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The
Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies at Bar Ilan University,
Israel
U.S.
Kosovo Policy Is Bad for Israel
James
Jatras and
Serge Trifkovic
Strong American support for the independence of Kosovo is
detrimental to Israeli interests. The US position is based on the
view that a solution to long-standing conflict can and should be
imposed on the parties by outside powers.
In addition, the new state's creation seeks to award part of a nation’s
territory to a violent ethno-religious minority; futilely hopes
to curry favor with the Islamic world through appeasement; effectively
gives a fresh impetus to the ongoing growth of Islamic influence
in Europe; and denies the fact that the putative state’s leaders
are tainted by terrorism, criminality, and well-documented links
with global jihad. Most importantly, it betrays a cynically postmodern
contempt for all claims based on the historical rights and spiritual
significance of a land to a nation.
It is in Israel’s interest
to reiterate its already-stated position that any solution to Kosovo
should be based on the agreement of both parties in dispute. In
addition, the Israeli government should declare that it will not
extend recognition to any self-proclaimed “state” unless its
independence is approved by the UN Security Council.
Full article:
http://www.biu.ac.il/Besa/perspectives.html
or in PDF: http://www.biu.ac.il/SOC/besa/docs/perspectives35.pdf
Background
There is a small piece of disputed land, rich in history
but poor in everything else, whose preponderant population of two
million Muslims wants to turn into a sovereign, internationally-recognized
state.
While that ambition is supported by the United States, the European
Union, and much of the international community, such an act would
open a Pandora’s Box of geopolitical, legal, moral and security
issues, and create a black hole of lawlessness, endemic corruption
and jihad-terrorism.
Surprisingly, the territory
in question is not in the Middle East, but in Europe. The status
of Kosovo, Serbia’s southern province (Kosovo and Metohija), remains
contentious eight years after it came under UN/NATO control in the
spring of 1999.
In the very near future, Washington
is expected to make its final push to separate Kosovo from Serbia
and establish an independent Muslim Albanian state. A four-month
round of negotiations is continuing until December 10, with the
mediation of a US/EU/Russian “Troika.” These talks are proving
to be as unsuccessful in reaching a compromise solution as earlier
efforts had been under Martti Ahtisaari, the previous UN mediator.
Mr. Ahtisaari produced a plan, unveiled in February 2007, that would
award independence to Kosovo, over Serbia’s objections. Only the
certainty of a Russian veto in the Security Council prevented the
plan’s adoption.
The unlikelihood of a negotiated agreement is a direct result
of Washington’s promise of independence to the Albanian separatists
“one way or another” (in the words of US Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice), which means the Albanians have no incentive to
compromise. No less than its predecessor, the
Bush Administration is committed wholeheartedly to the Kosovo Albanian
cause. Since the UN Security Council route has
been blocked, the prospect looms for later this year of a unilateral
declaration of Kosovo’s independence and US recognition, despite
absence of a UNSC Resolution providing for such recognition.
Washington is exerting pressure
on EU countries to break with their stated policy of acting within
the UN framework, and go along with Washington. The United States
also looks toward key non-EU allies –Canada, Turkey, and Israel
among the foremost prospects – to follow its example and extend
recognition to a self-proclaimed state of Kosovo.
The unilateral independence
scenario may play out as early as December 10, the date the Troika
is due to report to the Secretary General on the result of its efforts.
The US has threatened to recognize Kosovo after a unilateral declaration
of independence, but fortunately, neither the declaration nor the
recognition is certain. Washington still might be dissuaded from
that step if it had reason to think other countries, notably its
closest allies, would not follow the US example.
While it may not be readily
apparent to most Israelis, Jerusalem’s decision whether or not
to follow Washington’s lead may be among the most crucial factors
in the unfolding drama. The prospect that Israeli
political leaders are prepared to display a degree of clear-headedness
and realism sadly lacking in Washington, and say No to Kosovo’s
separation from Serbia, may be one of the most influential factors
in inducing Washington to step back from the brink of a disaster
in the making.
Implications
for Israel
While most Israelis may assume their country has no stake in the
outcome of the Kosovo question, Washington’s proceeding with its
current course would in fact adversely affect Israel’s interests
in a number of ways:
1. It would set the precedent
that a solution to an intractable political and territorial quarrel
can and should be imposed by outside countries, even if one of the
parties rejects the proposed solution as contrary to its vital national
interests. While the question of how Israel should come to an accommodation
with Palestinian aspirations for self-rule has resisted efforts
to find a negotiated settlement, no one suggests a solution imposed
from outside would likely be in Israel’s interest.
2. The theory that outside
powers can award part of a state’s sovereign territory to a violent
ethnic or religious minority would put in question not only Judaea
and Samaria – which, in any event, are not formally part of Israel
– but even such areas as the southern Galilee and parts of the
Negev, where non-Jews have, or may eventually acquire, local majorities.
Israel’s Muslim population is now just above 20 percent, roughly
the same as Serbia’s if Kosovo is included. If
Albanian Muslims can demand separation from Serbia today, and citing
alleged past mistreatment, why cannot Israel’s Arabs do the same
tomorrow?
3. Washington’s plan to
circumvent the Security Council to avoid Moscow’s veto would amount
to a devaluing of Russia’s veto in the Security Council. Such
an action is likely to devalue the power of the veto as such, at
least as concerns a Permanent Member’s protection of smaller states.
In light of how many times anti-Israel UNSC Resolutions have been
thwarted by a US veto, damaging the power of the veto per se is
detrimental to Israel in the future.
4. As has been pointed out by many American policymakers,
an overt motivation of US policy on Kosovo is to curry favor in
the Islamic world. Such a notion betrays an incredible
naïveté about the jihadist mindset, which has never been impressed
with concessions. One only need look at American
efforts to help create a Palestinian state, to bring “democracy”
to Iraq or Afghanistan, or to provide aid to Osama bin Laden and
other mujaheddin against the Soviet Union to see the value of jihadist
gratitude. A victory in Kosovo would merely stimulate the jihadists’
demand for further concessions elsewhere.
5. Creation of a second Islamic
state in the Balkans (after Bosnia, which is regarded as a Muslim
country even though its population is majority Christian) would
help further the growth of Islamic influence in Europe. Such influence,
based on the growing Muslim presence in key European countries,
already has contributed to those countries’, and the EU’s, growing
anti-Israel tilt, as well as to anti-Jewish violence in Europe.
6. Proponents of Kosovo independence
scoff at Serbia’s claim that Kosovo represents not just any part
of their country but its heart and soul – “Serbia’s Jerusalem.”
Such a dismissive attitude betrays a cynical contempt for the essence
of any nation’s life, which must rest on a common historical acknowledgment
of its moral and spiritual identity, without which a people ceases
to be a people and is little more than a random mob.
If Serbia can be deprived of its Jerusalem today, what’s
to say “al-Quds” will not be demanded of Israel tomorrow as
the capital of an independent “Palestine”?
7. Proponents of Kosovo’s independence overlook or flatly
deny the fact that Kosovo’s top Albanian leaders are tainted by
terrorism and criminality, and that their record indicates an endemic
inability to run a stable, civilized polity. In the same vein, today’s
Pristina or Podujevo are reminiscent of Gaza or Ramallah – Saudi-financed
mosques, armed men, and roadside rubbish heaps included.
No one pretends it will be easy for Israel to stand up to
its closest friend and ally on an issue many Israelis may consider
peripheral. Yet, it must be kept in mind that
Israel’s sound position on Kosovo may itself be a factor in holding
Washington back from a serious error in judgment.
Israeli Influence
There are two main areas in which Israel can make a positive, perhaps
decisive, contribution.
Firstly, the Israeli government can restate its position
publicly and forcefully – against an imposed solution. When Serbia’s
then-Foreign Minister Vuk Draskovic visited Israel last year, his
Israeli counterpart Tzipi Livni clearly stated Israel’s position
against an imposed solution. It can communicate
this in bilateral contacts with Washington and with other capitals,
notably in Europe. It would also be appropriate for the Knesset
to act on a resolution to this effect.
Secondly, the impact of Israeli
opinion on the public policy community in the United States should
not be underestimated. Among the American advocates of Kosovo independence
are many sincere friends and supporters of Israel who have no notion
that their advocacy might have a negative impact on Israel.
Such advocates are found among media, public policy groups and think
tanks, advocacy organizations, and other centers of influence representing
in particular the US Jewish community, liberals, neoconservatives,
and elements of the Christian community.
In addition, Israel’s military
and defense experience with terrorism is widely respected in American
defense, intelligence, and homeland security sectors, both in and
out of government, and in both the Executive and Legislative branches.
It is important that every
such contact in the United States be informed by their Israeli interlocutors
that the wrong solution for Kosovo would have an adverse impact
on Israel.
Conclusion
Since the 1999 NATO war against Serbia, the Kosovo question has
faded from the horizon of the American and Israeli policy communities.
This has allowed the proponents of Kosovo’s
forcible and illegal separation from Serbia to gain the upper hand
in formulating American policy.
That does not mean, however, that the misguided
policy cannot be recast if the relevant perspectives, including
the impact on Israel, are brought to bear. For
Israel’s well-being, if for no other reason, that process needs
to begin as soon as possible.
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Mr. Jatras,
Director of the Washington DC-based American Council for Kosovo,
is a former Foreign Service officer and former Senior Analyst with
the US Senate Republican Policy Committee.
Dr. Trifkovic is Foreign Affairs Editor
of Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture published by The Rockford
Institute, and the author – most recently – of Defeating Jihad:
How the War on Terror May Yet Be Won, in Spite of Ourselves.
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