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US leads push for Kosovo independence
By Paul Mitchell
13 June 2007
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Following his meeting with Albanian Prime Minister Sali Berisha
Sunday, President George W. Bush declared he would push for Kosovan
independence. The question is whether theres going
to be endless dialogue on a subject that weve already made
up our mind on, he said. Im worried about expectations
not being met in Kosovo. And therefore well push the process.
The issue of Kosovan independence is inflaming great power
relations, splitting Europe, threatening further instability in
the Balkans region and emboldening secessionist movements elsewhere
to press for independence.
Kosovo became the subject of a bitter public clash between
the United States and Russia in the run-up to last weeks
G8 summit. The clashone amongst manyreflected a growing
confrontation between the US, which is asserting its power in
former Soviet republics and spheres of influence, and a Russian
regime, encouraged by rising oil revenues and the crisis in Iraq,
seeking to realise its own aspirations as a regional and world
power.
Last week, US State Department official David Kramer, deputy
assistant secretary for European and Eurasian affairs, claimed,
We see Kosovo as, sui generis, a set of circumstances not
found in any other conflict, and added, We also hope
that Russia does not invoke Kosovo as a basis for intervention
in other places along its bordersfor that would be a most
dangerous game to play.
US Ambassador to the United Nations Zalmay Khalilzad also said
the US was going to push the UN Security Council to vote this
week on a new resolution granting Kosovo internationally supervised
independence from Serbia. Belgiums UN Ambassador Johan Verbeke,
who holds the rotating council presidency for June added, Well
see how the situation will evolve.... For the time being, its
a wait-and-see period; its a question of days, not weeks.
With reports that a vote on the resolution could be delayed,
Great Britain, France, Italy, Belgium and Slovakia said they supported
the resolution, whilst Russia and China are opposed to it. According
to Human Rights Watch, If the UN Security Council fails
to approve the plan, then Washington could turn to Plan B: unilateral
recognition by the United States, the United Kingdom, and then
other states.
Russian President Vladimir Putin insists that there can be
no resolution of the provinces status without the agreement
of Serbia, whose loss of sovereignty over Kosovo does not
correspond to moral or legal norms. He told Prime Minister
Vojilsav Kostunica of Serbia that he was pleased he
had thwarted the independence plan at the G8 summit.
Putin told reporters, If we are to put ethnic self-determination
ahead of national integrity, then this approach needs to be universal
in its applicationit needs to be applied in other regions
of the world, at least in other regions of Europe. Our partners
claims that Kosovo is a unique case are not convincing to us.
There are no reasons to believe that the Kosovo case is different
in any way from the situation in South Ossetia, in Abkhazia, or
in Trans-Dniester.... This will provoke separatist movements in
Europe itself, in Scotland, in Catalonia, in the Basque country,
in the Balkans, Republica Srbska.
Russia may yet be prepared to jettison its ally, Serbia, should
it be able to wring concessions from the US and the European Union.
It has been a member of the so-called Contact Group, along with
the US, Britain, France, Germany and Italy, which ruled out every
option other than secession in January 2006. Press reports also
suggest that Russia along with China then told US Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice they would probably abstain on a resolution
granting independence. More recently, reports indicate Russia
floated the idea of cooperation over Kosovo with the US in exchange
for withdrawal of its planned missile shield in talks with Rice
in Moscow in May.
Since 1999, the province of 2 million people has been administered
as a protectorate under the terms of Security Council Resolution
1244, which formally recognised Serbias sovereignty over
Kosovo while simultaneously placing it under the occupation of
foreign troops governed by an unelected UN viceroy.
The new resolution is based on the plan drawn up by UN special
envoy and ex-Finnish prime minister Martti Ahtisaari. He declared,
Independence is the only viable option for a politically
stable and economically viable Kosovo, adding, I propose
the exercise of Kosovan independence...be supervised and supported
for an initial period by international civilian and military presences.
Ahtisaari has played a central role in the Balkans. He presided
over the Western effort to force Serbia to accept the terms of
its withdrawal from the province in 1999 following the NATO bombings.
He then became 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 that has spearheaded the plans by the major
powers to formalise Kosovos status as an independent
state subservient to their interests and demands.
Formally, the new resolution is needed to terminate the mandate
of the current UN mission in Kosovo and transfer control to the
EU along the lines of the set-up in neighbouring Bosnia-Herzegovina.
An International Civilian Representative, also known as the EU
Special Representative, will be appointed by an International
Steering Group and will have the power to overturn laws passed
by the Kosovan parliament and remove public officials. A European
Security and Defence Policy Mission will monitor and advise
on all areas related to public order, and a NATO-led International
Military Presence will patrol the streets.
The Ahtisaari plan was approved by the parliament in Kosovo
but rejected by the provinces Serb minority and the Serbian
government.
Kosovo Albanian leaders said they expect independence very
soon and last week launched a competition to create a new
flag and anthem. Kosovan Prime Minister Agim Ceku declared, Our
symbols need international legitimacy and warned against
any delays. Berat Buzhala, editor of the Kosovo daily newspaper
Express, also condemned further delays, warning, It
would be unwise to expect rational behaviour from a desperate
and disillusioned society.
Earlier this year, several thousand Kosovo Albanians demonstrated
against the Ahtisaari plan, saying it fell short of full independence
and made too many concessions to the Serb minority. Two demonstrators
were killed after UN police fired rubber bullets, leading to the
resignation of the UN police chief and Kosovan interior minister.
More than two thirds of Kosovos Serbs have fled the province,
and the divided city of Kosovska Mitrovica, where the river Ibar
separates an Albanian enclave on the southern side from a Serbian
one in the north, remains extremely volatile.
Serbia already has the largest refugee population in Europe.
This is under conditions of 30 percent unemployment and where
analysts say another decade is needed to raise per capita GDP
to 1989 levels. Balint Pastor, leader of the Vojvodina Hungarians
Union, warned about a new wave of refugees into the Serbian province
of Vojvodina saying, We all know very well, with experience
from the 1990s, that those refugee colonies moved to Vojvodina
in great numbers, firstly in the northern regions, populated mostly
with Hungarians and other ethnic minorities.
Pro-Western Serbian President Boris Tadic has warned the EU
that its vision of a separate Serbia and Kosovo was implausible.
Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica warned that if the Albanian
separatists use the failure of the resolution as an excuse to
unilaterally declare the province independent, the Serbian
government would instantly declare it invalid. The sovereignty
of Serbia over Kosovo was restated in Serbias recently adopted
constitution and confirmed by the Serbian National Assembly, whose
largest party, the ultra-nationalist Serbian Radical Party, has
advocated keeping Kosovo by force if necessary.
The European powers have tried to buy off Serbian opposition
to Kosovan independence by resuming talks with Belgrade over EU
accession. These had stalled over Serbias failure to arrest
former Bosnian Serb General Ratko Mladic, who is wanted on genocide
charges by the International Criminal Tribunal for the former
Yugoslavia at The Hague. The recent arrest of the Balkans
third-most-wanted manMladics aide, Zdravko Tolimirbecame
the pretext for restarting negotiations last week.
However, independence for Kosovo is also opposed by EU member
states such as Spain, Romania, Greece and Cyprusprimarily
because of the impact it will have on nationalist and secessionist
movements in their own countries. Slovakia is also opposed to
Kosovan independence (it has a large Hungarian-speaking minority),
but Prime Minister Robert Fico made it clear that it would vote
for the resolution because If the resolution does not pass,
some countries will take one-sided steps in making Kosovo independent.
That would lead to destabilisation. We want the resolution to
protect Serbias interests and to give the international
community a high level of influence in Kosovo, he added.
The push towards a Security Council vote has led to a renewal
of calls for independence by several of the worlds 50 secessionist
movements.
The leaders of Abkhazia, Sergei Bagapsh, and South Ossetia,
Eduard Kokoity, which broke away from Georgia in the early 1990s
after wars with Tbilisi, restated their claims for international
recognition should Kosovo secede. To date, Russia has avoided
recognising their independence or considering their appeals to
join Russia. Kokoity said, We are watching the situation,
and we believe Moscow will not remain indifferent to what is happening
and what precedents are being created when major deals are violated
by the West.
A parliamentary spokesman for the Basque Nationalist Party,
the main party in the Basque region of northern Spain, sees the
Kosovo plan as a very positive development.... We think
this could be a very good precedent, and someday we could aspire
to something similar.
After eight years as a UN protectorate, social misery, corruption,
lawlessness and ethnic division dominate everyday life in Kosovo
and affect ordinary working class people of Serbian and Albanian
descent alike. The province is, and will continue to be, subject
to the diktats of international financial institutions and foreign
powers, the most aggressive of which, the US, has built its largest
overseas military bases since Vietnam in Camp Bondsteel.
All of the political parties are implicated in corruption and
the black market, which have flourished since the civil war. The
mafia networks that smuggled arms to the Kosovo Liberation Army
in the late 1990s have become a conduit for trade in contraband
goods, narcotics and trafficking in women and children.
The bombing of Serbia in 1999, just as with the war that was
to follow against Iraq, was never based on humanitarian
or democratic concerns but was rooted in the drive
of the US corporate elite to dominate world markets, control raw
materials and exploit new sources of cheap labour.
The Clinton administration was able to enlist liberals and
radicals in building a constituency for a moral use
of military force. But the human rights war launched
by Clinton and the war against terrorism initiated
by the Bush administration four years later have the same underlying
policy of exploiting US military power to assert the dominance
of American imperialism in geo-politically strategic regions of
the globe.
See Also:
After G8 summit: Conflict between US
and Russia intensifies
[12 June 2007]
Seven years after
US-led war on Yugoslavia Deadlocks continue at Kosovo final status
talks: Part Two
[1 April 2006]
Seven years after
US-led war on Yugoslavia Deadlocks continue at Kosovo final status
talks: Part One
[31 March 2006]
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