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Kosovo's sovereignity establishing new world order

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  • Kosovo's sovereignity establishing new world order

    What the Papers Say (Russia)
    February 22, 2008 Friday


    KOSOVO'S SOVEREIGNTY ESTABLISHES NEW WORLD ORDER

    by Ruslan Gorevoi


    KOVOSO: TIME TO START THINKING OF WAYS AND MEANS TO AVOID WORLD WAR
    THREE; Kosovo precedent may rearrange European borders and actually
    launch World War Three.

    Emergency meeting of the UN Security Council formulated its attitude
    to self-proclaimed sovereignty of Kosovo. Five members of the UN
    Security Council out of fifteen backed independence and sovereignty
    of the Serbian province on the basis of the so called Ahtisaari's
    Plan. Russian Ambassador Vasily Churkin questioned the right of the
    United States and European Union to encourage Kosovo to proclaim
    sovereignty but his pleas were ignored.

    In theory, five members of the UN Security Council are prepared to
    acknowledge Kosovo as a sovereign state. Special emphasis is made on
    the fact that the Kosovo case is unique and therefore sets no
    precedents for others like North Cyprus, Trans-Dniester region,
    Abkhazia, South Ossetia, or Nagorno-Karabakh. Some political
    scientists suspect that encouragement of Kosovo by the Western
    community might end in another war in the Balkans.

    Supporters of sovereignty apparently refused to believe until the
    last moment that pro-Western Serbian President Boris Tadic would go
    to the end. Tadic, supported and prodded by Moscow, did disappoint
    them. Official Belgrade waived independence of the territory even
    before it was declared. Tadic and his Premier Vojislav Kostunica said
    in no uncertain terms that sovereignty of Kosovo would never be
    recognized.

    Emergency meeting of the parliament echoed their firm "no" to
    separatism. The war seems inevitable, it is just a matter of time
    now. How soon meanwhile shall we expect an analogous revision of
    European borders elsewhere? Forget the Commonwealth where Moldova's
    chances to retain the Trans-Dniester region are as slim as Georgia's
    to keep Abkhazia and South Ossetia. (At least because of these
    countries' insolvency.) The Kosovo precedent may backfire in Great
    Britain where separatist Scotland has been biding its time, not to
    mention Ulster that is probably ready to share its fighting
    experience and weapons with the Scots.

    Forget Basques in Spain and the Cyprus divided between Greece and
    Turkey! There is also Kurdistan that actually exists even though the
    international community refuses to acknowledge the fact. Kurdistan is
    located on the territories of Iran, Iraq, Syria, and Turkey. Ankara
    has been doing what it can to postpone declaration of Larger
    Kurdistan nearby, but now... The Kurds have already stated in no
    uncertain terms that they take recognition of Kosovo sovereignty as a
    signal.

    Shortly speaking, the international community had better start
    thinking about ways and means of to avoid WWIII.

    Source: Versiya, No 6, February, 2008, p. 4
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