Will Kosovo be turned over to the Pentagon?
The Monitor (McAllen, Texas) - March 28, 2008 Friday
By Tamara Zamyatina, RIA Novosti
MOSCOW - Predictions made by experts before Kosovo's illegal declaration of
independence are coming true, the territory seized from Serbia is turning into a
big military base of the United States and NATO.
Thus, George W. Bush ordered arms shipments to Kosovo. Because of this, Moscow
insisted on an emergency session of the NATO-Russia Council - it will be held in
Brussels on March 28.
Incidentally, Bush issued this order two days after the Moscow visit of U.S.
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Defense Secretary Robert Gates, who
urged Moscow to promote cooperation, expand consultations, and display more
openness in general.
The haste with which the Pentagon is trying to take the fledgling Kosovo under
its wing demonstrates the West's lack of confidence that peace will come to the
Balkans after Kosovo's cessation. But the West was actively using this rhetoric
- the need to put an end to the Yugoslav crisis - in order to justify its
support for the Kosovo separatists. There can be no peace when one side is being
equipped with weapons against the other. This means pouring more fuel on the
fire.
The Serbs have already got the message. In the city of Kosovska Mitrovica (in
northern Kosovo), they desperately rushed to defend their last shelter - a
courthouse. Previously, it was the venue of Serbian justice, but now it is
occupied by international lawyers who will turn it over to their Albanian
colleagues. Blood was spilled there during clashes with peacekeepers. There are
numerous rallies in Belgrade supporting the Serbian minority in Kosovo.
The city divided into Albanian and Serbian parts by the Ibar River will be a
bone of contention for a long time to come. Belgrade has already sent an appeal
to the United Nations, demanding that Kosovo's northern region adjacent to
Kosovska Mitrovica with a compact Serb population be returned to Serbia. These
people primarily need physical protection, but the advocates of Kosovo's
independence are not likely to be worried about that. In the first half of the
1990s, Western countries shut their eyes to the expulsion of 300,000 Serbs from
Croatia. They won't bother about a mere hundred thousand. People in Belgrade say
that if 300,000 birds suddenly left a region, the world would be alarmed, but it
did not even notice the Serbian tragedy.
One of the reasons behind Washington's decision to supply Kosovo with arms is
its intention to keep Kosovska Mitrovica in Kosovo, because it is a turbulent
and strategically important Serbian city. But the main goal is to give Kosovars
carte-blanche to suppress the protests in Serbian enclaves on Kosovo's entire
territory. This opinion is held by Yelena Guskova, head of the Balkans Crisis
Center at the Institute of Slavic Studies, Russian Academy of Sciences.
Arms shipments to Kosovars are designed to legalize future Albanian efforts to
oust the Serbian minority from the province. In other words, the Kosovars are
given a chance to complete what they have started - drive non-Albanians out of
the province, but with their own hands so as not to cast a shadow on the
NATO-led KFOR peace keepers, not to mention the United States.
It seems that Kosovo will be the first state under NATO's complete protection.
The KFOR peacekeepers have been a guarantor of order in the province for nine
years now. Considering the intentions of Albania, Macedonia, and Croatia to join
the North Atlantic alliance at its summit in Bucharest on April 2-4, Kosovo may
become NATO's most powerful support in the Balkans. The Pentagon has already
built the world's biggest military base on its territory - Camp Bondsteel. Now
it has started the construction of a second military base, Guskova said.
Col.-Gen. Leonid Ivashov, president of the Academy of Geopolitical Problems, is
convinced that Washington, at least under the current administration, does not
need stability in the Balkans or the rest of Europe: "The United States cannot
influence events in a stable situation. If it is calm in Europe, the United
States has nothing to do there. U.S. political strategy is based on control
through chaos." He mentioned that as far as he knows, initially Washington will
supply Kosovo with small arms and armored vehicles without heavy equipment.
Subsequently the Albanians will be trained for air force and tank units.
Under the circumstances, there is little Russia can do. Guskova and Ivashov
believe that in addition to humanitarian aid to the Serbian enclaves in Kosovo,
the Kremlin could suggest bringing Russian peacekeepers into the district of
Kosovska Mitrovica. Russian experts are actively discussing the introduction of
Russian peacekeepers into Serbia's southern regions bordering on Kosovo. But
pro-Western President Boris Tadic is not likely to turn to Russia with such a
request. Hence, Russia will have to use only diplomatic levers. As for economic
levers - Kosovo's participation in the South Stream gas project - Russia either
did not want to use them, or failed to do so.
ABOUT THE WRITER
Tamara Zamyatina is an international commentator for the Russian News and
Information Agency Novosti; Web site: http://en.rian.ru/. The Washington Bureau
of RIA Novosti can be reached by phone at (202) 328-3238, fax (202) 328-0137, or
e-mail: novosti@comcast.net
The opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and may not
necessarily represent those of RIA Novosti.
(c) 2008, RIA Novosti
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