December 27, 2007

Palestine: Kosovo of the Middle East











Palestine:
Kosovo of the Middle East
















19:50



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27/ 12/ 2007




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MOSCOW. (RIA Novosti political analyst Dmitry Kosyrev) -
Victory has a thousand fathers, but defeat is an orphan. It was not one, but
hundreds of observers who hastened to declare the November international
conference in Annapolis America's success that allegedly gave a fresh start to
the Palestinian-Israeli peace process.



Now that the process has hiccupped, no one seems eager to
take the blame.



But, I repeat, it is only a hiccup: Israeli and Palestinian
diplomats have quarreled during a working group meeting. One may expect it to
be defused by another meeting between the two prime ministers, Mahmoud Abbas
and Ehud Olmert; they meet for negotiations roughly once every two weeks. But,
as always, the nuts and bolts of these talks are discussed in meetings at the
working level. And these meetings make it clear that Annapolis has not solved
any substantial issues.



The main issue is land. The Palestinian delegation demanded
a stop to building settlements in the occupied territories. The Israelis
countered by reminding the Palestinians of their commitment to neutralize the
radical groups on the West Bank and in the Gaza Strip. But that is not a very
credible response because building houses in the occupied territories is just
as real a problem as radicals and terrorists.



It was after Annapolis, early this month, that Israel
announced it was building houses in East Jerusalem. Such plans have also been
unveiled for the Jewish settlement of Maale Adumim and so on. All this is being
done within the existing settlements since Israel has promised not to take any
new Palestinian territories. But in general one of the issues in the Middle
East peace process is the Jewish development of the territories which, based on
the results of the talks, theoretically may not belong to them. In other words,
ahead of the negotiations, Israel is stepping up the activities that Palestine
wants it to stop.



Or take the question of Jerusalem where new developments are
planned. It is Israel's capital, but the negotiating process implies a joint
negotiated solution of the city's status. For the time being, in terms of
international law, the eastern quarters of Jerusalem are occupied territories.
The Israelis say they are ready to discuss the city's status with the
Palestinians, but what is the point of talking if new Jewish homes are already
being built there?



The settlements are only one item in the overall peace
process.



For "the father of the Annapolis victory," George
Bush, the problem now is that he is scheduled to go to the Middle East in
January. Even if he manages to wriggle out of that trip, he will still have to
come to grips with concrete issues, for example, to say what he thinks about
the building of Israeli settlements on Palestinian lands in parallel with the
talks. America's support for Israel is the Achilles heel of all its policy in
the greater Middle East and further afield, for example, right up to Muslim
Indonesia. These problems will have to be grappled with.



A land that has for centuries been inhabited by people of
one creed (or, to put it in other words, of one ethnic identity) and which as a
result of the use of force is now inhabited by a different people is not only a
problem of Palestine and Israel. The same is true of Kosovo. Russian Foreign
Minister Sergei Lavrov and other Russian diplomats have repeatedly pointed out:
if the world has been wrestling with the Palestinian problem for half a century
and will continue to do so, why such a hurry in the case of Kosovo?



And indeed, the "settlement activities" of the Albanians
who infiltrated into Kosovo are very similar to what the Israelis have been up
to all this time: to create settlements taking advantage of the weakness of
their opponents and then to present the other side with an accomplished fact
during the course of negotiations, hoping to wrest at least partial
concessions.



What will happen to Europe if it tries to settle a similar
problem between the Serbs and the Kosovars after both are admitted to the
European Union as "independent states"? It may or may not pan out
because Kosovo's independence would not be legally complete without a formal
recognition by the UN. That would give the Serbs reason to seek redress for
half a century or for as long as they feel like it. It is unclear who will play
the role of the U.S., which, let us face it, is disliked in the Muslim world
because of Israel. America's other missteps (i.e. wars) look in many ways as a
derivative of the starting point of its Middle East policy.



The opinions expressed in this article are the author's and
do not necessarily represent those of RIA Novosti.



http://en.rian.ru/analysis/20071227/94407036.html





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December 15, 2007

Kosovo Cannot Be the End of International Law



















Kosovo Cannot Be the End of International Law








13.12.2007 Source: URL: http://english.pravda.ru/opinion/columnists/102783-kosovointlaw-0









Kosovo-Metohija
is the very heart and soul of the Serbian nation. Kosovo province is to
Serbs what Westminster Abbey is to Britons, Paris is to the French or
Jerusalem is to the three world religions. It is not something the
Serbian nation is willing to surrender to NATO, Albanian Muslims or the
US State Department, however mighty they might think they are, and
however persistently they demand to steal it.

The
Serbian province of Kosovo, administered by NATO since June 1999, is
the fourth region with the highest corruption rate in the world, right
after Albania, according to a report from the organization Transparency
International, an anti-corruption watchdog based in Berlin.
Transparency International’s 2007 Global Corruption Barometer showed
that the Kosovo province under the NATO-imposed Albanian KLA criminal
gang, well known for illegal drug trade and human trafficking, is among
the most corrupt regions in the world today.

Unemployment
is high and the farcical “election” recently held generated an
extremely poor turnout showing that there is little effort or basis for
such a pseudo political process. Sixty-seven percent of Kosovo province
residents have stated they have to pay bribes to get services. The
criminal governance of Kosovo does not meet any criteria whatsoever for
a legal secession from Serbia.

They are not
self-sustaining, they have no viable political process, they have no
historical connection to the land, they were offered wide autonomy by
Serbia and they have no claims whatsoever regarding mistreatment by Serbian
authorities, so no legal condition exits by which such unilateral
action can be considered by the international community. Those who
would encourage such illegal action should also consider that Kosovo is
completely dependent on SERBIA for all its electricity and, like the
rest of Europe, Kosovo also needs Russian GAS for heating.

Unilateral declaration of independence would constitute a violation ofUN Security Council
Resolution 1244 as well as the UN Charter, and it will subsequently be
null and void in the UN. Russia, which holds a veto in the U.N.
Security Council, will demand that any such decision be cancelled or be
annulled. Washington and most EU member states support Kosovo
independence. Albanians say they will declare independence within
months. Without approval from the UN, any recognition given would
completely lack legitimacy or a legal basis.

Since
the NATO war of aggression was a crime against international peace and,
therefore, gives rise to international responsibility, the
international community is duty-bound to mount an appropriate response,
and that does not include allowing declarations of independence which
would slice away fifteen percent of Serbian territory. When all
peaceful options are exhausted, Serbia has a right under all provisions
of international law to force the aggressor out of its territory in
accordance with article 51 of the UN Charter. Yugoslavia was and Serbia
is a UN member state.

The UN Charter's
prohibition of member states of the UN attacking other UN member states
is central to the purpose for which the UN was founded in the wake of
the massive death and destruction of World War II: to prevent war. This
prevailing concern is also reflected in the Nuremberg Trials' concept
of crimes against peace, "starting or waging a war against the
territorial integrity, political independence or sovereignty of a
state, or in violation of international treaties or agreements..."
(crime against peace), was held to be the crime that makes all war
crimes possible.

The provision on the
inviolability of state sovereignty was elaborated in the Declaration on
the Principles of International Law adopted by the UN General Assembly
in 1970, which in particular defines aggression as follows:

"The
first use of armed forces by a state in contravention of the Charter
shall constitute prima facie evidence of an act of aggression..."

This is the Helsinki Final Act from 1 August 1975, upon which resolution 1244 calls: I Defining sovereignty: "The
participating States will respect each other's sovereign equality and
individuality as well as all the rights inherent in and encompassed by
its sovereignty, including in particular the right of every State to
juridical equality, to territorial integrity and to freedom and
political independence. They will also respect each other's right
freely to choose and develop its political, social, economic and
cultural systems as well as its right to determine its laws and
regulations.
"

In III Inviolability of frontiers: "The
participating States regard as inviolable all one another's frontiers
as well as the frontiers of all States in Europe and therefore they
will refrain now and in the future from assaulting these frontiers.
Accordingly, they will also refrain from any demand for, or act of,
seizure and usurpation of part or all of the territory of any
participating State.
"

In IV Territorial Integrity of States: "The
participating States will respect the territorial integrity of each of
the participating States. Accordingly, they will refrain from any
action inconsistent with the purposes and principles of the Charter of
the United Nations against the territorial integrity, political
independence or the unity of any participating State, and in particular
from any such action constituting a threat or use of force. The
participating States will likewise refrain from making each other's
territory the object of military occupation or other direct or indirect
measures of force in contravention of international law, or the object
of acquisition by means of such measures or the threat of them. No such
occupation or acquisition will be recognized as legal.
"

Russia
has warned the West that recognizing a unilateral declaration of
independence by Kosovo Albanians would set off a chain reaction of
problems in the Balkans and beyond. "I want to stress that a unilateral
declaration of independence of Kosovo and recognition of such
independence will not remain without consequences," Russian Foreign
Minister Sergei Lavrov said during a visit to Nicosia. "It will create
a chain reaction throughout the Balkans and other areas of the world,"
he said, speaking through an interpreter after talks with Cypriot
President Tassos Papadopoulos.

What are the
real reasons behind the West strongly pushing this issue at this time?
Are they nostalgic for war in Europe again? Are they attempting to
force Russia to reciprocate in kind on Abkhazia and South Ossetia? Why
not just leave Kosovo's status as is and continue negotiations? How do
they explain to the people at home that they are fighting terrorists in
Afghanistan and Iraq, yet they have been protecting them in Kosovo and
Bosnia? Analysts warn that the Kosovo precedent may set into motion
separatists in Spain, Belgium and Britain.

Western
media has been claiming that there were two million Albanians in
Kosovo. They have also been underestimating the number of Serbs living
there, who constitute approximately twenty-five percent of the
population. The constant claim in the Albanian and Western press that
there are “close to two million ethnic Albanians” in Serbian province
is false, and the latest “elections“, where only around 43 percent of
Albanian voters have taken part (minus the Serbs of course), have
confirmed the earlier census data according to which there is no more
than 1.1 - 1.2 million ethnic Albanians in Kosovo.

If
there is only around one million ethnic Albanians in the Serbian
province, that also means that there is at least 25 percent Serbs
remaining in Kosovo which is significantly more than the commonly
repeated number that 10 or even only 5 percent of Serbs remain in
Kosovo-Metohija.

The Danish People’s Party
broke for the first time with the VK [ruling coalition] government over
an essential foreign policy question. The party refused to support the
recognition of Kosovo.

The Danish People’s
Party wrote in a letter to the foreign minister that the international
community is setting out to do an injustice to Serbia, and the decision
to recognize Kosovo will violate the UN charter, which emphasizes the
member countries’ territorial integrity.

After
horrendous and incredible sacrifices during two world wars, Serbs have
been egregiously betrayed by former allies in favor of Albanians who
sided with and served Hitler and the Axis. Serbs have had to endure the
dissolution of the state of Yugoslavia in which they were not only
ethnically cleansed and purged from every one of the former Yugoslav
republics, but also falsely and wrongly singled out as both the
instigators of each of the civil wars and perpetrators of the worst
crimes conceivable.

Is this what the west, the empire, stands for?

Rewarding
criminals, terrorists and alliances with and services to Hitler? Does
international law get set aside and eliminated for the interests of
corporate elitists seeking power, control and enrichment? It would seem
that the lessons of history have been lost on them and that they have
forgotten why these laws were enacted and why the UN was created.

Lisa KARPOVA

PRAVDA.Ru

USA/CANADA



















© 1999-2006. «PRAVDA.Ru». When reproducing our materials in whole or in
part, hyperlink to PRAVDA.Ru should be made. The opinions and views of
the authors do not always coincide with the point of view of
PRAVDA.Ru's editors.



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December 13, 2007

Misreporting Kosovo

Misreporting Kosovo

December 13, 2007 | From theTrumpet.com
How the mainstream press has missed the single most important angle to what’s happening in Kosovo.





Brad Macdonald


Brad Macdonald




On back-to-back days in December 1991, the New York Times
published two separate articles highlighting Germany’s alarming and
audacious decision to recognize and legitimize the efforts of Slovenia
and Croatia to break away from Yugoslavia. Both articles (you can read
them here and here)
are refreshingly honest and hold little back in their analysis of
Germany’s seminal role in the violent fragmentation of Yugoslavia.



In this
article, Paul Lewis cites European diplomats who warned that Germany’s
decision to support Croatia and Slovenia, despite opposition from
virtually the rest of the world, “underscored Germany’s growing
political power in the 12-nation European Community.” Germany’s
incursion into the Balkans, wrote Lewis, “has worried many in Europe
who see it as an attempt to re-exert traditional Germanic influences over this area of the Balkans” (emphasis mine throughout).



Lewis exhibited little reticence in exposing the German
undercurrent gushing beneath what was unfolding in Yugoslavia, even
when it meant connecting Germany’s decision to recognize Croatia and
Slovenia in 1991, to its sordid history with these entities during
World War ii.


Moreover, in its unusual assertiveness in
moving ahead with a plan to extend diplomatic recognition to the
breakaway Yugoslav republics of Croatia and Slovenia, Germany has stirred troubling historical associations …. Nazi Germany dominated the two Yugoslav regions during World War ii, absorbing Slovenia into the Third Reich and creating a puppet regime in Croatia.



Then there’s this piece from the Times a month later: “Germany’s decision to press for quick recognition of the two republics, disregarding
appeals from the United States and the United Nations, marked a new
assertiveness that some Europeans find disconcerting”
(Jan. 16, 1992).



The point?



In 1991-92, a mainstream news organ like the New York Times
was not afraid to confront the reality that Germany was manipulating
the Balkans in an effort to “re-exert traditional Germanic influences”
over the region. A willingness to analyze the Balkans through the
German prism was plainly evident.



How times have changed.


On Monday, the deadline for a mutual solution to the Kosovo dilemma
expired, and Kosovar Albanians, led by former terrorist leader Hashim
Thaci, said they would immediately start finalizing their declaration
of independence from Serbia, which they will likely announce within the
first two months of 2008.


The subject of Kosovo’s independence does not lack coverage. What
it lacks is the kind of fresh, up-front, in-depth reporting practiced
by the likes of the New York Times
when it covered Yugoslavia’s dissolution in 1991-92. When Croatia,
Slovenia and Bosnia broke away from Yugoslavia in the early 1990s, the Times
didn’t hesitate to declare Germany’s pivotal and alarming role in the
crises (though later, when the U.S. and British governments switched
sides, so too did the Times).


Now Kosovo is about to erupt, and few people, certainly not the
mainstream press, are talking about Germany’s fundamental role in this
crisis!



Why not? It’s a blockbuster angle!


What’s happening in Kosovo is covered with German fingerprints. It
was Germany (and the Vatican) that first legitimized the dissolution of
the state formerly called Yugoslavia. The day Bonn threw its weight
behind Croatia’s and Slovenia’s decision to break away in 1991, every
republic in Yugoslavia that was thinking about breaking away, including
Kosovo, learned that it could do so and have the support of Germany and
the Vatican.


But Germany’s intimate relationship with Kosovo runs deeper than
mere ideological support. The involvement in the province by Germany,
one of Kosovo’s most important and long-standing supporters, has
manifested itself in very practical—and dangerous—ways. The German
government has been closely linked to the Kosovo Liberation Army (kla),
a terrorist organization that during the early to mid-1990s was linked
to the mafia in Kosovo and other Islamic terrorists in the region.



In 1996, the German foreign intelligence service (bnd), established a major outpost in the Albanian city of Tirana, where kla terrorists were trained to fight against Serbian authorities. According to Le Monde Diplomatique,
“special forces in Berlin provided the operational training and
supplied arms and transmission equipment from ex-East German Stasi
stocks as well as black uniforms” (May 1999).



Here’s what Trumpet editor in chief Gerald Flurry wrote in July 2002:



Kosovo’s “internationally unrecognized government-in-exile” had a prime minister who was based in Germany and operated freely with the blessing (perhaps even the direction) of the German government!
So Germany recognized Kosovo’s government-in-exile when nobody else
did. But the international community submissively followed Germany’s
lead. The kla guerrillas didn’t just happen. They were essentially raised up and directly supported by Germany—the powerhouse of Europe.


How many analysts, when they consider Kosovo’s independence today,
are factoring in Germany’s central role in the growth and expansion of
the kla? How many wonder why
Germany would be so interested in, and go to such great lengths to
secure, Kosovo’s independence from Serbia? What’s in it for Germany?



These questions lie at the heart of analysis on Kosovo—but few are asking them!



The Trumpet has explained how, under the umbrella of the United States and nato,
Germany and Europe have, since 1991, dramatically increased their
influence in the Balkans. By employing a subtle diplomatic
divide-and-conquer policy, Germany has precipitated the systematic and
violent fracturing of Yugoslavia. It was Germany, through cunning use
of exaggerated and inaccurate claims and emotive language, that in 1999
stirred nato, predominantly comprised of U.S. troops, to bomb Serbia.



In March 1999, German Defense Minister Rudolf Scharping said in a television interview on zdf that “genocide is starting” in Serbia. His alarmist vocabulary turned the collective Western mindset against Serbia. The Australian
reported on April 1, 1999, “With thousands of refugees continuing to
stream out of the war-torn province, German Defense Minister Rudolf
Scharping claimed in Bonn last night that evidence had emerged of
concentration camps being set up by Serb forces.”


“People watched television and saw the streams of Albanian
refugees,” wrote Gerald Flurry at the time. “Then they totally blamed
the Serbs. Most knew very little about Kosovo, yet spoke of ‘genocide’—the deliberate and systematic destruction of a race. Then came talk about ‘concentration camps.’ Genocide and concentration camps—words introduced by the German defense minister” (The Rising Beast).



Are Serbian leader Slobodan Milosevic’s supposed atrocities against Albanians the real reason America and nato bombed Belgrade into submission? During the 1990s, actual genocides were occurring in Rwanda and Sierra Leone—not to mention the slaughter of Serbs
by Croatians and the Kosovo Albanians themselves—and the Clinton
government did little to intervene. Why was America prepared to bomb
Serbia into submission, but not the evil forces killing hundreds of
thousands of innocent victims in Rwanda or Sierra Leone? Because
America was pressured into bombing Serbia! Germany and Europe convinced all of nato to fight for their Balkan cause!


From the very beginning, Germany and Europe have been determined to
conquer the Balkans, be it by force or in a web of diplomatic
maneuvers.


In 2003, EU Commission President Romano Prodi promised that all
Balkan countries—if they danced to the EU’s tune of course—could
“become members of the EU one day.” While they might not necessarily
become members on the same day, and each would have to follow its own
course, he said, nonetheless, “in the long run, [the] Balkans belong strictly to the EU” (EUobserver, Jan. 10, 2003).



Out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaks!



This is why Germany wanted Serbia, its historical enemy and counterweight in the region, destroyed by nato.
Germany and Europe believe the Balkans belong “strictly to the EU.”
Without the pesky Slobodan Milosevic around to interrupt their plans,
Germany and Europe could more easily conquer the Balkans!



Any in-depth analysis of the events unfolding in Kosovo must account for this history.



The International Herald Tribune
reported yesterday on a plan concocted by Slovenia (which will likely
be holding the EU presidency when Kosovo declares its independence) by
which the European Union will embrace Kosovo when it declares
statehood. Europe is prepping itself for action in Kosovo.



The Tribune quoted one diplomat who said that if violence breaks out in Kosovo, Europe’s response must be “fast and decisive because the EU is showing it’s boss in its own courtyard. We want to show we don’t need Washington or Moscow to tell us what to do.”



Considering the history we just covered, against whom do you think Germany and Europe will take action?



On Monday, the Itar-Tass news agency reported
that Wolfgang Ischinger, the German diplomat representing the EU in the
group of three international mediators (Russia, the United States and
the EU) at the talks that were held between Serbia and Kosovar
Albanians, told Radio Berlin Brandenburg that the EU would soon be in
agreement on the Kosovo issue.


Ischinger’s interpretation of what Kosovo’s independence will look
like was intriguing. “It will be a state entity,” he said, “which will
continue to be under broad international observation. The nato troops will continue to be deployed there. A further international presence of the UN and, consequently, of EU, will be ensured.”



Germany and Europe are making plans to cement their control of Kosovo via the UN and nato!


In 1991, both Germany and Europe as a whole were significantly
weaker, less unified and less defined than they are today. Germany was
a newly united, largely inward-focused state in the early stages of
resurrecting itself as the leader of Europe and on the global scene.
Europe was even more amorphous than it appears today.


But this seemingly innocuous appearance didn’t stop a major
newspaper from ringing alarm bells when Germany boldly announced it
would support Croatia and Slovenia in their quest for independence, a
decision that many knew would set a dangerous precedent and likely
cause Yugoslavia’s dissolution. At that time, even a mainstream news
source analyzed the breakdown of Yugoslavia in the context of German
ambition in the Balkans!


Today, we don’t see any such analysis in the news media. Germany
and the EU are widely embraced as legitimate and influential global
powers with a formidable economic, military and geopolitical imprint.
Europe, with Germany at its vanguard, has become a respected and
increasingly powerful geopolitical force motivated by lofty ambitions
of becoming a united superpower.


Still, the mainstream media today refuse to analyze the Balkans in
the context of what’s happening in Germany and Europe, and of Germany’s
history with the region. This is the most dangerous and ominous angle
of the story, and the most underreported one!



In time, this shameful ignorance will prove to be an expensive mistake.


http://www.thetrumpet.com/index.php?q=4556.2818.0.0

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December 12, 2007

The case against Kosovo independence



The case against Kosovo independence




























If
I were to say that Israel deserved to qualify for the European championship,
most local football fans might agree. Israel played really well - the best
ever. However, England deserved to qualify too - especially if you look back in
history: They invented the game, after all. Nevertheless, neither of them will
be heading to the championship because there are certain rules and conditions
which preclude that from happening.



If
someone came along insisting that Israel and England take part in the finals
anyway and made room for them by excluding teams that had won their places fair
and square, such behavior would destroy the entire football enterprise. The
championships would become meaningless.



This
is how things work in professional sports. Agreed upon rules must be applied -
equally across the board.



And
that's also how international relations must work. Fair is fair and rules are
rules.



For
instance, when someone states: "Kosovo deserves independence," as my
colleague Tonin Gjuraj, ambassador of Albania, did in his Jerusalem Post op-ed
(November 27), people of good intentions would be inclined to first ask: What
are the rules of the game?



OK,
they would say, if that's possible, why not? But in this case the rules are
clear: It is not possible without agreement from Serbia! International law,
above all the UN Charter and its fundamental principle of sovereignty,
guarantees territorial integrity and equality of states, and Kosovo is part of
sovereign state - the Republic of Serbia. That has been approved once again by
Resolution 1244 of the Security Council.



Regarding
the rights of national minorities, Albanians of Kosovo included, it is clear
that creating a state of their own is not one of those rights.



That
is why Albania's ambassador, wisely choosing his words, claims that Kosovo
deserves independence; he does not say that it has the right. He is advocating
for his fellow Albanians - that is understandable - but also carefully avoiding
mentioning that an independent Kosovo would be another Albanian state in
Europe.



Two
states, side by side, for about four million people - that would be difficult
to explain to Israelis who are struggling to preserve a single Jewish state.



Creating
a state for Kosovo could be a first step toward joining it with the Albanian
state - that was Hitler's solution. Only during the Hitler period did a
so-called Greater Albania exist, and only during the Nazi regime was Kosovo
treated as a separate region by itself, named New Albania.



That
was a time of ethnic cleansing which produced the Albanian majority in the
area. How could anyone justify such an approach today? Wherever you look in
history, Kosovo was part of either Serbia or some other empire that
occasionally dominated in the Balkans, but never part of the Albanian state. In
fact, there was no Albanian state until 1912.



A
MODERN Serbian state was established after the war in the Balkans. The Kingdom
of Serbia, on most of the territory of the old Serbian Empire, included Kosovo
and Macedonia.



Distorting
history can only have a boomerang effect. My Albanian colleague claims:
"The area was annexed by Yugoslavia against Kosovar resistance in 1918.
This annexation violated the right of the Kosovars to self-determination and,
therefore, violated international law."



He
is wrong on three counts.



First,
in 1918, Yugoslavia did not exist at all. With the downfall of Austro-Hungarian
and Ottoman empires in 1918 the "Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenians"
was established.



Second,
the pillar of that new state was the Kingdom of Serbia, and Kosovo was part of
it. Finally, since the right to self-determination never belonged to the
minorities, it became proof that Albanians in Kosovo always had a status of a
minority.



Since
there was no annexation of Kosovo in 1918, that raises the question: Where does
that idea come from?



There
is only one case in history when the notion of annexation was connected with
Kosovo - from 1941 to 1944 when the Nazis annexed Kosovo to Albania and it was
called "annexed territories."



So,
here we are again at the idea of Greater Albania, which besides Albania and
Kosovo, at that time included large parts of Macedonia, Montenegro and South
Serbia. The idea of Greater Albania established by the "1878 First League
of Prizren," was and still is the dream of Kosovar irredentists, who
organized a so-called liberation movement on the eve of the last century which
Serbia treated as a terrorist organization.



It
is worth recalling that during World War II the 21st SS Division
"Skenderbeg" was created and comprised primarily of Kosovar Muslim
recruits. They committed genocide against the Serbian and Jewish populations in
Kosovo as well as in Bosnia and Croatia. Therefore, trying to make the Albanian
case to Israelis - as the ambassador did in his op-ed - using the example of
the 200 Jews who survived the Holocaust in Albania (under Italian control) is
disingenuous.



It
is equally cynical to claim that "Kosovo is not and will not be a Muslim
state" considering that during the past eight years over 150 Christian
churches have been destroyed while 400 mosques financed by Islamic countries
have been constructed.



The writer is ambassador of Serbia in Israel. The
case against Kosovo independence | Jerusalem Post





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Kosovo’s Independence Will Stir Up Trouble. Who Will Benefit?

Kosovo’s Independence Will Stir Up Trouble. Who Will Benefit?






laughland-controversies.gif
Perhaps
the most striking things about the impending declaration of
independence about Kosovo is that is happening at all. Why should the
Kosovo Albanians be striving for independence from Belgrade now, since
there has been peace in the province for eight years (interrupted only
in 2004, when a mob of Albanians killed 25 Serbs) and since the regime
in Serbia, of which the Kosovo Albanians are citizens, has been
democratic and pro-European since 2000?

Why, indeed, did the
Kosovo Albanians spend the whole of the first part of the 1990s in
peace, when the rest of Yugoslavia was in flames? If their desire for
independence had really been so intense as their national propaganda
claims, then surely the time to act would have been when the Yugoslav
federation was collapsing in 1992-1992, or during the Bosnian civil war
of 1992-1995.

For that matter, why did the Albanians inside
Serbia, who are in the majority in the area around the Southern towns
of Presevo and Bujanovac, start their attacks there in 2001, a year
after the fall of Slobodan Milošević’s fall from power, whereas they
had been left in peace during the civil war between Serbs and Albanians
in neighbouring Kosovo in 1998-1999?

None of this seems to make any sense.

One
thing is certain: the Kosovo Albanians would not have threatened to
declare independence if they were not certain that they would receive
diplomatic recognition from the United States and most European states.
The Kosovo leadership (which means the leadership of the Kosovo
Liberation Army, the guerrilla force whose head, Hashim Thaci, is now
the “Prime Minister” of Kosovo) has very close ties to the West. Thaci
famously kissed Madeleine Albright during the Kosovo war of 1999 and
also visited Tony Blair at Number 10; one of his predecessors as Prime
Minister, Ramush Haradinaj, who has since been indicted by The Hague
for war crimes, is known as a major CIA asset.

No doubt the
Kosovo Albanians have some claim to independence, although it is
notable how seldom they refer to the persecution of which they were
supposedly the victims in 1999 under Milošević. This is no doubt
because everyone knows that those claims of genocide bore as much
relation to reality as did the claim made in 2002-2003 that there were
weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. Indeed, the charge of genocide
turned out to be so unsustainable that it was never even included in
the indictment against Milošević.

The loss of Kosovo by Serbia
would be a terrible blow to the values of Christian civilisation, since
that region is itself a symbol of the victory over the European spirit
over the superior military force of Islam, having been the scene of
Serbia’ historic battle against the Turks in 1389. The province
contains some of the jewels of European architecture, the monasteries
of Peć, Dečani and Gračanica. But the truth is that the new battle of
Kosovo was lost a long time ago, when the Serbs, like most Europeans,
stopped having babies while the Albanians, like many other Muslim
peoples, continued having them – and at a vast rate. The demographic
battle having been lost, there is very little the government in
Belgrade can do now to halt the inevitable.

Worse, perhaps, is
the effect which the independence of this small province will have on
the region and the wider world. The anger of Bosnian Serbs is inflamed
by the West’s double-standards. While it demands autonomy and now
secession for the Kosovo Albanians, it is pushing ever greater
centralisation and curtailment of autonomy in neighbouring
Bosnia-Herzegovina. The Serbs there have been told they must never hold
a referendum on independence from Bosnia, while the EU-back “High
Representative” is determined to abrogate what remains of the autonomy
of Republika Srpska. Independence for Kosovo will, in all likelihood,
lead to the fragmentation of the artificial and largely bogus state of
Bosnia-Herzegovina.

But the double-standards are not confined
to the Balkans. The narrative in Cyprus is almost identical to that in
Kosovo: a Muslim population there, the Turks, was the subject of
persecution by its Orthodox co-nationals, the Greeks, until they were
protected by military intervention according to international law:
Turkey invaded Cyprus in 1974 and invoked the terms of the 1960 Treaty
of Guarantee (between Britain, Turkey and Greece) which guaranteed the
constitution of Cyprus. Yet Northern Cyprus (the Turkish part) has been
the victim of an embargo and international isolation ever since then,
an international pariah while Kosovo’s leaders are the toast of the
world’s chancelleries.

The same goes for Transnistria.
Transnistria is a small sliver of land along the left bank of the
Dniestr river, North-West of Odessa. When the Romanian province of
Bessarabia was illegally annexed by the Soviet Union in 1940, according
to the terms of the secret protocol of the Molotov-Ribbentrop pact,
Transnistria became part of the Soviet Socialist Republic of Moldova.
It had never before in history been governed from the Moldovan capital,
Chişinău, and most of its inhabitants speak Russian. The Soviet Union
started to collapse in 1990 precisely when Moscow admitted, after years
of denial, the existence of the secret protocol to the
Molotov-Ribbentrop pact and this led to the secession of the Baltic
states and, eventually, the dissolution of the USSR itself.
Transnistria naturally said that its incorporation into Moldova was as
illegal as Moldova’s incorporation into the Soviet Union and demanded
independence. Although it has indeed been de facto independent since
1992, the West has consistently told it that it will not allow it to
secede from Moldova. Ditto for Nagorno-Karabakh (formally part of
Azerbaijan, populated now exclusively by Armenians), South Ossetia
(part of Georgia but culturally linked to North Ossetia, which is
inside Russia) and Abkazia (also part of Georgia but de facto
independent since 1992).

Encouraging independence for Kosovo
will only re-ignite the conflict which has been basically frozen there
since 1999, as well as the similarly frozen conflicts in the Balkans,
in Moldova and the Caucasus. What is the point of this when the other
option is to let sleeping dogs lie? Does someone have an interest in
causing trouble?

The only common denominator in all these
various conflicts, indeed, is attitudes to Russia. Russia supports
Serbia on Kosovo and Bosnia; it is broadly supportive of Transnistria
and the other non-recognised states on the territory of the former
Soviet Union (although it has done little concrete to help them). Any
trouble in these area is trouble for Moscow in its own backyard, which
President Putin told me in September is the last thing he wants. Maybe
that is why the West is determined to provoke it.

http://www.brusselsjournal.com/node/2764



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December 09, 2007

What will be Russia's response to Kosovo's independence?











What will
be Russia's response to Kosovo's independence?
















19:40



|



07/ 12/ 2007




Print version





MOSCOW. (RIA Novosti political commentator Yelena
Shesternina) - The troika of international mediators (the U.S., EU and Russia),
after several months of trying to think up an elegant solution to the Kosovo
problem, has admitted its failure.



The final report, which it decided to submit to UN Secretary
General Ban Ki-Moon ahead of schedule (the original deadline was December 10),
does not contain a single concrete recommendation to Belgrade or Pristina, or
indeed, to the UN. What will happen next? How will Moscow respond if the Kosovo
authorities carry out their threat and proclaim independence unilaterally?



The troika mission has failed, as it should have. The
positions of its members were too wide apart.



Washington was pressing for the province's independence and
Moscow went out of its way to argue that there should be no haste. The European
Union, supposed to represent the interests of all its 27 member countries, was
doing a balancing act between the two positions.



Not everyone in Europe would welcome the appearance of a new
state on the world map. The most vocal opponents are Spain, Greece, Cyprus,
Romania and Slovakia. They know that as soon as Kosovo declares its
independence their own separatists will be quick to put forward similar
demands.



But it is not the position of the mediators that is the main
stumbling block. The Serbs were prepared to offer Pristina everything,
including the broadest autonomy, the likes of which no other autonomy in the
world enjoys, as long as the word "independence" is not used.



The Kosovars, however, were determined from the start that
secession from Serbia was only a matter of time. Yes, they were ready to go
through the diplomatic motions, even to sit down at the negotiating table with
the Serbs, but no more than that. And why should they if the United States and
several European countries had promised them independence in advance? The
Kosovars do not quite know themselves what they will do with the independence.
They seem to hope that the West will address their numerous economic problems
with greater zeal than now.



Moscow is still behaving as if the issue of the province's
independence has not been closed. But it seems that it has. The Kosovars are
right when they say it is only a matter of time. The question that remains is
when the independence will become official and how it will be "acted
out"?



The scenario until the end of the year is more or less
clear. After Ban Ki-Moon reads the report it will be submitted to the UN
Security Council. The discussion promises to be stormy, but the result is a
foregone conclusion: Moscow will categorically object to any document that
contains the word "independence." If it manages to persuade the West
that another round of talks is needed, it would be its biggest foreign policy
triumph of the year.



Most experts believe the Kosovars will not dare to proclaim
independence immediately after the collapse of the UN debate. First, they have
to wait for the presidential elections in Serbia, where the first round will
take place on January 20. Second, it would be good to enlist the support of the
"united Europe" in addition to that of the United States. The EU
leaders will try to agree their actions on the "Kosovo issue" at their
summit in Brussels next week. The declared position so far is encouraging: the
EU says it is necessary "to prevent unilateral moves on Kosovo's
part."



The Europeans, at least those of them who do not think
Kosovo would set a dangerous precedent, are developing at least two secret
plans. According to the report of the International Crisis Group, Britain,
Germany, Italy and France will support independence before May 2008. For
starters, they will try to get the Brussels meeting to pass a joint statement to
the effect that the EU considers the Kosovo negotiations closed and the best
way out of the impasse is to revert to the Ahtisaari Plan (Martti Ahtisaari is
the UN Secretary General's special representative who developed a plan for
Kosovo's independence). If Spain, Greece and other countries opposed to the
Ahtisaari Plan put their foot down, the European Commission will give every
country a carte blanche to decide whether or not to recognize Kosovo's
independence.



The second plan has been worked out in Paris. According to a
leak to the press, Pristina will issue its "final warning" in January
and officially proclaim independence in February. Albania would be the first to
recognize the new country, followed by the United States, Muslim countries and
some EU members.



What are Moscow's options in this situation? There are not
many. The "adequate response" variant (recognizing the independence
of South Ossetia, Abkhazia and Transdnester) is unlikely to be used.



Sergei Lavrov has said more than once that the Foreign
Ministry will proceed strictly within the legal framework and will not violate
the territorial integrity of other states. And there is no point in aggravating
the quarrel with Georgia, especially because the West would certainly throw its
weight behind Tbilisi (it is not for nothing that it has prudently declared the
Kosovo case "unique").



Such a response will not lead to a reversal of Kosovo's
independence, and Russia will end up with more troubles on its borders than it
can handle. Tbilisi would not take the secession of rebel republics lying down,
no matter who wins the presidential election.



So, the chances are that we will again see Moscow trying to
do some diplomatic footwork. For example, stopping Kosovo from being admitted
to the OSCE and, far more importantly for Pristina, to the UN. After all,
Kosovo cannot join the United Nations without the consent of the Security
Council.



The opinions expressed in this article are the author's and
do not necessarily represent those of RIA Novosti.



http://en.rian.ru/analysis/20071207/91418613.html





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Kosovo 'mess' could spark ethnic violence: ex-KFOR chief

Kosovo 'mess' could spark ethnic violence: ex-KFOR chief



LONDON (AFP) — The Kosovo situation is "a mess" that threatens to
spill over into ethnic violence again, the man who first commanded
NATO-led forces in the Serbian province said Sunday.

General Sir
Mike Jackson, the former British Army chief who commanded the Kosovo
Force (KFOR) when it entered the province in June 1999, said there was
a minefield ahead in which all parties must "tread carefully", in an
article in the British weekly newspaper The Sunday Telegraph.

Last-ditch
talks between Serbia and ethnic-Albanian-majority Kosovo have failed
and the southern province could soon declare independence once the
United Nations deadline for sorting out its future expires on Monday.

"It
is, sadly, anything but clear: the Albanian Kosovars expect
independence, which Belgrade refuses to concede. We should not
underestimate the volatility of this situation," Jackson wrote.

"While
both Kosovar and Serb leaders claim to oppose the use of force to
achieve their aims, the same cannot be said of the ethnic paramilitary
groupings."

UN Security Council resolution 1244 stipulated that Kosovo was to remain part of Serbia, but under UN administration.

"At
this point, we have a mess. It seems that UNSCR 1244 remains extant
until the Security Council removes it -- but Russia will not allow
this," Jackson said.

"So what happens to the current UN mission
in Kosovo? Do the staff of recognising countries leave, while those of
non-recognising countries remain? What of KFOR? Will Kosovo qualify for
UN membership?

"All of this will provide much work for diplomats and lawyers -- but not, I fervently hope, for soldiers.

"I
do not believe the Serbs would be so foolish as to invade Kosovo in the
face of KFOR, but I do fear further ethnic violence, and thus the need
for KFOR reinforcement."

NATO has said its 17,000 strong peacekeeping force would "resolutely" deal with any violence in Kosovo.

"Perhaps the international community's aversion to boundary change should be re-examined in this case," Jackson added.

"The
largest concentration of Kosovo Serbs live north of the River Ibar,
adjacent to Serbia proper. This small area was transferred from Serbia
to Kosovo only 40 years ago. A restoration might have merit.

"Overall, I suspect that the die is cast. Understandably, Kosovo's independence will go very hard in Serbia.

"The
Serbian government's current sad predicament is (former Yugoslav
president Slobodan) Milosevic's wretched legacy, but all parties must
now tread carefully.

"If Kosovo's independence really is to be
the last piece of the Balkan jigsaw, there must be an unprecedented
generosity of spirit in all concerned."

http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5ie7RcMnMnejw01bISqr-E9r8sdWg






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Gen. Sir Mike Jackson warns on Kosovo



Gen. Sir
Mike Jackson warns on Kosovo





Last Updated: 1:11am GMT 09/12/2007










General Sir Mike Jackson has warned that the Balkans could
be engulfed in violence unless the crisis surrounding the future of the
province of Kosovo can be resolved.


Sir Mike fears that British troops will be sent to
intervene if Kosovo's leaders unilaterally declare independence from Serbia.


Serbian officials have stated they will use "all
means" to preserve sovereignty over the ethnically Albanian province.


The current crisis follows the failure of a peace
initiative between the rival governments in Pristina and Belgrade.


Writing in The Sunday Telegraph today, Sir Mike says:
"The situation is volatile and likely to become more so."


Many of the Serbian minority living in Kosovo have already
left their homes for Serbia in the belief that they are about to be attacked.


Kosovo is to be discussed at a meeting of European foreign
ministers on Monday, and at a European summit this week before going before
the Security Council on December 19.




http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2007/12/09/wkosovo109.xml





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December 06, 2007

Black cloud over the Balkans



Black cloud over
the Balkans



Misha
Glenny



Published 06 December 2007



The status of Kosovo was supposed to be the last obstacle to
solving the problems of the Balkans. Failure would affect the entire region.



Most people in the Balkans have seen the Kosovo train wreck coming for the
past two years. But now that it is upon us, apart from some dark warnings, few
have been able to spell out what the failure of talks on Kosovo's final status
actually means.



The international significance of a debacle that reflects poorly on all
participants is, by contrast, very clear: Russia and the United States have
combined to humiliate the European Union. "They are clearly trying to
undermine the EU - of that there is no doubt," a senior Brussels official
told me recently.



For several months, both Russia and the US have in effect supported the
maximalist demands of their chosen proxies in the Balkans: Serbia and Kosovo.
This neutered the most recent negotiations of the US-EU-Russia troika, which
were a last-ditch attempt to hammer out a compromise between Belgrade and
Pristina. Serbia knew Russia would block Kosovo's independence in the United
Nations, while Kosovo was secure in American support for a unilateral
declaration of independence. Neither side had any incentive to compromise, and
the EU was exposed again as incapable of managing a political crisis in its own
backyard, while its taxpayers will be compelled to clear up the resulting mess.



Over the past decade, Brussels has channelled incalculable diplomatic and
financial resources into the Balkans (far more money than either Washington or
Moscow). The reasoning behind this expenditure is eminently sensible: as a
consequence of the Yugoslav wars of the 1990s and the troubled transition from
communism, the entire region has suffered from stunted development. This has
enabled corrupt economic interests, chiefly from within the Balkans, but also
from the EU and Russia, to turn the region into a playground for
asset-grabbing, money laundering and other criminal activities.



By offering the inducement of huge infrastructural and financial support,
the EU has persuaded the new leaderships in the Balkans to embark on
far-reaching economic and political reforms. The EU's commitment has already
had a stunning transformational impact on its two Balkan members, Romania and
Bulgaria, not to mention Slovenia, the former Yugoslav republic that is now
almost indistinguishable in character from Austria.



But the Kosovo crisis is casting a big black cloud over the hope that the
remaining former Yugoslav territories would follow Slovenia's smooth passage
into the EU. Croatia is likely to slip in before the door shuts. But the
constitutional mess of Kosovo and Serbia may well keep that door closed,
probably temporarily but perhaps for many years, as the crisis reverberates in
Bosnia and Macedonia, and less directly in Montenegro and Albania.



So what happens now? In the long term, the question keeping EU officials
awake at night concerns Serbia's membership of the EU. The enlargement
commission and several key European foreign ministries have believed for some
time that Serbia's admission is crucial for long-term stabilisation of the
region, given its situation at the geographical heart of the Balkans.



Nonetheless, the major EU member states feel they have no choice but to
follow Washington in recognising the UDI that Pristina is preparing. But most
of them are doing so reluctantly - they know that, privately, UN officials in
Kosovo predict that some 50,000 Serbs living south of the Ibar River will head
to northern Mitrovica, the Serb enclave in Kosovo bordering on Serbia that is
in effect governed from Belgrade; and that the recognition of an indep endent
Kosovo will also result in the territory's de facto partition.



The sight of impoverished peasants throwing their worldly belongings on to
the back of carts and trucks will make for an unedifying spectacle to accompany
independence. But, though all sides in this dispute have long understood that
partition would be a consequence of almost any solution, diplomatic cowardice
has ensured that nobody has been prepared to articulate this clearly in public.
So the independent state will be divided, with Belgrade retaining absolute
control in the northern enclave.



Inelegant though a divided Kosovo might be, both sides can probably live
with it. The epicentres of potential political earthquakes lie elsewhere. Zone
one is Bosnia-Herzegovina, where the rule of a series of omnipotent European
high representatives has disguised the profound weakness of the state fashioned
in Dayton, Ohio. At stake is the very viability of Bosnia.



The most depressing symbol of the Bosnian Federation, which joins Catholic
Croats and Muslim Bosniaks, is Mostar, the capital of Herzegovina. After 12
years, the two communities on either side of the Neretva River have nothing in
common except a high school that Croat children attend in the morning and
Bosniaks in the afternoon.



Meanwhile, the leadership of the Serbian entity in the east and north,
Republika Srpska, reacts with open hostility to attempts by the current EU
Special Representative, the Slovak Miroslav Lajcák, to centralise in
anticipation of transferring more power to the government in Sarajevo. Serbia's
prime minister, Vojislav Kostunica, is encouraging this intransigence as well
as contributing to the outbreak of Putin-mania in both Serbia and Republika
Srpska. The dour face of the Russian president stares down from kiosks
throughout the two territories as the presumed new saviour of Serbia's
interests.



The Bosnian state will feel the strain of Kosovan independence as Serbia,
backed by Russia, toys with demanding the same rights of secession for
Republika Srpska as the west has granted Kosovo.



What neither Kostunica nor other Serbs care to mention too often is how
Russia was the main international sponsor of another "betrayal" of Serbian
interests - the recent independence of Montenegro. Renamed Moscow-on-Sea by
local wits, Montenegro has invited Russian oligarchs to replace cigarette
smuggling as the profoundly corrupt state's main source of income. According to
the Podgorica weekly magazine Monitor, Oleg Deripaska, Russia's
aluminium king, now owns 40 per cent of the new country's indust rial capacity.



But apart from becoming the new money-laundering paradise of the Balkans,
Montenegro presents fewer potential problems than southern Serbia and
Macedonia. Here we must wait to see whether Kosovo's independence further
discombobulates the fragile relationships between large Albanian minorities and
the Slav majorities. Despite being an EU candidate member, Macedonia is coming
under renewed pressure from Greece in the ludicrous dispute about the former
country's official name. The argument may be arcane, but with Greece
administering a veto on Macedonia's progress towards European and Nato
integration, the implications are very serious.



And in Kosovo itself? The great headache is the economy - under UN and EU
administration, the province has experienced a precipitous decline in GDP and
frightening levels of un employment. This is a dismal record that underlines
the hopeless inadequacy of the west's post-intervention policies. The territory
is now thoroughly criminalised as a consequence, and it is hard to see how
independence will change this in the short term.



Two to three years ago, the EU was on the way to solving the fundamental
problems of the Balkans. Kosovo's status was the final, albeit very complex,
obstacle to circumnavigate. The collective failure to do so has cast the region
back into uncharted, choppy waters, where lie several concealed rocks.



3 comments from
readers



David
Edenden


06 December 2007



Dear Misha Glenny:



Along with Noel Malcolm and Human Rights Watch, you
are one of the very few people who have written about the sorry plight of
ethnic Macedonians in Greece (an EU and Nato member) struggling for human
rights.



There is a basic flaw in your argument that
"Russia and the United States have combined to humiliate the European
Union".



The EU is part of the problem in the Balkans, not
part of the solution. Greece and Bulgaria have conducted a slow motion cultural
genocide against their respective ethnic Macedonian minorities, Greece's values
regarding minority rights are EU values. Bulgaria was recently admitted to the
EU and Nato, notwithstanding their denial of minority rights to ethnic
Macedonians.



Any Serb in Kosovo who trusts the EU or Nato to
protect their rights is insane! They only have to look to Greece and Bulgaria
to see their future!



The best way to demonstrate EU commitment to
minority rights in the Balkans is to suspend Greece and Bulgaria from the EU
for one year and force them to re-apply using their treatment of ethnic
Macedonians as a criteria for membership.



Anything less is just smoke and mirrors!



"Despite being an EU candidate member,
Macedonia is coming under renewed pressure from Greece in the ludicrous dispute
about the former country's official name. The argument may be arcane, but with
Greece administering a veto on Macedonia's progress towards European and Nato
integration, the implications are very serious."



David Edenden



The Macedonian Tendency



http://the-macedonian-tendency.blogspot.com/



David
Edenden


06 December 2007



Dear Misha Glenny,



When discussing the positions that states take in international
affairs, we often forget that these positions of "national interest"
are the result of the interests of particular politicians, not of "state
interests".



If you want to make a splash in the US presidential
debate, you may want to discuss Barack Obama's pandering to the Greek lobby
regarding the Macedonian name issue. My suggestion is to contact Slate or
Salon.



Obama's proposed Bill (HR 356) in the House of
Representatives denounces the Republic of Macedonia for "irredentism"
for simply demanding that Greece grant basic minority rights to its ethnic
Macedonian minority. Obama ignores the rights of ethnic Macedonian for a few
pieces of sliver to his campaign.



Greece does admit to a "slavophone"
minority that speaks an "idiom" but does not have a language, history
or culture, you know … a bunch of "N….. Words".



Therefore the title of your piece may be:



"Barack Obama to Ethnic Macedonians: Drop
Dead!"



"Barack Obama to ethnic Macedonians: You are a
bunch of "N-Words"



"Barack Obama supports Greek Racism!"



Misha, if you want more information about the
impact on Macedonia about independence for Kosovo, don't be a stranger!



David Edenden



The Macedonian Tendency



http://the-macedonian-tendency.blogspot.com/



writeon


06 December 2007



I miss Misha Glenny. He used to be a regular on the
Today Programme and Radio 4, and I used to think after listening to his
analysis, he's too good, he won't last. What I mean by this is, he seemed to
have a real grasp of the complexities of the Balkans and the dangers and
possible consequences of Great Power interference in the region.



This was at a time when our political leaders
seemed bent on a policy of "simplifictaion" and taking sides, in of
all places, the Balkans! Every time I heard Misha Glenny his knowlegde and
analytical abilities seemed to put to shame and undermine the increasingly
emotional response of our politicians to the Balkan crisis.



If we recognise an independent and breakaway
Kosova, won't we in practice be re-drawing the borders of Serbia against the
will of the majority of Serbs? And without the support of the United Nations?
What about the issue of Serbian sovereignty in this matter? Surely they have
the right to oppose the forced re-drawing of their borders by foreign powers?



It seems that, looked at from a neutral
perspective, it's only Western powers and their clients that have the right to
re-define borders and create new states, if anyone else tries it they are in
Big Trouble. It almost appears like we think that we own the world, what we do
is right, we make mistakes, but we're fundamentally benign, and our national
interests the only interests that are legitimate, and natural; everyone else is
merely being "nationalistic", old-fashioned, unrealistic, and
selfish.



http://www.newstatesman.com/200712060031





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