Westerwelle’s Big Adventure

German FM Does the Balkans

by Nebojsa Malic <http://original.antiwar.com/author/malic/> , August 28, 2010 

Germany’s Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle is touring the Balkans this week, 
visiting Zagreb, Belgrade, Pristina and Sarajevo. It is the newest mission in 
pursuit of an old agenda <http://www.antiwar.com/malic/m050301.html> : the 
surrender of Serbia, an independent state of Kosovo, and a centralized 
Bosnia-Herzegovina.

The only surprise so far has been Westerwelle’s message to Croatia — Germany’s 
principal Balkans client since 1991 — that its admission to the EU may not be 
as quick as Zagreb had hoped. While reassuring his hosts that "nothing has 
changed," the German FM also said 
<http://www.google.com/hostednews/canadianpress/article/ALeqM5jfo-st29HRZOqJHR4gcI1zlYzTUA>
  there was "a lot of work ahead" before Croatia would qualify to be annexed by 
Brussels, and that "thoroughness is more important than speed."

On Thursday, Westerwelle traveled on to Belgrade, where he tried to persuade 
the ruling regime to give up Serbia’s sovereignty for the mere promise of EU 
membership. Yet even the sycophant, quisling government set up in Belgrade by 
EU and Imperial ambassadors in July 2008 
<http://original.antiwar.com/malic/2008/06/26/return-of-the-reds/> , seemed 
strangely reluctant to fawn over Westerwelle’s words.

Disobedient Quislings

The tone of Westerwelle’s visit to Belgrade was not so much imperious as 
petulant. Germany and the EU have hardly tried to disguise annoyance with their 
clients in Serbia, who have so far refused to do as told and officially concede 
that the Serbian province occupied by NATO in 1999 
<http://original.antiwar.com/malic/2005/03/24/an-evil-little-war/>  is now the 
"Independent state 
<http://original.antiwar.com/malic/2010/02/19/the-state-thats-still-a-lie/>  of 
Kosovo." (ISK)

Earlier this year, the governments of U.S., UK, Germany, France and Italy even 
sent a most un-diplomatic note <http://waz.euobserver.com/887/29432>  to 
Serbia’s Foreign Minister Vuk Jeremic, expressing their frustration and 
disappointment that the "aggressive rhetoric" from Serbia wasn’t merely a ploy 
for domestic consumption to "remove Kosovo from the political agenda," as their 
"partners in Belgrade" assured them.

While the Tadic regime hasn’t gone beyond words in defending Kosovo — and has 
done much to surrender the province in practice — even that had become 
unacceptable to the Empire and the EU. Only unconditional submission would do.

Though Belgrade’s appeal to international law failed in late July, the tortured 
verdict <http://original.antiwar.com/malic/2010/07/22/cry-havoc/>  by the 
International Court of Justice has created far more trouble for the Empire than 
for Serbia. Furthermore, new recognitions for the ISK have failed to 
materialize. Instead of just surrendering as expected, Tadic and his people 
proposed a new UN resolution, calling for new negotiations. Even though the 
proposal has little chance of passing in the General Assembly, the very fact 
that it was made has "has rankled many Western UN members, who see Belgrade’s 
fixation on Kosovo as a tiresome impediment to progress in the Balkans," 
reports Radio Free Europe 
<http://www.rferl.org/content/Germany_To_Serbia_Its_Time_To_Toe_EU_Line_On_Kosovo/2137640.html>
 , adding that Westerwelle is expected to demand the resolution’s gutting, if 
not outright withdrawal.

RFE also quotes what Westerwelle’s spokesman Stephan Bredohl told Deutsche 
Welle: "Germany has accepted [Kosovo's] independence, and it’s very important 
for us that if Serbia wants to join the European Union, it needs to be 
constructive and toe the EU’s line."

Facts and Fantasy

No doubt that Berlin — and Washington — consider it of great importance for 
Belgrade to "toe the line" and do what it’s told. But the notion that Serbia 
would be rewarded for surrendering Kosovo with a promise of EU membership was 
already outlandish back in 2008 
<http://original.antiwar.com/malic/2008/05/08/franklins-choice/> . Now that 
Germany has explicitly ruled out 
<http://www.rferl.org/content/Is_Germany_Closing_The_Door_On_Further_EU_Enlargement__/1563457.html>
  any further EU expansion anytime soon (after the annexation of Croatia, that 
is), the notion of Serbia joining the EU in this decade is at best an exercise 
in wishful thinking. Nor is it easy any more to promote the myth of 
"pre-accession funds" rolling in, what with the financial crisis undermining 
the Euro.

In return for the promise of a fantasy, Westerwelle expects Serbia to accept 
the "reality" imposed by the EU. As he put it in a speech at the University of 
Belgrade, "The independence of Kosovo is a reality… Reconciliation is only 
possible when one grasps the reality." (Deutsche Welle 
<http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,5945679,00.html> ) In another statement, 
quoted by Reuters <http://www.worldbulletin.net/news_detail.php?id=63039> , he 
asserted, "The map of southeastern Europe has been laid down and completed."

So, "reality" is whatever ends up being established at gunpoint, as a result of 
pure willpower. Where have we heard this before 
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reality-based_community> ?

Westerwelle also tried to persuade Belgrade to drop the UN resolution proposal. 
"When someone in Europe wants to solve something including conflicts […] the 
road should first lead to Brussels, not to New York," he said. (DW 
<http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,5945679,00.html> )

Brussels is the capital of the EU, and while that may entitle it to assert 
authority over EU member countries (itself a dubious claim), what sort of 
authority can it claim, and on what basis, over countries and territories in no 
way, shape, or form associated with the EU Leviathan? If Serbia were an EU 
member, and Brussels decided to bully it into giving independence to Kosovo, 
Westerwelle might have a point. But this sort of arrogance of power argues 
precisely against EU membership. What is to stop Brussels from deciding 
tomorrow that "reality" involved an independent Catalunya 
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catalonia>  or Basque, or a revision of the 
Treaty of Trianon <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_of_Trianon> ?

No wonder, then, that the Serbian president is playing stupid, and the official 
statement 
<http://glassrbije.org/E/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=11929&Itemid=26>
  about the meeting with Westerwelle says only that the two "agreed in Belgrade 
that Serbia’s future lies with the EU and that for Serbia, Germany is one of 
the major political and economic partners." Tadic even "told the German 
minister that Serbia counts on the EU support for the solution of the Kosovo 
issue…"

Support? What support?!

Dumb and Dumber

Something does not add up. The obsession of Germany, the EU and the Empire with 
the "independent state of Kosovo" and bringing Serbia to heel can actually be 
explained 
<http://original.antiwar.com/doug-bandow/2007/12/07/creating-crisis-another-war-in-the-balkans/>
  with conspiracy facts (as opposed to theories). What is truly puzzling here 
is the behavior of the Belgrade government.

Boris Tadic has established his credentials 
<http://original.antiwar.com/malic/2004/09/30/most-humbly-yours/>  as a 
spineless sycophant years ago. The only thing doubtful about his loyalty is if 
he whether it lies more with himself, or the Empire; to Serbia, there isn’t 
any. Tadic personally scuttled the government’s plan to resist the seizure of 
Kosovo by breaking up the coalition and calling for new elections. The 
Albanians in Kosovo went ahead with their February 2008 "declaration of 
independence" only after Tadic was re-elected president 
<http://original.antiwar.com/malic/2008/02/07/dead-end/>  of Serbia.

Similarly, for all his patriotic rhetoric, Foreign Minister Vuk Jeremic 
<http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/2007/05/18/the-jeremic-dossier/>  is loyal 
to Tadic, who was his schoolteacher before becoming his political patron. In 
April 2007, Austrian chancellor Alfred Gusenbauer told Reuters 
<http://www.b92.net/eng/news/politics-article.php?yyyy=2007&mm=04&dd=13&nav_category=92&nav_id=40666>
  that he was "working with Boris Tadic and his people to find a way to 
implement the essence of the Ahtisaari plan" — a proposal by an Imperial envoy 
<http://original.antiwar.com/malic/2007/02/08/ahtisaaris-final-solution/>  to 
give Kosovo "supervised independence" that was ultimately rejected by the UN. 
Jeremic was one of the people implicated in these secret talks.

The Empire has spelled out the promises its "partners in Belgrade" have made. 
So why have they not delivered yet? Tadic currently has complete dominance over 
the politics, media and civil society in Serbia, not seen since the late 
Communist leader Tito. It doesn’t matter that Tadic is nowhere near as popular; 
the people have no way to express their dissent save by taking to the streets 
en masse. All other avenues are controlled by people loyal to either Tadic, or 
directly to the Empire. By all rights, Tadic should not care what the people 
want. Yet he still refuses to surrender. Why?

Could it be that he is afraid? Afraid of a theoretical popular revolt that 
would sweep away the house of cards laboriously constructed ever since the 
Empire-sponsored coup in October 2000, and possibly even cost Tadic and his 
associates their heads? Serbia and Georgia are the only two Empire-engineered 
"revolutions" that haven’t been rolled back yet.

There is the theoretical possibility that Tadic is just playing dumb and 
feigning patriotism, while the Empire is playing dumber and feigning annoyance, 
so as to preclude any resistance from arising until it is too late. But this 
would require a far greater degree of subtlety that either can be credited with.


Read more by Nebojsa Malic


*       The Sorrow of Empire 
<http://original.antiwar.com/malic/2010/08/06/the-sorrow-of-empire/>  – August 
6th, 2010
*       Cry Havoc <http://original.antiwar.com/malic/2010/07/22/cry-havoc/>  – 
July 22nd, 2010
*       Srebrenica: The Sacred Lie 
<http://original.antiwar.com/malic/2010/07/09/srebrenica-the-sacred-lie/>  – 
July 9th, 2010
*       The Endless Summer of 1914 
<http://original.antiwar.com/malic/2010/07/01/the-endless-summer-of-1914/>  – 
July 1st, 2010
*       Empire’s Deal 
<http://original.antiwar.com/malic/2010/06/13/empires-deal/>  – June 13th, 2010

http://original.antiwar.com/malic/2010/08/27/westerwelles-big-adventure/



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