PRISHTINË, 16 Nëntor 2015/ Nga bisedimet Kosovë – Serbi po fiton vetëm Serbia, kurse shpëtimi i Kosovës është ndërrimi i klasës politike me figura të papërlyera, si dhe bashkëpunimi i lartë me Shtetet e Bashkuara. Flet për “Zërin”, ish-diplomati amerikan, David Phillips, kontribuues i lartë në proceset për çlirimin e Kosovës, që nga viti 1989.
Kosova jo vetëm se është vonuar në ndërtimin e një shteti me prosperitet, por edhe është kthyer prapa.
Fatkeqësisht angazhimi i udhëheqësve të shtetit të saj, është i ndikuar nga qëllimet e ambicieve personale të vetëpasurimit.Korrupsioni dhe aktivitetet kriminale kanë lulëzuar.
Kështu thotë për gazetën kosovare “Zëri” ish-këshilltari i OKB-së dhe i Departamentit Amerikan të Shtetit, David Phillips.
Autori i librit “Çlirimi i Kosovës” dhe bashkëpunëtori i ngushtë i ambasadorit Richard Hollbrook kritikon Evropën për politikat e gabuara të saj ndaj Kosovës.
Ai thotë sendarja etno-territoriale e Kosovës është projekt i Millosheviqit, dhe para këtij presioni nuk guxon të bjerë Kosova.
Sipas tij, e vetmja përfituese e bisedimeve Prishtinë – Beograd, është Serbia. Si një parakusht për dialog, BE-ja duhet t’i japë Kosovës liberalizimin e vizave dhe jo ta shpërblejë krejt në fund të procesit.
”Liberalizimi i vizave duhet të jetë një parakusht për angazhimin në negociata politike me Serbinë”, deklaron Phillips.
“Tradition and History Matter to Albanians””
By David L. Phillips/
Tradition and history matter to Albanians. As Kosovars go to the polls on Sunday, they should remember that independence was no gift. The decision to go to war and the determined effort by the United States and its allies to realize Kosova’s independence was the culmination of efforts over many years. The Democratic League of Kosova (LDK) played a pivotal role in giving Kosova’s cause credibility.
The LDK was established as a national party on December 23, 1989. Albanians flocked to join the LDK as an expression of discontent with Serbia’s tyrannical rule. Ibrahim Rugova, whom I am proud to call a friend, was not a professional politician. He was a scholar of literary history and aesthetics whose populist nationalism gave voice to the grievances of Kosova Albanians.
The LDK refused to participate in Serbian elections and boycotted Serbian institutions. When Kosovars went to Parliament on July 2, 1990, the building was blockaded by police. Kosovars met on its steps in an act of defiance. The Kosova Assembly convened in Kacanik and declared independence on September 7, 1990. The LDK’s platform repudiated ethnic cleansing. It rejected minority status for ethnic Albanians in Serbia. It demanded communication and free travel to Albania. A referendum was held on September 26. Ballots were cast by 87% of voters and 99% voted for independence.
I was witness to dozens of meetings between the LDK leadership and U.S. officials. The LDK cultivated strong bipartisan support in the U.S. Congress including Senators Bob Dole and Joe Lieberman, and Congressman Tom Lantos and Bill Broomfield. Kosovars have no better friend on Capitol Hill than Congressman Eliot Engel. These friendships did not spring up overnight. They were the result of hard work by the LDK and Albanian Americans.
Though Kosova had no legal status, the LDK succeeded in working within the UN-system. It was helped by Albania, a UN member State, to make its case. After years of the LDK’s advocacy in Geneva, the UN General Assembly finally adopted a stand-alone Kosova resolution on March 13, 1995. It described discriminatory measures against ethnic Albanians in Kosova – torture, killings, arbitrary arrests, searches, forced evictions, the closing of Albanian-language secondary schools and the university, as well as scientific and cultural institutions. According to an Albanian friend, “We finally got Kosova out of Yugoslavia.”
As the face of Kosova’s independence movement in the United States, Dr. Rugova was committed to working with U.S. officials on political dialogue. These efforts were doomed, however, by Serbia’s aggression. Rugova joined Kosovars deploring the murder of Adem Jeshari and his family in Donji Prekaj on January 22, 1998. Though Rugova accommodated U.S.negotiations at Rambouillet, he knew that Belgrade would never agree. He understood that NATO would only get involved once diplomacy had fully and finally run its course.
As a gesture of appreciation for the LDK’s historic role, the LDK won 21 of 27 contested municipalities and 58% of the popular vote in elections of October 2000. However, Kosova’s interim status was untenable. The 2004 spring riots galvanized action by the international community.
Elections were held in October 2004. Ramush Haradinaj became prime minister on December 3, 2004. Rugova and Haradinaj served together in leadership positions for just 100 days. This period – a “golden age” – represented a unique time in Kosova’s political life. Kosova developed an action plan for self-rule. Kosovars took responsibility for their future.
Mr. Haradinaj was sent to The Hague based on politically motivated and trumped up charges. Under new leadership, Kosova entered a period of stagnation with politicians placing self-interest above the greater good.
Kosovars could see that Dr. Rugova was unwell when he showed up to inaugurate the Mother Teresa Cathedral on August 26, 2005. I was with Dr. Rugova at his home just a few weeks before he died. He wore a baseball cap to cover his balding from chemotherapy. Dr. Rugova was determined to live and celebrate Kosova’s independence, but he passed away in the middle of negotiations. President Bush wrote, “The United States has lost a true friend.” Condoleezza Rice issued a statement, “Even while battling his final illness, President Rugova worked to bring unity to Kosova’s leaders and hope to its people.”
The dream of independence was born at the Kosova Literary Society in 1989. It was realized after Dr. Rugova’s death. I was honored to be in Pristina for independence celebrations on February 17, 1998.
To this day, I am amazed, and proud, that the United States went to war to prevent from happening in Kosova what happened in Bosnia. Kosova was always a bipartisan project in the United States. President Bill Clinton deserves credit for exhausting diplomatic options and then leading NATO’s action in 1999. President George W. Bush also deserves credit for stewarding Kosova’s coordinated declaration of independence.
Today Kosova is free. It is, however, flawed with serious problems. Every UN Member State should recognize Kosova’s independence, but only 106 have recognized it so far.
Now is the time for Kosovars to vote and express their determination for reform. Democracy and good government will make Kosova an equal and respected member of the family of nations.
David L. Phillips is Director of the Program on Peace-building and Rights at Columbia University’s Institute for the Study of Human Rights. He served as a senior adviser and foreign affairs experts at the U.S. Department of State during the administrations of President Clinton, Bush, and Obama. Phillips is author of “Liberating Kosovo: Coercive Diplomacy and U.S. Intervention” (Harvard’s Kennedy School and NBC Publishing).
“Blood Brothers: Milosevic and Putin”
By David L. Phillips/
Slobodan Milosevic and Vladimir Putin are cut from the same cloth. Just as the West’s experience with Milosevic can inform its approach to Putin, diplomacy during the Yugoslav crisis can inform strategies for dealing with Russia today.
The political careers and tactics of Milosevic and Putin are parallel. Neither was democratically elected. Serbia’s President, Ivan Stambolic, appointed Milosevic to head Serbia’s Communist Party. A few years later, Stambolic was murdered and Milosevic took his job. Putin was backed by Boris Yeltsin to succeed him as Russia’s president in 1999.
Milosevic and Putin consolidated their power by exploiting ethnic conflict. Milosevic appealed to the victimization and humiliation of Serbs, declaring martial law in Kosovo and attacking Slovenia, Croatia and Bosnia. Putin attacked Chechnya, razing Grozny, and declaring direct rule from Moscow in 2000.
Both used history and religion to manipulate emotions. Milosevic arranged for the bones of Prince Lazar, who was defeated by the Ottoman Army in Kosovo Polje on June 28, 1389, to be disinterred from the Ravanica Monastery and toured around Serbia. He proclaimed that the organ pipes of the Decani Monastery in Kosovo were forged from the swords of Serbian nobility slain in battle. According to Milosevic, “One time we were brave and dignified, and one of the few who went into battle undefeated. Six centuries later, we are again in battles and quarrels.”
Putin also highlighted historical injustice to rile Russians. He told the Federal Assembly on March 18, 2014: “Everything in Crimea speaks of our shared history and pride. This is the location of ancient Khersones, where Prince Vladimir was baptized. His spiritual feat of adopting Orthodoxy predetermined the overall basis of the culture, civilization and human values that unite the peoples of Russia, Ukraine and Belarus.” Putin condemned encroachment “next to our homeland or in territories that were historically ours.”
Milosevic and Putin were adept at propaganda. Serbia’s state-controlled media repeatedly characterized Albanians as “Shiptars,” a derogatory slur. Bosnian Muslims were called “Turks” and mujahedeen.” Milosevic linked Croatia’s pro-democracy forces in the 1990s with the Ustase Independent State of Croatia, a Nazi puppet regime let by Ante Pavelic during World War II.
Russia’s state media has likewise been unrelenting in its criticism of the new authorities in Kiev. In an interview with hand-picked journalists, Putin maintained: “Nationalists, neo-Nazis, Russophobes and anti-Semites executed this coup.” He described them as the ideological heirs to Anton Bandera, Hitler’s Ukrainian accomplice.
Milosevic and Putin conjure conspiracies. Milosevic railed against NATO’s 1999 military action in Kosovo. Putin complained, “[The West] lied to us many times, took decisions behind our backs, and presented us with an accomplished fact.” He feels betrayed by NATO’s expansion to the East, its welcome to countries on Russia’s borders, and the deployment of an anti-ballistic missile system to former Warsaw Pact countries.
Both Milosevic and Putin embrace irredentism. Milosevic’s project was to create a greater Serbia from the ashes of Yugoslavia. As a result, more than one hundred thousand people died and millions were displaced during the death of Yugoslavia.
Putin believes that the greatest tragedy of the 20th century was the Soviet Union’s demise. “Millions of people went to bed in one country and awoke in different ones, overnight becoming ethnic minorities in former Union republics, while the Russian nation became one of the biggest, if not the biggest ethnic group in the world to be divided by borders.”
Putin is seeking to restore Imperial Russia, reunifying lost territory where Russians reside. “Kiev is the mother of Russian cities. Ancient Rus is our common source and we cannot live without each other.” Putin uses the term “Novorossiya” or “New Russia” when referring to parts of eastern and southern Ukraine. “Kharkiv, Luhansk, Donetsk, Odessa were not part of Ukraine in czarist times. They were transferred in 1920. Why? God knows.”
Both advanced their insidious agenda through paramilitaries. Milosevic sponsored Chetnik gangs in Serb populated regions of Bosnia and Croatia. His proxies declared the Republika Srspska in Bosnia and the Serbian Republic of Krajina in Croatia. Arkan and his “Tigers,” backed by Belgrade, led murderous assaults on Bijeljina and Zvornik terrorizing civilians and driving them from their homes. Milosevic claimed they were acting on their own. However, he was indicted by the International Criminal Court (ICC) for atrocities committed by surrogates under his control.
Putin maintains that unmarked troops in Crimea were spontaneously organized self-defense forces made up of concerned citizens. “Volunteers” seized government buildings in Eastern and Southern Ukraine. They were well-equipped with brand new Kalashnikovs, shoulder launched missiles, and state-of-the art communications gear. Putin disavows ties to paramilitaries who declared the People’s Republic of Donetsk.” Will Putin end up in the dock like Milosevic, indicted by the ICC for war crimes committed by Russian military intelligence under his control?
Understanding parallels between Milosevic and Putin can also inform strategies for preventing the escalation of deadly violence in Ukraine, and deterring Russia’s further cross-border aggression.
I served as counselor to the Bosnian delegation to the London Conference of August 26-27, 1992. What happened last week at peace talks between Russia, Ukraine, the United States and the EU in Geneva bears striking similarity with events in London 22 years ago.
The Bosnian delegation was promised peace. Secretary of State Larry Eagleburger and British Prime Minister John Major offered airtight sanctions. They also proposed to sequester artillery shelling Sarajevo. Foreign Minister Haris Silajdzic protested: “These are just words. We have no guarantees. My people are being slaughtered every day.” Major replied, “You have my word of honor. If the shelling of Sarajevo does not stop in 30 days, the Royal Air Force will be overhead.”
Milosevic and the Serb delegation agreed to demands of the international community, just as Russia promised to use its influence to remedy the crisis in eastern Ukraine. Both lied. Better rope-a-dope than confrontation.
Bosnia offers three fundamental lessons about diplomacy:
Deadlines are mandatory.
Agreements must be monitored.
Enforcement is critical.
Milosevic rhetorically acceded to the West’s demands, while Serbia consolidated its gains on the battlefield. Like Milosevic, Putin is buying time. And like Milosevic, Putin is counting on trans-Atlantic divisions to undermine a coherent international response.
Both Milosvic and Putin are cunning and crafty. Last week’s Geneva agreement established that “all sides must refrain from any violence, intimidation, or provocative action.” Predictably, Russian-backed paramilitaries ignored Russia’s entreaties to lay down their arms, lift roadblocks, and cease illegally occupation of government buildings. They are goading the Ukrainian Government to use force. This is just what Putin wants. Geneva established the terms to justify Russia’s overt military intervention.( Huffington Post)
*Phillips is Director of the Program on Peace-building and Rights at Columbia University’s Institute for the Study of Human Rights. He is author of “Liberating Kosovo: Coercive Diplomacy and U.S. Intervention”.
Danielle Goldberg
Program Coordinator
Program on Peace-building and Rights
Institute for the Study of Human Rights
Columbia University
Ramush Haradinaj duartokitet në Columbia University
Ish kryeministri i Kosovës, Ramush Haradinaj, po zvillon takime dhe veprimtari të shumta në New York dhe nesër, 24 shtator, shkon për takime të planifikuara në Washington, për t’u rikthyer sërish në Nju Jork, me 27 shtator, ku është i ftuar në mbrëmjen që organizon Këshilli Kombëtar Shqiptaro-Amerikan. Ditën e djeshme, e dielë 22 shtator, ai ka qenë mysafir fillimisht në Shtëpinë e Federatës Panshqiptare të Amerikës VATRA, ku u prit me ngrohtësi nga kryetari Bucaj dhe kryesia, ku ishin të pranishëm edhe anëtarë të Këshillit të Vatrës. Z. Haradinaj, tha gjatë takimit me vatranët se e kishte pritur prej kohësh këtë vizitë në shtëpinë e Vatrës historike që ka bërë aq shumë për Kombin tonë. Haradinaj vlerësoi rolin e madh që ka luajtur diaspora shqiptare në Amerikë për ndërkombëtarizimin e Kosovës dhe evidentoi kontributin finacar që shqiptarët e Amerikës dhe ata të Kosovës, kanë dhënë gjatë dhe pas luftës. Haradinaj, në shenjë nderimi, i dhuroi Vatrës një dhuratë simbolike, -Një Hartë të Kosovës me gurë të cmuar. Z. Haradinaj vizitoi Ekspozitën “100 vitet e Vatrës në shërbim të Kombit” si dhe bibliotekën e Nolit e Konicës. Një bisedë e ngrohtë u zhvillua në sallën e mbledhejve, ku morën pjesë edhe zotërinjët Harry Bajraktari dhe Rrustem Gecaj.
Një pritje e ngrohtë iu rezervua z. Haridanaj në Kishën Katolike Shqiptare Zoja e Shkodrës në New York. Z. Haradinaj mori pjesë ne Meshë. Ai me zonjën u nderuan duke u vendosur në radhën e parë dhe aty ndoqën meshën. Prezantimi që i bëri famullitari i Kishës, dom Pjetër Popaj,heroit të Kosovës, u prit me duartrokitje të qindra besimtarëve që kishin mbushur plot sallën e lutjeve. Mysafiri i nderuar i dhuroi Kishës një dhuratë simbolike të Kosvës. Më pas z. Haradinaj u zhvendos në Qendrën Kulturore “ Nëna Terezë” , ku radha për ta takuar dhe për t’u fotografuar me të, ishte shumë e gjatë. Ai u prit tamam si hero.
Po ditën e dielë z. Haradinaj është takuar me kryetarin e qytetit të Mannhatan-it, z. Stringer. Kryetari i Aleancës Haradinaj ka folur për zhvillimet aktuale në Kosovë dhe përgatitjet që po bëhen në prag të zgjedhjeve lokale që do të organizohen në vjeshtën e këtij viti. Ai ka bashkëbiseduar më kryetarin Stringer për modalitetet e qeverisjes lokale si dhe ka folur për vizionin që ka AAK për qeverisjen lokale në Kosovë.
Kryetari i Manhatenit z. Stringer dhe përfaqësuesit e komunitetit shqiptar atje, i kanë ndarë kryetarit Haradinaj një mirënjohje me dedikim Heroit të Kombit – njeriut të orëve të para të Ushtrisë Clirimtare të Kosovës.
Kryetari Stringer i ka shpejguar kryetarit Haradinaj për raportet e mira që ka me komunitetin shqiptar, për rolin dhe rëndësinë e këtij komuniteti në të gjitha zhvillimet e rëndësishme në Manhaten dhe më gjerë në SHBA.
Të dielën e 22 shtatorit, i shoqëruar nga z. Harry Bajraktari dhe Rrustem Gecaj , zoti Haradinaj dhe zonja Anita, ishin në një takim me ambasador Wizner.
Një takim i përzemërt ishte edhe ai i mbrëmjes të së dielës, ku dega e Vatrës Hudson Valley, shtroi një darkë në Restorantin Fiorino, pronë e bashkatdhetarit Sabit Bytyci, një nga vatranët e hershëm dhe anëtar i Këshillit të Vatrës.Në këtë darkë ishin të pranishëm edhe kongresmen Eliot Engel dhe ambasador Menes, Konsulli i përgjitshëm i Shqipërisë Dritan Mishto, anëtari i Asamblesë të shtetit të Nju Jorkut, Mark Gjonaj e të tjerë.
Pronari i restorantit Sabit Bytyci u ka uruar mirëseardhjen e mysafirëve dhe ka prezantuar dr. Gjon Bucaj, i cili prezantoi mysafirët dhe foli për heroin e Kosovës Ramush Haradinaj, rolin e tij gjatë luftës, humbjen në këtë luftë të vëllait të tij dëshmor, lirimin nga akuzat e Gjykatës së Hagës,rolin si kryeministër, etj. Për mysafirin e nderuar dhe për Kosovën kanë folë e përshëndetur, Konresiti Eliot Engel, ambasador Mens, Mark Gjonaj, Dritan Mishto, Harry Bajraktari, Elmi Berisha e të tjerë. Më pas fjalën e ka marrë Ramush Haradinaj, i cili tha se ndjehej i gëzuar që ishte në këtë darkë bashkëatdhetarësh, në një restorant shqiptar, mes miqëve amerikanë, që kanë bërë aq shumë për Kosovën. Më pas ai foli për Kosovën, problematikën e saj, përballjen me korrupsionin, problemet e veriut, marrdhëniet etnike dhe ato fetare etj.
Të Hënën e 23 shtatorit, ish kryeministri i Kosovës, z. Haradinaj, ishte i ftuar në Columbia University për të zhvilluar një ligjëratë për Kosovën. Ai ligjëroi në Shkollën Për marrdhënie Publike dhe Ndërkombëtare në Universitetin e Kolombias në New York, e njohur si auditor i hapur i fjalës së lirë nga shumë personalitete botërore. David Philips ka prezantuar ligjëruesin duke vlerësuar figurën e tij si një luftëtar popullor me përmasat e heroit dhe një lider me vizion bashkekohor. Më pas z. Philips foli për Kosovën, qëndresën dhe luftën e saj, dhe përpjekjet për ndërtimin e shtetit, për diplomacinë, për ndërhyrjen dhe mbështetjen amerikane etj. David Philips është i njohur mes shqiptarëve edhe me librin e tij” Liberating Kosvo- Coercive Diplomacy and U.S Intervention.”
Në ligjëratën e tij, me një anglishte elokuente, në një auditor ku kishte studentë e pedagogë, studiues të interesuar, Ramush Haradinaj, fitoi admirim dhe u duartrokit nxehtësisht. Pa letra përpara ai foli për Kosovën martire, qëndresën e saj stoike ndaj dhunës së regjimit të Milloshevicit, lufën për liri, mbështetjen amerikane dhe europiane, foli për Kosovën shtet i pavarur, njohjet ndërkombëtare, përballjen sot me problematikat e reja dhe të vjetra,foli për veriun, për marrdhëniet ndëretnike dhe ato fetare, për marrdhëniet e Kosovës me shtetet fqinjë, për burokracinë dhe korrupsionin dhe shaplosi vizionin e vetë për ndryshimin e gjendjes, foli për popullin e mrekullueshëm, për moshën e re të pupullsisë, për resurset natyrore të Kosovës etj.
Pas ligëjratës u bënë shumë pyetje që Haradinaj u përgjigj me qetësi dhe argumente.
Në takim ishin edhe veprimtarë të Komunitetit shqiptarë si Xhim Xhema, Harry Bajraktari, Rrustem Gecaj, Lumi Hadri, Elmi Berisha, Anton Raja, Mimoza Ferra, Grid Roji, Uk Lushi,e të tjerë .(Dalip Greca)
“Intervention Lessons From Kosovo for Syria”
By David L. Phillips/
President Bill Clinton intervened in the Balkans to end a war in Bosnia and stop the slaughter of civilians in Kosovo. As the United States considers military intervention in Syria, the Obama administration should reflect on America’s Balkan engagements in the 1990s, considering what was done right — and wrong.
The international community took more than 3 years to stop ethnic cleansing in Bosnia. While it dithered, more than 100,000 people were killed and millions displaced. The response to Serbia’s aggression in Kosovo was faster and more effective. NATO launched a 78-day air campaign that prevented what happened in Bosnia from happening in Kosovo. The diplomacy and military operations were imperfect, but Kosovo is the gold standard in humanitarian intervention.
Here are some lessons from Kosovo that are relevant to Syria:
-Diplomacy comes first: After more than a quarter million Kosovo Albanians fled to the mountains during the summer of 1998, the U.S.-led Contact Group, which included Russia, negotiated the Kosovo Verification Mission (KVM) to verify the withdrawal of Serb forces, enable the return of displaced Kosovars, and ensure the delivery of humanitarian supplies. The KVM was suspended after 40 Kosovo civilians were massacred in Racak, including women and children.
-Back diplomacy with the threat of force: After Racak, NATO approved an “activation order,” the last step in force readiness before launching an attack. U.S. Special Envoy Richard C. Holbrooke issued an ultimatum, but Slobodan Milosevic scoffed at Holbrooke’s threat. NATO launched limited operations, then paused. Holbrooke called Milosevic to give him a last chance, but his entreaties were ignored. NATO’s full force was unleashed only after all diplomatic options were exhausted.
-Build international coalitions: With the UN Security Council paralyzed, the U.S. abandoned efforts to gain a UN resolution and focused its diplomacy on building consensus among NATO Member States. NATO did not act alone. It was backed by the Organization of Islamic Conference and statements by the UN Secretary General.
-Gain Congressional and public support: The Clinton administration worked effectively with civil society groups and the media to expose Milosevic’s criminal regime and make the case for military action. Intervention was supported by a broad bipartisan group of lawmakers. Albanian-Americans played a key role garnering support.
-Keep all options on the table: Clinton pledged no U.S. ground troops. Milosevic believed he could withstand NATO’s air campaign, and hunkered down. Milosevic
finally capitulated after 78 days of intensive bombing.
-Expect retaliation: Serbia intensified its ethnic cleansing when NATO attacked. Serbian forces went door-to-door, assassinating Kosovo Albanian leaders and displacing more than one million Kosovars. The U.S. had conducted extensive contingency planning. Expecting population flows, humanitarian supplies were pre-positioned in Macedonia and Albania.
-Anticipate collateral damage: NATO mistakenly bombed a convoy of Albanian refugees fleeing Decani, killing 73 civilians. In the fog of war, NATO also accidentally bombed the Chinese embassy in Belgrade. Clinton personally apologized, but the incident entrenched China’s opposition to the war.
-Work with insurgents: Target selection became more difficult as the bombing campaign dragged on. NATO cooperated with the Kosova Liberation Army to identify targets and track Serbian troop movements. The KLA was an essential force on-the-ground that helped guide NATO air operations.
-Hand-over power to a credible local partner: American diplomats worked intensively to forge cooperation among Kosovar leaders. The Kosovo “Unity Team” became the nucleus of post-Milosevic administration in Kosovo.
-Walk-the-talk: In the middle of the Kosovo conflict, dignitaries from around the world gathered in Washington, D.C. to celebrate the 50th anniversary of NATO’s founding. The Clinton administration understood that Kosovo was more than a test of Western diplomacy. The future of the North Atlantic Alliance was also at-stake.
Has the Obama administration taken on-board lessons from Kosovo?
The United States is diplomatically isolated, except for France which endorsed air strikes against Syria. Even Great Britain, America’s erstwhile ally in Iraq and Afghanistan, has balked. The Obama administration released its intelligence verifying Assad’s use of chemical weapons too late to influence the British parliament’s vote to authorize use of force. After the vote, Obama offended Britain by referring to France as America’s “oldest ally.”
Though Russia and China have vetoed three resolutions designed to pressure Assad, the Obama administration has bent over backwards to work with Russia on talks between the regime and opposition. The Geneva conference was stillborn from the beginning, and has recently been overtaken by events. Hezbollah entered the battlefield, rolling-back gains by the insurgents and further regionalizing the conflict.
Indignation is the right response to Assad’s use of chemical weapons. However, the threat of military action is more effective when demanding compliance rather than as a punitive measure. With U.S. tomahawk cruise missiles locked and loaded, the Obama administration should demand that Assad sequester chemical weapons under UN control or hand over field commanders to the International Criminal Court. It could also give Assad a deadline to relinquish power.
Some Members of Congress want air strikes to advance the goal of regime change. But who will succeed Assad? Syria’s insurgency is dominated by the Al-Nusra Front, an al-Qaeda affiliated terror group murdering Alawites, moderate Arab Sunnis, and Syrian Kurds. Just like Kosovo when more than 100,000 Serbs fled after Milosevic was defeated, reprisals resulting in a bloodbath are a real possibility when Assad steps down.
Secretary of State John Kerry has been a passionate point man in the recent flurry of public diplomacy. However, the administration has not done enough to explain why it is in America’s national interest to attack Syria. Given public skepticism, Obama’s decision to consult lawmakers is a high-stakes gambit. Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton launched strikes against Libya, Afghanistan and Kosovo without asking Congressional authorization.
Obama repeatedly characterized military action as “limited and narrow.” He called it a “shot across the bow.” He also publicly ruled out the possibility of ground troops. Taking the middle ground satisfies no one. Opponents to military action are not convinced. At the same time, moderation may be alienating some senators clamoring for a more robust response.
Obama is clearly a reluctant warrior. He understands that Americans are weary from a decade of conflict in distant lands. However, Obama has boxed himself into a corner. Speaking at an impromptu news conference more than a year ago, he went off-script saying that President Bashar al-Assad’s use or movement of chemical weapons represents a “red-line” that would change his administration’s “calculus,” with significant consequences including the possibility of more direct U.S. intervention in the conflict.
Drawing a red-line is morally correct. It is also in America’s national security interest. I visited Iraqi Kurdistan after chemical weapons were used to kill thousands. It was a horrific scene. Indiscriminate use of the world’s most heinous weapons against civilians violates international humanitarian law and norms of decency. Just like Milosevic’s murderous rampage in Bosnia and Kosovo, it cannot be tolerated.
However, military action is a tactic not a policy. The decision to go to war should be linked to a broader strategy of creating a safe haven on Syria’s border with Syria and Jordan. The safe haven would be protected by a no-fly-zone, enforced by NATO. As was the case in Kosovo, a Russian contingent under NATO’s command could be deployed. The safe haven would allow refugees to return to Syria. It would also provide a buffer between Syria and front-line states, furthering stability in the region. Creating a safe haven could also change momentum on the battlefield, revitalizing prospects for a Geneva conference and bringing the grinding conflict in Syria closer to an end.
(David L. Phillips is Director of the Program on Peace-building and Rights at the Institute for the Study of Human Rights. His most recent book is Liberating Kosovo: Coercive Diplomacy and U.S. Intervention).