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Fixing Kosovo

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  • Fixing Kosovo

    FIXING KOSOVO
    By Helle Dale

    Washington Times, DC
    Jan 16 2007

    Memory fades quickly. Just shy of 10 years ago, the images of the
    Balkans filled the front pages and television screens with the horrors
    of ethnic cleansing. Then those images became dimmer in the public
    consciousness, until the conflict became frozen in place. No resolution
    of unresolved problems has been in sight during the intervening 10
    years, and, as a result we may be headed for yet another crisis in
    the next weeks and months. Indeed, the conflict may be about to be
    unfrozen and back in the news again.

    To recap briefly (if this is possible in the context of the tangled
    history of the Balkans) in the late 1990s, Serbia attempted to
    drive out the ethnic Albanians from the Kosovo province of Serbia
    by the hundreds of thousands in the hope of preventing the province
    from declaring independence. Albanians, who are Muslims, make up 90
    percent of Kosovo's population of 2 million. This followed a decade
    of conflict, during which Serbia, the successor state to the former
    Yugoslavia had fought against the independence of former Yugoslav
    republics Croatia, Bosnia-Herzegovina and Slovenia.

    A bombing campaign in 1999 by the United States and its NATO allies
    finally intervened against the mass expulsions and murders committed by
    Serbian forces in Kosovo. The bombing campaign had its hits and misses
    - we hit an empty train and the Chinese embassy, among other things -
    but it did put a stop to the atrocities on the ground. The Serbian
    leader who had presided over the wars against Serbia's neighbors,
    Slobodan Milosevic, was toppled and placed on war crimes trial in
    The Hague, where he subsequently died in prison of a heart attack.

    On the ground in Kosovo, nothing much has happened for the past
    10 years. The hostility between the majority Albanian and minority
    Serbian populations remains intense. American and European troops
    are in Kosovo to keep the uneasy peace between them so far with no
    end in sight for their deployment.

    The Albanian threat has been in the air for some time that if the
    international community cannot negotiate a final-status agreement
    for Kosovo, it will declare independence unilaterally. The province
    has a very young population (50 percent are under 18), which is
    growing restive. Sky-high unemployment ensures that there is very
    little productively to keep their minds off the seething anger over
    the past. Chances are that later this month, the Kosovo leadership
    will take the fateful step of declaring secession from Serbia. The
    trigger will be presidential elections in Serbia on Jan. 20 and Feb. 3,
    which may move in a more nationalistic direction.

    This will present major headaches for the international community,
    understandable and justifiable though it is. And it is equally hard to
    see how independence will actually improve the lives of the Kosovars,
    who occupy one of the most economically depressed parts of Europe,
    beyond offering psychological satisfaction. Will it rebuild Kosovo's
    still bombed-out ruined towns? Will it produce economic engagement
    and foreign investment? Will it create jobs or build schools? Will
    it root out rampant corruption at official levels? All of these are
    desperately needed before Kosovo can be said to have a future as a
    functioning state.

    The international community remains stumped. Serbia, which adamantly
    opposes Kosovo independence, has few supporters, mainly Greece and
    Russia, both of which belong to the Orthodox Church like Serbia.

    Within the European Union, Greece has been the odd man out against
    accepting Kosovo independence.

    Russia, meanwhile, has been the holdout in the U.N. Security Council,
    where it threatens to oppose recognition of Kosovo, which is favored
    by the United States. Russia for its part has seized the opportunity
    to muddy the waters by threatening to tie the issue to the ethnic
    conflicts in the former Soviet Union, such as Transdnester in
    Moldova, South Ossettia and Abkhazia in Georgia and Nagorno Karabakh
    in Azerbaijan.

    The Russian argument is that if Kosovo deserves self-determination,
    so do these other minority areas. Funnily enough, Russia has failed
    to mention any impact a Kosovo precedent would have on Chechnya,
    which tried to secede from Russia, only to endure a brutal military
    Russian campaign (designed by President Putin none other) to beat
    any such idea out of the Chechens.

    Is there a solution? The most logical is for the entire Balkan area
    eventually to become part of NATO and the European Union, which
    will offer hope of economic development and integration into its
    structures. How we get to there from here, however, is a difficult
    road to envision.
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