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Stratfor.com
August 25, 2008
Georgia and Kosovo: A Single Intertwined Crisis
By George Friedman
The Russo-Georgian war was rooted in broad geopolitical processes. In large
part it was simply the result of the cyclical reassertion of Russian power. The
Russian empire czarist and Soviet expanded to its borders in the 17th and
19th centuries. It collapsed in 1992. The Western powers wanted to make the
disintegration permanent. It was inevitable that Russia would, in due course,
want to reassert its claims. That it happened in Georgia was simply the result
of circumstance.
There is, however, another context within which to view this, the context of
Russian perceptions of U.S. and European intentions and of U.S. and European
perceptions of Russian capabilities. This context shaped the policies that led
to the Russo-Georgian war. And those attitudes can only be understood if we
trace the question of Kosovo, because the Russo-Georgian war was forged over the
last decade over the Kosovo question.
Yugoslavia broke up into its component republics in the early 1990s. The
borders of the republics did not cohere to the distribution of nationalities.
Many Serbs, Croats, Bosnians and so on found themselves citizens of
republics where the majorities were not of their ethnicities and disliked the
minorities intensely for historical reasons. Wars were fought between Croatia
and Serbia (still calling itself Yugoslavia because Montenegro was part of it),
Bosnia and Serbia and Bosnia and Croatia. Other countries in the region became
involved as well.
One conflict became particularly brutal. Bosnia had a large area dominated by
Serbs. This region wanted to secede from Bosnia and rejoin Serbia. The Bosnians
objected and an internal war in Bosnia took place, with the Serbian government
involved. This war involved the single greatest bloodletting of the bloody
Balkan wars, the mass murder by Serbs of Bosnians.
Here we must pause and define some terms that are very casually thrown
around. Genocide is the crime of trying to annihilate an entire people. War
crimes are actions that violate the rules of war. If a soldier shoots a
prisoner, he has committed a war crime. Then there is a class called “crimes
against humanity.” It is intended to denote those crimes that are too vast to be
included in normal charges of murder or rape. They may not involve genocide, in
that the annihilation of a race or nation is not at stake, but they may also go
well beyond war crimes, which are much lesser offenses. The events in Bosnia
were reasonably deemed crimes against humanity. They did not constitute genocide
and they were more than war crimes.
At the time, the Americans and Europeans did nothing about these crimes,
which became an internal political issue as the magnitude of the Serbian crimes
became clear. In this context, the Clinton administration helped negotiate the
Dayton Accords, which were intended to end the Balkan wars and indeed managed to
go quite far in achieving this. The Dayton Accords were built around the
principle that there could be no adjustment in the borders of the former
Yugoslav republics. Ethnic Serbs would live under Bosnian rule. The principle
that existing borders were sacrosanct was embedded in the Dayton Accords.
In the late 1990s, a crisis began to develop in the Serbian province of
Kosovo. Over the years, Albanians had moved into the province in a broad
migration. By 1997, the province was overwhelmingly Albanian, although it had
not only been historically part of Serbia but also its historical foundation.
Nevertheless, the Albanians showed significant intentions of moving toward
either a separate state or unification with Albania. Serbia moved to resist
this, increasing its military forces and indicating an intention to crush the
Albanian resistance.
There were many claims that the Serbians were repeating the crimes against
humanity that were committed in Bosnia. The Americans and Europeans, burned by
Bosnia, were eager to demonstrate their will. Arguing that something between
crimes against humanity and genocide was under way and citing reports that
between 10,000 and 100,000 Kosovo Albanians were missing or had been killed
NATO launched a campaign designed to stop the killings. In fact, while some
killings had taken place, the claims by NATO of the number already killed were
false. NATO might have prevented mass murder in Kosovo. That is not provable.
They did not, however, find that mass murder on the order of the numbers claimed
had taken place. The war could be defended as a preventive measure, but the
atmosphere under which the war was carried out overstated what had happened.
The campaign was carried out without U.N. sanction because of Russian and
Chinese opposition. The Russians were particularly opposed, arguing that major
crimes were not being committed and that Serbia was an ally of Russia and that
the air assault was not warranted by the evidence. The United States and other
European powers disregarded the Russian position. Far more important, they
established the precedent that U.N. sanction was not needed to launch a war (a
precedent used by George W. Bush in Iraq). Rather and this is the vital point
they argued that NATO support legitimized the war.
This transformed NATO from a military alliance into a quasi-United Nations.
What happened in Kosovo was that NATO took on the role of peacemaker, empowered
to determine if intervention was necessary, allowed to make the military
intervention, and empowered to determine the outcome. Conceptually, NATO was
transformed from a military force into a regional multinational grouping with
responsibility for maintenance of regional order, even within the borders of
states that are not members. If the United Nations wouldn’t support the action,
the NATO Council was sufficient.
Since Russia was not a member of NATO, and since Russia denied the urgency of
war, and since Russia was overruled, the bombing campaign against Kosovo created
a crisis in relations with Russia. The Russians saw the attack as a unilateral
attack by an anti-Russian alliance on a Russian ally, without sound
justification. Then-Russian President Boris Yeltsin was not prepared to make
this into a major confrontation, nor was he in a position to. The Russians did
not so much acquiesce as concede they had no options.
The war did not go as well as history records. The bombing campaign did not
force capitulation and NATO was not prepared to invade Kosovo. The air campaign
continued inconclusively as the West turned to the Russians to negotiate an end.
The Russians sent an envoy who negotiated an agreement consisting of three
parts. First, the West would halt the bombing campaign. Second, Serbian army
forces would withdraw and be replaced by a multinational force including Russian
troops. Third, implicit in the agreement, the Russian troops would be there to
guarantee Serbian interests and sovereignty.
As soon as the agreement was signed, the Russians rushed troops to the
Pristina airport to take up their duties in the multinational force as they
had in the Bosnian peacekeeping force. In part because of deliberate maneuvers
and in part because no one took the Russians seriously, the Russians never
played the role they believed had been negotiated. They were never seen as part
of the peacekeeping operation or as part of the decision-making system over
Kosovo. The Russians felt doubly betrayed, first by the war itself, then by the
peace arrangements.
The Kosovo war directly effected the fall of Yeltsin and the rise of Vladimir
Putin. The faction around Putin saw Yeltsin as an incompetent bungler who
allowed Russia to be doubly betrayed. The Russian perception of the war directly
led to the massive reversal in Russian policy we see today. The installation of
Putin and Russian nationalists from the former KGB had a number of roots. But
fundamentally it was rooted in the events in Kosovo. Most of all it was driven
by the perception that NATO had now shifted from being a military alliance to
seeing itself as a substitute for the United Nations, arbitrating regional
politics. Russia had no vote or say in NATO decisions, so NATO’s new role was
seen as a direct challenge to Russian interests.
Thus, the ongoing expansion of NATO into the former Soviet Union and the
promise to include Ukraine and Georgia into NATO were seen in terms of the
Kosovo war. From the Russian point of view, NATO expansion meant a further
exclusion of Russia from decision-making, and implied that NATO reserved the
right to repeat Kosovo if it felt that human rights or political issues required
it. The United Nations was no longer the prime multinational peacekeeping
entity. NATO assumed that role in the region and now it was going to expand all
around Russia.
Then came Kosovo’s independence. Yugoslavia broke apart into its constituent
entities, but the borders of its nations didn’t change. Then, for the first time
since World War II, the decision was made to change Serbia’s borders, in
opposition to Serbian and Russian wishes, with the authorizing body, in effect,
being NATO. It was a decision avidly supported by the Americans.
The initial attempt to resolve Kosovo’s status was the round of negotiations
led by former Finnish President Martti Ahtisaari that officially began in
February 2006 but had been in the works since 2005. This round of negotiations
was actually started under U.S. urging and closely supervised from Washington.
In charge of keeping Ahtisaari’s negotiations running smoothly was Frank G.
Wisner, a diplomat during the Clinton administration. Also very important to the
U.S. effort was Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs
Daniel Fried, another leftover from the Clinton administration and a specialist
in Soviet and Polish affairs.
In the summer of 2007, when it was obvious that the negotiations were going
nowhere, the Bush administration decided the talks were over and that it was
time for independence. On June 10, 2007, Bush said that the end result of
negotiations must be “certain independence.” In July 2007, Daniel Fried said
that independence was “inevitable” even if the talks failed. Finally, in
September 2007, Condoleezza Rice put it succinctly: “There’s going to be an
independent Kosovo. We’re dedicated to that.” Europeans took cues from this
line.
How and when independence was brought about was really a European problem.
The Americans set the debate and the Europeans implemented it. Among Europeans,
the most enthusiastic about Kosovo independence were the British and the French.
The British followed the American line while the French were led by their
foreign minister, Bernard Kouchner, who had also served as the U.N. Kosovo
administrator. The Germans were more cautiously supportive.
On Feb. 17, 2008, Kosovo declared independence and was recognized rapidly by
a small number of European states and countries allied with the United States.
Even before the declaration, the Europeans had created an administrative body to
administer Kosovo. The Europeans, through the European Union, micromanaged the
date of the declaration.
On May 15, during a conference in Ekaterinburg, the foreign ministers of
India, Russia and China made a joint statement regarding Kosovo. It was read by
the Russian host minister, Sergei Lavrov, and it said: “In our statement, we
recorded our fundamental position that the unilateral declaration of
independence by Kosovo contradicts Resolution 1244. Russia, India and China
encourage Belgrade and Pristina to resume talks within the framework of
international law and hope they reach an agreement on all problems of that
Serbian territory.”
The Europeans and Americans rejected this request as they had rejected all
Russian arguments on Kosovo. The argument here was that the Kosovo situation was
one of a kind because of atrocities that had been committed. The Russians argued
that the level of atrocity was unclear and that, in any case, the government
that committed them was long gone from Belgrade. More to the point, the Russians
let it be clearly known that they would not accept the idea that Kosovo
independence was a one-of-a-kind situation and that they would regard it,
instead, as a new precedent for all to follow.
The problem was not that the Europeans and the Americans didn’t hear the
Russians. The problem was that they simply didn’t believe them they didn’t
take the Russians seriously. They had heard the Russians say things for many
years. They did not understand three things. First, that the Russians had
reached the end of their rope. Second, that Russian military capability was not
what it had been in 1999. Third, and most important, NATO, the Americans and the
Europeans did not recognize that they were making political decisions that they
could not support militarily.
For the Russians, the transformation of NATO from a military alliance into a
regional United Nations was the problem. The West argued that NATO was no longer
just a military alliance but a political arbitrator for the region. If NATO does
not like Serbian policies in Kosovo, it can at its option and in opposition to
U.N. rulings intervene. It could intervene in Serbia and it intended to expand
deep into the former Soviet Union. NATO thought that because it was now a
political arbiter encouraging regimes to reform and not just a war-fighting
system, Russian fears would actually be assuaged. To the contrary, it was
Russia’s worst nightmare. Compensating for all this was the fact that NATO had
neglected its own military power. Now, Russia could do something about it.
At the beginning of this discourse, we explained that the underlying issues
behind the Russo-Georgian war went deep into geopolitics and that it could not
be understood without understanding Kosovo. It wasn’t everything, but it was the
single most significant event behind all of this. The war of 1999 was the
framework that created the war of 2008.
The problem for NATO was that it was expanding its political reach and claims
while contracting its military muscle. The Russians were expanding their
military capability (after 1999 they had no place to go but up) and the West
didn’t notice. In 1999, the Americans and Europeans made political decisions
backed by military force. In 2008, in Kosovo, they made political decisions
without sufficient military force to stop a Russian response. Either they
underestimated their adversary or even more amazingly they did not see the
Russians as adversaries despite absolutely clear statements the Russians had
made. No matter what warning the Russians gave, or what the history of the
situation was, the West couldn’t take the Russians seriously.
It began in 1999 with war in Kosovo and it ended in 2008 with the
independence of Kosovo. When we study the history of the coming period, the war
in Kosovo will stand out as a turning point. Whatever the humanitarian
justification and the apparent ease of victory, it set the stage for the rise of
Putin and the current and future crises.
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