A
Decade Too Late -
Kosovo
Talks Begin
PressInfo #
192
October
14, 2003
By
Jan
Oberg,
TFF director
On October 14, 2003, in Vienna, high-level
Kosovo-Albanians and Serbs from Belgrade met
face-to-face. It was a historical meeting in more than
one sense. It provides an opportunity for anyone
concerned about conflict-management and peace-building to
reflect on its philosophy, methods and politics. Did the
international so-called community do the right thing? Is
there adequate institutional learning? Are there
parallels between Kosovo, Afghanistan and Iraq that we
should discuss self-critically rather than simply blame
the parties?
Dialogue is fine
but the 1999 bombing hardened everybody
It is the first time since NATO's war on Yugoslavia in
1999 that Serbs and Albanians meet this way. Indeed, with
a few exceptions, it's the first attempt at real
negotiations since it all began in the late 1980s. Like
in Iraq, the main parties were prevented from meeting. As
time has passed hard-liners have taken over the scene and
now they won't really talk.
Being the clear victims of Milosevic' repressive
policies, the Albanians rightly felt that they had the
support of the West and would be rewarded by sticking to
a maximalist position; thus no compromise about the goal
of complete independence.
Being the largest people whose minorities in Croatia,
Bosnia and Kosovo never really felt any solidarity from
the Western conflict-managers, the Serbs felt
misunderstood, treated without fairness and they were
humiliated by the bombings. Why should they not fight
adamantly for the Kosovo province that they consider
their cradle? In addition, the Serbs as a people - and
the Kosovo Serbs in particular - have lost more than any
other due to the policies of their own leadership.
The Vienna process is not likely to bring the needed
turning point or real peace to Kosovo. Games keep on
being played by all sides, while ordinary good-hearted
Albanians, Serbs, Turks etc. in the province keep on
paying the high price. These negotiations come about a
decade too late. If there were acceptable solutions in
the eyes of the parties in the early 1990s, there is now
too much hate and distrust to identify even the least bad
solution for all.
Present in Vienna are also representatives of the UN
mission in Kosovo (UNMIK) led by Special Representative
Harri Holkeri, the contact group on Kosovo which includes
the United States, Britain, Russia, France, Italy and
Germany as well as the top leaders of the EU, Chris
Patten and Javier Solana, NATO's Secretary-General Lord
Robertson and the Chairman-in-Office of the OSCE, Dutch
Foreign Minister Jaap de Hoop Scheffer.
Conspicuous aspects
At least four aspects stand out as conspicuous:
A) The absence of Prime Minister Bajram Rexhepi, of
the Provisional Institutions of Self-Government, (PSIG)
in Kosovo; the Albanian side is headed instead by
President Dr. Ibrahim Rugova.
B) When Rexhepi refused to come, UN officials
cancelled invitations to representatives of the Serbs and
Turks in Kosovo which angered Belgrade to such an extent
that it sent a Member of its Council of Ministers but
neither its prime minister nor his deputy, according to
the BBC. Thus, all the relevant local parties are not
represented and neither is the PSIG and the Kosovo
Assembly. But
C) The UN mission, EU, OSCE and NATO is present at
their very highest levels.
D) The future status of Kosovo is not on the agenda.
The meeting cover issues such as power shortages, car
number plates, the 3,700 mostly Albanians still missing
in Kosovo, and the future of the more than 100,000 mainly
Serb citizens who fled Kosovo after the war in the
reverse ethnic cleansing by extremist Albanians.
Judging from this, it seems that the Vienna talks are
more important to the international community than to the
local parties. The international community intervened in
a most partial manner, sided with the Albanians, bombed
Serbia, showed a tacitly understanding for the Albanian
extremists reverse ethnic cleansing that forced more than
200,000 Serbs out of Kosovo after NATO's war. It got
Serbs but not Albanians to the war crimes tribunal in the
Hague and poured billions of dollars into Kosovo (not
into Serbia). But in spite of all that, the international
community still does not seem to have the trust and
authority to tell certain Albanian leaders that enough
foot-dragging is enough.
After more than a decade of missed negotiation
opportunities and four post-war years of polarisation and
hardened attitudes between the parties, international
organisations have to give the impression that the Kosovo
conflicts are moving toward some kind of solution. But
they are not. Secondly, they are probably perfectly aware
that the EU-NATO-mediated Ohrid Agreement in neighbouring
Macedonia does not work as intended and that Macedonia's
crisis is such that new Albanian-Macedonian violence
cannot be excluded - something that will once again
display the interconnectedness of extremist
Kosovo-Albanian and Macedonia-Albanian political and
military forces.
Flash-back on the
conflict in light of conflict mitigation
TFF published its first analysis on the conflict,
Preventing
War in Kosovo 11 years ago based on on-the-ground
fact-finding. Our team spent four years between 1992 and
1996 providing the only sustained (written) dialogue
between three successive governments in Belgrade (and
Slobodan Milosevic) on the one hand and the moderate
Kosovo-Albanian leadership under Dr. Rugova and his LDK
party which, as the only political leadership in former
Yugoslavia, advocated pragmatic non-violent means to
achieve its long-term goals, an independent Kosova.
This Kosova would have open borders, no military
forces and no military alliance membership and it would
never repress anyone but was destined to be based on
multi-ethnic, non-violent co-existence. I personally
served during these years as unofficial, goodwill adviser
in conflict-resolution to Dr. Rugova and our team
suggested a number of these features and strategies to
him and his fellow leaders.
In 1996, TFF published Memorandum
of Understanding between the UN and the Federal Republic
of Yugoslavia concerning a United Nations Temporary
Authority for a Negotiated Settlement, UNTANS, in
Kosovo. It was formulated as an internationally
binding treaty by our experts and dealt with issues such
as relative demilitarisation and the establishment of a
government-cum-NGO Professional Negotiation Facility
staffed by experts experienced in conflict and dispute
mitigation. It was proposed that the Authority would take
over parts of the administration in Kosovo. It was
violence-prevention and principled negotiation in one,
and it did not stipulate what the final settlement should
look like. It provided only a set of means and procedures
while proposing a comprehensive education of the people
in conflict understanding, negotiation, trust-building
and reconciliation; Serb military and police would be
replaced by international Civil Police and monitors.
Multi-ethnic Civil Affairs Officers would help everybody
run daily affairs. The UN and the OSCE would be the main
governmental actors.
We took the two reports to the UN in New York and
discussed them at the Yugoslav desk, with HE Kofi Annan
who at the time was heading the Peace-Keeping Operation,
PKO and with several others. Everyone told us that this
was the type of professional conflict analysis, early
warning and constructive proposals in line with the UN
norm of "peace by peaceful means" that was dearly needed
in the international community. However, one assistant
Secretary-General also said, "excellent work, but I have
to tell you that no one takes action in this house before
we have read on the front page of New York Times for a
couple of weeks that there is war. We are fully aware of
the need for early warning and action that you suggest
and we do do early listening, but the whole global
community is desperately overloaded with the ongoing
hotspots and wars. The sad fact is that no one has the
extra capacity to also deal seriously with potential
wars."
Ignored and
mismanaged conflicts lead to war
So, warfare broke out in Kosovo in 1997. The German
intelligence first, then the US Central Intelligence
Agency, CIA, and private mercenary companies, had done
their utmost to undercut Dr. Rugova - who Western
governments never gave anything but lip service - and
made the Kosovo Liberation Army, KLA, a forceful actor in
the province from 1993 onwards.
Among KLA's leaders was Agim Ceku, a Kosovo-born
Albanian officer in the Croatian army who in 1993 had
been spearheading Croatian President Tudjman's
politically US-condoned and militarily US-supported
Operations Flash and Storm in Krajina and Western
Slavonia. It drove out 250,000 Croatian Serbs from where
they had lived for centuries, most of whom have not
returned. It also drove out the marvellous UN
peace-keeping mission from the UNPAs (, the UN Protected
Areas) in Croatia, a first humiliation of the UN in a
series that has so far ended in Baghdad.
Years ago, Agim Ceku told me that he went down to
Kosovo from time to time to "help" KLA develop into a
formidable force of some 20,000 soldiers. Later on Ceku
was chosen by the international community to lead the
so-called civilian Kosovo Protection Corps, KPC, whose
disarmament by NATO was nothing but de facto
make-believe. KPC and irregular forces carried warfare
into both Southern Serbia and Macedonia - where NATO once
again allegedly disarmed the Albanian insurgents from
Kosovo and local paramilitary forces.
Then US envoy Richard Holbrooke who was assistant US
Secretary for the Far East when the Kwangju massacre on
hundreds of students by Seoul in 1980 was endorsed by
Washington - made an agreement with President Milosevic
to have an OSCE mission established in Kosovo, apparently
without any prior planning.
The 1200 monitors were never made available by OSCE
members but the CIA did arrive and infiltrated it. The
head of mission was William Walker, a man who had worked
in Latin America - some sources relate his name to the
CIA and death squads there - and played a short,
unimpressive role as head of the UN in Vukovar. But he
knew before any investigation had been made that the
Belgrade had committed the Racak massacre and said so on
the spot. That served as the final drop in the Clinton
administration's decision to bomb Yugoslavia. Rather than
getting a new diplomatic assignment, Walker now heads the
new privately funded American University in Kosovo!
[http://www.aukf.org/press/press_release_2.htm]
President Clinton saw it fit to bomb. He was operating
on assumptions and a level of knowledge about as good as
the Bush administration's about Iraq. He too was told and
retold invented stories that had no relation to reality -
such as the one about the thousands of people who
Milosevic had burnt in the industrial furnaces in
Mitrovica or the "Horseshoe Plan" that allegedly aimed at
driving out every and each Albanian out of Kosovo. He was
a Hitler as was Saddam and he was an ally of the US and
the West in general until priorities changed.
And there was this bothersome world media focus on the
Monica Lewinsky affair that was in need of diversion.
Incidentally, the highest NATO commander of that shameful
war, fought without UN mandate and killing 600 innocent
citizens on the ground, was Wesley Clark, the most
popular presidential candidate - Democrat - now in 2003.
And the highest-ranking civilian responsible for the war
was then NATO Secretary-General, Javier Solana who is
present in Vienna now as a EU peacemaker.
Questions we may
still ask about Kosovo
Such was the background to the international
community's de facto conflict management policies in
Kosovo. No government tried to achieve a political, civil
settlement when it was possible, i.e. in early 1990s. No
international organisation made a serious attempt at
getting Serbs and Albanians to sit down and talk under
some kind of professional mediation guidance in a
sustained, principled process.
True, there were "negotiations" in Rambouillet outside
Paris before the war. But the parties never met
face-to-face and the real American purpose seems to have
been to present a plan that would be receive a "yes" from
Albanians and "no" from the Serbs. It was achieved by
adding a military appendix that gave NATO carte blanche
to be present anywhere in Serbia, not take responsibility
for accidents or other damage done and not paying for the
use of Serbian facilities, roads, harbours etc. No matter
what one thinks about Milosevic' leadership and Serb
politics during these years, no sovereign state would
have accepted this sort of mediation. In its
consequences, Rambouillet was a de facto declaration of
the war that followed.
The relations between the Kosovo issue and the similar
aspects of conflicts in Croatia, Bosnia and Macedonia
were never really taken into account. Kosovo was not
treated as anything but a unique conflict with no
relations to anything else. The problems facing yet
another Serb minority was totally ignored by the
international community.
Few ever asked whether Kosovo could be about something
else, too - such as securing various corporations' and
consortia's projected oil and gas pipelines from the
Caspian and Black Seas through Bulgaria, Macedonia and
Albania to the Adriatic, securing supplies to the West.
Few bothered to investigated why the US built the largest
military base, Bondsteel, outside the US since the
Vietnam War a few kilometres outside Pristina, Kosovo's
capital. Few have asked how the US could carve out a
province of a sovereign state and establish their
organisations - and the base - in buildings and on land
belonging to that state without negotiating compensation.
Few asked whether Kosovo's enormous importance and the
prestige and billions of dollars poured into it had to do
also with the fact that this province seems to have
Europe's largest metal deposits.
Indeed, few have asked themselves why this tiny
province received the proportionately largest
peace-keeping mission ever - some 43,000 soldiers at the
outset plus tens of thousands of staff members of the UN,
OSCE and hundreds of NGO who flocked to the place after
the war on 1999.
The situation
today
This is what ReliefWeb
tells you
Insecurity
General security improvements have not,
however meant that harassment and violence towards ethnic
minorities have stopped. A range of serious human rights
violations including grenade attacks, booby-traps,
drive-by-shootings, arson, physical assaults, stone
throwing, vandalism and verbal insults continue. With
victims often afraid to report crimes and community
leaders reticent to stop them, perpetrators have rarely
been held accountable, reinforcing a dangerous cycle of
impunity.
Unemployment
Kosovo's young economy remains heavily reliant on
international aid and development assistance. The Kosovo
Statistics Office (KSO) has put unemployment at an
alarming 57%, with even higher rates consistently found
in minority and rural areas as well as for women
throughout Kosovo. With outside assistance expected to
decline sharply in 2003, unemployment - at least in the
short term - is likely to grow. At the same time,
unregulated activities and organised crime dominate many
areas of economic interests and compromise prospects for
private investments and socio-economic advances.
Ethnic cleansing and
enclave-isation
Subjected to various levels of ethnically
motivated harassment and violence after the 1999
conflict, minorities who remained within Kosovo sought
protection by clustering in groups. As a result, enclaves
requiring heavy international monitoring to ensure the
basic safety of residents became home to most of the
minority population remaining in Kosovo. Until recently,
free movement outside of these enclaves has been highly
restricted.
Refugees and Displaced not
returning
Against relatively positive developments, UNHCR
registered 2,741 minority returns in 2002, boosting the
2000 - 2002 cumulative total to 6,094. Approximately a
quarter of a million of Kosovo's pre-war population -
mainly Serbs, followed by Roma, Ashkalia and Egyptians -
are still displaced.
The vast majority - some 205,000 - mainly Kosovo
Serbs, are in Serbia, while Montenegro hosts
approximately 29,000 IDPs, the majority of who are Roma.
In addition, an estimated 22,500 minority individuals
remain displaced within Kosovo proper and are scattered
among five regions including the ethnically divided
municipality of Mitrovica.
Low donor response to
humanitarian needs
Of the eight organisations participating in the Kosovo
2002 CAP (the UN Consolidated Appeal for Humanitarian
Assistance), only four (UNHCR, OCHA, UNICEF and WHO)
received some funding for CAP projects. As of 10 February
2003, 31% or $8,428,254 out of a requested $27,255,6044
had been secured. Low donor response resulted in major
adjustments to and in some cases, cancellation of CAP
projects.
Learners versus
fundamentalists
Mr. Richard Holbrooke and Mr. Bernhard Kouchner (who
once held Holkeri's position) just visited Kosovo.
According to the New
York Times, "on their five-day visit to the region
via private jet, which was underwritten by two private
foundations, the diplomats charmed and cajoled, lectured
and hectored their various audiences, locking arms and
proclaiming their friendship a la Casablanca along the
way
"We don't need you," Bernard Kouchner, the
Frenchman who once administered Kosovo for the United
Nations, said in Sarajevo. "You need us."
Learners are those who make mistakes and know today
that they knew too little yesterday. With realistic
images of themselves and a dose of humility they draw
conclusions and become wiser. Thus, they open the door to
true peace and nonviolence.
Fundamentalists and other ignorant people are
convinced that they do everything right and, thus, see no
reason to learn anything. They only teach and threaten,
"We don't need you, you need us." They will continue to
commit psychological, cultural and military violence -
perhaps in proportion to the failures that must be
covered up.
Nothing
else working and all chances for peace blown, it is
indeed time to discuss the car number plates in
Kosovo!
A civilisation that sees no need to learn lessons or
learn from other cultures is ultimately doomed to perish.
Places like Croatia, Bosnia, Kosovo, Afghanistan and now
Iraq are merely stations on the Western road to moral and
political decay.
© TFF 2003

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