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


To: cody andre who wrote (15676)1/3/2000 10:14:00 PM
From: George Papadopoulos  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 17770
 
Latest from Stratfor....the fiasco consequences are just in the beginning stages...

Russia/Yugoslavia/NATO
GLOBAL INTELLIGENCE UPDATE

Russia and Yugoslavia Prepare to Test NATO
4 January 2000

SUMMARY

Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic is once again reviving nationalism in order to divert
attention away from Yugoslavia?s domestic woes. This time the focus is on the continuing
problems that NATO faces in maintaining order in Kosovo. It appears that Russia and
Yugoslavia are teaming up to put NATO in an impossible corner. They plan to make NATO live
by the very agreement it forced on Yugoslavia at the end of last year?s war, which would allow
Yugoslav troops to return to Kosovo ? causing immediate chaos from Kosovar Albanians. Or,
they plan to make NATO violate the agreement by refusing Yugoslavia's return, thus painting
NATO and its members as hypocrites when they speak of the international rule of law.

ANALYSIS

Yugoslavia?s official Tanjug news agency announced Dec. 28 that Yugoslav President Slobodan
Milosevic had promoted a number of officers, raising some to the rank of general, reshuffled a
number of senior commands and decorated military units and individuals. The announcement
came just four days after Yugoslavia's parliament adopted its 2000 budget. The parliament had
allocated 73 percent of the $1.94 billion total to finance the Yugoslav army. A week earlier, the
Serbian assembly had adopted the republic's 2000 budget of $2.49 billion, of which nearly 25
percent was earmarked for the Milosevic-controlled police force.

Two days after the announcement about the military, on Dec. 30, Milosevic said that Yugoslavia
was determined to hold onto Kosovo. In an interview with the Politka daily, as reported by Tanjug,
Milosevic said that the presence of NATO troops in the Serbian province was "temporary."
Reviving his nationalistic rhetoric, he said, "We must put up with it and show great patience.? He
added, "no one can take Kosovo from us."

Milosevic's comments reiterated those of Gen. Nebojsa Pavkovic, head of Yugoslavia's Third
Army, who said two weeks ago that his troops would go back into Kosovo, probably in June, as
authorized by a NATO agreement with Yugoslavia reached at the conclusion of last year?s war.

Playing into Milosevic?s hand, U.S. Gen. Wesley Clark, supreme commander of NATO forces in
Europe, immediately ruled out any return of the Yugoslav army to Kosovo, in an interview
released the same day. Clark told the Montenegrin weekly newspaper Monitor that "the Yugoslav
Army will not be authorized to return to Kosovo." He said, "If by chance it tries, it will be
prevented."

Nevertheless, under the June 15, 1999, military technical agreement between NATO and
Belgrade, and the subsequent Annex 2 of U.N. resolution 1244, a small, lightly armed contingent
of Yugoslav soldiers and police is authorized to return to Kosovo in June 2000 to guard cultural
sites and Yugoslavia's borders as well as aid in the clearing of minefields.

In making these aggressive statements, Milosevic is invoking a familiar strategy of generating
nationalistic fervor to detract attention from serious domestic problems, such as the
reconstruction of critical infrastructure and the revitalization of the economy. Milosevic has
consistently attempted to provoke the United States into a diplomatic confrontation in order to
maintain his position of power. To this point, he has succeeded in turning the sanctions, the
possible succession of Montenegro and the continued violence in Kosovo to his favor. When a
crisis isn?t pressing, Milosevic raises the public?s awareness of the NATO intervention by holding
awards ceremonies and having the Yugoslav army hold special operations and army training
exercises, some near the Kosovo border.

However, this new round of confrontation with the West is different due to the re-emergence of
Russia in Yugoslav diplomacy. On Dec. 22, four days after Duma elections, in a key victory for
interim Russian President Vladimir Putin and the nationalist centrist movement in Russia,
Russian policy toward Kosovo began to shift.

ITAR-Tass news agency reported Dec 22 that the head of the Defense Ministry's Main
Directorate for International Military Cooperation, Col. Gen. Leonid Ivashov, said that Russia ?will
revise the forms and degree of its participation,? if NATO does not comply with its obligations.
However, he added, "Russia is not considering any ways of its withdrawal and exit from Kosovo.?

NATO's agreement in Kosovo was to let the Yugoslav army eventually return. Ivashov made it
clear that if NATO doesn?t live up to its agreement, Russia would not withdraw troops but may
"stop cooperating.?

Not coincidentally, the next day Russian Defense Minister Igor Sergeyev, at the head of a
delegation of Russian officers, arrived in Belgrade for talks with Milosevic focused on bilateral
relations, Kosovo and other issues affecting southeastern Europe. At a military reception in Beli
Dvor following talks, Milosevic decorated prominent Russian officers for their contribution to the
development of relations between the armed forces of the two countries. Milosevic also awarded
Sergeyev and Gen. Anatoly Kvashnin the Yugoslav Star Order of the First Degree.

On Dec. 24, Sergeyev met with Gen. Klaus Reinhardt, the commander of NATO's KFOR
peacekeeping troops, in Kosovo?s capital of Pristina. He reiterated the clause in the
military-technical agreement, allowing the Yugoslav army and police to return to Kosovo. As well,
on Dec. 30 ? the same day Milosevic vowed to re-enter Kosovo and Clark vowed to stop him if
he tried ? Yugoslav Defense Minister Pavle Bulatovic said that Yugoslavia would seek greater
military cooperation with Russia to boost its capability. The Belgrade daily Vecernje Novosti also
reported that same day that Sergeyev had discussed the possible shipment of modern Russian
anti-aircraft missiles and Sukhoi-27 and MiG-29 combat planes during his recent visit to
Yugoslavia.

To a lesser degree, these developments point to a small domestic victory for Milosevic by
detracting attention away from Yugoslavia?s economic woes. It is also a victory for Russian
nationalists disenchanted by Yeltsin's capitulation to the West over Kosovo. Also, it puts the
Russians in a strong position in Yugoslavia through threats to pullout of the international
peacekeeping force. It provides them with a lever to use against NATO and especially the United
States. But most importantly, for both Russia and Yugoslavia, these moves put the United States
and the rest of NATO in an awkward position, forcing NATO to choose between adhering to or
breaking the military technical agreement.