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Pastimes : Kosovo -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Les H who wrote (15572)12/20/1999 11:04:00 PM
From: George Papadopoulos  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 17770
 
Les, I am posting the whole article here from your previous post. This is a MUST READ! This guy captures exactly the way I feel about this Kosovo mess

Nato's actions have made the world a much more dangerous place

Robert Skidelsky - Nato's deadly legacy
Western intervention in Serbia caused a humanitarian catastrophe and
encouraged Russian militarism

With the west's humanitarian concern now focused on
Russia's assault on Grozny, it is a good moment to
look back on Kosovo, not least because the renewal of
the Chechen war is a direct consequence of the
Kosovan operation. It showed Russia the "western,
civilised" way of waging this type of war, and it tilted
the balance of power in Russian politics towards the
military.

The publication last week of "Human Rights in Kosovo", a report by the
Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe, is another reason to
revisit Kosovo, because it so clearly exposes the lies spun by Nato's war
machine.

By now, it should be clear that Nato's military intervention in Yugoslavia was
illegal under international law. The UN Charter limits members' external use of
force to self-defence and actions authorised by the Security Council.
Protection of human rights is not a ground in international law for military
intervention in the domestic affairs of sovereign states.

As the OSCE report makes clear, Nato's military intervention caused the
humanitarian catastrophe it was ostensibly designed to avert. Based on the
evidence of monitors on the ground and refugees during the bombing period,
the report establishes that it was only after OSCE observers left Kosovo on
March 20, four days before bombing started, that general and systematic
violation of human rights began to occur.

"Summary and arbitrary killing became a generalised phenomenon throughout
Kosovo with the beginning of the Nato air campaign against the Federal
Republic of Yugoslavia on the night of March 24-25."

The report provides no evidence to back Nato's claim that genocide and mass
expulsion of Kosovo Albanians was the deliberate aim of Slobodan Milosevic,
the Yugoslav leader, and that it was only Nato's intervention that averted this
"humanitarian catastrophe". On the contrary, it makes it clear that the human
rights situation in Kosovo had improved after the installation of the monitors in
November 1998, and that the flight or expulsion of 863,000 Kosovo Albanians
took place after the air raids began.

Under no circumstances can the Yugoslav response to Nato's action be
justified. But it has to be remembered that Yugoslavia was expecting a ground
invasion in addition to the hostilities of the Kosovo Liberation Army.

The main aim of any sensible diplomacy should have been to ensure that an
expanded force of monitors was kept in place in Kosovo. This was
inconsistent with Nato's determination to use the threat of force to bring Mr
Milosevic to heel.

Nato's actions have made the world a much more dangerous place. Almost all
of the non-Nato, non-Islamic world was deeply hostile to the war. Alexander
Lukin, director of Moscow's Institute for Political and Legal Studies, sees
Nato's "new strategic doctrine" as a project that "implies an unlimited
enlargement of Nato's membership, extending its writ to a vaguely defined
Euro-Atlantic area and eventually the whole world".

Mr Lukin laments the fact that "all the Nato countries followed the US in a
deliberate effort to destroy the post-second world war international system".

The damage to the post-war system can already be seen in the start of global
rearmament, and the new strategic doctrines of Russia, India and China. The
"cold peace" predicted by Boris Yeltsin, the Russian president, has already
arrived.

If truth is the first casualty of war, then acknowledgment of that truth should
be the first step towards reconciliation. The truths embodied in the
propositions above are not the whole truth. As the OSCE report says, violation
of human rights was "both cause and consequence of the conflict in Kosovo".

Mr Milosevic and the Serbs who supported him bear a heavy responsibility for
the suffering. But Nato has not acknowledged its own contribution to the
disaster.

If admission of error is an essential ingredient of reconciliation, another should
be restitution for damage over the Balkan area. The IMF estimates that the six
countries most directly affected by the war (excluding Serbia) lost 2 per cent
of their national output as a result of the conflict. Serbia's loss is estimated at
45 per cent.

A Nato "Marshall Aid" package would not only be justified, but prudent, for
economic impoverishment is the seedbed of virulent nationalism.

Finally, we should learn from the experience of eastern Europe's "velvet
revolution" of 1989-90, and drop indictments for war crimes against Mr
Milosevic.

This will enable him to give up power without being handed over for trial at the
Hague Tribunal. His own rule should not be perpetuated by those who also
have blood on their hands.

Unless we are willing to come clean on Kosovo, Russia will not listen to us on
Chechnya - or anything much else.

The author was dismissed as Conservative Treasury spokesman in the
House of Lords for his opposition to Nato's bombing campaign