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To: George Papadopoulos who wrote (16644)6/10/2000 6:17:00 PM
From: George Papadopoulos  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 17770
 
full text at cato.org

Cato Policy Analysis No. 373 June 10, 2000

Policy Analysis

Dubious Anniversary:
Kosovo One Year Later

by Christopher Layne and Benjamin Schwarz

Christopher Layne is a visiting fellow in foreign policy studies at
the Cato Institute. Benjamin Schwarz is a correspondent for the
Atlantic Monthly
.
_________________________________________________________________

Executive Summary

One year after NATO ended its bombing campaign against Yugoslavia, the
Clinton administration's Kosovo policy is a conspicuous failure.
Kosovo is now the scene of a brutal ethnic cleansing campaign carried
out by NATO's erstwhile de facto ally, the Kosovo Liberation Army, an
organization profoundly inimical to America's interests and professed
values. The KLA is also currently fomenting an insurgency elsewhere in
Serbia, which promises to destabilize the Balkans even further.

The Clinton administration has embarked on yet another
multi-billion-dollar nation-building adventure, which many analysts
suggest will entangle the U.S. military for a decade or longer. This
situation could have been avoided. Because of its inept diplomacy and
strategic miscalculation, the administration bears a large measure of
responsibility for both Kosovo's humanitarian crisis a year ago and
the KLA's postwar thuggery. It is now clear that the administration's
claims of "horrific slaughter" and attempts at "genocide" by the Serbs
were gross exaggerations designed to whip up support for intervention
from a skeptical Congress and public.

Confronting Kosovo's depressing prospects, the administration consoles
itself that, as President Clinton says, it "did the right thing in the
right way" when it intervened. Even granting that doubtful premise,
this is not enough to exonerate policymakers from their responsibility
for the situation the United States confronts today. In the real
world, policymakers are judged by the consequences of their actions,
not by their intentions. The Kosovo war has not vindicated the
administration's doctrine of "virtuous power." By waging an avoidable
war, the Clinton administration has saddled the United States with a
host of intractable problems.