by Brian Barder
Anyone under the widely shared illusion that NATO's attack on Serbia in 1999 over Kosovo permanently resolved the problem of Kosovo's relationship with the rest of Serbia needs to have another think. The veteran peace-making miracle man,
Martti Ahtisaari, former President of Finland and accomplished godfather of UN solutions to intractable problems, is shortly to announce his proposals for the future status of Kosovo, having consulted at length with the governments of Russia, the US, the UK, France, Germany and Italy, the leaders of Serbia and Kosovo, and many others.

The forecast is that (after yet another round of protracted 'consultations') he will propose for Kosovo a form of internationally policed quasi-independence from Serbia but without any specific mention of the i-word; probably also without any entitlement to membership of the UN, other countries then free to decide whether to 'recognise' Kosovo as a state or not. This, like any other kind of severance of Kosovo from Serbia, will be bitterly and perhaps violently opposed by the great majority of the people of Serbia, and (not unnaturally) by the small, beleaguered Serbian minority still clinging on in Kosovo. For there are still some Serbs in Kosovo despite the virtual ethnic cleansing that followed the departure of the Serbian army and police in 1999 and the installation of the NATO-led international régime in Kosovo under the revised settlement programme skilfully negotiated by you guessed! Ahtisaari, with discreet help from the Russians and the Americans, after the NATO bombing had failed to bring the Serbs to heel.
There's a predictably excellent account of the current situation in the
Guardian of 26 January 2007 by Jonathan Steele,
who argues with his usual persuasiveness for the award of full
independence to Kosovo without further delay, despite the acknowledged
risks. One such risk is that when the package is submitted to the
Security Council for endorsement, the Russians, traditional protectors
and patrons of the Serbs, will veto it. There's also the risk of armed
resistance by Serbia to the secession of Kosovo, prospect reinforced by
the sweeping victory of the Serb nationalists (united in their
determination that Kosovo should remain part of Serbia) at the recent
Serbian elections.
Another risk is that even qualified independence
for Kosovo will precipitate a demand by the Bosnian Serbs for secession
from Bosnia and union with Serbia, a situation that could also
degenerate into violence. Any move by the newly independent Kosovars,
often referred to as the Kosovo Albanians, to seek a union with their
kith and kin in neighbouring Albania would give a strong fillip to the
campaign for a Greater Albania which in turn would arouse intense alarm
throughout the region, providing another destabilising element. Yet
another daunting factor is the impact of any UN-approved Kosovo
secession from Serbia, justified on grounds of nationalism and
self-determination, on the serious dispute between Russia and Georgia
over the future status of South Ossetia and Abkhazia (usefully
described in
an article last August in the Christian Science Monitor).
There could even be consequences for Chechnya, in that case wholly
negative for Moscow. Here too there's a real danger of disputes
erupting, or erupting again, into violence.
There's a sad irony
in all this. The Kosovo nationalists fighting for their independence
from Serbia in the period leading up to the NATO attack on Serbia in
1999 were given a promise by the Americans of an "act of
self-determination" unmistakeable code for independence, the
inevitable result of any such exercise of self-determination in
exchange for the Kosovars' reluctant acceptance of the NATO ultimatum
drawn up at the Rambouillet conference in March, 1999.
The ultimatum
had been carefully crafted to ensure that the Serbian government any
Serbian government would reject it, as indeed it duly did. The US
and some other western delegations at Rambouillet, presumably including
the British who co-chaired the conference with the French, were
determined to ensure that their ultimatum would be accepted by the
Kosovars and rejected by the Serbs. This was designed to provide a
plausible justification for the NATO aerial assault on Serbia on which
Madeleine Albright, the then US Secretary of State and leader of the US
team at Rambouillet, was determined, drawing on a false and misleading
analogy with the west's failure, earlier, to use force against the
Serbs in Bosnia until too late.

NATO's
escalating attack on Serbia for 11 weeks in 1999 had many eerie
parallels with the US-led attack on Iraq four years later, for which in
many ways Kosovo was intended to be the model. Contrary to the current
received wisdom, both wars were illegal, neither having been authorised
by the UN Security Council and neither fought in self-defence. Both
failed in their proclaimed objectives: it wasn't the NATO bombing that
eventually dislodged the Serbian forces and administration from Kosovo
but the flexible and constructive behind-the-scenes diplomacy of an
American and a Russian negotiator (Strobe Talbott and Viktor
Chernomyrdin) and Martti Ahtisaari.
Both wars were unnecessary: the
terms eventually accepted by the Serbs could and should have been
negotiated with them at Rambouillet, producing the same as the eventual
settlement without a single bomb being dropped. Similarly, if the UN
inspectors under Blix had been allowed to complete their work in Iraq,
they might well have been able to show that Iraq had no WMD, which
would have demolished the sole British rationale (at the time) for
participation in the attack and occupation. Both wars were publicly
asserted to have a variety of objectives and justifications, some of
each of them sold on a deliberately false prospectus. Both military
actions were disproportionate to both their real and their proclaimed
objectives. Both turned out to be counter-productive: the NATO
bombing of Serbia actually accelerated and aggravated Serbian ethnic
cleansing in Kosovo and precipitated for the first time the wholesale
flight of refugees into neighbouring countries. So far from producing
a solution to the problem of how Kosovars and Serbs could live together
in peace in Kosovo, the NATO attack actually aggravated it, and the
international administration which was eventually installed under the
US-Russian-Ahtisaari settlement has merely frozen the problem and
made it worse by presiding over the expulsion of thousands of Serbs
from their Kosovo homes.
In case some of these assertions sound
improbable, I have set out the ample and damning evidence in support of
them in a much earlier piece
here.
Nothing can excuse the brutal behaviour of the Serbs towards their
Kosovo compatriots in their repeated over-reaction to the 'liberation
struggle' or 'terrorist campaign' (select whichever description you
prefer) waged until 1999 by the Kosovo Liberation Army; but it's
almost equally hard to excuse the misjudgements, the duplicity, and the
failure to exhaust the resources of diplomacy before resorting to the
use of force, which characterised the western performance at
Rambouillet leading, as it was always designed to do, to the NATO
bombing campaign, just as the same failures characterised the
performance of the US and UK governments over Iraq in 2003. Kosovo,
not Iraq, was Blair's first illegal war; sadly, it was Clinton's and
Robin Cook's, too.
I don't of course pretend to have a solution
to the problem of what to do now about Kosovo. No possible solution is
without its risks and defects, and as Jonathan Steele rightly says
today the stakes are high, as always in the Balkans. What's certain,
though, is that the intractability of the problem now is in part the
fruit of the misjudgements of the western powers in 1999 in their
hasty, premature, unnecessary, unsuccessful, and above all illegal
resort to the use of force. History was all too soon to repeat itself.
Backdate:
For a typically idiosyncratic take on the 1999 NATO (i.e. US) bombing written by the late Edward Said while the bombing was still going on, click here.
Edward Said was right about the effect of the bombing on Serbian
support for Milosevic, whose fall occurred only months later, toppled
not by bombs but by the ballot box.
Retired from Diplomatic Service ('6594) and Civil Service (5765). Former member (
resigned) of SIAC. Brian Barder's writings can be found at
Barder.com
Not only are we now seeing the results of an ill thought out strategy in Kosovo, but also in Iraq (which could never have happened without the precedent being set by the attack on Serbia). Where are all of those voices such as George Robertson's, who spoke of a multicultural utopia? And where were the same antiwar voices during the 1999 attack?? What a shame that it wasn't a cause celebre; an acceptable bandwagon - it would have saved thousands of innocent lives.
The reality in Kosovo today is very ugly and will continue to affect the rest of Europe. The only half decent report to have been sseen on British TV was by Jonathan Dimbleby, which showed the terror that still exists there today.