Reality and Reconciliation: Urgently
Needed in Kosovo
August 17, 2004
By John Zavales
Several years ago, I
had the opportunity to witness real, indisputable evil. On a visit to
Rwanda, my hosts brought me to a site unlike anything found outside that
tragic country. I had been to Auschwitz, where the deeds of half a century
ago are commemorated by museum displays and a somber atmosphere, but I was
unprepared for what I now saw. The new Rwandan government decided that the
most effective way to remember the million people who perished in the 1994
genocide was to leave a number of massacre sites throughout the country in
the state in which they were discovered.
The site I visited
had been a college, where tens of thousands of Tutsis were lured with the
false promise of protection, in order to efficiently concentrate them for
mass murder. Now, three years later, several thousand bodies remained in
the rooms in which they had died, coated with a preservative that turned
them into desiccated mummies. Room after room was filled with men, women,
and children, often in the poses in which they had died, flinching from a
bullet or raising their arms against a machete. The stench of chemicals and
decay was almost unbearable. Tens of thousands more lay buried in nearby
mass graves, identifiable only by gently sloping mounds and tiny signs
marking the number of victims.
I’ve written
frequently about Kosovo, and until recently saw no reason to include a
discussion of Rwanda. What changed my mind was a comment I read, in the
aftermath of the pogrom that occurred in March. Following this
well-orchestrated campaign of ethnic cleansing, designed to rid central
Kosovo of all Serbs, a UN representative (who, I believe, was not quoted by
name) observed that he had seen more forgiveness in Rwanda, one year after
the genocide, than he now saw in Kosovo. It’s easy to dismiss his remark as
hyperbole, but unfortunately it contains a great deal of truth.
What, exactly, are
the differences between these two places? The most obvious is that in
Rwanda, actual, unquestionable genocide occurred, an attempt to exterminate
an entire ethnic group. The Kosovo crisis was far more ambiguous. What
began as a guerilla campaign by the Kosovo Liberation Army targeting Serbian
security forces (and civilians) escalated into widespread ethnic violence.
Hundreds of thousands of Albanians fled, or were forcibly driven, to
neighboring countries. There is no doubt that in some places Serbian troops
and paramilitaries killed unarmed Albanian civilians, just as the KLA killed
unarmed Serbs.
In order to mobilize
support for military intervention, Western political leaders deployed the
word “genocide,” in a way that we now know to have been cavalier and
misleading. The number of Albanians allegedly murdered in the course of
Milosevic’s campaign has steadily dropped, from the hundred thousand spoken
of during the war, to ten thousand in its immediate aftermath, to a final
estimate of perhaps a few thousand, including many killed by ground combat
and NATO bombing. Mass gravesites, claimed at the time to contain thousands
of victims, were investigated and found to have been either exaggerated by
orders of magnitude or entirely fictional.
The second
difference is that the international community intervened militarily in
Kosovo, while doing nothing in Rwanda, where experts believe that a minimal
use of force could have saved hundreds of thousands of lives. Frustrated
friends of Africa know that a
double standard applies to humanitarian intervention. It is not hard to
conclude that Kosovo, like Bosnia
before it, merited international intervention because the threatened
population was white. Now, in 2004, Africa watchers fear that the crisis in
western Sudan will lead to the deaths of hundreds of thousands, with many
words of outrage by the international community, but no forceful action
against a regime whose crimes have far surpassed those of Milosevic.
Ironically, the “humanitarian intervention” in Kosovo was justified by many
supporters at the time as somehow making up for international inaction on
Rwanda.
What is most
striking today is the different degree of reconciliation and forgiveness
between these two places. Colin Prentice, the director of a nongovernmental
relief organization in New Zealand, put it this way: “The level of
acceptance of the past in Rwanda, both among Hutus and Tutsis, is
remarkable. I don't think I saw anything like it in Kosovo, yet the killing
in Rwanda was worse.” Prentice quotes a Rwandan Tutsi, whose family was
murdered in the genocide: "People can live together here if Hutus accept
that the bad Government did this and if there is some attempt at
restitution. Then we can live in peace. If we are patient, we can tolerate
this pain." Now imagine, if you will, a Kosovo Albanian, either a
politician or a man on the street, saying: “We recognize that only a small
number of Serbs were responsible for crimes against us. We appreciate that
the Serbian people ousted Milosevic in a democratic election. Today’s
Serbia
is different, and we welcome the opportunity to live in peace with our
neighbors of all ethnic groups.” Need I say more?
Despite the
unrealistic optimism projected by UNMIK and many other observers (at least
publicly; I suspect that in private they are more candid), there is an
overwhelming inability on the part of the Kosovo Albanian community to
forgive what was done to them, atrocities that while indefensible came
nowhere close to those in Rwanda. Five years after the war, characterizing
the murder of Serb teenagers and 80-year old pensioners and the burning of
medieval churches as “revenge” is wearing rather thin. Clearly, the
attitude that collective guilt should be levied against the entire Serbian
people is not appropriate for those who aspire to be modern Europeans.
This view has been
fostered by the elected Kosovar political leadership, and abetted by their
sympathizers in the U.S. In the aftermath of the March pogrom, some
editorialists had the audacity to blame the violence on Albanian impatience
over having to wait for final status determination (i.e., independence). I
would like to see these same individuals blame the next Hamas bombing that
kills Israeli civilians on frustrated Palestinian national
aspirations.
I’ve met a number of
Kosovo Albanians, and found them to be very decent people. So it pains me
to say, that I believe no other ethnic community in the world has, in the
aftermath of international intervention on its behalf, behaved as badly,
with as much vindictiveness and unwarranted sense of entitlement. Many
commentators believe that a “winner take all” attitude prevails in Kosovo.
Such an attitude would be objectionable enough if the Kosovo Albanians had
actually won on their own, but in fact they are only in a position to
repress and attack others because the international community did the
“winning” for them. Every murder of a Serb or Roma civilian is attributable
to the demand for the removal of all Serbian troops and police in 1999, and
the failure by UNMIK and KFOR to maintain public security.
The question of why
the U.S. and its allies intervened in Kosovo continues to haunt us. The
stated rationale at the time was humanitarian, to prevent ethnic cleansing
and other atrocities against civilians. UN Security Council Resolution
1244, under which Kosovo remains a part of Serbia, is consistent with this
rationale. Unfortunately, to the Kosovo Albanian leadership, most of their
population, and, depressingly, many in the foreign policy elite here in the
U.S., the humanitarian goals of the intervention are inseparable from the
national goal of an independent Kosovo. This is why the Kosovar leadership
is so dismissive of the standards before status argument. Apparently they
believe that the objective of the 1999 war was to give them their
independence, and that Resolution 1244 was simply a fraud to hoodwink the
Serbs and the Russians.
Far from being
modern democrats ready to join the European Union, the Kosovar leaders are
19th century nationalists, who believe they have found in the
United States a Great Power patron. They feel they are a chosen people who
can do no wrong. While Serbs are facing up to the guilt of Milosevic and
Karadzic, there is no comparable process among Kosovo Albanians. In the
rare cases in which Albanians are charged with war crimes, it is for the
murder of other Albanians, and never for killing Serbs or Roma. To take the
most egregious case, Agim Ceku, who should be in the Hague for crimes
against Serb civilians in Croatia, still enjoys a position of prestige and
leadership in Kosovo. Because of this sense of national privilege, the
Kosovar leadership sees no contradiction in demanding independence for
Kosovo and maximum autonomy for Albanians in Macedonia, while rejecting
cantonization for Kosovo Serbs or independence for Serbs in Bosnia.
Unfortunately the
international community has indulged this sense of impunity. UNMIK, with
strong support from the EU and the U.S., must begin instilling some sense of
reality in the Kosovar leadership. Rexhepi, Rugova, Thaci and their
colleagues must understand that independence is not guaranteed, and is
probably less likely today than in 1999. They should prudently plan for how
Kosovo might function as an autonomous province of
Serbia,
since that is a possible outcome. They must be told, in no uncertain terms,
that they have not made a more compelling case for independence than dozens
of other ethnic groups in the world, and that rioting and burning churches
does not make their position more convincing. In fact, the Kurds, who
number twenty million, have no nation of their own anywhere, and suffered
much worse violence under Saddam Hussein, have a far stronger case—and the
international community has discouraged their independence in the interest
of regional stability.
The truth is that
the current Kosovar leadership has proven incapable of effectively running
the province and providing basic services, much less of guaranteeing
minority rights. They have failed to rein in extremists, failed to create a
tolerant society and barely even pay lip service to the notion of a
multiethnic state. For this performance, they expect to be rewarded with
independence. The incoming head of UNMIK must try to break through this
wall of delusion. Reconciliation will be impossible until Kosovo Albanians
accept that the rules apply to them as well, and that the Serbs and other
groups have been in Kosovo for centuries and intend to stay. Here in the
U.S., policymakers focused on Iraq, both supporters of that war looking for
a useful model to follow and critics hoping to contrast how the two crises
were managed, should be extremely wary of pointing to Kosovo as a success
story in any meaningful sense of the word.
John Zavales
served in the Office of the Secretary of Defense from 1991 to 2001. During
the 1999 Kosovo crisis he was based in Albania as a part of Operation
Shining Hope, the relief operation in support of Kosovar refugees. He later
served as the OSD desk officer for a number of Balkan and Central European
countries.
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