U.S./NATO want to carve out Kosovo from Serbia
By John Catalinotto
Dec 20, 2007
The ultra-right-wing forces now running Serbia’s Kosovo province plan
to announce its secession from Serbia in 2008. The U.S. and most NATO powers
support this reactionary move, continuing their strategy of "divide and
conquer" in the Balkans. This strategy has pulled Yugoslavia into pieces,
leaving the region unstable, divided and now facing new internecine wars.
Employed throughout the 1990s, this strategy succeeded in separating once
socialist and united Yugoslavia into a half-dozen capitalist mini-states. It is
an error to call these states “independent.” They are weak
neo-colonies dominated by the West, pillaged mainly by U.S., Italian, and
German-based corporations and banks, and dependent on imperialism.
Now Serbia, once the strongest and most multinational republic in the
Yugoslav Federation, is itself threatened by the same reactionary forces that
tore apart Yugoslavia.
Who rules Kosovo now? The same people who led the armed gang called UCK by
its Albanian initials against Yugoslavia in the 1990s. Former General Hashim
Thaci, a UCK head, has been Kosovo’s president since an election in
November. This grouping has ultra-right-wing politics appealing to the most
reactionary and chauvinist aspects of Kosovar-Albanian nationalism.
Though armed by the U.S. and Germany, the UCK was unable to win serious
firefights in Kosovo until the Pentagon stepped in. The U.S. military used its
overwhelming air power to carry out a murderous 78-day bombing attack on
Yugoslavia in the spring of 1999. U.S. and NATO bombs and rockets destroyed
much of the industrial infrastructure in Serbia, also bombing bridges, schools
and 147 hospitals.
Under the pressure of this bombing and the threat of an even bloodier
invasion, the Yugoslav government agreed in June 1999 to let NATO forces occupy
Kosovo. With NATO backing, the UCK set up a corrupt, rightist regime that
proceeded in the following eight years to persecute and drive out of the
province many of the remaining people of Serb, Jewish, Roma, Egyptian and other
nationalities, including the pro-Yugoslav-oriented Albanians. Most of these
refugees found a new home inside non-occupied Serbia or Montenegro.
According to the agreement that ended the bombing, the U.N. Security Council
adopted Resolution 1244, which reaffirmed “the commitment of all Member
States to the sovereignty and territorial integrity” of Yugoslavia, of
which Serbia is the successor state. That means that Washington, Berlin, etc.,
will break international treaties and international law when they recognize
Kosovo’s secession.
No liberation, no independence
UCK means “Kosovo Liberation Army,” yet no one was liberated
when it came to power. Even Albanian Kosovars who opposed the UCK had to flee
the province. Under UCK rule, Kosovo became a center for trafficking in illegal
drugs and enslaving women and children through prostitution rings—and a
corrupt regime that made the UCK-run enterprises look like minor-league
versions of Halliburton and Blackwater.
The Thaci regime is expected to declare “independence” for
Kosovo early in 2008. The new entity, however, would be even more dependent on
NATO and on Western imperialism than the other new Balkan republics. Its main
role will be as a NATO cats-paw in the Balkans and as a transit space for oil
and gas pipelines that avoid Russian territory on their way west.
The imperialists already control most of Serbia’s—including
Kosovo’s—profitable industries and commerce. This includes
Kosovo’s valuable Trepca mines. But a weak and separate Kosovo with a
completely dependent regime is a reliable military base where NATO troops can
remain indefinitely.
Soon after NATO troops occupied Kosovo in 1999, the U.S. built a major
military base there called Camp Bondsteel. There are still 7,000 U.S. troops
stationed there among the 16,000 NATO troops still in Kosovo. And now the
European Union has decided to send 1,600 more to be there when the Kosovo
regime announces it will separate.
As war opponent Michel Collon pointed out before 1999 in his book
“Liar’s Poker,” by controlling Kosovo the U.S. gains control
over a route for oil and gas pipelines from Central Asia and the Caucasus to
Europe that avoids Russian territory.
The Russian government, on the other hand, is the main power opposing
Kosovo’s secession. Moscow supports Resolution 1244 and the territorial
integrity of Serbia.
Media demonizes Serbs again
With Kosovo in the news again, the corporate media have again gone on a
binge demonizing Serbs. They do this even though the current government in
Belgrade had the full backing of U.S. secret services and nongovernmental
organizations funded by billionaire George Soros when it overthrew the
Socialist Party government led by Slobodan Milosevic in October 2000. Among
such groups was the right-wing youth group “Otpor” or
“Resistance,” which Washington later used to organize reactionary
movements in Ukraine, Georgia, and now Venezuela.
Once having deposed Milosevic and the Socialists, the imperialists started
pressuring the new Serbian regime—the one they had installed—to
keep making further concessions to Western penetration. Separating Kosovo from
Serbia would be a painful blow, especially because Serbia has historic
monuments and churches in the northern part of the province. Since the start of
the occupation in 1999, about 200 medieval Serbian churches have been destroyed
by the UCK under NATO watch. If the Kosovo regime makes a unilateral
declaration of independence before the Jan. 20 presidential election in Serbia,
it could provoke sharp political struggles in Serbia.
The media have been repeating all the same lies that they repeated in 1999
to justify the “humanitarian” bombing of Yugoslavia. The main lie
was that Serbia was committing “genocide” of the Albanian Kosovars.
In 1999, U.S. and German government spokespeople claimed that Serbs had killed
100,000 Kosovar Albanians and buried them in mass graves.
Expecting to find bodies everywhere, a United Nations team searched occupied
Kosovo all summer of 1999 and found a total of 2,108 bodies of all
nationalities. Some were killed by NATO bombing and some in the war between the
UCK and the Serbian police and military. No massacres. No genocide.
Puerto Rico, Ireland, Basque Country?
The U.S., Britain and France, along with Germany, are expected to give full
diplomatic recognition to the Kosovo entity if Thaci declares
“independence.” Some European Union members—Malta, Cyprus,
Greece, Romania and Spain (in this case, because of its own oppression of the
Basque Country)—have said they would not recognize it.
One might justifiably ask if Washington will also recognize the independence
of Puerto Rico, if London will recognize the northern Irish counties’
right to join the rest of Ireland and if France (and Spain) will recognize
self-determination for the Basque Country. There is little doubt the rulers in
these capitals would answer, “No.”
There is a difference between the situations just described and that in
Kosovo. In Kosovo there are, along with some smaller minority peoples, two
major nationalities: Serb and Kosovar-Albanian. Each of these two nationalities
is oppressed by imperialism, as are the other nationalities in the former
Yugoslavia. The imperialists have been able to use the rightist UCK gang first
against Yugoslavia and now Serbia, but neither nationality oppresses or
exploits the other the way the imperialists in the U.S., Britain and France
oppress and exploit the nationalities in their colonies.
When Tito’s partisan movement drove out the German occupiers in 1945
and set up the Yugoslav Socialist Federation in the Balkans, the new socialist
regime passed laws that both protected the interests of all the nationalities
in Yugoslavia and tried to hold them together in one state. It succeeded for
about 45 years despite historic differences among the nationalities. Then came
the counterrevolution in the Eastern Bloc countries and a concerted attack by
the imperialists on Yugoslavia.
To break up Yugoslavia, the imperialists have envenomed every difference
among the nationalities by supporting the most reactionary parties and
groupings in each of the six Yugoslav republics. This included financing those
forces that collaborated with the Nazis during the German occupation in World
War II. Imperialism has now imposed neo-liberal economic policies on the
republics that promote competition and make cooperation impossible.
The only road to real independence from imperialism in the Balkans is to
again take up the struggle for a united federation and join it to a struggle
for socialism.
The writer helped organize the June 2000 Peoples Tribunal on Yugoslavia
in New York and co-edited the book “Hidden Agenda: the U.S. NATO takeover
of Yugoslavia” with International Action Center co-director Sara
Flounders.