Kosovo and Quebec




New 'nation' got our OK. 


How our Balkan decision may haunt us.


By Rafe <http://thetyee.ca/Bios/Rafe__Mair>  Mair
Published: April 7, 2008




TheTyee.ca


What impact does recognition of Kosovo have on Europe on the one hand and
Canada on the other?

It is confidently asserted by those set in authority over us -- in that
lovely Victorian phrase from the Anglican Book of Common Prayer -- that our
recognition of Kosovo as an independent state will have no effect upon
Canada's relationship with Quebec. That seems to be a correct, not to say
wise, statement given the present state of separatism in Quebec. 

However, as Canadians have seen (though they've learned no lessons), Quebec
separatism never leaves us but merely hibernates from time to time.

Recognition of Kosovo was inevitable. As Churchill once observed,
recognition is not done to "confer a compliment but to secure an advantage."
Kosovo has been an independent state in fact for some years and there seems
no alternative but to recognize that as a fact (de facto recognition), and
legally defensible (de jure). 

NATO next 'nation'?

With Kosovo's spiritual home, Albania, moving to join the EU and NATO, it
seems that this path will be irresistible to Kosovo.

"Nations" within a state now have one more precedent to justify their fight
for independence. The Catalonians and Basques in Spain come readily to mind
and there are others. But these things don't happen quickly. It took the
United States 13 years to recognize the Soviet Union. It took even longer
with "Red" China. 

The recognition of Kosovo does not imply that minorities all over the world
will pour into the streets waving new nationalists flags and singing new
anthems as they take over their part of the country. 

The biggest secession of recent times came with the breakup of the Soviet
Union and we see now that some of the breakaway nations are moving closer
and closer to Moscow, demonstrating that predicting the fallout of secession
is a dangerous game.

How to insult a Russian

The international impact of the recognition of Kosovo is on Russia's
relationship with the West.

Russia has always regarded itself as the kindly old uncle towards all Serbs.
It was this pan-Slav sense that provided the spark for World War I. The
Austro-Hungarian Empire mobilized for war against Serbia (because Serbia
didn't, in their eyes, sufficiently apologize for the assassination of Grand
Duke Ferdinand in Sarajevo), which led Russia to mobilize to protect Serbia.
The race for the trenches was on.

Russia still regards itself as the spiritual home of Slavs but their concern
for Serbia would probably be "pro forma" had only the West not behaved as it
did after the breakup of the Soviet Union. The United States had a glorious
opportunity to follow Churchill's dictum, "In victory, magnanimity." Instead
it gloated and what aid it did provide was spasmodic and desultory. 

Then NATO, of which America is the senior partner, wooed former Warsaw
Treaty nations and new countries formerly part of the USSR. This was, we
surely can understand, seen both as an insult and a real military threat to
Moscow. 

A part time drunk and buffoon and part time man of extraordinary courage,
Boris Yeltsin was replaced by the steely tough, former KGB officer Vladimir
Putin who has straightened out the huge economic mess made first by the
Communists and then by the corporate thieves who moved into the economic
chaos.

New arms race brewing?

Putin is the new Russian iron man and he is angry, very angry. Freedom of
the press is gone as is the short lived fair election process and the
semi-democracy it spawned. 

With America moving its "Star Wars" space weapons program into Eastern
Europe, Mr. Putin, with some justification, sees this defense shield as
aimed at Russia, not just some rogue states. Russia, already the second most
powerful nation in the world, will now, under an angry President Putin work
overtime to gain the ability to push the shield out of the way or in some
way nullify it. What this means, of course, is a renewed arms race.

This is not all happening because unimportant Canada recognized Kosovo nor,
indeed, just because the United States and others did. But it's one piece of
the puzzle. 

There will be consequences and the noises being made by President Putin
ought to make NATO consider the wisdom of taking in areas that for a long
time were within the Russian sphere of influence, to put it mildly.

Meanwhile back at home . . .

What about Canada?

No political action, no matter how minor it appears, is without
consequences. The immediate consequences on Canada of the Kosovo recognition
appear be minor but I fear this will change. While there are scarcely flag
waving crowds flocking to the national assembly demanding independence on
the strength of the Kosovo recognition, this event does have an impact
especially in light of the recent foolish declarations by both the Liberals
and Conservatives that Quebec is a "nation." 

Nation within nation situations do not have a good track record. Ethnicity
never dies as the breakup of Yugoslavia demonstrates. Intact minorities in
Romania, Spain and France demonstrate that. As does, indeed, the United
Kingdom where Scots have remained Scots even though the English/Scottish
single kingdom came into being over 400 years ago. Ireland struggles under
ethnic division that goes back to the 11th century.

Ironically, if Quebec were to secede, the hitherto helpful example of Kosovo
would quickly bite them on the backside since the minority would no longer
be Francophones in Canada but non-Francophones within their new country. 

It can be concluded, I think, this way. Canada had little choice but to
recognize Kosovo. But that recognition did add a couple of chips to the
Quebec's stack, especially as it came at a time when the Liberals and
Conservatives, for short term political profit, declared that Quebec is "a
nation." 

Over the past 50 years, (a very short time in constitutional terms), Quebec
has gone from "maitres chez nous" to "sovereignty association" to "distinct
society" to "nation." 

What do you suppose the next step will be? 

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