Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

The Division of the Balkans and the Black Sea Region

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • The Division of the Balkans and the Black Sea Region

    DefenceTalk.com
    Nov 13 2004

    Defence & Strategic

    The Division of the Balkans and the Black Sea Region
    Willard Payne
    Nov 12, 2004, 15:45 |


    An Invitation to Invasion

    With the decision, led by the Organization of Security and
    Cooperation in Europe, headquartered in Vienna, to recognize the
    division of Yugoslavia and the newly independent states and the
    creation of Moldova with the break-up of the Soviet Union, all done
    in the name of the “New World Order”, it set in motion a chain
    reaction which will lead to further instability and conflict beyond
    what the world has seen already. One of the few dissenting voices was
    that of the then US Secretary of State James Baker, who stated
    publicly in 1991, that he refused to recognize the independence of
    Slovenia, “under any circumstances”. There was also the Belgian who
    was Secretary- General of NATO in 1990 I believe his name was Willy
    Claes, who mentioned that the threat to the West and to international
    security was Islam. Within a year he was removed by a scandal never
    to be mentioned again, as if he never existed. I always suspected it
    was arranged by those in the OSCE who wanted the staged crisis in the
    Balkans as a showcase for the New World Order which I assume they
    thought could be solved by a diplomatic show, something Vienna loves
    to orchestrate. And there was a British expert who observed, with the
    willful division of Czechoslovakia, that Eastern and Central Europe
    are in danger of descending into tribalism. There is no greater abyss
    to march into.

    There was another interested party in these proceedings, Islam. In
    the first half of the 1990’s, the initial phase of the Balkan front,
    during one of the winters when there was a pause in the fighting due
    to the weather, an article mentioned Serbia having the best weapon
    contacts in the region. This is the factor Vienna failed to take into
    consideration, being so caught up in the illusion of their grand
    design. The impact of weapon dealers and outside influences and in
    this instance representing a region which also has long festering
    disputes with the West and would immediately realize the convenience
    of using the Balkans and Black Sea region to keep the West busy which
    in turn would reduce the West’s military presence in the
    Mediterranean not to mention Central Asia, the main front. An article
    stated Serbia was receiving weapon support from Libya. Iran also
    evinced an interest by establishing formal relations with Croatia in
    1992 and announcing since then that Croatia was their entry into
    Central Europe. Some in the West realized the hidden meaning. Germany
    has since sent to Poland Leopard tanks and the US helped Poland to
    upgrade her air force. Iran has also established a very busy embassy
    in downtown Sarajevo, which puts them in an extremely strategic
    position to monitor and assist the Islamic fighters, who have arrived
    there to do more than just help Bosnia and to assist in coordinating
    the Islamic war effort with nationalistic forces. A few months ago
    Iran’s, extremely eager Defense Minister Adm. Ali Shamkani paid a
    call on Warsaw most likely to look over Poland’s new equipment. His
    visit is an indication Iran views everything from Macedonia to
    Moldova and beyond as up for grabs and that a lot of groups,
    nationalists, are readily available, from any religious ritual, to
    express their hatred not only of Vienna but also those who support
    Vienna. This may partly explain Iran and Saudi Arabia’s reason for
    using Al-Qaeda and other terrorist groups in their current threats
    against Rome.

    Unfortunately Europe has a long Imperial history of promoting wars in
    the Balkans to use as a military playground, a display of
    international prominence. This has kept the entire region in a cross
    fire of conflicting spheres of influence and now is showing signs of
    alienating the people the OSCE attempted to impress and manipulate.

    When NATO decided to use Pres. Slobodan Milosevic once again, as they
    did in 1994, when Milosevic’s support of the Bosnian Serbs helped
    justify the NATO bombing campaign that year, the year I believe World
    War III began, NATO marched further into the abyss with the bombing
    of Serbia/Kosovo in 1999. NATO simply ignored the UN which gave a
    further indication this was not the same organization that was
    established 50 years previously to convince nations in and around the
    north Atlantic to no longer go to war with each other, as Europe had
    been doing for the 1,000 years since the death of Charlemagne.

    The bombing alienated Greece, which for centuries had close relations
    with Serbia since the two follow the same Orthodox ritual. There is
    also regional identity, which may explain why a year or two later,
    Greece and Turkey conducted a joint peace mission to the Middle East.
    It was now Southeastern Europe as opposed to the rest of Europe
    welcoming the invitation from Islam under Persian direction.

    It was either late in 2000 or early 2001when the news mention Turkey
    and Iran were comparing intelligence information but the announcement
    did not say about where. During February a six-month ethnic Albanian
    rebellion began and nearly defeated the Macedonian government. It was
    admitted in the news the Macedonian military was little more than
    well-armed policemen who were no stranger to corrupt privileges. The
    head of state was actually on the phone, in a panic, to the head of
    the European Union. During the fighting, the former British
    negotiator Lord David Owen stated publicly NATO should leave the
    region. What was so significant about his statement is that he used
    to be one of Britain’s lead negotiators in the early 1990’s during
    the first part of the Balkan crisis and now he seemed to realize the
    trap NATO and the West had fallen into. The US dispatched its new
    National Security Advisor Dr. Condoleezza Rice to the Ukraine on a
    non-agenda crisis trip because the Ukraine was eager to arm Skopje
    with virtually anything, which could have widened the conflict.
    Articles admitted Ukraine was actually controlled by a weapons mafia.

    Though mountainous and poor, with only two million people and an
    average monthly salary of $155.00 per person, Macedonia sits astride
    a strategic crossroads on the Balkans peninsula encompassed by
    neighbors on all sides who ruled it in the past or coveted its
    territory. Throughout its history it was occupied by Greeks, Romans,
    Bulgarians, Byzantines, Serbs and Islamic Ottoman Turks, who ruled
    for 500 years, but never eradicated Christianity. Its disintegration
    along the ethnic fault lines, that are only to clear on the map
    today, could trigger a new carve-up of the Balkans, propelling the
    one-third Albanian majority towards union with Albania to the west or
    Kosovo to the north.

    The Macedonia majority, a family of southern Slavs, would be tempted
    to seek shelter for their abbreviated state in the protection of
    Serbia or Bulgaria, larger societies whose language and religion they
    share. As “domino” theory predicts, the ethnic Albanian majority of
    Kosovo and reluctant Serbs in Bosnia would see any failure to knit
    together a multi-ethnic society in Macedonia as justification to
    seize their own destinies back from the hands of Western powers.

    Such a chain reaction, the European fears, would mean a reversion to
    the Balkan cauldron of the early 20th century, an unstable
    nationalist jigsaw of disputed borders and latent conflict, a recipe
    for seething anarchy requiring permanent supervision. Preserving
    territorial integrity has been the foundation of Western foreign
    policy since Yugoslavia began its violent breakup in 1991, but a
    policy often in retreat. This is why Iran and Turkey decided to help
    the West find reasons to remain committed because it is a drain on
    military resources.

    When Macedonia declared independence its choice of name so angered
    EU-member Greece, whose northern province carries the same ancient
    label, European recognition, was held up for three years. A Greek
    blockade of petroleum and other supplies showed how easy it was to
    bring the dependent, landlocked country to its knees. Recent violence
    and demonstrations have shown that the issue of stability is far from
    settled and no one stands to benefit more from further instability
    than Iran and the Jihad.

    Moldova, formed in 1992, with the collapse of the Soviet Union into
    15 nations, Moldova was part of the second group of Soviet successor
    states. It comprised the nine that formed part of non-NATO Europe.
    This also included four Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS),
    Armenia, Belarus, Ukraine and Moldova. Do not be ashamed to be
    confused, they are in a constant state of flux and they are by no
    means by themselves though I suspect that is what they preferred.
    Individual international recognition controlling what was left of the
    state economy and a thriving undeclared underground black economy.
    This is basically what virtually every nation that has surfaced after
    the Soviet Union became and in Moldova’s case history Russia had to
    establish regional peacekeeping forces, the 14th Army under Lt. Gen.
    Alexandre Lebed to limit the fighting between Moldova and the
    breakaway trans-Dnestr region, mostly inhabited by ethnic Russians
    and Ukrainians. Russia provided arms and troops to the insurgents,
    helping them to defeat the Moldovan army in several battles, notably
    that for Bendery in June 1992. A cease-fire was signed the following
    month by Pres. Boris Yeltsin of Russia and Moldova’s Pres. Mircea
    Snegur.

    For the next 12 years international efforts to resolve the crisis
    have failed with the current controversy revolving around a language
    and now energy dispute with the usual cycle of regional interest.
    What has enlarged the conflict is the greater war against terror in
    other words Islam. The US and other nations adjacent to Moldova have
    provided military facilities for operations in the Middle East so
    stability is obviously of paramount importance while at the same time
    Iran has been signing substantial economic agreements, memorandums of
    understanding, with every nation in the Black Sea region. The
    economic dimension of the Jihad will be felt very heavily here. If
    Iran has enough military successes in the region the entire economic
    dialogue will be dictated by Tehran.

    International initiatives have encountered withering criticism from a
    range of international and local analysts and Moldovan
    nongovernmental organizations fearful that the OSCE plan would turn
    Moldova into a satellite of Russia. Prospects for a breakthrough
    appear slim. The Transnistrian authorities are reluctant to lift
    their authoritarian controls or abandon lucrative smuggling
    activities that have left Transnistria isolated but for its lifeline
    to Russia and its leaders banned from traveling to Western countries.
    Meanwhile, a significant exodus of adult Moldovans is taking place
    owing to endemic corruption at the elite level and the contraction of
    the economy. The country’s population is a scant 39.5% of the size it
    was in 1990. Many people swapped professional jobs at home for menial
    ones in Western Europe in order to earn enough to support their
    families.

    With the corruption at the top and the serious regional rivalry
    around them the chances for these countries surviving from Macedonia
    to Moldova, under their current boundaries, or any other, is
    virtually non-existent. Moscow probably concluded a long time ago
    that peaceful solutions to the arrogant, self-contained nationalities
    exist only in a dream world. The nightmarish consequences, which will
    become more apparent before the end of the year, will result in the
    re-establishment of the Russian hegemony whose hard currency of
    financing comes from, as always the West, principally Berlin. The
    Berlin-Moscow spectrum and the serious industrial concern behind it,
    realizes this crescent of crisis can only be solved militarily.
    During the war reliable local leaders will assert themselves and if
    they have enough local military support will survive to represent
    their provinces in the post-World War III climate.

    Of course the post-war climate will not be one of universal peace but
    one of militaristic stability. The Jihad would have run its course. I
    cannot see more than two years of all out fighting starting with this
    one. When Tehran realizes it cannot defeat Moscow they will make a
    deal which will end at least most of the fighting. They will probably
    call it a new partnership with Moscow being the most prominent.

    About the author: Willard Payne is a consultant and analyst in
    international affairs, specializing in extreme situations. He is a
    member of US Naval Institute and President’s Circle of Chicago
    Council on Foreign Relations. Willard holds a degree in history from
    Western Illinois University and currently he is running Night Watch
    Information Service, a broad range news-analysis service.

    URL of this article:
    http://www.defencetalk.com/news/publish/article_001999.shtml

    --Boundary_(ID_de1synzvgIZ0uPBSzbJAvA)--
Working...
X