Tag Kosovo

Self-Evident

Today marks the 60th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. This day is also marked annually as Human Rights Day. Additionally, today is the traditional date for the presentation of the Nobel Peace Prize, which this year was awarded to former President of Finland Martti Ahtisaari, largely in recognition for his role in negotiating the end of armed conflict in Kosovo.

Like the United Nations itself, the UDHR was born amid the ashes of a World War which took tens of millions of lives not just in combat but also through unspeakable acts of inhumanity – systematic state-controlled genocide of Jews, Gypsies, Poles and other ethnic groups, mass political imprisonments by Germany, the Soviet Union, Japan, and even the United States, atrocities beyond count and description from one corner of the globe to another. It left the ruling class shaken and disturbed and willing to draft and adopt a declaration that addressed the centuries of abuse towards the bulk of humanity by their rulers. As the 1950s witnessed the disassembly of the 19th Century imperial order once and for all, the UDHR would become a foundation for new constitutions and guarantees of human rights in many of the new countries that were established.

But, like the UN itself, as time wore on, “human rights” became a cudgel for political pressure, a cover for avoiding meaningful social reform in both inudstrialized and developing countries alike, and finally a toxic piece of propaganda turned against itself as a justification for a return to government-sanctioned torture, the resurgence of genocide rebranded as “ethnic cleansing”, and the abandonment of any pretense of spreading the goals of human dignity and equality. Today, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights exists more as the hollow cry of our grandparents’ ghosts than of any genuine mark of humanity. History has proven that even the most honorable intentions of the greatest leaders are readily and easily tossed aside like garbage when the exigiencies of political expediency demand it. And history has shown that even our nation, to whom the rest of the world could always look for the inspiration to make the tenets of the UDHR come true, would eventually succumb and choose to violate our own foundational beliefs.

The 20th Century was the single most violent, atrocious, inhumane period of human history, and midway through it the recognition of our own depravity became too much to bear to the extent that we would create this declaration of highest and most basic principles. Now, another half century past, we have made our real intentions painfully, violently, hopelessly clear for all time. We found the path and chose to turn the other way. Our heirs will judge us accordingly.

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Breaking Up Is Hard To Do

I guess the Serbs didn’t take the news of Kosovo’s “supervised independence” all that well, eh?

The Venn diagram above is one that’s been going around the web recently. It purports to explain the overlapping and intersecting identifications of people and places in the United Kingdom — for example, how you can be a Scotsman and a Briton at the same time. When Americans call people “British” they generally mean “English”, but while all Englishmen are British, not all Britons are Englishmen. Get it? Devolution is a big deal in the United Kingdom these days, as we’ve discussed here before. This recent article in The Guardian by journalist Iain McWhirter goes so far as to assert that the dissolution of the U.K. back into its constituent parts is now “inevitable”. The success of the SNP in wresting away political authority from Westminster is serving as a model for similar actions in Wales and Northern Ireland, and McWhirter argues that perhaps the best that London can hope for is some sort of federal system.

In the 1990s, the Soviet Union fell apart without a lot of effort once the Communist Party lost control in Moscow. While Russia and Byelorussia eventually kissed and made up, the rest of the nations that re-asserted themselves as independent states have moved on. Some, most notably the Baltic trio of Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia, quickly re-aligned with the West. Others simply replaced the brutal Soviet government with their own brutal dictatorships, and even the “Orange Revolution” in Ukraine has not completely reformed that country’s government. The tiny country of Georgia was one of the first to shed the Soviet yoke, but they have struggled with Russia for years because Georgia controls access to valuable ports and oil. Now the Georgian government has to deal with a breakaway minority of its own — Abkhazia (via). Abkhazia borders on the Black Sea, which is why the Russian government has kept a hand in this particular conflict. As the linked article states, the Kosovo declaration puts Georgia and the EU in a tough spot with regard to recognizing Abkhazia.

You may or may not recall this from late last year: the Native American tribes that collective are known as the Lakota have declared their independence from the United States and renounced all U.S. claims to their territory, which covers portions of North and South Dakota, Nebraska, Wyoming, and Montana. As with the situations in Kosovo and Abkhazia, the stakes of other nations recognizing the validity of this claim to nationhood are pretty high but have been so low-balled by the U.S. government as to be almost meaningless.

But the Lakota are not the only ones talking about declaring independence. There’s an active secession movement in Vermont. Vermont was briefly an independent republic prior to becoming a state, and so the secessionists would call their country the “Second Vermont Republic”. That article also mentions in passing some secessionist groups in the Pacific Northwest, Texas (big surprise), and even California. And those are the ones who AREN’T the loonie gun-toting wackjobs!

The, of course, there’s that whole Red State Vs. Blue State thing:

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A Little Tide Will Get That Right Out

Kosovo declared itself independent from Serbia on Sunday.  You’ll remember that President Clinton sent American troops to Kosovo as part of a NATO mission to curb Serbian aggression against the ethnic Albanian population there.  At the time, then-candidate George W. Bush criticized Clinton, saying "Victory means exit strategy, and it’s important for the president to explain to us what the exit strategy is."  Funny how just a few short years later the Republicans would be all about invading other countries without any sort of exit strategy, isn’t it?

Well, anyway, Serbia was sufficiently defanged and declawed through the U.S. bombing campaign and the eventual deposing of Slobodan Milosovic, but the political question of Kosovo’s autonomy was more or less shoved aside by more pressing issues, especially once the Bush Administration started working on their list of places to invade.  A United Nations protectorate (UNMIK) has been running the show in Kosovo for the last eight years.  Writing at Spiked Online, Philip Cunliffe explains that the declaration does not declare complete independence from the Serbian government in Belgrade, or even from UNMIK.  Instead, the Kosovars have declared themselves to have "supervised independence", transferring the control of their country from UNMIK to another protectorate controlled by the EU called EULEX, which gets 16,000 NATO troops to use in maintaining the stability of the area.  Mr. Cunliffe concludes:

"The travesty of Kosovo’s declaration of independence is not the act of secession, nor the undermining of international law, but the very idea of supervised independence – a contradiction in terms if ever there was one."

He notes, as well, that the new flag of Kosovo (seen above) bears more than a passing resemblance to the flag of the EU, rather than the traditional flag, which bore the twin-eagle of Albania.  It’s kind of unfortunate that the flag also has that big mustard stain right in the middle.  The deaign committee must have been having a dinner meeting.

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