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Geert Lovink <geert@xs4all.nl> NATO kills Kosovo Albanians JT's collumn: "e-mail uit belgrado" LINK: motherated discussion NO WAR BUT THE CLASS WAR ! - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Date: Wed, 14 Apr 1999 21:34:45 +0200 (CEST) From: Geert Lovink <geert@xs4all.nl> Subject: NATO kills Kosovo Albanians MEHA, Yugoslavia, April 14 - At least 20 people from an Albanian-populated village in western Kosovo were killed Wednesday in a bombing attributed by witnesses to NATO planes, an AFP reporter said. The victims were in a convoy of vehicles and tractors near the village of Meha, some five kilometres (three miles) from the border with Albania, when it was hit shortly after 1:30 p.m. (1130 GMT). Bomb fragments could be seen scattered at the scene, a dusty village road. Witnesses told an AFP reporter, who arrived on the spot two hours after the bombing, that NATO planes had bombed the area. Antigona Hasanaj, who lost two relatives in the bombing, said she "heard humming of planes and five or six explosions." Ruse Gjokaj, from the nearby village of Junik, said she and members of her family had fled their home village earlier in the day. Two of her relatives were killed in the raid. A 14-year-old boy, Muharem Alija from a nearby village Pace, who survived the bombing, said that "grenades were falling from the planes." A local legal offical, Milovan Momcilovic, said at least 20 people were killed and four wounded. Several bodies, including those of a woman and a girl, were lying at the roadside, alongside tractors packed with personal belongings. One male victim appeared to have been burned to death. Six victims were pulled out of the ruins of a house. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Date: Wed, 14 Apr 1999 21:31:42 +0200 (CEST) From: Geert Lovink <geert@xs4all.nl> Subject: JT's collumn: "e-mail uit belgrado" http://magazine.examedia.nl/column/kosovo.html - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Date: Wed, 14 Apr 1999 21:55:54 +0200 (CEST) From: Geert Lovink <geert@xs4all.nl> Subject: LINK: motherated discussion Van: Phyllis Bennis <PBENNIS@compuserve.com> Datum: dinsdag 13 april 1999 17:37 Onderwerp: kosovo - question one >Dear friends, Mother Jones magazine put together an internal "forum" on Kosovo, in which a group of five answered a series of questions and interacted with each other's answers -- Howard Zinn, Barbara Ehrenreich, George Kenney, Diana Johnstone and me. It's now up on their website -- http://www.motherjones.com/total_coverage/kosovo/forum/kosovo.html but I'm including the bulk of the answers here (in separate e-mails) to the first two or three questions. Hope it's useful in these awful times. Phyllis QUESTION ONE--- 1. Tactics aside, was it right for NATO to intervene in the Kosovo conflict? In other words, is this mission a moral imperative? Did NATO have any options left aside from the use of force? PHYLLIS BENNIS -- The question begs the answer. I think there may well have been (and still is) a moral imperative to intervene -- but NOT for NATO! The U.S. sidelining of the UN in international affairs -- replacing UN primacy either with unapologetic unilateralism as we saw during the last several years in Iraq, or with NATO as the bestower of international legitimacy as we are seeing in Kosovo -- represents a major catastrophe for U.S. foreign policy. So while there may BE a moral imperative, that doesn't make this U.S./NATO mission a moral response. Certainly one must be skeptical about morality having anything to do with U.S. policy. The continuing humanitarian crisis in Iraq -- where far more people are still dying, today, as a DIRECT result of U.S. policy, than are dying even now in Kosovo -- should provide enough evidence to anyone for whom the delayed and disastrously handled attention to Somalia, the deliberate decision to allow genocide in Rwanda to go forward, the disasters of Bonia, Sierra Leone, etc. still leave questions. But we cannot challenge Washington's double standards by claiming that because they refused to move in the past, they should not move now. While we must continue to identify, analyze and condemn past failures to prevent or halt genocide, we must continue to demand appropriate action to prevent or stop such humanitarian crises now. The question for us should be whether there were other options beside THIS use of force by THIS agency -- and the answer to that I think is yes. The UN Charter is unequivocal that the use of force is justified only in the context of two scenarios: either a Security Council authorization (despite all of the problems inherent in that because of U.S. domination of the Council), or immediate self-defense response to armed aggression, and then only until the first opportunity for the Council to meet. What took place here was neither -- it was a clear refusal by the U.S. (with the Brits trotting along behind) to allow the Council to debate the issue, as France had proposed. Even under the terms of the Genocide Covention, the obligation to act to prevent genocide does not supercede the primacy of the UN in responding to an international crisis. And whether or not one accepts the applicability of that term (based on the part of the definition of genocide that speaks of creating conditions that render the group's survival impossible -- something that may well be approaching if the ethnic cleansing efforts result in a near-complete expulsion and forced dispersion of Albanian Kosovars from Kosovo ) it is sigificant that the U.S. has NOT claimed it as a justification of its actions. And of course, U.S. awareness of the possibility (not probability, given Russia's continued dependence on Western aid) of a Russian veto does not provide a legal 'out' for avoiding a Council decision. What might the Council have decided on, even if a full-scale UN Blue Helmet deployment was not a likely outcome? One very reasonable possibility as early as months ago could have involved UN authorization for an OSCE -- certainly NOT NATO -- protection force, not the limited unarmed OSCE monitoring force that were pulled out at the moment they were most vitally needed. The UN Charter speaks of looking first to regional solutions to regional problems -- but certainly OSCE, including eastern Europe and Russia as well as the western European powers, is a far better exemple of regional diplomatic actors than a U.S.-dominated NATO military alliance. What could the UN look towards now? One possibility would be to rely (however ironically) on the precedent set by the Korean War-era Uniting for Peace resolution. Under its terms, the General Assembly can, when the Council is judged to be deadlocked or otherwise unable to work, meet in special session to make decisions regarding war and peace, issues generally left to the providence of the Council. The Russians have recently proposed such an Assembly meeting. Its first task would be to call a halt to NATO's bombing and Serb expulsions, release of all detainees, and massive refugee assistance. While bringing NATO to heel, let alone the Milosevic-led military, would by no means be guaranteed by such a UN resolution, a specific Assembly demand for an end to the bombing would go far towards delegitimizing NATO's role, challenging the U.S. and reasserting the centrality of the UN in dealing with the ethnic cleansing, thus providing a much better chance of a policy that would, in the Hippocratic sense, "first, do no harm.". Further, the Assembly should not only call for a resumption of serious diplomacy, but delegate representatives to act in the name of the most democratic part of the UN, the General Assembly, to carry out such diplomacy on behalf of the international community. Such a diplomatic effort, I would propose, might best be carried out by Nelson Mandela and Kofi Annan -- two African statesmen without personal vested interests in the region or conflict, but most importantly combining the international legitimacy of the UN with the internationally recogized personal credibility of the South African leader. What might such a diplomatic 'dream team' be able to accomplish that NATO bombing could not? BARBARA EHRENREICH: In answer to your first question, Mat: Yes, I think there was a moral imperative for someone to intervene, somehow, to stop the Serb brutalities in Kosovo. Some of my friends point out that the US and international bodies calmly sat out genocide in Rwanda and against the Kurds in Turkey, as if this were a reason for not doing anything this time around. I don't follow that logic. I'm sorry no one intervened in Rwanda and would like to see more international readiness to stop anti-civilian warfare wherever it crops up. That said, is NATO the body to do it in this case? The worrisome thing about NATO is that it is now constituted to maximally irritate Russia, as the NATO bombing campaign seems to be in general. Why risk deepening and widening tensions in this way? Seems to me, the more appropriate body to intervene in this and future cases would have been the UN, but by completely bypassing the Security Council, NATO and the US have contributed to further undermining it. As for "use of force," this is not easy to separate from "tactics." Naturally, you are not going to send unarmed peacekeepers into a place like Kosovo. But there could have been, and probably still should be, a DEFENSIVE, on-the-ground, peacekeeping mission to protect Kosovar Albanians and their cities and villages and to establish a safe haven for refugees within Kosovo. But the air strikes have not done a thing to help the Kosovars: 1. In the first phase, NATO/US completely neglected to bomb Yugoslav troops in Kosovo because this would have meant flying dangerously low. No help for Kosovars from that. 2. In bombing Serbia, the emphasis has been on striking anti-aircraft sites - to make things safer for the bombers, not for the Kosovars. 3. In the current phase, NATO is supposedly targeting command-and-control centers and supply routes within Serbia. But it is not clear to me that the FRY troops in Kosovo would be stopped in their tracks by being cut off from Serbia. Looting can be an effective substitute for supply lines; and, to the extent that the ethnic-cleansers in Kosovo are paramilitary units, they may not be entirely dependent on orders from any central command post. So what has been accomplished so far? 1. Toward stopping the expulsion of ethnic Albanians from Kosovar: exactly zero. Maybe less than zero - if in fact the Serbs stepped up their ethnic cleansing campaign in response to the onset of bombing. 2. Toward undermining Milosevic: definitely less than zero. The effect of the bombings so far has been to eliminate his considerable opposition within Serbia and produce an extraordinary burst of unity and solidarity within the Serb population. This could have been predicted. In short, the effect of the NATO/US bombing campaign has been to do nothing for the suffering Kosovar Albanians and to consolidate Milosevic's power domestically. Clever, no? GEORGE KENNEY Negotiation was always an option. Remember, in Bosnia it was the U.S., more than the Bosnian Serbs, who resisted a negotiated settlement that fell short of the desires of the Sarajevo regime. Not until 1995, when the Europeans threatened to pull out their UN peacekeepers and thereby forced the U.S. to reassess its position, was a deal possible. The eventual settlement in Bosnia was very much like what had been offered before the war began (the Cutilheiro plan) and during the war (Vance-Owen). Very likely it could have been achieved much earlier had the U.S. been more amenable instead of encouraging the Sarajevo regime to fight. Anyway, in Kosovo there was a lot to be negotiated that should have been, but wasn't. Specifically, whether Kosovo or some part of it should become independent, and then what compensation the Serbs could expect. The whole issue of the Balkan crisis from the beginning, as I've argued for a long time, boils down to changes in borders—the problem of why should I be a minority in your country when you can be a minority in mine. The borders of the region have changed, are changing, and will continue to change. So, the sensible thing is to help negotiate those changes rather than exacerbate the fighting over them. The U.S. government, however, has taken the opposite view since 1992: Balkan borders must not change and the U.S. will defend their inviolability with force. With such an entrenched attitude, though in theory negotiation was possible, in practice the U.S. left itself with nothing to negotiate, with no choice except forcing an outcome on the Serbs that was unacceptable. War was inevitable. That said, it is important to take issue with the rhetoric of Genocide. What was going on in Kosovo was not even junior Genocide or Genocide-light. From the beginning of this year up to NATO’s attack probably a couple hundred were killed, about a quarter of them Serbs—this was a mild form of ugly civil insurrection, the likes of which with far worse examples is to be found all over the place. It involved a lot of complicated nuances in the shade of gray. While as usual the Serbian regime acted brutally, so did the Kosovo Liberation army, an entity described within the past year by the CIA and the U.S. State Department as a terrorist organization. One should note that, according to numerous reports, including in the London Times, its funding comes in large measure from heroin trafficking in Europe. And that, according to other reputable sources, it maintains active ties with terrorist organizations in the Middle East. Presumably the U.S. would react better than the Serbs did if faced with such an insurrection in, say, Texas, but on the other hand, within their own frame of reference, the Serbs probably felt they were showing restraint. Moral imperatives cannot, by definition, apply only to specific circumstances. To date I have not seen, nor can I imagine, an argument for a moral imperative in Kosovo that would not apply even more aptly to at least half a dozen other conflicts around the world. We seem to be talking not about the reality but about the perception of a moral imperative. And—I have a lot of trouble articulating this because I don’t want merely to say everybody is nuts—why a very large, influential community of journalists, intellectuals, and policy-makers would whip themselves into a frenzy screaming for bloody vengeance over Genocide in Kosovo. Having watched this intervention movement evolve from the middle of the scrum it seems to me that many of those most directly involved have found that Genocide crusades make a meal ticket. We are witnessing a sort of mega-meshing of selfish interests under the mantle of altruism. To put it bluntly, I know many (most) of the prominent interventionists. I think they are phonies. I just wish I could explain better, from a sociological point of view, how they happened to rally together. HOWARD ZINN -- Where people are suffering, there is a moral imperative to act. But how one acts is crucial, because there are interventions which make things worse. What we have here is such an instance. In the past, we have often had to wait a long time before it became clear that bombing did not help the people we claimed to care about. We have rarely been able to come to a clear conclusion as quickly as in this case. The bombing, as became evident almost immediately, multiplied many-fold the suffering of the Kosovars, and simultaneously inflicted suffering to innocent people in Serbia. The admonition "we must do something" or the question "what else could we have done?" become moot in such a situation. No matter how complex the situation, how elusive the alternatives, we need to start with: "The bombing is wrong", and go on from there. The rhetoric of Clinton and other government officials reveals an utter lack of intelligence as well as an indifference to human suffering. Clinton, speaking to a miitary audience, again and again talked about making Milosovic "pay a price". The assumption that we will bomb him into submission makes no sense. The "price" is not being paid by Milosovic but by the Kosovars and Serbs alike as both are victims ofour bombing campaign. This is comparable to the notion that we are making Saddam Hussein "pay a price" by the economic sanctions that have killed hundreds of thousands of Iraqi children. They have paid the price. The terrible consequences of the sanctions constitutes powerful evidence that U.S. foreign policy is indifferent to large-scale suffering, and suggests its declared concern for the Kosovars is sheer hypocrisy. If the bombing if morally indefensible, the difficulty of finding other "options" cannot change that fact. Bombing is always an easy option. Diplomacy, compromise are more complex, more difficult, require coming down from macho heights of superiority. Again and again in recent decades we have seen that military conflicts had to be resolved by diplomatic means, and that the final agreement could have been arrived at earlier without massive loss of life. I recall the Christmas bombing of Hanoi in 1973, and after it took place, and all those people died, the peace agreement was substantially what it had been in October, before the bombing. NATO, was created to meet a Soviet threat which was never real. It built a huge military machine to guard against a threat to Western Europe which was never real, and which was useless in dealing with the Soviet control of Eastern Europe, which was real. Now, with no Soviet threat, it is being artifiically kept alive by again creating unreal threats. Its massive armaments cannot deal with the complex conflicts we have today -- and Kosovo reveals this. NATO should be discarded, and the sooner people start talking about this the better. We don't need stronger military alliances; we need stronger instruments of international peacekeeping. DIANA JOHNSTONE -- The question is strangely put. Of course NATO had no option but force. It is a military organization. The only language it knows or understands is force. The assumption underlying the question is that Kosovo was NATO's problem, that NATO had to do SOMETHING about Kosovo. This assumption is totally false and far-fetched. NATO's moral imperative was to stay the hell out. Bringing in NATO has escalated the Kosovo conflict into a full-scale human, moral and world political catastrophe. As for various foreign political leaders, notably the Clinton administration, they indeed had plenty of options left. They could have tried negotiations. Yes, negotiations. Because that option was not tried. The "Rambouillet talks" were a charade built on months and years of lies. For years, various Serbs in and out of government have suggested compromise solutions for the very difficult Kosovo problem. Nobody in the U.S. or the E.U. has shown any interest. For months, Belgrade was ready to negotiate but ethnic Albanian leaders refused on one pretext or another. The main reason for ethnic Albanian intransigence was the assurances they had, or at least THOUGHT they had (and with good reason), that the United States and NATO would get them what they wanted: independent Kosovo. All they had to do was mount armed attacks on Serbian police and Kosovo civilians (including ethnic Albanians) as provocations. When the Serbian police reacted, or overreacted, presto, the U.S. would send NATO to be their air force. Victory and huge Western investments would follow. So there were no negotiations. At Rambouillet, Serbian president Milan Milutinovic and his (multi-ethnic) delegation were presented with an ultimatum: accept Chris Hill's "peace agreement" allowing NATO to take over Kosovo on terms that could only be totally unacceptable to any sovereign government OR ELSE. Kosovo's "self-government" was to be run by a NATO imperial proconsul, with the title of CHief of theh OSCE/EU Implementation Mission, or CIM. The CIM would have authority over virtually everything and everybody. Kosovo would be occupied by a NATO force called "KFOR" headed by a Commander, COMKFOR, who could do whatever he wanted to counter any "potential threat", whose forces could be augmented indefinitelly (no ceiling), who would have full control of airspace over Kosovo and beyond, who would be above local law, and would have free access to the rest of Yugoslavia -- a license to invade the rest of the country. Serbia, a small country that has braved mighty empires more than once, that rejected a rather milder Habsburg ultimatum in 1914, that defied Hitler in 1941, could not possibly be expected to turn itself over to the likes of CIM and COMKFOR. The ethnic Albanians did much like the Hill document either. They probably wanted NATO to get Kosovo for ethnic Albanians, not for itself. They had to be openly coaxed into signing by the promise that only if they signed, NATO would be able to start bombing Serbia. And this is called a "peace agreement"? It was a war agreement between NATO and the armed Albanians in the KLA. Incidentally, according to Article 52 of the Vienna Treaties Convention, treaties are not binding if obtained by threat or use of force. The whole Clinton administration "sign or we'll bomb you" performance has been in violation of international law. The Yugoslavs were ready to make huge political sacrifices, but not to welcome NATO. NATO was the sticking point. A United Nations peacekeeping force might well have been acceptable. However, the Clinton administration insisted on NATO or nothing. In short, the interests of Kosovo, the interests of world peace, were sacrificed to U.S. ambitions for NATO. Yugoslavs, and not only Yugoslavs but probably a majority of people east of NATO, were convinced that the Clinton administration was exploiting the very old and complex conflict between Serbs and Albanians on behalf of NATO. For NATO had its own problem: to display its capacity for a "new mission" after the collapse of the "Soviet threat". It needed a raison d'etre. The new NATO is to be a global intervention force, to be used to defend the interests of its rich member states anywhere in the world. Of course, these interests will not be explained to the public, oh no. For public consumption, NATO intervention will always be motivated by compelling "humanitarian" reasons. NATO will rush in with cruise missiles and stealth bombers to avert "humanitarian crisis". Meanwhile, Kosovo provides a proving ground, supposed to produce marvelous results just in time for NATO's 50th anniversary celebrations. The results so far don't look so marvelous, but that's NATO's new problem. I am ready to expand considerably on any of the statements made above. Next question? -Diana Johnstone, Paris, April 3, 1999 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Date: Wed, 14 Apr 1999 23:04:51 +0200 (CEST) From: Geert Lovink <geert@xs4all.nl> Subject: NO WAR BUT THE CLASS WAR ! From: radfest@yahoo.com > NO WAR BUT THE CLASS WAR ! > >Nationalism out of the Balkans! Don't support the bombing! > >We say NO WAR BUT THE CLASS WAR because : > >* Ethnic nationalism brings misery for the ordinary > downtrodden people ; > >* The interests of the Rulers of any country, multinational > company, etc., are not our interests, as workers and as > "pawns" in their machiavellian games ; > >* While non-violent direct action is a valid tactic in day-to-day > resistance the world over, there comes a time when workers > have to resist by any means necessary, united on a class > understanding throughout the world, these rulers and their > destructive impact on the planet to serve profit and power. > >If they, the NATO rulers now bombing Yugoslavia, had examined >their own history, they would have known that it does not weaken >their enemy. > All the bombs that fell on Clydebank, Hanoi, or Iraq alienated >those bombed from the agressors. The fact that so-called smart bombs >are targeting destruction on military and strategic sites has made >little difference. > What generals, air-force commanders and their media spokesmen >called "collateral" damage has meant civilian deaths in Pristina and >south of Belgrade. Any opposition to the ruling Socialist Party led by >Milosevic has been driven underground. > Before the Bosnia conflict, Serb workers besieged their >parliament during protests. During the Croatia and Bosnia >conflicts, anti-militarists including "Women in Black" made >brave protests against Serb nationalist warmongering. >Mistaken youth in Belgrade and elsewhere, seduced by >the appeal of western consumerism, thought the West >was their ally. > The K.L.A. , set up with Western security help, welcome >the bombing and consider NATO as _their_ airforce. >Such is their disdain for the suffering of their fellow >Albanians in Kosovo, they have played into the hands >of the Serb nationalist forces who have now "ethnically >cleansed" over half of the population through forced >migration or male genocide. NATO has been out-thought >by the rulers in Belgrade with the Serb forces dispersed; >opponents of the regime neutralised, as in Montenegro; >and largely unable to predict or destroy the paramilitary >"ethnic cleansers". > Now a threat of wider conflict arises, with Russia >threatening a pan-Slav anti-NATO alliance, China >and other powers alarmed at the United States riding >roughshod over international conventions in the Gulf >and now Serbia, while at the same time overlooking >atrocities carried out in Burma, East Timor, Kurdistan, >Sierra Leone, Rwanda, when it doesn't suit them. >With Hungary, Poland, and the Czech Republic signed >up as new members of NATO, if "ground" conflict >did break out it could happen on a second front >in Vojvodina, in northern Yugoslavia, and spread >the war throughout the Balkans. > >The ANARCHIST CIRCLE in Glasgow support the efforts >of the committee to stop the bombing in the Balkans, >but we go further than calls like "Welfare Not Warfare". > >The only solution to the world we live in is a social revolution >of the people against their rulers, politicians, business >leaders, and all of the apologists for capitalism >and its military diversions. >______________________________________ > >Write to us at Counter Information ( Autonomy) >c/o 28 King Street, Glasgow G1 5QP. >Or e-mail <radfest@yahoo.com>. >We are linked to anarchists in Edinburgh >and elsewhere in Scotland. --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@desk.nl and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@desk.nl