-Caveat Lector-
Yes, the KLA (narco-terrorists) was our ally, funded by the CIA and trained by al Qaeda.
 
JR
 
----- Original Message -----
From: Euphorian
Sent: Sunday, February 23, 2003 2:37 PM
Subject: [CTRL] Kosovo: A Political Virus

-Caveat Lector-

Observer Worldview Extra: Unseen Wars
http://www.observer.co.uk/worldview/story/0,11581,901367,00.html


Lessons from Kosovo

If there is war from Iraq, there are many lessons about post-war
reconstruction from the west's experience in Kosovo. But the current
crisis also means we risk overlooking unfinished business elsewhere, say Val
Percival and James Lyon of the International Crisis Group

Val Percival and James Lyon
Sunday February 23, 2003
The Observer

As the United States and its allies prepare for possible military intervention
in Iraq, they should bear in mind the lessons of their intervention in
Kosovo - perhaps the most ambitious experiment in post-war
reconstruction that the international community has undertaken.

Since 1999 the donor community has contributed billions of dollars in
humanitarian, reconstruction, and development assistance. Tens of
thousands of peacekeepers and thousands of civilians worked to rebuild
Kosovo into a democratic 'autonomous' society.

Although the international community has much to be proud of in Kosovo,
two key weaknesses have hampered their efforts: failure to get full control
of the security situation, and failure to develop a realistic exit strategy in
partnership with the local actors. Both of these are also risks for any
future international intervention elsewhere, and while Kosovo's specific
circumstances are of course unique, the situation there illustrates the
problems that will arise elsewhere.

When the NATO-led Kosovo Force (KFOR) rolled into the province on 11
June 1999, they feared resistance from remaining Yugoslav army and
paramilitary forces, as well as retaliation attacks against KFOR from the
local Serb population.

In fact (as should have been anticipated) the problems of those first few
months were completely different - a complete security vacuum, with
horrific crimes of revenge perpetrated against the Serb civilian population
by Albanian extremists. NATO and the UN were shown to be impotent, and
they - and Kosovo's population - are still paying for that early failure. The
international community cannot afford to make that mistake elsewhere.

NATO also failed to effectively neutralize its former allies from the 1999
conflict, the Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA). In the immediate aftermath,
KLA members were able to gain control of local institutions, involve
themselves in organised crime, and engage in extortion and intimidation.
Although the international community tried to occupy former KLA
members through recruitment to a new Kosovo Protection Corps and the
Kosovo Police Service, former KLA fighters were still able to exacerbate
armed conflicts in South Serbia in 2000 and Macedonia in 2001. It is not
sufficient to disarm the enemy - to get a peaceful environment, you have
to disarm your allies as well.

Under Security Council Resolution 1244 the UN must develop
"autonomous" government institutions for Kosovo pending the resolution of
the province's final status. Kosovo is thus in a sort of international twilight
zone: a de jure part of Yugoslavia (now renamed "Serbia and Montenegro"),
yet simultaneously a de facto UN protectorate under international
administration, which may well be on the road towards independence.

The UN at first found it difficult to attract sufficiently skilled international
recruits to work in a difficult post- conflict setting. Many internationals
found themselves running municipal administrations, or even government
ministries, for which they had no experience or training.

Three and a half years down the line, Kosovo now has a President, a Prime
Minister, and a functioning government. However international
administrators are finding it hard to let go. Consultation mechanisms with
local leaders have not been institutionalized, and critical information is
kept in the hands of internationals. While local politicians lobby the
international community for more authority, it is often a cry for inclusion
in the process of governing rather than a desire to be at the helm.

While UNMIK has outlined "benchmarks" to assess Kosovo's institutional
development, the process has not gone much beyond describing these
objectives. There is no implementation strategy, no assessment of how
close (or far) Kosovo is from meeting these benchmarks, what resources
are needed, and what further action. At the same time there is mission
fatigue, resources are running low, and the world's attention is focused on
the Middle East. UNMIK is planning to transfer as much responsibility as
possible in the next twelve months to minimize the costs and to minimize
its responsibility for governing Kosovo.

Yet Kosovo is at a critical phase. Institutions are not yet fully developed,
the civil service has not yet been completely recruited, and there is no
transition strategy. Moreover, too early a transfer of power would put the
three billion dollar investment to date at risk. What is lacking is a careful
transition strategy - to build local counterparts who will be able to take
over responsibility gradually from UNMIK.

On the ground, Serbian areas of Kosovo still function as if they were part
of Serbia, outside the framework of government established by UNMIK, in
terms of courts, schools, health care, pensions, telecommunications and
most importantly security forces. Zoran Djindjic, the Prime Minister of
Serbia, has appealed to the international community to start talks on
Kosovo's final status sooner rather than later. Rather than repeat the
traditional mantras of returning the whole province to Belgrade rule, he
takes the line that independence for Kosovo is not a taboo topic; but he
also has begun to hint about partition of the province as part of an
independence deal.

The overwhelming majority of Albanians will accept nothing less than the
independence that they proclaimed over ten years ago, while the vast
majority of Serbs want to remain part of Serbia. Until this question is
addressed, insecurity among both populations about the future will remain
high, impeding important aspects of Kosovo's rebuilding effort, including
privatization, trade relations, economic development, and the willingness
of displaced Serbs to return to the province.

But the UN Security Council (mindful perhaps of possible parallels in Tibet
or Chechnya) was, and is, unwilling to move in that direction. Michael
Steiner, who as UN Special Representative runs Kosovo on behalf of the
international community, has declared that any resolution of the issue
must wait until the UN's benchmarks have been met - his slogan is
"standards before status". Meanwhile there is a Kosovo parliament with 120
members, all of whom were elected because of their views on the one
subject - Kosovo's future status - which they are forbidden to discuss.

Any partition of Kosovo along ethnic lines would raise very uncomfortable
issues elsewhere in the Balkans - not least in Bosnia, and in neighbouring
Macedonia. But if the international community continues to stonewall on
the question of final status, the existing soft partition on the ground will
become harder, and the ability of the UN or its members to have a positive
influence on the outcome will be correspondingly less. These are indeed
difficult issues - and there will be similar difficult issues in planning the
future of Iraq - but that is no reason not to address them.

For, while international attention will focus still more sharply on Iraq in the
coming weeks, the lengthy process of clearing up earlier crises, Kosovo,
Afghanistan, and indeed Bosnia, remains incomplete. Rather than allow
them to slip off the agenda in favour of the hot issue of 2003, we should
remember that those who do not learn from past mistakes are doomed to
repeat them.

· Val Percival is Kosovo Project Director, International Crisis Group, and
James Lyon is Serbia Project Director, International Crisis Group.

About Observer Worldview

Observer Worldview contains the best of The Observer's recent
international commentary and reporting, along with exclusive online
coverage, including the Unseen Wars series in association with the
International Crisis Group.

Guardian Unlimited © Guardian Newspapers Limited 2003
Forwarded for your information.  The text and intent of the article
have to stand on their own merits.
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is distributed without charge or profit to those who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving this type of information
for non-profit research and educational purposes only.
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