..."..KFOR had no intention of policing the former Serbian province if the EU 
mission is delayed, because it has not been trained or assigned to carry out 
such duties...."

Serbia should invite Russia / China soldiers to train and carry out 
"peacekeeping"duties in the occupied Serbia's province of Kosovo-Metohija. 

====

 http://washingtontimes.com/news/2008/jun/13/us-sees-model-for-nation-building/
U.S. sees Kosovo as model
Peacekeeping success has lessons for future in Iraq, Afghanistan
Nicholas  Kralev
Friday, June 13, 2008 
Second of two parts 
CAMP BONDSTEEL, Kosovo | The U.S. military, which has been part of a NATO 
peacekeeping force in Kosovo for nine years, views its mission as a model for 
its presence in Iraq and Afghanistan. 

 
A French KFOR soldier participates in a maneuver near the border with Serbia. 
Kosovo is 90 percent Albanian, and relations with the Serbian minority have 
been generally peaceful for the past nine years, save a few violent incidents, 
the most recent of which being those following Kosovo's declaration of 
independence.
The more than 16,000-strong force, known as KFOR, includes more than 1,000 
Americans. It has managed to keep Kosovo largely peaceful, because "problems 
get worked out before they become an issue that results in violence," said 
Brig. Gen. John E. Davoren, the U.S. commander here. 
"I'd like to think we are the template for what we'd like Iraq and Afghanistan 
to be," he said in an interview. "The average soldier out there is working very 
hard to ensure that people in the U.S. really don“t read about us, because 
peace could seem to be boring business when it comes to [news] articles." 
 
Agence France-Presse/Getty Images photographs French soldiers in the Kosovo 
Force, or KFOR, assemble near the crossing between Kosovo and Serbia on Sunday. 
The force, composed of troops from 35 countries, is directed by NATO's North 
Atlantic Council. It is expected to operate in the newly sovereign Kosovo for 
some time, with the U.S. scheduling rotations through 2010.

Kosovo's post-independence constitution takes effect Sunday, and KFOR is the 
only international component here with a certain future. 
The constitution does not envision a role for the U.N. mission (UNMIK) that has 
run Kosovo since 1999. It invites the European Union to take over some 
responsibilities, but its justice and law-enforcement mission is not yet ready 
to fully deploy, and it is viewed as illegitimate by Moscow and Belgrade, which 
still consider Kosovo part of Serbia. 
Russia maintained pressure to force the U.N. mission out of Kosovo by calling 
yesterday for the top U.N. official, Joachim Rucker, to be fired, the 
Associated Press reported from Moscow.

KFOR answers to the North Atlantic Council, NATO's policy-making arm in 
Brussels, and it has said the force will remain in Kosovo as long as it is 
needed. U.S. military officials said they "identified" upcoming rotations 
through 2010. 
There are still deep divisions here between the ethnic Albanian majority, which 
is about 90 percent of the population, and the Serbian minority. But except for 
a few violent incidents, the latest in March following the Feb. 17 declaration 
of independence, the past nine years have been peaceful. 
NATO's 1999 military campaign against Serbia was provoked by the treatment of 
Kosovo's Albanians, which the United States called a continuation of the ethnic 
cleansing practiced by then-Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic in other 
parts of former Yugoslavia. 
"Our work with the people in the communities out there have allowed us to have 
a very calm situation. There have been times where people have not been very 
polite with each other, but they have been peaceful in their dealings with each 
other," Gen. Davoren said.

He said the United States is one of seven countries with troops at Camp 
Bondsteel, in southeast Kosovo - some of which are not even NATO members, such 
as Armenia and Ukraine. A total of 35 countries participate in KFOR 
peacekeeping throughout Kosovo.

Most Americans here are National Guard troops, and they currently serve for 
nine months. 
"Their basic mission is to ensure that we have a safe and secure environment 
whether we are engaging in anti-smuggling operations, weapons search and 
seizure or identification of where we may have problems," Gen. Davoren said. 
NATO agreed at a meeting in Brussels yesterday to train a 2,500-strong, lightly 
armed Kosovo Security Force, which is set to replace the existing civil 
emergency force, the Kosovo Protection Corps. 
"NATO will ... supervise and support the stand-up and training of a 
civilian-controlled Kosovo Security Force," an alliance spokesman told Reuters 
news agency after the meeting. 
Late last month, NATO spokesman James Appathurai said KFOR had no intention of 
policing the former Serbian province if the EU mission is delayed, because it 
has not been trained or assigned to carry out such duties. 
"We can and do ask other international organizations to play that role," he 
said. 

 
AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE/GETTY IMAGES ONGOING MISSION: Defense Secretary Robert M. 
Gates considers a NATO file Thursday. Kosovo's constitution takes effect 
Sunday, but the NATO peacekeeping force, to which the U.S. contributes troops, 
will linger.
Western diplomats in Pristina, Kosovo's capital, said the local government will 
most likely invite UNMIK to continue with policing responsibilities until the 
EU mission is fully deployed. 



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