Greece Endorses the ICG Agenda 

Friday's Washington Times carried a piece by Greek foreign minister Petros
Molyviatis, unimaginatively titled "Back to Kosovo: Athens' view." 

The moment Molyviatis mentions the 1999 war as "dramatic events," it becomes
obvious something is seriously wrong. Indeed, the Greek FM suffers from a
terminal case of absurd terminology. To him, the 2004 pogrom was
"incidents;" Kosovo is a "country;" and security of Serbs, their property,
and the Orthodox temples "remain major concerns," instead of being
nonexistent.

"Fostering democracy, respect for human rights and-especially-minority
rights, as well as good governance, have been the great challenge from the
outset," says Molyviatis. "The international community's initial goal of a
stable, democratic and multiethnic Kosovo has not yet been achieved."

Challenge? More like an abysmal failure - even if these have been the goals
of the so-called international community (what does that mean, anyway?).
What is so challenging about some 40,000 occupying NATO troops failing
entirely to prevent the ethnic cleansing of non-Albanians, the plunder and
destruction of their property, and the ongoing murder and violence against
those who remained? All they had to do is stand and watch - a duty they
performed superbly.

Despite all this, Molyviatis wants Belgrade and the Kosovo Serbs to become
"involved" - i.e. collaborate with the occupation, offering a smarmy quote
supposed to be a proverb: "the absent are always in the wrong." Huh?

It would be easy to say that Petros Molyviatis must have fallen off the
stupid tree, hitting every branch on the way down. He is, however, Athens'
foreign minister, and the editorial was titled "Athens' view." So this is
not just his, but the Greek government's agenda. Its goal becomes obvious at
the end of the article, when Molyviatis starts extolling the virtues of
Greece as the best mediator for Kosovo, "as a member of the EU and NATO, as
a member of the U.N. Security Council for 2005-2006, as a friend and ally of
the United States, and as the chairman in office of the South East European
Cooperation Process. And, of course, as a country with strong bonds of
friendship and cooperation with all Contact Group members." 

What this amounts to is Athens trying to score points with the EU and the
Empire, while trying to appease Albanian territorial aspirations by throwing
them the Kosovo bone and hoping the "Chamerian Liberation Army" never comes
into being. This is both stupid and wrong - but I suppose the Greeks are
about to find that out the hard way.

As for the Serbs who hoped for some kind of "friendship" with Greece, they
should remember the crucial difference between the people and the State:
while people may have friends, the State has only interests. If the Greek
State had been friendly, it would have vetoed the 1999 bombing. Enough said.
http://grayfalcon.blogspot.com/2005/03/greece-endorses-icg-agenda.html









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