The Kosovo Drama Escalates

http://www.wvwnews.net/story.php?id=2640

by Srdja Trifkovic

A deeply divided UN Security Council failed to break the deadlock over Kosovo on Wednesday. Russia and China remain adamant that there can be no imposed solution, and no valid proclamation of independence outside the Security Council framework. The United States, Britain and France—which support Kosovo’s independence—say further talks between the parties are pointless. They appear intent on encouraging Pristina’s unilateral declaration of independence (UDI) and its subsequent recognition through NATO and the European Union, thus bypassing the Russian veto at the UN.

The exact timing of Kosovo’s UDI will depend on Serbia’s domestic politics. Almost a year ago, the unveiling of the infamous Ahtisaari plan—the blueprint for the province’s illegal secession from Serbia—was delayed by the United States and her West European allies from January 1, 2007, until after the parliamentary election in Serbia on January 21. The reason was frankly stated in Washington and Brussels: the need to help the “pro-Western, reformist” Democratic Party (DS) of President Boris Tadic in its bid to secure as many seats in the national legislature as possible by pushing its old agenda of “Euro-Atlantic [i.e., EU-NATO integrations.”

It was assumed, reasonably enough, that Tadic’s starry-eyed Europhoric supporters may have second thoughts about continuing their support for Serbia’s integration into those same institutions that underwrite and condone amputation of one-seventh of her sovereign territory for the benefit of a bunch of Albanian heroin kingpins.We are witnessing the same ploy all over again. Tadic and his allies in the Assembly of Serbia have conspired with the European Union to gerrymander a “quickie” presidential election on January 20, in order to preempt the looming unilateral declaration of “independence” by Kosovo and the subsequent recognition by the United States and some of the EU countries.

Just one day after the election was announced—illegally and unconstitutionally, according to Prime Minister Kostunica’s Democratic Party of Serbia (DSS), which is still DS’s partner in the current coalition—a top EU official was quoted as saying that “it may take until the spring” before the status of Kosovo is finally determined.

The DS, the Bush Administration, and the EU bureaucratic machine have a common agenda in pushing ahead with the election now. If the presidential race is over before Kosovo declares its independence, Hashim Thaci’s pending declaration, aided and abetted by Washington and Brussels, supposedly won’t impact the outcome of the race. Tadic gets duly reelected, to provide a “reasonable” voice in the Serbian leadership that will not veer away from the cherished Euro-integrations come what may.

http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/?p=449#more-449

2007-12-21