Source: http://www.wsws.org/articles/1999/jun1999/koso-j29.shtml
Accessed 22 July 1999
Attacks on Kosovar Serbs intensifying
The US, the KLA and ethnic cleansing
By the Editorial Board
29 June 1999
It has not taken long for the horrific implications of the US-led war in the Balkans to
manifest themselves. Each day brings new reports of killings, rapes, arson attacks and
incidents of looting carried out against Serbs and Gypsies in Kosovo, spearheaded by the
Kosovo Liberation Army. The attacks have assumed such a scale that even the US media
cannot ignore them.
According to the Associated Press, returning Albanians on Monday burned and looted the
Serb village of Belo Polje, the same town where KLA members allegedly raped and stabbed to
death a mentally ill woman. The pillaging of the town was the latest in what is apparently
a systematic campaign to drive the remaining Serbs, mostly elderly people, out of the
western Kosovo city of Pec and surrounding villages. The AP reporter noted that men in KLA
uniforms drove up and down the village's dirt roads, watching the looting. NATO
soldiers showed no immediate sign of stopping it. Human Rights Watch, a US-based
group, says it has telling evidence that KLA soldiers have murdered and
abducted Serbs in several western towns.
At least 14 houses were burned to the ground in the sector of southern Kosovo patrolled
by US forces during the course of Saturday night and Sunday morning. Last
night was ugly,' Captain Marshall Niles told AFP [Agence France Presse], who said he
suspected ethnic Albanian Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) rebels of being behind the attack.
KLA fighters were spotted near the village.
In Prizren an 85-year-old Serb man returned from shopping to find his 77-year-old wife
had been hacked to death with an axe. Down the street NATO forces discovered a 63-year-old
Serb man stabbed to death.
The violence is accelerating and spreading further into Kosovo as the Albanian Kosovar
refugees pour back into the country from the camps in Albania and Macedonia; meanwhile the
exodus of Kosovo Serbs, now more than 50,000, continues. The anti-Serb ethnic cleansing is
taking place under the auspices of NATO, which moved into the province promising to
guarantee peace and democracy. As one Serb religious leader observed, This is ethnic
cleansing under cover of NATO.
Whatever the statements of regret from NATO policy makers and military commanders, the
fact remains that the NATO governments, and in particular the US, bear responsibility for
the tragic and bloody consequences of their policies. And this responsibility is not of a
general or abstract variety. Those leading the campaign against the Kosovo Serb civilians
are NATO's partners in peace. President Clinton has gone out of his way on
more than one occasion to praise the KLA for having chosen the road of peace
at the Rambouillet talks.
US officials cannot credibly claim that the KLA's policy of ethnic cleansing against
the Serbs comes as a surprise. It is entirely in keeping with the history and politics of
this reactionary chauvinist organization. American officials are well aware of the nature
of the KLA and its leadership. As late as 1997 Washington chose to include the
secessionist group on the State Department's list of terrorist organizations. Why was the
KLA subsequently removed from this list? What changed in the organization's methods or
outlook to justify this reversal? No explanation has ever been provided. The Clinton
administration counts on a servile press never to raise such embarrassing questions.
An article by Chris Hedges in the June 25 New York Times provides an indelible
portrait of the KLA and its leaders. The picture that emerges from Hedges' piece bears
little resemblance to the heroic liberation movement painted by the media in the period
leading up to and during the war. It reveals a pattern of beatings and murders of rivals
and dissidents within the KLA ordered by its leader Hashim Thaci beginning in early 1998,
by means of which the latter consolidated his position within the top leadership. (See
accompanying article: KLA leader Thaci
ordered rivals executed, rebel commanders say).
It is hardly possible for US officials to deny that they were aware of the events cited
by Hedges. The series of killings took place precisely during the period when Washington
was shifting its policy from one of covert support for the Thaci group, to open political
backing, while pushing Ibrahim Rugova's Democratic League of Kosovo into the background.
During the Rambouillet negotiations, the US seated the KLA at the head of the Kosovo
delegation. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright demonstratively promoted Thaci as the
legitimate representative of the Kosovar people. Since that time, the US has continued to
favor Thaci at the expense of other KLA leaders, such as Adem Demaci, who seemed less
amenable to American demands.
State Department spokesman James Rubin has made no secret of his close association with
Thaci, with whom he communicates virtually on a daily basis. Confronted with the accounts
of Thaci's record of violence within his own organization, Rubin responded, We
simply don't have information to substantiate allegations that there was a KLA
leadership-directed program of assassinations or executions. Rubin also claimed at a
press conference last week that the State Department had no credible evidence
the KLA was involved in drug trafficking.
Obviously the US State Department's standard of proof for Serb atrocities is
considerably lower than for rapes and murders carried out by Washington's KLA allies.
Thaci and his cohorts are the elements the American government has unleashed on the
Kosovan population, Albanians as well as Serbs. One shudders to think what type of
democracy the Kosovar Albanians, let alone any surviving Serbs, will enjoy
under a KLA-policed US protectorate.
Clinton, Albright and the NATO military commanders now preach brotherly love to the
Albanian population. But the current violence has to be seen in the context of the
propaganda effort to demonize the entire Serb people that has characterized the NATO
approach during this entire crisis. This was first of all necessary to sell the war to the
American and European populations, or at least neutralize opposition.
Furthermore, it should be recalled that the US and NATO gave KLA officials the run of
the refugee camps in Albania and Macedonia, where they were encouraged, if they needed
such encouragement, to incite hatred and vengeance against the Serb population. The KLA
was able to play on the suffering and disorientation of the ethnic Albanian Kosovans,
subjected to Serb violence and terror, NATO bombing, the trauma of flight, and the horrors
of life in the makeshift camps.
The WSWS noted an incident, reported in the June 7 New York Times, in
which a mob of Albanian refugees beat members of a Gypsy family at the camp in Stenkovec,
Macedonia: For a moment, it seemed as if the mob of Albanian refugees would
literally tear the 7-year-old Gypsy boy apart, limb from limb, said three aid workers who
saw the attack on Saturday night.
The Times article noted: In one sense, the refugee camps here are
sweltering caldrons of hate, where increasingly frustrated Kosovo Albanians can
commiserate about their mutual victimization at the hands of the Serbs. As might be
expected, peer pressure is exerted in the camps to hate Serbs.
US officials did nothing to counter such sentiments. On the contrary, Albright visited
the same camp in the immediate aftermath of the bombing campaign, one week after the
assault on the Gypsy family, and incited a crowd of refugees, declaring, Milosevic
and the Serbs have lost control over Kosovo.
The close relationship of the Clinton administration to the KLA speaks volumes about
the character of American foreign policy and those who carry it out. The attraction of
Clinton, Albright and Rubin for Thaci and his ilk is telling. They find themselves
irresistibly drawn to a social type: the semi-fascist, gangster-like man of
action. These types exist in every trouble spot and many end up on the
payroll of the American state.
What is happening on the ground in Kosovo stands as an indictment of imperialist policy
in general, and US militarism in particular. The pursuit of big power military and
geopolitical advantage, and the ambitions of American-based corporations in regard to the
oil-rich lands that lie to the east of the Balkans, have created such chaotic and degraded
conditions in the former Yugoslavia as to turn a section of the population into
pogromists.
What one sees in the current situation is only a foreshadowing of the future national
and communal conflicts in the Balkans, whose seeds have been sown by the US-NATO war. But
the results are already sufficient to demonstrate the disastrous consequences of accepting
as good coin the claims of the US and European powers to represent justice, progress and
humanitarianism. |