The European Union and the Kosovo-question



The relations between the European Union and the Serbian province of Kosovo develop in multidimensional, complex and partly conflicting ways. The EU is the largest financial support of Kosovo. The mission of the United Nations in Kosovo (UNMIK) has its own EU pillar, and the EU has several times maintained its willingness to take charge of the administration of Kosovo and take away this responsibility from the UNMIK. In the long term the future of Kosovo lies within the European Union, but the prospect of Kosovo’s accession to the EU is still uncertain. The EU’s relationship with Kosovo is therefore also directly linked to the debates on the solution to the status of Kosovo. How are the negotiations on the status of Kosovo then proceeding ? And what scenarios are conceivable for the future status of Kosovo ?

Kosovo as a Serbian province : “Nobody has the right to beat you”

When Europeans today discuss the collapse of Yugoslavia they tend to forget that the revolts, the protests and the essential political decisions, which resulted in the breakup of this multinational state, originate from Kosovo.

In the early eighties there were riots and demonstrations in Kosovo because the Albanians, who inhabited the province (about 90%), claimed the status of a republic in Yugoslavia. Kosovo never obtained this status which would have justified a later independence according to the decisions of the Badinter Arbitration Committee in 1992. Certainly the province acquired extensive autonomy within the scope of the new Yugoslav constitution of 1974. This included linguistic and cultural freedoms. Within the administration field the Albanians of Kosovo were the main workforce. Most of the police officers were Albanians, but within the Communist Party of Kosovo, the Serbs continued to be represented by the majority and this was especially the case among the party-leaders.

When the new Serbian party leader Slobodan Milosevic went into Kosovo in 1989 the Serbs staged a demonstration. They pelted Albanian police officers with stones and later demanded from Milosevic that he would react to the methods of the Albanian police, who behaved rigorously in their eyes. The famous statement of Milosevic – “nobody has the right to beat you” – was the driving force for a policy of Serbian dominance in Kosovo and Yugoslavia. Within a few months Kosovo and the second autonomous province of Vojvodina were deprived of every kind of autonomy and were directly administered from Belgrade. Within Kosovo, Serbs who had been loyal to Milosevic, were promoted to party-leaders, while leading Kosovo-Albanians were excluded from the party-top and left the party entirely.

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„Nobody has the right to beat you“

Milosevic in Kosovo in 1989

On the other hand the developments in Kosovo prepared the ground for other Yugoslav republics’ fear of Serbian dominance. Consequently, the declarations of independence of Slovenia and Croatia, and later also of Bosnia and Macedonia, were made. While the world was observing the bloody wars in Croatia and Bosnia, Kosovo’s situation was forgotten. In Kosovo the Serbian minority at that time established an apartheid regime that was supported by Serbia’s Communist Party and the Yugoslav People’s Army. Albanian was neither permitted as the official language, nor were Albanians allowed to occupy important positions within administration, science or the judiciary. Often it was rather impossible for Albanian children to attend school. At the same time the UCK and the Kosovo Liberation Army were united by the common goal of Kosovo’s complete independence.

NATO at war in Kosovo and the UN Resolution 1244

When the Yugoslav People’s Army violently attacked the UCK in 1998 and employed the same methods that were used in Bosnia and Croatia, i.e. robbery, rape, dislodging and homicide, the world could no longer ignore it. After several unsuccessful rounds of negotiations NATO decided to intervene without a UN resolution, which had been blocked by Russia. The present debates on “humanitarian interventions” can for one thing be traced back to the decision of NATO in 1999.

Within several weeks NATO bombed Serbian targets in Kosovo and all over Serbia. The actions of NATO did not come to a stop until Milosevic agreed to withdraw all Serbian military units from Kosovo and place the province under the international community’s military and administrative control. Hereafter, the United Nations Security Council adopted the resolution 1244 that is the basis of the United Nations’ Mission in Kosovo. Resolution 1244 defined Kosovo as an established part of Serbia that was administered by the UN and guarded by NATO troops. Today this resolution poses the biggest problem for those who argue for Kosovo to be independent of Serbia, because Kosovo belongs to Serbia according to international law.

Nevertheless Kosovo developed entirely independent of Belgrade after the NATO intervention : New institutions were founded, elections were held, the euro was introduced as a currency, an independent administration of Kosovo along with a police force and a small army were established. These measures, which were supported by the international community, were totally rejected by the remaining Serbian minority. Even the elections of 2007 were close to a total boycott of the Serbian minority.

Kosovo and Pristina negotiate - without a Finnish miracle

Several years after the NATO intervention the search for a political solution to Kosovo began. It was obvious that the UN was going to play an essential role in these matters. The former Finnish president and Balkans expert Martti Ahtisaari was appointed as the United Nations special envoy with the task of finding a political solution to the future status of Kosovo.

In this connection the international community imposed a number of essential conditions on the negotiations. Firstly Kosovo was not allowed to join another state. Secondly it was laid down that the international community would not tolerate a return to the situation before 1998.

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Independence ?

Martti Ahtisaari could not find any solution in spite of two-year-long negotiations.

In spite of negotiations lasting two years and the rapprochement concerning some decisive questions such as the protection of minorities, the Kosovo-Albanians and the Serbian government could not reach an agreement. The opposed views were clear. In general the Serbs were ready to offer Kosovo extensive autonomy, but certainly on the terms that Kosovo continued to be a part of Serbia. They were envoking resolution 1244 and its definition of the status of Kosovo. Furthermore they referred to Kosovo’s importance to Serbian history and culture. In the minds of Serbs the Battle of Kosovo in 1389 is a reference to national identity.

The Kosovo-Albanians demanded nothing less than a complete independence from Belgrade. This included the possible membership of international organizations and an independent army.

On 19 February 2007 Ahtisaari presented his report on a solution to the question. The report was not based on any agreement between the conflicting parties, but instead on Ahtisaari’s assesment of the situation. The well-known report mentioned important questions such as Kosovo membership to international organizations, but did not mention independence. According to the report the international community would uphold a massive presence and opportunities of influence in Kosovo. Furthermore, the Serbian minority of Kosovo was to obtain extensive rights of autonomy. The report was accepted by the Albanian delegation, but the Serbian government rejected it categorically since the status of Kosovo suggested in the report was comparable to the independence of Kosovo.

Because the members of the United Nations Security Council could not agree on the Ahtisaari report - Russia argued that a solution could not be accepted without the agreement of Serbia - further negotiations were outlined. However, the negotiations did not take place under the auspices of Ahtisaari. Instead, the so-called troika, consisting of representatives of the EU, the USA and Russia, were mediating.

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The USA, Russia and the EU :

Representatives of the troika could not bring agreement to the parties.

When the last round of negotiations between the troika and the conflicting parties failed in November 2007 in Baden in Austria, it was obvious to everybody that Belgrade and Pristina were not going to find any common solution. The views of the parties were too opposed. According to Wolfgang Ischinger, the representative of the EU, the mediators had tried everything : He could not see a solution to the conflict.

What is going to happen after 10 December 2007 ?

10 December 2007 the three representatives of the troika are briefing the UN on the status of the negotiations. The United Nations Secretary-General and the United Nations Security Council will then decide on the future. Several scenarios are plausible after 10 December 2007 :

1. „Frozen Conflict scenario“

The international community decides not to negotiate any more, and further steps concerning a solution to the conflict are not taken. The consequence could be a frozen conflict just like the one you find in Moldavia and Georgia today. This step would paralyse the whole region. The EU would lose more than anybody else. It would be impossible for the EU to take over the mission of the United Nations.

2. Kosovo declares its unilateral independence

It is more likely that Kosovo will declare its independence unilaterally. The USA and the majority of European states have already stated that they would recognize a claim of independence. Above all this statement would have legal consequences, since the resolution 1244 would not be valid. But the resolution would not be replaced by a new one. Again this will be a problem for the EU, if the EU is going to accept the successor of UNMIK. Furthermore this one-sided statement would be a problem for all the states that have stationed troops in Kosovo under the resolution 1244 (above all, those states who are not members of NATO), because they would have to withdraw all troops immediately after the declaration of independence. Once more this would aggravate the safety circumstances and result in further problems. Furthermore Kosovo would not become a member of the United Nations, since Russia would block this measure. Nevertheless Kosovo could apply for a membership of the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund – and also the Council of Europe and the EU.

3. Kosovo declares independence and the North of Kosovo declares its secession to remain as a part of Serbia

This scenario would be possible, perhaps also unlikely. The so-called double independence : Firstly the one of Kosovo, secondly the areas of the North that are inhabited by the Serbs. This was also discussed by the troika. Nevertheless all parties have in September ruled out a division of Kosovo. The international community also rejects a division of Kosovo. This scenario would have fundamental consequences for the Albanian minority in Macedonia and for the Serbian Republika Srpska in Bosnia. This would result in new ethnic conflicts for the whole region.

4. The independence of Kosovo will be a fact and the report of Ahtisaari will be implemented

Given the various announcements of Kosovo-Albanians that they will declare their independence after 10 December 2007, this solution appears to be the most likely of them all. Even the daily paper “Balkan Times” (almost “Belgrade-loyal”) supported this idea in late November writing : “Back to Plan A”.

5. Kosovo remains a part of Serbia

This solution appears to be the most unlikely of them all. Firstly, the Kosovo-Albanians have on several occasions expressed their readiness to proclaim their independence unilaterally. Secondly, Belgrade or the region – let alone the EU – cannot let this conflict of the last decade continue. As it has already been mentioned, Kosovo has in the meantime developed its own administrative structures. It would require more than minor ajustments, if Kosovo were to adapt its structures to the Serbian system.

Whatever the future prospects of Kosovo may be, the European Union will be playing an essential role. In the long run Belgrade and Pristina will negotiate jointly in the EU. In the short run the conflict seems to be a final struggle for power in the aftermath of the collapse of Yugoslavia.

Espace réactions(7)

ds The European Union and the Kosovo-question



Par Sören Keil, 11 décembre 2007

The article tries to describe the situation of the region as objective as possible. Only the listed challenges and consequences of the different scenarios should be regarded as personal views. In these comments I would like to explain why I personally recommend the independence of Kosovo :

1. Kosovo does not have any precedence in any other region. Neither Republika Srpska nor the Basque country have ever had the same degree of autonomy as Kosovo has had in Yugoslavia since 1974. Furthermore, genocide has never been attempted on the people of Republika Srpska or the Basque Country .

2. It is not natural that Serbia wants to rule a region where almost two million non-Serbs are living.

3. The Albanians do not trust any Serbian autonomy. The Albanians were already granted autonomy in 1974 but it was abolished overnight by Milosevic. How are they going to trust the Serbs ever again ? Are the Serbs actually going to grant the Albanians autonomy ? And that is when the majority of the Serbian parliamentarians are nationalists !

4. The independence of Kosovo would also be advantageous for Serbia that could then concentrate on EU integration. The re-entry of Kosovo into Serbia would have the opposite effect. Through some years, Serbia would be involved in maintaining the peace in Kosovo.

ds The European Union and the Kosovo-question



11 décembre 2007

A biased and inaccurate article. The Albanians are the aggressors in the Balkans.

ds The European Union and the Kosovo-question



Par Tim Jenkins, 11 décembre 2007

QUOTE : "Furthermore, genocide has never been attempted on the people of Republika Srpska or the Basque Country "

What proof do you have that genocide has been attempted on the people of Kosovo ? CIA ? The State Department ? The very same sources of world deception and dirty business for decades and we still tend to believe they are forces of human rights promotion !?? Or perhaps your sources are cheap tabloids whose readership cannot sustain any article longer than 1-2 paragraphs with a simple picture of a fight between good and bad guys ? Or you’ve just made your mind up based on established ’truths’ ? Do serious journalists and analysts exist ? Do they still make even a tiny attempt to look into topics objectively and from broader prospective ? Is the expulsion of 250.000 Serbs from Croatia an attempted genocide ? Only a handful dare to return. How many Serbs returned to their own villages in Mulsim-held areas of Bosnia ? How many Serbs have left Kosovo since NATO ’liberated’ the province ? How about finding out what’s the largest (by far) ethnic group in former Yugoslavia still displaced from their place of origin ? How about the fact that only a few decades ago - Serbs were the largest ethnic group in Kosovo itself. Why did they leave ? The world would certainly be a better place if we could all think and act without prejudice.

ds The European Union and the Kosovo-question



Par George, 11 décembre 2007

What is Tim talking about ?!?! Have you forgoten who started the wars in the Balkans ? What about Srebrenica, Sarajevo, Racak ? Why do you think the international community and especially the ’Hage’ are looking for serbian criminals ? Do you think they like their pretty faces ? As for Albanians being the aggressors in the Balkans .... !!! Dream on my dear friend....

ds The European Union and the Kosovo-question



Par Tim Jenkins, 11 décembre 2007

So how do you know who started the wars in the Balkans ? If you could do your own analysis please - it would be great !

By the way, you’re doing exactly what I highlighted in my response above. You’re just repeating what, for some reason, has become the established, official version of the events in the Balkans.

I want to hear something new, more objective and based on facts not politicans’ fantasies.

We all know about Srebrenica, Vukovar, Sarajevo but why no one talks about attrocities committed against the Serbs ?

Furthemore, If you sit down with all these world decision-makers and ask them to elaborate why it’s good idea to set a precedent and recognise Kosovo as an independent nation - I doubt you would get very intelligetn answer. I suspect Western governments’ line of conclusion is - Russia is against it - we better do the opposite ! And we are the ones who preach about world law and order, democracy, rules and integrity... I just think this is just a case of a very sad state of the world affairs getting worse...

ds The European Union and the Kosovo-question



Par Mike, 11 décembre 2007

There is not a country anywhere on this Earth that would tolerate an armed secessionist insurrection within its borders yet the USA and EU expected Serbia to tolerate this in 1999. The Albanians in the Serbian province of Kosovo now want to create a second Albania but keep fooling the people supporting them by saying they are forming a country called ’Kosovo’ . Its a second Albania ie Greater Albania of course !!

ds The European Union and the Kosovo-question



Par Pierre ROCA - Editing director, 11 décembre 2007

Hi everybody,

thanks for your messages. As editing director of this webzine, I just would like to point out :

1. that the author, Sören, is an expert in this field and I personnaly think that his analysis gives you objective details about the situation and is not biased. He preferred to give his own point of view (with arguments and in the Comment space) and he has the right to do so.

2. The article published on the German version has led to an important debate and I am sure Sören will appreciate to join the debate on the EN version when he will have the opportunity to do so.

3. This debate space is here to provide you with a tool to debate openly but also politely (what you have done since then). I just prefer to warn you all about this fact especially when discussing burning issues like this one.

thanks for your understanding,

Pierre

ds The European Union and the Kosovo-question



Par Tim Jenkins, 11 décembre 2007

Pierre,

I am not disputing Sören’s expertise. What I’m trying to argue here is a chronic ’inertia of thoughts’ and the premise on what too many analysts and journalists base their conclusion on what we have to do with Kosovo.

It seems to me that Kosovo issue has many properties of inverted process of logical conclusions. ’We’ made our minds up on what we have to do (with Kosovo) then try to justify our action by steering premises towards pre-determined conclusion.

How about something like this :

1. Kosovo is a province of internationally recognised, democratic and sovereign state of Serbia. What are the current rules for breaking up sovereign states ? Were these rules established for a reason ? Are they still valid ? Do we want to change them ? Do we want to change them in an orderly way ?

2. Kosovo Albanians like any other, have a right to live in peace and democracy. What about other breakaway regions of Georgia, Moldova etc ? Are we going to recognise their independence too ? Why not ? Shall we recognise the right for self-determination of 260.000 Bangladeshi community in east London ? Why not ?

3. If we have to break the rules - what is the overriding, universally accepted reason for this ? Do we have an objective reason to believe that our evidence is correct ?

4. Have we objectively evaluated both sides’ arguments ? Why not ?

5. If we break the rules anyway - are we prepared to face the consequences ? Are there likely to be any ? If we break the rules, can we expect other to stick to them ?

Let’s not be naive. Let the sanity prevail and make every conceivable effort to make the right decision based on rules. We all know very well what comes When rules fail.

ds The European Union and the Kosovo-question



Par Princip,UK, page perso : http://www.kosovocompromise.com/cms/item/home/en.html, 11 décembre 2007

There was no legality for the illegal 1999 NATO Partisan war in coordination with their terrorist inspired KLA partners.

Legality rested on the emerging doctrine that - in grave circumstances - a humanitarian imperative could overrule national sovereignty. However, the "humanitarian imperitive" was a lie spun to create the deception to the UK and other NATO citizens that we must wage illegal war on a Sovereign, UN recognised and European State. Tony Blair spun this false perception to the US administration (Clinton et al) who picked it up and pushed the mass media to sucked it all up ! That fact is well known. This earleir war was Illegal since it was just as much a lie over WMG (Whereabouts of Mass Graves) as the later illegal war was over WMD. There was no "humaitarian imperitive" nor the "100,000" ethnic Albanians killed - "we must act" it was all spin ;

"The death toll in Kosovo was in the hundreds before the start of the bombing campaign. It was around 5,000 by the end. Not quite the "genocide" that some people claimed, incidentally, but not a good precedent either.

I was working at Amnesty International during the Kosovo crisis. I first visited refugee camps in Albania and Macedonia during the conflict and then spent a year in Pristina seconded into the UN High Commissioner for Refugees. Tony Blair says that we "reversed ethnic cleansing" there, but I would not count the expulsion of over 100,000 Serbs and Roma from a province guarded by 40,000 Nato troops as a success." http://commentisfree.guardian.co.uk/take_two/2007/04/oliver_kamm_v_conor_foley.html

Serbia in its 3 years at quelling seccessionist terrorism being waged by KLA (linked to Al-Queda and strangely supported by US & German Intelligence agencies) had lead to a few hundred dead on all sides (including the many killed by the Terrorist KLA !).

Put some perspective on the few hundred in 3 years when we hear of the hundreds killed in Falluja in a couple of months or the hundreds of actual civilians in Afghanistan killed this year alone by NATO forces deemed as "collateral damage" ! In this perspective it is wrong to suggest "Serb reaction was uncompromising" - especially in comparison to this year alone civilan deaths at the hands of NATO in Afghanistan in retrospect Serbian action over the 3 preceeding years was moderate to say the least !

Given that this partisan NATO war against Serbia had no Illegality why are NATO and a "few" EU countries now demanding once more as they did in 1999 Dipomacy cant work, wont work and again promoting war - "déjà vu" - indeed ?

Could it be they failed to comprehend the full complexities and got things totally wrong in 1999 ? Of course it won’t do to let everyone know an illegal war based on lies and spin was waged before Iraq - that would have far too many repurcussions for political legacies on both sides of the atlantic !

Regarding legacies worth noting, Churchill once said ; "To jaw-jaw is always better than to war-war."

- so let diplomacy have the respect it deserves and continue until a solution that is acceptable to all which respects international norms and laws be found - just as the Serbian government are requesting !

For the US, UK and any other NATO governments to not wish to allow diplomacy to continue and who suggest they will illegally recognise a unilateral declaration of seccession by Serbia’s ethnic Albanians in the Serbia province of Kosovo would be the greatest error and create the greatest instability not just in the region but globally. Let us all be reminded it was an earlier haste by a "few" EU countries to recognise individual administrative republics of former SFR Yugoslavia in 1991 that actually lead to the predictable bloodshed. It is not inertia but the haste once more to act outside of international laws that again are being pushed - "déjà vu" but has anyone really learnt the lesson from Yugoslavia’s demise ?

This would be a flagrant act against UN resolutions, laws and contrary to the Helsinki final act - it would be tantemount to a declaration of war against Serbia ! Is NATO willing to declare and wage war Illegally again in Europe and is the EU willing to be accountable for this travesty ?

ds The European Union and the Kosovo-question



Par Aleks, 11 décembre 2007

Lol ! The author is an expert !

It’s a basic article with but the briefest rundown of ’how we got here’ and a list at the end of the ’options’. Bearly a shred of analysis. Expert my foot.

1 : No mention of Kosovo prior to Milosevic, i.e. the massive demostration for ’indpenedence’ in 1981, sparked off by albanian students who claimed they had been poisioned (a very popular theme with the albanians, repeated again in 1988 and in 2003 (Macedonia)) ;

2 : No mention of the ethnic cleansing of Serbs from the region since the Albanians got their autonomy in the early 1970s (after another massive riot, Tito gave in yet again) ;

3 : No mention of Marek Anton Nowicki, the former Ombudsman for Kosovo and author of Pro Memoria, the only voice not to follow the West’s propganada line that everything was hunky dory in Kosovo. Well, he didn’t have his mandate renewed. Talk about killing the messenger ;

4 : Nothing about the massive economic drain Kosovo was on the rest of the SFRY and a major reason that the economy tanked ;

5 : Nothing about KLA affiliates (the same people) starting the war in Macedonia in 2003 ;

6 : Nothing of "Standards before Status" becoming "Status before Standards" ;

7 : Nothiing about the total lack of law and order, jobs etc. for most ordinary albnians either, let alone that 55% didn’t vote. Now what kind of ’independence’ mandate is that or is the fact that they don’t want the albanina mafia to continue to ’run’ Kosovo, even though they are the most preferred by the West.

As for the YPA’s methods, the author is remarkably loose with his terms. Funny, the US and their allies regularly drop high explosive bombs and annihilate small towns (or large ones) under the guise of the ’war on terror’, yet terrorists like the KLA who dress in civilian clothes and use their own families as human shields are the victims. They had plenty of women in ther ranks. He shows a distinct lack of knowledge of what kind of war was being fought, i.e. a classic counter insurgency campaign, hence has to rely on the usual journalistic clichés (Apartheid ! Raus Juden ! Waht a joke). He has no idea.

He neither addresses the ’credibility’ of NATO, a fundamental reason that they went to ’war’ with Serbia in 1999 - ’credibility’ is what NATO said, not massacres or human rights. What of the credibility of the UN which the West continues to undermine, really a continuation of their behavior in the 1990s where ’humanitarianism’ trumped all laws, but of course for the ’right’ people.

So Kosovo gets its independence and NATO will stand there and watch as the remaing Serbs, Goranies, Roma pack and leave. They might even provide transport. That would be absolutely brilliant for NATO’s ’credibility’.

Absolutely nothing will be solved with the usual quick fix ’solution’, so who will be to blame when it all goes wrong ? Ridiculous. At least the West and the KLA have something in common : total disregared for any law when it stands in the way of their interests. The Indians and the Chinese won’t forget, let alone trust the West. Unfortuately, the consequences of the West’s actions will resonate for decades in all sorts of places and ways. Maybe not immediately, but it will occur.

ds The European Union and the Kosovo-question



Par Sören Keil, 12 décembre 2007

Dear Aleks, thank your for your comments. Indeed I did not mention those events. Thank you very much for adding facts to my analysis, which attempted to give a very brief introduction of why Kosovo is as tricky today as it is.

Several authors mentioned the NATO intervention in Kosovo as illegitimate. It is true that there has been no UN Security Resolution on this intervention, it was Russia who blocked this. However, the literature discusses this case critically and some authors claim it to be legitimate as a form of Humanitarian Intervention. Now again, this can be discussed. However, there has been a resolution after the intervention namely 1244, which indeed states that Kosovo is a part of Serbia (at this time Yugoslavia) Again, if Kosovo declares indepence unilaterally, it will be a breach of international law. Now, one could argue that the principle of self determination has been the underlying principle of international law since the 1940s, and taking into account the specialities of the 1974 constitution of Yugoslavia and the events in the 1990s one could argue that the Kosovars deserve the right to self determination. Again, this could be questioned. Indeed Mr Jenkins raises important questions. And I confess that I do not have an answer to them. However, my question would be, what alternative to Kosovo indepence could be implemented peacefully and successfully ? And this questions stands. Independent of the support of the International Community, how could one answer this question. Both, the USA and Russia have made important mistakes. The US in the way that say agreed to accept a unilateral indepence before the end of the last talks and Russia with its early support for Belgrade that it will not support any decision against the will of Belgrade. However, we have seen over 2 years of negotiations and there is just no way for a common solution of the problem. So what to do ? Negotiate again, knowing there will be no outcome ? Let the conflict rest and continue to support the economic recession in Kosovo and accept all the instabilites this will bring to the region ? Send the Kosovars back to Serbia, a decision 90 per cent completely oppose ?

ds The European Union and the Kosovo-question



Par Marek, 12 décembre 2007

Kosovo is indeed a very difficult question. My only problem with the whole thing is that the West just cannot get out of this frame of mind called ’Kosovo independence’. And let’s be frank - it doesn’t want to. This is an Anglo-American game - the opportunity of humiliating Russia is at stake and it must not be missed. Do you really think US administration cares about Kosovo’s plight for independence ?

Also, are you saying we should give in to independence demands just because Kosovo Albanians threatean with violance ? We are currently told that this threat amounts to terrorism. Excellent message we would be sending to future hijackers, rebels etc... Instead, can’t we just say - if you use violance we’ll do exactly the same thing as we did to Serbia in 1999 !?

Many other frozen disputes function rather well - Taiwan, Gibraltar, Northern Cyprus - there’s no reason why Kosovo shouldn’t. After all, if they are not happy with that - seek a compromise rather than just repeating one thing - independence. Well, I think it’s time to be firmer with the Albanians and guess what - the compromise will come sooner than you think.

ds The European Union and the Kosovo-question



Par Aleks, 13 décembre 2007

Illegitimacy is in the eye of the beholder, as is legitimacy. My problem with ’brief’ explanations is Sun Zun like. By omitting certain key facts, one is left with an inaccurate representation of the situation, which, I think we all agree is certainly not simple. I understand there are time/other constraints, but loose wording such as rape camps (have you actually read the Dame Anne-Warburton report on the camps, which incidentally only investigated cases against non-Serbs ?) and Vukovar which if anything reflected the paralysis of the JNA General Staff who had no idea how to deal with the HOS behaviour, not to mention regular units that had haemorraghed good parts of their multi-ethnic personnel etc. etc.. The same with Srebrenica - have you read the interview in Dani of Mirsad Tosacka(sp ?) by Emir Suljagic where it is clearly stated that those ’men and boys’, as our free media likes to call them, were officially members of the ArBiH (and everthing that entails on the international law on genocide etc. etc.). Still, there’s no point debating that because it has already been ’decided’ by the powers that be (as is always the case).

Returning to your highlighted point, what alternative indeed ? The West took its position long before Russia put its foot down (i.e. finally under Putin, they are laying down their red lines, much as the Chinese did much earlier over the spy plane ’incident’) and has had the game entirely in hand, and still screwed it up. Explain to me how ’negotiation’, as I oft hear from well learned journalists (and I know quite a few across the spectrum of media) equals only the Serbs agreeing to independence, whatever euphimism politicians and their friends decide to call ? Does a 45% turn out equal a mandate for independence ? Is the fact that Kosovo is not independent the cause of its ills ? Why do I read report of thousands of kosvo albanians applying for, and receiving serbian passports ? Is it simply because as a Serb it is easier to travel or is it because the police actually can do something ?

Again, the question you pose has no answer. Maybe you should ask what is the price the West is willing to pay for this quick solution ? Independence is the desperate solution. Can you eat it ? Does it give you jobs ? Does it educate you ? Does it protect you ? How is it possible to have a clear and frank debate about Kosovo when the Kosovo albanian leadership is not held responsible for any of the mess (any straight international like Nowicki is cleaned out) but can dial up a mob at short notice (as was done over the drowning ’by Serbs’ of albanian boys in 2004) ?

Your question also presupposes an egality between Western and Eastern positions, which is not even a neutral standpoint to start from. That standpoint is UN resolution 1244. If the West didn’t like it, then why sign up to it (rhetorical - they totally screwed up their war aims, a 2 day bombing campaign that turned into 78 days - does anyone question the competence of these people ???). The Serbs have clearly stated that they would be involved only minimally, just short of independence. They have move a long way. The albanians have not moved and inch, nor 2.54cm. The West was dishonest from the start when they launched the ’negotiating process’. Rule no.1, choose a safe pair of hands. Enter Ahtesaari, a member of the infamous International Crisis Group of former has beens who just can’t say goodbye (check out their member page and ’special advisors’ page to get an idea of how balanced they are). The ICG has been give uncritical and very wide media access across the world as an expert group, rather than an advocacy group that has always championed independence. It has been a struggle to get Media organizations to even introduce them correctly. Why does this matter (am I not going off on a tangent here ?) ? It matters because it is the unofficial arm, propaganda arm if you will, of certain states advocating certain solutions. As we have seen through out the 1990s, most interventions have been preceeded with seeding of atrocity stories in key media outlets regardless of veracity or checking (e.g. 1993 200,000 ’bosniaks’ killed, 80,000 ’bosniaks’ raped, 1995 7,000 ’men and boys’ executed).

Now, where did Russia enter into this ? It didn’t, apart from backing the Serbs in 1999 and the WWIII episode with General Clark.

Why is independence the only solution ? Why not ask, "why are we still saying that any solution is better than no solution" ?

So what happens if Kosovo doesn’t get its independence ? Who will be worse off ? Will the Serbs attack ? No. Will millions of albanians die ? No. Will Kosovo suddenly implode ? Unlikely. Why on earth are we stuck in this one dimensional thought that ’the albanians, out of frustration, will lash out and kick out all the Serbs’, i.e. talk of the kosvo albanians as 1 : not responsible for themselves (or to put it another way, I killed my wife because I had a bad day at work), 2 : that they are somehow incapable of controlling themselves (now that is very colonial, johnny foriegner being less advanced/developed but they can’t help it as they are just mere savages). The whole one-sided ’debate’ is false. Kosovo will implode and take the rest of the world with it if it is not given independence. So why bother with talks in the first place ? To buy time to punish, beg, threaten etc. the opposition into agreement. WTF are they called ’talks’ ? Is the West really afraid of ’an explosion of violence’, as we are regularly promised by breathless reporters or just using it as a figleaf so that everyone looks the other way when the UN is kicked bodily between the legs ??? I question every single assumption that is made and especially those that are not spelt out.

You talk of instabilities brought to the region. Only the Albanian ’leaderships’ in Kosovo and Macedonia can answer that. As I pointed out, KLA & co. started a war in Macedonia which had nothing to do with Kosovo, though many try to link the two. Only with NATO/the West on their side did they have disproportionate influence on talks, hence the Ohrid agreement. It is basically the case of a minority threatening to bring down the whole region into violence if it does not get what it wants. How does this fit into Western ideals of democracy exactly ? Human rights (i.e. or in this case, the ’human rights’ of some over others) ? Do you think it is reasonable for the West to allow itself to be held (and I must emphasise the word ’apparent’ here), hostage to further destabilisation ?

To me it looks like the gamble is that the Serbs won’t risk jacking in joining of the EU for Kosovo. What if they are wrong. After all, it was only the Serbs who said ’No’ to the Nazis. The famous ’Inat’. What are the politico-strategic implications for the EU stability, security and energy policies if Serbia does a Switzerland or goes totally East ? Is this risk really worth taking. It’s implications certainly go way beyond the consequences of kosovo albanian violence if they do not get what they want.

A further arrow to add to the bow. What of China and India ? The ’enlightened’ often focus solely on Russia, the fact that China and India have not been vocal on the issue is totally ignored. China is behind Russia. They are more than happy that Russia takes the media flak. What of the other growing super-power India ? The struggle it is facing can be seen the US-India nuclear deal which may well sink because it is a too significant shift away from India’s traditional non-aligned politics. And the UN. Whatever form it takes in future, neither India nor China will ignore such a blatant disregared of a UN resolution. What are their options ? Say nothing, but when it is in their interests, invoke the same arguments ? Everyone recognises that power is shifting East. The UN was useful to the West during the Cold War as it served as a balance against the Soviet Union. Since then, it has been seen as a hindrance, from the OSCE wresting monitoring of elections away from it (how strange for the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe) and politicising elections (i.e. giving the all-ok to the truely corrupt elections of Yelsin in 1996), to bombing Bosnia when Boutrosx2 Ghali was on holiday and Kofi Annan was incharge who kindly provided the second ’key’ to the dual key system for bombing when needed - the US vetoing relection of the truely popular Ghali for their own man.... Kofi Annan. Why is it that no-one seems to care a damn about a system that the West will need in future ?

Is independence for Kosovo worth resolution 1244 and all its consequences ? Does humanitarian intervention override everything ? Where has it been successful ? Bosnia doesn’t count because the Serbs militarily won in 1993, but the West froze this and provided military and political support, thus prolonging the war another 2 years, resulting in Dayton, a plan really not very different from that proposed by Jose Cutilehro in...1992. Or should we mention the Congo, where the withdrawl of Belgian ’peace keepers’ was the last barrier to the biggest killings of civilians in the last 20 years ? Or maybe Somalia, another great success, in 1994. Or Somalia again, that was peaceful under the Islamic courts, but not ’acceptable’ to the West and not surprisingly, the fighting has continued and is kiling more and more people. Or bringing peace and democracy to Afghanistan and equality for women ? The humanitarian argument has nothing to do with foreign policy because foreign policy cannot function in the short term and would ultimately serve to undermine the state’s power, i.e. 5% action, 95% effect. How long would the military powers in the world last politically if they were involved in every single conflict globally ? Someone has to pay for it, in cash or in blood, and people in democratic countries don’t like to pay for either. Knee-jerk, atrocity motivated actions have many implications, not to mention money, resources, manpower etc. etc. Humanitarian intervention is only adopted when it is in line with current thinking, hence the importance of supposedly ’independent’ groups like the ICG and brainless parroting Media to prepare the way. When it is not in our interests (too far away, too foreign, we have no companies there of significance), then no-one cares, hence the genocide in the Congo.

Whatever, I’ve gone on far too long. I just don’t accept the question you pose in those terms. It is presenting a one dimensional presupposed situation where we all agree that it is far, far more complicated. The refusal to accept, let alone debate or discuss, any of the Serb’s numerous propositions, and the albanias offering absolutely nothing from their side, shows how fixed and one-sided this pony show is, and always was. It’s not a debate or negotiations, it’s a shouting match. Hand wringing by the Media ("we must do something !") shows how far the trade has fallen. They should be grilling those who are elected and not giving them an easy ride....

P.S. Is ’your’ government willing to accept hundreds of thousands of young albanians with no hopes nor prospects into the country. I suppose being white is in their favor...

ds The European Union and the Kosovo-question



19 février 2008

I am from Romania and i suport Serbia... The independence of Kosovo is nothing but a way to make a new Albania...we will see in the future the jonction of Kosovo with Albania...

ds Réagir



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11 décembre 2007

Par Hans-Jorgen TROELSEN (translator), Sören KEIL

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