

Only a few years ago both the Irish IRA and the French Corsicans were making 
their demands at the point of a gun – and sticks of dynamite. Today, we can add 
the Chechens; Turkish Kurds; Armenians in Nagorno-Karabagh; Abkhazians and 
Ossetians in Georgia and the Turks of northern Cyprus to the clamor for 
separatism and independence. And that is only in Europe. Consider Africa from 
the Western Sahara over to the Horn. In the Middle East, we have Palestinians 
divided amongst them-selves and an Iraq that may split up. In Asia, Tamils in 
Sri Lanka; Tibetans; and Kashmiri and Philippine Moslems. There are dozens of 
such movements and organisations around the world – some with legitimate 
grievances, some not. Why then is independence for Kosovo considered to be so 
very urgent – mainly by the Albanians themselves in this tiny impoverished 
Balkan back- water and their powerful US supporters in Washington?       

The International Crisis Group (ICG) has issued yet another report urging 
independence  – even without the agreement of the UN Security Council. It calls 
Kosovo “a ticking time bomb in the EU’s backyard.” This so-called independent 
think-tank has pushed this issue for years, always issuing dire warnings should 
the Albanians not get their way. Former US Secretary of State Madeleine 
Albright, the architect of NATO’s 1999 bombing campaign, has often led the pack 
backed by Rand Corporation Director James Dobbins. It is striking how former 
senior US officials dominate the ICG: Thomas Pickering, Morton Abramowitz, 
Kenneth Adelman, Steven Solarz, Wesley Clark, Zbigniew Brzezinski, Carla Hills, 
and Swanee Hunt. Leslie Gelb of the Council on Foreign Relations is there as 
well – and others. Former ICG country director Edward Joseph has called for US 
“brinkmanship” over Kosovo in order to block Russian influence. It was an 
unwelcome return to Cold War rhetoric, a blind unwillingness to accept the fact 
that others may see Kosovo differently from Washington.

Given ICG efforts to undermine and prejudge the outcome of the ongoing round of 
talks between the Kosovo Albanians and Belgrade in advance, the EU’s 
representative to the Contact Group, Wolfgang Ischinger, has urged both sides 
to “think outside of the box” – to even consider partition if both sides want 
it. Previously the Contact Group had considered such talk taboo. However, if 
one is to really “think outside of the box”, then one might well imagine that 
Belgrade may want to table other issues – which might promote flexibility and 
encourage them to consider trade-offs. Among these might be a “green light” for 
the Srpska Republic to leave an obviously dysfunctional Bosnia-Herzegovina to 
join their brethren across the Drina River in Serbia; an agreed autonomy for 
the Krajina Serbs of Croatia, as set out in previous UN-brokered negotiations; 
and finally a “dual autonomy” for Kosovo that would give the Serbs and 
Albanians their own symbols, schools, religious institutions, police, and local 
governing bodies. Each community could have its own banks; and both could have 
tariff-free trade and other services with Serbia and Albania respectively. 
Kosovo could enjoy representation in inter-national organisations, as others 
do, but not full sovereignty. As with being pregnant, there is no half way 
house to “independence”. A second Albanian state in the Balkans is not needed – 
nor is it desirable, as it would set a very unfortunate precedent 
internationally.
____________

Wes Johnson is the author of Balkan Inferno: Betrayal, War, and Intervention 
1990-2005, Enigma Books, New York, NY, 2007.

http://www.neurope.eu/articles/77689.php



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