Kosovo Conflict
The Balkans have been a very unstable region for hundreds of years. The
reason
for contention is because of ethnic origin and disputes of which race
owns which
land.. That is the reason for the dispute over Kosovo is because
of the same
thing. This is a very complicated situation, that I don't really
know everything
about. I just kind of know the basics. Back in the 1500
hundreds, the Serbs
conquered the Kosovo area, slowly and gradually over the
years the Ethnic
Albanians started occupying the territory, until before
the bombing began,
Kosovo consisted of 90% Ethnic Albanians. Well, the
Serbs didn't like this,
especially Milosevic who is the ruler over Serbia.
Since Kosovo has many
historical ties to the Serbs, and the Serbs conquered
that territory back in the
1500 hundreds, Milosevic wanted to reclaim
their rightful territory. And his
method to do this was through "ethnic
cleansing" Kosovo. Stats: -Milosevic
has been doing this subtlety for years,
and as of last fall has increased his
killing of "ethnic Albainians". To
date, there are now 200,00 people
dead as a result of Milosevic's ethnic
cleansing. That is probably a very low
figure. 100,000 Kosovar men are now
missing, which might be the reason for the
"mass graves" that have been
pictured. Nearly one half a million
people have been expelled from their
homes, many forced out at gunpoint, while
the Serbian troops destroyed their
identity papers, making them unable to return
to their homes. This flood of
refugees have overwhelmed neighboring countries,
who are economically weak,
and are unable to take in all the refugees. 600,000
Kosovars are
surviving off the land in mountains nearby. Controversy: -You might
wonder
what business the U.S. has in a country on the other side of the world,
where
it seems to be no political interest whatsoever. That is a big
controversery
of whether or not NATO should be involved. At first I was against
NATO
involvement for just those reasons, why should NATO get involved where
there
would be no benefit to us, because this was more of a humanitarian
issue.
But as I researched this and read more about it, I am in favor of
NATO
involvement. I believe that we should do everything possible to help
stop
Tyrants from killing innocent people. Which is what was and is
occuring in
Kosovo. -But I am against NATO in who, why and how NATO is
handling this
conflict. Who: -NATO is very hypocritical by saying they got
involved in this
situation purely because of humanitarian reasons. There have
been many occasions
where the U.S. looked the other way on bigger
humanitarian disasters. In West
Africa, there was a similar "ethnic
cleansing" situation where the
U.S. did not get involved. Why: -In the
begging, where NATO was on the verge of
bombing Kosovo, Clinton spoke in a
public meeting about why we were getting
involved. He said, trying to get
public approval, that the reason the U.S. is
getting involved is largely an
economical reason. He said that this war would
help the U.S. financially. By
getting involved, we would become partners with
Europe, thus increasing a
trade relationship. That is what I am against. I am
against the U.S./Clinton
thinking more about how much money we can get, rather
than saving innocent
lives from being brutally murdered. -After the bombing had
dragged on for
longer than expected, which was only about a week in some
people's opinion,
the objectives were stated as follows: "To stop ethnic
cleansing, stop flood
of refugees into nieghboring countries, stop NATO from
splitting, prevent
Milosevic from strengthening his grip on the Balkan
region." And, after over
2 months of involvement, NATO has not been able to
meet those objectives.
-Bob Bennet said that the current bombing has "been
no help to the Albanians
and Macedonians, who have seen hundreds of thousands of
refugees flood across
the borders into their ill-equipped countries. It has been
of no help to
NATO, an alliance that has seen its military stocks drawn down to
dangerously
low levels, with no effects on the atrocities going on in the
killing
fields." -One speculated reason to get involved was because of the
military
stategic point in the Balkans. After NATO wins, the U.S. would put
troops in
the area to secure it. That was one reason why Russia is against
U.S.
involvement. How: This is my biggest controversy to NATO's actions.
NATO's
strategy to stop Milosevic from killing innocent people, was to bomb
him into
submission. Military officials predicted this "war" would last
less
than two weeks. NATO underestimated milosevics tolerance. (VIETNAM
CARTOON) Many
people compare this war to vietnam. The U.S. underestimated
what Vietnamise were
willing to take. Also, both sides did not fully explore
the possiblity of a
peaceful negotiation. After the Vietnam war, there was a
study on the conflict
where a group of researchers tried to find out if there
was a better way of
handling the conflict. They talked with both U.S.
government and the vietnamese
government, they found that both sides were
much more open to negotiations than
previously thought. The U.S. just assumed
that there was no peaceful solution,
and thought bombing would solve all
problems. Which in the end, made things much
worse. That is the question
being raised in this conflict, could there have been
a peaceful negotiation?
-quote from New York Times-"This century has been
the bloodiest in history.
Over 160 million human beings have been killed in
various conflicts, and that
number rises each day. It is a dark history, but
unless we look at it and
seek to learn from it, it will only get darker."
"It was once famously said
that the United States did not have 10 years of
experience n Vietnam, but one
year of experience 10 times over. Will we say the
same about the Balkans?"
-This is a quote from a military spokesman,
"NATO strikes continue to cause
serious damage to the Serb military and
will further degrade their capability
to commit atrocities against the Kosovo
Albanian population" "We are also
seeing increased evidence of ethnic
cleansing"-Same spokesman, same briefing,
same day, one minute later. This
is also a characteristic of Vietnam, where
there was very questionable news
being sent back to the public. There is very
vague reports of what NATO bombed,
and how bad the damage was. It doesn't
seem as though we are getting all the
information. There has been much use of
double speak in the news. The death of
innocent men, women and children from
bombs and missiles launched by over a
thousand warplanes are labeled as
"Unintentional collateral damage".
Bakeries and water pumping stations
blown to pieces by NATO's barrage are
"dual-use facilities" because soldiers,
like civilians, eat and drink.
And, of course, deliberate terror bombing
is a "humanitarian" war.
-Another big controversy of this war is whether or
not to bring in ground
troops. The U.S. did not even consider ground troops
before the war began; they
didn't even have the threat of using them. This
gave Milosivic the advantage.
Without even the threat of ground troops
coming in, Milosevic had all the
freedom he wanted to "ethnically cleanse"
Kosovo. Milosevic was
allready killing ethnic albanians before the bombing
began, but not to the
degree he was after bombing started. NATO bombing gave
the serbs a good reason
to start kicking all the Ethnic Albanians out. So,
you could argue that NATO
involvement has only worstened the situation in
Kosovo. - The reason why NATO
picked air raids as there strategy to win was
because they did not want to lose
allied lives. As in Somalia, the U.S. was
involved as long as no U.S. soldiers
lives were not lost. Then in one day,
when 15 soldiers died, the U.S. backed out
of Somalia. "The single most
remarkable fact about this "war" is
this: Not one allied soldier engaged in
combat has even been seriously injured
in 2 months of the campaign." Has
there ever been such a war anywhere? -It
seems as though NATO's biggest
objective in this war is to make sure that no
allied lives are lost, not to
save the thousands of Kosovars that are dying and
millions that are going
homeless. This is by far my biggest objection to this
war. If the U.S. is
going to get involved in a war, then I believe that we
should do whatever is
necessary to accomplish the objectives. In this case, to
save the ethnic
albanians. -A recent pole showed that 63% of the American people
think that
NATO is right in getting involved. When asked about sending in ground
troops
this dropped to only 41% thinking that ground troops should be used.
This
means that the majority of people are allright with being involve in a
conflict,
just as long as no allied soldier's lives are lost. And this is
exactly how
Clinton is going about this war. Clinton, I believe, is too
concern with public
opinion. In general, the average american citizen is not
going to have an
in-depth knowledge of the Kosovo situation, and what
strategy would be the best
to use to save the most amount of lives. -NATO is
not even willing to air drop
desperately needed food and medicine to the tens
of thousands of Albanians still
trapped inside Kosovo. The reason for this is
because the planes would have to
fly low and they might be shot down. I guess
this didn't apply to the f-117
stealth fighter pilot who was shot down over
enemy territory. NATO actually got
together an entire rescue team, flew over
enemy territory in a helicopter, much
more vulnerable than a plane, and
rescue the single pilot taking an incredible
risk of being shot down. Is this
supposed to mean that a single allied life is
worth more than thousands of
albanian lives? My view: -I think that the U.S.
should use the Powell
strategy used in Desert Storm. "To use as much force
as possible to overwhelm
the opposition." I believe that a human life is
worth the same no matter
where that person is from. I believe that if the
President is not willing
to sacrifice allied lives to achieve military
objectives, then we have no
business.