[R-G] Why Canada should not recognize Kosovo

Anthony Fenton fentona at shaw.ca
Tue Feb 19 10:56:29 MST 2008


Why Canada should not recognize Kosovo
by James Bissett
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php? 
context=viewArticle&code=BIS20080219&articleId=8126
Global Research, February 19, 2008

Kosovo's unilateral declaration of independence should not be  
recognized by Canada. It has not been authorized by the United  
Nations and is therefore in violation of international law, the  
United Nations Charter and the Helsinki Final Accords. In addition,  
UN resolution 1244, which ended the bombing of Serbia, reaffirms  
Serbia's sovereignty over Kosovo.

The basic principles of territorial integrity and state sovereignty  
have governed the relations between states since the treaty of  
Westphalia in 1648. While they have been violated many times in the  
intervening years, usually by acts of aggression by dictators, they  
remain the essential components of international law.

After the cataclysmic events of two world wars and the dropping of  
the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki the framers of the United  
Nations incorporated the principles of territorial integrity and  
state sovereignty into the United Nations Charter. The Charter was  
seen as the primary safeguard of peace and security in a nuclear age.  
The Helsinki Final Act of 1975 reinforced these principles by adding  
to them the principle of the inviolability of borders.
These are fundamental principles and they have universal application.  
They cannot be set aside because of special cases or because they  
present an obstacle to the policy objectives of a powerful nation.  
Their message is simple and clear --borders cannot be changed without  
the consent of the state involved.

In the spring of 1999 the U.S.-led NATO countries intervened  
militarily in Kosovo and, in violation of the UN Charter, bombed  
Serbia. The bombing was justified on allegations that genocide and  
ethnic cleansing were taking place in Kosovo. We now know these  
allegations were completely unfounded.

In the three years of armed conflict in Kosovo leading up to the  
bombing by NATO the UN estimates there were a total of 4,600 people  
killed during the fighting and this figure includes both Serbs and  
Albanians. In fact, so far there have been only a little over 2,000  
bodies discovered. This in itself is a tragic figure, but it is not  
genocide.

As for ethnic cleansing it is now generally acknowledged that the  
mass expulsion of the Albanians took place after the bombing started.  
While there were thousands of Albanians displaced within Kosovo as a  
result of two years of armed conflict there was not a deliberate  
policy of ethnic cleansing taking place.

Although the western media continue to justify the independence of  
Kosovo on the grounds of ethnic cleansing and atrocities committed by  
Slobodan Milosevic's security forces the facts do not support these  
allegations. They do stand, however, as testimony to the success of  
NATO's propaganda machine.

The intervention in Kosovo had nothing to do with humanitarian  
reasons but was deliberately designed to justify the continued  
existence of NATO and to fundamentally change its role from a purely  
defensive organization acting in accordance with the UN Charter into  
one that could intervene wherever or whenever it decided to do so,  
and with or without UN approval.

There have been numerous reports that western security agencies  
trained, equipped and armed members of the Kosovo Liberation Army  
(KLA) and sent them back into Kosovo to assassinate Serbian mayors,  
police officials and Albanians who did not support their cause. It  
was a highly successful operation and it fuelled the armed rebellion  
by the KLA.

In August 1998 -- seven months before the NATO bombing -- the U.S.  
Senate Republican Policy Committee reported that, "planning for a  
U.S.-led NATO intervention in Kosovo is largely in place. ... The  
only missing element seems to be an event with suitably vivid media  
coverage that could make the intervention politically saleable. ...  
That the administration is waiting for a 'trigger' is increasingly  
obvious." That trigger was soon to be pulled. It was the highly  
suspicious "Racak" massacre that, as Madeleine Albright said, was the  
galvanizing incident that led to the bombing.

The bombing of Serbia by NATO without UN approval was a historical  
turning point. The precedent had been set. The UN Charter could be  
subverted if the military intervention could be cloaked and justified  
in terms of humanitarianism.
The intervention in Iraq was to follow but this time not all of the  
NATO countries went along with the American initiative. Many of those  
who supported the bombing of Serbia condemned the invasion of Iraq.  
There seemed some hope that a lesson had been learned- that violation  
of the UN Charter leads to a slippery slope and a return to the days  
when the resolution of international disputes would only be by the  
use of force.

The recognition of Kosovo outside of the UN framework will set a  
dangerous precedent. Prime Minister Stephen Harper has said that  
Canada should make foreign policy decisions that are not only  
independent but are noticed by other powers around the world. Here is  
an opportunity for Canada to illustrate both of these objectives and  
stand firm for the UN Charter -- by saying no to the recognition of  
Kosovo.

James Bissett served as Canadian ambassador to Yugoslavia.

  Global Research Articles by James Bissett




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