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War Watch
by Chris Dodge
Why Kosovo?
I spent an hour on the phone with a friend the other day, talking about
economic issues, especially the U.S. trade deficit and the emergence of
the euro. For folks who missed it, this January marked the
establishment of the euro as a new currency in Europe; it will
eventually become the common currency for all of the member nations of the
European Union. What does this have to do with the U.S. trade deficit?
Well, in simple terms, currently the U.S. can run up as big a trade
deficit as it wants because the U.S. dollar is the currency of choice for
international trade. Think of our trade deficit as an unlimited credit
line extended by the world to U.S. consumers: we can buy what we want from
the rest of the world because they desperately need our dollars to pay
their own dollar-denominated debts to the World Bank, IMF, western banks,
and western corporations. Now think of those same western banks and
corporations accepting euros in payment on those loans. Now imagine
them beginning to prefer payments made in euros over
payments made in dollars. Uh-oh. Suddenly that big U.S. trade deficit that
so many economists now think of as only white noise becomes economically
destabilizing for the U.S. economy.
Which could explain why the U.S. government is so damn interested now in
bolstering NATO, to the exclusion of all other foreign policy
matters--even the "problem" of overthrowing Saddam Hussein. Literally, the
U.S. has a major interest in ensuring the destabilization of Europe,
which--after the Asian economic crisis, Russia's debt default, and the
currency collapses in Brazil, Ecuador, Venezuela, Mexico, and the rest of
Latin America--is the only healthy economic competitor in the world to
challenge U.S. hegemony. With the resources of Russia and the former
Soviet republics up for sale after a decade of disastrous free market
policies, the unification of neighboring Europe--which would naturally
look eastward for resources--is the U.S.'s worst nightmare. So there
exists a very compelling reason for Clinton & Co. to strengthen NATO and
drive a wedge between those European countries that belong to NATO and
those that don't, and between Western Europe and Russia.
In spite of those efforts, Russia's finally becoming the active
agent in negotiating peace in the Balkans--as it should have been from the
first. This is the direct result of hard work done by Kofi Annan, the
German government, the European Union, and the Russian government (and
this whole process has been largely ignored by the U.S. press). By making
an end-run around the U.S., the U.K., and France, these folks have finally
come up with a solution that could end the war in Kosovo, and salvage
relations between Russia and Western Europe.
In the meantime, Clinton and NATO have tried their best to derail the
peace process, particularly by stepping up the bombing runs during key
times in the negotiating process. Last Friday, the night after Milosevic
agreed to a workable peace plan--including the deployment of international
troops in Kosovo--NATO planes conducted the heaviest attack on Yugoslavian
cities so far in the war. While managing to destroy the Chinese embassy in
Belgrade with three missiles (one missile could have been described
as a stray, but three make it seem like an intentional act), the
news leaked out that NATO planes are dropping cluster bombs on cities.
In the past two weeks, we've seen pictures and read vivid details of the
nail bombs detonated in London: children with nails driven through their
skulls, men and women with nails imbedded in their bodies, faces covered
with blood from deep lacerations. Last Friday night, NATO planes dumped
cluster bombs on a market and hospital in Nis, the third largest city in
Yugoslavia. Cluster bombs explode near the ground and send metal shrapnel
flying in all directions; they are explicitly designed to be
anti-personnel devices, and are far more deadly than land mines. Some
explode right away; others remain as neat little unexploded packages among
the rubble: a nasty surprise for rescue workers. It's long been known that
NATO planes were dropping these vile things--small British Harrier planes,
in particular (which aren't big enough to carry laser-guided bombs)--but
NATO has always claimed that they were dropping them on Serbian troops and
military targets, not on cities and civilians. Naturally, we
won't be treated to pictures of babies in Nis with shrapnel imbedded in
their skulls, or heart patients with blood running down their faces, but
we should know that these people are now military targets. And any NATO
claims about surgical strikes or precision bombing are outright lies.
In the meantime, for your reading pleasure, here's a list of sources and
resources on the current Balkan conflict. It was forwarded to us by a
radical librarian in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Kosovo: A bibliography
"The saga of Kosovo: focus on Serbian-Albanian relations," Alex N.
Dragnich and Slavko Todorovich, East European Monographs, distributed by
Columbia University Press, 1984.
"Kosovo: a short history," Noel Malcolm, New York University Press,
Washington Square, NY, 1998.
"Between Serb and Albanian: a history of Kosovo," Miranda Vickers,
Columbia University Press, New York, 1998.
Background on inter-ethnic history of Yugoslavia:
"Yugoslavia's ethnic nightmare: the inside story of Europe's unfolding
ordeal," edited by Jasminka Udovicki and James Ridgeway. "Written by a
team of antiwar Muslim, Croatian, and Serbian journalists and a ...
Croatian historian," Lawrence Hill Books, New York, 1995.
"Ethnic nationalism: the tragic death of Yugoslavia," Bogdan Denitch,
University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis, MN, 1996.
"Broken bonds: the disintegration of Yugoslavia," Leonard J. Cohen,
Westview Press, Boulder, CO, 1993.
"Bosnia and Hercegovina: a tradition betrayed," by Robert J. Donia and
John V.A. Fine, with maps by John C. Hamer, Columbia University Press, New
York, 1994.
"Serbs and Croats: the struggle in Yugoslavia," Alex N. Dragnich, Harcourt
Brace Jovanovich, 1992.
"Yugoslavian inferno: ethnoreligious warfare in the Balkans," Paul Mojzes,
Continuum, New York, 1994.
"Balkan babel: the disintegration of Yugoslavia from the death of Tito to
insurrection in Kosove," Sabrina Petra Ramet, Westview Press, Boulder, CO,
1999 (3rd ed.).
"The improbable survivor: Yugoslavia and its problems, 1918-1988," Stevan
K. Pavlowitch, Ohio State University Press, 1988.
"Black lamb and grey falcon: a journey through Yugoslavia," Rebecca West,
Penguin Books, New York, 1969.
On interventionism:
"The warrior's honor: ethnic war and the modern conscience," Michael
Ignatieff, Metropolitan Books, New York, 1998. Discusses "the ambiguous
ethics of engagement, the limited force of moral justice in a world of
war, and the inevitable clash between those who defend tribal and national
loyalties and those who speak the universal language of human rights."
"Endless enemies: the making of an unfriendly world," Jonathan Kwitny,
Congdon and Weed, 1984. Jacket subtitle: "How America's worldwide
interventions destroy democracy and free enterprise and defeat our own
best interests."
"Against empire," Michael Parenti, City Lights Books, San Francisco, CA,
1995.
Some web sites:
International Action Center: http://www.iacenter.org/
Kosova Crisis Center: http://amahelp.com/kosova/
Nonviolence Web: http://www.nonviolence.org/
Znet: http://www.zmag.org/ZMag/kosovo.htm
Statement by librarians:
http://www.germany.net/teilnehmer/100/115158/kosovo.htm
Compiled by: Chris Dodge, Street Librarian,
http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/Cafe/7423
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