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  • Is Kosovo the End of Europe?

    Mainstream, India
    Mainstream, Vol XLVI, No 15
    March 29 2008

    Is Kosovo the End of Europe?
    Saturday 29 March 2008, by Ash Narain Roy



    Rene Magritte, the celebrated Belgian surrealist painter, once
    painted an apple and wrote on it, `This is not an apple.' He did the
    same on a pipe. Today, he could as well paint his country, Belgium,
    and certainly Kosovo, the youngest nation in the world, and write,
    `This is not a country.' Belgium is collapsing under the weight of
    its own contradictions, with its majority Dutch-speaking, many
    French-speaking and few German-speaking citizens unable to decide
    what and for whom the state stands for. Kosovo is a self-inflicted
    pain and the world will not be able to withstand it given the can of
    worms its creation has opened. Mitrovica, witnessing intense
    violence, may emerge as a flashpoint of new conflict. Serbia is
    thinking of inviting Russian troops into Serb-dominated northern
    Kosovo as peacekeepers that may undermine the authority of the
    NATO-led KFOR peacekeeping mission, creating the potential for
    conflict leading to the partition of Kosovo.

    Kosovo's independence has dealt a blow to the nation-state. Many
    wonder if the nation-state in the 21st century is going out of
    fashion and whether a model of multi-cultural living, the hallmark of
    the nation-state, is on way to redundancy. In any case, China and
    Russia seem moving towards 19th century-style nationalism, militarism
    and assertive-ness. Many states would follow them.

    Kosovo's declaration of independence has won enthusiastic to grudging
    approval from some and vociferous to mild disapproval from others
    depending on which side of the fence one is sitting. But it has
    placed India on the horns of a dilemma. New Delhi is only studying
    the evolving situation as there are `several issues' involved in the
    declaration. There was a time when India took pride in being right
    than in being diplomatic. Today hard realities of `national
    interests' and pragmatism have become the main yardstick of its
    foreign policy. Silence and discretion are in, moralising is out.
    That perhaps explains what Shashi Tharoor says, why India feels
    comfortable with the `Burmese junta, than its janata'. India's
    flirtations with the US and the desire to occupy the UN high table
    with the help of Washington are also coming in the way of taking a
    principled stand on global issues.

    But New Delhi's virtual silence on Kosovo is fraught with
    far-reaching consequences. It is unfortunate that even on an issue
    that concerns its own minorities and sub-national movements, India
    has chosen to look the other way. As the CPI-M mouthpiece People's
    Democracy says, `at least on such a vital issue as the sovereignty of
    countries with minority populations and the challenges to a basic
    principle of international law, India should speak up.' Kosovo has
    created a new precedent and twisted international law that
    separatists all over the world would use to further their interests.
    Kashmiri separatists like Syed Ali Shah Geelani, Shabbir Shah and
    Yasin Malik have already said that they see Kosovo as a ray of hope.
    North-East militants and the Naxalites would not be far behind in
    extracting some mileage out of Kosovo. Spain's Basque and Catalan
    separatists have also welcomed Kosovo's independence with a banner
    like, `Today Kosovo. Tomorrow Catalonia'. Ethnic Albanians in
    Macedonia have also intensified their autonomy demands, an obvious
    road to independence. Many believe the upsurge of violence in Tibet
    is not unrelated to Kosovo.


    WHAT is the American gameplan in Kosovo? Russia certainly sees a red
    signal. Kosovo is a dress-rehearsal for redrawing boundaries in
    Eurasia and the Middle East. It is a new balkanisation, part of
    American and German geo-strategic plan, to tame Russia. The goal is
    to drive a wedge in the Balkans to advance a spurious form of
    European integration. A clear pattern is discernible. Since the
    former Yugoslavia was a thorn in the American-German flesh, it has
    been systematically targeted. The NATO bombing of Yugoslavia in 1999
    was a well-devised plan. It was no coincidence that
    Bosnia-Herzegovina was divided along ethnic and religious lines - Serb,
    Croat, Bosniak, Christians and Muslims. To these ethnic-religious
    divides have been added further sectarian divisions within
    Christianity - Eastern Orthodoxy versus Roman Catholicism.

    Facts speak for themselves. Bosnia's Constitution was written at a US
    Air Force base in Dayton, Ohio by American and European experts.
    Efforts are now on to establish a Greater Albania which will bring
    together what are now Albania and Kosovo as well as adjacent parts of
    Serbia and Montenegro, Western Macedonia and the north-western
    regions of Greece.

    Kosovo has created a new divide even in the ranks of European states.
    While, Germany, Britain, Italy and France have recognised Kosovo,
    countries like Spain, Greece, Slovenia, Bulgaria, Romania and Cyprus
    have opposed Kosovo's independence. There is a perception among
    multinational, multi-ethnic and multicultural states that Kosovo's
    independence will give a new lease of life to separatists in their
    own midst - Basques in Spain, Tiroleans in Italy, Hungarians in Romania
    and the like.

    Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has reacted most vehemently
    calling Kosovo's independence as the `beginning of the end of
    Europe'. Moscow is right in maintaining that Kosovo's independence
    will rekindle fire in the frozen conflict zones - Abkhazia, South
    Ossetia and Transnistria etc. Way back in 1992, South Ossetia had
    declared independence from Georgia. Only thanks to the presence of
    Russian peacekeepers a bigger conflict was avoided. Russia has not
    recognised South Ossetia as yet, but it could exercise that option.
    Moscow has also hinted that the Kosovo precedent could be invoked in
    Abkhazia, South Ossetia and Nagorno-Karabakh. In fact, Moscow has
    decided to withdraw from a CIS treaty imposing sanctions against
    Georgia's breakaway region of Abkhazia. It is not hard to imagine
    what happens if Russia decides to use the Kosovo approach to
    resolving conflicts in its own backyard. Even supposing Russian
    troops are sent to Serb-dominated northern Kosovo, it could create a
    flashpoint of conflict.

    Is the US trying to appease the Muslim world by its support for
    Kosovo and thus seeking to make up for the folly of the Iraq war? It
    is possible that some Muslim regimes may see the American gameplan in
    that light. But what kind of message is Washington conveying to the
    Iraqi Kurds? The US says it is backing a federal Iraq where Arabs,
    Kurds, Turkomans, Assyrians as also Shias and Sunnis could live
    together. Can Iraqis be blamed for thinking that the federal formula
    is a cover to break the country?

    The West's stance is inconsistent and self-contradictory. If it
    supports Kosovo's independence, why does it oppose the independence
    of Flanders in Belgium? Few believe Kosovo will actually be free; it
    will become a protectorate of the EU. What is worse, Kosovo is likely
    to see the Serb-dominated parts walking away. In pursuing their
    geo-strategic interests, the US and Germany may end up reviving old
    chauvinist passions and creating a monster that may turn their dream
    into a nightmare. It is too dangerous to fiddle with the Balkans'
    fault lines. The US smiles at Kosovo only to frown at Russia. Come on
    America! Your bare teeth are showing.

    The author is the Associate Director, Institute of Social Sciences,
    New Delhi.

    http://www.mainstreamweekly.net/article606 .html
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