How It Came To War
Last summer, in response to the Kosovo Liberation Army's guerrilla campaign
for independence from Serbia, President Milosevic launched a brutal
offensive against the region's ethnic Albanian majority. Serb forces
attacked the civilian population, destroying villages and driving hundreds
of thousands of Kosovar Albanians from their homes. Civilian casualties and
the mounting refugee crisis prompted NATO countries to threaten military
action against Milosevic. In October, under threat of NATO air strikes,
Milosevic signed a cease-fire agreement with U.S. envoy Richard Holbrooke.
Western diplomats had hoped that the cease-fire and the harsh Balkan winter
would give them an opportunity to press both the Serbs and the KLA into a
peace deal. But by January the conflict was back on the boil, with the
massacre of 45 civilians by Serb forces in the village of Racak signaling
the failure of the October deal. In February, NATO demanded that both sides
meet in France and sign on to a Western-authored peace deal, or face
military pressure. Two weeks of talks at Rambouillet failed to produce
results after both the Serbs and the KLA refused to accept the deal. When
the talks reconvened in mid-March, the KLA accepted the peace deal, but the
Serbs refused. Milosevic then escalated the crisis by launching another
large-scale offensive in Kosovo. Stopping that offensive is the principal
objective of NATO's current air strikes.
Claims on Kosovo: Why They're Fighting
Kosovo is a province of Serbia, the core of the former Yugoslavia. Because 90
percent of its population are of Albanian rather than Serb origins, the region
enjoyed a high degree of autonomy in the old Yugoslavia. President Slobodan
Milosevic revoked that autonomy in 1989 in keeping with his nationalist campaign
for a "Greater Serbia." As the site of an historic defeat by the Ottoman empire
in the 14th century, Kosovo has great emotional significance to Serbian
nationalists.
The revoking of Kosovo's autonomy sparked the current conflict, as the
territory's ethnic-Albanian majority sought to restore their cultural rights. The
Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) has radicalized the conflict by taking up arms and
demanding full independence in the face of Serb determination to hold on to the
province.
U.S. Involvement: Why Do We Care?
The Serbs' campaign to eliminate the KLA has driven hundreds of thousands of
ethnic-Albanian from their homes, creating an unavoidable humanitarian
catastrophe and a potential continent-wide refugee problem. The conflict
threatens to draw in neighboring Albania and Macedonia, as well as more distant
powers such as Russia (who have ethnic and religious ties to the Serbs) and Iran
(out of concern for the Albanians, who are Muslim).
The U.S. and NATO: What Do They Want?
NATO opposes independence for Kosovo on the grounds that this would spur
secessionist movements elsewhere and destabilize an already volatile region. At
the same time, it believes that there can be no stability under the status quo.
The U.S. and its NATO allies are trying to force both sides to accept a
compromise -- restoring Kosovo's autonomy within the former Yugoslavia.
Obstacles to Peace: The Serbs
President Slobodan Milosevic has shown in the past that he only makes
concessions when facing NATO military action. His political power was built on
nationalist promises of a "Greater Serbia" and after failing in Bosnia and
Croatia, losing Kosovo might be a death blow to his domestic political standing.
Obstacles to Peace: The KLA
A year ago they were still dismissed as an insignificant irritant by both the
Serbs and moderate ethnic-Albanian leaders; now they're the dominant political
voice in Kosovo and the war has forced the moderates to back their demand for
full independence. Still, they're not a unified or well-organized group, and
Western diplomats are not sure if they can be held to any deal. Besides, given
what they've achieved in a year, they may not see any advantage in halting their
campaign.
Problems of Peacekeeping
European allies want the U.S. to be part of a peacekeeping mission, but the
Clinton administration will struggle to win congressional approval. U.S. military
commanders are skeptical about putting personnel at risk in a situation where the
warring factions have shown little enthusiasm for a Western-authored peace plan.
And there's a fear that, like in Bosnia, once the troops go in they'll have no
easy way out.
For more background, visit CNN.com's Roots of Conflict
PHOTO: Darko Bandic/AP
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