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The
twilight of the European Project.
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By Peter Gowan.
In the midsts of the bombing campaign it is impossible for
us to grasp the full significance of the NATO war against
Yugoslavia. This is particularly true for those of us living in
NATOland since the war, for us, is purely synthetic experience,
television images as part of our daily, normal routine and images
which are themselves increasingly routinised and thus normal. Indeed
for us the whole war is part of our everyday routine: yesterday it
was Iraq, some newsflashes about Sudan and somebody with an exotic
name in Afghanistan, today Kosovo, tomorrow Taiwan -- all far away
places which we naturally care deeply about but about which we know
little and need to know less.
But one of the significant consequences of the NATO attack on
Yugoslavia is almost certainly that it marks the end of the European
project as a political project for Western and Central Europe. That
political project could only have succeed if the member states of
the European Union had been prepared to stick to their words and
reconstruct the European political order as a norm-based rather than
a power-politics based system, becoming democratic and embracing the
Eastern part of the continent. This war seems certain to bring that
effort to an end. A gathering of intellectuals at the Marc-Bloc
Foundation in Paris on 29th May, entitled 'After the Emotion the
Political Reflection began to tackle this question seriously. Claude
Lanzmann, the producer of Shoah, the documentary account of the
Holocaust spoke. He said that the NATO attack on Yugoslavia was a
new Dreyfus Affair. It is, but this time with a whole European
nation, the Serbs, cast in the role of Dreyfus. A handful of French
intellectuals sensed quickly that the whole case against Dreyfus was
constructed out of lies. Millions upon millions of people across
Europe now see the Serb nation for what it is: a victim of the power
plays of Western powers which have constructed this war on a
foundation of lies, shattering the entire normative scaffolding upon
which the new Europe was supposed to be built. Powerful States can
and so wage wars rooted in fictions and falsehoods, and get away
with it. But attempts to build transnational, post-nation state
structures like the European Union, the Council of Europe or the
OSCE on a power politics that displays contempt for the supposedly
founding principles of such bodies are unlikely to be sustainable.
The continuation of the European project as a form of political
development for Europe will be possible only if one of two
conditions are met: either the NATO Dreyfus affair in the Western
Balkans can be quickly forgotten in a rapid move to prosperity,
peace and hope in a reconstructed Western Balkans; or the political
and intellectual resources of Europe are mobilised to decisively
repudiate the entire aggressive war against Serbia and against a
tolerable future for all the peoples in that region. Neither of
these two conditions seems a remote possibility. As a result, the
European project is likely to become a Single Market project,
harmonised with the requirements of American business plus a
currency under American tutelage. And the tendency will be for the
main West European powers to be constantly involved in power
politics manoeuvres on an American led agenda, manoeuvres focused
largely on mounting chaos in the Eastern and South Eastern part of
the continent.
The NATO attack on Yugoslavia was the result of American diplomacy,
just as the war itself is essentially an American war legitimated by
the fact that it is run as a NATO war. For many months during 1998,
the West European powers did try to resist the American drive for a
NATO war. Their resistance was partly based upon the fact that there
strategic interests differed from those of the Americans but the
form of their resistance was that of attempting to resolve the
conflict in Yugoslavia by mediation and by peaceful means. But in
late January,1999 the British and the French governments broke ranks
and lined up behind the Clinton Administration for war.
Thus to understand the current war we have to understand the
character of American aims. There are broadly speaking two
approaches to this question. One approach says that the Clinton
Administration was reacting to events in the Western Balkans in
deciding to go for war. Its aims were governed by the plight of the
Kosovar Albanians. This line of argument then leads to the
conclusion that there was an extraordinary mismatch between US aims
and US methods, a mismatch which the European pundits supporting the
war explain by reference to supposed American stupidity. We will
survey the diplomatic background and the launch of the war to
explore the validity of this theory which we will call the Theory of
American Stupidity. In doing so we will show how the approaches of
the US and the West Europeans to the Kosovo issue in the run-up to
war were not complementary: they were directly contradictory. The US
approach undermined European efforts at mediation and peaceful
resolution of the conflict. The West European approaches constantly
undermined the US drive for war, until the Franco-British turn in
January 1999. Those who support the war need to address this
conflict of approaches in order to provide themselves with a
consistent position. They can say that the European approach was
complicit with the Serbian government; or they can say that the US
approach was responsible for much of the terrible sufferings of the
Kosovo Albanians both before the NATO attack and especially after it
had begun. But they should not evade these issues.
But there is a second way of understanding US aims in launching this
war. This says that the Clinton Administration's drive for war was
dictated by US strategic political aims in Europe and in the
international arena and thus that a war against Yugoslavia over
Kosovo was simply an instrument in US geopolitical strategy: the
Kosovo Albanians' plight was a pretext and the Kosovar Albanian
political groups were simply pawns. This view is, of course,
anathema to the media pundits in NATOland, but it is overwhelmingly
popular in the foreign offices and state executives of the states of
Europe and of the entire world. On this view, the war demonstrates
one central lesson: the inability of the main West European powers
to sustain a collective political will in the face of unremitting US
pressure. Thus, despite the very strong political and economic
interests of the main West European capitalist states in maintaining
a collective stance in the face of US manoeuvres over European
affairs, their rivalries and vanities can always ultimately be
exploited by the US to divide them. In essence this gives us a
theory of the current war in terms of the West European states'
stupidities. We will examine that theory, which we will call the
Theory of European Stupidity.
Of course, the word 'stupidity' is a polite one, it is a neutral,
problem-solving word, without significant ethical connotations. It
is necessary, perhaps to add that the word is used here in an
ironical sense. The moral and political consequences of this war for
Europe are terrible to contemplate. The hopes of a better future for
the continent 10 years ago are over. Never glad confident morning in
Europe again, at least not for decades. The next phase of European
history will be marked by the efforts of the United States to push
further its drive for global hegemony in Europe and elsewhere. As
soon as it has finished its bombing campaign in the Western Balkans
it will switch its pitiless gaze East towards the coming truly
awesome confrontation with China. Back and forth between Asia and
Europe the US will move, attempting to beat the world into shape for
the next millennium. The really strong arguments for the NATO war
are actually the general arguments for US global hegemony. These
take two forms. First, those who actually believe that US hegemony
will produce a new world of global citizens rights, global
prosperity and global justice. Secondly, the pragmatists argue that
we cannot buck the trend, we must bandwagon with the hegemon in
order to subvert it later from within its secure security zone. That
subversion will take the form of transforming hegemonic dominance
into a cosmopolitan set of institutions of global governance and
justice. We will survey those arguments at the end of this article.
PART 1: THE THEORY OF AMERICAN STUPIDITY
The notion of American stupidity is really a British idea. It has
been a double-sided notion throughout the post-war period in
Britain: on one side it is a variety of Anti-Americanism much
beloved in the British upper classes (especially those on the
Right); on the other side it is a message of hope -- perhaps we can
be cleverer than the Americans and manipulate them to our advantage.
Thus have the British upper classes reconciled themselves to being
constantly managed -- often for the benefit of the world's
populations, as in the case of Suez -- by successive American
administrations in an uninterrupted progress of British decline. The
notion of American Stupidity is now becoming a European idea during
the course of the present war. It has become the absolutely central
conceptual mechanism for overcoming the contradictions in the
efforts to justify the NATO air war against Yugoslavia.
These contradictions derive from one single source: the attempt to
explain the origins of the NATO attack as lying in a reactive effort
to respond to the plight of the Kosovar Albanians. The
contradictions disappear if we explain the attack as an attempt
involve the European NATO members in a war to destroy the existing
Serbian state. But that latter explanation raises a great many new
questions about this war which NATO governments are seeking, so far
very successfully, to evade.
The distinction between seeking to help the Kosovar Albanians and
seeking to destroy the existing Serbian state may seem a fine one.
Common sense may suggest that the two goals are simply two sides of
a single coin: supporting one side in a local conflict against the
other side. But the NATO attack on Yugoslavia has involved much more
than support for one side against another. It has entailed a
decision by NATO to overthrow the normative cornerstones of the
post-war international order: the principle of state sovereignty and
the outlawing of aggression against a state without UN Security
Council mandate. To take that step, the NATO powers could not simply
claim that they were opposed to the domestic policies of the
Yugoslav state. They had to claim that they were taking drastic
action to save the Kosovo Albanians from a genocidal catastrophe.
More, they had to claim that nothing other than military aggression
against Serbia could prevent the catastrophe because all other
methods had been tried and had failed.
>From this stance come all the contradictions in the NATO position.
For during the 14 months up to the launch of the NATO war, the West
European and Russian governments were in continuous conflict with
the USA over Kosovo, the USA systematically tried to sabotage a
peaceful settlement of the conflict in Yugoslavia and the way in
which the Clinton Administration launched the war invited a
genocidal slaughter of the Kosovo Albanians.
The European variant says that for 14 months the 'International
Community' tried every possible means of resolving the conflict
peacefully. All efforts were thwarted by the Yugoslav authorities.
So there was no choice but to turn to US air power. The US variant
claims that for 14 months the US was struggling to gain agreement to
a war against Yugoslavia, but the Europeans and Russians were
blocking war. But finally, the US managed to push the Russians out
of the picture (along with the UN) and bounce the West Europeans
into a just war that they had been resisting.
These two variants may not appear incompatible, but a glance at that
14 month history shows that they were, because the failure of the
European-Russian efforts to gain a negotiated solution was the
direct result of the activities of the US State Department. Only for
a brief moment at the very start of the current phase of the Kosovo
crisis did the USA appear to be on the same line as the Europeans,
in viewing the KLA as a terrorist group. To search for the real
origins of the war we need to survey this history.
1. The US both encouraged the Serbian government to launch the
counter-insurgency and wanted war against the Serbian government
because of its counter-insurgency.
From early March 1998, Albright wanted war against Serbia on the
grounds that the Serbian government was genocidal. On March
7th,1998, just after and in response to the Serbian security force
operation in the Benitsar region of Kosovo, she declared: "We are
not going to stand by and watch the Serbian authorities do in Kosovo
what they can no longer get away with doing in Bosnia." Two days
later she reserved the right for the US to take unilateral action
against the Serbian government, saying, 'We know what we need to
know to believe we are seeing ethnic cleansing all over again.' This
remained the US line right the way through from that first Serbian
counter-insurgency drive against the KLA in Benitsar: Albright
demanded war against Serbia. But the signal for the Serbian
government to launch its counter-insurgency in Benistar also,
intriguingly, came from Albright's own State Department. This signal
was given by the United States special envoy to the region,
Ambassador Gelbard. The BBC correspondent in Belgrade reported that
Gelbard flew into Belgrade to brand the KLA as a terrorist group.
' "I know a terrorist when I see one and these men are terrorists,"
he said...At the time, the KLA was believed to number just a several
hundred armed men. Mr. Gelbard's words were interpreted in the
Yugoslav capital, Belgrade, as a green light for a security forces
operation against the KLA and the special police conducted two raids
in the Benitsar region in March.'
So the Clinton administration encouraged the Serbian
counter-insurgency in order to liberate the Kosovo Albanians from it
through a NATO war. The Europeans on the other hand, wanted the
Serbian counter-offensive against the KLA to result in an
internationally brokered compromise peace granting Kosovo Autonomy
within Serbia.
2. The ''international community' tried for 14 months to broker a
peaceful solution, but the Clinton Administration did not.
The UN (in its resolution 1199), the West European powers and the
Russians sought, during 1998, to bring about a cease fire and a
negotiated solution in Kosovo, granting autonomy to the Albanians
within Serbia. The Serbian government, from March 1998 declared its
support for this, and there was support for this approach, as an
interim solution, from the Rugova shadow government in Pristina.
Only two major actors opposed this: Madeleine Albright and the KLA.
Albright and the whole Clinton administration gave massive political
support to the KLA, undermining the line of the other members of the
Contact Group and the line of UN resolution 1199.
Support for the KLA did not involve support for its aims: the
Clinton administration has always opposed the aims of both the KLA
and the Rugova leadership, both of whom demand independence for
Kosovo. The Clinton administration did, however, support the KLA's
means -- guerrilla warfare against the Serbian state -- by
repeatedly and vigorously making demands upon the Serbian government
which strengthened and encouraged the KLA war.
This US support for the KLA became unequivocal by June 1998, by
which time NATO military planning for an attack on Yugoslavia was
completed. In that month, White House spokesperson Mike McCurry
asserted that Serbia 'must immediately withdraw security units
involved in civilian repression, without linkage to...the 'stopping
of terrorist activity.' In parallel, Pentagon spokesperson Kenneth
Bacon said: 'We don't think that there should be any linkage between
an immediate withdrawal of forces by the Yugoslavs on the one hand,
and stopping terrorist activities, on the other. There ought to be
complete withdrawal of military forces so that negotiations can
begin.' In other words, Washington was insisting that before any
cease-fire or negotiations on a Kosovo peace settlement, the Serbian
authorities must withdraw all their forces for Kosovo, handing over
the territory to the KLA's military forces despite the fact that the
urban Albanian population of Kosovo was far more pro-Rugova than the
KLA. As Gary Dempsey explains, the US was demanding that the Serbian
government 'effectively hand over one of its territories to an
insurgency movement.....This...led many ethnic Albanians to further
conclude that the Clinton administration-- despite its official
statements to the contrary -- backed their goal of
independence....Although US policy was officially opposed to
independence for Kosovo, Washington would not allow Belgrade to
forcibly resist it.'
Air War supporters thus have a choice of interpretations on these
matters: either the US was right to back the KLA and sharpen the
internal conflict in preparation for a NATO attack, in which case
the Europeans are the Russians were presumably covert supporters of
the dictatorial, genocidal Milosevic regime. Alternatively, they can
argue that the European-Russians-UN were right to seek an internal
cease-fire and negotiated solution and the US was wrong to try to
sabotage this. But Air War supporters cannot embrace both variants.
3. Sabotaging the October 13th Cease-Fire:
On 13th October, Albright's rival in the Clinton administration,
Richard Holbrooke, negotiated a cease-fire agreement with Yugoslav
President Milosevic. The cease-fire would be monitored in Kosovo by
OSCE observers. Milosevic agreed on the basis that the US
administration would ensure that the KLA did observe the cease-Fire.
But the Clinton administration sabotaged the whole operation. The
OSCE monitors did not enter Kosovo for a whole month after the
agreement. During that time, the KLA did not respect the cease-fire,
continued its operations and extended its reach in Kosovo. During
the delay, the Clinton administration took control of the OSCE,
placed William Walker, a key organiser of the Contra operation in
Nicaragua and the blood-bath in El Salvador, in charge of the OSCE
monitoring force. Some 2,000 trained monitors waiting in Bosnia to
be sent into Kosovo were blocked by the US, who put US ex-military
personnel in as the monitoring force and from mid-November they
surveyed every bridge, cross-roads, official building, security
force billet and barracks -- every item that could be relevant to a
future NATO-KLA joint offensive.
At the same time the European-Russian-UN line continued to be to
seek an internal solution and blamed the KLA for the failure to
achieve it. Thus, for example, at their General Affairs Council on
8th December, 1998, Cook and the other foreign ministers of the EU
assessed the situation in Kosovo. The report of the meeting in the
Agence Europe Bulletin of the following day stated: 'At the close of
its debate on the situation in the Western Balkans, the General
Affairs Council mainly expressed concern for the recent
'intensification of military action' in Kosovo, noting that
'increased activity by the KLA has prompted an increased presence of
Serbian security forces in the region.' ' Thus, the EU saw the KLA
as the driving force undermining the possibility of a cease fire and
a compromise solution. They were simply on a different line from
Albright. And they continued to be right through January.
4.Turning the Rambouillet Negotiations into an Ultimatum, while
overthrowing the Rugova Leadership:
The two variants continue into the Rambouillet process. The idea of
bringing the two sides together into face to face negotiations under
international auspices came from the French government. The Clinton
administration had been against such an idea, favouring a straight
move towards bombing. But on this occasion, the differences were
overcome in favour of the French getting their way on the form while
the US would get its way on the substance. This was a turning point.
The French and British switched over to the US position at a meeting
of the contact group in London on 29th January,1999, exactly a week
before the opening on 6th February of the Rambouillet
'negotiations'. From that moment on the NATO attack on Yugoslavia
was a virtual certainty. We can see why when we appreciate that the
Rambouillet 'negotiations' were not negotiations at all: they were
an ultimatum to the Serbian government which was drafted in such a
way as to ensure that it would be rejected.
The Serbian government wanted face to face negotiations at
Rambouillet with the Kosovo representatives. This the Americans
absolutely refused, presumably with British and French support since
they were formally supposed to be in charge of the process. It is
also fairly clear that there were some on the Kosovo side who were
interested in discussing with the Serbian authorities. Why else
would be Clinton administration have decided to overthrow the
elected Rugova government of Kosovo and replace it with a KLA-led
government, there and then, at Rambouillet?
The Serbian side was then required to agree to the 'Agreement'
without changing it, or face NATO attack on Yugoslavia. If the
Serbian government had signed the 'Agreement' the agreement would
have had no status in international law, since treaties signed under
threat of aggression have no force in international law. But the
Serbian authorities, probably wisely, did not have any confidence in
their ability to rely upon international law, so they refused to
sign.
Most people assume that the Serbian government refused to sign,
because the 'Agreement' would lead to the independence of Kosovo.
The 'Agreement' did involve a de facto NATO Protectorate (not, by
the way, a democratic entity. The Chief of the Implementation Force
could dictate to the Kosovo government on any aspect of policy he
considered relevant to NATO (ie US) concerns.)
But the real sticking point for the Serbian government seems to have
been the threat that the 'Agreement' posed to the rest of
Yugoslavia. The NATO compliance force would have complete control of
Kosovo deploying there whatever types of forces it wished: ' NATO
will establish and deploy a force (hereinafter KFOR) which may be
composed of ground, air, and maritime units from NATO and non-NATO
nations, operating under the authority and subject to the direction
and the political control of the North Atlantic Council (NAC)
through the NATO chain of command. The Parties agree to facilitate
the deployment and operations of this force.' Thus, if the US wished
to use Kosovo as a base for the invasion and occupation of the rest
of Yugoslavia it could do so.
This was threat enough. But the so-called 'Appendix B' added to the
document at Rambouillet itself and kept secret until it was leaked
and eventually published in the French press, insisted that NATO
forces could move at will across the whole of Yugoslavia. Thus:
'NATO personnel shall enjoy, together with their vehicles, vessels,
aircraft, and equipment, free and unrestricted passage and unimpeded
access throughout the FRY including associated airspace and
territorial waters. This shall include, but not be limited to, the
right of bivouac, manoeuvre, billet, and utilisation of any areas or
facilities as required for support, training, and operations.' NATO
could also alter the infrastructure of Yugoslavia at will: 'NATO
may.... have need to make improvements or modifications to certain
infrastructures in the FRY, such as roads, bridges, tunnels,
buildings, and utility systems.' It could thus move around
investigating all Yugoslav infrastructures with a view to destroying
them (in an attack) later. And the Yugoslav authorities 'shall
provide, free of cost, such public facilities as NATO shall
require.' The Yugoslav authorities 'shall, upon simple request,
grant all telecommunications services, including broadcast services,
needed for the Operation, as determined by NATO. This shall include
the right to utilise such means and services as required to assure
full ability to communicate....free of cost.' 'NATO is granted the
use of airports, roads, rails, and ports without payment of fees,
duties, dues, tolls, or charges occasioned by mere use.' The
Yugoslav authorities must not merely tolerate this: they must
facilitate it:' The authorities in the FRY shall facilitate, on a
priority basis and with all appropriate means, all movement of
personnel, vehicles, vessels, aircraft, equipment, or supplies,
through or in the airspace, ports, airports, or roads used. No
charges may be assessed against NATO for air navigation, landing, or
takeoff of aircraft, whether government-owned or chartered.
Similarly, no duties, dues, tolls or charges may be assessed against
NATO ships, whether government-owned or chartered, for the mere
entry and exit of ports.'
And in all such activities in the whole of Yugoslavia, NATO shall be
completely above the law: 'NATO shall be immune from all legal
process, whether civil, administrative, or criminal.' And again:
'NATO personnel, under all circumstances and at all times, shall be
immune from the Parties' jurisdiction in respect of any civil,
administrative, criminal, or disciplinary offences which may be
committed by them in the FRY. ' And again: ' NATO and NATO personnel
shall be immune from claims of any sort which arise out of
activities in pursuance of the operation'.
This threat to move from Kosovo to the overthrow of the entire
Serbian and Yugoslav regime was underlined by the fact that NATO
claimed the right to dictate the fundamentals of socio-economic
policy within Kosovo, with the Yugoslav and Kosovo governments
completely under the diktat of US policies. Thus:' The economy of
Kosovo shall function in accordance with free market principles.'
And: 'There shall be no impediments to the free movement of persons,
goods, services, and capital to and from Kosovo.' And again:
'Federal and other authorities shall within their respective powers
and responsibilities ensure the free movement of persons, goods,
services, and capital to Kosovo, including from international
sources. There must also be complete compliance with the IMF and
World Bank. Thus: 'International assistance, with the exception of
humanitarian aid, will be subject to full compliance with....conditionalities
defined in advance by the donors and the absorptive capacity of
Kosovo.' The Yugoslav government must also agree to handing over
economic assets to foreign interests. Thus: 'If expressly required
by an international donor or lender, international contracts for
reconstruction projects shall be concluded by the authorities of the
Federal Republic of Yugoslavia.'
These statements made it perfectly clear that NATO was out to
destroy the existing character of the Serbian economy. The ultimatum
also demonstrated that NATO was determined to wage war against the
Serbian media. It demanded 'Free media, effectively accessible to
registered political parties and candidates, and available to voters
throughout Kosovo.' And it said that 'The IM shall have its own
broadcast frequencies for radio and television programming in
Kosovo. The Federal Republic of Yugoslavia shall provide all
necessary facilities.....'
Rambouillet was thus an ultimatum for a war against Serbia and the
terms of the ultimatum demonstrated that if the Serbian government
accepted Rambouillet they would very likely face a crushing attack
in the future from NATO forces on Yugoslav soil.
5. The Launch of the War and the Need for Stupidity With the
'failure' of Rambouillet, the Clinton Administration took open
charge of the preparations for war. And it is at this point that the
analysis of those who support the NATO Air War faces absolutely
irreconcilable contradictions. For the way in which the war was
launched is, on the face of it, absolutely inexplicable.
The bombing campaign was launched in 24th March. But President
Clinton announced on the 19th of March that the bombing campaign
would be launched and nothing now could block it. The US
administration thus gave the Serbian government 5 days in which they
could do as their pleased in Kosovo. And when the bombing started,
it was organised so that the Serbian authorities could continue to
have a free hand in Kosovo for more than a week. The air war's first
phase was directed largely at targets outside the Kosovo theatre
itself for a full week.
And this military side of the attack was combined with an absolutely
contradictory set of explanations for NATO's aggression. On one
side, the attack was justified as an attempt to prevent the
genocidal threat to the Kosovar Albanians from the Milosevic regime.
But on the other side, the attack was simultaneously justified by
the claim that the Milosevic regime had no such genocidal intentions
and indeed wanted the bombing campaign in order to use it to sell
Rambouillet to the Serbian people.
These contradictions cannot be explained away by haste,
improvisation and confusion on the part of the Clinton
administration. We know that the US National Security Council and
the State Department had been planning this war in detail for 14
months before it started. We know also from the Washington Post that
the experts in the US administration spent those 14 months running
over, day after day, all the variants of the course of such a war,
all the scenarios of possible Yugoslav government responses to the
air attack. We know that they foresaw the possibilities of mass
refugee exits from Kosovo. The Pentagon foresaw a long air war: the
notion that Milosevic wanted the bombing attack was political spin
put about by General Wesley Clark: it was nonsense. So why did they
plan the start of the war in this particular way?
There is only one serious explanation: the Clinton administration
was giving the Serbian authorities the opportunity to provide the
NATO attack with an ex post facto legitimation. The US was hoping
that the five days before the launch of the bombing and the first
week of the war would give various forces in Serbia the opportunity
for atrocities that could then be used to legitimate the air war.
This was a rational calculation on the part of the US planners. They
knew that the main political opponents in Serbia of Milosevic's
Socialist Party -- the Radical Party of Seselj and various Serbian
fascist groups -- supported the ethnic cleansing of Kosovo, though
the Socialist Party did not. They knew also that Yugoslav military
forces would pour into positions in Kosovo as the OSCE personnel
left, clearing strategic villages, driving forward against KLA-US
supporters. They could predict also that there would be a refugee
flow across the borders into Macedonia and Albania.
And the US planners were proved right. Extremist Serbian groups did,
it seems, go on the rampage in Pristina for three days after the
start of the war. Refugees did start to flood across the borders.
And the resulting news pictures did indeed swing European public
opinion behind the war. As for the Serbian government organising a
genocidal mass slaughter, this did not happen: the Clinton
administration organised the launch of the war to invited the
Serbian authorities to launch a genocide, but the Milosevic
government declined the invitation.
It is simply impossible to argue that the US military campaign was
designed to stop the brutalities against the Kosovo Albanians. It
would be far easier to demonstrate that this thoroughly planned and
prepared war was designed to increase the chances of such
brutalities being escalated to qualitatively higher levels. The way
that the war was launched was designed to increase the sufferings of
the Kosovar Albanians in order to justify an open-ended US bombing
campaign against the Serbian state. The technique worked. But this
success cannot be acknowledged. Instead it must be hidden by the
notion of Clinton administration stupidity.
And to this stupidity the European pundits of NATO can add many
other supposed American stupidities. The stupidity of trying to save
the Kosovar Albanians with an air war instead of a ground war. The
stupidity of killing so many Albanian and Serbian civilians. The
stupidity of not swiftly admitting such killings when they occur.
And then there is the most fascinating stupidity of all: the bombing
of the Chinese Embassy in Belgrade. This particular stupidity must
have been a defining moment for the European powers, a moment for
hard, focused thinking, for one very simple reason: stupid or not,
the governments of Western Europe know that it was not a mistake.
They know that the US military attaches in Belgrade had dined more
than once at the Chinese Embassy compound in the city before the war
started. They know very well how prominent the compound is and how
professional the US intelligence operation for targeting is. They
know that the Embassy was hit on a special mission by a plane from
the United States. And they noted Clinton's casual response: no
press conference to make a formal public apology. Just an aside
about an unfortunate mistake in a speech about something else. They
know too that China is by far the most important issue in the entire
current US foreign policy agenda.
And the West European states have learned more about the stupidity
of the bombing of the Chinese Embassy since it has occurred: it
resulted in the collapse of weeks of German-Russian diplomacy which
had gone into producing the G8 declaration agreed just before the
Embassy was bombed. That G8 declaration threatened to undermine the
US's 5 conditions for ending the war and threatened to rebuild the
central authority of the UN over NATO: the Embassy bombing put a
stop to all that. More, it completely sabotaged Schoder's planned
business visit to China: West European efforts to steal contracts
with China by taking a softer line than the Clinton administration
were brought to a standstill and the West Europeans are being
brigaded into line behind Washington's policy in a new confrontation
with China.
All this, for the West Europeans is surely the height of stupidity.
But pennies have been dropping in the Chancelleries of Western
Europe. They are realising that even if there has been plenty of
stupidity in the NATO war against Yugoslavia, the stupidity may not
lie in Washington. It may lie in quite a different quarter, namely
in the state executives of Western Europe itself. To see why, we
need an entirely different take on the origins of the NATO attack on
Yugoslavia.
PART 2: THE THEORY OF EUROPEAN STUPIDITY
The alternative take on the origins of the NATO war against
Yugoslavia starts from the fact that the war did not derive from big
power reactions to local events in the Balkans at all. Instead, this
theory starts from the premise that the Clinton administration was
seeking a war against Yugoslavia as a means for achieving political
goals outside the Balkans altogether. The conflict between the
Serbian state and the Kosovar Albanians was to be exploited as a
means to achieve US strategic goals outside the Balkans on the
international plane.
This conception turns the cognitive map used by the proponents of
American stupidity on its head. Thus, for example, instead of
thinking that the US was ready to overthrow the norms of the
international order for the sake of the Kosovar Albanians, we assume
exactly the opposite: the US was wanting to overthrow the principles
of state sovereignty and the authority of the UN Security Council
and used the Kosovo crisis as an instrument for doing so. Instead of
imagining that the US was ready to shut Russia out of European
politics for the sake of the Kosovar Albanians, we assume that the
Clinton administration used the NATO attack on Yugoslavia precisely
as an instrument for consolidating Russia's exclusion. Instead of
assuming that the US was ready to abandon its policy of engagement
with China for the sake of the Kosovo Albanians, we assume that the
Clinton administration used the war against Yugoslavia to inaugurate
a new phase of its policy towards China. And last but not least,
instead of assuming that the US firmly subordinated the West
European states to its military and political leadership in order
create a new dawn in the Western Balkans, it used a number of
ingenious devices -- especially the dilettantish vanity of messieurs
Chirac and Jospin -- to drag the West European states into a Balkan
war that would consolidate US hegemony over them, the EU and the
Euro's development.
This is where the European stupidity enters the theory. The one
strategic interest of the main West European states (Germany and
France) in the Balkans lies in maintaining stable and strong enough
states in the region to keep their impoverished populations firmly
in place. West European military intervention in the Balkans has
essentially been concerned with preventing mass migrations Westwards
when states collapse. Anglo-French military involvement in
Yugoslavia through UNPROFOR was essentially about that:
'humanitarian aid' in the war zone to ensure that the civilian
population did not leave the war theatre. Italian military
intervention in Albania in 1997 was about the same thing: stanching
the flood of humanity out of Albania Westwards, by rebuilding an
Albanian state while blocking emigration and asylum rights.
Anglo-French efforts in Macedonia and Albania in the current war are
similarly about caging the Kosovar Albanians within the Western
Balkans. Yet now the American air force has, with European support,
turned the Western Balkans into twenty years (minimum) of chaos from
which all the energetic younger generations of all ethnic groups
will rightly wish to flee West for decades to come. This is the
first European stupidity.
The second strategic interest of the West European states
(especially Germany) in Eastern Europe is to maintain stable,
friendly governments in Russia and Ukraine. That too can be ruled
out as a result of this war as far as Russia is concerned; Ukraine
will have to choose between Russia and the USA (the EU is not a
serious alternative. And both Russia and Ukraine could spiral out of
control with disastrous consequences for Central Europe Western
Europe. This is the second European stupidity.
The third strategic interest of the main West European states has
been to combine an effort to bandwagon with US power with preserving
an effective check on US efforts to impose its will on their foreign
policies, whether in Europe or other parts of the world. That too
seems finished now. The basic West European check on US power was
the French veto at the UN Security Council, restraining the US with
its 2 votes (including that of the UK). Now that Chirac has chosen
to discredit the UN Security Council, he has undermined his own
ability to speak for Europe at the UNSC and to be a useful partner
for other states seeking to gain European help to restrain the US.
That is a third stupidity.
A fourth West European priority was to be able to claim that the EU
is an independent, West European political entity with a dominant
say at least over European affairs. Yet the current war demonstrates
that this is a piece of pretentious bluff: the EU has played
absolutely no role whatever in the launching or the management of
this war. It will play no role whatever in the ending of the war. It
is simply a subordinate policy instrument in the hands of a
transatlantic organisation, the North Atlantic Council, handling the
economic statecraft side of NATO's policy implementation. And within
the North Atlantic Council the United States rules: the way the war
ends will shape the future of Europe for at least a decade, yet that
decision will be taken in the White House: the West European states
(not to speak of the EU institutions) are political voyeurs with
their noses pressed against the windows of the Oval Office trying to
read the lips of the people in there deciding Europe's fate. This is
a fourth stupidity.
To explain the background to these stupidities we must examine US
strategy since the collapse of the Soviet Bloc.
US GLOBAL STRATEGY IN THE 1990s
In some conditions the cognitive framework -- local actions, big
power reactions -- is useful. Such conditions exist when the
superpower is satisfied and secure that the structures which it has
established to ensure its dominance are safely in place. It is
sitting astride the oceans comfortably and it reacts now and again
to little local blow-outs and break downs.
Some might regard that as being the situation of the United States
after the collapse of the Soviet Bloc. If we look at the power of
the United States in the 1990s in resource terms, it has had no
rival or even potential group of rivals in the military field, it
dominates the international political economy, there is no power on
earth remotely able for the foreseeable future to challenge the
United States for world leadership.
Yet curiously enough, the United States has been far from satisfied
with its situation in the 1990s. It has felt itself to be facing a
number of important challenges in the two key traditional regions of
the world where it must exercise leadership -- Europe and the
Pacific Rim -- and the challenges there are linked to another big
challenge: the battle to ensure the preponderant weight of US
capitalism in the so-called 'emerging markets'. Leadership of Europe
and of the Pacific in turn ensure that the United States can channel
the activities of these states to ensure that US interests
predominate in designing regimes to open up and dominate the
'emerging markets'.
These problems were all connected to another, deeper issue: concerns
about the basic strength and dynamism of the American economy and
American capitalism. When the Clinton administration came into
office it was determined to rejuvenate the dynamism of American
capitalism through an activist foreign drive to build a new global
set of political economy regimes accented to the strengths and
interests of American capitalist expansion. Getting leverage over
the Europeans and Japanese to achieve that was key.
To understand US policy in the 1990s, we must appreciate the
double-sided situation that it found itself in: on one side, its old
way of dominating its capitalist 'allies' had been shattered by the
Soviet Bloc collapse, giving lots of scope for these 'allies' to
threaten important US interests in their particular regional
spheres. But on the other side, the US had gigantic resources,
especially in the military-political field and if it could develop
an effective political strategy it could convert these military
power resources into a global imperial project of historically
unprecedented scope and solidity. We must grasp both the challenges
and the great opportunities after the Soviet Bloc collapse to
understand the strategy and tactics of the Bush and Clinton
administrations.
(a) The Post-Cold War Problems
The challenge to the US in Europe created by the collapse of the
Soviet Bloc has too often been ignored. That collapse not only made
the USA the sole global super-power. It also simultaneously
destroyed the political structures through which the USA had
exercised its direct leadership over West European capitalism. And
it simultaneously opened the whole of Eastern Europe for business
with the West, a business and political expansion opportunity which
the West European states, especially Germany, would spontaneously
tend to control. What if West European capitalist states threw off
US leadership, forged their own collective military-political
identity, joined their capitals with Russian resources and Russian
nuclear capacity? Where would that leave the USA in Western Eurasia
outside of Turkey?
The central political pillar of US leadership over Western Europe
during the Cold War was NATO. The US-Soviet confrontation positioned
Western Europe on the front line in the event of a US-Soviet war.
This situation enable the USA to gain political leadership over
Western Europe by supplying the military services -- the strategic
nuclear arsenal -- to protect Western Europe. In return for these
military services, the West European states agreed to the US
politically brigading them under US leadership. The US could
exercise control over their foreign policy apparatuses, integrating
the bulk of their military forces under US command, imposing
discipline of the dealings of West European capitalism with the East
and so on. And the US could also exercise this political leadership
for economic purposes, especially to assure the free entry of US
capitals into Europe, to ensure that Europe worked with the US over
the management of the global economy etc. So NATO was a key
military- political structure. The hierarchy was: US military
services give political leadership which gives leadership on the big
economic issues, those to do with the direction of accumulation
strategies.
But the Soviet collapse led to the redundancy of the US strategic
arsenal which led to the redundancy of NATO, the collapse of the
political leadership structure for the US in Europe and the
undermining of the US's ability to impose its core political economy
goals for Europe and for the world on the West Europeans. This is
one of the key things that has made the United States a
paradoxically dissatisfied power in the 1990s. It has had to combat
all kinds of European schemes for building political structures that
deny the US hegemonic leadership in Europe. And in combating such
schemes it has had to develop a new European programme and strategy
for rebuilding US European leadership. In short, the USA has been an
activist and pro-active power in Europe during the 1990s, not a
satisfied and reactive power. The 1990s have been a period of
political manoeuvres amongst the Atlantic capitalist powers as the
key players have sought to advance their often competitive schemes
for reorganising the political structures of the continent.
And in these manoeuvres, the territory and peoples of the former
Yugoslavia have played a very special role. The states bearing
competing programmes for a new European political order have all
sought to demonstrate the value of their political project for
Europe by showing how it can handle an important European problem:
the long Yugoslav crises. Yugoslavia has been the anvil on which the
competing great powers have sought to forge the instruments for
their new European orders. No power has been more active in these
endeavours than the United States.
And this means that a cognitive framework for understanding the
Balkan wars cannot take the form of: local actions, great power
reactions. We need an entirely different framework: great power
European strategies, and the tactical uses of Yugoslavia's crisis
for advancing them.
(b)The New Opportunities.
Yet the United States was not just a power dissatisfied with the
international arrangements it confronted at the end of the Cold War.
It was also aware that it had a gigantic relative lead over all
other powers in the world in terms of the resources for entirely
reshaping arrangements on the planet. It had not only unrivalled
military capacity but command of new military technologies that
could enable it to strike safely and fairly accurately at will
anywhere on the planet. It could, for example, out of a clear blue
sky, destroy the great dam on the Yangtse river and drown 100
million Chinese at the heart of the Chinese economy without the
Chinese government being able to stop it: that kind of power. It
could take on China and Russia together and win. It could militarily
seal of Japan and Western Europe from their sources of vital inputs
for their economies and from the export markets vital for their
economic stability.
The United States also have supreme command over the international
political economy through the dominance of the Dollar-Wall Street
Regime over international monetary and financial affairs and through
US control over the key multilateral organisations in this field,
especially the IMF and the World Bank.
With resources like these, the collapse of the Soviet Bloc opened up
the possibility of a new global Empire of a new type. An empire made
up of the patchwork of the states of the entire planet. The legal
sovereignty of all these states would be preserved but the political
significance of that legal sovereignty would be turned on its head.
It would mean that the state concerned would bear entire juridical
and political responsibility for all the problems on its territory
but would lose effective control over the central actual economic
and political processes flowing in and out of its territories. The
empire would be centred in Washington with Western Europe and Japan
as brigaded client powers and would extend across the rest of the
world, beating against the borders of an enfeebled Russia and a
potentially beleaguered China.
And it would be an Empire in which the capitalist classes of every
state within it would be guaranteed security against any social
challenge, through the protection of the new Behemoth, provided only
that they respected the will and authority of the Behemoth on all
questions which it considered important. It the US played its new
strategy for empire building effectively, it could thus earn the
support and even adulation of all the capitalist classes of the
world.
Thus the decade from 1989 to 1999 has been marked above all by one
central process: the drive by the US to get from (a) to (b): from
political structures left over from the Cold War which disadvantaged
and even threatened the US in the new situation, to entirely new
global political and economic structures which would produce an
historically new, global political order: New Democrats, New Labour,
New NATO, new state system, new world economy, new world order. This
is the context in which we can understand the various Yugoslav wars,
including the current one. CP
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