ON TARGET: Ukraine could learn from Kosovo's troubles

SCOTT TAYLOR 
Published June 28, 2015 - 8:32pm 
Last Updated June 28, 2015 - 8:40pm 

 
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There was an interesting
<http://thechronicleherald.ca/opinion/1295935-on-target-ukraine-could-learn-
from-kosovo%e2%80%99s-troubles?utm_source=website&utm_medium=mobi&utm_campai
gn=full-site#86718076>  announcement recently that went almost entirely
unnoticed in the Canadian media.

On June 17, Peter Szijjarto, foreign minister of Hungary's centre-right
government, made the startling declaration that his national security forces
will erect a four-metre wall along the entire 175 kilometres of shared
border with Serbia.

Szijjarto's rationale for resorting to such a drastic measure results from a
months-long flood of asylum seekers pouring into southern Hungary. While
tens of thousands of these desperate illegal immigrants have been caught,
detained and returned into Serbia, the vast majority have used the
processing time for their asylum applications
<http://thechronicleherald.ca/opinion/1295935-on-target-ukraine-could-learn-
from-kosovo%e2%80%99s-troubles?utm_source=website&utm_medium=mobi&utm_campai
gn=full-site#80923597>  to simply disappear into other western European
countries.

This, of course
<http://thechronicleherald.ca/opinion/1295935-on-target-ukraine-could-learn-
from-kosovo%e2%80%99s-troubles?utm_source=website&utm_medium=mobi&utm_campai
gn=full-site#80912626> , explains why there is no public outcry from other
members of the European Union over Hungary's decision to fence out this wave
of desperate humanity.

For impoverished Serbia, staunching the flow of these refugees at its
northern border has generated the opposite
<http://thechronicleherald.ca/opinion/1295935-on-target-ukraine-could-learn-
from-kosovo%e2%80%99s-troubles?utm_source=website&utm_medium=mobi&utm_campai
gn=full-site#10754044>  reaction.

"I thought the Berlin Wall had fallen, but now new walls are being
constructed," stated Serbia's foreign minister, Ivica Dacic, referring to
the Cold War barrier
<http://thechronicleherald.ca/opinion/1295935-on-target-ukraine-could-learn-
from-kosovo%e2%80%99s-troubles?utm_source=website&utm_medium=mobi&utm_campai
gn=full-site#49896629>  that stood from 1961 until 1991.

"We are absolutely and fiercely against (Hungary's) decision to build a
fence."

While the nationalities of those fleeing through Serbia into Hungary and
beyond include Syrians, Somalis and even Afghans, the irony is that the vast
majority of asylum seekers are ethnic Albanians from Kosovo.

The most recent exodus began in earnest in the fall of 2014, when the
Serbian government relaxed travel restrictions on Albanians entering from
the declared independent
<http://thechronicleherald.ca/opinion/1295935-on-target-ukraine-could-learn-
from-kosovo%e2%80%99s-troubles?utm_source=website&utm_medium=mobi&utm_campai
gn=full-site#18643278>  state of Kosovo. Serbia has never recognized
Kosovo's 2008 declaration of independence and still legally considers the
region to be sovereign Serbian territory.

In 1999, Kosovo was ravaged by a brutal civil war between ethnic Albanian
separatists and Serbian security
<http://thechronicleherald.ca/opinion/1295935-on-target-ukraine-could-learn-
from-kosovo%e2%80%99s-troubles?utm_source=website&utm_medium=mobi&utm_campai
gn=full-site#9893734>  forces. The root cause of the public discontent was a
severely depressed economy, overpopulation and unemployment. The Albanian
underworld was able use that unrest to ignite and impassion a wave of
nationalist sentiment that soon boiled over into a full-scale armed
insurgency.

That year was the 50th anniversary of NATO and, given the collapse of the
Soviet Union in 1991, there was a strong desire for NATO leaders to prove
that the alliance was still relevant. Thus, NATO threw its full weight
behind the Albanian Kosovo rebels.

In the spring of 1999, NATO warplanes, including Canadian CF-18s, launched a
78-day bombing campaign - not just against Serbian military targets
<http://thechronicleherald.ca/opinion/1295935-on-target-ukraine-could-learn-
from-kosovo%e2%80%99s-troubles?utm_source=website&utm_medium=mobi&utm_campai
gn=full-site#31299728>  in the disputed territory of Kosovo but against
civilian infrastructure and utilities throughout all of Serbia. With NATO
combat forces, including Canadians, massed in Macedonia for a possible
ground war, the Serbian government negotiated a ceasefire on June 10, 1999.

Under the negotiated terms of UN Resolution 1244, Kosovo was to remain the
sovereign territory of Serbia after a brief military occupation by NATO
troops. Serbian security forces were to resume control of Kosovo's border
crossings and provide protection for the numerous sacred Serbian religious
sites and monasteries within the disputed territory.

Of course, that was never actually in the cards. NATO negotiators had never
wanted to have ground troops fight their way through Kosovo's forebodingly
steep mountain passes. Therefore, they agreed to all Serbian demands,
knowing full well that they would never honour the deal.

In February 2008, that duplicity was formalized when the United States
hastily recognized Kosovo's unilateral declaration of independence and
strong-armed allies such as Canada into following suit.

However, the precedent of such declarations of territorial independence
based upon ethnic regional majority has prevented many countries from
recognizing Kosovo. For instance, Spain, with its Basque separatist
movement, and Azerbaijan, with its claim over the region of
Nagorno-Karabakh, cannot recognize a unilaterally declared independence.

With Russia using its veto to deny Kosovo membership in the UN and Spain,
Slovakia, Greece and Cyprus doing likewise to keep it out of the European
Union, Kosovo has remained in a strange quasi-limbo status on the
international stage.

What matters most, however, is that at the end of the day, you cannot
subsist on flags. Despite its declared independence, unemployment, poverty,
corruption and widespread crime are driving a new flood of Albanian Kosovars
to seek a better life - anywhere but in Kosovo.

The people of Ukraine who see their salvation in the form of a NATO
intervention should take a good look at NATO's "success" in Kosovo.
Short-term military solutions do not solve long-term economic problems.

http://thechronicleherald.ca/opinion/1295935-on-target-ukraine-could-learn-f
rom-kosovo%e2%80%99s-troubles?utm_source=website
<http://thechronicleherald.ca/opinion/1295935-on-target-ukraine-could-learn-
from-kosovo%e2%80%99s-troubles?utm_source=website&utm_medium=mobi&utm_campai
gn=full-site> &utm_medium=mobi&utm_campaign=full-site 

 

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