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nivbri
Wed, 10th May 2006, 14:54:31
Botched Kosovo intervention dims hopes for peace
By Christopher Deliso
Originally published May 10, 2006
SKOPJE, MACEDONIA // Averting a humanitarian catastrophe was NATO's stated justification for bombing Serbia and its Kosovo province in 1999. But initial successes quickly succumbed to the reverse ethnic cleansing of more than 200,000 Serbs and other minorities by Albanian militants.
Now, despite seven years of U.N. policing and donor largess, Kosovo's remaining minorities still live in fear, and the economy and infrastructure remain in shambles.





Behind their façade of optimism, Western leaders negotiating Kosovo's future status are panicking. Realizing that Albanians will violently contest any continued affiliation with Serbia, they believe independence alone can ensure peace. Yet Kosovo is a classic quagmire, one with ominous repercussions for peace.

Deciding Kosovo's rightful ownership is difficult. It pits two peoples, and two hallowed principles, against each another. Albanians - 90 percent of the population - invoke self-determination to justify independence. Yet Serbian cultural legacy goes back seven centuries in Kosovo, which was only independent when Adolf Hitler's Albanian allies briefly enjoyed their Nazi puppet state. Further, U.N. Resolution 1244 in 1999 affirmed Yugoslav sovereignty.

Kosovo's independence will be conditional, promises the West, on its treatment of minorities. Yet nothing can realistically enforce compliance. If the Albanians continue intimidating Serbs, penalizing them by delaying NATO or European Union accession will have little impact; an advanced Balkan candidate, Macedonia, won't enter NATO before 2008, or the EU before 2013.

A well-informed international official predicts remaining Serbs will flee within 10 years of Kosovo's independence. So by the time Kosovo gets anywhere near NATO or EU accession, the minority issue will be moot.

Albanian attacks against Serbs still occur amid an atmosphere of a siege mentality. If the last Serbs are expelled, Belgrade's remaining argument for possession will vanish. Its first argument, for cultural heritage, no longer applies because since 1999, over 100 Orthodox churches, some 700 years old, have been damaged or destroyed by Albanians - thus eliminating Kosovo's most lucrative tourist attractions.

Further, the United Nations dismayed Kosovo's minorities by making a man who once terrorized them prime minister. Albanian war veteran Agim Ceku, whose name was removed from Interpol's wanted list after fierce U.N. lobbying, is accused of widespread atrocities while serving in Croatia's military and while leading the Kosovo Liberation Army in 1999.

Mr. Ceku's close associate and another veteran, Ramush Haradinaj, was indicted by the Hague Tribunal. Nevertheless, Mr. Haradinaj is now free to participate in Kosovo politics though he's technically an indicted war criminal awaiting trial.

Such privileged treatment reveals the fatal flaw of the U.N. mission. Canadian police Detective Stu Kellock, who headed the U.N. Regional Serious Crimes Unit in 2000 and 2001, says investigations implicating Albanian politicians or their associates were routinely blocked. The orders came directly from Washington, London and Brussels. Mr. Ceku and Mr. Haradinaj control Kosovo's militant factions and are considered heroes by Albanians. An anxious United Nations continually has sought to stay on their good side through appeasement.

Independence is a mere panacea for Kosovo's Albanians. They will remain poor. Erstwhile Albanian refugee workers - Kosovo's real breadwinners - will be sent home by European governments sensitive to popular anti-immigrant sentiments. Minorities will flee as nationalist militants remobilize to purge Serbs and annex Albanian-inhabited areas of Macedonia and Montenegro.

Bosnian Serbs, as well as Bosnian Muslims in Serbia's Sandjak region, also could demand self-determination.

Alarmingly, the West has no Plan B for ensuring Balkan peace. Plan A - open borders through eventual NATO and EU membership for all - is far off and ignores the anti-expansion sentiment among EU electorates. Membership may never arrive. The Balkans might well drift aimlessly.

In early 1999, Kosovo was a brutal but contained local conflict, relegated to villages. Botched Western intervention has made it a potential precedent for multiregional warfare.

Balozi
Wed, 10th May 2006, 15:10:57
yes. more unbased speculations that will never happen

but i know very well this christopher deliso person. he writes in all sorts of anti-albanian sites. i doubt he has ever written anything pro-albanian. so i couldn't really expect him to be objective anyway

nivbri
Wed, 10th May 2006, 15:22:13
yes. more unbased speculations that will never happen

but i know very well this christopher deliso person. he writes in all sorts of anti-albanian sites. i doubt he has ever written anything pro-albanian. so i couldn't really expect him to be objective anyway

Where do your ideas that Serbs are safe in Kosovo come from?

KASTRIOTI
Wed, 10th May 2006, 15:50:39
Where do your ideas that Serbs are safe in Kosovo come from?
Oh be realistic will you? And what do you expect after the war in Kosovo? I mean I am surprised that, fortunately, there have been so few Serbs killed in Kosovo after what they did during the war.

Did you expect Albanians to give flowers to the Serbs?!

nivbri
Wed, 10th May 2006, 17:21:45
Oh be realistic will you? And what do you expect after the war in Kosovo? I mean I am surprised that, fortunately, there have been so few Serbs killed in Kosovo after what they did during the war.

Did you expect Albanians to give flowers to the Serbs?!

This is clearly the kind of thinking that leads to me to belive the Serbs are in for a slaughter once the UN decides on independence. There'd be no going back so Albanians will just slaughter the Serbs.

KASTRIOTI
Wed, 10th May 2006, 17:38:23
This is clearly the kind of thinking that leads to me to belive the Serbs are in for a slaughter once the UN decides on independence. There'd be no going back so Albanians will just slaughter the Serbs.
Nivbri, you never cease to amuse me with your way of thinking. Can you get it through Your head that there will be NO slaughtering for the following reasons:

- Albanians are not like the Serb army which found killing as the only way to solve problems.

- Albanians of the newly independent Kosovo will be MONITORED by the international community and any reprisal against the Serbs could cost it its rightful place in the community.

Get it?!

nivbri
Wed, 10th May 2006, 17:56:20
Nivbri, you never cease to amuse me with your way of thinking. Can you get it through Your head that there will be NO slaughtering for the following reasons:

- Albanians are not like the Serb army which found killing as the only way to solve problems.

- Albanians of the newly independent Kosovo will be MONITORED by the international community and any reprisal against the Serbs could cost it its rightful place in the community.

Get it?!

Kosovo was being monintored in 2004 and guess what- rampaging albanians destroyed lots of Serb property and Serbs were killed.


Ceku believes the only way to deal with problems is war. KLA ring a bell?

KASTRIOTI
Wed, 10th May 2006, 18:03:41
......Ceku believes the only way to deal with problems is war. KLA ring a bell?
Yep it rings a lot of bells. Not as much as "ethnic cleansing" does to you I suppose, right?

nivbri
Wed, 10th May 2006, 18:05:31
Yep it rings a lot of bells. Not as much as "ethnic cleansing" does to you I suppose, right?

No, not all all. That is what Ceku has been doing to Serbs since June of 99.

KASTRIOTI
Wed, 10th May 2006, 18:11:08
No, not all all. That is what Ceku has been doing to Serbs since June of 99.
Why am I not surprised with your answer? You are ok with the "ethnic cleansing" the Serb army did in Kosovo under Milosevic? ok...... How about me telling you that Serbs need to understand that killing people is wrong?

Ceku was an Albanian soldier who fought against Serb occupation. Do you want me to draw you a picture? Just like Croatians fought against the Serbs, just like Boshniaks fought against the Serbs!

Serbia calls Ceku a criminal, but then again Serbia has not apologised for the thousands killed by its own soldiers in Kosovo. Serbia calls Ceku a criminal, but a percentage of the Serbian population still see Mladic as a hero and also Milosevic. So I guess the Serbs are in no good position to make such judgements.... maybe they ought to leave it to somebody else... like the international community for a change?!

nivbri
Wed, 10th May 2006, 18:15:13
Why am I not surprised with your answer? You are ok with the "ethnic cleansing" the Serb army did in Kosovo under Milosevic? ok...... How about me telling you that Serbs need to understand that killing people is wrong?

Ceku was an Albanian soldier who fought against Serb occupation. Do you want me to draw you a picture? Just like Croatians fought against the Serbs, just like Boshniaks fought against the Serbs!

Serbia calls Ceku a criminal, but then again Serbia has not apologised for the thousands killed by its own soldiers in Kosovo. Serbia calls Ceku a criminal, but a percentage of the Serbian population still see Mladic as a hero and also Milosevic. So I guess the Serbs are in no good position to make such judgements.... maybe they ought to leave it to somebody else... like the international community for a change?!

There was no Serb occupation. Kosovo in 1999 was a part of Serbia. UN resolution 1244 calls it that. Serbs were defending their land from KLA terrorism.

KASTRIOTI
Wed, 10th May 2006, 18:20:50
There was no Serb occupation. Kosovo in 1999 was a part of Serbia. UN resolution 1244 calls it that. Serbs were defending their land from KLA terrorism.
Need I say anything?! I solemnly rest my case! O.o

nivbri
Wed, 10th May 2006, 18:55:47
Need I say anything?! I solemnly rest my case! O.o


What proof do you have that Kosovo was not a part of Serbia in 1999 and in fact an independent country occupied by Serb troops?

Balozi
Wed, 10th May 2006, 19:44:14
look nivbri no serbs will be slaughtered i mean lets be serious here we are in year 2006 and in a part of the world that likes to call itself somewhat civilised

and lets not get into who occupied whom and such historical matters cause it is off topic

but where were you when albanians were being killed by serbs before you get bombed? did you go in forums to complain about it?

nivbri
Wed, 10th May 2006, 20:09:55
How is Ceku civilised?

No because first I was not online the way I am now and second the fight against the KLA was perfectly justifiable.

Balozi
Thu, 11th May 2006, 14:49:26
ok then. i rest my case :P