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Feb. 17
Aside from a bit of sniping and a few small shoot-outs, everything is
pretty quiet on the ground here in Kosovo...
Serbs control nothing at night except the capital Pristina and the stools
they sit on. During the day they control the roads and anything they can
see from their fortified positions. No appetite for aggressive anti-guerrilla
patrols, low morale, no incentive to take casualties.
The KLA are better trained and armed than last year but remain more important
as a force-in-being than as actual combat units. Good at ambushes. Turning
itself into a "Kosovo Liberation Party" in order to fulfill
Western demands to demilitarize. Count on nothing more than sling shots
and rubber bands to get turned in no matter what gets signed.
All that being said the Albanians are the primary victims, and if the
whole concept of self-determination has any merit, this is a classic case.
The Serb propensity for atrocities is inseparable from the cause of Serb
nationalism; any argument of "we should be sympathetic to the Serbs
if only they would fight a clean war" is a pointless charade. Like
the French in Algeria or the Russians in Chechnya, they lost any chance
of redeeming their actual legitimate claims when Milosevic unleashed his
thugs. So it goes.
There is a fundamental European and American misunderstanding of this
and the other Balkan wars of the '90s. Intelligent, liberal, prosperous
people seem to think that war, death, and destruction are inherently terrible
things which should be avoided at almost any cost, and all of our diplomacy
has essentially had this axiom in mind. To an Albanian in Kosovo, and
perhaps slightly less so for the Serbs, there is every reason in the world
to fight, and to continue fighting until victory. The American use of
power towards containment and compromise can only go so far, as in Bosnia.
Is it enough?
Pristina remains strangely normal, if tense. The food is better here than
in Belgrade, and Kosovo wine is not bad at all.
20
Feb.
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