Answer of Serbian NGOs to pro-NATO letter from Helsinki Federation for Human Rights ; Nation Editor Responds to Critics AGAINST THE LOGIC OF WAR LETTER TO THE INTERNATIONAL HELSINKI FEDERATION FOR HUMAN RIGHTS Dear Friends and Esteemed Colleagues, This letter is an answer to a "request" made by our associates and friends of long standing, with whom we cooperated for a number of years on the long-term and far-reaching programme of building a civic society in the FR of Yugoslavia. This request, which we received in the midst of war, "humanitarian intervention" and NATO aggression, that is, in the midst of a collapse of the legitimate spheres of public and political life, at a time of extraordinary decrees, military rule and summary trials in Yugoslavia, asks of us to raise our voices and sharpen political criticism and moral condemnation of the regime in Belgrade. Moreover, in this assault of severe western Alliance action, which has transformed our society into a military barracks and enthroned Milosevic a charismatic leader and Supreme Commander, we are expected, if possible, to approve, even greet with understanding the militarist interventionism of NATO in the FR of Yugoslavia. Let us say immediately: from the beginning of the destruction of former Yugoslavia our "civic position" has been clear and unambiguous. We have been equally opposed both to the ethnic cleansing in Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina and today in Kosovo and to NATO's intervention in the FR of Yugoslavia. In other words, we fought with equal decisiveness against the lethal political self-will of the Belgrade regime and the pernicious militarist self-will of the western alliance. In this context, we cannot be expected to unilaterally denounce local totalitarianism and, at the same time, express solidarity with the pretensions of global hegemonism. It is our principal belief that the civic society should function as a permanent corrective to the state reason, and that NGOs should be supportive of peace and not war option of their governments. It is unfounded to expect that the chain of violence and an expansionist military option will lead to a rational political solution in Kosovo, in the FR of Yugoslavia and in the Balkans. On the contrary, we fear that in the name of so-called "humanitarian intervention" we are witnessing the revival of the old, archaic "figure of war", which we hoped long banished from our culture. Finally, let us remind you: the brutal disintegration of the former Yugoslavia, and the related nationalist conflicts which culminated in the ethnic catastrophe in Kosovo, took place "in collusion" with European policies and international diplomacy. It has been precisely these unexpected shocks that have dangerously threatened the ideals and norms of international democracy, which is still the successor to the liberal and social heritage of defence of autonomy of the individual, groups and peoples. In spite of all circumstances, we shall continue to fight persistently and enduringly for freedom of the individual, for those individual, civic, collective and human rights which this war has again brought into peril. Alternative Academic Educational Network Association of Citizens for Democracy, Social Justice and Support for Trade Unions Belgrade Circle Belgrade Women Studies Center Center for Policy Studies NEZAVISNOST Center for Transition to Democracy Civic Initiatives District 0230 Kikinda EKO Center European Movement in Serbia Forum for Ethnic Relations and Foundation for Peace and Crisis Management Foundation for Peace and Crisis Management Group 484 Helsinki Committee for Human Rights in Serbia Society for Peace and Tolerance (Backa Palanka) Sombor's Peace Group (Sombor) Student Union of Yugoslavia Trade Union Confederation Union for Truth About Anti-Fascist Resistance Urban Inn (Novi Pazar) VIN Weekly Video News Women in Black YU Lawyers' Committee for Human Rights In Belgrade, May 21, 1999 Original sender: International Helsinki Federation for Human Rights <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Subject: Letter to Serbian NGOs Letter to Serbian non-governmental organizations regarding the Appeal of 6 April by Belgrade NGOs from the Norwegian Helsinki Committee and the International Helsinki Federation for Human Rights Oslo, Vienna 18 May 1999 Dear friends and colleagues, As human rights organizations devoted to the protection of civil society, and after having cooperated with some of you for many years, the Norwegian Helsinki Committee and the International Helsinki Federation for Human Rights take your Appeal of 6 April with utmost seriousness. The Executive Committee of the IHF, which met in New York on 8.-9. May, discussed your Appeal at length. It should be mentioned that the protection of human rights defenders and civic activists in Serbia are one of our main messages to decision makers and media in Europe, and that we have initiated support campaigns and letters for Serbian independents and intellectuals. However, we are deeply disturbed that the Appeal of 6 April -- and subsequent open letters and appeals from intellectuals in Belgrade -- reflects a view of the Kosovo crisis to which we cannot subscribe, and we feel a need to clarify our position on these issues. The Kosovo Albanians who have arrived in Albania, Macedonia and Montenegro have been extensively interviewed by members of various Helsinki committees, as well as by news media. Their stories confirm beyond any reasonable doubt that they were driven from their homes by Serbian police and paramilitary forces; that seemingly thousands have been systematically killed, maimed, raped and robbed. This is ethnic cleansing on a horrific scale. Neither the NATO bombing campaign nor military actions by the Kosovo Liberation Army are responsible for the "unprecedented exodus" which you describe. Based on the extensive information we have collected about the catastrophe in Kosovo, we consider it intellectualy and morally unsound to equate these campaigns. We respect your lonely and courageous struggle for democratization in the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, a struggle we have supported for years. But unfortunately -- and we would very much like to be mistaken in this -- it seems to us that hardly any of your fellow citizens have supported a just settlement to the Kosovo issue, and that the crisis has been caught in a downward spiral of radicalization for many years. Thus when you say that "NATO military intervention has undermined all results we have achieved,"one must ask if these results were of such a scope and significance to bring hope that the plight of Kosovo could be relieved by peaceful means. As the Rambouillet negotiations came to a close, it seemed clear to us that there was no such hope of a political settlement. The regime scorned international -- and domestic -- pressure aimed at a peaceful solution, and went ahead with the preparations for the campaign which is currently unfolding in Kosovo. Faced with preparations for grave crimes, how should one respond? That was the dilemma faced by the international community in March, and in our view you also should recognize -- even though you do not support it -- that, in principle, the NATO intervention was not an arbitrary act of aggression. We are in sympathy with your extremely difficult situation, but we cannot agree with the conclusions you have drawn as to who bears primary responsibility for improving it. It is our view that your appeal should properly be addressed to the FRY and Serbian authorities which bear the responsibility for systematic and grave crimes of war and crimes against humanity in Kosovo, and for the dangers you, as members of the civil sector in Serbia, are currently facing. We express our solidarity with you. Also, we acknowledge the sacrifices you must make, and the dilemmas and paradoxes you are faced with as victims of a government whose policies you cannot support, and bearing the costs attached to efforts to make that government act in accordance with civilized standards. It is our hope and aim that the enormous responsibility the NATO states have taken on by initiating the military intervention, will entail a far more whole-hearted support of the civil sector in the Serbian society, which more than ever, is crucial to Serbia's restoration into Europe. Unless the western states recognize the need for this kind of policy, it will be difficult to describe the current NATO actions as a humanitarian intervention. We will soon face new challenges. This letter is meant to open a dialogue on what we can do together to preserve the independent forces in the Serbian society in order that they may resurface after the war. We would very much welcome your recommendations as to how we, from the outside, should address the new situation and how we can continue to support you in your current plight. Bjorn Engesland Secretary General The Norwegian Helsinki Committee Aaron Rhodes Executive Director on behalf of the Executive Committee of the IHF: Ludmilla Alexeyeva Ulrich Fischer Stein-Ivar Aarsaether Sonja Biserko Holly Cartner Bjorn Emgesland Krassimir Kanev Andrzej Rzeplinski ========================================= Whose Kosovo Fantasy? By Katrina vanden Heuvel Monday, May 31, 1999; Page A23 Richard Cohen says that The Nation "more than any other magazine, probably, speaks for American liberalism," and then denounces the magazine's call for stopping the bombing of Yugoslavia as a liberal fantasy [op-ed, May 14]. But whose is the fantasy? Advocates of this air war insisted it would forestall the mass displacement, plunder and murder of the Albanian Kosovars. Reality: The catastrophic effects of NATO's air war against Serbia have subverted the Clinton administration's declared humanitarian intentions. By forcing the removal of independent observers and raining bombs on Serbia, NATO gave Slobodan Milosevic the predictable strategic occasion to implement and escalate his long-planned scheme to brutally remove Kosovar Albanians. Now the bombing intensifies with no humanitarian purpose, destroying the very people and places it was meant to protect. Innocent civilians -- Albanians and Serbs alike -- are dying as "collateral damage," even as Milosevic's killing and displacement of Albanian Kosovars goes on unimpeded. We are destroying a country that we will end up rebuilding -- or, more likely, walking out on. The bombing is destabilizing the entire region we promised to bolster and spreading the war we intended to contain. Cohen argues that we must nonetheless defend NATO's credibility -- without which, he says, Russia might again prey on the nations of Eastern Europe. The Cold War lives, if only in Cohen's imagination. Reality: NATO's credibility is being shredded across the world as the bombing intensifies and civilian casualties mount, while America's moral reputation is being degraded more effectively than Milosevic's military capabilities. Polls show that public esteem for NATO -- from Central Europe to Latin American -- has dropped dramatically, not because the alliance is viewed as "weak and ineffective" but because it looks like a bully, willing to kill innocent people but unwilling to risk casualties. And while the bombing fuels anti-American anger in Russia, China and other countries with negative consequences for disarmament, economic reform and democratization, the Clinton administration has been counting on the Russians to help get it out of the mess. Cohen says the war enforces the rule of law. Reality: The Clinton administration and NATO are pursuing their objectives by repeatedly discarding the very standards they claim to defend. NATO chose to launch a war against a sovereign nation without seeking U.N. sanction, thereby undermining the United Nations' authority and thus weakening its ability to deal with future conflicts. The president chose to launch a war without congressional declaration. The House of Representatives refused to endorse the air war, so now it continues in defiance of the will of Congress. NATO's tactics -- the bombing of civilian trains, refugee convoys and the economic infrastructure of Serbia -- violate international accords that all NATO countries have signed. The fact that Milosevic's brutal ethnic cleansing has earned his indictment by the Hague War Crimes Tribunal does not diminish the seriousness of NATO's violations. How can NATO encourage recognition of international law if the alliance itself views itself as above those standards? But Cohen and others now demand further escalation of the war -- to win it no matter the cost or consequences. This may reflect the desperation of the war's original architects and supporters, but no just war destroys a society in order to save it or uses recklessly disproportionate means. As for the ground war being proposed, it would likely incite Milosevic to massacre remaining fighting-age Kosovar men and use civilians as human shields. Cohen complains that by halting the bombing, the alliance would allow Milosevic to "retain Kosovo, not to mention his leadership." But NATO has never proposed to oust Milosevic and at Rambouillet compelled the Kosovars to drop their independence demands. A negotiated settlement is NATO's official goal. The argument is how to achieve it. Considering the disastrous consequences of this war, what is the danger of giving peace a real chance? Cohen admits that NATO's strategy has been "incompetent" but suggests more of the same will somehow solve its faults. That's not realism -- or any liberalism worth the name. If we halt the bombing, however, it may enable all the parties, including Russia, to negotiate productively. We must now move boldly toward a political settlement, which should include an effective international peacekeeping force acting under U.N. authority to protect the Albanian Kosovars, the opportunity for refugees to return safely, autonomy for Kosovo and a plan for economic reconstruction. (Much of this has already been officially proposed by the G-8 nations.) Only then will the United States and its allies actually help the victims of Milosevic's crimes. The writer is editor of The Nation. © Copyright 1999 The Washington Post Company