Kosovo, the United States, and International Law

by Lenora Foerstel
  
Global Research, December 20, 2008 
 
 
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=11456 
Under the Bush administration, the United States has demonstrated little, if 
any, respect for the fundamental rules of international law, human rights, and 
the American Constitution.  In particular, by arbitrarily conferring 
sovereignty on the Serbian province of Kosovo, the United States has violated 
the territorial rights and sovereignty of Serbia.   

The independence of the United Nations and the Security Council is often 
compromised by American influence and intimidation.  Bowing to American and 
British pressure, the United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki Moon handed over 
the power of the UN mission in Kosovo to the European Union, violating UN 
resolution 1244, which acknowledged Serbian sovereignty and territorial 
integrity.  The Secretary General’s actions were carried out without the 
consent of the Security Council and in opposition to the will of Serbia. 
           
On February 2008, Kosovo was declared independent.  China and Russia argued 
that the unilateral declaration of Kosovo’s independence undermined the United 
Nations and is illegal under international law.  Attempts by western nations to 
solve everything unilaterally have been subjected to growing criticism.  
Further disrespect for UN authority occurred again on September 23, 2008. 
During the UN General Assembly meeting, it was discovered that Ben Ki Moon and 
the Secretary General of NATO, Joop de Hoop, signed a secret agreement on 
Kosovo. When asked why such secrecy was needed, Ben Ki Moon refused to answer. 
            
Today the United States maintains one of its largest military bases, Camp 
Bondsteel, in Kosovo,.  This camp houses 3000 US troops, along with 7000 local 
Albanian personnel.  Camp Bondstill is surrounded by barbed wire fences and 
towers located at regular intervals.  Several observers have characterized its 
appearance as a concentration camp.  The escalating US presence at Camp 
Bondstill is accompanied by increased military activity, including training of 
the Albanian Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA).

           
In the past, the KLA were trained in camps run by the international fugitive 
Osama Bin Laden, leading the US State Department to  list them as a terrorist 
organization.  Nonetheless, in 1998 then President Bill Clinton removed the KLA 
from the State Department’s list and organized their members to fight in the 
U.S./NATO war against Yugoslavia.  Members of the KLA supported the war effort 
through human trafficking and the sale of heroin. 
            
In 1995, Osama Bin Laden visited Albania as a guest of President Sali Berisha.  
Accompanying Bin Laden was Bashkin Garzided, former head of the Albanian Secret 
Police, Hashim Thaci, then leader of the KLA, and Ramush Haradinaj, former 
commander of the KLA who in 1999 was indicted by the International Court at the 
Hague on 37 charges, including murder, torture, rape and the expulsion of 
Serbs, Albanians and Roma. This meeting of international criminals was held to 
plan a jihad in Kosovo. (1)  With NATO military power behind it, the jihad 
succeeded in wresting the province of Kosovo from Serbia.
      
On June 10, 2007 President George Bush visited Albania to hold a meeting with 
President Sali Berisha at which he declared his support for Albania’s efforts 
to join NATO and declare an independent Kosovo.             

On July 21, 2008, President Bush welcomed President Tatmir Sejdui and new Prime 
Minister of Kosovo, Hashim Thaci.  Bush stated his approval of their leadership 
and his support for their goals and policies. 
            
Today, 2008, Kosovo is under the control of criminal leaders tolerated by the 
bureaucracy of Europe.  Prime Minister Hashim Thaci has declared that Kosovo is 
independent and free, but he ignores the fact that occupied Kosovo was created 
in violation of international law.      The current government in Kosovo 
functions without a democratic constitution.  Hatred and fear between 
Albanians, Serbians and Roma prevail. Kosovo is one of the poorest regions in 
the world, with an unemployment rate of 43.7 percent.  The country is ruled 
through corruption by organized crime.  The UN mission on Kosovo states: 
“Kosovo ranks as one of the worlds most corrupt countries with 67 percent of 
the population reporting that they have to pay a bribe to get service.” (2)
            
The World Health Organization reports that drug use in Kosovo by people under 
25 years of age has reached an unprecedented level.  Tension between the Serbs, 
Albanians and Roma is a major problem, with each ethnic group living in 
isolation from the other.  The Albanian children, copying the actions of their 
parents, throw stones and harass the Serbian and Roma citizens. 
            
Not only has Kosovo become corrupt and undemocratic, but its illegal creation 
through great power meddling has set a dangerous precedent throughout the 
world.  This tragic situation in Kosovo is encouraging insurgents in other 
countries who seek to create their own state through violence. Among the many 
groups seeking secession from their own countries are the Basques and Catalans 
in Spain, the Magyara in Romania, the Muslim Pomaks in Bulgaria, the Hungarian 
Minority in Slovakia, The Turks in western Thrace of Greece, the Kurds in 
Turkey and Iraq, Transdniestria in Moldava, and many others. 
            
We are witnessing a new era in international relations characterized by ethnic 
unrest, disputed borders and political instability.  It is in this context that 
the United Nations’ highest judicial body will consider the legality of 
Kosovo’s unilateral declaration of independence from Serbia.  About 140 UN 
members, including five European Union countries, continue to withhold 
recognition of Kosovo’s independence.  The court’s decision should be made 
within the next six months, and though that decision  is not binding, Belgrade 
and the world at large hope the court’s ruling will facilitate principled 
negotiations on Kosovo’s final status. 
 
 
References

(1)   Haradinaj and Thaci met with Osama Bin Laden in Tirana in 1995 to plan 
Al-Qaeda, jihad in Kosovo, May 2, 2008.  http://www.srbihja.sr.gov.yu 
Source Government of Serbia
       
(2) Independent Kosovo Faces an Uncertain Economic Future, posted by 
Waldo              
             Vanderhaeghen, February 21, 2008.  
Http://rationseeuropean.wordpress.com/fied  
 ra 

Lenora Foerstel is a frequent contributor to Global Research.  Global Research 
Articles by Lenora Foerstel 


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