Ivo Skoric on Fri, 22 Jan 1999 09:09:56 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> Racak and Deja Vu |
For nearly a decade news from the Balkans too often started with: "The bodies of dozens of men were found..." A recent AP wire reporting on the massacre in village Racak, for example, had that same beginning: "The bodies of dozens of men were found scattered on a hillside and in ravines in southern Kosovo today, many of them mutilated, the day after a fierce attack by Serb forces on ethnic Albanian villages. Reporters counted at least 35 bodies." Journalists versed in former Yugoslavia events perhaps have already created form articles with multiple choice of locations and objects, kind of like this: <<The bodies of dozens of men were found scattered on a hillside and in ravines in... a) Eastern Croatia b) Western Bosnia c) Southern Kosovo ...today, many of them mutilated, the day after a fierce attack by Serb forces on... a) Albanian b) Croatian c) Muslim ...villages. Reporters counted at least 35 bodies.>> Indeed, the history seems to repeat itself: in the Balkans much too often and way too soon. And now we even have OSCE "verifiers" to verify that undeniable truth. We've been hearing and seeing the same BS (as in bullshit) for the third time in eight years. In Kosovo, American special envoy Richard Holbroke brokered the same kind of solution that American diplomacy vehemently opposed to support and ridiculed as a sign of European failure in Bosnia. As such a solution did not work in Bosnia, expectably it does not work in Kosovo, either. Unarmed monitors are sitting targets: a hefty supply of hostages. Verifiers are there to verify the truce that isn't, the truce that neither of the two involved parties really wants. The Racak massacre makes perfect sense from Milosevic's standpoint. The "truce" brought the opportunity to KLA to consolidate, obtain weapons and rid itself from informers (KLA has a policy to kill ethnic Albanians that cooperate with Serbian government), which is basically what such temporary periods of truce had brought to Croatian and Bosnian governments in the past. Then a heap of mutilated bodies would be found somewhere, or a grenade would hit the market- place in the busiest hour. Serbs never failed us with a zesty bloodshed. The emphasis on gore is very important - since the massacre has a single intent: to provoke the opposing side into fighting back before it is ready to take Serbs on, and consequently to drag the West deeper into the Balkan conflict: in Croatia a slight help (arming, training, close air support) was sufficient, while in Bosnia the West actually had to send ground troops to police the cease-fire. The later may also be the case in Kosovo. Although - Kosovo is a part of Serbia, and Serbia is not likely to approve West sending troops there, so the West would actually had to go in war with Serbia over the fate of Kosovo. On that note: USS Enterprise sailed back into Adriatic. NATO is transferring more airplanes to bases in Italy. British SAS is ready to pull out hostages. NATO is developing plans to evacuate the entire OSCE team with a 8-10 thousands strong force. Serbia has less than 80 jet-fighters, and 4/5 are ancient MIG 21s. In air battle, Serbia has no chances whatsoever. But maybe Serbia wants to loose the war. What if Milosevic really wants to unload Kosovo, but can't do it because that would make him lose political support of the hard-core nationalists who brought him to and keep him in power? Also, he can't let Albanians win. But he can afford to lose the war to the U.S. He will stay in power, just like Saddam. (I just rode with a truck driver who was asking rhetorically, why didn't just somebody go and kill the s.o.b.-s already.) The attempt to expel American diplomat Walker, the head of the OSCE team, resulted in the drop in publicity of the Serbian cause everywhere, including Russia. Not that a P.R. can help Serbia, not any more: the interviews Milosevic gave to Washington Post and Newsweek, were generally cut and edited short, amusing Western Reader with the exotic Balkan madman thinking - because they were mostly made for domestic public to reassure people that not all is lost. It is, however. Serbia's efforts to wipe out KLA are going to be hampered by verifiers, until the KLA is ready and equipped to fight back. Taking verifiers hostage, on the other hand, might provoke quick response from the USS Enterprise. Ivo --------------------------------------------------------------- 3 WOMEN IN BLACK RACCOON, Inc. INVITE YOU to a Silent Vigil AGAINST VIOLENCE IN KOSOVO/A on Wednsday, Janaury 27, 1999 from 5.30 pm until 6.30 pm, in front of the New York Public Library, 5th Avenue between 41 and 42nd streets. Please wear black clothes. For further information contact Indira at (212) 598-0954. http://balkansnet.org/raccoon/kosovo.html http://balkansnet.org/raccoon.html http://balkansnet.org/women/wib.html ----------------------------------------------------------------------- --- # distributed via nettime-l : no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a closed moderated mailinglist for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@desk.nl and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # URL: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime/ contact: nettime-owner@desk.nl