Kosovo: Lost to Serbia and to the West

>From the desk of John <http://www.brusselsjournal.com/johnlaughland>  
>Laughland on Mon, 2008-10-27 21:12

 

A few days spent in Belgrade feels like an age. Although I have been here more 
times than I can remember (albeit not for five years or so) the country remains 
almost insuperably foreign. There is something radically different about the 
Balkans, with respect to the rest of Europe, and there are few more 
quintessentially Balkan states than Serbia.
 
Where else, for instance, would you meet a man with the wonderful name of 
Slobodan Despot who smiles and hands you a copy of “The Road to Revolution” by 
Thomas Kaczynski, a.k.a. the Unabomber? Mr. Despot is a publisher previously 
worked for a conservative pro-Serb publishing house in Paris and the other 
titles in his own list now include a consolidated calendar of Orthodox and 
Western saints, and the memoirs of a woman who opened a sex shop in Paris in 
the early 1970s.
 
And where else would you find yourself on a sofa sipping wine and talking to a 
civilised young professor of medicine who was himself ethnically cleansed from 
his home town of Urosevac in Kosovo in June 1999, as NATO guards transported 
Albanian guerrillas in their Hummers across the province to commit their 
vicious and systematic arson, murder and rape? Where else – especially in 
Europe – would you meet a monk whose 25 parishioners (in one of the main towns 
of Kosovo) have to run the gauntlet every Sunday in order to avoid getting 
killed on the way to Mass?
 
All these things happened to me – and much more – in the space of a very short 
stay last week. Ever since the United Nations took over Kosovo in 1999, indeed, 
the province’s endemic corruption has exploded, as I was able to confirm by 
talking to two American policemen who work for the international administration 
there. “Every level of society is corrupt,” one of them said. “Every single 
aspect of the society is criminal.” This is largely because the Kosovo 
Liberation Army, the US-backed Contra-style guerrilla force which runs the 
province and which controls the government, the army and the police, is also 
notorious for its role as a powerful organisation running drugs, guns and sex 
slaves to Western Europe.
 
If organised crime is a way of life in Kosovo, so is the systematic destruction 
of churches: more than 150 churches and monasteries have been blown up on the 
UN’s watch in the last nine years, as Albanians seek not only to expel all 
Serbs from the province but also to eradicate any physical record of their ever 
having been their in the first place. Kosovo, one should never forget, is the 
original heartland of medieval Serbia, the Serbs having migrated North to 
Belgrade and the Pannonian plane beyond as a result of the Turkish invasions. 
Images of an angry mob pulling down crosses and stamping on them, such as were 
filmed on 17 March 2004, have not been seen since the early years of the 
Bolshevik Revolution in Russia; just under a century later they are now, once 
again, part of Europe’s present.
 
In spite of these atrocities, which include the pogrom conducted against Serbs 
in March 2004 – a killing spree which went largely unreported in the West and 
which is now completely forgotten about – the European Union and the United 
States have pushed Kosovo to proclaim its own independence unilaterally, even 
though international law clearly forbids such a step. In 1998, the Supreme 
Court of Canada rejected Quebec’s right unilaterally to secede from Canada, on 
the grounds that the inhabitants of Quebec had full civil and political rights 
within Canada. Since Kosovo has been governed by the UN since 1999, their 
proclamation of independence now can only mean that they did not have full 
political and civil rights under that administration – the very body thrust 
onto Serbia by the “international community” in the name of human rights and 
democracy.
 
In the remaining months of this year, the Western powers (the EU and the US) 
will try to finesse a way of transferring power from the UN administration to 
one run by the European Union. The main obstacle comes from Russia which has a 
veto in the UN Security Council, the only body which can relinquish authority 
over the province. For the time being, the Belgrade government says that it 
opposes EULEX because EULEX was created as a vehicle for the independence of 
Kosovo, and Russia has said it will support Serbia. In private, however, Serb 
ministers admit that they will do anything to get into the EU, including 
accepting the amputation of 15% of their state territory.
 
However the circle is squared, the likely fudge of authority between the EU and 
the UN will cause what little government there is in Kosovo to break down 
completely. As one of the American policemen said to me, “How can you arrest 
someone if the lines of authority are unclear?” This unclarity will of course 
again further benefit the gangsters, pimps and drug-runners who currently 
constitute the government of Kosovo, and who have been the West’s allies since 
1998.
 
Kosovo is therefore now decisively lost to the Serbs, and therefore to 
Christian civilisation. A war waged in the name of human rights in 1999 has led 
to nothing less than genocide – the wholesale eradication both of the Serb 
population of Kosovo since then (the few remaining Serbs live in ghettos) and 
of the historical memory of that population.  In 1999, to justify the attack on 
Yugoslavia, the US State Department published a document called “Erasing 
History” which documented the alleged genocide against the Albanians. Now we 
know that the bulk of that document was war propaganda, its claims unproven 
despite years spent trying to prove them at the International Criminal Tribunal 
for the former Yugoslavia in The Hague. Yet “erasing history” is precisely what 
the Albanians have done in Kosovo since NATO occupied the province, and on its 
watch. They have also erased democracy, human rights, and all the basic tenets 
of common human decency. The history of the last ten years in Kosovo is nothing 
but tragedy and hypocrisy blended into one – a true death of the West and all 
it stands for. 

 

http://www.brusselsjournal.com/node/3614

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