March 31, 2007

A slippery slope for Kosovo

A slippery slope for Kosovo











March 31, 2007















Re "Kosovo needs independence, mediator says," March 27



Martti
Ahtisaari, the Kosovo mediator, needs a solid lesson in international
law. The same applies to the U.S. government, which according to the
article "strongly backs independence for Kosovo." The United Nations
would be trampling on its own charter by ripping the province of Kosovo
from Serbia and handing it to those who constitute the majority, i.e.
Kosovo's Albanians.




It should also be noted that 40% of the Albanians who came to Kosovo
over the decades were illegal aliens from Albania who entered Serbia
through its porous border with Albania. Sounds somewhat similar to the
dilemma the United States has with illegal aliens who enter California
from Mexico. So, following the logic of Ahtisaari and the U.S., could
there not be some such future scenario vis-a-vis California?




The U.S. and its NATO allies are recklessly lobbying for the emergence
of an intolerant, ethnically cleansed Islamic state, and in so doing
are ignoring all recognized global constitutional norms and
international law. They began on this slippery slope in 1999 with their
illegal invasion of a sovereign Yugoslavia, which had posed no threat
to the U.S. or to any of the other NATO countries.



LIZ MILANOVICH



Edmonton, Canada

http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/letters/la-le-saturday31.4mar31,0,1170769.story





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Moscow Mulls Veto

You are at: www.ruvr.ru / Details / Politics

RUSSIAN SUGGESTION GETS WIDE SUPPORT AT THE UN

Chairman
of the UN Security Council, Dumisani Kumalo has said that the Russian
suggestion to send international contact group to Pristina and Belgrade
on a fact finding mission before a decision on the future of Kosovo,
has received wide support among Security Council members.


He said that such a trip was necessary to enable members of the
Council, especially new one not well informed about the Kosovo issue,
find out the true position. Mr. Kumalo also backed the Russian proposal
for a review of the implementation of earlier resolutions and as well
as current security situation in the province. The present predominant
Albanian population in Kosovo is demanding independence.


Last Monday Council members were presented with the plan by U/N
special envoy, Marti Ahtisaari on the settlement of the Kosovo future
status issue The plan proposes granting Kosovo practically independence
status under international control but Serbia is vehemently opposed to
such a plan and Russia has said that solving the Kosovo problem is not
possible without resolving the differences between Pristina and
Belgrade. The country is therefore most likely to use its veto power
should the Security Council endorse the Ahtisaari plan. Speaking on the
issue, chairman of the State Duma international affairs committee,
Constantine Kosachev said:


“We view it as important that both Pristina and Belgrade jointly
accept the plan on the future of Kosovo” “For now there are no human
rights in the province; Serbs forced into exile in the 90s still cannot
go back to their homes; the undue haste in forcing the settlement of
Kosovo future is unacceptable and counterproductive”.


Russian officials have said that since Marti Ahtisaari is to end his
mission soon with the writing of his final report, a new U.N special
envoy should be appointed to continue diplomatic efforts to solve the
Kosovo logjam. A hasty and ill-thought decision on the Kosovo issue
could set a dangerous international precedent capable of making
supporters of such haste to rue the day it was made.





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March 29, 2007

A Russian puzzle


A Russian puzzle


What, exactly, is Putin's game in Kosovo?









March 29, 2007 8:30 PM | Printable version

The stand-off, in the opinion of a British general, harboured the
risk of starting a third world war between Russia and the west. It was
the summer of 1999 and General Mike Jackson, now retired, was leading a Nato ground force into Kosovo after 11 weeks of Nato bombing had driven the Serbs out.



Serbia's main ally, Russia, was fuming impotently on the sidelines.
Boris Yeltsin and his top military men had been totally against Nato's
first war, refused to supply a UN mandate for the campaign, and then
had to stand by as Tony Blair and Bill Clinton made a case for the use
of force as humanitarianism.



When the war ended and the Nato troops moved to secure Kosovo,
Yeltsin and his chief of staff pulled a fast one. Secretly, Russian
peacekeepers in nearby Bosnia were ordered to make a dash to grab
control of Kosovo's main airport at Pristina. It worked. The Russians
got there before Gen Jackson.



Wesley Clark, the American officer commanding the war, went
ballistic and ordered Jackson and his ground troops to recapture the
airport.



No way, answered the Brit insubordinately. "I'm not going to start the third world war for you."



That was then - the tail-end of the Yeltsin decade. Russia was weak
and demoralised. Eight years later, Vladimir Putin's main claim to his
position is that he has stopped the rot. Russia, he boasts, is back as
a big international player. It will no longer be ignored or pushed
around. And on Kosovo, it's payback time for the humiliation of 1999.



Nursing grudges and making mischief, Russia now stands as the main
obstacle to a peaceful settlement of the Kosovo conflict - redrawing
the borders in the southern Balkans and creating a new, independent
state of Kosovo inhabited mainly by ethnic Albanians but including a
sizeable frightened and hostile Serbian minority afforded extensive
powers of self-government and international protection.



No one knows what Russia wants, what its real aim is, or where it
identifies its genuine interests. To drive a hard bargain? Get a
pay-off somewhere else? It is threatening to veto a new UN security
council resolution needed to mandate the EU's most ambitious ever
mission as the international overseer of Kosovo independence and the
implementation of the independence blueprint drafted by the Finnish
fixer and UN envoy, Martti Ahtisaari.



Ahtisaari laid
his 58-page settlement before the security council in New York this
week and added three pages of recommendations in which he forcefully
used the i-word for the first time. Independence was the only viable
option for security, stability, and lasting peace.



No surprise there. In the crisis of 1999, it was the same Ahtisaari
who went to Belgrade on an emergency mission and persuaded Serbia's
Slobodan Milosevic to back down, creating the scenario for the
insertion of Gen Jackson's troops in Kosovo. Ever since, Ahtisaari has
privately told diplomats engaged in the Balkans, the west has blundered
by failing to move more promptly towards Kosovo independence.



The issue should have been tackled seven years ago, he believes,
rather than being left to fester during years of uninspired UN
administration. Now, much depends on the Russians.



The British, and then the Americans, chair the security council in
April and May and everyone involved thinks the Russians will stonewall
to keep London or Washington from taking the credit for any
breakthrough.



In June, the security council chair falls to Belgium, while Angela
Merkel, the German chancellor, leads two big international summits - of
the EU and of the G-8. Mrs Merkel is proving a very able international
fixer and the hope is she will charm and deliver Putin on Kosovo at the
G-8, while the EU summit rubberstamps the dispatch of some 2,000 EU
officials, policemen, judges, and administrators to Kosovo to act as
midwife to a new country.



This is the optimistic scenario. There's a reasonable prospect of it prevailing.



The alternative is grim. A Russian veto in New York will unleash
diplomatic chaos internationally and violence on the ground in the
Balkans.



The 27 countries of the EU tentatively support the Ahtisaari plan if
it can be implemented. EU and Nato leaders are daily calling for
European "unity", in the full knowledge of how fragile that consensus
is.



Greece, Cyprus, Romania, Slovakia, Spain, Hungary, Bulgaria all have
strong reservations about the peace and independence plan. If there is
a consensus in New York and a security council resolution, the European
unity will hold. If not, the European position will buckle, with many
of the Europeans effectively supporting the Russian position and that
of Serbia, which will never volunteer to give up Kosovo.



The Russians are adroit at sowing and exploiting European division,
whether on energy and gas pipelines or missile defence in Europe.
Kosovo offers a further opportunity.



Even if the Europeans support the Ahtisaari plan, many of them do
not support its imposition against the will of Serbia - the only way it
can be implemented.



If the Russians block and the Europeans crumble, the Kosovo
Albanians, fed up waiting, are likely to declare independence anyway
and invite international recognition. The Americans may recognise, the
British follow suit, a few more Europeans, too. EU fissures will be
laid bare. The Serbs may seize on the confusion to partition Kosovo,
grabbing the northern sliver of the province that they already control.
Ethnic cleansing and violence will be inevitable, accompanied by
international disarray.



It is not clear at all what Russia's interest may be in triggering
such mayhem, nor is it clear what interest Russia has in Kosovo at all.
It won't be the third world war, but there is a lot at stake.

http://commentisfree.guardian.co.uk/ian_traynor/2007/03/ian_traynor_the_standoff_thoug.html





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Forfeiting Nothing

 Forfeiting Nothing



Main Argument for Kosovo's Secession Bogus

by Nebojsa Malic



Despite fierce opposition from Belgrade and Moscow, the UN-designated "mediator" for Kosovo, former Finnish president and ICG board member Martti Ahtisaari submitted his proposal this week to the UN Security Council. Ahtisaari told Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon that "supervised independence" was the "only viable option" for the Serbian province, occupied since June 1999 by NATO and administered by a UN mission and a "provisional" ethnic Albanian government.



Washington has declared its ironclad support to Ahtisaari's proposal, rejecting out of hand any further negotiations. According to NATO Secretary-General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, the Alliance also fully supports Ahtisaari.



After a 78-day illegal war, followed by almost eight years of violent occupation, the Empire is finally making a move to separate Kosovo from Serbia. The decision is in line with its systematic violations of international law, NATO and UN charter, the U.S. Constitution, and even the very UN resolution that created a precarious legal cover for the occupation.



What is even worse, the reasoning invoked to justify this criminal act is cynical and duplicitous, bearing no relationship to truth or logic.



Simply Illegal



Jurist, a well-known publication of the University of Pittsburgh School of Law, carried a guest column this week, in which Prof. Anthony D'Amato of Northwestern University claimed an independent Kosovo would be a "humanitarian disaster" for the remaining Serbs. D'Amato described Kosovo as having a "Serb-hating majority," and wrote that "a Kosovar-dominated (sic) independent government will lose no time in confiscating the property and rights of the Serbian minority. Some 200,000 Serbs in Kosovo could lose everything they own and maybe their lives."



Of particular interest is this observation, concerning the legality of Ahtisaari's proposal:



"If we remove the diplomatic euphemisms from Mr. Ahtisaari's report, we find that he is essentially arguing that UNMIK has conquered Kosovo! Territory-grabbing by conquest has been illegal since the Kellogg-Briand Pact of 1928, yet somehow the United Nations has done it, according to Mr. Ahtisaari. However, there is nothing in the UN Charter that gives the UN the power to oust an existing government by force, replace it with a United Nations mission created especially for the occasion, and then dissolve the mission and hand sovereignty over the territory to someone else. Acquisition of territory by conquest is simply illegal, whether a state does it or an international organization does it."



Sounds clear enough.



However, D'Amato continues the article by claiming that partition would be a preferred solution, and explains why; to establish at least some legitimacy for the Albanian (or "Kosovar," as he erroneously puts it) cause, he turns to a "human rights argument." Since, he claims, the Albanians were victims of an "unremitting campaign of suppression" by Milosevic, and "crimes against humanity" by the Yugoslav army and police, "the brutality of the Milosevic incursions into Kosovo may be argued as disqualifying Serbia from ever again governing the Kosovars."



Argumentum Ad Atrocitas



This "victim argument" has long been used as justification for NATO's bombing, the subsequent expulsion and persecution of Serbs ("revenge attacks") and others by Albanians, and indeed for claiming the "right" to independence. Supporters of independence have repeatedly claimed that Serbia has somehow "forfeited" its sovereignty through actions in Kosovo in 1999 and before.



As NATO bombs began raining on Serbia and Montenegro in March of 1999, media in NATO countries began manufacturing atrocity stories from the mold perfected just a few years earlier in Bosnia. Refugees, ethnic cleansing, genocide, massacres, rape camps – everything was there. In addition to propaganda injected into the mainstream media by U.S. and other NATO governments, there was also KLA propaganda directly fed to gullible reporters.



Even today, veteran propagandists dutifully repeat the claim that Serb "ethnic cleansing" of Albanians led to the NATO attack. Nothing can be further from the truth. NATO launched the attack in March 1999 after failing to coerce Serbia into accepting an occupation force, during the false negotiations in France. The official justification for the bombing was to force Belgrade to sign the "agreement" presented by the U.S. envoys in Rambouillet. Alleged atrocities are all said to have happened subsequent to the start of the bombing. Indeed, the ICTY indictment against Slobodan Milosevic included only one alleged crime dated prior to March 23, and that was the faux massacre at Racak.



By late 1999, it was obvious that the death toll in Kosovo was much less than the alleged 100,000 – or even the more commonly used 10,000, often falsely qualified as Albanian civilians (That number was actually a wild claim by UK Foreign Minister Geoff Hoon, who sought to justify the bombing.) The total number of bodies exhumed by ICTY's investigators was 2,108, of all ethnicities and with varying causes of death. It is unclear whether that death toll included the numerous Albanians killed by the KLA, the KLA's own substantial casualties, or those of the Yugoslav Army. In any case, horror stories presented as facts in a State Department "report" were later proven false. For example, the "Trepca mines" story was debunked by Wall Street Journal's Daniel Pearl. True, several other mass graves were discovered in the province since 1999. However, the victims buried there were Serbs, so the discoveries quickly faded from memory.



Although many Kosovo Albanians suffered terribly during the KLA insurrection and the NATO bombing, their claim that "Serb atrocities" have earned them the right to independence holds very little water.



Goose and Gander



However, neither the Albanians nor their Western sponsors actually believe the "atrocity argument" on principle. For if they did, and it was universally applicable, they would have forfeited all right to Kosovo themselves!



We could start from the beginning: NATO's war itself was illegal and illegitimate. In the course of the war, NATO pilots targeted civilians and civilian infrastructure. The Alliance naturally claims those were "unfortunate mistakes" and that bombs were dropped "in good faith," yet Gen. Michael Short publicly stated that the campaign was designed to force Belgrade to surrender by terrorizing civilians.



Korisa, Grdelica, Aleksinac, Surdulica – these were just some of the NATO atrocities during the "humanitarian" war of 1999.



Once the government in Belgrade agreed to withdraw from Kosovo and allow the UN to occupy the province (in practice, it was NATO occupation), Albanian separatists began terrorizing Kosovo. Violence against Serbs has been amply documented, in photographs, in print, and on film. It is important to note that Serbs were not the sole victims of Albanian attacks; Roma and other communities in Kosovo have also been exposed to violence, intimidation, extortion and murder.



Here are just some of the more gruesome incidents of anti-Serb violence:



- July 1999: fourteen Serb farmers massacred in the fields near Staro Gracko (graphic photos);



- October 1999: Valentin Krumov, UN official from Bulgaria, slain for "speaking Serbian";



- February 2000: bus carrying Serbs to a cemetery service hit by a missile;



- February 2001: roadside bomb blows up another bus;



- June 2003: brutal slaying of a Serb family in Obilic;



- August 2003: Serb children swimming in the river near Gorazdevac machine-gunned down;



- March 2004: massive pogrom throughout the province targets Serbs; 8 dead, 4500 expelled, several villages razed.



All this was accompanied by systematic destruction of Serbian Orthodox churches, chapels, monasteries and cemeteries.



Albanian separatists and NATO leaders claim that Serbia's violent suppression of the terrorist KLA in 1998-99 merited not only an illegal aggression in response, but also forfeited Serbia's sovereignty over Kosovo. Yet the Albanians have not "forfeited" their right to Kosovo because of systematic terrorism under NATO occupation – they are being rewarded for it by independence!



The Croatian Precedent



Further proof that the "atrocity argument" was made up for the specific purpose of fabricating a reason to separate the occupied province from Serbia and make it into an Albanian state is the absolute absence of any such argument in the case of Croatia, which once had a considerable Serb population.



No "humanitarian" interventionist has ever claimed that atrocities of the Ustasha regime between 1941-1945, in which hundreds of thousands of Serbs perished (Croat and Nazi estimates were over half a million!), somehow disqualified Croatia from sovereignty over territories with majority Serb population that rebelled in 1991? Nor have any of them claimed that Croatia "forfeited" its sovereignty after the ethnic cleansing of Serbs in 1995, following a brutal Croat military incursion that ended the Serb rebellion and "reintegrated" the disputed territories. So how is Kosovo different?



When Croatia engaged in suppression of a Serb rebellion, it was an ally of the United States and NATO, enjoying their full support – military, political, intelligence and diplomatic. When Serbia tried to suppress the Albanian rebellion three years later, the U.S./NATO support was there again – on the side of the Albanians! This is why the same logic does not apply to Krajina and Kosovo, Croatia and Serbia, or even the Serbs and the Albanians. There is no logic here, no principle, no coherent concept of right or wrong – beyond the naked argument of force: whomsoever the Empire supports is a righteous victim, and its enemy an irredeemable villain.



The Final Leap



Empire's pattern of aggression has by now torn the fragile tapestry of international law to shreds. The UN has already lost so much credibility and respect in the world, unable to stop the abuses by the Washington-run "international community," the Ahtisaari Show is but a final nail in its coffin. Over the past fifteen years, many lines have been crossed. Appeasement of NATO and Albanian aggression in Kosovo might just be that last step over the edge, and into the abyss from which what remains of Western civilization may never return.



http://www.antiwar.com/malic/?articleid=10736





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March 28, 2007

Kosovo: The shocking hand of UN imperialism

28.03.2007      Source:      URL:http://english.pravda.ru/world/europe/88705-kosovoimperialism-0



UN Special Envoy for Kosovo ignores centuries of history, disregards deep-rooted nationality issues and insults the psyche of the Serb Nation by declaring that the only solution for Kosovo is independence. After years of drawing lines on maps, the international community goes back to imperialist practices, this time rubber-stamped by the United Nations Organization.



Now that Ban Ki-Moon has accepted the report drawn up by the UN Special Envoy for Kosovo, Martti Ahtisaari, in which he unilaterally imposes the Final Solution for this Serbian Province - full independence – the writing seems on the wall. For the international community, little does the Battle of Kosovo Polye mean – this, the rallying cry which formed first the heart, and later the hearth, of the Serbian nation.



One hopes that Martti Ahtisaari never once complained about Finland’s historical relations with its neighbours, Sweden and Russia. One hopes that those who support his Final Solution would also not disapprove of parts of their countries being carved off and integrated in their neighbours’ territory.



Practically every European nation has or had a frontier dispute which wars were fought over, and due to the same type of imperialistic, intrusive and meddlesome practices, most African nations continue to have the same disputes today. The result of this was an appeal by the UNO itself to respect the frontiers which history and time had drawn up.



It was the UNO which called on its members to accept the international frontiers which this organization presents as inviolable. Where, then, is the logic in carving Kosovo out of Serbia and giving it to ethnic Albanians, when many only went there in the first place because of its higher standard of living – not because it was Albanian, but precisely because it was Serbian.



What right has the international community to dismember the Serbian nation in this way, after the outrage committed against the forces of Slobodan Milosevic (before he was illegally kidnapped and imprisoned), when all he was trying to do was keep terrorists (UCK) out of his country?



How wonderful for the people of Kosovo that they are to have ludicrous characters like Big Bird and the Cookie Monster walking their streets. Cultural imperialism following military adventurism, criminal and murderous colonialism following the most blatant example of foreign intrusion into a region where the international community was never asked to come.



Kosovo is, was, has always been and shall always be, the heart of the Serbian nation. When will the international community learn its history lesson, stop drawing lines on maps and messing up people’s lives?



Timothy BANCROFT-HINCHEY



PRAVDA.Ru







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March 25, 2007

Independent Kosovo a Muslim mafia state


Independent
Kosovo a Muslim mafia state

March 18, 2007 -- Kosovo Albanian military and police is under complete
control of the notorious Muslim Albanian mafia and if Kosovo becomes independent,
the mafia will have an unprecedented total control, from the top to the
underground, says Marko Nicovic, former Chief of Belgrade police and an
expert on mafia crimes in the Balkans.

"At the last congress in Phoenix in Arizona where I participated last
October, the final conclusion of the congress was that 90% of all financial
support of terrorist action in the world comes from drug dealing, and if
you have on the other side the Albanian mafia, it is connected with all
of these activities," says Nicovic.

Over 40% of the world heroin smuggling is controlled by the Albanian
mafia, and only in the US, 30% of heroin is sold by the emerging Albanian
Muslim mafia cartel.

The international recognition of Kosovo will strengthen the drug cartelization
that is already taking place through arranged marriages between Muslim
Albanian families in Kosovo and the drug producers in Afghanistan, Pakistan
and Iran says Marko Nicovic.

Nicovic warns that the Kosovo Albanian familial chains with Muslim drug
families in the Golden Crescent will be impossible to penetrate by the
law enforcement. 

"When I was appointed Chief of Police in 1983 it is the first time that
I met the power of the Albanian mafia. I warned my colleagues in the West
that it will be hard to penetrate because all family is involved in smuggling
and that makes very difficult for undercover agents to penetrate this structure,"
says Nicovic.

Arranged marriages between Kosovo Muslim drug families with ones in
Iran, Afghanistan and Pakistan is the emerging horizontal integration of
the heroin supply from the producers there to the suppliers in Kosovo and
only family members will be allowed into this inner sanctum of drugs and
terror.

"It will be the very big problem for the Western countries especially
now when Kosovo is almost independent. After that European countries will
have our Columbia in Europe," says Nicovic. "It will be the first time
in history that mafia has its own country."

Nicovic says that large amount of the Albanian mafia money is invested
into political activities such as lobbies that advocate independence for
Kosovo.

"That lobby would organize the structure that would include, for example,
some Congressman, some journalist, some analysts, institutes, foundations...
for the project of an independent Kosovo," says Nicovic.







































Richard
C. Holbrooke, former U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, on the left,
enjoying company with a Kosovo Albanian Florin Krasniqi, a weapons smuggler
from New York pictured in the middle, and Wesley Clark on the right at
a political fundraiser for John Kerry.





"Albanian mafia knows where the money is... money is in the western
countries," says Nicovic. "The main damage will be in the western countries
because they make money in the West not in Kosovo."

Statistics published by the UN that is administering Kosovo says that
unemployment among Kosovo Albanians is at 75% yet Kosovo is undergoing
a construction boom.

"If you have 75% unemployed yet many new buildings, new shops, construction
everywhere, where from has that money come," asks Nicovic.

"Osama bin Laden had in Albania a construction company which made drug
activities with construction companies in Kosovo. These extreme Muslims
will be the trouble for the West... and West will be provoked to investigate
what was done in Kosovo when a terrorist attack is clearly connected with
Albanian mafia," says Nicovic.

An appointed UN envoy, Marti Ahtisaari, has submitted his plan to the
UN on the status of Kosovo where he suggests that independence for the
province should be the solution.

UN decision on the status of the province is expected this year.

March 18, 2007 serbianna (c)






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Russia's Sane Position on Kosovo










Russia's
Sane Position on Kosovo



By
Michael
Averko



March
22, 2007





Russian
Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov firmly stated that any solution to the Kosovo
conflict must be agreeable to both sides. Russia's UN Ambassador Vitaly
Churkin correctly noted how some of his Western peers have disrespected
UN Resolution 1244 governing Kosovo. Recent Russian diplomatic action on
the disputed south Serb province confirms how many in the West continue
to misread Kremlin desires. In some Western circles, Russia was expected
to cave in to the idea of granting Kosovo independence. Russia's position
isn't yet etched in stone. However, at this late stage of Kosovo negotiating,
one can't overlook how Russia has if anything become more resolute in securing
a settlement on agreeable terms with Serbia.


 


During the presidency of Vladimir Putin - Russia is experiencing economic
growth and a new found confidence in its post Cold War world role. Nations
on the rebound often become more assertive in their foreign policy agendas.
For example: the US displayed a more muscular foreign policy during and
after Ronald Reagan's presidency; after America experienced a brief geo-strategic
decline following its debacle in Southeast Asia.


 


Contemporary Russia isn't the same as the one of the last decade when
Zbigniew Brzezinski wrote (in Foreign Affairs Magazine) of that country
possibly breaking up into several nations. Some might recall the pathetic
backtracking of the Russian troop deployment to Kosovo at the end of the
NATO bombing campaign against Yugoslavia in 1999. That clumsy move saw
Moscow back down from an engagement in Kosovo to counter NATO's presence.


 


Lavrov and Churkin are hardened no nonsense diplomats, with an active
background in former Yugoslav matters. During Boris Yeltsin's presidency,
Churkin represented Russia in the Contact Group of outside powers monitoring
the Bosnian Civil War. At the time, Lavrov was his country's UN ambassador
to many discussions on former Yugoslav issues.


 


In his prior role as UN ambassador, Lavrov was very much involved with
UN Resolution 1244. He's fully aware of how certain Western governments
have attempted to leapfrog over that document.


 


When looked at in its entirety, 1244 isn't a directive for Kosovo becoming
independent.


 


- It specifically states that Kosovo is a part of Yugoslavia. 
Serbia is internationally recognized as the successor state to Yugoslavia. 
In Communist and post Communist Yugoslavia - Kosovo was part of the Serb
republic.

- 1244 calls for a return of refugees, as well as of Serb military and
government bodies to Kosovo.  This has yet to happen.

- In legalese, the 1244 clause about taking into "full consideration"
the unsigned Rambouillet diktat isn't a green light for independence. It
simply means that aspects of Rambouillet can perhaps be considered. Prior
to the NATO bombing of Yugoslavia, the Clinton Administration and Kosovo
Albanian nationalists wrote a clause in Rambouillet which would've (if
signed) permitted Kosovo to vote on independence after three years from
the accord's signing. I specifically recall noted American University law
professor Paul Williams bragging about his having written that segment
on Geraldo Rivera's MSNBC cable news show. No one questioned Williams'
objectivity as a then adviser to the Kosovo Albanian nationalist leaders.
Madeleine Albright was quoted as having said that Rambouillet was written
in a way that was unacceptable to the Serbs. An obvious pretext for starting
the war that was to be.

- The "final outcome" status for Kosovo is stated towards the end of
1244. It relates to how Kosovo should be governed as a part of Serbia.
What other logical way can be otherwise suggested when the very same document
recognizes Kosovo as part of Serbia, while stating that refugees, Serb
government and military bodies should all return to that province?


 


Bill Clinton's UN Ambassador Richard Holbrooke leads a pack of Democratic
Party affiliated foreign policy politicos advocating Kosovo independence.
They argue how Kosovo will become more violent if independence isn't granted.
Is this rational not a blueprint for encouraging violence elsewhere by
effectively saying that peaceful means will not get the same consideration?
Why should independence be granted to a group threatening  violence?
Isn't such an acquiesce a support for law of the jungle principles?


 


Holbrooke claims that Kosovo is the "special case" for independence
unlike some other disputed former Communist bloc territories. On this point,
Lavrov can easily outdo him by noting how Trans-Dniester has a much better
case for independence than Kosovo.


 


The lines have been drawn. Other nations have expressed sympathy with
the Russian and Serb position. At the same time, the vestiges of neo-liberal
and neo-conservative antipathy towards Serbia remains a strong guiding
factor in American foreign policy. The art of diplomacy seeks a middle
course to such a dispute. This would lead one to believe that a compromise
of sorts could be in the works. Writing in The Washington Times (March
20), former Serbian Unity Congress President Michael Djordjevich sees the
possibility of a partition of Kosovo.


 


Bosnia, in a way, already serves as a precedent for such an arrangement
and in this case it means that the Bosnian Serb republic "Republika Srpska"
(RS) has a greater case for independence than Kosovo. The signed Dayton
Accords governing Bosnia states that each of the two established Bosnian
entities can establish their own parallel relationships with other states
after a four year period from the document's signing in 1995. Unlike Kosovo:
in RS, there's no noticeable ethnic violence, with many refugees having
returned to its territory.


 


What’s really spooky about all of this is how Anglo-American mass media
outlets at large haven't fully explained all of the valid particulars related
to opposing Kosovo's independence. This kind of a "free press" makes it
easy for officialdom to hustle policies like the "humanitarian" bombing
of Yugoslavia.


 


Russia and America have a number of common interests. Why risk a betterment
in Russo-American relations by supporting a faulty premised Kosovo independence?


Michael
Averko is a New York based independent foreign policy analyst and media
critic. His commentary has appeared in the Action
Ukraine Report
, Eurasian
Home
, Intelligent.ru,
Johnson's
Russia List
, Russia
Blog
, The
New York Times
  and The
Tiraspol Times
.






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March 23, 2007

Opening Pandora's Box in Kosovo?

Opening Pandora's Box in Kosovo?

By Yevgeny Primakov, member of the Russian Academy of Sciences

 

A few days ago, I returned from Belgrade, where I had attended the jubilee, 150th session of Serbia's Chamber of Commerce, a partner organization of the Russian Chamber of Commerce and Industry. My visit to the Serbian capital gave me an opportunity to meet with many people. I had informal, extensive contacts with both President Boris Tadic and Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica. Russian Ambassador Alexander Alekseyev, well informed about the situation in and around Serbia, also offered some interesting insights.



My general impression from what I saw and heard is that Kosovo is the central issue for Serbian society today. I don't think that everyone, primarily in Washington, understands just how deeply ingrained this problem is in the minds of the Serbs. Aware of this mood (no one in the Serbian leadership can possibly ignore it), both Kostunica and Tadic categorically reject independence for Kosovo.



Some Western politicians may have hoped that President Tadic would put EU membership above Serbia's territorial integrity. That did not happen.



Today, the two Serb leaders are opposed to the plan proposed by Martti Ahtisaari, the UN secretary general's special envoy for Kosovo. As the Serbian president told me, this plan is not based on compromise: It provides for the separation of Kosovo, turning 15 percent of Serbia's territory into an independent state. I understand there are three main points in the position of the Serbian leadership.



First, a fundamental solution to the Kosovo problem should be based on the preservation of the province's de jure status as part of Serbia with maximum independence [autonomy] rights.



Second, this position does not mean that Serbia is turning its back on the West. According to Kostunica, the country's course toward integration into Europe [the EU] is still on. However, this course should not impede relations with Russia. According to Tadic, Serbia has three foreign policy priorities: rapprochement with the European Union, the United States, and Russia.



Third, the Serbian leadership (and I would like to stress this especially) is striving to continue negotiations with the Kosovo Albanians, harmonize positions and achieve a compromise formula that would be acceptable to both sides. The submission of the Ahtisaari plan in its present form to the UN Security Council is viewed as a completely unacceptable option.



The impression I got from my meetings in Belgrade is that not all negotiating avenues have been exhausted yet. I have often heard the question: Why act in such haste in dealing with this complex, long-standing problem? Unsurprisingly, many see "PR moves by the U.S. administration" behind this haste.



After leaving office, President Bush will go down in history not just with an "Iraq stigma" but also with victory in the Balkans, meaning that the air strikes on Belgrade eight years ago were not in vain: As a result, Serbia has attained democracy, while all those who sought independence have acquired it; and now Kosovo, with its Albanian population, is also in the process of acquiring it, which only shows that the approaches and actions by the Bush administration were correct.



This PR campaign comes at a heavy price to the Serbs.



Belgrade is especially worried by a possible outbreak of violence against Kosovo's Serbian minority.



As President Tadic said, "we cannot and will not fight against NATO, but this does not diminish our concern about the situation in Kosovo."



While I was in Belgrade, Richard Holbrooke made a statement, predicting that delay in resolving the Kosovo issue would lead to more bloodshed.



"This is not an analysis, but a scenario," a senior Serb government official said. "As soon as Washington issues a threat to the Kosovo Albanians, to the effect that in the event of anti-Serb violence they would lose Western support once and for all, everything will return to normal in Kosovo." But will Washington ever do that?



I do not agree with this take on Holbrooke, who I know very well. Furthermore, this scenario seems to be absolutely not in the U.S. interests. Should, God forbid, the scenario be played out, many questions are bound to arise. One of them will be as follows: NATO forces and police have been deployed in Kosovo for the past eight years, therefore this entire international operation, initiated by the United States, has failed to establish stability in the province? Or, another question: If anti-Serb violence is possible even in the presence of international forces, what will be in store for the Serbian minority should Kosovo gain independence?



Finally, I would like to draw attention to yet another problem. Once Kosovo is granted independence, the Bosnian state, created with so much difficulty, could start coming apart at the seams. It cannot be ruled out that centrifugal trends will reemerge and start picking up pace. Bosnian Serbs could start gravitating toward Serbia, while a similar trend among Bosnian Croats with respect to Croatia could result in their secession from the Croatian-Muslim federation in Bosnia. In this situation, Bosnian Muslims will perforce reach out to independent Kosovo, which will further radicalize politics. Under the Ahtisaari plan, Kosovo will not join other states, but then others could join Kosovo.



All of this requires thinking.







http://english.mn.ru/english/issue.php?2007-11-8





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Why NATO really smote the Serbs

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20070322.COSERBIA22/TPStory/



Comment



Why NATO really smote the Serbs

JAMES BISSETT

March 22, 2007



This weekend marks the eighth anniversary of the U.S.-led NATO bombing of Yugoslavia. The implications of that action are still with us.



The onslaught that began March 24, 1999, continued for 78 days, causing an estimated 10,000 civilian casualties and inflicting widespread damage on the country's infrastructure. The North Atlantic Treaty Organization's unprecedented attack against a sovereign state was done without United Nations authority and in violation of the UN Charter and international law.

It also set a dangerous precedent: It transformed NATO from a purely defensive organization into a powerful alliance prepared to intervene militarily wherever it chose to do so. And it paved the way for the unilateral U.S. invasion of Iraq.



Bill Clinton and other NATO leaders justified the bombing on humanitarian grounds. It was alleged that genocide was taking place in Kosovo and that Serbian security forces were driving out the Albanian population. Later, it was disclosed there was no genocide in Kosovo. (Of course, the outcome appears to be an independent quasi-state of Kosovo, as shall be recommended next week to the UN Security Council.) Before the bombing, several thousand Albanians had been displaced within Kosovo as a result of the fighting between Serbian security forces and the Kosovo Liberation Army. But nearly all of the Albanians who fled Kosovo did so after the bombing began. The real ethnic cleansing came after Serbian forces withdrew and more than 200,000 Serbs, Roma, Jews and other non-Albanians were forced to flee; more than 150 Christian churches and monasteries have since been burned by Albanian mobs.



The bombing had little, if anything, to do with humanitarian concerns. It had everything to do with the determination of the United States to maintain NATO as an essential military organization. The fall of the Berlin Wall, the collapse of the Soviet Union and the withdrawal of Warsaw Pact armies had called into question NATO's reason for existence. Why was such a powerful and expensive military organization needed to defend Western Europe when there was no longer any threat from Soviet communism?



The armed rebellion by the terrorist Kosovo Liberation Army provided Washington with the opportunity needed to demonstrate to Western Europe that NATO was still needed. So, it was essential to convince the news media and the public that atrocities and ethnic cleansing were taking place in Kosovo.

This was done with relative ease by a campaign of misinformation aimed at demonizing the Serbs and by assertions by Mr. Clinton, Tony Blair and other NATO spokesmen that hundreds of young Albanian men were "missing" and that mass executions and genocide were taking place in Kosovo. Compliant journalists and a credulous public accepted these lies.



In April, 1999, at the peak of the bombing, Mr. Clinton gathered NATO's political leaders in Washington to celebrate the alliance's 50th birthday.

The party was used as a platform for Mr. Clinton to announce a new "strategic concept" -- NATO was to be modernized and made ready for the new century. There was no reference to defence or the settling of international disputes by peaceful means or of complying with the principles of the UN Charter. The new emphasis would be on "conflict prevention," "crisis management" and "crisis response operation."



Usually when a treaty is to be amended or changed, it must be approved and ratified by the legislatures of the contracting states. This was not done with the North Atlantic Treaty. It was changed by an announcement from the U.S. president, with little or no debate by the legislatures of member countries. It may well be that NATO should be in a position to intervene militarily in the internal affairs of another country, but it surely is essential that the ground rules for such intervention be in accordance with the UN Charter and only after concurrence of member states. NATO should not become a convenient political "cover" to justify the use of military power by the United States.



James Bissett was Canada's ambassador to Yugoslavia from 1990 to 1992.







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March 21, 2007

“Kosovo is not unique. There is the Republic of Northern Cyprus” – expert opinion

“Kosovo is not unique. There is the Republic of Northern Cyprus” – expert opinion



Read it in Russian



REGNUM publishes an opinion of an eminent expert on the post-Soviet space who chose to remain undisclosed, on the situation around the “Kosovo precedent” and possibilities of its application to the practices of the post-Soviet unrecognized states – Transdniestria (Transdnestr), Abkhazia, South Ossetia, and Nagorno Karabakh.



“The failure of the plan of ‘Kosovo issue settlement’ proposed by the official Turkish lobbyist Ahtisaari – with whose biasness only the pro-American players candidly put up – could scare only those who, contrary to reality, were convinced that they would subdue Serbia, deceive Russia, lull Kosovo, and satisfy the anti-European US game.



The truth is that any, any decision on the fate of the really existing Kosovo is a catastrophic trap for the west. For any, any acting and approved in all aspects of sovereignty status of Kosovo is a progress and desired goal for the post-Soviet space. Even the formula ‘independence minus the UN’ intended for Kosovo, that is, the formula of granting a real status WITHOUT solving the problem with Serbia (or something similar) – presents the level of powers for the post-Soviet self-determined states that has already destroyed, and will destroy further yet, Moldavia, Georgia, and Azerbaijan. Naïve are those who think that some decision on the status of Kosovo will be applicable for the countries of the former USSR. Kosovo already exists, and the precedent does not depend on senseless intelligentsia’s reflections of ‘crisis groups’ of all sorts.



Kosovo is not a unique precedent. There is de facto recognized by the NATO countries – Turkey, Great Britain, France, the USA – as well as by Azerbaijan, Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus. And this example does not depend on the follies of Ahtisaari. The precedent is comprehensively created by Turkey and Azerbaijan. And the whole mankind has no other choice than to follow the example. Get ready.”

Permanent news address: www.regnum.ru/english/798723.html





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March 11, 2007

Serbia Press: Kosovo plan, trap; no exit



Serbia Press: Kosovo plan, trap; no exit



Sun, 11 Mar 2007 19:43:51



A day after the last talks on the future of Kosovo seemingly failed, Serbian press said the West was wrong believing that it can resolve the Serbian-Albanian issue with a "take it or leave it approach."



"Playing the card of pragmatism, of an estimate that the Serbs can make less trouble than the Albanians, is a sign of lacking political skill and a trap without an exit," Belgrade daily Politika wrote in an editorial on Sunday



"The Albanians now live in five different states and a bad solution provides material for new conflicts in the Balkans," it wrote.



The paper sharply criticized NATO and the U.S. for supporting the majority Albanians' bid for Kosovo's independence.



"When NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer says in Belgrade 'we'll protect the Serbs in Kosovo,' we are of course satisfied. But as far as I can remember, NATO was founded to protect the territorial integrity of member-states," it added.



"I actually expected to hear that NATO would protect the state of Serbia, a prospective member," the commentator added. "Or will Serbia become the first exception to that rule?"



After the talks between Serbia and Kosovo's ethnic Albanians on the future of the breakaway province failed Saturday, the UN envoy in the issue, Martti Ahtisaari, is expected to send his plan for the future of Kosovo to the UN Security Council in late March.



The Albanians signaled acceptance of the plan, which sees in the future the supervised graduation to independence for Kosovo.



Kosovo has been a NATO protectorate since 1999 when the NATO-led international forces launched a bombing campaign in the area to drive out Serbian troops responsible for the killing of over 10,000 native Kosovars and displacing one million others.



MA/AVA



http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=2295 />






March 08, 2007

UN plan for Kosovo faces a rocky future



International Herald Tribune



UN plan for Kosovo faces a rocky future



By Nicholas Wood



Thursday, March 8, 2007



VITINA, Kosovo: Hajriz Jakupi, a former guerrilla who fought the Serbs, is not happy with the international proposal that is meant to bring lasting peace to this region, even though Kosovo would get the trappings of a state — a flag, an army and the right to seek international recognition.



It is the quid pro quo that angers Jakupi: that the relatively few Serbs living in Kosovo would have control over expanded areas that would include Albanian villages, including his own, which lies just outside this town.



"It's an offense," Jakupi said, raising his voice. "It is our territory, it is our land." He was speaking of the ethnic Albanians who would become a minority in the municipality he comes from but are a large majority overall in Kosovo.



How fighters like Jakupi behave in the next months will be crucial to the success of the UN-designed plan. For now, he said, he will express his opposition "in a peaceful manner."



Serbian leaders rejected the UN plan Thursday while ethnic Albanians accepted it, diminishing hopes of a compromise before the proposal reaches the UN Security Council, The Associated Press reported from Belgrade. Ethnic Albanian and Serbian leaders held separate meetings in Kosovo's capital, Pristina, and in Belgrade to discuss the amended proposal drafted by the chief UN envoy, Martti Ahtisaari.



The calculation of the United Nations was that people like Jakupi and his colleagues in the Kosovo Liberation Army would accept the deal, since it gives the Albanian population considerable independence, although with a dose of international supervision.



If they do so, the United Nations will hope to scale back a multibillion-dollar exercise that it has been engaged in for nearly eight years, tying down thousands of peacekeeping troops. The proposals, which have taken more than a year to draw up, were expected to go to the UN Security Council for a vote by June.



But there are worries that things could go wrong, and not only among people like Jakupi who have been quick to fight before. Jakupi, 35, leads a group of former fighters from the Kosovo Liberation Army, which waged an insurgency against Serbian security forces from 1997 to 1999, a conflict that took 10,000 lives and ultimately pushed NATO to intervene. Some of his colleagues were at the center of two other insurgencies, in Macedonia and southern Serbia, in 2001.



And Serbia is loath to lose Kosovo, a province it has controlled for most of the 20th century and regards as central to its history and identity. Many Serbs in Kosovo are weighing whether to move out. There also are worries that Serbia will simply hold on to the part of Kosovo where Serbs are a majority, splitting the province and not recognizing the new arrangements.



A senior UN official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said of the Serbs: "My fear is that they would consider some kind of partition. That would cause great concern."



The United Nations and NATO have never been able to exert dominance in that northern region. Yet the authorities say little has been done to prevent such a partition within Kosovo.



That could provoke renewed conflict, senior UN officials and regional analysts warned, from armed ethnic Albanians determined to retain Kosovo's current boundaries.



"If independence is not recognized, I think people will take up arms," Jakupi said. "It is the minimum we can accept. This is what our heroes gave their lives for in the war."



Even if things go well, international and local officials said ethnic divisions would not permit the quick exit of peacekeepers and administrators that the international community hopes for.



Europe and the United States will need to act as arbitrators in a divided and economically backward region for years, according to this view, having some oversight over the new government and an ability to amend laws and dismiss public officials.



Kosovo has been run by the United Nations since June 1999, after a 78-day NATO-led bombing campaign forced out the Serbian security forces who had been accused of committing atrocities against ethnic Albanians.



Years later there is little doubt among UN officials that their tenure should come to an end, allowing the European Union to take the lead (although with far fewer responsibilities than the United Nations had) and with most decision-making powers in the hands of a new Albanian-led government.



Ethnic Albanians are impatient to control their affairs and have taken their anger out on UN soldiers. Protests are frequent in Pristina, most recently on Saturday, when several thousand people marched by the UN headquarters shouting "UN out."



Under the proposals drafted by Ahtisaari, the UN would be replaced by a European Union-led mission with limited powers and Kosovo would enjoy considerable autonomy.



Controls would be put in place to protect minorities. Serbian areas would control their own affairs in health and education in five new municipalities that could get financing from the Serbian government. The European Commission has allocated €120 million, or nearly $160 million, over three years to help minority communities.



For the Serbs, "this is attractive, if they engage," said Torbjorn Sohlstrom, the EU official in charge of planning for the next administration.



But Serbia's record of engagement in Kosovo suggests that ordinary Serbs may not engage as EU officials might wish.



For six years Belgrade has pressured Serbs living in Kosovo not to cooperate with international or Albanian institutions in Kosovo, often by docking pay or cutting pensions. Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica of Serbia, a nationalist, has said his government will never recognize an independent Kosovo.



"It will be very hard to implement if the Serbian government is against it," said Oliver Ivanovic, one of a handful of Serbian politicians who take part in Kosovo's institutions, dominated by ethnic Albanians.



Alex Anderson, director of the International Crisis Group, a political research group active in the Balkans, said, "If you have Belgrade trying to undermine it, the Albanians may regard the status settlement as a big burden."



Others worry about how the proposals will be carried out. Kim Vetting, an adviser on security issues with the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, which works alongside the UN mission here, said: "Here we are just a few months from settlement day and we don't know how or what to do. How do we maintain control there?"

Notes:

International Herald Tribune Copyright © 2007 The International Herald Tribune | www.iht.com







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March 02, 2007

Swallowing the Balkans

Swallowing the Balkans

By Ryan Malone

March 2007

/>One advantage to having Romania and Bulgaria in the European Union, according to the European Commission, is that both countries will be able to help strengthen the EU’s foreign policy and security policy: Romania as a bridge to the east, and both as interfaces with the Balkan region.



That second point is particularly interesting given Europe’s history with the Balkans. Stratfor made this observation: “With Romania and Bulgaria joining the European Union … the Balkans are nearly surrounded by EU member countries, meaning the European Union will have to address rising tensions and instability in southeastern Europe” (Dec. 29, 2006).



Consider these “rising tensions.” Serbia, for example, stripped of its former republics and geopolitical relevance thanks to European intrusion, now stands at the threshold of a political revolution. When Serbia held its national parliamentary elections in January, the pro-West, pro-EU Democratic Party garnered enough votes to form a coalition government that excludes the Serbian Radicals. This gives Serbia the opportunity to pursue EU membership. EU officials said, shortly after the election, that Belgrade “could begin accession talks as soon as” the coalition government was formed. Those were the words of Erhard Busek, spokesman for the Stability Pact for South Eastern Europe, stating that Serbia had a better chance than Turkey of gaining EU membership (EUbusiness.com, January 23).



Also, with the Serbian Radicals sidelined—a party opposing the independence of Kosovo—the barriers to Kosovo breaking away have fallen. This makes way for the EU to cement its hold on Kosovo. It is now planning to have its police force take over security operations from NATO troops. This will be the EU’s biggest security operation ever in Kosovo, involving not only policing, but also institution building.



Meanwhile, in Bosnia, the United Nations is supposed to hand power over to the national government this spring, when European forces are set to withdraw from the country. No one quite knows how successfully the deadlocked government (split among Muslims, Croats, Serbs) will function on its own.



Added to that is the possible energy crisis into which the EU has purposefully plunged the Balkans. To be an EU member, Bulgaria—the Balkans’ biggest electricity supplier—had to shut down two functional nuclear reactors that violated the EU’s strict safety regulations. This means Sofia will lose up to _‚_10 billion in export revenues and face possible increases in energy imports and shut-down costs; at the same time, electricity may become more scarce and costlier. It will “destroy the delicate energy balance in a region that continues to be economically and politically unstable” (Deutsche Welle, Dec. 28, 2006).



But have no fear. Europe is poised to address these “rising tensions.”



The EU’s increased presence in the Balkans through Romania’s and Bulgaria’s accessions has coincided with Germany’s six-month presidency of the EU. Stratfor asserts, “Whether or not Germany likes it, these Balkan issues have fallen in its lap. Keeping the Balkans from returning to its previous chaos, then, could become Germany’s unintended presidential legacy” (op. cit., emphasis ours).



Unintended? Hardly. Germany and the Vatican were at the helm of slicing and dicing the Balkans in the first place. Back when Germany stood firm in recognizing Croatia and Slovenia, the New York Times said the incident “underscored Germany’s growing political power within the 12-nation European Community” and that “it marked the single most visible demonstration of that power since reunification of the two Germanys …” (Dec. 16, 1991). In his booklet The Rising Beast, editor in chief Gerald Flurry called Yugoslavia the first victim of World War III, just as Czechoslovakia was the first of the Second World War.



As Stratfor maintained only a few years back, “Germany is seeking to reassert itself at the center of Europe, and the Balkans play a big part in that strategy. It is an area where Germany can expand its military reach without frightening either itself or its neighbors. Berlin also would like to build on its ties with Slovenia, Croatia, Albania, Bosnia and Bulgaria to pull both southern and Eastern Europe under its wing as the EU expands” (March 6, 2002).



How interesting is the timing of Germany’s presidency, along with the accession of two large Balkan countries, while the former Yugoslav republics stand at political crossroads. It won’t be long before these countries, now surrounded by the EU—and essentially vassal states of it—join a united Europe.



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