Tony Blair details role of his faith

Saturday, May 3rd, 2008

Blair had begun to pick at the subject haltingly over the last year, tony blair details role of his faithannouncing his conversion to Catholicism (after years of secretly attending Mass as prime minister) in December. But only now is he discussing it fully and openly, and acknowledging the degree to which his religious faith informed his years leading America’s closest ally.

“But there is a reason why my former press secretary Alastair Campbell once famously said, ‘We don’t do God.’ In our culture, here in Britain and in many other parts of Europe, to admit to having faith leads to a whole series of suppositions, none of which are very helpful to the practicing politician.”

Blair’s aides have long said that his policies on intervention in Iraq, Kosovo and Sierra Leone were motivated not by practicalities or even, in the case of the 2003 invasion of Iraq, fear of weapons of mass destruction so much as a profound sense that they were the “right” thing to do.

Yet it has become clear over the last year or so that religion permeated many aspects of Blair’s work in government. Last year, Blair told ITV1 that he had prayed while making his decision on committing British forces to Iraq.

“In the end, there is a judgment that, I think if you have faith about these things, you realize that judgment is made by other people . . . and if you believe in God, it’s made by God as well,” he said.

That Blair’s coming-out would not be easy goes without saying, and perhaps accounts for his reticence during his years at Downing Street to discuss the issue.

Britain has a long history of tension between Roman Catholics and Protestants; the Church of England, which is Protestant, has status as an official church, with its bishops sitting in the House of Lords, and the heir to the British throne is not permitted to marry a Catholic. Though relatively little of the friction remains today, the nation has never had a Catholic prime minister.

Longtime liberal commentator Rod Liddle took Blair to task for in essence invoking God on the sly. “In other words, Tony believed in God but not with sufficient conviction or fervor to allow the voters to know he believed in God,” he wrote in the Sunday Times.

“The creator of the universe was an embarrassing encumbrance whom the prime minister was forced to take around with him, perhaps in his back pocket. . . . He would be retrieved from the pocket only once in a while, to offer a quiet but enthusiastic endorsement of some policy Tony was about to embark upon, and then be put back, very quietly, while nobody was looking.”

Blair also has taken heat from antiabortion groups and some among Britain’s 6 million Catholics, who complain that his record in support of abortion rights, homosexual civil unions, stem cell research and measures that might hasten the death of terminally ill patients belie the official teachings of the Roman Catholic Church.

John Smeaton, head of the Society for the Protection of Unborn Children, wants Blair to repudiate some of those positions.

“Whether he says it or not, the fact of the matter is that defending the inviolable dignity of every human life is the fundamental teaching of the Catholic Church,” Smeaton said. “It would be rather like saying, ‘Yes, indeed, St. Paul has converted to Christianity, but he absolutely refuses to repudiate the killing of Christians. He doesn’t want to go into it.”

Blair’s religion is based as much on conviction about right and wrong as on specific doctrines, say many of those who know him.

“This is a man who, in terms of judgment of right and wrong, would think that his own judgment was at least as good as that of the archbishop of Canterbury, the cardinal of Westminster and the pope combined,” a former Blair aide is cited as saying in “Blair Unbound” by biographer Anthony Seldon.

In his Westminster speech, Blair said his foundation would “help partner those within any of the faiths who stand up for peaceful coexistence and reject the extremist and divisive notion that faiths are in fundamental struggle against each other.”

He will also explore the interaction of faiths around the world for good and ill in a course he has agreed to teach next year at Yale University on faith and globalization.

“Faith,” Blair said, “answers to the basic, irrepressible, irresistible human wish for spiritual betterment, to do good, to think and act beyond the limitations of selfish human desires.

“Faith is not something separate from our reason, still less from society around us, but integral to it, giving the use of reason a purpose and society a soul, and human beings a sense of the divine,” he said.

“This is the life purpose that cannot be found in constitutions, speeches, stirring art or rhetoric. It is a purpose uniquely centered around kneeling before God.”

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12 Reasons to Get Out of Iraq

Sunday, April 20th, 2008

by Tom Engelhardt

(Tom Dispatch)

Can there be any question that, since the invasion of 2003, Iraq has

been unraveling? And here’s the curious thing: Despite a lack of decent

information and analysis on crucial aspects of the Iraqi catastrophe,

despite the way much of the Iraq story fell off newspaper front pages

and out of the TV news in the last year, despite so many reports on the

success of the President’s surge strategy, Americans sense this

perfectly well. In the latest Washington Post/ABC News poll, 56% of Americans say the United States should withdraw its military forces to avoid further casualties and this has, as the Post

notes, been a majority position since January 2007, the month that the

surge was first announced. Imagine what might happen if the American

public knew more about the actual state of affairs in Iraq — and of

thinking in Washington. So, here, in an attempt to unravel the

situation in ever-unraveling Iraq are twelve answers to questions which

should be asked far more often in this country:

1. Yes, the war has morphed into the U.S. military’s worst Iraq nightmare:

Few now remember, but before George W. Bush launched the invasion of

Iraq in March 2003, top administration and Pentagon officials had a

single overriding nightmare — not chemical, but urban, warfare. Saddam

Hussein, they feared, would lure American forces into Fortress Baghdad, as Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld labeled it. There, they would find themselves fighting block by block, especially in the warren of streets that make up the Iraqi capital’s poorest districts.

When American forces actually entered Baghdad in early April 2003,

however, even Saddam’s vaunted Republican Guard units had put away

their weapons and gone home. It took five years but, as of now,

American troops are indeed fighting in the warren of streets in Sadr

City, the Shiite slum of two and a half million in eastern Baghdad

largely controlled by Muqtada al-Sadr’s Mahdi Army militia. The U.S.

military, in fact, recently experienced its worst week

of 2008 in terms of casualties, mainly in and around Baghdad. So,

mission accomplished — the worst fear of 2003 has now been realized.

2. No, there was never an exit strategy from Iraq because the Bush administration never intended to leave — and still doesn’t:

Critics of the war have regularly gone after the Bush administration

for its lack of planning, including its lack of an exit strategy. In

this, they miss the point. The Bush administration arrived in Iraq with

four mega-bases on the drawing boards.

These were meant to undergird a future American garrisoning of that

country and were to house at least 30,000 American troops, as well as

U.S. air power, for the indefinite future. The term used for such

places wasn’t permanent base, but the more charming and euphemistic

enduring camp. (In fact, as we learned recently,

the Bush administration refuses to define any American base on foreign

soil anywhere on the planet, including ones in Japan for over 60 years,

as permanent.) Those four monster bases in Iraq (and many others) were soon being built at the cost of multibillions and are, even today, being significantly upgraded.

In October 2007, for instance, National Public Radio’s defense

correspondent Guy Raz visited Balad Air Base, north of Baghdad, which

houses about 40,000 American troops, contractors, and Defense

Department civilian employees, and described

it as one giant construction project, with new roads, sidewalks, and

structures going up across this 16-square-mile fortress in the center

of Iraq, all with an eye toward the next few decades.

These mega-bases, like Camp Cupcake

(al-Asad Air Base), nicknamed for its amenities, are small town-sized

with massive facilities, including PXs, fast-food outlets, and the

latest in communications. They have largely been ignored by the

American media and so have played no part in the debate about Iraq in

this country, but they are the most striking on-the-ground evidence of

the plans of an administration that simply never expected to leave. To

this day, despite the endless talk about drawdowns and withdrawals,

that hasn’t changed. In fact, the latest news about secret negotiations

for a future Status of Forces Agreement on the American presence in

that country indicates that U.S. officials are calling for an

open-ended military presence and no limits on numbers of U.S. forces,

the weapons they are able to deploy, their legal status or powers over

Iraqi citizens, going far beyond long-term U.S. security agreements

with other countries.

3. Yes, the United States is still occupying Iraq (just not particularly effectively): In June 2004,

the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA), then ruling the country,

officially turned over sovereignty to an Iraqi government largely

housed in the American-controlled Green Zone in Baghdad and the

occupation officially ended. However, the day before the head of the

CPA, L. Paul Bremer III, slipped out of the country without fanfare, he signed, among other degrees, Order 17,

which became (and, remarkably enough, remains) the law of the land. It

is still a document worth reading as it essentially granted to all

occupying forces and allied private companies what, in the era of

colonialism, used to be called extraterritoriality — the freedom not

to be in any way subject to Iraqi law or jurisdiction, ever. And so the

occupation ended without ever actually ending. With 160,000 troops

still in Iraq, not to speak of an unknown number of hired guns and

private security contractors, the U.S. continues to occupy the country,

whatever the legalities might be (including a UN mandate and the claim

that we are part of a coalition). The only catch is this: As of now,

the U.S. is simply the most technologically sophisticated and

potentially destructive of Iraq’s proliferating militias — and outside

the fortified Green Zone in Baghdad, it is capable of controlling only

the ground that its troops actually occupy at any moment.

4. Yes, the war was about oil: Oil was hardly mentioned in the

mainstream media or by the administration before the invasion was

launched. The President, when he spoke of Iraq’s vast petroleum reserves at all, piously referred to them as the sacred patrimony

of the people of Iraq. But an administration of former energy execs –

with a National Security Advisor who once sat on the board of Chevron

and had a double-hulled oil tanker, the Condoleezza Rice, named after her (until she took office), and a Vice President who was especially aware

of the globe’s potentially limited energy supplies — certainly had oil

reserves and energy flows on the brain. They knew, in Deputy Secretary

of Defense Paul Wolfowitz’s apt phrase, that Iraq was afloat on a sea of oil and that it sat strategically in the midst of the oil heartlands of the planet.

It wasn’t a mistake that, in 2001, Vice President Dick Cheney’s

semi-secret Energy Task Force set itself the task of opening up the

energy sectors of various Middle Eastern countries to foreign

investment; or that it scrutinized

a detailed map of Iraq’s oil fields, together with the (non-American)

oil companies scheduled to develop them; or that, according to the New Yorker’s Jane Mayer, the National Security Council directed

its staff to cooperate fully with the Energy Task Force as it

considered the ‘melding’ of two seemingly unrelated areas of policy:

‘the review of operational policies towards rogue states,’ such as

Iraq, and ‘actions regarding the capture of new and existing oil and

gas fields’; or that the only American troops ordered to guard

buildings in Iraq, after Baghdad fell, were sent to the Oil Ministry

(and the Interior Ministry, which housed Saddam Hussein’s dreaded

secret police); or that the first reconstruction contract was issued

to Cheney’s former firm, Halliburton, for emergency repairs to those

patrimonial oil fields. Once in charge in Baghdad, as sociologist

Michael Schwartz has made clear,

the administration immediately began guiding recalcitrant Iraqis toward

denationalizing and opening up their oil industry, as well as bringing

in the big boys.

Though rampant insecurity has kept the Western oil giants on the

sidelines, the American-shaped Iraqi oil law quickly became a

benchmark of progress in Washington and remains a constant source

of prodding and advice from American officials in Baghdad. Former

Federal Reserve chief Alan Greenspan put the oil matter simply and

straightforwardly in his memoir in 2007: I am saddened, he wrote,

that it is politically inconvenient to acknowledge what everyone

knows: the Iraq war is largely about oil. In other words, in a

variation on the old Bill Clinton campaign mantra: It’s the oil,

stupid. Greenspan was, unsurprisingly, roundly assaulted

for the obvious naivet?of his statement, from which, when it proved

inconvenient, he quickly retreated. But if this administration hadn’t

had oil on the brain in 2002-2003, given the importance of Iraq’s

reserves, Congress should have impeached the President and Vice

President for that.

5. No, our new embassy in Baghdad is not an embassy: When,

for more than three-quarters of a billion dollars, you construct a

complex — regularly described as Vatican-sized — of at least 20

blast-resistant buildings on 104 acres of prime Baghdadi real estate,

with fortified working space and a staff of at least 1,000 (plus

several thousand guards, cooks, and general factotums), when you deeply

embunker it, equip it with its own electricity and water systems, its

own anti-missile defense system, its own PX, and its own indoor and

outdoor basketball courts, volleyball court, and indoor Olympic-size

swimming pool, among other things, you haven’t built an embassy at

all. What you’ve constructed in the heart of the heart of another

country is more than a citadel,

even if it falls short of a city-state. It is, at a minimum, a monument

to Bush administration dreams of domination in Iraq and in what its

adherents once liked to call the Greater Middle East.

Just about ready to open, after the normal construction mishaps

in Iraq, it will constitute the living definition of diplomatic

overkill. It will, according to a Senate estimate, now cost Americans $1.2 billion

a year just to be represented in Iraq. The embassy is, in fact, the

largest headquarters on the planet for the running of an occupation.

Functionally, it is also another well-fortified enduring camp with the

amenities of home. Tell that to the Shiite militiamen now mortaring the Green Zone as if it were?enemy-occupied territory.

6. No, the Iraqi government is not a government: The government of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki has next to no presence

in Iraq beyond the Green Zone; it delivers next to no services; it has

next to no ability to spend its own oil money, reconstruct the country,

or do much of anything else, and it most certainly does not hold a

monopoly on the instruments of violence. It has no control over the

provinces of northern Iraq which operate as a near-independent Kurdish

state. Non-Kurdish Iraqi troops are not even allowed on its territory.

Maliki’s government cannot control the largely Sunni provinces of the

country, where its officials are regularly termed the Iranians (a

reference to the heavily Shiite government’s closeness to neighboring

Iran) and are considered the equivalent of representatives of a foreign

occupying power; and it does not control the Shiite south, where power

is fragmented among the militias of ISCI (the Badr Organization),

Muqtada al-Sadr’s Mahdi Army, and the armed adherents of the Fadila

Party, a Sadrist offshoot, among others.

In Afghanistan, President Hamid Karzai has been derisively nicknamed

the mayor of Kabul for his government’s lack of control over much

territory outside the national capital. It would be a step forward for

Maliki if he were nicknamed the mayor of Baghdad. Right now, his

troops, heavily backed by American forces, are fighting for some modest

control over Shiite cities (or parts of cities) from Basra to Baghdad.

7. No, the surge is not over: Two weeks ago, amid much hoopla,

General David Petraeus and Ambassador Ryan Crocker spent two days

before Congress discussing the President’s surge strategy in Iraq and

whether it has been a success. But that surge — the ground one in

which an extra 30,000-plus American troops were siphoned into Baghdad

and, to a lesser extent, adjoining provinces — was by then already so

over. In fact, all but about 10,000 of those troops will be home by the

end of July, not because the President has had any urge for a drawdown,

but, as Fred Kaplan of Slate wrote recently,

because of simple math. The five extra combat brigades, which were

deployed to Iraq with the surge, each have 15-month tours of duty; the

15 months will be up in July?and the U.S. Army and Marines have no combat brigades ready to replace them.

On the other hand, in all those days of yak, neither the general with so much more martial bling on his chest than any victorious World War II commander, nor the white-haired ambassador uttered a word about the surge that is ongoing — the air surge that began

in mid-2007 and has yet to end. Explain it as you will, but, with rare

exceptions, American reporters in Iraq generally don’t look up or more

of them would have noticed that the extra air units surged into that

country and the region in the last year are now being brought to bear over Iraq’s cities. Today, as fighting goes on in Sadr City, American helicopters and Hellfire-missile armed Predator drones

reportedly circle overhead almost constantly and air strikes of various

kinds on city neighborhoods are on the rise. Yet the air surge in Iraq

remains unacknowledged here and so is not a subject for discussion,

debate, or consideration when it comes to our future in Iraq.

8. No, the Iraqi army will never stand up: It can’t. It’s not

a national army. It’s not that Iraqis can’t fight — or fight bravely.

Ask the Sunni insurgents. Ask the Mahdi Army militia of Muqtada

al-Sadr. It’s not that Iraqis are incapable of functioning in a

national army. In the bitter Iran-Iraq War of 1980-88, Iraqi Shiite as

well as Sunni conscripts, led by a largely Sunni officer corps, fought

Iranian troops fiercely in battle after pitched battle. But from Fallujah in 2004 to today,

Iraqi army (and police) units, wheeled into battle (often at the behest

of the Americans), have regularly broken and run, or abandoned their

posts, or gone over to the other side, or, at the very least, fought

poorly. In the recent offensive launched by the Maliki government in

Basra, military and police units up against a single resistant militia,

the Mahdi Army, deserted in sizeable numbers, while other units, when

not backed by the Americans, gave poor showings. At least 1,300 troops

and police (including 37 senior police officers) were recently fired

by Maliki for dereliction of duty, while two top commanders were removed as well.

Though American training began in 2004 and, by 2005, the President was

regularly talking about us standing down as soon as the Iraqi Army

stood up, as Charles Hanley of the Associated Press points out,

Year by year, the goal of deploying a capable, free-standing Iraqi

army has seemed to always slip further into the future. He adds, In

the latest shift, the Pentagon’s new quarterly status report quietly

drops any prediction of when local units will take over security

responsibility for Iraq. Last year’s reports had forecast a transition

in 2008. According to Hanley, the chief American trainer of Iraqi

forces, Lt. Gen. James Dubik, now estimates that the military will not

be able to guard the country’s borders effectively until 2018.

No wonder. The Iraqi military is not in any real sense a national

military at all. Its troops generally lack heavy weaponry, and it has

neither a real air force nor a real navy.

Its command structures are integrated into the command structure of the

U.S. military, while the U.S. Air Force and the U.S. Navy are the real

Iraqi air force and navy. It is reliant on the U.S. military for much

of its logistics and resupply, even after an investment of $22 billion

by the American taxpayer. It represents a non-government, is riddled

with recruits from Shiite militias (especially the Badr brigades), and

is riven about who its enemy is (or enemies are) and why. It cannot be

a national army because it has, in essence, nothing to stand up for.

You can count on one thing, as long as we are training and advising

the Iraqi military, however many years down the line, you will read

comments like this one

from an American platoon sergeant, after an Iraqi front-line unit

abandoned its positions in the ongoing battle for control of parts of

Sadr City: It bugs the hell out of me. We don’t see any progress being

made at all. We hear these guys in firefights. We know if we are not up

there helping these guys out we are making very little progress.

9. No, the U.S. military does not stand between Iraq and fragmentation:

The U.S. invasion and the Bush administration’s initial occupation

policies decisively smashed Iraq’s fragile national sense of self.

Since then, the Bush administration, a motor for chaos and

fragmentation, has destroyed the national (if dictatorial) government,

allowed the capital and much of the country (as well as its true patrimony of ancient historical objects and sites) to be looted, disbanded the Iraqi military, and deconstructed

the national economy. Ever since, whatever the administration rhetoric,

the U.S. has only presided over the further fragmentation of the

country. Its military, in fact, employs a specific policy of urban

fragmentation in which it regularly builds

enormous concrete walls around neighborhoods, supposedly for security

and reconstruction, that actually cut them off from their social and

economic surroundings. And, of course, Iraq has in these years been

fragmented in other staggering ways with an estimated four-plus million Iraqis driven into exile abroad or turned into internal refugees.

According to Pepe Escobar of the Asia Times,

there are now at least 28 different militias in the country. The longer

the U.S. remains even somewhat in control, the greater the possibility

of further fragmentation. Initially, the fragmentation was sectarian –

into Kurdish, Sunni, and Shia regions, but each of those regions has

its own potentially hostile parts and so its points of future conflict

and further fragmentation. If the U.S. military spent the early years

of its occupation fighting a Sunni insurgency in the name of a largely

Shiite (and Kurdish) government, it is now fighting a Shiite militia,

while paying and arming former Sunni insurgents, relabeled Sons of

Iraq. Iran is also clearly sending arms into a country that is, in any

case, awash in weaponry. Without a real national government, Iraq has

descended into a welter of militia-controlled neighborhoods, city

states, and provincial or regional semi-governments. Despite all the

talk of American-supported reconciliation, Juan Cole described the present situation well at his Informed Comment

blog: Maybe the US in Iraq is not the little boy with his finger in

the dike. Maybe we are workers with jackhammers instructed to make the

hole in the dike much more huge.

10. No, the U.S. military does not stand between Iraq and civil war:

As with fragmentation, the U.S. military’s presence has, in fact, been

a motor for civil war in that country. The invasion and subsequent

chaos, as well as punitive acts against the Sunni minority, allowed

Sunni extremists, some of whom took the name al-Qaeda in Mesopotamia,

to establish themselves as a force in the country for the first time.

Later, U.S. military operations in both Sunni and Shiite areas

regularly repressed local militias — almost the only forces capable of

bringing some semblance of security to urban neighborhoods — opening

the way for the most extreme members of the other community (Sunni

suicide or car bombers and Shiite death squads) to attack. It’s worth

remembering that it was in the surge months

of 2007, when all those extra American troops hit Baghdad

neighborhoods, that many of the city’s mixed or Sunni neighborhoods

were most definitively cleansed by death squads, producing a 75-80% Shiite capital. Iraq is now embroiled in what Juan Cole has termed three civil wars,

two of which (in the south and the north) are largely beyond the reach

of limited American ground forces and all of which could become far

worse. The still low-level struggle between Kurds and Arabs (with the

Turks hovering nearby) for the oil-rich city of Kirkuk in the north may

be the true explosion point to come. The U.S. military sits

precariously atop this mess, at best putting off to the future aspects

of the present civil-war landscape, but more likely intensifying it.

11. No, al-Qaeda will not control Iraq if we leave (and neither will Iran):

The latest figures tell the story. Of 658 suicide bombings globally in

2007 (more than double those of any year in the last quarter century),

542, according to the Washington Post’s

Robin Wright, took place in occupied Iraq or Afghanistan, mainly Iraq.

In other words, the American occupation of that land has been a motor

for acts of terrorism (as occupations will be). There was no al-Qaeda

in Mesopotamia before the invasion and Iraq was no Afghanistan. The

occupation under whatever name will continue to create terrorists, no

matter how many times the administration claims that al-Qaeda is on

the run. With the departure of U.S. troops, it’s clear that homegrown

Sunni extremists (and the small number of foreign jihadis who

work with them), already a minority of a minority, will more than meet

their match in facing the Sunni mainstream. The Sunni Awakening

Movement came into existence, in part, to deal with such

self-destructive extremism (and its fantasies of a Taliban-style

society) before the Americans even noticed that it was happening. When

the Americans leave, al-Qaeda (and whatever other groups the Bush

administration subsumes under that catch-all title) will undoubtedly

lose much of their raison d’阾re or simply be crushed.

As for Iran, the moment the Bush administration finally agreed to a

popular democratic vote in occupied Iraq, it ensured one thing — that

the Shiite majority would take control, which in practice meant

religio-political parties that, throughout the Saddam Hussein years,

had generally been close to, or in exile in, Iran. Everything the Bush

administration has done since has only ensured the growth of Iranian

influence among Shiite groups. This is surely meant by the Iranians as,

in part, a threat/trump card, should the Bush administration launch an

attack on that country. After all, crucial U.S. resupply lines from

Kuwait run through areas near Iran and would assumedly be relatively

easy to disrupt.

Without the U.S. military in Iraq, there can be no question that the

Iranians would have real influence over the Shiite (and probably

Kurdish) parts of the country. But that influence would have its

distinct limits. If Iran overplayed its hand even in a rump Shiite

Iraq, it would soon enough find itself facing some version of the

situation that now confronts the Americans. As Robert Dreyfuss wrote in the Nation

recently, [D]espite Iran’s enormous influence in Iraq, most Iraqis –

even most Iraqi Shiites — are not pro-Iran. On the contrary,

underneath the ruling alliance in Baghdad, there is a fierce

undercurrent of Arab nationalism in Iraq that opposes both the U.S.

occupation and Iran’s support for religious parties in Iraq. The

al-Qaedan and Iranian threats are, at one and the same time, bogeymen

used by the Bush administration to scare Americans who might favor

withdrawal and, paradoxically, realities that a continued military

presence only encourages.

12. Yes, some Americans were right about Iraq from the beginning (and not the pundits either): One of the strangest aspects of the recent fifth anniversary (as of every other anniversary) of the invasion of Iraq was the newspaper print space

reserved for those Bush administration officials and other war

supporters who were dead wrong in 2002-2003 on an endless host of

Iraq-related topics. Many of them were given ample opportunity to offer

their views on past failures, the success of the surge, future

withdrawals or drawdowns, and the responsibilities of a future U.S.

president in Iraq.

Noticeably missing were representatives of the group of Americans who

happened to have been right from the get-go. In our country, of course,

it often doesn’t pay to be right. (It’s seen as a sign of weakness or

plain dumb luck.) I’m speaking, in this case, of the millions of people

who poured into the streets to demonstrate against the coming invasion

with an efflorescence

of placards that said things too simpleminded (as endless pundits

assured American news readers at the time) to take seriously — like

No Blood for Oil, Don’t Trade Lives for Oil, or How did USA’s oil

get under Iraq’s sand? At the time, it seemed clear to most reporters,

commentators, and op-ed writers that these sign-carriers represented a

crew of well-meaning know-nothings and the fact that their collective

fears proved all too prescient still can’t save them from that

conclusion. So, in their very rightness, they were largely forgotten.

Now, as has been true for some time, a majority of Americans, another obvious bunch of know-nothings, are deluded enough to favor bringing all U.S. troops out of Iraq at a reasonable pace and relatively soon. (More than 60% of them also believe

that the conflict is not integral to the success of U.S.

anti-terrorism efforts.) If, on the other hand, a poll were taken of

pundits and the inside-the-Beltway intelligentsia (not to speak of the

officials of the Bush administration), the number of them who would

want a total withdrawal from Iraq (or even see that as a reasonable

goal) would undoubtedly descend near the vanishing point. When it comes

to American imperial interests, most of them know better, just as so

many of them did before the war began. Even advisors to candidates who

theoretically want out of Iraq are hinting that a full-scale withdrawal is hardly the proper way to go.

So let me ask you a question (and you answer it): Given all of the

above, given the record thus far, who is likely to be right?

Tom Engelhardt, who runs the Nation Institute’s Tomdispatch.com, is the co-founder of the American Empire Project. His book, The End of Victory Culture

(University of Massachusetts Press), has been updated in a newly issued

edition that deals with victory culture’s crash-and-burn sequel in Iraq.

[Tomdispatch recommendations: For another numbered piece on Iraq, check out Gary Kamiya's eminently sane reprise of the Ten Commandments as applied to the launching of the 2003 invasion -- to be found at Salon.com. (Commandment I, Thou shalt not launch preventive wars?quot;; Commandment VI: Do not allow neoconservatives anywhere near Middle East policy?Special Bill Kristol Sub-commandment VI a:

Stop giving these buffoons prestigious jobs on newspaper-of-record

Op-Ed pages, top magazines and television shows. They have been

completely and consistently wrong about everything. Must we continue to

be subjected to their pontifications?). Also let me offer a

Tomdispatch bow of thanks to Cursor.org's daily Media Patrol column.

Someone at that site with a keen eye for the less noticed but

newsworthy pieces of any day (and an always splendid set of links)

makes my life so much easier, when gathering material for essays like

this one.]

Copyright 2008 Tom Engelhardt

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Iraq War as War Crime (Part One)

Tuesday, March 18th, 2008

by Robert, Sam and Nat Parry (Consortium News)Editor Note: The Iraq War ?now ending its fifth bloody year ?represents not only a human tragedy of enormous consequence and possibly the greatest strategic blunder in U.S. history but also a systemic failure of American political and journalistic institutions.Instead of checking George W. Bush imperial impulse for the good of the Republic, the Congress ?including Sen. Hillary Clinton and other prominent Democrats ?and the national press corps tended to their careers and their political viability.In recognition of this tragedy ?and in honor of the thousands of American dead and the hundreds of thousands of Iraqi dead ?we are publishing the first of two excerpts from Neck Deep: The Disastrous Presidency of George W. Bush:Iraq 揇ay of Liberation??as George W. Bush called it ?was supposed to begin with a bombardment consisting of 3,000 U.S. missiles delivered over 48 hours, 10 times the number of bombs dropped during the first two days of the Persian Gulf War in 1991.Officials, who were briefed on the plans, said the goal was to so stun the Iraqis that they would simply submit to the overwhelming force demonstrated by the U.S. military. Administration officials dubbed the strategy hock and awe.In his 2003 State of the Union speech, Bush had addressed the 揵rave and oppressed people of Iraq?with the reassuring message that 搚our enemy is not surrounding your country ?your enemy is ruling your country.Bush promised that the day that Saddam Hussein and his regime re removed from power will be the day of your liberation.But never before in history had a dominant world power planned to strike a much weaker nation in a preemptive war with such ferocity. It would be liberation through devastation.Many projections expected the deaths of thousands of Iraqi non-combatants, no matter how targeted or precise the U.S. weapons. For those civilians, their end would come in the dark terror of crushing concrete or in the blinding flash of high explosives.In the prelude to the invasion, the United Nations predicted possibly more than 500,000 civilians injured or killed during the war and its aftermath and nearly one million displaced from their homes.The International Study Team, a Canadian non-governmental organization, raised similar alarms. The invasion of Iraq would cause a 揼rave humanitarian disaster,?with potential casualties among children in he tens of thousands, and possibly in the hundreds of thousands,?the group said.Assuming U.S. forces succeeded in eliminating Saddam Hussein and his army with relative speed, the post-war period still promised to be complicated and dangerous. The Bush administration outlined plans to occupy Iraq for at least 18 months, installing a military governor in the style of Gen. Douglas MacArthur in Japan after World War II.But it was not clear how the United States would police a population that was certain to include anti-American militants ready to employ suicide bombings and other irregular tactics against an occupying force.Bin Laden MessageThere was the risk, too, that the U.S. invasion would play into the hands of Osama bin Laden, who circulated a message portraying himself as the defender of the Arab people.揂nyone who tries to destroy our villages and cities, then we are going to destroy their villages and cities,?the al-Qaeda leader said. 揂nyone who steals our fortunes, then we must destroy their economy. Anyone who kills our civilians, then we are going to kill their civilians.Some U.S. military strategists saw Bush war plan as the worst sort of wishful thinking.What if the Iraqi army ?instead of making itself an easy target for the U.S. missiles ?melted into urban centers and began coordinating with an armed civilian population to resist a foreign invasion of their homeland? What if the Iraqi people chose to fight the American invaders, rather than shower them with rose petals?Already, Saddam Hussein had begun concentrating his troops in urban centers and passing out AK-47s to Iraqis, young and old, men and women.But Bush biggest gamble was whether the hock and awe?bombardment from the air and the stunning American firepower during the ground invasion would intimidate the Iraqis into surrendering.The relatively light invading force of a couple hundred thousand troops would be enough to take Baghdad, most military analysts believed, but significant resistance during the invasion would be an early sign that the Army chief of staff, Gen. Eric Shinseki, was right when he told Congress that the occupation could require everal hundred thousand troops.After that alarming estimate, Shinseki was pushed into early retirement and drew a public rebuke from Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz, who called Shinseki ildly off the mark.A similar dispute erupted over the expected cost of the war. White House economic adviser Lawrence Lindsay had estimated a figure as high as one or two percent of the gross national product or about $100 billion to $200 billion.To head off American worries about this high cost, Bush budget director Mitch Daniels slapped down Lindsay estimate as 搗ery, very high,?pegging it instead at between $50 billion and $60 billion. As for reconstruction costs, Wolfowitz and other administration officials suggested that Iraq oil revenues would pay for nearly all of that.Lindsay was soon headed for the door, fired in December 2002 along with Treasury Secretary Paul O扤eill, an even more outspoken Iraq War critic.Lost ObjectivityThere is the old clich?about war, that its first casualty is truth. But ?as U.S. forces began the invasion of Iraq on March 20, 2003, still the evening of March 19 in Washington ?an even more immediate casualty was the journalistic principle of objectivity.Many U.S. news outlets dropped even the pretense of trying to stay neutral and just report the facts. TV anchors were soon opining about what strategies e?should follow in prosecuting the Iraq War.揙ne of the things that we don want to do is to destroy the infrastructure of Iraq because in a few days we抮e going to own that country,?NBC Tom Brokaw explained as he sat among a panel of retired generals on the opening night of 揙peration Iraqi Freedom.There was little sensitivity to the sensibilities of the region. U.S. networks used large floor maps of Iraq so American analysts could stride across the country to point out troop movements. They looked like giants towering over the Middle East.When American troops faced resistance from Iraqi paramilitary fighters, Fox termed them 揝addam goons.?When Iraqi forces surrendered, they were paraded before U.S. cameras as roof?that Iraqi resistance was crumbling.Some of the scenes showed Iraqi POWs forced at gunpoint to kneel down with their hands behind their heads as they were patted down by U.S. soldiers. Network executives apparently felt no sense of irony when they ran these images over the words, 揙peration Iraqi Freedom,?the title for the coverage and the code name for the invasion.Showing these degrading images of captured Iraqi soldiers generated not even the mildest concern. Neither the Bush administration nor a single U.S. reporter covering the war for the news networks observed that these scenes might violate the Geneva Conventions on treatment of prisoners of war.But several days into the invasion, five American soldiers were captured in the southern city of Nasiriyah. When their images were broadcast on Iraqi TV, Bush administration officials immediately denounced the brief televised interviews as a violation of the Geneva Conventions, a charge that was repeated over and over by outraged U.S. television networks.揑t illegal to do things to POWs that are humiliating to those prisoners,?said Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld.In their collective outrage over Iraq alleged violation of international law, the U.S. networks seemed to forget the earlier scenes of the Iraqi POWs. They also left out how President Bush had stripped POWs captured in Afghanistan of their rights under the Geneva Conventions.Prisoners at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, were shaved bald and forced to kneel down with their eyes, ears and mouths covered to deprive them of their senses. Their humiliation was broadcast widely for the world to see.There also had been leaks to the news media that terrorist suspects were being subjected to tress and duress?tactics, which in some cases could be considered forms of torture. U.S. officials admitted to the use of sleep deprivation in their interrogations of prisoners.But senior U.S. officials defended these tactics, with one official telling The Washington Post, 揑f you don violate someone human rights some of the time, you probably aren doing your job.Virtually confirming the new U.S. policy of using forms of torture, Cofer Black, former head of the CIA Counterterrorist Center, told a joint hearing of the House and Senate intelligence committees that there was a new 搊perational flexibility?in dealing with suspected terrorists.here was a before 9/11, and there was an after 9/11,?Black said. 揂fter 9/11 the gloves come off.This background left many in the world shaking their heads over the U.S. outrage when Iraqi TV broadcast the videotapes of American POWs. The Bush administration ?and the major American media ?seemed to prefer their international law a la carte, picking and choosing when the rules should apply and when they shouldn.Patriotism SweepstakesAs the invasion ?or iberation??proceeded, Fox News and MSNBC competed in the sweepstakes to be the network that demonstrated the greatest pro-war patriotism.Both Fox and MSNBC broadcast Madison Avenue-style montages of heroic American soldiers at war, amid thankful Iraqis and stirring background music. Fox News used a harmonica soundtrack of the 揃attle Hymn of the Republic.MSNBC brought even higher production values to its images of U.S. troops moving through Iraq. One segment ended with an American boy surrounded by yellow ribbons for his father at war, and the concluding slogan, 揌ome of the Brave.Another MSNBC montage showed happy Iraqis welcoming U.S. troops as liberators over the slogan, 揕et Freedom Ring.Left out of these 搉ews?montages ?and much of the American news coverage ?were images of death and destruction.Rather than troubling Americans with gruesome pictures of mangled and dismembered Iraqi bodies, including many children, the cable networks, in particular, edited the war in ways that helped avoid negativity, boost ratings and give advertisers the feel-good content that plays best around their products.Fox News may have pioneered the concept of casting the war in the gauzy light of heroic imagery, but the other U.S. networks weren far behind.Not to be completely out-foxed, CNN offered startlingly different war coverage to Americans on domestic CNN than what other viewers saw on CNN International.While domestic CNN focused on happy stories of American courage and appreciative Iraqis, CNNI carried more scenes of wounded civilians overflowing Iraqi hospitals.揇uring the Gulf War in 1991, [CNN] presented a uniform global feed that showed the war largely through American eyes,?the Wall Street Journal reported. 揝ince then, CNN has developed several overseas networks that increasingly cater their programming to regional audiences and advertisers.Left unsaid by the Journal formulation of how CNN overseas affiliates 揷ater?to foreign audiences was the flip side of that coin, that domestic CNN was freer to shape a version of the news that was more satisfying to Americans.Still, CNN ?and MSNBC ?lagged behind Fox in pulling in the viewers with super-patriotic war coverage, albeit not for lack of trying.The U.S. networks fell over themselves to tell the glorious story of Pfc. Jessica Lynch, who was captured during the invasion early days. Her rescue was filmed by the U.S. military in the fuzzy green of night-vision equipment and played over and over again.Only later was it revealed that the Lynch story had been embroidered for propaganda effect. The Iraqi doctors who had cared for Lynch said the rescue was staged, a kind of made-for-TV movie before it was destined to become a made-for-TV movie.hey made a big show,?said Haitham Gizzy, a doctor who treated Lynch. 揑t was just a drama?filmed after Iraqi fighters had fled the scene and with only doctors manning the hospital.Impending DisasterWhile Americans were fed a steady diet of cheerleading journalism, the stronger-than-expected resistance from Iraqi forces on the ground in the war early days raised warning signs about trouble ahead.Robert Parry tracked down some of his longtime military and intelligence sources who painted for him a much grimmer picture than was appearing in the major U.S. news media.With the war less than two weeks old, he described their portents of disaster in a Consortiumnews.com article entitled 揃ay of Pigs Meets Black Hawk Down.?It read:hatever happens in the weeks ahead, George W. Bush has 憀ost?the war in Iraq. The only question now is how big a price America will pay, both in terms of battlefield casualties and political hatred swelling around the world.hat is the view slowly dawning on U.S. military analysts, who privately are asking whether the cost of ousting Saddam Hussein has grown so large that 憊ictory?will constitute a strategic defeat of historic proportions.揂t best, even assuming Saddam ouster, the Bush administration may be looking at an indefinite period of governing something akin to a California-size Gaza Strip.he chilling realization is spreading in Washington that Bush Iraqi debacle may be the mother of all presidential miscalculations ?an extraordinary blend of Bay of Pigs-style wishful thinking with a lack Hawk Down?reliance on special operations to wipe out enemy leaders as a short-cut to victory.揃ut the magnitude of the Iraq disaster could be far worse than either the Bay of Pigs fiasco in Cuba in 1961 or the bloody miscalculations in Somalia in 1993. In both those cases, the U.S. government showed the tactical flexibility to extricate itself from military misjudgments without grave strategic damage.he CIA-backed Bay of Pigs invasion left a small army of Cuban exiles in the lurch when the rosy predictions of popular uprisings against Fidel Castro failed to materialize. To the nation advantage, however, President John Kennedy applied what he learned from the Bay of Pigs ?that he shouldn blindly trust his military advisers ?to navigate the far more dangerous Cuban missile crisis in 1962.he botched lack Hawk Down?raid in Mogadishu cost the lives of 18 U.S. soldiers, but President Bill Clinton then cut U.S. losses by recognizing the hopelessness of the leadership-decapitation strategy and withdrawing American troops from Somalia.揝imilarly, President Ronald Reagan pulled out U.S. forces from Lebanon in 1983 after a suicide bomber killed 241 Marines who were part of a force that had entered Beirut as peace-keepers but found itself drawn into the middle of a brutal civil war.Robert Parry continued: 揊ew analysts today, however, believe that George W. Bush and his senior advisers, including Vice President Dick Cheney and Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, have the common sense to swallow the short-term bitter medicine of a cease-fire or a U.S. withdrawal.揜ather than face the political music for admitting to the gross error of ordering an invasion in defiance of the United Nations and then misjudging the enemy, these U.S. leaders are expected to push forward no matter how bloody or ghastly their future course might be.ithout doubt, the Bush administration misjudged the biggest question of the war: æ…¦ould the Iraqis fight??Happy visions of rose petals and cheers have given way to a grim reality of ambushes and suicide bombs.揃ut the Bush pattern of miscalculation continues unabated. Bush seems to have cut himself off from internal dissent at the CIA and the Pentagon, where intelligence analysts and field generals warned against the wishful thinking that is proving lethal on the Iraqi battlefields. 揑nstead of recognizing their initial errors and rethinking their war strategy, Bush and his team are pressing forward confidently into what looks like a dreamscape of their own propaganda. hile the Bush administration once talked about administering Iraq for a couple of years after victory, that timetable was based on the pre-war assumptions that the war would be a akewalk?and that the Iraqi population would welcome U.S. troops with open arms.揂fter that easy victory, a U.S. proconsul administration would weed out Saddam loyalists and build a epresentative?government, apparently meaning that the U.S. would pick leaders from among Iraq various ethnic groups and tribes.揌owever, now, with civilian casualties rising and a U.S. 憊ictory?possibly requiring a blood bath, the timeline for the post-war econstruction?may need lengthening. Instead of a couple of years, the process could prove open-ended with fewer Iraqis willing to collaborate and more Iraqis determined to resist.揂 long occupation would be another grim prospect for American soldiers. Given what happened in the past 11 days, U.S. occupation troops and Iraqi collaborators can expect an extended period of scattered fighting that might well involve assassinations and bombings.揢.S. troops, inexperienced with Iraqi culture and ignorant of the Arabic language, will be put in the predicament of making split-second decisions about whether to shoot some 14-year-old boy with a backpack or some 70-year-old woman in a chador. 揙nce the hock and awe?bombing failed to crack the regime and Iraqis showed they were willing to fight in southern Iraqi cities ?such as Umm Qasr, Basra and Nasiriyah ?where Saddam support was considered weak, Bush initial war strategy was shown to be a grave mistake.he supposedly decisive hock and awe?bombing in the war opening days amounted to TV pyrotechnics that did little more than blow up empty government buildings, including Saddam tackily decorated palaces. The U.S. had so telegraphed the punch that the buildings had been evacuated. 揢nwittingly, Bush may be applying all the wrong lessons from America worst military disasters of the past 40-plus years. He mixing risky military tactics with a heavy reliance on propaganda and a large dose of wishful thinking.揃ush also has guessed wrong on the one crucial ingredient that would separate meaningful victory from the political defeat that is now looming. He completely miscalculated the reaction of the Iraqi people to an invasion.揗ore and more, Bush appears to be heading toward that ultimate lesson of U.S. military futility. He committed himself ?and the nation ?to destroying Iraq in order to save it.Part Two: Stiffer-Than-Expected Resistance –Robert Parry, who broke many of the Iran-Contra stories in the 1980s for the Associated Press and Newsweek, wrote Neck Deep: The Disastrous Presidency of George W. Bush, with two of his sons, Sam and Nat. It can be ordered at neckdeepbook.com. Or go to Amazon.com.

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Pope appeals for peace in Iraq

Monday, March 17th, 2008

Enough with the slaughters. Enough with the violence. Enough with the hatred in Iraq, Benedict said to applause at the end of Palm Sunday Mass in St. Peter’s Square.

On Thursday, the body of Archbishop Paulos Faraj Rahho was found near the northern Iraqi city of Mosul, from where he had been abducted on February 29. No one has claimed responsibility.

Benedict has called Rahho’s death an inhuman act of violence that offended human dignity.

Benedict praised Rahho for his loyalty to Christ and refusal to abandon his flock despite many threats and difficulties.

He recalled that Rahho’s death came as the Catholic Church opened Holy Week, the most solemn week in the liturgical calendar, in which the faithful recall the suffering and death of Jesus Christ.

Benedict said Rahho’s dedication to the Church and his death compelled him to raise a strong and sorrowful cry to denounce the violence in Iraq spawned by the war that he said had destroyed civilian life.

At the same time, I make an appeal to the Iraqi people, who for the past five years have borne the consequences of a war that provoked the breakup of their civil and social life, Benedict said.

He urged them to raise their heads and reconstruct their life through reconciliation, forgiveness, justice and coexistence among tribal, ethnic and religious groups.

The Vatican strongly opposed the US-led invasion of Iraq. Last year, he urged US President George W. Bush to keep the safety of Iraqi Christians in mind.

Benedict is due to preside over a memorial service at the Vatican on Monday in honor of Rahho.

Typically, the pope only presides over such services when a cardinal dies.

The pontiff’s appeal for peace came at the end of his Palm Sunday Mass. Over the next week, Benedict will preside over the Good Friday re-enactment of Christ’s crucifixion and death and the celebration of Christ’s resurrection on Easter Sunday.

At the start of Mass, Benedict blessed palms and olive branches with holy water and then processed through St. Peter’s Square, wearing intricate, red- and gold-brocaded vestments and clutching a woven palm frond.

In his homily, Benedict urged the faithful to follow God with the innocence and purity of a child’s heart.

To recognize God, we must abandon the pride that dazzles us, that seeks to push us away from God, he said. To find God, he said, we must learn to see with a young heart, one which isn’t blocked by prejudice and dazzled by interests.

Sunday also marked a lead-up celebration to the Catholic Church’s annual World Youth Day, and young people were very much on hand during the open-air service on a blustery spring day.

A few hundred carried massive palm fronds at the start of the procession through the square.

Benedict plans to attend World Youth Day itself in Sydney, Australia, in July. –IRNA

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Suicide bomber kills 40 in Iraq

Monday, March 3rd, 2008

The US military said it was trying to confirm reports 60 people had been killed and 100 wounded in the bombing in the town of Iskandariya, 40 km south of Baghdad. Women and children were among the victims, officials said.
The attack was one of the deadliest in Iraq this year and happened despite a major tightening of security for the annual Arbain festival in the southern holy city of Kerbala.
Most of the casualties were hit by the ball bearings, said a doctor at a hospital in the city of Hilla, where many of the wounded were taken. A wounded woman there said the attack happened in a tent where pilgrims were offered refreshments.
%26quot;When we reached the area people invited us into a tent to take some rest and have some food. When we entered, there was a huge ball of fire and we saw people lying on the ground,%26quot; said Um Amr, who was being treated for multiple wounds.
Police and the US military said the bomber struck hours after militants killed three pilgrims and wounded 36 others in an attack in southern Baghdad.
Captain Muthanna al-Mamouri, spokesman for police in Hilla, 100 km south of the capital, said 40 people were killed and 60 wounded in the Iskandariya attack.
The US military said in a statement the attack took place on a two-lane highway near a residential area where more than 40,000 pilgrims had passed through earlier in the day.
Tens of thousands of Iraqi soldiers and police have been deployed for the Arbain festival after suspected Sunni Arab insurgents killed 149 pilgrims on their way to Kerbala for the event last year, one of the worst spasms of violence since the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003.
The pilgrims are particularly vulnerable to attack because many prefer to walk to Kerbala, 110 km south of Baghdad. They believe the effort will bring them greater spiritual reward.
Millions of Shi%26#39;ite pilgrims are expected in Kerbala for Arbain this week, which commemorates the end of the 40-day mourning period following Ashura, a religious ritual that marks the death of Prophet Mohammad%26#39;s grandson in 680.
It is one of Shi%26#39;ite Islam%26#39;s holiest events.
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In the Baghdad attack, the pilgrims were hit by a roadside bomb and then fired on by gunmen on a road used by pilgrims walking to Kerbala, police said.
The US military gave a different account, saying gunmen had lobbed hand grenades at the pilgrims in Baghdad, killing one and wounding 17.
It said US and Iraqi forces would increase patrols and checkpoints, restricting vehicle access through key routes to Kerbala from southern Baghdad.
Kerbala%26#39;s police chief, Major-General Raad Shakir, told Reuters last week that 40,000 police and soldiers had been deployed and Iraqi tanks were being used to protect the city for the first time.
All public transport, including bicycles, has been banned within a 25 km radius of the city and 600 female security staff have been assigned to search women, police said.
Militants have used horses and carts, bicycles and motorcycles in bomb attacks in the past. There has also been a spate of suicide bombings carried out by women in recent months.
In previous years, militants have killed scores of pilgrims in suicide bombings and other attacks. Sunni Islamist al Qaeda views Shi%26#39;ites, a majority in Iraq but a minority in the Muslim world, as heretics.

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The Absurdity of ”Independent” Kosovo

Saturday, February 16th, 2008

By George Szamuely

(Counter Punch)

With their unfailing passion for the inconsequential and their knack for doing the wrong thing at the wrong time, NATO leaders appear determined to carve the province of Kosovo out of Serbia and grant it independence. That they lack the physical, legal and moral power to bestow independent statehood to a part of a state that is neither a member of the E.U. nor NATO appears only to have emboldened them to use this issue to demonstrate Western resolve. Just as in the 1990s, and just as erroneously, a self-righteous West has seized on the Balkans as an opportunity to parade before the world in the unfamiliar guise of champion of democracy and national self-determination, and protector of Muslims.

Much as it did before the invasion of Iraq, the United States has said it will do whatever it wants to do — namely, recognize independent Kosovo — with or without U.N. sanction. Unlike Iraq, this time the Europeans intend to take an active part in the Easter egg hunt and are as determined to ignore the United Nations as the Americans. Confident that the new state of Kosovo will prove to be a reliable NATO/E.U. satellite, key European countries, and especially the ever-compliant British, promise to recognize Kosovo’s unilateral declaration of independence on the very day it happens.

The line from Brussels and Washington is that the status quo in Kosovo is unsustainable and that the status of Kosovo needs to be settled once and for all. Final status means independence and only independence. The Serbs have been told to forget about Kosovo and all the talk of historic patrimony and to focus instead on Europe (the grand name the European Union has arrogated to itself). Curiously, the Kosovo Albanians are not told forget about their national aspirations and focus on Europe. Yet their claim to statehood is particularly dubious since an Albanian state already exists in Europe. There doesn’t seem to be any reason to have two Albanian states.

Kosovo’s status is governed by U.N. Security Council Resolution 1244, which envisages only self-government for Kosovo, and acknowledges the sovereignty and territorial integrity of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. Kosovo’s status can’t be changed without a new resolution.

To be sure, the status quo is unsustainable. But this status quo is one entirely of NATO’s making. Eager to demonstrate that it had relevance even though the Cold War had long ended, NATO pulverized Yugoslavia with cluster bombs, depleted uranium and cruise missiles for 11 weeks, in the name of its newly proclaimed mission of humanitarian intervention. As the adoring media told and, in subsequent years, retold the story, the United States and its supposedly supine European allies were knights in shining armor, selflessly killing and destroying in order to rescue the oppressed Kosovo Albanians from the bloodthirsty Serbs. NATO forces marched into Kosovo, stood by passively as more than 250,000 Serbs fled or were driven out of the province and then cowered in the safety of their barracks in March 2004 as the Kosovo Albanians went on a bloody anti-Serb rampage.

Meanwhile, making use of the engineering skills of Halliburton subsidiary, Brown %26amp; Root Services Corp., the United States built a giant military base, Camp Bondsteel, covering some 955 acres or 360,000 square meters. The camp also includes a prison. According to Alvaro Gil Robles, Human Rights Commissioner for the Council of Europe, who visited the prison in 2005,

What I saw there, the prisoners’ situation, was one which you would absolutely recognize from the photographs of Guantanamo. The prisoners were housed in little wooden huts, some alone, others in pairs or threes. Each hut was surrounded with barbed wire, and guards were patrolling between them. Around all of this was a high wall with watchtowers. Because these people had been arrested directly by the army, they had not had any recourse to the judicial system. They had no lawyers. There was no appeals process. There weren’t even exact orders about how long they were to be kept prisoner.

Shamelessly, but not at all surprisingly, the U.S. political establishment, particularly its Clintonian wing (the bunch that did so much to destroy Yugoslavia), seized on the March 2004 anti-Serb pogrom as evidence that the Kosovo Albanians deserved independent statehood immediately. On March 28, 2004, columnist Georgie Anne Geyer quoted Richard Holbrooke as saying ‘The recognition of an independent Kosovo and eventual membership in the European Union would be the best way to bring permanent peace and stability to the Balkans.’ The leadership in Belgrade ’should finally come to terms with the new reality and choose either Kosovo or the E.U.but if Serbia chooses Kosovo over the E.U., it will end up with neither.

Holbrooke, permanent secretary of state in waiting, notoriously negotiated an agreement with President Slobodan Milosevic in October 1998. In return for the United States agreeing to put off the bombing of Yugoslavia for a few months, Milosevic agreed to withdraw Serbian security forces from Kosovo and permitted the arrival of an OSCE mission-the so-called Kosovo Verification Mission. The agreement wasn’t binding on the terrorist Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA), whose members armed themselves and committed terrorist attacks, the purpose of which was to provoke the Serbian forces to retaliate and thereby to provide a pretext for the bombing the Clinton administration was itching to launch. Milosevic, well aware of the trap that was being laid for him, went out of his way to avoid being provoked. The Kosovo Verification Mission did not remain passive in all of this. Led by William Walker, U.S. ambassador to El Salvador during the 1980s, the KVM actively colluded with the KLA, going so far as to fake the Racak incident in January 1999 that served to trigger the NATO onslaught. It isn’t surprising, therefore, that Holbrooke, who played such a crucial role in that earlier charade, should play an equally crucial role in today’s Kosovo charade.

Another establishment ticket-puncher, this time a member of its Republican branch, also weighed in early demanding independence for Kosovo. Frank Carlucci, a former secretary of defense and national security adviser in the Reagan administration and a former chairman of the Carlyle Group, global private equity firm for ex-government officials, wrote in the New York Times on Feb. 22, 2005,

The only solution that makes long-term sense is full independence for Kosovo, and the only question that remains is how to get there. The best approach would be for Washington and its five partners in the so-called Contact Group-Britain, France, Germany, Italy and Russia-to initiate a process for a final settlement, or Kosovo Accord. First the powers would have to establish a timeline and some ground rules. The goal would have to be independence for the entire province, and all other options — partition, or union with Albania or slivers of other neighboring states where ethnic Albanians live — would be off the table from the outset. Given the events of last March, the Kosovo Albanians would be informed that that the pace of their progress toward independence will be set by their treatment of Serbs and other minorities.

So progress toward independence should depend on how the Albanians treat Kosovo’s minorities. Holbrooke had no time for this. He ridiculed the notion that independence should in any way be connected to the Albanians’ treatment of the Serbs. Standards before status, he sneered in the Washington Post on April 20, was merely a delaying policy that disguised bureaucratic inaction inside diplomatic mumbo-jumbo. As a result, there have been no serious discussions on the future of Kosovo.

Standards before status or status before standards, it really didn’t matter too much. The United States pushed U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan to launch a fraudulent process that would — so it was it believed — result in an independent Kosovo. In June 2005, Annan appointed Norway’s ambassador to NATO, Kai Aide, to determine if Kosovo has made sufficient progress in meeting accepted standards on democracy and minority rights to merit a decision on its final status. In October 2005, Aide duly reported to Annan that, yes, Kosovo had made splendid progress and that any further delay on resolving its final status would lead to catastrophe. Actually, the report said that the Kosovo Serbs fear that they will become a decoration to any central-level political institution with little ability to yield tangible results. The Kosovo Albanians have done little to dispel it. The report concluded that with regard to the foundation for a multi-ethnic society, the situation is grim. Nonetheless, there wasn’t a moment to be lost. What’s important, Annan said, is that talks begin soon.

Talks did indeed begin. Annan appointed former Finnish President Marti Ahtisaari as his special envoy to lead the negotiations on Kosovo’s final status. Talk about rewarding terrorism! The Kosovo Albanians rioted for several days in March 2004, and here they were, some 18 months later, about to be made a gift of independence. Ahtisaari was as likely to act the honest broker as Holbrooke. One of the posts he holds is chairman emeritus of the International Crisis Group (ICG), one of those George Soros-funded organizations staffed by out-of-office international worthies who invariably advocate for NATO expansion/intervention and unhindered U.S.-E.U. foreign investment. The ICG has for a long time been a fervent propagandist for an independent Kosovo. On its board sit such veteran bomb-the-Serbs alumni as Wesley Clark, Zbigniew Brzezinski, Joschka Fischer, Morton Abramowitz and Samantha Power.

The negotiations under Ahtisaari’s aegis inevitably went nowhere, as they were meant to. Given that key NATO/E.U. officials had already declared that independence was inevitable, the Kosovo Albanians knew they only had to sit tight, reject any option other than independence and prepare to collect their reward within a few months.

In March 2007, Ahtisaari reported to the new U.N. secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, that the negotiations’ potential to produce any mutually agreeable outcome on Kosovo’s status is exhausted. No amount of additional talks, whatever the format, will overcome this impasse. Therefore, he announced,

I have come to the conclusion that the only viable option for Kosovo is independence, to be supervised for an initial period by the international community. My Comprehensive Proposal for the Kosovo Status Settlement, which sets forth these international supervisory structures, provides the foundations for a future independent Kosovo that is viable, sustainable and stable, and in which all communities and their members can live a peaceful and dignified existence.

Washington, London, Brussels and other capitals immediately embraced Ahtisaari’s proposal and his noble, but entirely vacuous, sentiments. Since a massive NATO military presence had not sufficed to ensure that Kosovo’s communities and their members lived an even minimally peaceful and dignified existence (as even Kofi Annan’s envoy Kai Aide had admitted), the idea that in an independent Kosovo the province’s minorities would be flourishing was laughable. Kosovo’s Serbs — the few that remain — live behind barbed wire and need armed escort whenever they step outside their enclaves. According to a recent European Commission report, only 1 per cent of judges belong to a minority group and less than 0.5 per cent belong to the Serbian minority. Only six of the 88 prosecutors belong to minority groups. Overall, the report concluded, little progress has been made in the promotion and enforcement of human rights.

None of this really matters. The United States, the European Union and Ahtisaari himself are as serious about protecting Kosovo’s minorities as they are about creating an independent state there. In fact, the last thing one would call the state that Ahtisaari envisages is independent.

To be sure, land would be taken away from Serbia, and the Kosovo’s Serbs, Turks, Roma and other minorities would be booted out, even as NATO/EU officials will doubtless go on avowing their commitment to a multicultural, multiethnic, multi-whatever Kosovo. To be sure, Brussels will probably succeed in bribing a few Serbs to come back to — or even make a home in — Kosovo. These returnees will then be touted as evidence that Kosovo is embracing European values.

However, there is no plan to permit Kosovo’s Albanians to run their own affairs. First of all, as in Bosnia, ultimate power will reside with an internationally-appointed bureaucrat. This position of colonial viceroy known as the International Civilian Representative (ICR), will be held by one of the West’s innumerable, interchangeable has-been politicians moving from one sinecure to another. The ICR will, for example, have the authority to [t]ake corrective measures to remedy, as necessary, any actions taken by the Kosovo authorities that the ICR deems to be a breach of this Settlement. Such corrective measures would include annulment of laws or decisions adopted by Kosovo authorities, sanction or remov[al] from office [of] any public official or take other measures, as necessary, to ensure full respect for this Settlement and its implementation, final say over the appointment of the Director-General of the Customs Service, the Director of Tax Administration, the Director of the Treasury, and the Managing Director of the Central Banking Authority of Kosovo. There’s democracy for you.

In addition, the European Union is to establish a European Security and Defense Policy (ESDP) Mission. This mission shall assist Kosovo authorities in their progress towards sustainability and accountability and in further developing and strengthening an independent judiciary, police and customs service, ensuring that these institutions are free from political interferenceand shall provide mentoring, monitoring and advice in the area of the rule of law generally, while retaining certain powers, in particular, with respect to the judiciary, police, customs and correctional services.

The ESDP mission will have [a]uthority to ensure that cases of war crimes, terrorism, organised crime, corruption, inter-ethnic crimes, financial/economic crimes, and other serious crimes are properly investigated according to the law, including, where appropriate, by international investigators acting with Kosovo authorities or independently. The mission will have the authority to ensure crimes are properly prosecuted including, where appropriate, by international prosecutors acting jointly with Kosovo prosecutors or independently. Case selection for international prosecutors shall be based upon objective criteria and procedural safeguards, as determined by the Head of the ESDP Mission. The mission will have the authority to reverse or annul operational decisions taken by the competent Kosovo authorities, as necessary, to ensure the maintenance and promotion of the rule of law, public order and security. The mission will have [a]uthority to monitor, mentor and advise on all areas related to the rule of law. The Kosovo authorities shall facilitate such efforts and grant immediate and complete access to any site, person, activity, proceeding, document, or other item or event in Kosovo.

There is also to be an International Military Presence (IMP) established by NATO; it is to operate under the authority, and be subject to the direction and political control of the North Atlantic Council through the NATO chain of command. NATO’s military presence in Kosovo does not preclude a possible future follow-on military mission by another international security organization, subject to a revised mandate. Furthermore, the IMP is to have overall responsibility for the development and training of the Kosovo Security Force, and NATO shall have overall responsibility for the development and establishment of a civilian-led organization of the Government to exercise civilian control over this Force, without prejudice to the responsibilities of the ICR. The IMP will be responsible for: Assisting and advising with respect to the process of integration in Euro-Atlantic structures and advising on the involvement of elements from the security force in internationally mandated missions.

So, Kosovo will have no say on taxation, on foreign and security policy, on customs, on law enforcement. The only thing independent about independent Kosovo is that it will be independent of Serbia. In fact, there is not the slightest pretense that duly elected Kosovo authorities will have any say about anything other than perhaps refuse collection, though, doubtless even here, the authorities will have to follow E.U. guidelines or pay a penalty.

Not that this talk of mentoring, monitoring, training, assisting, advising and investigating should be taken too seriously. After all, the United Nations hasn’t taken it too seriously during the past 8_ years; why should the European Union? Given the E.U.’s contempt for international law, its pride over its member-countries’ participation in the 1999 bombing of Yugoslavia, its dismissive attitude toward Serbia’s concerns about the loss of its sovereign territory and its jurisdiction over its nationals, the idea that the E.U. is now ready to draw its sword and to come to the aid of Kosovo’s minorities is laughable. The soaring rhetoric over Kosovo’s supposed extraordinary progress, under U.N. auspices, contrasts starkly with the reality. According to Amnesty International’s recent report on U.N.-style justice in Kosovo,

[H]undreds of cases of war crimes, enforced disappearances and interethnic crimes remain unresolved (often with little or no investigation having been carried out); hundreds of cases have been closed, for the want of evidence which was neither promptly nor effectively gathered. Relatives of missing and ‘disappeared’ persons report that they have been interviewed too many times by international police and prosecutors new to their case, yet no progress is ever made.In terms of recruitment, it appears that at no stage were serious efforts made to identify and recruit the most highly qualified, experienced and appropriate candidates in the world for the job.A significant concern regarding the fairness of the trials conducted by international judges and prosecutors is the lack of attention that has been given to the rights of the defense.Many of the trial proceedingsare conducted in a language not understood by the accused or their counsel. They are not simultaneously translated in full, but simply summarized. In some cases, translated transcripts of trial proceedings are not available until long after the time for an appeal has passed.It is disturbing that of the war crimes cases conducted only onehas involved a non-Albanian victim. In that case one of the 26 victims was Serb.

Some of the problems Amnesty mentioned: Trials are conducted in absentia; there’s use of anonymous witnesses; reconstructions of the crime take place without the accused and defense counsel being present; poor translation and interpretation and use of summaries by interpreters instead of verbatim interpretation; poorly reasoned, unclear and ‘incomprehensible’ decisions; judgments based on eyewitness testimony contradicted by forensic evidence or the prior testimony of the witnesses; discrepancies between the evidence and the verdict or insufficient evidence to support the verdict; and significant differences between the oral judgment and the written judgment. Otherwise, the judiciary is in great shape, and likely to get even better under E.U. guidance.

No report about Kosovo’s dismal human rights record or its economic and political failure as a ward of international busybodies, no invocation by Serbia and Russia of international law, the Helsinki Final Act or U.N. Resolution 1244 makes any difference: Washington says it will do what it before the invasion of Iraq — ignore the United Nations and recognize independent Kosovo. Brussels says it will do likewise. Unlike 2003, however, the Russians this time have a card up their sleeves. If Kosovo is to be permitted to secede, the Russians have argued, then why not other nationalities or ethnic groups living as minorities within someone else’s state? As examples, President Vladimir Putin pointed to South Ossetia, Abkhazia, Nagorno-Karabakh and Transnistria. But he could have mentioned innumerable others: the Hungarians in Slovakia and Rumania, the Basques and Catalans in Spain, Corsicans in France, the Flemish in Belgium, Russians in Estonia and Latvia, the Turkish Cypriots.

The West responded with fury to the Russians’ argument. Russia’s position is cynical. It has no power to regain Kosovo for Serbia and the Kremlin plays its own secessionist games in Georgia and Moldova. President Vladimir Putin has simply been using Kosovo as a handy stick to beat the West and to remind the world that Russia still wields a Security Council veto, the New York Times thundered in an editorial on Dec. 6, 2007. Holbrooke accused Putin of seeking to reassert Russia’s role as a regional hegemon. The suggestion that Kosovo has any bearing on any other territorial dispute was spurious, he declared. Kosovo is a unique case and sets no precedent for separatist movements elsewhere. Why? [B]ecause in 1999, with Russian support, the United Nations was given authority to decide the future of Kosovo. This is a typically shameless Holbrooke lie. The U.N. was authorized to set up an interim administration under which the people of Kosovo can enjoy substantial autonomy within the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.

Moreover, given the utter failure of the U.N. administration to fulfill most of the provisions of 1244, invoking this resolution as authorizing the U.N. to do something is particularly egregious. According to 1244, among the responsibilities of the interim administration was Demilitarizing the Kosovo Liberation Army, Establishing a secure environment in which refugees and displaced persons can return home in safety and ensuring that an agreed number of Yugoslav and Serbian personnel will be permitted to return to perform the following functions: Liaison with the international civil mission and the international security presence.Maintaining a presence at Serb patrimonial sites; Maintaining a presence at key border crossings. Needless to say, none of this ever took place. In any case, even if the U.N. was given the authority to decide Kosovo’s future, then that’s precisely what Russia, as permanent veto-wielding member of the Security Council, is insisting on by rejecting unilateral secession.

That Kosovo was unique has been the Western officials’ mantra for months. On Dec. 19, Zalmay Khalilzad, permanent U.S. representative to the U.N., told the U.N. Security Council that Kosovo is a unique situation — it is a land that used to be part of a country that no longer exists and that has been administered for eight years by the United Nations with the ultimate objective of definitely resolving Kosovo’s status.The policies of ethnic cleansing that the Milosevic government pursued against the Kosovar people forever ensured that Kosovo would never again return to rule by Belgrade. This is an unavoidable fact and the direct consequence of those barbaric policies.

On Dec. 21, Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs Daniel Fried said Kosovo is obviously a unique case because there’s no other place in the world where the UN has been administering a territory pursuant to a Security Council resolution. So there’s nothing else like it, so it clearly isn’t a precedent. It is our view that Kosovo is not a precedent, not for any place. Not for south Ossetia, not for Abkhazia, not for Transnistria, not for Corsica, not for Texas. For nothing. Nothing. On Nov. 28, Under Secretary for Political Affairs Nicholas Burns declared It’s a unique situation. Milosevic tried to annihilate over one million Kosovar Albanian Muslims. He was denied that by NATO. We fought a war over it. And the United Nations and NATO and the EU have kept the peace there for eight-and-a-half years. And now, fully 94 or 95 per cent of the people that live there are Kosovar Albanian Muslims.

The sheer absurdity of Burns’ hysterical statement illustrates the lengths to which Western officials will go to justify what obviously can’t be justified. Milosevic tried to annihilate over one million Kosovar Albanian Muslims? The Foundation for Humanitarian Law led by Nata_a Kandi_, much beloved and much bankrolled by Western governments and non-governmental organizations, runs a project seeking to establish the number of dead and missing in Kosovo. According to an article in the Croatian magazine, Globus, The project has documented 9,702 people dead or missing during the war in Kosovo from 1998 to 2000. Of this number, as things stand now, 4,903 killed and missing are Albanians and 2,322 are Serbs, with the rest either belonging to other nationalities or their ethnic identity remaining uncertain. One should add also that these numbers say nothing about how people were killed, whether in combat or otherwise, and by whom. And there’s no clarification as to how many were killed by NATO bombs. What these numbers do reveal is that it was the Serbs, not the Albanians, who suffered disproportionately in Kosovo. If Burns is right and fully 94 or 95 per cent of the people that live there are Kosovar Albanian Muslims, that means that there are 19 times as many Albanians as there are Serbs in Kosovo. Yet, according to these numbers, the Albanians’ casualty numbers are only slightly more than twice the size of the Serb casualty numbers.

The war between Armenia and Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh resulted in far worse casualty numbers. The U.S. State Department itself admits, More than 30,000 people were killed in the fighting from 1992 to 1994.According to the CIA, over 800,000 mostly ethnic Azerbaijanis were driven from the occupied lands and Armenia; about 230,000 ethnic Armenians were driven from their homes in Azerbaijan into Armenia.

In any case, if bad treatment of the local population were to disqualify a state from exercising sovereignty over part of its territory, then an awful lot of countries would be eligible for enforced amputation: Turkey would have to be stripped of Turkish Kurdistan; Israel would long ago have been given the boot from the West Bank and other occupied territories; Indonesia would be denied Aceh and Papua; Pakistan would lose Waziristan.

Kosovo’s claim to independent statehood is based on one fact only: The Albanians are the overwhelming majority in Kosovo. They are Muslims in a Christian state to which they don’t want to belong. Yet this argument is convincing only to the willfully ignorant. First, the majority of Kosovo may be Muslim; but the Kosovo Albanians are only a small minority within Serbia as a whole. Kosovo would vote overwhelmingly for independence; Serbia would vote overwhelmingly against. Serbia is a legal entity; Kosovo is not. A Serbian vote trumps a Kosovo one. Second, there is nothing unusual about an overwhelmingly-Muslim inhabited province existing within a state that is overwhelmingly non-Muslim. There are the Muslim Moros who inhabit Mindanao in the Philippines. There is the Xinjiang province in China. There is Kashmir, overwhelmingly Muslim, many of whom live under Indian rule. Russia is replete with provinces in which the population is overwhelmingly Muslim — Tatarstan, Bashkiristan, Dagestan, Chechnya. Northern Cyprus is overwhelmingly Muslim — yet, except for Turkey, no country in the world recognizes it as an independent state. Muslim Narathiwat, Pattani and Yala provinces in Thailand are waging an insurgency to free themselves from Bangkok’s Buddhist rule. And of course, there is the West Bank, yet another Muslim population, subjected to the rule of non-Muslims. In all of these cases, there has been an Islamic insurgency, a war seeking to liberate Muslims from the rule of non-Muslims, and considerable government repression. Yet, Western leaders do not splutter about unsustainable status quos, they do not demand immediate U.N. Security Council action, they do not insist that independence must be granted immediately and they do not threaten to ignore the United Nations and embrace a seceding state.

Moreover, Kosovo has hardly made an even remotely plausible case for its having earned independence. First, for all the talk of Kosovars and Kosovans, the residents of Kosovo identify themselves as either Serb or as Albanian; the languages they speak is either Serbian or Albanian. Creating a second Albanian state in Europe makes no sense whatsoever. It doesn’t govern itself. It is a ward of various international bodies. Economically, it is a basket case, and lives off vast handouts. Kosovo is an example of an ethnic minority grabbing a piece of territory, permitting unrestricted immigration by its co-nationals from a neighboring state, ethnically cleansing the territory of all other groups and thereby creating an artificial overwhelming ethnic majority, and then demanding that these actions be rewarded by the bestowal of independent statehood.

By comparison, the provinces whose demand for recognition the West rejects have been self-governing entities for years. A newly-independent Kosovo would have poor relations with Serbia and would be subjected to an economic blockade. Its electric grid is integrated within Serbia’s electric grid. Its debt has been taken care of by Serbia.

Compare Kosovo with Transnistria. Transnistria declared itself independent of Moldova in 1990. Transnistria functions as a presidential republic, with its own government and parliament. Its authorities have adopted a constitution, flag, a national anthem and a coat of arms. It has its own currency and its own military and police force. Yet the U.S.-E.U. position is that Transnistria has no right to independence, and that Moldova’s territorial integirty must be respected. In 2003, the U.S. and E.U. announced a visa boycott against the 17 members of the leadership of Transnistria, accusing them of continued obstructionism. In 2006, Ukraine introduced new customs regulations on its border with Transnistria, declaring it would only import goods from Transnistria with documents processed by Moldovan customs offices. The U.S., E.U. and OSCE applauded Ukraine’s action, even though it was effectively imposing a blockade. In 2006, Transnistria held a referendum in which 97.2 percent of voters voted for independence. The OSCE refused to send observers, and the E.U. immediately announced that it wouldn’t recognize the referendum results. This is the same OSCE, E.U. and U.S. that, a few months earlier, had leapt to recognize the results of Montenegro’s independence referendum, despite the fact that the vote in favor of independence was a bare majority, rather than the two-thirds normally required for a constitutional change, and that Montenegrins living in Serbia were denied the right to vote in the referendum.

Compare Kosovo with South Ossetia. Ossetians have their own language. South Ossetia had been an autonomous oblast within the Soviet Socialist Republic of Georgia. In 1990, the Georgian Supreme Soviet revoked its autonomy. The OSCE declared its firm commitment to support the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Georgia. In November 2006, 99 percent of South Ossetians voted for independence from Georgia. The usual gaggle of international bodies howled with indignation. The European Union, OSCE, NATO and the USA condemned the referendum. The Council of Europe called the referendum unnecessary, unhelpful and unfair.[T]he vote did nothing to bring forward the search for a peaceful political solution. The OSCE declared South Ossetia’s intention to hold a referendum counterproductive. It will not be recognized by the international community and it will not be recognized by the OSCE and it will impede the peace process. NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer said On behalf of NATO, I join other international leaders in rejecting the so-called ‘referendum’.Such actions serve no purpose other than to exacerbate tensions in the South Caucasus region.

Nagorno-Karabakh can also make a vastly stronger case than Kosovo for independence. Since 1923, the Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast had been part of the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist Republic, even though about 94 percent of its population was Armenian. In November 1991, the parliament of the Azerbaijan SSR abolished the autonomous status of the oblast. In response, in December 1991, Nagorno-Karabakh held a referendum, which overwhelmingly approved the creation of an independent state. Yet the E.U., the OSCE and the United States took the line that Nagorno-Karabakh must remain a part of Azerbaijan, irrespective of the fact that almost 100 per cent of the populace wants out. Interestingly, in declaring itself independent in 1991, Azerbaijan claimed to be the successor state to the Azerbaijan republic that existed from 1918 to 1920. The League of Nations, however, did not recognize Azerbaijan’s inclusion of Nagorno-Karabakh as part of Azerbaijan’s claimed territory. This makes Nagorno-Karabakh’s inclusion within Azerbaijan even more questionable. If the states that seceded from the Soviet Union are to be regarded as independent states, it’s hard to see on what basis parts of those states are to be denied the right to independence.

In 2002, Nagorno-Karabakh held a presidential election; in response, the European Union presidency declared The European Union confirms its support for the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan, and recalls that it does not recognise the independence of Nagorno Karabakh.The European Union cannot consider legitimate the ‘presidential elections.’…The European Union does not believe that these elections should have an impact on the peace process.

In December 2006, Nagorno-Karabakh held another referendum on independence: Something like 98 per cent favored independence. The European Union immediately announced it wouldn’t recognize the results of the referendum and said that only a negotiated settlement between Azerbaijan and ethnic Armenians who control the region can bring a lasting solution.The E.U. recalls that it does not recognize the independence of Nagorno-Karabakh. It recognizes neither the ‘referendum’ nor its outcome. The E.U. added that holding the referendum pre-empts the outcome of negotiations and that it did not contribute to constructive efforts at peaceful conflict resolution. The E.U.’s attitude here is strikingly different from its attitude on Kosovo. On Kosovo, the E.U. holds Serbia’s refusal to relinquish its sovereign territory as the reason for the failure of negotiations, which supposedly is the justification for Kosovo’s declaration of independence.

The West’s entire approach to Kosovo has been marked by sordid dishonesty and bad faith, supporting national self-determination and the right to secession in one place and territorial integrity in another, cheering on ethnic cleansing by one ethnic group and demanding war crimes trials for another, trumpeting the virtues of majority rule when it’s convenient to do so and threatening to impose sanctions and penalties on majorities when that’s convenient. For the Americans, Kosovo is nothing more than the hinterland of a giant military base, a key presence in the eastern Mediterranean should Greece or Turkey prove unreliable. As for the duly grateful Albanians, they are expected to repay their benefactors by agreeing to be cannon fodder in future imperial wars. For the Europeans, Kosovo is an opportunity to show the world that Europe counts for something and to conduct various pointless social experiments in multiculturalism and multiconfessionalism — particularly pointless since Kosovo will be one of the most ethnically homogeneous places in Europe.

–George Szamuely lives in New York and can be reached at:

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