Not much positive news from Afghanistan 

 

Note: This article should have been entitled 'Kosovo is no success story",
and when you read it, you will understand

By SCOTT TAYLOR On Target
Mon. Nov 2 - 4:46 AM 



 
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AS EVERYONE scrambles to predict a possible future outlook for war-ravaged
Afghanistan, the negative variables continue to mount.

The Taliban have boldly stepped up their attacks in the power vacuum created
by the failed August elections and the countrywide apathy in anticipation of
the upcoming Nov. 7 presidential run-off vote. 

October was by far the deadliest month of the war with 50 Allied soldiers
killed, including yet another Canadian. The daring assault against the
United States guest house in the fortified centre of Kabul last Tuesday —
coincidental with an equally brash attack against the posh foreigners-only
Serena Hotel — indicates that even in areas previously considered secure,
the Taliban can now instigate violence and terror. 

The steady stream of negative news has caused one international observer to
warn us that "Afghanistan could become Somalia." Simon Chesterman uttered
this dire warning while he was in Ottawa to deliver a speech to the
International Development Research Centre.

Cited by the media as an Oxford-educated lawyer who is a specialist in state
building, it was Chesterman’s quotes about the Balkans that disturbed me the
most.

"The successes we’ve had in state building, such as they are, are places
like Kosovo," he said.

While Chesterman is certainly not alone in his attempt to paint the Kosovo
fiasco as a "success," I think that if we are going to use it as a yardstick
to measure progress in Afghanistan, a little dose of objective reality needs
to be injected into the equation.

Kosovo was recognized as the sovereign territory and religious heartland of
Serbia prior to the breakup of Yugoslavia in the 1990s. The ethnic Albanian
majority of Kosovo, behind the armed instigation of the Kosovo Liberation
Army, began a serious quest for independence in 1998 through a campaign of
terror attacks on Serb police and civilians. 

For years, the Central Intelligence Agency listed the army as a terrorist
organization, but then had a change of heart in January 1999 when they were
declared "freedom fighters." 

In March 1999, the U.S. pressured the North Atlantic Treaty Organization
into intervening in Kosovo on behalf of the ethnic Albanians.

The NATO bombing campaign, which lasted 78 days, triggered a massive exodus
of Albanian refugees fleeing the war zone. This horde of humanity fled into
neighbouring countries like Macedonia and created a humanitarian crisis the
world could not ignore. 

As NATO air strikes against targets in both Kosovo and Serbia failed to wear
down the will of Serbs to resist, the NATO propaganda machine began spinning
tales of widespread slaughter and genocide being perpetrated against the
ethnic Albanians. While this may have kept morale up on the NATO home front,
the body count and mass graves failed to materialize when the Serbs forced a
negotiated peace settlement with the alliance. 

As part of the terms of agreement for NATO soldiers to enter Kosovo
unopposed, the West agreed to continued recognition of the sovereignty of
the territory as that of Serbia. It was also stated in the UN Resolution
1244 ceasefire agreement that NATO would disarm and disband the Kosovo
Liberation Army and protect the ethnic Serb minority and their Orthodox
Christian religious sites. 

As events unfolded, the army was never disbanded — it was simply renamed the
Kosovo Protection Corps — and the Albanians launched an immediate wave of
slaughter and destruction against Serbs and their property. 

NATO troops initially dismissed these attacks against the Serbs as
reprisals, but in March 2004 — five years into the international occupation
— the Albanians staged a massive three-day pogrom of violence against the
remaining Serbian enclaves. 

The status of Kosovo remained in disputed limbo until February 2008, when
Albanian leadership followed the U.S. State Department’s advice and
unilaterally declared independence from Serbia. The U.S. knew that Russia
and China would block such a secession at the UN Security Council, and they
thought that by having the Kosovo Albanians deliver a fait accompli, they
could bypass the procedural roadblock. 

Given that Kosovo is occupied by some 17,000 foreign troops and is entirely
dependent on foreign aid for survival, one could easily argue that there is
nothing truly independent about it. When you add in the fact that it is an
unstable administration headed by indicted war criminals and drug lords, one
has to once again question what constitutes a success in the mind of
Chesterman. 

Kosovo’s current prime minister is Hashim (The Snake) Thaci, who was the
political leader of the Kosovo Liberation Army when Agim Ceku was its
military commander. Keen-eyed Canadian readers may recall that Agim Ceku
commanded the Croatian troops who committed the barbaric massacre of Serbs
at the Medak Pocket in September 1993. It was the Canadian soldiers of the
Princess Patricia’s Canadian Light Infantry who bore witness to those events
and who still question how individuals like Ceku can avoid being brought to
justice. But I digress.

Despite incredible pressure from the U.S., only 62 United Nations countries
to date have recognized Kosovo’s declared independence. On the flip side,
some 92 nations have opposed that declaration. With Russian and Chinese
vetoes at the Security Council, Kosovo cannot join the UN. As there are five
European Union and four NATO members opposed to its independence, Kosovo
cannot hope to join those organizations either.

On Oct. 8, 2008, the UN General Assembly overwhelmingly voted to support
Serbia’s request to have the legality of Kosovo’s unilateral declaration of
independence reviewed by the International Court of Justice. Those hearings
are set to begin in December of this year. Should the Serbian government
successfully make its case, Canada may have to revoke recognition of Kosovo
in order to respect the international rule of law.

Awash in violence, a rampant drug trade, war criminal leadership, occupied
by foreign troops, dependant on foreign aid and a future status in limbo
sounds a lot more like Afghanistan than Chesterman would care to admit.

( [email protected])

Scott Taylor is an author and editor of Esprit de Corps magazine.

 



 
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