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Seven years after US-led war on Yugoslavia
Deadlocks continue at Kosovo final status talks
Part One
By Tony Robson
31 March 2006
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This is the first of a two-part article on Kosovo. The conclusion
will be published on April 1.
Seven years after US-led NATO forces commenced Operation Allied
Forcea 78-day military assault on Serbia in 1999UN-initiated
talks aimed at resolving the final status of Kosovo remain deadlocked.
The issues at stake in the talks demonstrate that, contrary to
the claims of the Clinton administration at the time, the war
was never about protecting the human rights of the
majority Albanian population from ethnic cleansing in the then
Serbian province.
The diplomatic conflicts being fought out over Kosovo, between
the local ethnic leadersand behind them, the major foreign
powersare about the carving up of the province, like the
rest of the former Yugoslavia, in the economic and strategic interests
of the US and its European allies.
The bombing of Serbia in 1999, just as the war that was to
follow against Iraq, was rooted in the drive of the US corporate
elite to dominate world markets, control raw materials and exploit
new sources of cheap labour. In Yugoslavia, this meant breaking
up the federation into ethno-nationalist states and crushing Serbia,
which opposed the carve-up.
The initial round of the current talks, involving delegations
from the Kosovan and Serbian governments on February 20-21, resolved
nothing. As the second one-day round began on March 17 at Viennas
Auersperg Palace, thousands of Serbs protested on the anniversary
of anti-Serb pogroms in 2004, when mobs of ethnic Albanians were
mobilised to attack them and their property.
The second round opened with denunciations by Serb officials
of the inclusion in the Kosovo delegation of former Kosovo Liberation
Army (KLA) commander Hashim Thaci, who was convicted of terrorism
in 1997 and is under investigation in Belgrade for war crimes.
These protests fell on deaf ears. The dark past will be
buried tomorrow with Milosevic in Serbia, Thaci told reporters,
provocatively referring to the burial the next day of former Yugoslav
president Slobodan Milosevic, who died in his prison cell four
years into his war crimes trial at The Hague.
The talks broke down after the Kosovo representatives rejected
Serb proposals for the creation of local government entities for
Serb minority groups within Kosovo, with direct links to the Serbian
government. Having ghettoised Serbs and subjected them to sporadic
violence since the end of the war, when half the Serb population
fled, the Kosovo delegation denounced the proposal as ethnic
partition.
The two sides agreed to meet again on April 3, but Albert Rohan,
the UN mediator chairing the session, said there were profound
differences over the details of the proposals, as well as
over whether Kosovo should become independent.
Since 1999, the province of two million people has been administered
as a protectorate under the terms of UN Security Council Resolution
1244, which formally recognised Serbias sovereignty over
Kosovo while simultaneously placing it under the occupation of
some 40,000 foreign troops (K-FOR) governed by an unelected UN
viceroy.
The US by-passed the UN Security Council to launch the military
intervention in 1999, by using its preeminent position within
NATO. The UN was only brought in after the event to provide a
rubber stamp for this unprovoked invasion. Resolution 1244 then
presented the occupation as a peace keeping effort in a war that
was ostensibly waged for humanitarian reasons to prevent
genocide against Kosovo Albanians.
Over the intervening seven years, the UN and NATOwhose
presence was justified on the grounds of maintaining a multi-ethnic
society in Kosovohave presided over an unprecedented degree
of ethnic cleansing in which the KLA is heavily implicated.
According to the Transnational Foundation for Peace and Future
Research (TFF): There has been virtually no return of the
200,000 Serbs and tens of thousands of other non-Albanians who
felt threatened by the Albanian nationalists and terrorists in
1999-2000. Proportionately this is the largest ethnic cleansing
in ex-Yugoslavia. The TFF is a Swedish-based thinktank,
which acted as former advisor to the Belgrade government and the
Kosovo Albanian leadership of Ibrahim Rugova in an attempt to
find a negotiated settlement.
Citing figures compiled by the United Nations Mission in Kosovo
(UNMIK), a report was presented to the European Parliament on
March 6 by Dusan Batakovic, a member of the Serbian negotiating
team on Kosovo. He explained that 60 percent of the Serb population
had been expelled since Kosovo became a UN protectorate, and those
who remained were restricted to enclaves behind K-FOR barricades.
There are practically no Serbs living in big cities such
as Pristina, Pizren, Urosevac or Pec. In Pristina, there were
about 40,000 Serbs prior to 1999, while today there are less than
a hundred of them living in a single building, under appalling
conditions, constantly guarded by KFOR, the report stated.
The report cited other UN figures showing that more than 125
churches and monasteries and other significant or cultural heritage
buildings have been destroyed. Approximately 40,000 flats and
houses are registered as illegally occupied.
Other non-Albanian minorities have fared worse. Between 60
and 70 percent of Roma people have been expelled, while only 7,000
of the 17,000 Gorani (Muslim Slav Serbian-speaking) minority remain,
according to figures compiled by the UN and the Organisation for
Security and Cooperation in Europe.
The Western media has not contested these figures; it simply
neglects to report them. To do so would undercut the main thrust
of the propaganda campaign about the butcher Milosevic,
which blames the Serbian side for all the ethnic conflicts in
the Balkans. This bad man or bad Serbia
version of history has been evidenced in the majority of articles
that have appeared on the death of Milosevic.
It has also been necessary to maintain the myth of a just
war in the Balkans as the imperialist nature of US-led interventions
has become more obvious in the occupations of Afghanistan and
Iraq, and as the US and its allies ratchet up their claims and
threats against Iran.
Major powers push secession
The UN Security Council authorised the current talks despite
the violation of the pre-conditions it originally set down in
December 2003. Referred to as the Standards before Status
requirements, they set benchmarks for the return of refugees,
freedom of movement and preservation of cultural heritage sites
that had to be met before the issue of final status could be settled.
Following the riots aimed against Serbs in March 2004, however,
Standards before Status was unceremoniously ditched.
Kai Eide, the UN envoy who was dispatched to investigate the disturbances,
reported: Cases of inter-ethnic crimes and violence often
go unreported, inhibiting ethnic minorities freedom of movement
and encouraging impunity among Kosovos 90 percent Albanian
majority.
Eides conclusion was not to call for the standards to
be enforced but to write them off as unworkable. UN secretary
general Kofi Annan approved this decision and endorsed the status
talks last October.
To describe the talks as negotiations is a misnomer.
The degree of influence that the US and EU exert over the protectorate
means that the de facto secession of Kosovo from Serbia has already
occurred.
The chief UN envoy for the talks, ex-Finnish prime minister
Martti Ahtisaari, is hardly an impartial figure. He played a central
role in forcing Serbia to accept the terms of its withdrawal from
the province in 1999 following the NATO bombings. He is chairman
emeritus of the International Crisis Group (ICG), a Brussels-based
foreign policy organisation funded by big business and staffed
by former ministers and high-ranking military officers. Among
its members is Wesley Clark, NATO commander in chief of Operation
Allied Force.
James Lyon, the ICGs Belgrade representative, is on record
as saying: I think Kosovo is lost to Serbia. Its been
lost for some time. Its been lost since 1999. Alexander
Anderson, head of the ICG office in Kosovo, said: Within
the last month, weve had US, UK and European Union envoys
telling Belgrade that the likely, favored result of this process
is going to be Kosovos independence and that it needs to
concentrate on negotiating the best deal it can for Kosovos
Serbs.
While the UN Security Council must ratify any final settlement,
the agenda is being set by the so-called Contact Group of the
US, Britain, France, Germany, Italy and Russia, all of which have
extensive economic, political and military interests in the Balkans.
In a January 31 statement, the group ruled out every option
other than secession: The Contact Group Guiding Principles
of November 2005 make clear that there should be: no return of
Kosovo to the pre-1999 situation, no partition of Kosovo, and
no union of Kosovo with any or part of another country.
This month, British Foreign Secretary Jack Straw, reflecting the
British alliance with the US, said Kosovos independence
was almost inevitable, although his French counterpart,
Philippe Douste-Blazy, stuck closer to the EUs official
line by saying that the negotiations should not be prejudged.
While secession is largely presented as a foregone conclusion,
it has been made abundantly clear that withdrawal of KFOR troops
is beyond consideration. Ahtisaari told Reuters: Its
important that NATO retains its security role, no matter what
the solution. The numbers of troops has been reduced from
40,000 to approximately 17,000, but the US has established two
permanent army bases in the southeast of the province, near the
border with Macedonia.
Significantly, NATO conducted a show of strength to coincide
with the second round of the status talks. Operation Determined
Effort 2006 involved 600 extra German troops. Its purpose
was to demonstrate that the military presence, although lessened,
could be bolstered at short notice if the talks were not concluded
satisfactorily.
To be continued
See Also:
After the Slaughter:
Political Lessons of the Balkan War
[14 June 1999]
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