FOR MURDEROUS, ETHNICALLY
CLEANSED KOSOVO
INDEPENDENCE WOULD BE ILLEGAL
Dr Srdja Trifkovic
Dateline 22nd December 2006
Russia's ambassador to the U.N. told his Western
colleagues
"You may be willing to give in to Albanian blackmail, but we are
not."
The law is clear: Kosovo belongs to Serbia, and
its status was reiterated in the
UN Security Council Resolution 1244 that stopped NATO bombing in June
1999.
Detaching it from Serbia against Belgrade's will would be an unprecedented
violation of the UN Charter and the Helsinki Final Act of 1975
INTRODUCTION BY FREENATIONS
In the Serbian State of Kosovo Muslim extremism, Albanian terrorism
and rampant ethnic cleansing and criminality are being carried on (under
the eyes of UN troops) by the European Union's allies (and the allies
of Muslim extremism throughout the world including Al Qaeda) - the Kosovo
Albanian de facto Government. Kosovo was a predominantly Serb populated
state of Yugoslavia. With the help of the EU, Germany and NATO the Albanians
have ethnically cleansed hundreds of thousands of Serbs and now want
an "Independent (Muslim Albanian) Kosovo". British people
should imagine Kent becoming a Muslim independent state under the Al
Qaeda friendly Kent Liberation Army!
In news reports from Kosovo violence against non-Albanians (not
just Serbs but other minorities like Jews and gypsies!) continues unimpeded.
On December 21, Reuters reported that two officials of Kosovo's governing
coalition have been arrested after police found a minibus packed with
heavy weapons and ammunition. A police source said the haul included
a 12.7 mm anti-aircraft gun and more than 100 rocket-propelled grenades
- the find was the largest in Kosovo since the 1998-99 war and the deployment
of NATO peacekeepers. Three men were arrested, including a senior adviser
to the Kosovo labor minister and a member of the governing Alliance
for the Future of Kosovo (AAK), which emerged from the guerrilla Kosovo
Liberation Army.
On December 10th a bus on the Belgrade-Strpce line carrying 30 Serb
passengers was stoned and on December 9, B92 reported that the Kosovo
Police Service had confirmed that an explosion damaged the railway tracks
only a few minutes before a train carrying Serbs was scheduled to pass
that section of the railway.
But this is normal in that haven of peace and ethnic friendship
created by the illegal war against Yugoslavia conducted by Germany,
the European Union and NATO. This report by Dr Trifkovic discusses the
possible thwarting of the long planned (and illegal) separation of Kosovo
from Serbia.
KOSTUNICA, Serbia's Prime Minister for the past three years, has one
of the most challenging jobs in the world. He nevertheless seems at
ease with that burden, and appears more confident than while he was
Yugoslavia's last president (2000-2003). When we met in Belgrade last
week, he was as matter-of-fact about the problems he is facing as ever;
but whereas in the past he had occasionally agonized about the magnitude
and complexity of those problems, today he treats them as facts of life
that neither intimidate nor depress him. It may be telling that in appearance
he has hardly aged over the past decade, while in substance he has become
the key figure on Serbia's political scene for many years to come.
The most pressing of those problems is of course Kosovo. The United
States, NATO and several leading European Union countries have occupied
one-seventh of his country's territory for over seven years, and the
officials who run the "international community" appear keen
- for now - to detach the southern province permanently from Serbia.
Kostunica's best defense against the pressure to sign Kosovo away -
and that pressure keeps coming from Washington, Brussels, London and
other power centers - has been to insist on the need for any solution
to be legal, to conform to the letter and spirit of the international
law.
The law is clear: Kosovo belongs to Serbia, and its status was reiterated
in the UN Security Council Resolution 1244 that stopped NATO bombing
in June 1999. Detaching it from Serbia against Belgrade's will would
be an unprecedented violation of the UN Charter and the Helsinki Final
Act of 1975. Ahtisaari and his political masters know that, of course,
but like to pretend that it is but a minor irritant. As Kostunica says,
"When we mention the need for legality, some of these officials
become exasperated, even agitated. They respond with various comments
to the effect that we should not be bound by 'mere' legality."
This, Kostunica adds, reminds him of the attitude of Yugoslavia's late
communist dictator, Marshal Tito. When commenting on how the country's
judges should try political cases, Tito famously advised them "not
to stick to the law like a drunk sticks to a fence." Such attitude
irritates Kostunica - a constitutional lawyer, whose nickname in Serbia
is "the Legalist" - but it does not surprise him. "The
whole negotiating process had been designed from the outset to lead
to only one outcome: Kosovo's independence," says he; and the role
of the U.N. mediator, Finland's former president Marti Ahtisaari, was
simply to choreograph that outcome.
Kostunica's account of Ahtisaari's bungled attempt to "deliver"
the Serbs indicates that the promoters of the Albanian cause had selected
the wrong person for the job. The Finn came to it as a self-declared
proponent of detaching Kosovo from Serbia and an associate of the Soros-funded
International Crisis Group, a leading pro-Albanian lobby group. Ahtisaari's
opening gambit nevertheless was to try and assure Kostunica of his good
intentions: he really wanted to assist Serbia, he said, in ridding herself
of a problem - of Kosovo, that is; and "we" should work together
on finding the formula to make it happen smoothly and painlessly, since
"we" (men of the world, big-time players in the "international
community") surely realize that Kosovo is lost to Serbia anyway.
Ahtisaari's approach may have been based on six years' worth of flawed
advice that he and others in the "international community"
had received from Western diplomats in Belgrade and from a small but
influential clique of "pro-Western" Serbian officials and
analysts.
All along their assumption had been that Serbia would cave in yet again
and agree to Kosovo's detachment, albeit with some meaningless fig leaf
("conditional independence," "international guarantees
for minority rights," etc, etc); that Russia and China would endorse
the deal at the Security Council; and that the problem would be taken
off the agenda by the end of this year with the admission of yet another
part of ex-Yugoslavia into the "international community."
Observers agree that the nature of the new entity would be clear not
so much for what Kosovo would be (an international protectorate, an
EU-NATO condominium, a future province of Greater Albania) but for what
it would no longer be: part of Serbia. As a Washingtonian insider has
noted, "The UN, the EU, the Contact Group countries, would issue
the appropriate guarantees, mainly protection for the remaining Serbs,
and everyone would know the guarantees were just new lies on top of
the old. When all the Serbs were cleared out and their holy places destroyed,
there would be expressions of regret from Washington, Brussels, London,
etc: 'Indeed, how sad. How unfortunate that these Serbs should have
made themselves so hated'."
The belief that this scenario might work was reinforced by none other
than President Boris Tadic's chief foreign policy advisor Vuk Jeremic,
one of very few Serbian enthusiasts for John Kerry's victory in November
2004. Mr. Jeremic (who happens to be a Muslim on his mother's side)
came to Washington on 18 May 2005 to testify in Congress on why Kosovo
should stay within Serbia; but in some of his off-the-record conversations
he assured his hosts that the task is really to sugar-coat the bitter
pill that Serbia will have to swallow anyway - and to ensure that the
nationalist Radical Party does not score excessive gains in the process.
When confronted with Kostunica's polite but firm refusal to operate
on those assumptions, Ahtisaari tried subterfuge, suggesting tete-a-tete,
off-the-record conversations with individual Serbian leaders. Aware
of the potential for intrigue and double-dealing contingent upon such
arrangements, Kostunica refused. All his meetings with Ahtisaari were
strictly official, on-the-record, minuted, and attended by advisors.
In the meantime the negotiations between Serbs and Albanians in Vienna,
supposedly mediated by Ahtisaari, failed because they were doomed to
fail. As Kostunica says, the Albanians were led to believe that they
would get independence anyway, and therefore had no incentive to negotiate.
The biggest internal challenge for the prime minister was to ensure
coherence of the official Serbian position, between himself, President
Tadic, and foreign minister Draskovic. That has not been easy, and may
have become impossible were it not for the remarkable unity of the country's
public opinion on this issue, manifested in the referendum on Serbia's
constitution last October that reiterated Kosovo's status as integral
part of Serbia.
Confronted with the strength of popular sentiment, Kostunica's coalition
partners and Mr. Tadic - whose Democratic Party is not in government
- realized that breaking ranks would be tantamount to political suicide.
Some of the lingering ambiguities in Belgrade's leadership remain, however,
and became apparent only days after our meeting when President Tadic
announced that he would fight to save Kosovo - but added that he does
not believe that the fight would be ultimately successful.
Kostunica disagrees with that assessment, and believes that the chances
of success - of a compromise that would give self-rule to the Albanians
but keep Kosovo within Serbia's boundaries - are better now than at
any time since 1999. The fact that Ahtisaari felt compelled to move
the deadline, long set for the end of this year, has tremendous psychological
and political significance: the surest means of denial is delay. Many
proponents of Kosovo's independence now realize that setting a firm
deadline was a grave mistake. We are witnessing a shift in momentum
that does not work to their advantage.
WHY RUSSIA AND CHINA OPPOSE KOSOVO INDEPENDENCE
The shift would not have been possible without Russia's firm and unambiguous
commitment not to support any Security Council resolution that is not
acceptable to Serbia. We can only speculate whether Moscow's stand would
be so solid had the United States promised to treat Kosovo as a valid
precedent for Transdnistria, Abkhazia, South Ossetia and Nagorno-Karabakh;
but, having rejected any such possibility out of hand, Washington has
ensured that Putin had no incentive to play ball. As for China, the
danger works in the opposite direction: had Peking supported Kosovo's
independence, it could have facilitated the creation of a precedent
that could be and therefore would be used against it vis-à-vis
Taiwan (or even Tibet) at some future date.
Option B for the proponents of Kosovo's independence was stated by
the province's "prime minister," war criminal Agim Ceku, earlier
this week: Albanians proclaim independence regardless of the UN and
invite bilateral recognition by individual countries, most crucially
the United States. The trouble is that the Europeans hate that option,
even those (notably in London and Berlin) who are supportive of independence.
Option B cannot work unless the European Union supports it as a whole,
and within the EU so many countries have announced their opposition
- Spain, Greece, Rumania, and Slovakia unequivocally - that it is not
practicable. No individual EU country will recognize a self-proclaimed
"state" in Kosovo unless it is an agreed policy consensually
approved in Brussels. Ceku et al may try it nevertheless, but Washington
is certain not to extend recognition that bypasses the Security Council
if that risks a rift with the Europeans: the U.S. needs them on board
to manage the mess in Afghanistan, and for the forthcoming disengagement
from Iraq.
In conclusion, the untold news is that Kosovo will not become independent.
The New York Times, The Washington Post and the rest of the Western
"mainstream" will go on huffing and puffing and pretending
otherwise, but there is not much they can do: Kostunica will not be
duped, Serbia will not cave in, Russia will not relent, and the Albanians
will not give up on what they had been promised by those who had never
had the right to make the promise in the first place. They threaten
renewed violence, but the threat only serves to reinforce the argument
that they should not be allowed to get away with it. As Russia's ambassador
to the U.N. told his Western colleagues last Wednesday, "you may
be willing to give in to Albanian blackmail, but we are not."
As Kostunica says, once the reality sinks in we'll finally have some
real negotiations. We do not know what the end result will be, but that
is in the nature of all genuine negotiations: their outcome is unknown.